Michigan synagogue posts photos of fire damage a week after armed man plowed truck into building

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — A Michigan synagogue on Thursday postedphotos on social mediaof major fire damage that occurred when an attackerdrove a pickup truckinto the building last week before killing himself.

Associated Press

One image shows tables of fruits and snacks left uneaten when the midday strike occurred near an early childhood education room at Temple Israel in suburban Detroit. Photos reveal loose wires in the hallway, an exposed ceiling and blackened walls, including an array of celebratory photos ruined by fire. Sprinklers ran for hours.

The synagogue decided to share photos after an earlier release of law enforcement images was "incredibly triggering" to members of Temple Israel, Rabbi Josh Bennett told The Associated Press.

"This is our sacred space, and we will be the ones to tell its story," Temple Israel said on Facebook.

Ayman Ghazali, 41, rammed his pickup through a synagogue door on March 12, striking a security guard, after he sat in the parking lot for two hours. Security staff exchanged gunfire with him before he killed himself, the FBI said, noting that the truck had commercial-grade fireworks and several jugs of gasoline.

No one else among the 150 children and staff was injured, Bennett said.

At a news conference organized by law enforcement and area faith leaders, he said the congregation of 3,500 families will eventually return to its house of worship in West Bloomfield Township.

"We will not be defined by the violence done to us. Rather, we will be defined by the values we carry forward," Bennett said Thursday. "We are grateful for this community ... for every voice that has spoken out. We ask that those voices do not fall silent."

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Imam Steve Mustapha Elturk of the Islamic Organization of North America listened nearby and agreed.

"Silence in the face of antisemitism or Islamophobia is complicity. We must speak out whenever and wherever we see hate, whether it's in a synagogue or a mosque," Elturk told reporters.

The FBI said it hasn't determined a motive, though Ghazali'sex-wife called policein Dearborn Heights around the time of the attack to warn that he seemed distraught and suicidal. Ghazali, who was a naturalized U.S. citizen, had lost family members during an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon on March 5.

"You don't go into somebody's house, or in this case a house of worship, and try to kill kids from zero to 5 because something happened in another part of the world," Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard said.

"You can't justify that."

Israel's military said the man's brother, Ibrahim Ghazali, who was killed in the recent airstrike, wasa Hezbollah commanderin Lebanon. National intelligence director Tulsi Gabbard told a Senate committee Wednesday that Ayman Ghazali had family ties "to a Hezbollah leader."

White reported from Detroit.

Michigan synagogue posts photos of fire damage a week after armed man plowed truck into building

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) — A Michigan synagogue on Thursday postedphotos on social mediaof major fire damage that occurred whe...
19-year-old Mexican immigrant dies in ICE custody this week, agency says

A 19-year-old Mexican immigrant died in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody this week, according to a notice sent to lawmakers.

ABC News

Royer Perez-Jimenez, 19, died March 16 at the Glades County Detention Center in Moore Haven, Florida, according to the notice from ICE that was reviewed by ABC News.

Perez-Jimenez is the 44th person todie in ICE custodyduring the second Trump administration, according to lawmakers.

Google Maps Street View - PHOTO: In this screen grab from Google Maps Street View, the Glades County Detention Center is shown in Moore Haven, Fla.

"He died of a presumed suicide; however, the official cause of his death remains under investigation," ICE stated.

In the notice, ICE said the 19-year-old entered the United States from Mexico on Feb. 19, 2022, and was granted voluntary return. On an unknown date, according to ICE, he reentered the U.S.

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'Let go of me': Cuban man who died in ICE custody allegedly slammed by guards, witnesses say

The notice said Perez-Jimenez was arrested in Florida and charged with felony fraud for impersonation and misdemeanor resisting an officer. ABC News has not verified this claim from the Department of Homeland Security.

"ICE placed an immigration detainer on him that same day, and he was transferred into ICE custody on February 21, 2026," the agency said in the notice.

A DHS spokesperson on Thursday confirmed Perez-Jimenez was found by a Glades County detention officer "unconscious and unresponsive."

