NFL fan has two-word message for Hamas terrorists after Israel attacks

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A moment of silence for the victims of the terror attacks in Israel was held Thursday night ahead of the Kansas City Chiefs’ game against the Denver Broncos.

More than 1,000 Israelis and more than two dozen Americans have been killed in Hamas’ attacks. The NFL teams remembered the lives lost before the national anthem.

As the public address announcer thanked those in attendance for their silence, one fan shouted an explicit message aimed at terrorists responsible for the massacre.

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APP USERS VIEW THE MOMENT HERE. EXPLICIT LANGUAGE

“F— Hamas!” the fan shouted.

The Broncos released a statement on the terror attacks after the anthem was played.

TOM BRADY CONDEMNS HAMAS TERRORIST ATTACK ON ISRAEL: ‘THERE SHOULD BE NO GRAY AREA’

“Prior to tonight’s game, the NFL held a moment of silence for the victims of the terrorist attacks in Israel,” the team said on X.

“The Broncos join the NFL community in mourning the innocent lives lost. We condemn all forms of terrorism and our hearts go out to the victims & their families.”

The Chiefs released a statement on Tuesday.

“The Kansas City Chiefs denounce the recent senseless acts of terrorism and mourn the loss of innocent lives in Israel. We pray for the families impacted by this horrific and unconscionable violence,” the team said.

 

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[Uk] Colorado officer found guilty in Elijah McClain death

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Image source, Getty Images

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Under Colorado law, Roedema faces possible prison time and a fine

A Colorado officer has been found guilty in the death of Elijah McClain, who was pinned down before a medic injected him with ketamine and he died.

A jury unanimously convicted officer Randy Roedema of criminally negligent homicide and third-degree assault.

Another officer, Jason Rosenblatt, facing the same charges was acquitted.

Both men were accused of using excessive force and ignoring the unarmed black man’s repeated cries of “I can’t breathe”.

Under Colorado law, Roedema now faces possible prison time and a fine.

He was suspended without pay from the Aurora Police Department, while Mr Rosenblatt was fired in 2020.

The 12-person jury reached a verdict on Thursday after deliberating for 16 hours in over two days. The trial is the first of three in relation to Mr McClain’s death.

On 24 August 2019, Mr McClain, a 23-year-old autistic massage therapist, was walking home from a corner shop when three white police officers confronted him after an emergency caller reported a “sketchy” person in the Denver suburb of Aurora.

He was wearing a balaclava, which his family has said protected him from chronic chills due to his anaemia.

Listening to music on his headphones, he had initially ignored officers’ calls for him to stop walking.

Body camera footage of the incident showed him pleading with officers that he did nothing wrong, before they wrestled him to the ground and placed him in a chokehold.

Seven times, Mr McClain was heard telling the officers: “I can’t breathe” – the same refrain uttered by George Floyd as he was murdered by a police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 2020.

After officers called for assistance, a medic injected Mr McClain with ketamine to sedate him.

Mr McClain went limp, stopped breathing and never regained consciousness. He was declared brain-dead three days later.

A key focus of the two officers’ trial was how Mr McClain died.

In their closing arguments, prosecutors said Roedema and Mr Rosenblatt “chose force at every opportunity” instead of de-escalating the situation, counter to their training.

Meanwhile, lawyers for the officers argued they had no choice but to forcefully subdue him after he resisted them.

They also argued that it was the ketamine that killed Mr McClain, and that the paramedics were responsible for his death.

An autopsy report in September 2022 concluded that he had died from “complications of ketamine administration following forcible restraint”.

In a statement on social media after Thursday’s verdict, Aurora Police Department Chief Art Acevedo said: “We respect the verdict handed by the jury.”

Mr McClain was declared dead on 27 August 2019, but his death faced renewed scrutiny after Mr Floyd’s murder.

Several others have also been charged with his death, including a third officer, Nathan Woodyard, and medics Jeremy Cooper and Peter Cichuniec.

All three have pleaded not guilty. They will be tried in two separate cases later this year.

Roedema is scheduled to be sentenced in January.

 

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Lake Mead officials warn of rare but deadly brain-eating amoeba found present in hot springs

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Officials in Nevada are warning visitors of a brain-eating amoeba, with a near 100% infection fatality rate, present at Lake Mead.

Lake Mead National Recreation Area said Naegleria fowleri – popularly known as “brain-eating amoeba” – has been found in hot springs at the hot springs below the Hoover Dam.

“Naegleria fowleri has been found in hot springs,” according to a spokesperson for Lake Mead National Recreation Area. “This amoeba enters through the nose and can cause a deadly infection that causes a sudden and severe headache, fever, and vomiting.”

