
A federal judge said Tuesday that the Justice Department can publicly release investigative materials from a sex trafficking case against Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime confidante of Jeffrey Epstein.
Judge Paul A. Engelmayer ruled after the Justice Department in November asked two judges in New York to unseal grand jury transcripts and exhibits, along with investigative materials that could amount to hundreds or thousands of previously unreleased documents.
He’s the second judge to allow the Justice Department to publicly disclose previously secret Epstein-related records.
Last week, a judge in Florida granted the departmentâs request to release transcripts from an abandoned federal grand jury investigation into Epstein in the 2000s.
A request to release records from Epsteinâs 2019 sex trafficking case is still pending.
The Justice Department said Congress intended the unsealing when it passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which President Donald Trump signed into law last month.
Here’s the latest:
Judge extends order blocking health department from sharing Medicaid data with deportation officials
U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria in San Francisco had initially halted the data sharing in August, but the order covering 22 states that had sued the administration over privacy concerns was set to expire Tuesday.
Chhabria said in a court hearing it will now remain in effect until Jan. 5, a timeframe the judge said will give attorneys for the federal government and the states time to file further briefs. The judge said he wanted attorneys to lay out their reasoning as to whether he had the authority to, for example, allow the policy to be used narrowly only pertaining to non-citizens enrolled in Medicaid but not more broadly, saying that thus far, âthe scope of the policy, who it applies to, has not been adequately explained.â
Chhabria said he didnât anticipate there being another hearing before he issued a ruling, noting that the new timeframe and briefing schedule would also give both sides time to petition an appellate court before the Jan. 5 expiration date.
Democratic Leader seeks all-House briefing on deadly boat strikes
Rep. Hakeem Jeffries is asking for Hegseth to brief all members on the strikes near Venezuela.
âWe need an all-member briefing for the House of Representatives,â Jeffries told The Associated Press.
âThey havenât committed to it,â he said of Hegseth. âBut weâre going to continue to press our case.â
US military flies 2 fighter jets over the Gulf of Venezuela
The move Tuesday appears to be the closest American warplanes have come to the South American countryâs airspace since the start of the Trump administrationâs pressure campaign in the region.
Public flight tracking websites showed a pair of U.S. Navy F/A-18 fighter jets fly over the body of water bounded by Venezuela for more than 30 minutes.
A U.S. defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military operations, confirmed that the jets conducted a âroutine training flightâ and said they stayed in international airspace. The official likened it to previous exercises aimed at showing the reach of U.S. planes.
The move is the latest action that the U.S. military has taken as it has built up warships in the region and launched deadly strikes on alleged drug-smuggling boats. Those attacks are drawing new scrutiny from lawmakers.
___
â By Konstantin Toropin
Trump calls Crockett a âlow-IQ personâ
The president also said Democratic Rep. Jasmine Crockett will be a âgift to Republicansâ as she launches a new Senate campaign in Texas.
Trump made the comments aboard Air Force One a day after Crockett launched her campaign, telling Trump, âIâm coming for you.â Crockett is running for the seat held by Republican Sen. John Cornyn in what could be a critical race for both parties.
Crockett is a favorite GOP target and an outspoken Trump adversary.
The president didnât hold back when asked about the race: âI canât imagine she wins. Maybe sheâll get the Democrat nomination, but I think itâs a gift to Republicans, sheâs a terrible representative.â
Trump, running late, makes his way to Pennsylvania rally
Trump is making his way to a Pennsylvania resort where heâs scheduled to road-test his claims that heâs tackling Americansâ affordability woes.
The president was late leaving Washington, where he had been attending a Christmas party at the vice presidential residence.
Trumpâs event in the Pocono Mountains will be held indoors in a conference center ballroom at the Mount Airy Casino Resort, a smaller venue than the arena rallies that could host thousands during his campaign.
DOJ ends monitoring of illegal dumping in Houston in retreat from environmental justice
The U.S. Justice Department has withdrawn from an agreement with the city of Houston to curb illegal dumping in Black and Latino neighborhoods.
The action is part of the Trump administrationâs broad elimination of jobs and programs dedicated to environmental justice.