ABC News' Rebecca Gelpi contributed to this report.

19-year-old Mexican immigrant dies in ICE custody this week, agency says

A 19-year-old Mexican immigrant died in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody this week, according to a notice s...
César Chavez's name, once an honor, now carries a stain that officials want to scrub

Within hours of explosive sexual abuse allegations against the revered labor leader César Chavez, officials at a California university took swift action: First, a black cloth over a campus statue of Chavez, later followed by a plywood box hiding it from public view. Soon, officials said, it will be taken down.

Associated Press A student looks toward a plywood box covering a statue of César Chavez at California State University, Fresno in Fresno, Calif., Wednesday, March 18, 2026. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez) A sanitation worker picks up trash next to a mural of César Chavez in Bakersfield, Calif., Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez) A marker in honor of César Chavez along the Points of Light: Volunteer Pathway on Thursday, March 19, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Allison Robbert) A statute of César Chavez stands in the middle of a plaza at Cesar Chavez Park, honoring the United Farm Workers union founder, Wednesday, March 18, 2026, in Laveen, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin) A man walks his dogs past a covered bust of César Chavez at César E. Chavez Park in Denver on Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Thomas Peipert)

APTOPIX César Chavez Allegations

The statue at California State University, Fresno, is just one of scores of monuments, city streets and elementary schools that honorChavez's name and his labor movement legacy across the nation. The Associated Press identified more than 130 locations or objects in at least 19 states named after Chavez, including libraries, streets, community centers and public parks.

Overnight, the name has become more of a stain. Some of the institutions and local governments overseeing sites across the country bearing the Chavez name have already started the process of erasing it. Besides buildings and street signs, they also want to take steps torename César Chavez Day, a federally proclaimed holiday that falls on his March 31 birthday. Many plannedcelebrations this month have been canceled.

The allegations that Chavez sexually abused girls and women, including fellow movement leader Dolores Huerta, "call for our full attention and moral reckoning by removing his statue from our campus," said Saúl Jiménez-Sandoval, president of California State University, Fresno. It's not clear how long that will take.

It's also not clear what will happen to the César E. Chavez National Monument in Keene, California. It's where Chavez and his wife, Helen, are buried. It also includes the office where some of the reported abuse took place.

Brian Hughes, of Vancouver, Canada, was among the monument's visitors Thursday morning. The stop was planned for the trip weeks ago.

"Now it's difficult reconciling the inspirational side of his life and the stories with these revelations," Hughes said.

A push for honoring Huerta instead

At the Cesar Chavez Student Center at San Francisco State University on Thursday, student Luca Broggi Hendryx recalled hearing stories as a child about Chavez and idolizing him. Now he says the school needs to separate itself from Chavez by changing the student center's name.

"When I first started coming here it made total sense: He was seen as an icon for the Latino civil rights movement," Hendryx said. "So it was almost a proud thing to have a building named after Cesar Chavez. But now it feels the opposite."

Some are calling for Chavez's namesake places to be renamed for Huerta instead.

In Phoenix, city council members said they will meet next week to vote on whether to rename the holiday as well as any buildings and streets that bear Chavez's name. Mayor Kate Gallego is urging César Chavez Day be renamed Farmworkers Day.

"We have a duty to honor the dignity of the survivors and move forward in a way that reflects our values," she said in a statement.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and the city council announced the same decision in a proclamation. Bass also said she will assess the renaming of city landmarks that bear the Chavez name with the community and the city council.

Denver for now will celebrate the holiday as Sí, Se Puede Day, which translates into the farmworkers movement rallying cry — Yes We Can.

"We will not let the sins of one man set back the commitment of a community who has fought for decades to deliver on the fundamental belief that everyone is entitled to justice," Mayor Mike Johnston said to applause as he announced the change outside Denver's City and County Building.

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A few miles away, a handwritten "Dolores Huerta Park" sign was seen at the park that bore Chavez's name for two decades. A bust of Chavez was gone.