The national recreation area advised visitors to avoid diving, splashing water, or submerging in hot spring waters.

In the U.S., there have been at least four reported deaths this year from the infection, which occurs when the amoeba enters the nose during submersion in fresh water, usually while swimming. 

LAKE MEAD BODY IN BARREL IS VICTIM WHO WAS LIKELY SHOT DECADES AGO, POLICE SAY 

According to the CDC, Nagleria fowleri can cause the deadly primary amebic meningoencephalitis (PAM), which destroys brain tissue.

Of the 157 people known to be infected in the U.S. between 1962 and 2022, only four individuals survived — meaning the death rate is more than 97%.

In late July, a 17-year-old Georgia girl, Morgan Ebenroth, died after becoming infected while swimming in a lake with friends.

LAKE MEAD NATIONAL RECREATION AREA DROWNINGS PROMPT WARNINGS FROM OFFICIALS

And in February, a Florida man died after he was infected when washing his face and rinsing his sinuses with tap water containing Nagleria fowleri.

The amoeba thrives in warm water, growing best in July, August and September, the CDC says.

Some experts believe that climate change could make Naegleria fowleri infections more common.

“As air temperatures rise, water temperatures in lakes and ponds also rise, and water levels may be lower,” the CDC’s website states. “These conditions provide a more favorable environment for the amoeba to grow.”

Fox News’ Melissa Rudy contributed to this report.

 

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Trump’s Netanyahu diss becoming major 2024 lightning rod as rivals blast comments on ‘smart’ terror group

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EXCLUSIVE: Some of Donald Trump’s leading rivals for the 2024 GOP nomination are blasting the former president over his controversial critical comments of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his description of a terror group as “smart.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, in an exclusive Fox News interview on Thursday, pointed to Trump’s comments and argued that the former president “makes no sense.”

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who served as ambassador to the United Nations during Trump’s first two years in office, said in a one-on-one interview with Fox News Digital a couple of hours later that “we can’t be doing this. You don’t need to be talking about how good Hezbollah is, and you don’t need to be talking about how bad Netanyahu is.”

Trump’s comments, made during a speech Wednesday night in Florida, came just days after a sneak attack Saturday by Hamas on Israel resulted in the deadliest assault on the Jewish State in decades. Thousands have been killed and wounded after Hamas militants swarmed into Israel and butchered civilians, and in the resulting Israeli counterattacks on the Hamas controlled Gaza Strip.

HEAD HERE FOR LIVE FOX NEWS UPDATES ON THE ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR

Trump, who often showcases that he was the strongest defender of Israel ever to serve as president, criticized Netanyahu, claiming the Israeli leader backed out at the last minute in the plan to kill Iran’s top security and intelligence commander, Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, who was taken out by an American drone strike in 2020.

“I’ll never forget that Bibi Netanyahu let us down. That was a very terrible thing,” Trump said. “We were disappointed by that, very disappointed. But we did the job ourselves, and it was absolute precision, magnificent, beautiful job. And then Bibi tried to take credit for it. That didn’t make me feel too good.”

WATCH FOX NEWS CHANNEL COVERAGE OF THE ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR

Pointing to the apparent Israeli intelligence failure to anticipate the Hamas attack, Trump said Israel’s “got to straighten it out” and “strengthen themselves up.”

Trump also blamed President Biden’s administration for the terror attack on Israel — as well as for clashes on Israel’s northern border with Hezbollah, which like Hamas is backed by Iran. Trump credited Hezbollah, which along with Hamas is committed to the destruction of the Jewish State, saying “Hezbollah, they’re very smart.”

The Florida governor, who signed an executive order Thursday to conduct rescue operations in Israel and to provide support to Jerusalem in its war against Hamas, told Fox News that “our ally has been under an unprecedented assault. You’ve seen the death toll continue to mount in the most barbaric fashion. This is a time to be standing with Israel.”

2024 DIVIDE: GOP PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES SPAR OVER ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR

Pointing to Trump’s comments, DeSantis argued that to be attacking the prime minister and the defense minister just makes no sense. To be saying that Hezbollah, talking about how smart they are, just doesn’t make any sense.”

“I don’t know what he was doing. I know they got him on the teleprompter. When he gets off that teleprompter, then there’s things that happen. But the reality is this is the time to be strong, it’s a time for moral clarity and to make sure that Israel is able to defend itself to the hilt,” added DeSantis, who was interviewed at the New Hampshire Statehouse, minutes before he formally filed to place his name on the state’s GOP presidential primary.

Haley, interviewed in Rochester, New Hampshire following a town hall, charged that Trump “can’t leave the past alone. I’m mean everything that he thinks about is how someone treated him or what they said to him or what happened in the past. The world is a dangerous place. We’ve got to be dealing with our issues straight on. Focused, disciplined, and ready to go.”

