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Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Bomb squad detonates ‘suspicious device’ prior to TPUSA’s first Utah event since Kirk assassination

 A “suspicious device” was detonated by law enforcement at Utah State University on Tuesday afternoon prior to the first Turning Point USA event in the state since Charlie Kirk was assassinated. The institution was already taking extra security measures amid “heightened concerns.”

According to a statement from Utah State University, a “suspicious device” was located near the exterior of Old Main, a building on campus. While the device was deemed to be “non-explosive,” it was detonated by a bomb squad. Someone can be heard yelling “fire in the hole” before a loud explosion was heard, according to a video obtained by Fox News.

“A suspicious device was found near the exterior of Old Main. University and local law enforcement were dispatched to the scene. A device was located and deemed to be a non-explosive device. Out of an abundance of caution, the bomb squad detonated the suspicious device. Old Main building is now clear and safe. All scheduled events may resume as normal,” the university statement read.

Utah State University Executive Director of Public Safety Ellis Bruch told Fox News that an employee observed an individual place the device under a tree near Old Main and thought it was suspicious. He said a K-9 gave a “bit of an indication” on the device, which prompted a response by the bomb squad.

A drone view shows people waiting in line ahead of a Turning Point USA event at Utah State University campus, in Logan, Utah, U.S., September 30, 2025.REUTERS
A member of the law-enforcement bomb squad disposal team gets prepared to work at the Utah State University campus, after a building was evacuated following a bomb threat ahead of the Turning Point USA event in Logan, Utah, U.S., September 30, 2025.REUTERS

Bruch said no one was hurt as a result of the incident.

The Turning Point USA chapter at Utah State University is set to host Alex Clark; Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah; Utah Gov. Spencer Cox; Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz.; and former Congressman Jason Chaffetz on Tuesday night. It’s the first TPUSA event in the state since the organization’s founder was assassinated at Utah Valley University Sept. 10.

Suspected assassin Tyler Robinson has been charged with aggravated murder, two counts of obstruction of justice and felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily injury, two counts of witness tampering and commission of a violent offense in the presence of a child.

A bomb sniffing dog inspects members of the media’s bags after a building was evacuated following a bomb threat ahead of the Turning Point USA event in Logan, Utah, U.S., September 30, 2025.REUTERS
Utah State University said security for the TPUSA event will operate similarly to athletic events “to help protect the safety of participants and speakers.”

The following security measures are being taken for the TPUSA event:

Everyone going into the event will pass through magnetometers. Individuals who bring a firearm must follow Utah law for firearms on campuses and possess a Utah conceal-carry permit.

  • Backpacks and bags larger than 6.5 by 4.5 inches will not be allowed. Small purse clutches no larger than 6.5 inches by 4.5 inches will be searched.
  • No outside signs allowed.
  • No re-entry.

“Given the heightened concerns, USU’s department of public safety is continuing to collaborate with these partners to ensure appropriate safety measures and protocols are in place,” Utah State University explained.

https://nypost.com/2025/09/30/us-news/bomb-squad-detonates-suspicious-device-prior-to-tpusas-first-utah-event-since-charlie-kirk-assassination/

Uber found not liable in first US trial over driver sexual assault claims

 Uber is not liable for the sexual assault of a woman who said she was attacked by her driver on a ride she ordered from the ridesharing app, a California jury said on Tuesday, according to an attorney for the plaintiff.

At the end of a three-week civil trial in San Francisco Superior Court, the jury found that Uber was negligent in terms of the measures it put in place to protect the anonymous woman’s safety, but found that the negligence was not a substantial factor in causing the woman’s harm, according to Celine Cutter, one of her lawyers.

The case was the first to go to trial out of more than 500 lawsuits consolidated in California state court.

An Uber user holds up a phone with the company’s logo near a busy street in Bucharest, Romania on Dec, 22, 2017.agcreativelab – stock.adobe.com

There are also more than 2,500 lawsuits making similar claims that have been centralized in a federal court in California.