Without federal monitoring, advocates in Houston say city officials have become less responsive to residents afflicted by persistent dumping in the historically Black neighborhood of Trinity/Houston Gardens.
The Justice Department and Houston officials did not respond to requests for comment.
Federal authorities also quietly ended a similar agreement over wastewater problems in rural Alabama, according to three former law enforcement officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the move wasnât made public.
Bessent spoke about Russia oil sanctions with Ukrainian Prime Minister
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he spoke with Ukraineâs Prime Minister, Yulia Svyrydenko, Tuesday morning about President Trumpâs âcommitment to securing a lasting peace in Ukraine,â in a post on X.
Bessent said in the post that the pair discussed Treasuryâs October sanctions on Russiaâs oil giants, Lukoil and Rosneft, which are aimed at moving Russian President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table and bringing an end to Moscowâs brutal war on Ukraine.
They also discussed âthe importance of driving Ukraineâs reform and anti-corruption agenda forward.â
Newsom memoir will seek to build a more nuanced portrait of Californiaâs governor
Gavin Newsom is writing a memoir he says will be âa truly vulnerable bookâ about his family, his struggles growing up with dyslexia and his political career.
Itâs the latest effort by Newsom, the California governor and a potential 2028 presidential candidate, to build more nuance into his public persona. He has long pushed back against a narrative thatâs dogged him since the start of his political career â that he had a privileged upbringing and rode the coattails of his fatherâs wealthy and connected friends to political success.
He acknowledged the perception among many voters that heâs a slick politician.
âA lot of people look at me in the stark white shirt, the blue suit and yeah, the gelled hear, and they think, âOh I know this guy. I know him better than Iâd ever want to know him.â I get it,â Newsom says in a video announcing the book.
âThis is a story of a kid who always felt like he wasnât quite enough.â Newsomâs book, âYoung Man in a Hurry,â will be released in February.
Alarm grows over surge in violence in Rwanda-Congo conflict; one of Trumpâs touted peace deals
International alarm over a surge in fighting between Rwanda and Congo is growing less than a week after the two countries signed a peace deal in Washington that Trump has hailed as one of several agreements that are evidence of his peace-making prowess.
In a joint statement released on Tuesday, members of the International Contact Group for the Great Lakes expressed âprofound concernâ over recent developments in Congoâs South Kivu region where new deadly violence blamed on the Rwandan-backed M23 militia group has exploded in recent days.
The group, which includes Belgium, Britain, Denmark, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, the United States and the European Union, urged all sides âto uphold their commitments under the Washington Accords of 4 December 2025 and immediately deescalate the situation.â
Rubio calls Egyptian, Saudi counterparts to discuss urgent need for peace in Sudan
Secretary of State Marco Rubio has placed calls to his Egyptian and Saudi counterparts to discuss the urgent need for progress in faltering peace efforts in Sudan, along with other regional matters including the Israel-Hamas conflict and the situation in Yemen.
The State Department said Rubio spoke Tuesday with Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty and Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan to discuss the issues.
The department said Rubio and Abdelatty discussed the implementation of the President Donald Trumpâs peace plan for Gaza as well as âongoing engagements to achieve a humanitarian ceasefire in Sudan.â
There was no mention of the Gaza plan in the readout of Rubioâs call with the prince, but there was a reference to the outcomes of Trumpâs recent meeting in Washington with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman at which Gaza was a main topic as well as âdevelopments in Yemen and the urgent need to advance peace efforts in Sudan.â
Fighting between the Sudanese military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces has surged despite attempts to broker an end to the fighting, which began in 2023 and has killed more than 40,000 people, according to the World Health Organization, and displaced 12 million others. Aid groups warn that the true death toll is likely far higher.
Democratic Rep. Marc Veasey of Texas wonât seek reelection after district was redrawn
The seven-term congressman says heâll instead run for local office in Fort Worth, seeking to become Tarrant County judge, the countyâs top elected official.
âLet me be clear: Iâm not stepping back from the fight. Iâm stepping into a new one,â he said in a statement.
