Trump and GOP target ballots arriving after Election Day that delay counts and feed conspiracy fears

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  • Trump and GOP target ballots arriving after Election Day that delay counts and feed conspiracy fears</p>

<p>CHRISTINA A. CASSIDYJuly 6, 2025 at 1:18 PM</p>

<p>FILE - A billboard urges drivers to vote on Election Day in Union City, Calif., Nov. 5, 2024. (AP Photo/Noah Berger, File)</p>

<p>ATLANTA (AP) — President Donald Trump and other Republicans have long criticized states that take weeks to count their ballots after Election Day. This year has seen a flurry of activity to address it.</p>

<p>Part of Trump's executive order on elections, signed in March but held up by lawsuits, takes aim at one of the main reasons for late vote counts: Many states allow mailed ballots to be counted even if they arrive after Election Day.</p>

<p>The U.S. Supreme Court last month said it would consider whether a challenge in Illinois can proceed in a case that is among several Republican-backed lawsuits seeking to impose an Election Day deadline for mail ballots.</p>

<p>At least three states — Kansas, North Dakota and Utah — passed legislation this year that eliminated a grace period for receiving mailed ballots, saying they now need to be in by Election Day.</p>

<p>Even in California, where weekslong vote counting is a frequent source of frustration and a target of Republican criticism, a bill attempting to speed up the process is moving through the Democratic-controlled Legislature.</p>

<p>Order asserts federal law prohibits counting late ballots</p>

<p>The ballot deadline section of Trump's wide-ranging executive order relies on an interpretation of federal law that establishes Election Day for federal elections. He argues this means all ballots must be received by that date.</p>

<p>"This is like allowing persons who arrive 3 days after Election Day, perhaps after a winner has been declared, to vote in person at a former voting precinct, which would be absurd," the executive order states.</p>

<p>It follows a pattern for the president, who has repeatedly questioned the legitimacy of such ballots even though there is no evidence they are the source of widespread fraud. The issue is tied closely to his complaints about how long it takes to count ballots, his desire for results on election night and his false claims that overnight "dumps" of vote counts point to a rigged election in 2020, when he lost to Democrat Joe Biden.</p>

<p>But ballots received after Election Day, in addition to being signed and dated by the voter, must be postmarked by the U.S. Postal Service indicating they were completed and dropped off on or before the final day of voting.</p>

<p>Accepting late-arriving ballots has not been a partisan issue historically. States as different as California and Mississippi allow them, while Colorado and Indiana do not.</p>

<p>"There is nothing unreliable or insecure about a ballot that comes back after Election Day," said Steve Simon, the chief election official in Minnesota, which has an Election Day deadline.</p>

<p>In his executive order, most of which is paused by the courts, Trump directs the attorney general to "take all necessary action" to enforce federal law against states that include late-arriving ballots in their final counts for federal elections. He also directs the U.S. Election Assistance Commission to condition federal funding on compliance.</p>

<p>Trump's rhetoric motivates Republican states</p>

<p>Republicans in five states have passed legislation since the 2020 election moving the mail ballot deadline to Election Day, according to the Voting Rights Lab, which tracks election legislation.</p>

<p>Earlier this year, GOP lawmakers in Kansas ended the state's practice of accepting mail ballots up to three days after Election Day, a change that will take effect for next year's midterms. Problems with mail delivery had prompted Kansas to add the grace period in 2017.</p>

<p>Kansas state Sen. Mike Thompson, a Republican who chairs the committee that handles election legislation, compared the grace period to giving a football team extra chances to score after the game clock expires.</p>

<p>"We need this uniform end to the election just so that we know that all voters are operating on the same time frame," he said.</p>

<p>A history of complaints in California</p>

<p>California has long been a source of complaints about the amount of time it takes for ballots to be counted and winners declared.</p>

<p>"The rest of the country shouldn't have to wait on California to know the results of the elections," U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, a Wisconsin Republican who chairs the Committee on House Administration, said during an April hearing.</p>

<p>He said California's "lax election laws" were to blame for the delays.</p>

<p>The nation's most populous state has the largest number of registered voters in the country, some 22.9 million, which is roughly equivalent to the number of voters in Florida and Georgia combined.</p>

<p>California also has embraced universal mail voting, which means every registered voter automatically receives a ballot in the mail for each election. The deadline for election offices to receive completed ballots is seven days after Election Day as long as they are postmarked by then.</p>

