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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

NYPD’s Tisch insists cops don’t work with ICE on civil immigration enforcement

 Top cop Jessica Tisch insisted Tuesday that the NYPD doesn’t partner with ICE on civil immigration enforcement amid lefty criticism over the police response to protesters targeting agents at a hospital last week.

Tisch credited the cops’ actions outside Wyckoff Heights Medical Center in Brooklyn with preventing bloodshed when an anti-ICE mob tried to stop the federal agency’s enforcers from leaving the hospital with a detainee May 2.

NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch denied Tuesday that city cops cooperate with ICE on civil immigration enforcement.Robert Miller for NY Post

“Please know this: When police officers stand between armed ICE agents and surging protesters, that is not assisting with immigration enforcement,” the police commissioner said at the ABNY Power Breakfast at the 583 Park Ave.

“That is the men and women of the NYPD fulfilling their primary duty as members of service: to prevent chaos, to maintain order and protect human life.”

Tisch’s boss, Mayor Zohran Mamdani, has echoed his commissioner’s stance that the NYPD did not team up with ICE during the hospital showdown.

The NYPD boss’ stern comments stem from the anti-ICE mob descending on the Bushwick hospital in defense of Nigerian national Chidozie Wilson Okeke, who the feds said has been in the country illegally and has previously been arrested for assault and drug possession.

He was in federal law-enforcement custody when he claimed to be injured and the agents brought him to the hospital to be checked out.

Protesters earlier this month came out in defense of an illegal migrant detained by the feds.Dakota Santiago/FNTV

Word leaked among the woke crowd that ICE agents had the migrant there, and protesters stormed the outside of the hospital and blocked its emergency bays while tossing trash cans in the street to disrupt traffic.

NYPD officers reached the scene to restore order before a struggling Okeke was escorted away by ICE agents.

Lefty pols and activists accused the NYPD of assisting ICE at the time.

“New York City is a sanctuary city,” tweeted Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, who is also running for Congress. “The NYPD shouldn’t be helping ICE in any shape or form.”

The volatile scene was only worsened by the illegal migrant’s flailing against agents.Dakota Santiago/FNTV

But Tisch argued NYPD’s presence stopped deadly violence from breaking out between the feds and demonstrators akin to the shooting deaths of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis.

“That did not happen a little over a week ago outside Wyckoff Medical Center,” she said in her prepared remarks.

“Why? Because NYPD officers, in the middle of the night, amid chaos outside their control, did their job professionally and skillfully and made sure events did not spiral into calamity.”

She claimed critics of NYPD’s performance outside Wyckoff “have lost sight of the lives at stake.

“And misleading rhetoric that claims we’re colluding with ICE when we are emphatically not makes communities less safe,” she added, noting immigrants might not call 911 for help or to report a crime.  

Tisch stressed the NYPD and federal officers will still work together to take down violent criminals – but voiced her support for Gov. Kathy Hochul’s proposed sanctuary legislation restricting collaboration between local New York cops and ICE and blocking the federal agency from “sensitive locations.”  

The proposals pushed by Democrats are expected to be part of the state’s long-delayed budget. 

https://nypost.com/2026/05/12/us-news/nypds-tisch-insists-cops-dont-work-with-feds-on-civil-immigration-enforcement/

Inside spy network that propelled Chinese agent/Cal. mayor Eileen Wang on US soil

 Two convicted Chinese spies helped Arcadia’s former mayor become a successful SoCal politician — who secretly took orders from Beijing.

Yaoning “Mike” Sun and John Chen helped Eileen Wang win office and secretly reported back to their masters in the People’s Republic of China, according to court documents.

Sun took orders from Chen as he served as the campaign manager and business partner of Wang in her successful 2022 run for Arcadia City Council.

Wang regularly communicated with Chinese officials, according to court documents.CBS
John Chen, convicted in the United States of acting as a PRC agent, shaking hands with China’s top leader Xi Jinping in 2021.Department of Justice

When Wang won her seat, Chen told Sun to send a report to their PRC masters calling Wang a “new political star.”

Wang would “go against Taiwanese independence” and “report to China,” Chen reported to his PRC spymaster.

The Chinese official responded: “That’s great!”

Chen told Sun to make a list of politicians that Wang was friendly with, adding: “the more the better, the higher position the better.”

He also bragged to Beijing about they could turn local U.S. politicians against Taiwanese independence, according to the documents.

Wang pictured with California’s Attorney General Rob Bonta.Facebook/EieenWang

The mayor of Arcadia is selected from the Council on a rolling basis.

