Judicial Watch announced that it filed a Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the Department of Health and Human Services
seeking all records related to the so-called COVID-19 Community Corps.
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Because no one is above
the law! |
Sep 27, 2021 |
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Today's Top Stories
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Judicial Watch Sues for Records on Biden
Administration’s COVID-19 Community Corps Program
The HHS website describes the
COVID-19 Community Corps as “an initiative to increase confidence in
COVID-19 vaccines and reinforce basic prevention measures.” The
government program also seeks to enlist minors (16 and older). The site
reports “over 4,000 organizations and almost 10,000 individuals across
the United States have joined the COVID-19 Community Corps. They’ve
committed to take action to encourage their families, friends, and members
of their communities to get vaccinated for COVID-19.”
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Judicial Watch: New HHS Documents Reveal Sexual and
Physical Abuse of Unaccompanied Minors
The records include a spreadsheet
of data from the HHS Office of Refugee Resettlement and lists 33 “sexual
abuse allegations” involving “unaccompanied children” (UAC) for the
time period of January 21, 2021, to February 26, 2021. These incidents
seemed to be tied to “voluntary agencies” (VOLAGs), which are
contractors for the federal government. Ten of the allegations of sexual
abuse were made against staff and “non-staff” members. Twenty-one
incidents of children sexually assaulting other children while in
government contracted care facilities were reported.
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Judicial Watch Sues for Information Concerning Justice
Department’s Decision to Challenge Georgia’s Voter Integrity
Bill
A week after the DOJ filed its
lawsuit against Georgia, on July 1 of this year, the U.S. Supreme Court
upheld two Arizona voting provisions that Democrats and civil rights groups
had challenged as disproportionately burdening minority voters. Judicial
Watch and the Allied Educational Foundation filed amici curiae (friends of
the court) briefs in support of Arizona’s law. The court’s decision is
what Fitton called “a knockout blow to the Left’s tsunami of harassing
lawsuits challenging virtually any effort by any state to modestly increase
the security of elections and minimize the impact of voter fraud.” In
response to the Supreme Court ruling, the Left appears to have become, in
Fitton’s words, “desperate to short circuit the efforts of states to
implement security measures such as voter ID.”
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Biden’s Benghazi
Hearings into President Biden’s
disastrous Afghanistan withdrawal got underway last week on Capitol Hill.
Like many Americans, here at Judicial Watch we were shocked and outraged by
the Kabul debacle—the collapse of U.S. foreign policy, the chaotic
airfield scenes, the suicide bombing that killed thirteen American military
personnel and scores of others, the bungled U.S. drone strike that took
down no ISIS enemy but managed to wipe out ten members of an
American-friendly Afghan family, including seven children.
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Newsom
victory squashes rural California, which prayed for regime change
The Washington Examiner
Judicial
Watch president Tom Fitton, who settled a lawsuit against California to
clean up dirty voter rolls, said all is not lost. He recalled how
Republican Barry Goldwater lost the 1964 presidential election by a
landslide, and that ushered in the Ronald Reagan dynasty in California.
“If you care about our constitutional republic, you should stay and do
what you can do,” he said. “A committed opposition can have a dramatic
impact, even in a state like California.”
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Keep our investigators on the job uncovering the truth:
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