The woman, who went by Jessica C. at trial, sued in 2021, claiming she was assaulted by an Uber driver in 2016.

During the ride, her driver pulled off on a side street, restraining, groping and kissing her, according to her attorneys.

William Levin and Laurel Simes, two of the lawyers who represented her at trial, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“Uber has worked for years to raise the bar on safety, and will continue to do so in the years ahead,” an Uber spokesperson said in a statement.

Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi speaks during the 2025 Concordia Annual Summit at Sheraton New York Times Square on Sept. 23, 2025.Getty Images for Concordia Annual Summit
The case was the first to go to trial out of more than 500 lawsuits consolidated in California state court against Uber.Christopher Sadowski

The woman’s lawsuit was chosen to serve as the first “bellwether” for the state court litigation. In litigation with many plaintiffs asserting similar claims, bellwether trials are used to test the claims and establish what they may be worth.

Judges may use the outcome of the trial to manage the remaining cases, or lawyers can use them to inform settlement negotiations.

The woman’s attorneys had asked the jury for between $175,000 and $1.2 million in compensatory damages for each year of her life, suggesting larger figures for the years closest to the assault.

They did not suggest a number for punitive damages.

SAFETY PRACTICES IN THE SPOTLIGHT

The lawsuits allege Uber was aware it had a problem with drivers assaulting riders, but kept data on how many assaults took place from the public and did not take action to address the issue.

The plaintiffs have argued that Uber knew that things like assigning female riders to female drivers or requiring dash cams to record driver and passenger interactions would reduce assaults, but failed to broadly implement such programs.

Uber has maintained it should not be liable for criminal conduct by the drivers it connects with passengers, and that its background checks and disclosures about assaults were sufficient.

The Superior Court of California in San Francisco, Calif. on July 9, 2018.AFP via Getty Images

The lawsuits threaten to reopen wounds from Uber’s early years, when the company was dogged by safety controversies, allegations of lax driver vetting, and a culture critics said prioritized growth over protecting passengers.

The company has made safety a central talking point in recent years, publishing US Safety Reports that detail reported sexual assaults, rolling out features such as in-app ride verification, video and audio recording of rides, anomaly detection, and partnering with survivor advocacy groups to reform driver training.

Uber has also touted the formation of a Safety Advisory Board chaired by former US Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, and pledged $10 million through its “Driving Change” initiative to support organizations working to end gender-based violence.

Despite these measures, Uber’s safety reputation has remained fragile. In its latest safety report published last year, covering the 2021–2022 period, Uber said reports of serious sexual assault on its platform have fallen by 44% since its first report in 2017–2018.

But with thousands of cases still documented, critics say systemic risks remain.

Prompted by an August New York Times report on the issue, a US House of Representatives subcommittee sent a letter last week to Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi seeking information on the company’s protocols for responding to and preventing sexual assaults on its rides.

https://nypost.com/2025/10/01/business/uber-not-liable-for-california-woman-sexual-assault-by-driver/

Illegal-immigrant trucker ‘No Name Given’ mocks US law — and puts us in grave danger

 Oklahoma cops seized a New York commercial driver's license from an illegal immigrant that had the name "No Name Given."

On Monday, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt tweeted a picture of a New York state commercial driver’s license his officers seized during an “enforcement action” on an interstate highway.

The name on this official state document, found on one of 125 illegal-immigrant drivers apprehended by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol: “No Name Given.” 

No city or state suffered more on 9/11, but this single incident shows how even the Empire State has forgotten the lessons of that horrible day — and how New York’s solicitousness for illegal immigrants is setting America up for a tragic replay.

All but one of the 19 illegal aliens who carried out those attacks in 2001 had some type of US-issued identification document. 

As Richard Barth, then assistant secretary for policy development at the Department of Homeland Security, told the Senate in March 2007, the terrorists found it easy to fraudulently obtain driver’s licenses and state-issued IDs.