The U.S. Supreme Court this month allowed the challenged Texas congressional redistricting plan to be used in next yearâs election, despite a lower-court ruling that the map likely discriminates on the basis of race.
The Texas congressional map enacted last summer at President Donald Trumpâs urging was engineered to give Republicans five additional House seats.
US concerned by uptick in Cambodia-Thailand fighting after Trump-mediated peace deal
Secretary of State Marco Rubio says the U.S. is concerned by an uptick in fighting between Cambodia and Thailand along their contested border less than two months after the two countries signed a peace in Malaysia pushed for by President Trump.
âWe strongly urge the immediate cessation of hostilities, the protection of civilians, and for both sides to return to the de-escalatory measures outlined in the October 26 Kuala Lumpur Peace Accords signed by the Prime Ministers of Cambodia and Thailand and witnessed by President Trump and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim,â Rubio said in a statement.
The Cambodia-Thailand deal â one of several Trump has hailed as evidence of his negotiating abilities â has been faltering for weeks but took a big hit when fighting broke out following a weekend skirmish in which two Thai soldiers were injured. Five days of fighting since has left dozens dead on both sides and forced the evacuation of over 100,000 civilians.
Opponents of Trump-backed redistricting in Missouri submit a petition to force a public vote
Opponents of Missouriâs new congressional map submitted thousands of petition signatures Tuesday calling for a statewide referendum on a redistricting plan backed by President Trump as part of his quest to hold on to a slim Republican majority in next yearâs elections.
Organizers of the petition drive said they turned in more than 300,000 signatures to the secretary of stateâs office â well more than the roughly 110,000 needed to suspend the new U.S. House districts from taking effect until a public vote can be held next year.
The signatures must still be formally verified by local election authorities and Republican Secretary of State Denny Hoskins, whoâs argued the referendum is unconstitutional. But if the signatures hold up, the referendum could create a significant obstacle for Republicans who hope the new districts could help them win a currently Democratic-held seat in the Kansas City area in the November election.
â¶ Read more about redistricting efforts ahead of the 2026 elections
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reaffirms his refusal to cede land to Russia
Itâs a resistance to U.S. pressure for painful concessions to Russia as he moved ahead Tuesday to rally more European support for his country.
âUndoubtedly, Russia insists for us to give up territories. We, clearly, donât want to give up anything. Thatâs what we are fighting for,â Zelenskyy told reporters in a WhatsApp chat late Monday.
âDo we consider ceding any territories? According to the law we donât have such right,â he said. âAccording to Ukraineâs law, our constitution, international law, and to be frank, we donât have a moral right either.â
In an interview with Politico released Tuesday, President Trump again pressed Zelenskyy to accept the U.S. proposal that Ukraine cede territory to Russia, arguing that Moscow retains the âupper handâ in its nearly 4-year-old invasion, and that Zelenskyyâs government must âplay ball.â
â¶ Read more about the Russia-Ukraine war
US job openings barely budged in October, coming in just below 7.7 million
The Labor Department reported Tuesday that employers posted 7.67 million vacancies in October, close to Septemberâs 7.66 million.
The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS), which was delayed by the extended government shutdown, also showed the layoffs rose and number of people quitting their jobs â a sign of confidence in the labor market â fell in October.
Job openings have come down steadily since peaking at a record 12.1 million in March 2022, when the economy was roaring back from COVID-19 lockdowns. The job market has cooled partly because of the lingering effect of the high interest rates the Federal Reserve engineered in 2022 and 2023 to combat an outburst of inflation.
Overall, itâs a puzzling time for the American economy, buffeted by President Trumpâs decision to reverse decades of U.S. policy in favor of free trade and instead impose double-digit tariffs on imports from most of the worldâs countries.
â¶ Read more about U.S. job openings
Maxwellâs lawyer said his client took no position about the requested unsealing
Except to note that her plans to file a habeas petition could be spoiled because the public release of materials âwould create undue prejudice so severe that it would foreclose the possibility of a fair retrialâ if the habeas request succeeded.
Lawyers for the Epstein estate took no position.
