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- 'Did not act alone': Suspect tied to Zizian 'trans' cult charged with murdering own parentsby Candace Hathaway on June 25, 2026 at 5:25 pm
Authorities discovered Richard and Rita Zajko dead from gunshot wounds in their Pennsylvania home in Jan. 2023. The couple’s 33-year-old child, Michelle “Jamie” Zajko, was charged with the double murder on Wednesday. Michelle Zajko has been tied to the Zizians, a cult of trans-identifying extremists whose members have been linked to numerous killings across the country, including the death of a Vermont Border Patrol agent who was gunned down during a traffic stop in Jan. 2025.'We are finally at the point where we can say beyond any doubt that Michelle Zajko was at least part responsible for the death of her parents,' the DA claimed.Several days after the deaths of Richard and Rita Zajko, police detained Michelle Zajko, who was staying at a Pennsylvania hotel with Daniel Blank, an individual who has also been associated with the Zizians. Inside Blank’s hotel room, law enforcement discovered a Smith & Wesson 9mm and five boxes of ammunition believed to belong to Michelle Zajko. Blank — who has been charged with trespassing, obstruction of justice, weapons violations, drug possession, and felony drug-trafficking — was released from custody in Feb. 2026 after posting $15,000 bond. The conditions of his release require him to live alone and to submit to GPS tracking.Police claimed that Michelle Zajko engaged in suspicious activities following the murders, such as purchasing firearms and burner phones and transferring large sums of cash.RELATED: The Zizians’ violent spiral: A trans group tied to killings across America Michelle Jamie Zajko. Image source Allegany County Sheriff's OfficeMichelle Zajko was also previously accused of purchasing the guns confiscated from Teresa “Milo” Youngblut and Felix “Ophelia” Bauckholt, other alleged Zizian members, after the shooting death of Vermont Border Patrol agent David Maland.Michelle Zajko is being held without bond at the Allegany County Jail in Maryland while facing charges for alleged trespassing, obstruction of justice, weapons violations, drug possession, and felony drug-trafficking charges.Delaware County District Attorney Tanner Rouse announced new charges against Zajko on Wednesday related to the murder of Richard and Rita Zajko.“It is an exhaustive investigation that took years to put together. But we are finally at the point where we can say beyond any doubt that Michelle Zajko was at least part responsible for the death of her parents,” Rouse stated.Rouse stated that Michelle Zajko “did not act alone” but that authorities “don’t know who her co-conspirators were.”RELATED: Nonbinary suspect allegedly opens fire on Border Patrol agent — incident eerily similar to last year's fatal shooting Daniel Blank. Image source: Allegany County Sheriff’s OfficeThe Zajko family released a statement in response to the latest charges. “There has been much speculation, misinformation, and disinformation about our Rick and Rita and our niece. It has been difficult and challenging to hear and read and not comment until the appropriate time. That time is now. The evidence will speak loudly and decisively for us, as it will for Rick and Rita. Now is the time for the facts and the truth to be known,” the statement read.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
- Supreme Court hands Trump a MAJOR victory on TPS status for Haitian and Syrian migrantsby Carlos Garcia on June 25, 2026 at 5:03 pm
The U.S. Supreme Court has given President Donald Trump a major victory in his mission for mass deportations of migrants from the U.S.SCOTUS ruled Thursday that the Trump administration was within its power to strip Temporary Protective Status from hundreds of thousands of Haitians and Syrians. The 6-3 ruling overturned a lower court ruling that had postponed the termination of TPS for 6,000 migrants from Syria and 350,000 migrants from Haiti.'The Trump administration continues to lawfully end the egregious abuses to our immigration system that have hurt Americans for years.'"The TPS statute plainly bars consideration of respondents' nonconstitutional claims," wrote Justice Samuel Alito in the majority opinion.While the defendants' attorneys had argued that the administration had acted out of racial animus, Alito noted that "the current administration, which has terminated every TPS designation that has come up for renewal, simply opposes the TPS program, at least as it has been implemented in the past."Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson joined the dissent written by Justice Elena Kagan, who wrote that the plaintiffs "deserve better" than the decision made by the majority."True enough that TPS is a temporary program, and that it did not promise the plaintiffs never-ending humanitarian protection," wrote Justice Elena Kagan."But the law prevents the program from ending as it likely did here — without the required consultations about country conditions and, as to Haiti, with impermissible race-based considerations tainting the decision."Abigail Jackson, a spokesperson for the White House, praised the ruling and reiterated the administration's claim that previous Democratic presidents had misused the TPS program to grant de facto amnesty to migrants. "It was never intended to be a pathway to permanent status or legal residency, and it is committed to the discretion of the Secretary of Homeland Security," she said. "The Trump administration continues to lawfully end the egregious abuses to our immigration system that have hurt Americans for years."RELATED: Springfield officials, Ohio activists brace for end to TPS protection for Haitian migrants Ahilan Arulanantham, a UCLA law professor who argued on behalf of the Syrian plaintiffs, called on Congress to vote to pass legislation in favor of TPS protections."Without TPS, millions of individuals who are part of our communities are at risk of being sent back to countries in crisis," he said.Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York responded that Democrats are eager to intervene on behalf of the migrants affected. "In a cruel and inhumane decision, the Supreme Court just turned its back on more than 300,000 Haitians and thousands of Syrians who have worked and raised families here because they faced violence and instability back home. TPS exists for exactly this reason," he said in a statement on social media. "I have introduced legislation to extend TPS for Haitians and will keep fighting to protect Haitian and Syrian families from being forced back into danger," he added. "America should not turn its back on people who came here seeking safety."Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