“We can’t be doing this. You don’t need to be talking about how good Hezbollah is and you don’t need to be talking about how bad Netanyahu is,” Haley said. “Right now we need to have the backs of Israel. We need to do what it takes to eliminate Hamas. We need to do what it takes to get those American hostages and Israeli hostages home. And we need to do what it takes to bring peace in the world and stop all the other nonsense and chaos.”

Haley wasn’t the only Trump administration official to criticize the former president.

Trump’s two-time running-mate, former Vice President Mike Pence, said in an interview on radio show “New Hampshire Today with Chris Ryan” that “Hezbollah aren’t smart, they’re evil.”

“This is no time for the former president, or any other American leader to be sending any message other than America stands with Israel,” Pence added. “And look, I know the former president was frustrated with Netanyahu; he’s been critical over the last two years… I consider him a friend, and I’m proud of the relationship that America had under our administration with Israel.”

North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, another rival for the GOP presidential nomination, also criticized Trump’s comments.

Burgum, after filing to place his name on the New Hampshire primary ballot, told Fox News Digital that “it’s about leading forward. It’s not about criticizing something you know. You want it you want to do that, then be a pundit on TV. Do you want to lead? Then you actually get it in. And you have to you have to take responsibility for what’s going on. And you have to say, here’s our path forward.”

A Trump campaign spokesperson clarified the GOP front-runner’s remarks in a statement to Fox News Digital.

“President Trump was clearly pointing out how incompetent Biden and his administration were by telegraphing to the terrorists an area that is susceptible to an attack,” the spokesperson said. “Smart does not equal good. It just proves Biden is stupid.”

The spokesperson also pointed to another moment from Wednesday’s speech, when Trump said that if he regains office, “the United States will fully support Israel, defeating, dismantling, and permanently destroying the terrorist group, Hamas.”

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While Trump and Netanyahu were close allies for years, the former president turned on the embattled Israel leader after Netanyahu congratulated then-President-elect Biden for winning the 2020 election while Trump was still trying to overturn the results.

White House spokesman Andrew Bates called Trump’s statements “dangerous and unhinged,” while the Israeli communications minister, Shlomo Karhi, told Israel’s Channel 13 that it was “shameful that a man like that, a former U.S. president, abets propaganda and disseminates things that wound the spirit of Israel’s fighters and its citizens.”

The political question going forward is whether Trump’s comments will hurt his current political standing as the commanding front-runner in the GOP presidential nomination race. 

“I think he stepped in it, but I think like almost everything else, it’s not likely to leave a lasting mark,” longtime New Hampshire based Republican consultant Jim Merrill told Fox News.

Pointing to Trump’s record in the White House, including his moving of the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, Merrill said the former president’s “kind of inoculated himself on Israel.”

“Time will tell, but I think it’s likely this will be just another one of those things that we all thought might be an issue for him but won’t be,” Merril, a veteran of numerous GOP presidential campaigns, predicted.

Fox News’ Bryan Llena, Sally Persons, Brooke Singman, Danielle Wallace, and the Associated Press contributed to this report. 

Get the latest updates from the 2024 campaign trail, exclusive interviews and more at our Fox News Digital election hub.

 

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U.S. electric-vehicle sales hit record high, Tesla loses market share: Report

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A Tesla supercharging station in Kettleman City, California, Jan. 25, 2023.
Mike Blake | Reuters

Electric vehicle (EV) sales in the United States jumped to more than 300,000 for the first time in the third quarter, but industry leader Tesla‘s market share slipped to the lowest on record, a report by Cox Automotive showed on Thursday.

Tesla now dominates just half of the market, down from the 62% it held in the first quarter, despite a price war started by the Elon Musk-led company to solidify its foothold in the competitive EV arena.

However, the company could reverse the downward trend with the launch of its Cybertruck electric pickup truck, which is set to be delivered to customers in the current quarter, the market research firm said.

Playing catch-up, other automakers have been aggressively cutting prices to counter a tough demand environment triggered by high inflation and rising borrowing costs.

“Higher inventory levels, more product availability, and downward pricing pressure have helped spur continued linear growth of EV sales in the U.S. market,” Cox said.

The price war started by Tesla has brought average EV prices down to $50,683 in September, down from $52,212 in the prior month, Cox added.

Total EV sales for the third quarter rose nearly 50% from a year ago, and accounted for a record 7.9% of total industry sales, the report showed.

Rivian Automotive handed over more cars in the third quarter than analysts expected, and reiterated its annual production target of 52,000 vehicles.

Tesla, meanwhile, missed market estimates for deliveries in the third quarter as planned upgrades at its factories to roll out a newer version of the Model 3 mass-market sedan forced production halts.

