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Justice Department indicts Southern Poverty Law Center

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Justice Department indicts Southern Poverty Law Center

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The Justice Department on April 21-22, 2026 indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), a prominent U.S. civil rights nonprofit, on an 11-count federal indictment alleging wire fraud, bank fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering tied to a now-defunct paid-informant program. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said prosecutors allege the SPLC covertly routed roughly $3 million between 2014 and 2023 to informants affiliated with white supremacist and neo‑Nazi networks, using fictitious entities, multiple bank accounts and prepaid cards to conceal payments. Court filings describe at least nine unnamed sources, including figures tied to the Ku Klux Klan and other extremist groups, and allege some payments exceeded $1 million to a single source. The case is being handled in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Alabama. SPLC CEO Bryan Fair says the informant program was used to monitor violent threats, was often shared with law enforcement and ā€˜ā€˜saved lives,’’ and vowed to vigorously defend the organization. The indictment follows months of GOP criticism of the SPLC and the FBI’s decision last year to sever ties with the group.

Trump extends Iran ceasefire; markets, oil volatile

šŸ·ļø World NewsšŸŒ United StatesšŸ”— 334 sources91Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Trump extends Iran ceasefire; markets, oil volatile

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U.S. President Donald Trump said on April 21 he would indefinitely extend a ceasefire with Iran at Pakistan’s request to allow further peace talks, while keeping a U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports in place. The move appeared unilateral and Tehran, as well as U.S. ally Israel, gave no immediate commitment to resume negotiations. The extension came amid renewed attacks in the Strait of Hormuz, where at least three ships were reported fired upon and some seized, briefly pushing Brent crude above $100 a barrel before prices later retreated to the high-$90s. Global markets reacted unevenly: U.S. and Canadian futures rose modestly (S&P/TSX futures +0.4%), S&P and Nasdaq futures gained roughly 0.4–0.6%, while equity indexes had slipped on April 21 as Iran initially rejected talks. Safe-haven and commodity moves were mixed — spot gold and silver showed intraday gains at times, while the dollar wobbled. Shipping traffic through Hormuz remained constrained, reinforcing concerns about a prolonged energy shock, higher inflation risks and further volatility for bond, currency and equity markets as investors parsed the durability of the truce and the prospect of resumed hostilities.

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The ceasefire’s durability is doubtful because unilateral declarations aren’t binding; combined with the strait’s geographic vulnerability, the blockade is likely to sustain shipping disruptions and oil-market volatility unless Iran and other parties formally agree to pause hostilities.

Lufthansa Cuts 20,000 Flights Amid Jet Fuel Crisis

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Lufthansa Cuts 20,000 Flights Amid Jet Fuel Crisis

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Lufthansa Group announced on April 21-22, 2026 it will cancel about 20,000 short‑haul flights through October — equivalent to roughly 40,000 metric tonnes of jet fuel — as jet fuel prices and supply risks surge amid the U.S.-Israel military campaign against Iran and effective disruption of the Strait of Hormuz. The move targets unprofitable short routes across the group’s hubs (Frankfurt, Munich, Zurich, Vienna, Brussels, Rome) and comes as the EU prepares emergency guidance for airlines on slots, passenger rights and public service obligations, and considers importing more jet fuel from the United States, shared reserves and a new fuel observatory. The International Energy Agency has warned Europe could have as little as six weeks of jet fuel stocks; suppliers and carriers report higher prices and limited visibility beyond May–June. Other carriers — including KLM, SAS, Norse Atlantic, United, Air Canada and several Asian and Pacific operators — have already trimmed schedules or raised fees. Industry groups and campaigners warn ticket prices and cancellations will rise while the EU seeks to accelerate sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) production to reduce future reliance on Middle East supplies.

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Commenters add fiscal context — EU law largely exempts jet fuel, which fuels debate over private‑jet privileges — and report real travel disruption from cancellations and reroutings, creating pressure for policy fixes such as closing tax loopholes and shifting short trips to rail.

FAA probes near-miss between two jets at JFK

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FAA probes near-miss between two jets at JFK

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The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration is investigating a close call on Monday at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York after two passenger regional jets came dangerously close during parallel runway approaches. Republic Airways Flight 4464, operating for American Airlines, performed a go-around after deviating from its assigned approach and encroaching on the path of Jazz Aviation Flight 554, which had been cleared to land on the neighbouring runway. Flight-tracking service Flightradar24 recorded the aircraft as close as about 350 feet vertically and 0.62 miles (roughly 1 kilometre) horizontally. Air traffic control audio captured anti-collision alarms in cockpits and the tower; controllers issued immediate evasive instructions and both crews responded to onboard resolution advisories (RA). Both jets executed go-arounds and later landed safely. The FAA has opened a probe; the incident follows a string of recent near-misses in U.S. airspace, including a separate Southwest Airlines close call in Nashville and a fatal LaGuardia runway collision last month.

US seizes Iranian ship and boards sanctioned tanker

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US seizes Iranian ship and boards sanctioned tanker

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Between April 19 and April 21, 2026, US forces conducted two high-profile maritime interdictions against vessels linked to Iran. A US Navy destroyer disabled and US Marines boarded and seized the Iranian-flagged container ship Touska off the coast of Chabahar in the Gulf of Oman; US officials said the vessel, run by sanction-hit IRISL, was likely carrying dual-use items. Separately, US forces carried out a right-of-visit boarding of the M/T Tifani in the Indian Ocean/Bay of Bengal without incident; the tanker, described by the Pentagon as ā€œstatelessā€ though Botswana-flagged, is sanctioned for smuggling Iranian crude and linked to ENSA Ship Management. Washington says the actions enforce a wider blockade and will interdict contraband anywhere at sea. Iran has condemned the seizures as unlawful ā€œpiracy,ā€ urged the UN to press for the Touska’s release and warned of possible retaliation. The interdictions come as a fragile US-Iran ceasefire nears expiry and last-ditch talks in Pakistan hang in the balance.

FBI Director Kash Patel sues The Atlantic

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FBI Director Kash Patel sues The Atlantic

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FBI Director Kash Patel filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit on April 20, 2026, against The Atlantic and reporter Sarah Fitzpatrick after a magazine article alleged he had a pattern of ā€œconspicuous inebriation,ā€ unexplained absences and episodes that alarmed colleagues at the FBI and Justice Department. The Atlantic said it stood by the reporting, which cited more than two dozen anonymous sources and described an April 10 incident in which Patel was briefly locked out of a government system and reacted angrily. Patel and the White House denied the allegations; he has publicly contested specific claims and called the piece a ā€œmalicious hit piece.ā€ Media fact‑checkers said they could not independently verify the Atlantic’s anonymous sourcing. Patel’s complaint, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., alleges The Atlantic published the accusations with ā€œactual malice.ā€ Separately, a federal judge in Texas dismissed a separate Patel lawsuit against commentator Frank Figliuzzi under the state’s anti‑SLAPP law. Observers have also flagged typos and copy‑editing errors in Patel’s 19‑page complaint, and Patel faced confrontational questioning at a Justice Department press appearance as the dispute unfolded.

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Key developments: Patel’s public denial of a computer lockout appears to contradict his own complaint, and legal observers warn that the suit’s filing invites discovery that could force document and witness disclosures — increasing chances of an early dismissal or voluntary withdrawal.
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