The New York Times first reported Wednesday that it found credible evidence that Chavez groomed and sexually abused young girls who worked in the movement. One of his victims, in fact, partly felt compelled to come forward after a proposal to name a street near her home after Chavez.

Huerta, who was a labor legend in her own right and co-founded in 1962 with Chavez the National Farm Workers Association — which became theUnited Farm Workers of America— revealed to the newspaper that she was a victim of abuse by him in her 30s.

When it comes to changing names of sites or events honoring Chavez, Teresa Romero, United Farm Workers president, said, "Everybody's going to have to make their own decisions. I respect the victims, I respect the thousands of people who worked with the union throughout the years as volunteers, and that is not going to change."

Dozens of schools and a Navy cargo ship

Among the locations and objects bearing Chavez's name is aU.S. Navy cargo shipcommemorating his service during World War II and the national monument established in 2012 by then-President Barack Obama on a 187-acre site in Central California where Chavez once lived and worked.

Most of the locations are in California but they include sites in at least 19 states, from New York and Maryland to Oklahoma, the Great Lakes Region and Washington state.

About half are schools with most of them located in California. In Pueblo, Colorado, Chavez shares the name of a school with Huerta.

Altering a national monument, such as changing a name, needs an act of Congress or action by the president.

There have been previous efforts to change names for government sites and institutions on a broad scale.

During the civil rights backlash that followed the 2020 killing of George Floyd by police in Minneapolis, Congress ordered a nationwide review of military posts and other assets such as roads, buildings, memorials and signs that honored Confederate leaders.Nine Army basesincluding North Carolina's Fort Bragg, named after a slave-owning Confederate general, were renamed, only to have theoriginal names restoredunder President Donald Trump's administration last year after the army found other people with the same names to honor.

Under former Interior Secretary Deb Haaland – the first Native American to hold the post -- federal officials renamedhundreds of peaks, lakes, streams and other geographical featureswith racist and misogynistic terms. It capped a yearlong process to remove the historically offensive word "squaw" from geographic names across the country.

Artist Paula Castillo, who created a sculpture in Albuquerque in 2010 framed as a tribute to Chavez, joined other art critics in questioning whether people should think more about monuments to shared values.

"The public work in Albuquerque is intended to make collective labor and lived experience visible in civic space, rather than isolate a single figure," she said in an email. "This allows it to continue holding meaning for communities even as new information forces a more honest reckoning with the past."

Brown reported from Billings, Montana. Tang reported from Phoenix. from Associated Press writers Jacques Billeaud in Phoenix, Rebecca Boone in Boise, Idaho, Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Terry Chea in San Francisco, Haven Daley in Keene, California, Jaimie Ding in Los Angeles, Thomas Peipert and Colleen Slevin in Denver also contributed to this story.

César Chavez's name, once an honor, now carries a stain that officials want to scrub

Within hours of explosive sexual abuse allegations against the revered labor leader César Chavez, officials at a Californ...
7 Surprising Rules March Madness Players Must Follow

March Madness — the NCAA Division I Women's and Men's Basketball National Championship — kicked off on March 17

People The Connecticut Huskies celebrate with the trophy after winning the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament National Championship on April 03, 2023 in Houston, Texas.Credit: Brett Wilhelm/NCAA Photos via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The annual tournament follows the top 68 college basketball teams in several rounds of single-elimination games

  • Players must follow strict rules, including bans on jewelry, unsportsmanlike conduct and sports wagering of any kind

March Madnesshas arrived!

The fierce competition, which originated in 1939, features 68 of the best college basketball teams from across the country as they compete in hopes of taking home the national title. The tournament automatically included the 31 conference winners before 37 at-large selections were chosen by the NCAA basketball committee. From there, the "First Four" games narrow down the field to 64 teams — which make up the official bracket.

Teams get ranked within their division based on their yearly performance, so the top teams play against the bottom teams (No. 1 against No. 16, No. 2 against No. 15 and so on). Although the tournament is designed to reward the highest performing teams, there are upsets every year with lower ranked teams coming out on top.

