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DeSantis sinks Florida Republican’s plan to help pay Trump’s legal bill
A day after ending his campaign for the White House and tepidly endorsing Donald Trump, Florida governor Ron DeSantis sank an effort to use his state’s funds to pay off the former president’s legal expenses.
DeSantis promised to veto a bill from state senator Ileana Garcia, a Republican who sought to effectively dedicate up to $5m from Florida’s state budget to help Trump cover his legal costs. The former president faces 91 criminal charges and assorted lawsuits in various jurisdictions.
DeSantis shared a link on social media to a Politico article headlined “Some Florida Republicans want taxpayers to pay Trump’s legal bills”, and he added the caption: “But not the Florida Republican who wields the veto pen.”
Garcia’s proposal had won an endorsement from the elected official who oversees Florida’s state finances, Jimmy Patronis, a Republican. But Garcia withdrew her proposal shortly after DeSantis came out in opposition of it, FloridaPolitics.com reported.
She said in a statement that having Trump in the White House again would be a gain for Florida, where the former president’s Mar-a-Lago resort is located. “And anything we can do to support Florida presidential candidates, like president Trump, will not only benefit our state but our nation”.
DeSantis ended his White House campaign on Sunday after finishing a distant second to Trump in the Iowa caucuses. Polls suggested DeSantis was on track to finish in third far in Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary, far behind Trump and former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley.
Endorsing Trump, Desantis wrote: “It’s clear to me that a majority of Republican primary voters want to give Donald Trump another chance. He has my endorsement because we can’t go back to the old Republican guard of yesteryear, a repackaged form of warmed over corporatism that Nikki Haley represents.”
Trump thanked DeSantis. But he told Fox News it “was highly unlikely” that the Florida governor would have a role in a second Trump administration.
“I have a lot of great people, and I have great people that have been with me right from the beginning,” Trump said on Sunday.
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Trump’s criminal charges center on his attempts to forcibly overturn his defeat to Joe Biden in 2020, on illegally retaining government secrets after he left office, and on hush-money payments to an adult film actor who has alleged an extramarital sexual encounter with him.
He is also a defendant in civil litigation accusing him of illicit business practices as well as rape, with the latter allegation having been deemed substantially true by a judge.
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Video: F.A.A. Ignored Safety Concerns Prior to Collision Over Potomac, N.T.S.B. Says
new video loaded: F.A.A. Ignored Safety Concerns Prior to Collision Over Potomac, N.T.S.B. Says
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transcript
F.A.A. Ignored Safety Concerns Prior to Collision Over Potomac, N.T.S.B. Says
The National Transportation Safety Board said that a “multitude of errors” led to the collision between a military helicopter and a commercial jet, killing 67 people last January.
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“I imagine there will be some difficult moments today for all of us as we try to provide answers to how a multitude of errors led to this tragedy.” “We have an entire tower who took it upon themselves to try to raise concerns over and over and over and over again, only to get squashed by management and everybody above them within F.A.A. Were they set up for failure?” “They were not adequately prepared to do the jobs they were assigned to do.”
By Meg Felling
January 27, 2026
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Families of killed men file first U.S. federal lawsuit over drug boat strikes
President Trump speaks as U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth looks on during a meeting of his Cabinet at the White House in December 2025.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
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Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Relatives of two Trinidadian men killed in an airstrike last October are suing the U.S. government for wrongful death and for carrying out extrajudicial killings.
The case, filed in Massachusetts, is the first lawsuit over the strikes to land in a U.S. federal court since the Trump administration launched a campaign to target vessels off the coast of Venezuela. The American government has carried out three dozen such strikes since September, killing more than 100 people.

Among them are Chad Joseph, 26, and Rishi Samaroo, 41, who relatives say died in what President Trump described as “a lethal kinetic strike” on Oct. 14, 2025. The president posted a short video that day on social media that shows a missile targeting a ship, which erupts in flame.
“This is killing for sport, it’s killing for theater and it’s utterly lawless,” said Baher Azmy, legal director of the Center for Constitutional Rights. “We need a court of law to rein in this administration and provide some accountability to the families.”
The White House and Pentagon justify the strikes as part of a broader push to stop the flow of illegal drugs into the U.S. The Pentagon declined to comment on the lawsuit, saying it doesn’t comment on ongoing litigation.
But the new lawsuit described Joseph and Samaroo as fishermen doing farm work in Venezuela, with no ties to the drug trade. Court papers said they were headed home to family members when the strike occurred and now are presumed dead.
Neither man “presented a concrete, specific, and imminent threat of death or serious physical injury to the United States or anyone at all, and means other than lethal force could have reasonably been employed to neutralize any lesser threat,” according to the lawsuit.
Lenore Burnley, the mother of Chad Joseph, and Sallycar Korasingh, the sister of Rishi Samaroo, are the plaintiffs in the case.
Their court papers allege violations of the Death on the High Seas Act, a 1920 law that makes the U.S. government liable if its agents engage in negligence that results in wrongful death more than 3 miles off American shores. A second claim alleges violations of the Alien Tort Statute, which allows foreign citizens to sue over human rights violations such as deaths that occurred outside an armed conflict, with no judicial process.

The American Civil Liberties Union, the Center for Constitutional Rights, and Jonathan Hafetz at Seton Hall University School of Law are representing the plaintiffs.
“In seeking justice for the senseless killing of their loved ones, our clients are bravely demanding accountability for their devastating losses and standing up against the administration’s assault on the rule of law,” said Brett Max Kaufman, senior counsel at the ACLU.
U.S. lawmakers have raised questions about the legal basis for the strikes for months but the administration has persisted.
—NPR’s Quil Lawrence contributed to this report.
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Video: New Video Analysis Reveals Flawed and Fatal Decisions in Shooting of Pretti
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By Devon Lum, Haley Willis, Alexander Cardia, Dmitriy Khavin and Ainara Tiefenthäler
January 26, 2026
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