Sounds like this could have been serious. Here's another link and copy pasta.![]()
FBI foiled a 'potential terrorist attack' in Michigan planned for Halloween weekend, Director Kash Patel says
Police in Dearborn said the FBI carried out an operation there Friday morning — although the bureau has not confirmed this was linked to Friday's arrests.www.nbcnews.com
Whats wrong with the Hamas Israel deal?If Trump gets involved, hopefully it will end better than the Israel v. Hamas deal.
I am now wondering if the participants were women?Sounds like this could have been serious. Here's another link and copy pasta.
Pasta to follow.
A group of people who allegedly chatted online about an ISIS-inspired attack went to a shooting range with AK-47s, practiced high-speed reloads and made a reference to “pumpkin day,” authorities said. That’s when investigators jumped into action.
Multiple people were arrested Friday when the FBI averted a possible terrorist attack planned for Halloween weekend, Director Kash Patel said.
“This morning the FBI thwarted a potential terrorist attack and arrested multiple subjects in Michigan who were allegedly plotting a violent attack over Halloween weekend. More details to come,” Patel posted on X.
The plot was inspired by ISIS and unfolded in online chatrooms, two law enforcement officials with knowledge of the case told CNN.
Two participants have been arrested, and three others are being questioned, one of those officials said.
An FBI undercover person was introduced into the chatroom in the early stages of discussion, that official added.
“The FBI swept out from the Detroit field office last night and through this morning, taking people into custody, executing search warrants and doing subpoenas for phones, computers and other material,” said John Miller, CNN’s chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst.
“This all relates to an investigation that started months ago into people who were communicating online with each other here in the United States … but also talking to people overseas, possibly connected to ISIS,” Miller said, citing conversations with law enforcement officials who had been briefed.
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FBI agents gather outside a home in a Dearborn neighborhood on Friday.
Mike Householder/AP
The participants discussed whether to carry out an ISIS-inspired plot in the US – “though what that plot was, when that plot would be, what the target would be, was unclear as they discussed various options in terms of timing,” Miller said.
But this week, a group of those being monitored went to a shooting range with AK-47s, “fired a large number of rounds of ammunition, practiced tactical high-speed reloads” and apparently made a reference to “‘pumpkin day’ – a possible reference to Halloween,” the FBI jumped into action, Miller said.
The FBI’s Detroit field office confirmed “the FBI in Michigan were present in the cities of Dearborn and Inkster this morning conducting law enforcement activities,” spokesperson Jordan Hall told CNN. “There is no current threat to public safety.”
In the city of Inkster, the FBI carried out “law enforcement activities at a storage facility located on Michigan Avenue,” Police Chief Tamika L. Jenkins said.
She said local FBI agents confirmed there is no threat to residents. But to assuage any concerns, Inkster police “will have additional personnel deployed throughout the evening to ensure the safety and well-being of all residents, particularly those participating in Halloween festivities,” the police chief said.
The Dearborn Police Department said it “has been made aware that the FBI conducted operations in the City of Dearborn earlier this morning.”
“We want to assure our residents that there is no threat to the community at this time,” the police department said.
Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer thanked the FBI and Michigan State Police for their quick work.
“This morning, I was briefed by Director Patel on the thwarted potential terrorist attack in our state,” she posted on X. “As details continue to develop, I am grateful for the swift action of the FBI and MSP protecting Michiganders.”
CNN’s Hannah Rabinowitz, Nicki Brown and Jeff Winter contributed to this report.
Correction: This story has been updated to remove mention of the gender of those involved, as authorities have not yet specified.


www.nbcnewyork.com
So you get shot for knocking on someone's door. WTH!Reminds me a lot of the Ralph Yarl/Andrew Lester case.
Police initially called for home invasion in progress
WHITESTOWN, Ind. – A woman died following a shooting at a Whitestown subdivision in what appeared to be a case of mistaken identity.
Capt. John Jurkash, a public information officer with the Whitestown Metropolitan Police Department, confirmed the shooting was reported at 6:49 a.m. Wednesday on Maize Lane.
Police found a woman dead on the porch. It appeared a shot had been fired from inside, with bullet hole spotted in the front door.
The call initially came in as a home invasion, and police investigated it as such. Upon further investigation, however, Jurkash said the home invasion element was “not the case anymore.”
It appeared the woman was part of a cleaning crew who had arrived at the wrong address. Officers attempted life-saving measures when they arrived, but the woman was already dead.
“This remains an active and ongoing investigation into the fatal shooting,” police said in a statement sent just before noon on Wednesday. “The facts gathered do not support that a residential entry occurred. We want to reassure the community that this appears to be an isolated incident, and there is no known threat to public safety.”
Several people were in the home and at the scene when it happened, Jurkash said. Investigators recovered a firearm.
A man, also part of the cleaning crew, was on the porch with the victim when police arrived on scene. Police reiterated that no evidence leads them to believe the woman entered the home.
Jurkash said the investigation was still in its early stages and police were questioning several people. He declined to comment on a possible suspect, as investigators were still trying to understand the circumstances surrounding the shooting.
The victim has been identified as Maria Florinda Rios Perez. FOX59/CBS4 spoke with the victim’s husband Wednesday night as police continue investigating the shooting.
“The loss of life is always a profound tragedy, and our hearts and prayers go out to all those affected. WMPD is committed to conducting a thorough and impartial investigation,” police said in a statement. “Our detectives are interviewing all individuals involved, and our Crime Scene Investigators are meticulously collecting and analyzing all relevant evidence to understand the full scope of what occurred.”
