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Friday, April 17, 2026

Career US prosecutor removed from probe into ex-CIA chief Brennan

 A federal prosecutor investigating one of President Trump’s political enemies has reportedly been pulled off the case.

The Justice Department removed career Miami federal prosecutor Maria Medetis Long, who was leading the probe into John Brennan for months, after she resisted pressure to bring charges more quickly, CNN reported.

She reportedly notified attorneys representing people involved in the case that, as of Friday, she would no longer be handling the probe.

The investigation into Mr. Brennan, the former CIA director, revolves around a debunked 2017 finding that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election to secure Mr. Trump’s win.

The president has long urged prosecutors to pursue Mr. Brennan, one of the instigators of the Russia probe that Mr. Trump calls a hoax.

Those handling the case have pushed back against demands to bring charges against Mr. Brennan faster, CNN reported, signaling to Justice Department officials that they don’t believe the case has a strong standing.

The case is reportedly moving ahead anyway, as investigators have recently conducted interviews with witnesses and issued a fresh round of subpoenas. Ms. Medetis Long’s team sent out several rounds of subpoenas and requests for documents from Congress, plus is seeking witness interviews.

The FBI also plans to question roughly a half-dozen witnesses in its criminal inquiry, Reuters reported.

Miami U.S. Attorney Jason Reding Quinones reportedly told DOJ officials that charges could still be months away, which was unacceptable to the officials.

Prosecutors are focused on allegations that Mr. Brennan lied in his congressional testimony about the intelligence assessment.

He told House investigators that Russia “brazenly interfered” in U.S. elections, but did not label it “collusion.” An investigation did not find that the Trump campaign conspired with Russia.

Mr. Brennan’s lawyer wrote to the chief District Court judge in Miami in December that there was no “legally justifiable basis” for the investigation.

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2026/apr/17/lead-prosecutor-john-brennan-removed-case/

'Significant differences remain between Iran-US, including on nuclear issues: senior Iranian official'

 Significant differences between Iran and the United States remain to reach a deal aimed at ending the war, a senior Iranian official told Reuters on Friday, adding that keeping the Strait of Hormuz open is "conditional on U.S. adherence to the terms of ceasefire".

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said "no agreement has been reached on the details of the nuclear issues," and serious negotiations are required to overcome differences.

He said Tehran hoped that a preliminary agreement could be reached in the coming days with mediator Pakistan’s efforts, with the possibility of extending the ceasefire to "create space for more talks on lifting sanctions on Iran and securing compensation for war damages".

"In exchange, Iran will provide assurances to the international community about the peaceful nature of its nuclear programme," he said, adding that any other "narrative about the ongoing talks is a misrepresentation of the situation".

https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/significant-differences-remain-between-iran-us-including-on-nuclear-issues-senior-iranian-official

Kailera surges in Nasdaq debut

 Biotech company Kailera Therapeutics made its debut on the Nasdaq Global Select Market on Friday, opening at $26 per share under the symbol KLRA, jumping 63% from the initial public offering price (IPO) of $16 apiece.

The clinical-stage drug startup sold over 39 million American shares in its IPO, with a record-breaking $625 million raise, making it the largest biotech debut of all time, beating Moderna's $600 million raise in December 2018. The debut gave the obesity-care firm an estimated market valuation of about $2.06 billion.

The company, which develops a broad, advanced, and differentiated portfolio of injectable and oral therapies for the treatment of obesity, was founded in May of 2024 and is headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Kailera-surges-63-to-dollar26-in-Nasdaq-debut/66095046

Iran vows to reciprocate if US naval blockade continues

 Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said on Friday that if the United States' naval blockade of the Iranian ports in the Strait of Hormuz continues, Tehran will take "necessary measures."

"The enemy has made contradictory statements many times in one day, with the aim of creating a media atmosphere. The Islamic Republic of Iran is also the guardian of the Strait of Hormuz and, wherever necessary, will take the necessary measures to protect the rights of the people. If the other party continues to breach its obligations, we will take countermeasures. If the naval blockade continues, the Islamic Republic will also take necessary countermeasures," Baghaei said.

The Iranian spokesman added that the decision to reopen the waterway to commercial vessels was not an agreement made today, but a consequence of Israel reaching a ceasefire agreement with Lebanon.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Iran-vows-to-reciprocate-if-US-naval-blockade-continues/66095029

US Chemists Turn Natural Gas Into Liquid Fuel Without High Heat And Pressures

  by Prabhat Ranjan Mishra via Interesting Engineering,

Chemists in the United States have discovered a new way to turn natural gas into liquid fuel.

The team from Northwestern University has successfully converted methane directly into methanol in a single step. They harnessed tiny bursts of plasma — or mini “lightning bolts” — in glass tubes submerged in water.