- Your child’s new best friend might be a Chinese surveillance deviceby John Mac Ghlionn on June 25, 2026 at 5:00 pm
The anxiety surrounding TikTok was never difficult to understand. Parents worried about what their children were watching and how much time they were spending online. Politicians sounded alarms about biased algorithms. Experts warned about mass manipulation.Letting a foreign-owned app into a teenager’s hand felt like a reckless gamble, because it was. Yet a smartphone still requires a conscious choice to unlock a screen and tap an icon.Interactive teddy bears, on the other hand, require nothing but an innocent child's trust. When that cuddly toy rolls off a Chinese assembly line, as most of them do, it opens a pipeline from the playroom straight to a foreign government. American households are welcoming data collection hubs directly into the family circle, by way of devices that arrive packaged as comforting companions.When toys become spiesThe scale of this threat surpasses the reach of traditional social media. TikTok captures keyboard strokes and viewing histories. A conversational toy captures the raw psychology of a developing child. It records bedtime fears, family schedules, and background arguments. Children speak to their favorite toys with total honesty. Into tiny microphones, they whisper secrets they would hide from their own parents or not even think to share.Parents must recognize that convenience carries a hidden cost.This intimate surveillance apparatus serves the strategic ambitions of the China's Communist Party. Article 7 of China's 2017 National Intelligence Law mandates that all domestic organizations cooperate with state intelligence efforts. Every audio file, voiceprint, and psychological profile collected by these toys belongs to Beijing on demand. Chinese tech firms must comply with state security services. American stores hand valuable shelf space over to surveillance tools funded by Washington's primary adversary. The software inside these items acts as a digital Trojan horse.Every conversation helps these toys learn more about the children using them, from their interests and fears to how their thinking changes over time. The underlying systems log levels of vocabulary, emotional triggers, and psychological vulnerabilities. Voice data creates a permanent biometric print. The microphones pick up everything spoken in the room, capturing financial anxieties, parental disputes, and daily routines. This data provides a detailed map of the American household. Chinese manufacturers program these devices to deliver those family secrets directly to state security agencies.Cascading perilsThe immediate danger to children operates on physical and ideological levels. These toys rely on large language models trained on uncurated datasets. They frequently hallucinate, generating false information with absolute confidence. A plastic dinosaur might tell a child that eating pennies unlocks a secret treasure. It might explain that electrical outlets are actually secret doors meant to be explored with a fork. Physical safety depends entirely on the erratic outputs of a remote server.The ideological conditioning is equally deliberate. When a child asks a DeepSeek-connected toy about human rights or international history, the toy's response reflects Chinese state-trained data. The toy may repeat approved talking points in a soothing, reassuring voice. It may reframe authoritarian propaganda into nighttime fairy tales and nursery rhymes. RELATED: AI is killing the how-to book — and literacy is its next victim CookiesForDevo/Getty Images Current legal frameworks offer no protection against this encroachment. The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act dates back to the days of dial-up internet. The law stops at regulating website cookies, completely missing the fact that smart toys can now record and copy a child’s speech. Market incentives ensure that retail supply chains favor these products. Store owners buy these devices at low wholesale prices to maximize holiday profit margins. Corporate compliance departments check for physical choking hazards, battery security, and lead paint. They ignore the open server connections, routing data straight to Hangzhou.No comprehensive legislation bans foreign-controlled AI from interacting with minors. No regulatory agency has the authority to audit the source code of imported smart toys. Politicians treat the issue as a distant problem, ignoring the shipping containers currently arriving at American ports.Asleep at the wheelParents assume that product safety extends to the software inside a colorful box. They expect the government must somehow vet items sold by reputable retailers. That assumption is an illusion. The market moves faster than Congress or bureaucratic regulators. The pursuit of low-cost electronics ensures that families remain the primary target of data acquisition. The defense of the playroom relies entirely on a parent turning the power switch off.It's a corporate playbook that depends on parental exhaustion. A busy parent views a responsive toy as an affordable, good-enough babysitter. The device never grows tired of hearing the same story. It never snaps or loses its patience. It merely listens, logs, and transmits. The child receives a tireless friend, and a foreign intelligence service receives a permanent listening post in the American bedroom.Moreover, this dynamic transforms childhood into a commodity. In previous generations, children enjoyed a period of unmonitored development. They processed thoughts, threw tantrums, and invented games without creating a permanent record. Smart toys end this privacy. A child's formative years become training data for algorithms designed to predict and shape human behavior. Securing the home requires a fundamental shift in consumer awareness. The immediate solution remains low-tech. Parents must recognize that convenience carries a hidden cost. The safest toy lacks an internet connection. It contains no microchips, no microphones, and no software updates. It requires imagination rather than automated code. Until federal policy confronts the reality of digital espionage in consumer goods, the boundary of the home depends on a basic refusal to connect the playroom to the internet.