Industry analysis firm Canalys said earlier this month that while Tesla is dominant in the United States, there is an increasing demand for a wider range of EV options to satisfy the growing interest in electric vehicles.

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Hundreds of US families stranded in war-torn Israel plead with State Dept for safe return: 'We're scared'

Hundreds of U.S. families are stranded in Israel without a safe way home after most major airlines canceled routes out of the country and U.S.-bound flights remain unavailable following Hamas’ vicious terrorist attack in the region.

Several thousand Americans traveled to Israel in late September to celebrate the holiday of Sukkot, which spans over several days and has become a popular time for Jewish families to visit the Holy Land. For many in Jerusalem, the holiday celebrations were interrupted by air raid sirens signaling incoming missiles in the region, forcing them to take refuge in designated bomb shelters in their hotels or apartments. 

Orthodox Jews there had been off electronics, including their cellphones, and had not known the extent of the bloodshed in southern Israel until Sunday evening when the holiday concluded. That’s when they learned the harrowing details of Hamas’ massacre on Israeli civilians and were informed that their flights home had been canceled indefinitely. 

They spent the next several hours scrambling for alternative flights to no avail. Many of them were forced to accept the dreaded reality: They were now stuck in a region bracing for war.

HAMAS BRUTALITY AGAINST ISRAELI INNOCENTS SHOCKS THE WORLD’S CONSCIENCE

Strike on Ashkelon, Israel causes car fire

Israeli firefighters extinguish fire at a site struck by a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip in Ashkelon, Israel, on Monday. (AP/Tsafrir Abayov)

“This whole ordeal has been unimaginably stressful,” Moshe K., a resident of New Jersey who was visiting Jerusalem with 10 family members, told Fox News Digital. “I’m embarrassed of how the State Department has done nothing thus far to get us home other than collecting tens of thousands of names of stranded Americans who can’t get a flight out.”

Moshe was scheduled to return home on Monday, two days after Hamas launched its brutal attack in southern Israel, murdering over 700 civilians. He said he fears his family will be stuck in Israel for several more days if the U.S. State Department doesn’t intervene. 

When he’s not frantically searching for flights home, Moshe and his family, including his children, elderly parents and young grandchildren, have been spending the past three days in and out of bomb shelters in their rented Jerusalem condo as air raid sirens continue blaring across the country.

Moshe said he was told that Switzerland, Poland, Brazil and other European countries have sent charter planes to evacuate their citizens from the war-torn territory, but Americans have received no word from the consulate about an evacuation plan. U.S. families and individuals have been instructed to fill out an online form requesting help from the State Department, but most of them have not heard back.

AT LEAST 22 AMERICANS, OVER 1,200 ISRAELIS DEAD IN HAMAS WAR

“While I fully understand that the State Department also has to sadly deal with killed and captured Americans, they have sufficient manpower to assign people to handle that aspect as well as the evacuation plan. The fact that 80 hours later, absolutely no word has come out as to what that plan is or concrete steps being taken to evacuate thousands who are stranded, is absolutely appalling,” Moshe said.

“Not a word about their ‘evacuation plan,’ that at this point looks like it could take a week or so. They should be ashamed,” the worried father said Monday.

Many other stranded Americans expressed a similar sentiment.

A resident of Clifton, New Jersey, who asked to be identified only as Rivkie, traveled to Israel with her family at eight months pregnant for the holidays. Her doctor cleared her for international travel because she was scheduled to return home before the start of her ninth month, but with no available return flights or assurances from the U.S. government, Rivkie fears she will be forced to remain in Israel and deliver her baby in a hospital already overwhelmed with wounded war victims.

“This has been so hard on my family, I’m pregnant and I’m slowly running out of days to fly home,” she said. “Why isn’t the U.S. government doing more to help us? European airlines are working to bring their citizens home.”

TREY YINGST WALKS THROUGH ISRAELI HOME ATTACKED BY HAMAS: ‘MOST HORRIFIC THING I HAVE EVER SEEN’

Rivkie said she’s worried how her young toddlers are processing the chaos, anxiety and deep sadness in the air.

“I’m worried about my kids. This has been traumatic. I took them outside today, and they asked if there will be another ‘boom boom’ soon. They cry every time we have to run into a shelter,” she added.

“I’m worried about my kids. This has been traumatic. They cry every time we have to run into a shelter.”

— Rivkie, Fox News Digital

Many Americans trapped in Israel have been glued to their phones and computers in the hopes of a return flight opening up. If anything does become available, they are booking several flights at a time only for them to be canceled hours later. Some Americans have managed to leave the country with flights headed to Europe and then booked a connecting flight to the U.S. from there.