The teams compete in up to seven rounds of single-elimination games — including the Sweet Sixteen, Elite Eight and Final Four — to have a chance of making it to the final two in the national championship game.

While earning a spot in March Madness is the crowning achievement of many college athletes, they have to follow a myriad of meticulous rules in order to compete in the high-stakes tournament.

From how they behave on the court to what they can and cannot wear, here are some of the rules that all NCAA basketball athletes must abide by during March Madness.

Athletes can make their own brackets — as long as there's no money involved

The Michigan Wolverines play against the Purdue Boilermakers during the Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament Championship game on March 15, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois.Credit: Michael Reaves/Getty

Basketball and non-basketball fans alike enjoy filling out and competing on March Madness brackets. Depending on state regulations, many people can even place monetary bets on their brackets.

Student athletes and other team staff members can also get in on the fun by filling out brackets, but they can only do them in contests where "there is no entry fee but a possibility of winning a prize," per theDon't Bet On It NCAA statement. However, some NCAA schools have also forbidden those types of "for fun" contests.

All NCAA student athletes, athletic department staff members and conference office staff are strictly prohibited from participating in "sports wagering activities" of any kind, as well as providing "information to individuals involved in or associated with any type of sports wagering activities concerning intercollegiate, amateur or professional athletics competition," according to theNCAA bylaw 10.3.

The NCAA closely monitors thousands of students and staff members by screening them every year and hiring special law enforcement officers and gambling experts.

Any student athletes who are found violating any of the sports betting rules could face "severe penalties, including permanent loss of remaining athletic eligibility and loss of athletics scholarships, subject to review by divisional reinstatement committees," per theNCAA.

Coaches and other NCAA staff members are also subject to sanctions and terminations if they violate the guidelines.

Headwear is monitored and jewelry is forbidden during games

The UConn Huskies celebrate with a March Madness

Unfortunately for some players with lucky pieces of jewelry, all March Madness athletes must leave their jewelry on the bench and limit headwear.

"Head decorations, head wear, helmets, and jewelry are illegal," the Men's andWomen's NCAA Basketball 2025-2026 Rule Booksread.

In addition, any pieces of tape used to cover the jewelry or piercing holes are also not allowed.

However, athletes can wear religious headwear, as long as it is "securely fastened to the head and is subject to the approval of the referee."

Although headwear is prohibited from the court, both men and women can wear headbands — as long as they follow the strict criteria made by the NCAA. All headbands must be made of cloth, elastic fiber or other soft fabrics and must be a "solid color" of white, black, beige or a color from their jersey.

Headbands can not exceed four inches in width and can only include one logo that fits into a certain size rectangle. Any "hard items" — such as clips, bobby pins and barrettes — are a no-go.

Men's jersey shirts must be tucked in — but women's don't have to be

Connecticut Huskies celebrate after the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament National Championship game on April 08, 2024 in Glendale, Arizona.Credit: Tyler Schank/NCAA Photos via Getty

While many of the NCAA basketball rules are applied to both men's and women's teams, the rules on how a game-day jersey must be worn differ.

Ahead of the 2025-2026 school year, the NCAA had enforced the rule for women that "game jerseys shall be tucked in the game shorts." However, they deleted that rule for the first time this year because of the different way women's jerseys look.

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TheNCAA Women's Committeeruled that jerseys for women "have become shorter and are not always manufactured to be long enough to be properly tucked into the game shorts. When players lift their arms, the jersey often becomes untucked, making it difficult for officials to enforce the rule properly."

The Women's Rule Book noted that the jersey tucked-in rule was deleted for the 2026-2027 season, as well.

Meanwhile, the men's game jerseys "shall be tucked in the game shorts," per theMen's Rule Book. Since it's a common mistake to make, the Rule Book also listed out guidelines for punishment.

"The first time an official must tell a player to tuck in the game jersey, the official shall issue a warning to the head coach," it reads. "The next time any player on the same team has the game jersey untucked, that player shall leave the game until the next opportunity to substitute. The official shall enforce this rule at the next dead ball after observing the violation."