Police said they were working with the Boone County Prosecutor’s Office to make sure “every aspect of this case is handled with care and diligence.”
Whitestown police asked the community to “trust in their investigative process and refrain from sharing unverified information.”

That's awesome!![]()
Trump Pardons Cheyenne Diesel Delete Mechanic Troy Lake
President Donald Trump pardoned Troy Lake on Friday. The 65-year-old Wyoming diesel mechanic spent seven months in federal prison for tweaking and…cowboystatedaily.com
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Trump Pardons Cheyenne Diesel Delete Mechanic Troy Lake
President Donald Trump pardoned Troy Lake on Friday. The 65-year-old Wyoming diesel mechanic spent seven months in federal prison for tweaking and removing emissions systems on ailing engines. When he got the news, he wept.
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Clair McFarland
November 08, 20259 min read
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President Donald Trump pardoned Troy Lake on Friday. The 65-year-old Wyoming diesel mechanic spent seven months in federal prison for tweaking and removing emissions systems on ailing engines. When he got the news, he wept. (Jimmy Orr, Cowboy State Daily)
President Donald Trump pardoned Troy Lake on Friday.
The 65-year-old Wyoming diesel mechanic spent seven months in federal prison for tweaking and removing emissions systems on ailing engines. He was originally sentenced to one year and one day in prison, but was released early to home confinement with an ankle monitor in September.
He and his business Elite Diesel were also fined $52,000.
Though relieved to be free of the dismal prison in which he spent his 40th wedding anniversary and his 65th birthday, Lake said that he believed he’d spend the rest of his life as a convicted felon, unable to vote, hold public office, or possess or hunt with firearms.
Until Friday.
He was standing in his kitchen when he noticed he had a voicemail, Lake told Cowboy State Daily on Friday.
It was from U.S. Sen. Cynthia Lummis, calling to congratulate Lake on receiving a full, complete, unconditional pardon from the president.
Lummis said she found it shocking the pardon was even needed, in a copy of the voicemail Lake sent Friday to Cowboy State Daily.
“But I just wanted to call and … let you know how very sorry I am that this even happened to you guys, but how delighted I am that the pardon has come through from President Trump,” said Lummis. “Thank you, take care, and congratulations.”
Lake said he started pacing his family home just outside of Cheyenne, his heart racing.
Then he wept.
“I don’t guess men are supposed to do that,” he said. “But it’s great. It’s news that, you know — I guess I look at it as, there are some good things that happen in the world.”
The First Tears
Meanwhile, Troy’s wife Holly Lake was driving on Interstate 25 south of Cheyenne when she got the call.
She had to pull over to cry.
“These are the first tears I’ve shed over this whole thing since it all started,” Holly told Cowboy State Daily, reflecting on roughly six years of being investigated by the federal government after U.S. Environmental Protection Agency personnel first raided the family’s shop in 2018.
Holly hadn’t let herself cry because, “I knew we had to get through this,” she said. “I had to be strong for everybody, I guess.”
Troy Lake said the thrilling news makes him want to help others like him.
He said he hopes he can help anyone in the diesel industry or in the government who will listen to find ways to tune trucks for cleaner air — and to spark commonsense reforms to the systems and the laws around them.
“We need to sit down and think about a more logical way of doing it, not putting people out of work,” he said, referencing the expensive emissions repairs that can cripple small trucking businesses and other diesel fleets.
'Everyday People Won Today'
Troy and Holly Lake in their separate interviews both thanked Trump, Lummis and her team, as well as the advocates who fought for their cause.
Troy said he’s amazed at his wife and family, who fought for a pardon while he was in prison, “helpless” to get word of his own case to the new administration.
Holly said she’s grateful for the numerous Wyoming lawmakers who urged the president to pardon her husband, “and all the people around the country who have backed us up. We found out who our friends are. It’s unbelievable.”
One of those is Jeff Daugherty, a Cheyenne-based political consultant and family friend who took up the Lakes’ cause for free because he saw Troy’s prosecution as unjust.
“Regular, everyday people won today. That feels good,” Daugherty told Cowboy State Daily in a Friday text message.
He added that the pardon is “a testament to the brave people who stayed with Troy,” including Lummis, Wyoming House Speaker Rep. Chip Neiman and the state representatives he rallied, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin, and Region 8 Administrator Cyrus Western.
Neiman told Cowboy State Daily on Friday that he’d like to thank Trump, “for doing the right thing” and standing up for victims of government overreach.
“I appreciate all the efforts on behalf of everybody that was willing to put their name on the line for (Troy),” Neiman added.
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President Donald Trump pardoned Troy Lake on Friday. The 65-year-old Wyoming diesel mechanic spent seven months in federal prison for tweaking and removing emissions systems on ailing engines. When he got the news, he wept. Above, Troy and wife Holly celebrate in their home Friday. (Jimmy Orr, Cowboy State Daily)![]()
President Donald Trump pardoned Troy Lake on Friday. The 65-year-old Wyoming diesel mechanic spent seven months in federal prison for tweaking and removing emissions systems on ailing engines. When he got the news, he wept. Above, TJ, Troy and Holly Lake with a copy of the pardon from Trump. (Jimmy Orr, Cowboy State Daily)![]()
President Donald Trump pardoned Troy Lake on Friday. The 65-year-old Wyoming diesel mechanic spent seven months in federal prison for tweaking and removing emissions systems on ailing engines. When he got the news, he wept. (Jimmy Orr, Cowboy State Daily)