Chana Rowe, a resident of Queens, New York, told Fox News Digital that she has been staying at a hotel in Jerusalem with her family since her flight to JFK this week was canceled. They have been advised not to leave the hotel unless necessary and have spent most of their days holed up in their rooms desperately searching for connecting European flights or private charters to bring them home.

“The past few days have been a nightmare, in so many ways,” Rowe said. “We’ve had to run into the shelter multiple times. It is scary to think that it could be several days before we can leave as the airlines continue to cancel most flights.”

“We are all changed forever. I can’t fathom going back to normal life.”

— Chana Rowe, Fox News Digital

 “My family and I will never forget this time. We are all traumatized to say the least. There are young children with us who cannot fully grasp what is going on but the devastation, horror and fear in the air is palpable. We are terrified to go outside but we don’t feel completely safe in the hotel either. We are not sure where it is safest,” she added.

Rowe said her family has received no support or communication from the U.S. consulate.

“The U.S. government has not provided any means of support for the Americans that are stuck here,” she told Fox.

For some Americans stranded in the region, there is a deep sense of guilt felt by those trying to leave while their relatives, many of them residents of Israel, stay behind to face the war. The conflicting feelings among the Jewish Americans there — a longing to remain in Israel to support the Jewish State, while fearing for their own safety — has been weighing heavily on them.

GOP LAWMAKER RESCUES AMERICANS FROM WAR ORDEAL IN ISRAEL

The Albrechts were supposed to travel home from Israel this week. As war has broken out since the Hamas terrorist attack, they have endured fear but also felt pride for Israeli tenacity.

“Seeing what Hamas is doing to our fellow Jews is absolutely horrific. Anyone who doesn’t view these actions as acts of pure evil and hatred is inhumane,” Rowe said. “We are all changed forever. I can’t fathom going back to normal life once we do return to New York. I can’t stop thinking about the lives that were taken, those kidnapped, the women and teenagers that were raped, held hostage, for being Jewish. The whole world should be supporting Israel and should be helping out in any way they could.”

“We’re scared, we don’t know what to expect every time we run into a bomb shelter,” she added, “and at the same time, we are filled with deep sadness and feel sick to our stomach for our brothers and sisters just a few hours away who were brutally murdered or are grieving the loss of loved ones.”

Shai Albrecht, a personal trainer and Instagram fitness influencer from Maryland, traveled to Israel for the holidays with her husband and three children, ages 5, 7 and 9, with a scheduled return flight on Monday. Her flight with United Airlines was canceled indefinitely. Albrecht and her children have been using their unplanned time in Israel to support the IDF soldiers who’ve been deployed, buying meals and fundraising for them when they’re not rushing into a bomb shelter.

“We have now had to go into the shelters many times. We have heard about this as American Jews, but to experience it is completely different,” Albrecht said. “There is a fear and sense of insecurity all the time, even when the sirens were not going off. I never realized that I could be so nervous using the bathroom. I keep thinking, if the siren goes off now, will I be able to… grab my kids and get them all in the shelter in 30 seconds? My son seems most impacted, he constantly wants to check the Red Alert App and look outside for missiles,” she told Fox News Digital.

Like Rowe and others, Albrecht said she too has been grappling with conflicting feelings of guilt, fear and trepidation.

“This may be a war-torn country, but it is also my country as a Jew,” she said. “But, I’m also scared. I simultaneously want to run home to my quiet farm in the U.S., but also stay and support my family — literally and figuratively, in Israel. I have a lot of deeply conflicting feelings of fear, guilt, and trepidation for what may come tomorrow.”

“I simultaneously want to run home to my quiet farm in the U.S., but also stay and support my family.”

— Shai Albrecht, Fox News Digital

Albrecht said she trusts that the U.S. government will assist “if it gets to the point that our lives are in danger. Depending on how tonight and tomorrow are, I fear that this may get much worse,” she told News Digital.

“Again, I am deeply conflicted, I know that I have the privilege to leave in a way my Israeli cousins do not, but also know that the kids school started today and they are missing their home, their friends, and their sense of normalcy. This has given us all a newfound sense of appreciation for the tenacity and dedication of Israelis,” she added.

Until they can return home, Albrecht said she and her family will do their “best to support the Israeli people and show our children that in times of national crisis each of us, no matter where we are located, must step up to help.”

CONGRESS URGES STATE DEPARTMENT TO USE CHARTER FLIGHTS TO EVACUATE AMERICANS FROM ISRAEL

A source familiar with the situation told Fox News that the State Department is working on arranging flights to bring stranded Americans home as soon as possible.

The State Department is “acutely aware of the currently limited capacity on commercial flights and the high demand from U.S. citizens wanting to depart,” a spokesperson told Fox News.