"Excessively long fingernails" must be clipped

The Rice Owls punch their ticket for March Madness during the AAC Woman's Basketball Championship on March 13, 2024 in Fort Worth, Texas.Credit: Aric Becker/ISI Photos/Getty

In order to protect all NCAA players and prevent injuries, all March Madness athletes need to trim their nails ahead of games.

"Excessively long fingernails shall be prohibited," both the Men's and Women's Rule Books state. The organization cited the possibility that long nails could "cut or cause an injury to another player."

Although players have to watch out for their length, they are permitted to paint their nails any color they'd like.

Players can't "lift" or carry teammates

Motiejus Krivas #13 of the Arizona Wildcats attempts a shot against Isaiah Coleman #21 of the Oklahoma State Cowboys during a game on February 07, 2026 in Tucson, Arizona.Credit: Chris Coduto/Getty

Although there's no shortage of sports movies that have depicted one player hoisting up another to score that game-winning point, that's not the case in real life.

March Madness players can receive a technical foul for "climbing on or lifting a teammate to secure greater height," per both Rule Books.

Players must be respectful to crowds, coaches and officials, or they could get a technical infraction

Duke Blue Devils play against the Clemson Tigers during the ACC Men's basketball tournament on March 13, 2026 in Charlotte, N.C.Credit: John Byrum/Icon Sportswire via Getty

While games can get heated, players must comply with a strict code of sportsmanship in every interaction both on and off the court.

"The primary goal of the rules is to maximize the safety and enjoyment of the student-athlete," the Rule Books explain. "Good sporting behavior is a key part of that goal and should be a core value in behavior of players and bench personnel, in crowd control by game management and in the officials' proper enforcement of the rules governing related actions."

The Men's Rule Book defines unsportsmanlike conduct as "behavior or an act that is unbecoming to a fair, ethical and honorable individual."

Athletes and staff members who do not adhere to proper sporting behavior are subjected to a technical foul, a flagrant 2 technical foul, suspensions or even ejections in extreme cases.

Some of the acts that qualify as unsportsmanlike and could result in punishment include using disrespectful language or gestures toward an official or referee, using profane or vulgar language, making obscene gestures, taunting the other team and making derogatory remarks regarding race, religion, gender, sexual orientation or disabilities, among others.

Meanwhile, any sort of fight — including an attempt at one — is a flagrant 2 foul. Officials determine the punishment for the people involved, but it typically includes suspension from the following game or suspension from the next season.

While players have to be cautious about their behavior on the court, their fans do, as well. Players cannot "incite undesirable crowd reaction," and fans also cannot "commit an unsportsmanlike act" — such as throwing debris on the court, using profane language or playing music while the game is in progress.

Any use of tobacco during a game is forbidden and results in disqualification

The Florida Gators celebrate after the Elite Eight round of the 2025 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament on March 29, 2025 in San Francisco, California.Credit: Brett Wilhelm/NCAA Photos via Getty

The NCAA has astrict set of rulesregarding banned substances that include stimulants, narcotics and hormone and metabolic modifiers, among others. Athletes are regularly and randomly tested for prohibited substances, supplements and medications.

Tobacco products are not among the illicit substances, but they are strictly prohibited during any practices, competitions or games.

"The use of tobacco by student-athletes, or team or game personnel (e.g., coaches, athletic trainers, managers and game officials) is prohibited during competition," the Men's Rule Book reads. "Any student-athlete, or team or game personnel who uses tobacco during competition shall be disqualified for the remainder of that competition."

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7 Surprising Rules March Madness Players Must Follow

March Madness — the NCAA Division I Women's and Men's Basketball National Championship — kicked off on March 17 ...
Details of landmark WNBA salary verbal agreement that could make sports history

After months of WNBAlabor negotiations, WNBA Players Association President Nneka Ogwumike announced this week that the players' union had struck a transformational verbal agreement with the league, in which star athletes would reportedly be set to earn more than $1 million for the first time in league history.