Former Democratic congressman begins campaign in red Virginia district vulnerable to gerrymandering
Former Democratic Congressman Tom Perriello said Tuesday he would challenge Republican U.S. Rep. John McGuire in the midterm elections next year.
âFamilies canât afford groceries because Republicans in Congress like John McGuire wonât stand up to Trumpâs tariffs,â Perriello said in a video launching his campaign.
Perriello, elected for one term in 2008, was the last Democrat to win Virginiaâs 5th Congressional district, which McGuire now represents. Itâs a district where President Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris by 12 points, according to the nonpartisan Virginia Public Access Project. McGuire was first elected to the district in 2024 after defeating former Republican U.S. Rep. Bob Good in a bitter primary.
Virginia Democrats who control the statehouse have indicated McGuireâs seat may be vulnerable if theyâre successful in their efforts to redraw the stateâs Congressional maps ahead of elections next November. The General Assembly in October endorsed a proposed constitutional amendment allowing mid-decade redistricting, though another legislative vote is needed to refer the amendment to a statewide ballot.
Judge grants Justice Department request to unseal Ghislaine Maxwell records in sex trafficking case
A federal judge said Tuesday the Justice Department can publicly release investigative materials from a sex trafficking case against Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime confidant of Jeffrey Epstein.
Judge Paul A. Engelmayer ruled after the Justice Department in November asked two judges in New York to unseal grand jury transcripts and exhibits from Maxwell and Epsteinâs cases, along with investigative materials that could amount to hundreds or thousands of previously unreleased documents.
The ruling, in the wake of the passage last month of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, means the records could be made public within 10 days. The law requires the Justice Department provide Epstein-related records to the public in a searchable format by Dec. 19.
â¶ Read more about the Jeffrey Epstein case
Trump is dismissive of Leo XIVâs criticism of the US immigration agenda, saying he hasnât seen it
President Trump dismissed Pope Leo XIVâs criticisms of his aggressive immigration agenda, saying heâs not seen the pontiffâs remarks.
Leo recently offered strong support for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops criticizing the âvilificationâ of migrants and raids that have sown fear in immigrant communities.
Leo said the U.S. should use its justice system to handle immigration violations, âtreating people humanely, treating people with the dignity that they have.â
In a Politico interview, Trump responded: âYou know, they didnât like the wall. The wall turned out to be great.â
Pope Francis, Leoâs predecessor, criticized Trumpâs first-term immigration policies, including expanding the U.S-Mexico border wall.
Trump told Politico heâd still be interested in meeting Leo, the first U.S.-born pontiff, and the president noted without prompting that he especially likes one of Leoâs brothers whoâs a Trump supporter. âDo you know his brother is serious MAGA?â Trump said.
On health care worries, Trump says âdonât be dramaticâ
Questioned about how Republicansâ delay on addressing Affordable Care Act subsidies might affect U.S. householdsâ budget, Trump twice told a Politico reporter: âDonât be dramatic.â
It was the presidentâs push back to a question about how ACA premium holders might be struggling around the holidays facing steep health insurance premium spikes if the GOP-run Congress doesnât address expiring subsidies.
Trump loosely explained Republicansâ pitch to steer money directly to policy holders rather than subsidize premiums with tax credits that can be paid directly to insurance companies or claimed on policy holdersâ tax returns.
âIâm giving them money. I want to give the money to the people to buy their own health care,â Trump said. âThatâs a good thing, not a bad thing.â
Trump says the economy is âA-plus-plus-plus-plus-plusâ
Ahead of a planned speech on the economy, Trump is giving the U.S. market a sterling grade despite continued inflation, wealth gaps, layoffs and consumer angst.
âA-plus,â he told Politico when asked how heâd rate the economy, before adding, âA-plus-plus-plus-plus-plus.â
Told of concerns even from one of his supporters, Trump shifted blame to his predecessor, Democrat Joe Biden.
âI inherited a mess. I inherited a total mess,â he said, seemingly brushing off the idea of âaffordabilityâ that has become a buzz word ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
âEverything is coming down,â he insisted.