“The State Department has teams communicating 24/7 with U.S. citizens and providing them assistance through phone calls, an online form, and the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program,” its statement reads. “Our goal is to assist U.S citizens who want to leave Israel with a safe means of doing so.” 

At this time, the State Department encouraged U.S. citizens to “take advantage” of commercial flights that involve transiting a third country if they are unable to book a direct flight to the U.S.

“In order to meet high demand for flights, we are also exploring other contract options by air, land, and sea to nearby countries,” the department said, adding that it will continue to provide updates to U.S. citizens who have registered via its online form as information becomes available.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken. (SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

The statement comes a day after members of Congress urged Secretary of State Antony Blinken to do everything possible to evacuate Americans out of Israel.

Included in the request to Blinken was a push to charter flights out of Israel, as airlines have canceled most flights out of Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv.

STATE DEPARTMENT EXPLORES OPTIONS TO GET US CITIZENS OUT OF ISRAEL WARZONE

“As the number of casualties continue to rise, our constituents who remain in Israel fear for their lives,” the letter to Blinken reads. “We ask that you consider charter flights and military options for evacuation, simultaneously. At this harrowing moment in Israel’s history, it is more important than ever that every American who is looking to return home has the opportunity to do so.”

Hamas-led forces poured over the Israel-Gaza border on Saturday while residents were sleeping, dragging people, including women and children into the streets, taking some hostage while beheading and brutally murdering others. More than 700 Israelis, including men, women, children and the elderly, were indiscriminately killed in one day — the largest terror attack in a single day in Israel’s history.

Two days later, Israel’s military discovered many scenes of unspeakable bloodshed perpetrated by Hamas.  

The Hamas attack shocked Israel and the global community and has sparked a war on the Palestinian terrorist organization. More than 1,200 Israelis have been killed, and 25 Americans have been confirmed dead, with others still missing.

The U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem told Fox News Digital that U.S. citizens seeking to be in touch with the U.S. Embassy in Israel should visit the website cacms.state.gov/s/crisis-intake or call +1-833-890-9595 and +1-606-641-0131. Any notifications from the Embassy can be found at https://il.usembassy.gov/category/alert/

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Billionaire CEO demands UPenn leaders quit and donations halt over alleged failure to address antisemitism on campus


New York
CNN
 — 

Wall Street CEO Marc Rowan is calling for the leaders of the University of Pennsylvania to resign and donors to close their checkbooks over an alleged failure to condemn antisemitism and hate.

Rowan, the CEO of private equity giant Apollo Global Management, wrote in an op-ed posted online Wednesday that UPenn failed to condemn an event held on campus last month that the university acknowledged included speakers with a history of making antisemitic remarks.

“Why is UPenn repeating tragic mistakes of the past? Words of hate and violence must be met with clear, reasoned condemnation, rooted in morality from those in positions of authority,” Rowan wrote.

Rowan, whose fortune is estimated by Forbes to be nearly $6 billion, is one of the university’s wealthiest donors and supporters. He chairs the board of advisors at the university’s famed Wharton School and is the latest business leader to slam an Ivy League school over its handling of antisemitism in the wake of Hamas deadly attack on Israel.

UPenn leaders said in a statement Tuesday they were “devastated by the horrific assault on Israel by Hamas.”

“These abhorrent attacks have resulted in the tragic loss of life and escalating violence and unrest in the region,” UPenn President Elizabeth Magill and UPenn Provost John Jackson, Jr., said in that statement.

But the billionaire CEO argues UPenn leaders failed to condemn the “hate-filled” Palestine Writes Literature Festival, a multi-day event that took place at the university’s campus last month.

“The polarizing Palestine Writes gathering featured well-known antisemites and fomenters of hate and racism and was underwritten, supported and hosted by various UPenn academic departments and affiliates,” Rowan said.

The Apollo CEO, who is also a parent of UPenn graduates, demanded all UPenn alumni and supporters “who believe we are heading in the wrong direction to ‘Close their Checkbooks’” until Magill and Board of Trustees Chair Scott Bok both step down.

Rowan also alleged that instead of condemning the event, Magill and Bok have been “working to purge all Trustees with dissenting points of view by explicitly and aggressively demanding” the resignation of those who signed an open letter calling for Magill to resign.

In response, UPenn issued a statement from Julie Platt, vice chair of the school’s board of trustees and past president of the Penn Alumni board of directors, who said she has “full confidence” in the leadership of Magill and Bok.

