Kristi Noem is out at DHS. Here's a TV commercial of her on a horse, filmed five months ago at Mount Rushmore, for an ad campaign that cost more than $200 million
Kristi Noem is out at DHS. Here's a TV commercial of her on a horse, filmed five months ago at Mount Rushmore, for an ad campaign that cost more than $200 million
My latest, on the secretive legal weapon Homeland Security is using to target Americans.
Last fall, Jon, 67, emailed a DHS attorney, urging mercy for an asylum seeker. Hours later, DHS subpoenaed his Google account. Then it sent investigators to his home.
wapo.st/4rtfCw8
“USA!” chanted the would-be saboteurs of a 244-year-old democracy.
What actually happened five years ago, from the journalists who were there:
www.washingtonpost.com/local/trump-...
When H learned that he would continue to be held, with no resolution on the horizon, he made a plea:
Late on the afternoon before the hearing, DHS had filed an FBI memo that said H was under a “National Security investigation” and was considered “a potential threat.”
In court, the judge questioned the prosecutor about the memo. I've never before seen an exchange like this over evidence.
Last week, a DHS attorney announced in court that the government has not finished his background check and could not estimate when it would. The frustrated immigration judge acknowledged that, by law, she doesn’t have the option to grant him asylum without a finalized check.
ICE is now indefinitely holding the Afghan father of two — who hasn't been charged with any crime — in his high-stakes asylum case we've written about over the past two months.
wapo.st/3Lwidpi
And a link to our original story on the man,
who supported the war in Afghanistan, came to the U.S. legally, applied for asylum, had two kids, became a bookkeeper, bought an American flag bumper sticker.
Then ICE arrested him. If he's deported, he expects the Taliban to kill him.
wapo.st/4oomFoU
My latest: The Trump administration has presented misleading evidence and arguments in a high-stakes asylum hearing—and it could lead to the execution of a father of two who helped the U.S. cause in Afghanistan
The case may have sweeping consequences for thousands of migrants.
wapo.st/433Qsun
In this week's #LongreadsTop5 ⬇️
• The American Dream, dashed (@washingtonpost.com)
• Remembering D’Angelo (@the-ringer.bsky.social)
• DIY DNA (@noemamag.com)
• What media bias really looks like (@motherjones.com)
• Mummy dearest (Edify)
longreads.com/2025/10/17/l...
"At a time when the courts are denying a record number of asylum claims, a judge will soon decide whether he should be deported. If he is returned, he expects the Taliban to be waiting for him."
@johnwoodrowcox.bsky.social for @washingtonpost.com: www.washingtonpost.com/investigatio...
My latest, on a man who supported the war in Afghanistan, came to the U.S. legally, applied for asylum, had two kids, became a bookkeeper, bought an American flag bumper sticker.
Then ICE arrested him. If he's deported, he expects the Taliban to kill him.
wapo.st/49aGaw2
Unbelievable story of Afghan refugee, a highly vetted fluent English speaker who helped the US against the Taliban and now lives here with his US citizen kids, declared “illegal” and perhaps about to be shipped home by the Trump admin to his likely death
New on the backlash to Jim Acosta's "interview" of a dead Parkland teen's AI avatar, with its clunky phrases ("so much fun to the series") and "ghoulish" display.
"Can't possibly represent what that child wants to say in any reasonable way"
www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2... @willoremus.com
Last month, we profiled JJ Ficken, a Colorado farmer whose life was upended by Trump's policies. Four days later, the USDA called: The grant money he feared would never come was on its way. Checks for dozens of other desperate farmers should soon follow:
wapo.st/3ISIUDu
1. “Abandoned by Trump, a Farmer and a Migrant Search for a Better Future” @johnwoodrowcox.bsky.social, Sarah Blaskey, Matt McClain
"To survive the administration’s cuts and cruelty, a Trump voter and an immigrant needed each other."
www.washingtonpost.com/investigatio...
This heartbreaking story by @JohnWoodrowCox.bsky.social is gorgeously, empathetically written. The details could only have come from extraordinary reporting. This piece will be taught in journalism schools. wapo.st/44pck4q
My latest, from Camp Mystic: The story of one teenage counselor's extraordinary courage amid so much loss.
Deeply grateful to Ainslie Bashara for sharing.
wapo.st/44pck4q
. @johnwoodrowcox.bsky.social consistently writes humanizing narrative, but this article is next-level good. It's about a farmer who was promised a federal grant to hire a Guatemalan worker—only to have the Trump administration freeze the funds as "DEI." With Sarah Blakely; photos by Matt McClain.
On today's front page, the story of a farmer, a migrant and what it means to make a commitment.
Part of our examination into how President Trump’s policies are reshaping the lives of Americans, with reporting from Sarah Blaskey and photos from Matt McClain.
wapo.st/4liDorF
After threats against schools exploded last year, police arrested hundreds of students.
This is the story of what happened in one Florida county where the sheriff perp walked, and publicly shamed, children as young as 11.
w/ @hannahnatanson.bsky.social:
www.washingtonpost.com/investigatio...