Take Hani Hanjour, the Saudi national who hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 and flew it into the Pentagon that morning, killing 184 innocents. He had IDs from three different states. 

Those US-issued IDs, Barth noted, “enabled the hijackers to maneuver throughout the United States in order to plan and execute critical elements of their mission” — allowing them to “rent cars, travel, take flying lessons and board airplanes.”

“The 9/11 hijackers evidently believed that holding driver’s licenses and ID cards would allow them to operate freely in our country,” he chillingly concluded. “And they were right.”

The bipartisan 9/11 commission, tasked with investigating those attacks and making recommendations to ensure they could never be replicated, recognized that easy access to domestic IDs created an unacceptable vulnerability to our homeland. 

In their final report, the commissioners advised the federal government to set stringent new standards for driver’s licenses.

“Fraud in identification documents is no longer just a problem of theft,” they explained.

“At many entry points to vulnerable facilities … sources of identification are the last opportunity to ensure that people are who they say they are and to check whether they are terrorists.”

In response, Congress passed the REAL ID Act of 2005. 

Among other things, it established verification requirements that states must follow in issuing licenses and other IDs that can be used for federal purposes — like boarding aircraft and entering federal buildings — and mandated that certain information appear on those documents.

Including, at section 202(b)(1): “The person’s full legal name.” 

The image that Stitt tweeted shows a purportedly REAL ID-compliant New York state CDL, identifiable by the star in its upper right-hand corner. 

And yet that document was issued to “No Name Given.” 

Perhaps the Given family decided to pull the cruelest possible prank on their newborn child and christened him “No Name.”

More likely, though, a New York Department of Motor Vehicles clerk issued what’s supposed to be among the most secure documents in our nation — an ID allowing the bearer to enter a nuclear facility — to an individual who failed to provide that most rudimentary identifier, a full legal name. 

Worse is the fact that this is not a simple ID, but rather a commercial driver’s license. 

The 9/11 hijackers had to overpower flight crews and steer massive aircraft at high rates of speed to commit their attacks. 

Think of the carnage a malevolent trucker with the wrong cargo could wreak.

There’s a reason that semis on our highways are emblazoned with hazmat placards like “Flammable Gas,” “Explosives” and “Radioactive”: They warn other drivers to steer clear or risk calamity.

But what if calamity on a massive scale, impacting tens of thousands of our citizens, is the reason the driver is barreling down the highway? 

That’s not a “bad commute” — it’s a national disaster. 

A goal of the REAL ID Act was to ensure that only US citizens and legal immigrants could obtain compliant IDs. 

New York, having decided it can ignore our immigration laws, has now apparently set its sights on bypassing other federal mandates as well.

Until this issue is resolved, President Trump would be within his rights to bar travelers from using New York state “REAL IDs” when attempting to board aircraft or enter federally protected facilities.

There’s no reason for “No Name Given” to have a REAL ID commercial driver’s license — and New Yorkers, of all people, should understand why.

Andrew Arthur, the fellow in law and policy at the Center for Immigration Studies, drafted the Real ID Act of 2005.

https://nypost.com/2025/09/30/opinion/illegal-immigrant-trucker-no-name-given-reveals-grave-danger/

Kimmel has nothing on Wikipedia when it comes to misinforming people



Jimmy Kimmel has been accused of abusing the publicly subsidized airwaves with his lies and propaganda, but the two million viewers he reaches each night is a pittance compared to the hundreds of millions each month who think they’re getting unbiased information from Wikipedia.


Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger, who no longer has ties to the site, recently shocked Tucker Carlson in an interview when he showed that the web-based encyclopedia doesn’t permit its editors to cite news sources it considers “unreliable.”

Indeed, the universally referenced site ruthlessly censors conservative voices — openly — while giving liberal and far left sources a seal of approval.

CNN and MSNBC, chief purveyors of the Russia hoax, are marked with the green checkmark that says they are “reliable.”