<p>A survey of some 35,000 Los Angeles County voters during last fall's election found that 40% waited until Election Day to return their ballot.</p>

<p>Election officials say the exhaustive process for reviewing and counting mail ballots combined with a large percentage of voters waiting until the last minute makes it impossible for all results to be available on election night.</p>

<p>California Democrats consider changes to speed the count</p>

<p>Under state law, election officials in California have 30 days to count ballots, conduct a postelection review and certify the results.</p>

<p>Dean Logan, Los Angeles County's chief election official, told Congress in May that his team counted nearly 97% of the 3.8 million ballots cast within a week of Election Day in 2024. Jesse Salinas, president of the state clerks' association, said his staff in Yolo County, near Sacramento, already works 16-hour days, seven days a week before and after an election.</p>

<p>Assemblyman Marc Berman introduced legislation that would keep the state's 30-day certification period but require county election officials to finish counting most ballots within 13 days after the election. They would be required to notify the state if they weren't going to meet that deadline and give a reason.</p>

<p>"I don't think that we can stick our heads in the sand and pretend like these conspiracies aren't out there and that this lack of confidence doesn't exist, in particular among Republican voters in California," said Berman, a Democrat. "There are certain good government things that we can do to strengthen our election system."</p>

<p>He acknowledged that many counties already meet the 13-day deadline in his bill, which awaits consideration in the Senate.</p>

<p>"My hope is that this will strengthen people's confidence in their election system and their democracy by having some of those benchmarks and just making it very clear for folks when different results will be available," Berman said.</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>writer John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, contributed to this report.</p>

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Trump and GOP target ballots arriving after Election Day that delay counts and feed conspiracy fears

<p>- Trump and GOP target ballots arriving after Election Day that delay counts and feed conspiracy fears</p> ...

How Trump's policies are reshaping immigration enforcement in Puerto Rico

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  • How Trump's policies are reshaping immigration enforcement in Puerto Rico</p>

<p>Nicole AcevedoJuly 6, 2025 at 12:30 PM</p>

<p>Demonstrators in San Juan, Puerto Rico, protesting immigration raids on June 14. (Ricardo Arduengo / AFP via Getty Images)</p>

<p>In Barrio Obrero, a predominantly Dominican neighborhood in Puerto Rico, the chilling effect of unprecedented immigration raids in the U.S. territory has been paralyzing.</p>

<p>With homes and businesses desolate, a truck with speakers has been cruising through the streets of the working-class neighborhood with a message.</p>

<p>"Suddenly, in that darkness, they heard: 'Immigrants, you have rights,'" Ariadna Godreau, a human rights lawyer in Puerto Rico, told NBC News.</p>

<p>The legal nonprofit she leads, Ayuda Legal Puerto Rico, hired the truck, known as a "tumba coco," to make people aware of their rights and announce the launch of a new hotline, the first in Puerto Rico providing legal support to immigrants, Godreau said.</p>

<p>Over 300 families have already called the hotline and spoken with attorneys free of charge as they figure out their legal options in the face of a changing immigration landscape, Godreau said.</p>

<p>Residents in Puerto Rico now fear that President Donald Trump's efforts to carry out mass deportations will fundamentally change how immigration policies are enforced in a U.S. territory that had long been perceived as a sanctuary for immigrants.</p>

<p>That perception was first shattered on Jan. 27, the same week Trump took office. Immigration authorities raided Barrio Obrero and arrested more than 40 people. Witnesses told Telemundo Puerto Rico, NBC's sister station on the island, that they saw agents break down the doors of several homes and businesses. Detainees were handcuffed, placed in vans and taken away, they said.</p>

<p>The Barrio Obrero neighborhood of San Juan. (Carlos Berríos Polanco / Sipa USA via AP file)</p>

<p>In his 40 years living in Puerto Rico, Ramón Muñoz, a Dominican immigrant, had seen authorities sporadically detain undocumented people but never "with the aggressiveness" displayed during that raid.</p>

<p>Complicating matters for immigrants in Puerto Rico, those detained are transferred to the mainland U.S. — an ocean away from their families and attorneys managing their immigration cases — because there are no permanent detention centers on the island that can hold detainees for prolonged periods, according to Rebecca González-Ramos, the special agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations in San Juan.</p>