Chen was sentenced in 2024 to 20 months in prison for acting as an unregistered agent of the People’s Republic of China and bribing an Internal Revenue Service agent.

Wang resigned from her job as Mayor of Arcadia Monday.X/@eileen1282

While in custody, Chen told his cellmate that he was a Chinese spy and his agency is “100 times better than the FBI,” court documents say.

Sun, who was also Wang’s lover and fiancé, was charged in 2024 with conspiracy and acting as an illegal agent of a foreign government.

Wang dumped him, saying “We broke up the fiancé relationship — we keep the friendship.”

Sun pled guilty to his charges and in February was sentenced to 40 months in federal prison.

Wang resigned her job as mayor and pled guilty Monday to the charge of acting as an illegal agent for a foreign government. She faces up to 10 years in federal prison.

https://nypost.com/2026/05/12/us-news/inside-chinese-agent-eileen-wangs-sprawling-secret-spy-network/

Ignore Mamdani’s gaslighting — NYC subway violence is worse than you remember

When Decarlos Brown, Jr., fatally pierced 23-year-old Iryna Zarutska’s throat on a Charlotte, NC, commuter train last August, the horror made global news.

Last week’s fatal shoving of 76-year-old Ross Falzone down a flight of Manhattan subway steps commands equal outrage for what it says about the city’s steep decline in transit safety.

For decades, New York succeeded in keeping its transit system safe.

Surveillance video obtained by the Post shows Rhamell Burke allegedly pushing Ross Falzone down the subway stairs.
Surveillance video obtained by The Post shows Rhamell Burke allegedly pushing Ross Falzone down the subway stairs.

Obtained by the NY Post 

Recently, we’ve just given up on doing it.  

For any transit rider, watching the video of Falzone in the seconds before his murder conjures the same emotions video of Brown’s random attack on Zarutska evoked. 

We see Falzone, a retired teacher, confidently walking down Chelsea’s 18th Street toward the subway steps, backpack slung over his shoulders.  

He feels no danger; he appears to be reading a piece of paper.

Then another man, allegedly 32-year-old Rhamell Burke, steps into the frame, stretching his arms in one motion toward Falzone.

He catapults the older man forward, smashing Falzone’s head into the steps.  

We all like to think that we, streetwise and transit-wise, would never suffer such a fate. 

The footage reveals this to be self-delusion; neither Zarutska nor Falzone could have saved themselves. 

New Yorkers who can grasp facts feel another emotion, too: frustration and anger.  

Falzone’s was the fourth subway killing of 2026.

Three of these deaths were stranger-on-stranger crimes, the kind of violence people fear most.  

Falzone’s murder wasn’t even the first transit eldercide of 2026. 

In March Bairon Hernandez, 34, fatally flung Richard Williams, an 83-year-old military veteran, onto the subway tracks at Lexington Avenue and 63rd Street. 

And Falzone’s death wasn’t  the only recent instance of murder by stairs.

In July 2021, a suspect pulled 58-year-old Than Htwe down the Q train steps at Canal Street, killing her; a year before, another man was pushed to his death on the Penn Station steps.  

These murders aren’t anecdotes.  

They are part of a dataset that illustrates how much more deadly our subways are now, compared to seven years ago. 

Since 2020, New York has suffered 47 subway murders, along with at least five justified homicides, including the police killing of a machete-wielding head-hacker at Grand Central last month.  

That’s an average of eight murders a year over the past six years.  

This is not normal.

In the 23 years between 1997 and 2019, New York never had a year with more than five subway murders.

And it suffered just two years — 1999 and 2005 — with even that many.  

Over this two-decade period, the average number of killings in the transit system each year was two — and in 2017, it reached zero. 

Unsurprisingly, serious transit-system violence that sometimes results in murder is also up: Over six years from 2020 through 2025, New Yorkers, visitors, transit workers and police officers suffered 3,125 life-changing felony assaults in the subways — a level that previously took 13 years to reach. 

Now, we’re on our third mayor who is overseeing four times the level of subway killings that New Yorkers accepted between the late 1990s and 2019.  

And when we complain about it, we’re gaslit — from the Bill de Blasio-era NYPD saying the problem was “fearmongering,” to Eric Adams saying it was a matter of “perception,” to Mamdani’s NYPD implying, this month, that things are just fine — when in fact violent subway felonies were up nearly 7% in the first quarter of this year.  

What is going wrong?  

Adams, spurred by Gov. Kathy Hochul and state funding, deployed hundreds of NYPD officers on overtime shifts in the subway beginning in 2022, and Mamdani has kept them. 