“I join with the many members of the Penn family in expressing solidarity with all those who have been impacted by the horrific assault on Israel by Hamas and in condemning these hateful acts of terror,” Platt said. “The University has publicly committed to unprecedented steps to further combat antisemitism on its campus, reaffirmed deep support for our Jewish community, and condemned the devastating and barbaric attacks on Israel by Hamas. The Executive Committee of Penn’s Board of Trustees has unanimously endorsed the actions taken by the University.”

Bok, who is the CEO of investment bank Greenhill & Co., said in a statement provided by the University that the trustee executive committee decided not to force anyone to resign even if board members publicly opposed decisions.

“Mr. Rowan is a respected alumnus and benefactor of the University and is entitled to his views,” Bok said. “But it is a falsehood for him to say that the University sought to ‘purge’ dissenting Trustees from Penn’s Board in relation to the Palestinian Writes Literature Festival.”

UPenn leaders issued a statement last month ahead of the Palestine Writes Literature Festival that acknowledged some of the speakers have a history of antisemitism and condemned antisemitism broadly, though not the festival specifically.

“While the Festival will feature more than 100 speakers, many have raised deep concerns about several speakers who have a documented and troubling history of engaging in antisemitism by speaking and acting in ways that denigrate Jewish people,” read the September 12 statement from Magill, Jackson, Jr. and Steven Fluharty, dean of the School of Arts & Sciences.

“We unequivocally – and emphatically – condemn antisemitism as antithetical to our institutional values,” the UPenn leaders wrote. “As a university, we also fiercely support the free exchange of ideas as central to our educational mission. This includes the expression of views that are controversial and even those that are incompatible with our institutional values.”

Organizers of the Palestine Writes festival denied that it embraced antisemitism, according to UPenn student newspaper The Daily Pennsylvanian.

In an interview on CNBC on Thursday, Rowan argued the central issue was not hosting the festival, but failing to forcefully condemn it.

“That condemnation should not be so hard. Unfortunately, if you lack moral courage, it is hard,” Rowan said, adding there is a “climate of fear” at UPenn where professors are afraid of being canceled or ostracized.

Rowan’s UPenn op-ed was praised on Wednesday by Bill Ackman, the hedge fund billionaire who earlier this week called for Harvard University to publicly release the names of students who belong to organizations that signed a letter blaming Israel for last weekend’s deadly attacks by Hamas.

“We see sickening parallels between Harvard leadership’s inaction against Harvard’s antisemitism and the failure by UPenn’s leadership to take a stand against hate,” Rowan wrote in his op-ed.

The Apollo CEO argued the “embrace of antisemitism and other forms of discrimination by these institutions legitimizes and reinforces hate, racism and, ultimately, violence.”

Rowan warned there will be financial repercussions for UPenn’s handling of the situation.

In his op-ed, he called for alumni and supporters to send UPenn $1 donations in place of their normal contributions “so that no one misses the point.”

“I think the fundraising impact from this will be overwhelming,” Rowan told CNBC on Thursday.


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Fans grill pro-wrestling league for making ‘antisemitic’ joke days after Hamas kills 1,000+ Israelis

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

The All Elite Wrestling (AEW) league got into hot water recently after its wrestlers taunted a rival fighter of Jewish heritage with what viewers alleged was an antisemitic joke during a televised event

During the broadcast of the AEW Dynamite Title Tuesday event this week, rival fighters threatened to beat wrestler Maxwell Jacob Friedman in the wrestling ring with a $10 roll of quarters.

The threat generated controversy as Friedman’s AEW backstory included him dealing with childhood bullies using the same method because he was Jewish. 

Viewers took to social media to ask, “Why was this approved?” Considering the antisemitic reference was broadcast only days after Hamas’ deadly attack on innocent civilians in Israel which claimed the lives of over 1,000 people.

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During one of the AEW skits Tuesday night, Friedman’s rival, wrestler Juice Robinson, previewed their next match up where he teased he would beat Friedman with the roll of quarters. 

Robinson pulled the roll of coins out of his pocket saying, “You know what I do with these, Sonny Jack? I break idiots jaws.”

“So after we ruin your life, I’m going to put a roll of quarters in my hand,” Robinson continued before Friedman interrupted him. 

Friedman screamed, “Hey! Hey! You come near me with those quarters, I’ll end your life, you piece of s–t!” He then stormed off stage. 

An earlier AEW broadcast featured Friedman recounting a story from his time in high school when he was bullied for being Jewish. Detailing the tactic used against him, he told the crowd, “And in their hands they’re holding rolls of quarters. And all of them decided to throw the quarters at me as hard as they physically could and they said, ‘Pick it up, Jew boy. Pick it up!’”