Mother Jones, which called the Jan. 6 Capitol riot a “heavily armed insurrection,” is graded incorruptible, as is New York Magazine, which ran a 2018 cover story claiming President Donald Trump has been a Russian secret agent, code named “Krasnov,” since 1987.

Even Qatari propaganda outlet Al Jazeera, banned in the Arab world because of its pro-Muslim Brotherhood outlook, is counted as an A-OK source for Wikipedia entries.

Meanwhile, The New York Post is smeared as “generally unreliable.” Fox News is also off limits, along with The Federalist, The Epoch Times, The Daily Caller and other outlets.

And here’s the scariest part: Not only do masses of people unwittingly turn to Wikipedia for unbiased information, AI is trained on it.

Powerful bots like Grok, Chat GPT and Gemini siphon up huge swaths of text from Wikipedia and then spit it out as though it’s neutral and authoritative.

It’s not. It is trimmed and hewed to fit a particular leftist narrative that has excised a huge territory of conservative thought and reportage from its source-stream.

All of which distorts and corrupts fair public discourse.

Yes, every reputable information source has to impose some minimum guidelines and guardrails, but not rules based on political leaning.

If Wikipedia continues to adhere by such blatantly biased standards, it will invite guardrails — for itself.

https://nypost.com/2025/09/30/opinion/jimmy-kimmel-has-nothing-on-wikipedia-when-it-comes-to-misinforming-people/

FDA won't accept new drug applications during government shutdown

 

  • The Food and Drug Administration, already reeling from layoffs and leadership changes under the Trump Administration, warned that the government shutdown will delay or pause important work at the agency.
  • In a memo released before the shutdown began, the FDA said it expects to retain 86% of its staff, or 13,872 employees. The agency can continue reviewing existing applications for products, including drugs and medical devices that are funded by user fees, but will not be able to accept new submissions. 
  • The FDA will also stop many regulatory activities that don’t address “imminent threats to the safety of human life.” For instance, food safety efforts will be reduced during the shutdown, and the agency won’t be able to support much of the work done to protect Americans from unsafe and ineffective compounded drugs, the FDA said.
A shutdown of a few days or a week likely won’t have a major impact on Americans or on the health-care industry. But an extended standoff between Republicans and Democrats over the budget would affect research funding, health insurance negotiations and eventually the flow of new medical products onto the market, analysts said.

While the agency emphasized that most of its employees will stay on the job, the total number of workers is less than its previous contingency plan before President Trump took office. That plan called for 77% of the FDA’s staff, or 15,223 employees, to be retained during a shutdown. 

The numbers “reflect the impact of the significant job cuts at FDA early in the Trump Administration, with many non-user fee positions already eliminated,” TD Cowen analyst Rick Weissenstein wrote in a note to clients. Still, he said, the earlier actions mean the agency probably won’t be significantly impacted now if Trump follows through on his threat to fire more of the federal workforce because of the shutdown.

The budget impasse comes during a year that has already featured much uncertainty for the industries regulated by the FDA. In addition to layoffs throughout the Health and Human Services Department, many key officials have either resigned or been forced out of the FDA, thinning expertise and heightening scrutiny of the agency’s ability to complete reviews on time.

FDA Commissioner Marty Makary has said that the “trains are running on time” at the agency. But there have been signs of slippage, with key products facing extensions in review times and at least one case of a delay because of “resource constraints.” 

https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/fda-government-shutdown-new-drug-applications-reviews/761576/

CVS Offers $200 Wegovy Copay in Bid to Expand Coverage

 


CVS Health Corp.’s drug benefits unit is trying to entice health insurance plans to cover Wegovy, Novo Nordisk A/S’s pricey weight-loss shot, for more patients by allowing them to charge copays as high as $200.

It’s the latest move by pharmacy benefit managers, which negotiate drug prices on behalf of health plans, to deal with the surging demand for weight-loss medicines. The copay option would take effect starting next year.

Enanta upped to Buy from Hold by Jefferies

 Target $20

https://finviz.com/quote.ashx?t=ENTA&p=d