Methanol is a versatile, high-demand industrial chemical used to make many products people use every day.Employee/Alexander/Driscoll

Using pulses of high-voltage electricity

We’re using pulses of high-voltage electricity,” said Northwestern’s Dayne Swearer, the study’s corresponding author.

If the electrical potential is high enough, lightning bolts form inside of our reactor the way they do during a summer thunderstorm. We’re taking advantage of that chemistry to break methane’s bonds without heating the entire system to extreme temperatures.”

While the current method is reliable, it’s energy intensive and emits millions of tons of carbon dioxide per year globally. Using just electricity, water and a copper-oxide catalyst, the new process could offer a cleaner, electrified path to producing one of the world’s most widely used chemical building blocksaccording to a press release.

Methanol is a versatile, high-demand industrial chemical

The team also revealed that the methanol is a versatile, high-demand industrial chemical used to make many products people use every day. It also is commonly used as an industrial solvent and is gaining attention as a cleaner-burning fuel for ships and industrial boilers.

One of the world’s most used commodity chemicals, methanol is a key ingredient in plastics, paints and adhesives. More recently, researchers have explored methanol as a promising liquid fuel because its combustion produces lower sulfur emissions and particulate pollution than gasoline and diesel, as per the release.

Industry generates methanol through a multi-step process

The team also pointed out that currently, the industry generates methanol through a multi-step process, starting with steam reforming. First, methane is reacted with steam at temperatures exceeding 800 degrees Celsius to break it into carbon monoxide and hydrogen. Then, those gases are recombined under extremely high pressures — 200 to 300 times standard atmospheric pressure — to form methanol. Tearing methane apart and rebuilding it consumes an enormous amount of heat and inherently generates carbon dioxide along the way.

The extreme temperatures are needed to break the unreactive chemical bonds between carbon and hydrogen in methane,” Swearer said.

“Then, you must use high pressure to squeeze all those molecules together onto the catalyst in order to make the methanol molecule. It works, but it’s not the most straightforward path to making methanol from methane.”

For the new single-step process, James Ho, a Ph.D. candidate in Swearer’s lab and the study’s first author, built a plasma “bubble reactor,” which is essentially a porous glass tube coated with a copper oxide catalyst. Then, the team flowed methane gas through the tube while applying electrical pulses.

The electricity transformed the methane gas into plasma, splitting methane and water into highly reactive fragments. Those fragments then recombined to form methanol, which immediately dissolves into the surrounding water. That rapid “quenching” stopped the chemical reaction at the right moment, preventing the methane from decomposing into carbon dioxide.

“More than 99% of the observable universe is comprised of plasma,” said James Ho. “But even though it’s ubiquitous, it really is an untapped resource in the field of chemistry. The reason we use cold plasmas is because we can produce them at low temperatures and normal atmospheric pressure conditions.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/us-chemists-turn-natural-gas-liquid-fuel-without-high-heat-and-pressures

Microsoft Triples-Down On Data Centers, As Half Of Planned Projects Face Cancelations, Delays

 Microsoft unveiled plans to triple its data center footprint in Cheyenne, Wyoming, snapping up roughly 3,200 acres on the city's south edge. 

The deal covers a 200-acre parcel in Bison Business Park plus an adjacent 3,000-acre tract, turning what is already one of the company's longstanding hubs into a sprawling complex. 

With 11 data centers operational and three more under construction across four campuses, the tech giant is betting big on the Cowboy State's energy resources and workforce. 

A company spokeswoman called it a "commitment to continued growth," citing the area's skilled labor, solid infrastructure, and thriving energy sector.

The land grab hit the headlines amid a far less rosy picture for the data center frenzy in the United States and beyond. Announcements keep piling up at a disturbing clip, fueled by the AI “gold rush” and hyperscaler spending projected to top $700 billion this year alone. 

Earlier this week we reported that nearly half of the roughly 16 gigawatts of U.S. data-center capacity slated to come online in 2026 will likely face delays or outright cancellation. In fact, only about 5 gigawatts have even broken ground, according to Sightline Climate's latest outlook. Supply-chain gaps, transformer shortages, and grid constraints are turning ambitious blueprints into paper tigers.

Even in Cheyenne, not everyone is popping champagne. State Senator Cale Case voiced caution about future ratepayer impacts and grid congestion

It looks good on paper,” Case said.

“But what happens down the road when those supplies become constrained? So, it’s not benign, and it takes a lot of thought. I don’t think you can ever say this is not going to impact other customers.”

In the UK, OpenAI recently paused its ambitious Stargate project over prohibitive energy costs and regulatory hurdles, as we recently highlighted. Wyoming's climate and energy edge may insulate Microsoft's Cheyenne bet for now, but the global wave of cancellations suggests many shiny press releases will never pour concrete. 