The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the city have deployed police-backed teams of mental-health workers to get disturbed people out of transit.  

But once police arrest violent suspects or clinicians call for mental evaluation, suspects or patients don’t stay in jail or in the hospital.  

The man who allegedly killed Williams in March — an illegal migrant — had racked up 15 arrests. 

Police had arrested Burke, the suspect in Falzone’s killing, four times since February, including for violent subway behavior; he was released every time.  

And police brought Burke to Bellevue for psychiatric evaluation hours before he allegedly pushed Falzone — and was released again.   

Burke’s psychosis may have been drug-induced, meaning that he had calmed down by the time a doctor assessed him. He behaved normally in court this weekend.  

Yes, we must fix our mental-health system — Hochul and Adams made progress  — but no elected official wants to admit that we’ve also got to enforce laws against low-level illegal drug sales, possession and use. 

And fare evasion, though lower than its 14% peak in 2024, is still at 10.6%, more than twice as high as before 2020.

Farebeating is an indicator of antisocial behavior: Just last week, cops who caught a teen turnstile-hopper at Coney Island found he was wanted for a Times Square murder. 

Mamdani and Hochul, you’re on notice: This is not normal.

New Yorkers haven’t forgotten the not-so-olden days of safe subways — and we want them back. 

Nicole Gelinas is a contributing editor to the Manhattan Institute’s City Journal.  

https://nypost.com/2026/05/12/opinion/ignore-mamdanis-gaslighting-nyc-subway-violence-is-worse-than-you-remember/

Iran denies plans for 'hostile actions' against Kuwait

 Iranian Foreign Ministry shut down Kuwait's claims that Tehran was planning "hostile actions" against it on Tuesday.

Previously, Kuwait apprehended four individuals believed to be affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) for trying to "infiltrate" the country's territory by sea. Iran's ministry insisted in a statement that the four Iranians, who were detained, were conducting a standard maritime patrol operation and ended up crossing into Kuwait's waters "due to a malfunction in their navigation system."

Tehran further said that its embassy in Kuwait should be allowed to contact the arrested Iranians.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Iran-denies-plans-for-'hostile-actions'-against-Kuwait/66278348

OpenAI-linked sales said to have earned Microsoft $30B

 Microsoft Corporation has earned $30 billion, more than double the $13 billion it invested in OpenAI Inc., when it came to new revenue in services linked to the artificial intelligence (AI) company, The Information reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter, the tech giant's filings, and OpenAI's private financial papers.

According to the outlet, Microsoft cannot sell OpenAI's products itself; however, it can benefit from other aspects. The aforementioned $30 billion was earned through OpenAI paying for Microsoft’s cloud servers, sharing revenue, and Microsoft selling products powered by OpenAI's tools, such as Azure. The partnership was said to remain potent, as, according to financial filings, Microsoft earned $9.5 billion through its links to OpenAI between 2023 and 2025, and the rest of the revenue came in after 2025.

Microsoft currently owns approximately 25% stake in OpenAI, which is endangered by billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk's legal case against the AI firm.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/OpenAI-linked-sales-said-to-have-earned-Microsoft-dollar30B/66278144

Google to hire hundreds of engineers to aid AI adoption

 Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian announced on Tuesday that the company plans to hire new Forward Deployed Engineers (FDEs) to help customers with the adoption of artificial intelligence tools.

"We are investing in hiring additional Forward Deployed Engineers (FDEs) to help us scale customer AI transformation. While having FDEs is not new for Google Cloud, the demand from customers and partners for Google enterprise AI products and Google engineers to help them embrace agent development is growing very rapidly," Kurian said in a post on LinkedIn.

While Kurian did not disclose how many new engineers would be hired, the Information reported that the company is looking to hire "hundreds of engineers."

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Google-to-hire-hundreds-of-engineers-to-aid-AI-adoption/66278231

Trump confirms Diamantas will replace FDA's Makary

 United States President Donald Trump confirmed on Tuesday that Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Deputy Commissioner for Food Kyle Diamantas will temporarily succeed Marty Makary as the agency's acting head.

"I want to thank Dr. Marty Makary for having done a great job at the FDA. So much was accomplished under his leadership. He was a hard worker, who was respected by all, and will go on to have an outstanding career in Medicine. Kyle Diamantas, a very talented person, will be put in the Acting position," Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social.

Previous reports claimed that the US president was already planning to sack Makary, as it was believed he was struggling to lead the FDA.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Trump-confirms-Diamantas-will-replace-FDA's-Makary/66278629