Wednesday, April 16, 2025

El Salvador is “very eager to help”


El Salvador is “very eager to help” with the crime and terrorism problem connected to the southern border, El Salvador President Nayib Bukele said during a meeting with President Donald Trump on Monday. “But I want to thank you for the great job you’re doing. I appreciate it,” Trump said. Bukele, in turn, said it was an honor to be there with the President and leader of the free world, continuing, “We’re very happy, and we’re very eager to help.” 

“We know that you have a crime problem and a terrorism problem that you need help with, and we’re a small country, but if we can help, we will do it,” he said. At one point during the exchange, Bukele lauded Trump for his work on the southern border. “What you’re doing with the border is remarkable dropped, what, 95 percent? It’s incredible,” he remarked. “This morning, 99 percent 99.1 percent, to be exact,” Trump responded. Bukele asked why those figures are not shared far and wide by the mainstream media. 

 “Well, they get ’em, but the fake news you know, like CNN over here, doesn’t want to put them out. They don’t like putting out good numbers, because I think they hate our country, actually,” Trump said, adding, “It’s a shame. You’re right. Isn’t that a great question? Why don’t they put out the numbers.” The meeting took place after President Donald Trump extended an invitation, praising Bukele as an ally, supporting his efforts to curb illegal immigration. 

As reported, Trump’s administration “has deported … gang members, including child rapists and convicted killers, to El Salvador.” “Also of great importance to our partnership is your willingness to use El Salvador’s new supermax prison for Tren de Aragua and MS-13 gang members,” 

Trump wrote in the letter inviting Bukele to the White House. “You have shown real leadership and are a model for others seeking to work with the United States.”

Trump administration refers NY AG Letitia James for possible prosecution



Our man Donald Trump and his administration has issued refers on NY AG Letitia James for possible prosecution over allegations of mortgage fraud as James is accused of listing a home in Virginia as her primary residence and listing her father as her husband on mortgage applications. The documents obtained by Fox News which is where we got the report from at the show "The Ingraham Angle," the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) sent a criminal referral to the Department of Justice, accusing James of mortgage fraud Tuesday. The FHFA Director William Pulte said in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi that James appears to have falsified records to meet certain lending requirements and receive favorable loan terms. OOPS!

They cited a property in Virginia that James allegedly claimed as her principal residence and a property in New York she claimed as a four-unit structure instead of five, which he said could mean she was able to get a different and more favorable loan. Fox News contributor and George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley told Fox News host Laura Ingraham the irony of James getting accused of falsifying records is "perfectly crushing." "This is a person who prosecuted Trump for everything short of ripping a label off a mattress, and among the charges that were brought in New York, in just the civil but the criminal case, was making false or misleading statements to financial institutions," Turley said. "As for James, if we apply the Letitia James standard that she created, there'd be little question here. This seems pretty straightforward."

He explained the Trump administration is saying this was not her principal residence because, as a New York elected official, she has to say her principal residence is in New York. "The Supreme Court just stated earlier in March, in a case called Thompson, that they want to see knowing false statements under sections, like 10-14, not just misleading statements," Turley said. "These are misleading statements. Either it's your principal residence or it's not. Either you're married to your father or he's your father." The DOJ and James did not respond to Fox News on the matter. The issue has been prosecuted in the past, but as Turley said on the Ingraham Angle, the "documents themselves are quite damning."

Retired NYPD inspector and Fox News contributor Paul Mauro told Fox News Digital he first reported the allegations against James on his Substack almost 10 weeks ago. "The documents presented by Sam Antar, and the research he has done, appear entirely authentic," Mauro said. "In which case, AG James appears to have engaged in the very sort of fraud which she alleged in her ludicrous case against Donald Trump. Let's see now, if indeed, as AG James has stated herself, nobody is above the law." The New York Post reported that the documents show that the property James purchased with her father had both parties listed as "husband and wife" in 1983 and 2000.

"While this was a long time ago, it raises serious concerns about the validity of Ms. James' representations on mortgage applications," Pulte reportedly wrote. James brought forth a civil fraud suit against President Donald Trump, the Trump Organization and its senior leadership in 2022, frequently sitting in the courtroom throughout the proceedings and celebrating the prosecution of Trump in the Manhattan criminal trial over the 34 counts of falsifying business records. 

Trump was ordered to pay a $454 million civil fraud judgment in James’ lawsuit against him, which is currently on appeal. So far in 2025, James has spearheaded at least five legal actions against the Trump administration, including leading a coalition of state attorneys general to sue the federal government to halt DOGE’s access to the Treasury Department’s internal systems, and another lawsuit related to the Trump administration slashing grant funding to research institutions and universities.

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