The latest federal analysis, using data from September, found that overall prices rose 2.8% over the previous year, up slightly from 2.7% in August. Core prices also rose 2.8% from a year earlier, a small decline from the previous monthâs figure of 2.9%.
Trump wants Thomas and Alito to stick around on the Supreme Court
The president says he hopes the two eldest members of the Supreme Court, who were nominated by Republican presidents, donât leave the bench.
He was asked during a Politico interview whether he would want Justices Clarence Thomas, 77, and Sam Alito, 75, to retire so Trump could tap their younger successors.
Trump dismissed the idea.
âI hope they stay âcause I think theyâre fantastic, OK?â Trump said in the interview published Tuesday morning. âBoth of those men are fantastic.â
Trump says heâs fixing affordability problems. Heâll test out that message at a rally
Trump will road-test his claims that heâs tackling Americansâ affordability woes at a Tuesday rally in Mount Pocono, Pennsylvania â shifting an argument made in Oval Office appearances and social media posts to a campaign-style event.
The trip comes as polling consistently shows that public trust in Trumpâs economic leadership has faltered. Following dismal results for Republicans in last monthâs off-cycle elections, the White House has sought to convince voters that the economy will emerge stronger next year and that any anxieties over inflation have nothing to do with Trump.
The presidentâs reception in the county hosting his Tuesday rally could give a signal of just how much voters trust his claims. Monroe County flipped to Trump in the 2024 election after having backed Biden in 2020, helping the Republican to win the swing state of Pennsylvania and return to the White House after a four-year hiatus.
â¶ Read more about Trumpâs upcoming rally
Federal Reserve set to cut rate but may signal a pause to come
The Federal Reserve faces an unusually contentious meeting this week that will test Chair Jerome Powellâs ability to corral the necessary support from fellow policymakers for a third straight interest rate cut.
The Fedâs 19-member rate-setting committee is sharply divided over whether to lower borrowing costs again. The divisions have been exacerbated by the convoluted nature of the economy: Inflation remains elevated, which would typically lead the Fed to keep its key rate unchanged, while hiring is weak and the unemployment rate has risen, which often leads to rate cuts.
Some economists expect three Fed officials could vote against the quarter-point cut that Powell is likely to support at the Dec. 9-10 meeting, which would be the most dissenting votes in six years. Just 12 of the 19 members vote on rate decisions. Several of the non-voting officials have also said they oppose another rate cut.
â¶ Read more about the potential rate cut
Supreme Court weighs Republican appeal to end limits on party spending in federal elections
The Supreme Court is considering a Republican-led drive, backed by Trumpâs administration, to overturn a quarter-century-old decision and erase limits on how much political parties can spend in coordination with candidates for Congress and president.
A day after the justices indicated they would overturn a 90-year-old decision limiting the presidentâs power to fire independent agency heads, the court is revisiting a 2001 decision that upheld a provision of federal election law that is more than 50 years old.
Democrats are calling on the court to uphold the law.
The limits stem from a desire to prevent large donors from skirting caps on individual contributions to a candidate by directing unlimited sums to the party, with the understanding that the money will be spent on behalf of the candidate.
The Federal Election Commission and the GOP argue that the court should cast a skeptical eye on the limits, in line with recent high court decisions. Led by Chief Justice John Roberts, a conservative majority has upended a variety of congressionally enacted limits on raising and spending money to influence elections.
â¶ Read more about the decision
Trump approves sale of more advanced Nvidia computer chips used in AI to China
Trump said Monday that he would allow Nvidia to sell an advanced type of computer chip used in the development of artificial intelligence to âapproved customersâ in China.
There have been concerns about allowing advanced computer chips to be sold to China as it could help the country better compete against the U.S. in building out AI capabilities, but there has also been a desire to develop the AI ecosystem with American companies such as chipmaker Nvidia.
Nvidia said in a statement that it applauded Trumpâs decision, saying the choice would support domestic manufacturing and that by allowing the Commerce Department to vet commercial customers it would âstrike a thoughtful balanceâ on economic and national security priorities.
But a group of Democratic senators objected to the chip sales.
â¶ Read more about the sales