Good Morning America Good Morning America

"This journey has been well worth it," Ogwumike told "Good Morning America" co-anchor Robin Roberts on Thursday of the ups and downs it took to get a new collective bargaining agreement. "It's a deal that's changing lives in real time and also for generations to come."

Ian Maule/Getty Images - PHOTO: Nneka Ogwumike #3 of the Seattle Storm looks to shoot against the Las Vegas Aces during the 2025 WNBA Playoffs first round at Michelob ULTRA Arena on September 18, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

According to the WNBPA, the agreement would drive up the average salary by 364%, the maximum salary up 460% and the minimum salary 309%.

Ogwumike, a 10-time WNBA All-Star, told ABC News that to her understanding, this would become the single largest salary jump in all of sports history.

With that, she said they're able to report "a seven-figure max salary."

"There's not a lot of details that I can share, because we're still trying to finalize the term sheet," Ogwumike said, adding that in the meantime, they've been able to "preempt the players about what it is that they're going to be voting [on] and ratifying."

ABC News - PHOTO: WNBA Players Association President Nneka Ogwumike discusses the major salary negotiation update with

"That includes increases in, obviously, salary, minimum average and max. It includes retirement benefits, specifically something that reflects our appreciation for those who came before us and in our legends," Ogwumike said. "We wouldn't be here without people like you, without so many of the players that have created this league that we're in today."

Housing was another important term that Ogwumike said was "passionately voiced" during negotiations to provide certain benefits and "support for us to be able to perform at a high level."

What to know about the viral equal pay shirts worn during WNBA All-Star Game

"We are declaring our value, we're fighting for what we deserve and what we're owed," Ogwumike said.

She added that the agreement considers both existing and future players "and the amount of money that they can save to build for the future that they really desire for themselves," especially incoming players who are "still navigating that very tight transition from the college space tot the pro space."

The 30th WNBA season tips off May 8, 2026.

Details of landmark WNBA salary verbal agreement that could make sports history

After months of WNBAlabor negotiations, WNBA Players Association President Nneka Ogwumike announced this week that the pl...
Pentagon seeks $200 billion in additional funds for the Iran war, AP source says

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon is seeking $200 billion in additional funds for theIran war, a sizable amount that is certain to be met with questions from Congress, which would need to approve any new money.

Associated Press Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks to members of the media during a press briefing at the Pentagon in Washington, Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks to members of the media during a press briefing at the Pentagon in Washington, Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

APTOPIX Pentagon US Iran

The department sent the request to the White House, according to a senior administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private information. Asked about the figure at a press conference Thursday,Defense Secretary Pete Hegsethdid not directly confirm the amount, saying it could change.

"It takes money to kill bad guys," Hegseth said.

But he said "we're going back to Congress and our folks there to ensure that we're properly funded."

Big price tag faces scrutiny over war

It's an extraordinarily high number and comes on top of extra funding the Defense Department already received last year inPresident Donald Trump'sbig tax cuts bill. Such a request would need to be approved by Congress, and it is not at all clear such spending would have political support. Thenation's debt has surgedpast a record $39 trillion.

Congress has been bracing for a new spending request but it is not clear the White House has transmitted the request for consideration. Lawmakers have notauthorized the war, and Congress is showing growing unease with themilitary operation's scope and strategy.

The new funding request was first reported by The Washington Post.

Trump said the administration is asking for the money for other reasons beyond Iran.

"This is a very volatile world," the president said from the Oval Office. He said the emergency spending would be a "very small price to pay" to ensure the nation's military stays in top shape.

While the House and Senate are controlled by the president's Republican Party many of the more conservative lawmakers are also fiscal hawks, with little political appetite for big spending, on military operations or other matters. Most Democrats are likely to reject such a request and demand more detailed plans from the Trump administration about the U.S. military goals and objectives.

Rep. Ken Calvert, the Republican chair of the House subcommittee with oversight over defense spending, said he was already advocating for a supplemental spending bill to allow the Pentagon to replenish munitions.

"That was going to happen, and now we have this conflict with some additional costs. So, that's where we're at," Calvert of California said Thursday.