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/it-looks-good-paper-microsoft-tripling-down-data-centers-half-planned-projects-face-axe

Hochul Joins Mamdani In New York's "Eat The Rich" Movement

 by Jonathan Turley,

The hunt is on...

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani used Tax Day to announce a new fee targeting wealthy people who still linger in the city after moving their primary residences to other states.

The tax, called pied-à-terre (or “foot on the ground”) is designed to hit people who still maintain high-value properties in the city. It is a remarkably moronic effort to ensure that wealthy people cut all ties with the city. However, Gov. Kathy Hochul has yielded to the far left and joined the effort.

Mamdani, a socialist who supports the “decommodification” of private property, is seeking major tax increases, including a 10% property tax, to fund his pledges for free buses, city-run stores, and other policies.

He will need it. Mamdani not only recently admitted that he cannot fulfill his pledge for free buses this year, but that he will only build the first of five promise city-run stores next year at the cost of $30 million — almost half of what he set aside for all five promised stores.

The new measure would add a fee to existing taxes for owners of high-value properties worth more than $5 million.

Mamdani declared the new fee part of “Happy Tax Day,” which will generate $500 million more to “help fund things like free child care, cleaner streets, and safer neighborhoods.”

He is also pushing Hochul to increase taxes on the 33,000 New Yorkers earning more than $1 million annually as well as those corporations that have not left the state. Other blue states from Washington to Virginia are moving toward similar millionaire taxes.

The move is consistent with other blue states seeing the same exodus of wealthy taxpayers and businesses due to the rising budgets and tax burdens. Rather than seeking to make their states magnets for investment, California and other states are pursuing retroactive wealth taxes and so-called “Teddy Bear laws” that refuse to recognize changes of residency.

New York has used its “Teddy Bear” regulations to declare that people who fled to other states are still residents subject to taxation because of the location of their sentimental attachments in New York (like a Teddy Bear) from pets to children.

In my new book, “Rage and the Republic,” I discuss these taxes and how they are the final stage of economic atrophy for states like New York. Politicians like Hochul cannot muster the courage to face bloated budgets, excessive union pension contracts, and runaway spending. In other words, it is too difficult to create a state that draws investment and residents like so many red states. Instead, they are chasing the remaining wealthy people who still maintain contacts with the state.

The result is a form of economic Darwinism in which the herd of wealthy taxpayers is thinned further by capturing the slowest or most nostalgic individuals.

The irony is that Houhul and Mamdani are working to cut the final ties of these former residents, convincing them that they are viewed as parasites to be pursued relentlessly for more taxes.

In Rage and the Republic, I discuss these efforts as a dangerous form of “economic factionalism,” a popular tactic historically used by demagogues to curry public favor by vilifying the wealthy.

Mandani denounced those who “store their wealth in New York City real estate [and] reap the huge financial rewards” while “hurt[ing] working New Yorkers.”

This is evident in the renewed claims of figures such as Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.), who used Tax Day to renew calls for her unconstitutional wealth tax.

Warren posted on X that “It’s time to make the ultra-wealthy pay their fair share. It’s time to pass a wealth tax.”

Socialist Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders also made the same claim. In a Guardian op-ed, Sanders cited shocking figures claiming that Elon Musk pays a tax rate of only 3.3% while Jeff Bezos pays less than 1%.

The claim comes from the dubious source  ProPublica, which performs a statistical sleight of hand. In reality, the publication shows that figures like Jeff Bezos paid $973 million in taxes on income of $4.22 billion. That is a 23% tax burden, not less than 1%. Musk paid 30% with a $455 million tax bill.

The top 1% of taxpayers in this country paid roughly 40% of all taxes. The top 5% pays over 40% of taxes.

The Democrats are committed to economic factionalism as a strategy for the midterm elections. It is a major driver of the rage politics that many hope will allow them to regain power in November. It will come at a great cost to states like New York.

Hochul and Mamdani can hunt down the remaining wealthy taxpayers lingering in their state. In the end, it will not generate nearly as much revenue as it will cost as residents and businesses look elsewhere for position living and business environments.

The best way to improve the standard of living in these states is to improve their economies and tax bases. Instead, blue states like California and New York are raising costs across the board, including through pushes for a $ 30-per-hour minimum wage. In California, the massive increases in the minimum wage have already resulted in substantial job losses and business closures.

It is unlikely that many wealthy individuals will stick around to experience what Mayor Mamdani calls “the warmth of collectivism.” Instead, it will be average New Yorkers who are burned by his “eat the rich” policies.

Jonathan Turley is a law professor and the best-selling author of “Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/hochul-joins-mamdani-new-yorks-eat-rich-movement