After the Tuesday incident, Friedman called out Robinson on social media platform X, stating, “Tonight that piece of s–t, Juice Robinson decided to bring up a story from my childhood that has left me scared. I’m glad he did. He brought awareness to something we’ve all gone through in one way, shape, or form in our lives. On behalf of anyone who’s ever been bullied for being different in any capacity. I look forward to leaving him scared too. I also look forward to this Thursday #StandUpToJewishHate”

Friedman’s post also advertised a “Stand Up For Jewish Hate” event he will be attending at Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts. 

When contacted by Fox News Digital, The Foundation to Combat Antisemitism confirmed there was a private event happening Thursday but said it could not disclose attendees’ identities.

 ‘DESPICABLE’: STUDENTS CONDEMN HARVARD STUDENT GROUPS’ LETTER BLAMING ISRAELIS FOR OWN MASSACRE

X users found AEW’s broadcast of the anti-Jewish bullying Tuesday night offensive, especially in light of current events, with many assuming it was part of the script. 

X journalism account “FadeAwayMedia” commented on the AEW video, asking, “Why was this approved!?”

Podcast host and journalist David Bixenspan remarked, “Guessing it was MJF’s idea to do the quarters thing (albeit much more subtly than The Podcasters were suggesting for Wembley), but…ehhhhh I don’t like it.”

One wrestling fan declared, “Really could’ve done without the antisemitism. So gross and such poor taste.”

Pro-wrestling and MMA journalist Cassidy Haynes commented, “This isn’t the first time he’s used a roll of quarters. It was kinda his thing. But sheeesh the timing is terrible.”

The account for pro-wrestling podcast “Markin’ Out” called out AEW owner Tony Khan, posting, “Tone deaf and disgusting.”

The AEW did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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Volunteer in Israel describes the nightmare from the Hamas terrorist attacks

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Images and videos from the aftermath of the horrific attacks by Hamas over the weekend are emblems of the massacre in Israel, and one ZAKA volunteer believes they go far beyond depictions of a “regular war.”

“The size of this was insane. The amount of bodies. Not just the bodies that got shot. Bodies that got tortured,” Tomer Peretz, a volunteer with ZAKA, shared with Fox News Digital.

Tomer Peretz is an American artist who was visiting Israel with his two sons when hundreds of Hamas terrorists infiltrated Israel and shot rockets into civilian villages. The Israeli government declared war on Hamas Saturday in response to the attacks that have claimed the lives of at least 1,200 Israeli civilians and soldiers.

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Peretz immediately volunteered with ZAKA, a special unit search and rescue operation specializing in locating and clearing dead bodies. He insisted that he would do whatever he could to help.

After collecting resources and equipment from the remains of the Tribe of Nova Trance music festival that left 260 Israelis dead, the ZAKA crew headed to Kibbutz Be’eri, a village near Gaza.

WHO IS NOA ARGAMANI? WOMAN KIDNAPPED BY HAMAS TERRORISTS AT TRANCE MUSIC FESTIVAL IN ISRAEL

In one day, the crew of around 50 members picked up over 100 bodies in the small farming community, according to Peretz. “What we saw over there was insane,” he told Fox News.

“I never thought in my worst nightmare that anyone could do stuff like that. You see body parts all over. Babies. Kids,” he shares with followers in a video on his Instagram. “What kind of animal does stuff like that?”

ZAKA protocol was to write the house number on the body bags, one of the only ways to identify some of the victims, as many of the faces were indistinguishable after the brutality. “They cut the bodies. They burned the bodies.” 

“Some kids and some babies, lots of women, some body parts,” he told Fox News Digital. “Some were burned, some shot in the eyes, some shot maybe 50 times, tortured.”

The Israeli-born American said he wishes the world could see what he witnessed to know what is happening in Israel. “This is not a regular war; this is a genocide. They torture the people before they kill him.” 

The search continues for bodies left in shambles by Hamas.

“Once we cleared out the bodies, we found another body in between a house that collapsed. 

ISRAELI MUSIC FESTIVAL SURVIVOR DESCRIBES HORROR OF HAMAS-LED ATTACK THAT LEFT 260 DEAD

The head was tied to a tree, the body was cut, shot and burned. I think it was a teenager, maybe 18, hard to tell. Not a young person and not an old person,” he said.

The humanitarian response has been so “loving,” with everyone coming together to lend a hand where they can. Zaka and volunteers have received “A lot of food, a lot of donations,” Peretz shares. “I keep getting hundreds of messages of people wanting to help.”

Although first seen as a “rookie” by seasoned volunteers and members of ZAKA, he knew the work had to be done and that there was no hiding the horror of the murders. He went into houses he was advised against entering due to the devastating scenes inside. He said no matter what emotional toll it takes, “You just have to keep helping.”

“I want the world to see it. I will share as much as I can. Pray for Israel,” he said in a video posted on his Instagram account.

 

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