"I know there are peripheral issues out there that people are concerned about, but right now, this is about our national security and it's important that we get this done," he said.

But Rep. Betty McCollum of Minnesota, the ranking Democrat on the House subcommittee with oversight over defense spending, said the president has taken the U.S. into a war without coming to Congress and she's demanding more details.

"This is not going to be a rubber stamp for the president of the United States," McCollum said.

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She said Congress is still waiting for the administration to explain where it would be spending the additional $150 billion funding that went to the Pentagon through Trump's tax and spending cut bill. It's also waiting on the president's budget request for this year.

"I'm not writing blank checks to the Department of Defense," McCollum said.

Negotiations ahead on a final package

It all points to a monumental battle ahead in Congress over any new Pentagon spending that would almost certainly need support from Republicans and Democrats in a bipartisan package to push past objections toward approval.

The requested amount would be a hefty boost to the Pentagon's annual budget, which Congress approved at more than $800 billion for the current fiscal year.

That's on top of some $150 billion that Congress gave the Defense Department in last year's tax cuts bill, much of it for specific projects and overall upgrades to the Pentagon's operations.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has projected that the federal government will run a $1.9 trillion annual deficit this year, and that's before adding any spending done through a supplemental bill.

House Speaker Mike Johnson said it's a "dangerous time" and "we have to adequately fund defense."

Asked whether he supported the amount, Johnson said he has not seen the details, but "I support what's needed to ensure that the American people remain safe."

While some of the military's biggest champions on Capitol Hill have welcomed new spending as a way to replenish munitions stockpiles and upgrade the U.S. defense capabilities in the face of emerging threats, others will certainly point to health care and other domestic needs that they view as more important priorities.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro, the ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, said of the $200 billion price tag: "It's outrageous."

To muscle a package to passage, Republican leaders could either try to go it alone through an arduous budget process, or cut deals with Democrats on other priorities that would likely balloon the overall price tag.

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., signaled the negotiations ahead.

"Ultimately we're going to have negotiations with the White House on an exact amount," Scalise said. "We're not at that point yet."

Associated Press writers Konstantin Toropin, Seung Min Kim and Michelle L. Price contributed to this report.

Pentagon seeks $200 billion in additional funds for the Iran war, AP source says

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon is seeking $200 billion in additional funds for theIran war, a sizable amount that is cert...
Immigration judge denies Liam Conejo Ramos and family's asylum claim: Attorney

An immigration judge has deniedLiam Conejo Ramosand his family's asylum claim, their attorney confirmed.

ABC News

The 5-year-old boy and his father, Adrian Conejo Arias, were detained on Jan. 20 by immigration agents in Minneapolis and held in a Texas detention facility for over a week. They were released on Feb. 1 after a judge's order.

Attorney Danielle Molliver told ABC News the family was unable to present any evidence in the case before the government filed a motion to terminate the case which a judge granted. Molliver said she has filed an appeal with the Board of Immigration Appeals.

"We understand that this decision will be appealed and remain hopeful for a positive outcome," a spokesperson for Columbia Heights Public School District said earlier confirming the asylum claim denial. "The detention in January of Liam and his father shed light on the harm caused by Operation Metro Surge, during which many children and families have been detained."

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Columbia Heights Public Schools - PHOTO: Liam Conejo Ramos, as he is detained, January 20, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

The boy and his fatherwere detainedin January shortly after arriving home from the child's preschool.

Both were taken to a federal detention facility in Dilley, Texas. They had a pending asylum case but no order of deportation.

After being ordered released by a judge, the five-year-old's father told ABC News last month that he wants to remain in the United States with his family, saying they fled Ecuador out of fear.

"I asked for asylum to be here for my family, for my children," Conejo Arias said. "I'm here because I'm scared of returning to my country."

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Immigration judge denies Liam Conejo Ramos and family's asylum claim: Attorney

An immigration judge has deniedLiam Conejo Ramosand his family's asylum claim, their attorney confirmed. T...

 

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