- Supreme Court sides with Trump administration regarding asylum-seekersby Wyatt Feist on June 25, 2026 at 4:43 pm
The Supreme Court has ruled in favor of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin and the Trump administration regarding when asylum-seekers officially "arrive" in the U.S.In a 6-3 decision split along ideological lines, the Court held that aliens seeking asylum do not “arrive in the United States” until they physically cross the border into the country and therefore are not entitled to inspection by border officials until they have entered onto U.S. soil.'An alien "arrives in the United States" only when he crosses the border.'The case stems from the federal government’s “metering” policy — first adopted in 2016 amid a surge of migrants at the southern border — that limited the number of aliens whom Customs and Border Patrol agents would inspect each day for asylum. When a port of entry reached capacity, officials physically prevented additional aliens from entering until capacity became available again. In 2017, asylum-seekers and Al Otro Lado, an immigration advocacy organization, brought forward a class-action lawsuit arguing that the federal government was unlawfully denying aliens access to asylum procedures. The federal district court in Southern California granted summary judgment in favor of the noncitizens and declared the government’s policy unlawful. The metering policy was then discontinued in November 2021, though the second Trump administration has attempted to revive it. A divided Ninth Circuit panel affirmed the summary judgment, ruling that an alien “arrives in the United States” when said alien — even while standing on the Mexico side of the border — encounters a U.S. official and thus must be inspected for asylum claims. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito reversed the lower court’s ruling. The court held that the meaning of “arrives in the United States” requires physically entering the country. Therefore, under the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, an alien standing on the Mexico side of the border is not entitled to inspection by a U.S. official. “We hold that an alien who is standing in Mexico does not ‘arriv[e] in the United States’ by attempting, and failing, to set foot in this country. An alien ‘arrives in the United States’ only when he crosses the border,” Alito wrote.RELATED: Ketanji Brown Jackson melts down over SCOTUS ruling against Hawaii gun law: 'The court's objective is protecting guns' U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justices Samuel Alito (L) and Clarence Thomas (R).Chip Somodevilla/POOL/AFP/Getty ImagesThe court highlighted the text of other INA provisions and subsequent amendments to the statute to indicate that Congress intended asylum and inspection rights to apply only after an alien enters the country. “That Congress amended §1158(a) in IIRIRA to replace ‘at a land border or port of entry’ with ‘arrives in the United States’ suggests that we should not read those phrases — which carry different ordinary meanings — to have the same meaning.”Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justices Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson, dissented, arguing that Congress intended border officials to inspect and process all aliens who present themselves at ports of entry, regardless of whether they have physically stepped into the U.S. The dissent contended that the majority’s decision “ignores the statutory context and history” of the INA and weakens the asylum protections Congress created for people fleeing persecution. "The Court today holds that the Executive Branch may circumvent all these mandatory procedures by having U.S. immigration officers stand at the border and physically block noncitizens from setting a foot onto U.S. soil.” Sotomayor added, "The Court's illogical interpretation is driven almost entirely by a fixation on a single word: 'in.'"Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
- Congress Seeks Testimony From Former Biden Lawyer in ActBlue Probe
Three House committee chairs are asking a former Biden White House counsel to comply with their investigation into Democrat fundraising platform ActBlue, after the counsel in her private practice issued a blistering review of ActBlue’s process for screening out foreign contributions. Dana Remus, the former White House counsel, is now a partner at the Democrat-leaning...
- EXCLUSIVE: Pakistani Student Visa Holders Spark Legislative Action, National Security Concerns
FIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL — Indiana state Rep. Andrew Ireland is sounding the alarm on Pakistani and other foreign students imported by Indiana University to fill American jobs in its medical school. This move from the university prompted Ireland to not only shed light on the issue, but also introduce legislation that would cut...
- ‘Stop Hiding’: House Freedom Caucus Blasts Senate Over Voter ID
After the United States Senate voted on Wednesday to go on a 19-day recess instead of voting on the SAVE America Act, the House Freedom Caucus declared that the House of Representatives should not act on Senate legislation until the voter ID legislation is passed. “There should be no more legislation until the Senate is...
- Why Are Taxpayers Forced to Subsidize Chronic Disease?
Americans should be free to buy soda, but taxpayers should not be forced to subsidize this unhealthy habit. Now, a district judge is blocking state efforts to keep taxpayer dollars from funding soda purchases. The ruling challenges the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s authority to approve state Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program waivers, more commonly known as...