<p>A 'nightmare' amid racial profiling concerns</p>

<p>Aracely Terrero, one of the at least 732 immigrants arrested by federal immigration authorities in Puerto Rico so far this year, spent a month being bounced around three different detention centers in the States before she was released last week after an immigration judge determined she should have never been detained in the first place.</p>

<p>A local police officer in the coastal town of Cabo Rojo alerted federal immigration authorities about Terrero after the officer found her selling ice cream at the beach without business permits, Telemundo Puerto Rico reported.</p>

<p>Terrero had a visa and was in the process of obtaining a green card when she was taken into immigration custody, her attorney Ángel Robles and Annette Martínez, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Puerto Rico, told NBC News.</p>

<p>Local policies in Puerto Rico limit coordination between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities, Martínez said.</p>

<p>Yet the ACLU in Puerto Rico is seeing more cases in which local police are suspected of racially profiling Dominican immigrants with the purposes of alerting federal immigration authorities, reigniting concerns about the revival of "discriminatory policing practices" that led to police reforms in Puerto Rico a decade ago, Martínez said.</p>

<p>Terrero's case also spotlighted how difficult it is for families and attorneys to keep track of detainees once they are sent to the States, Martínez added.</p>

<p>"It was a nightmare," Terrero told Telemundo Puerto Rico following her release. "It was a very difficult journey because I'd never been arrested in my life. I'd never seen myself like this, with handcuffs, like a criminal."</p>

<p>A raid changes everything</p>

<p>González-Ramos, the HSI special agent, said in a local radio interview last week that her office had been preparing to ramp up immigration enforcement efforts in Puerto Rico since November. She said they started "reorganizing" resources and "shifting priorities" after Trump's win.</p>

<p>Yet the big raid on Jan. 27 came as a surprise to most people. Puerto Rico Gov. Jenniffer González-Colón had reassured immigrants in an interview with Telemundo Puerto Rico that same week that Trump was only "focused on what's happening in Mexico and in the United States, on that border."</p>

<p>It helped create a "​​false sense of security," Godreau said. "These consecutive raids then begin in areas historically inhabited by the Dominican population."</p>

<p>As immigration authorities escalate their efforts in Puerto Rico by raiding hotels, construction sites and neighborhoods, more than 500 of the immigrants arrested so far are from the Dominican Republic.</p>

<p>Dominicans make up the biggest share of Puerto Rico's immigrant population. Over 100,000 Dominicans are estimated to live in Puerto Rico. About a third are thought to be undocumented. Many of them are business owners or work hospitality, construction and elder care jobs, the last two being industries grappling with labor shortages, Godreau and Martínez said.</p>

<p>González-Ramos had said her office would be detaining people illegally present in Puerto Rico, "specifically those whose criminal records pose a threat to our communities and national security."</p>

<p>But only 13% of the 732 immigrants arrested this year have a criminal record, according to data from Homeland Security Investigations in San Juan.</p>

<p>Following a subpoena from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the administration of González-Colón, a Republican who supports Trump, recently handed over the names and addresses of 6,000 people who got driver's licenses under an immigrant-friendly law from 2013 that allowed people without legal immigration status to get them.</p>

<p>González-Colón has said she won't challenge Trump's immigration policies so as not to risk losing federal funding.</p>

<p>"The governor's attitudes and expressions have been quite misleading," Martínez said, adding that local jurisdictions frequently challenge and oppose federal policies in an effort to protect local residents.</p>

<p>Nowhere to be detained</p>

<p>A spokesperson for Homeland Security Investigations in San Juan told NBC News that González-Ramos was not available for an interview this week. But in her local radio interview last week, González-Ramos said immigration agents periodically carry out "daily interventions" in an effort to find over 1,200 people who have final deportation orders "that we must execute."</p>

<p>Everyone arrested in raids, regardless of whether they have final orders of deportation or not, "must be detained, no matter what," González-Ramos said in Spanish. "Right now, those are the instructions."</p>

<p>The ACLU's Martínez said that in Puerto Rico, immigration arrests have an "aggravating factor": Those immigrants arrested are put on a plane and sent away to detention centers in the mainland U.S.</p>

<p>For more than a decade, the island has lacked a working immigration detention center that can permanently house detainees.</p>

<p>As immigration arrests ramp up, "temporary detention centers" have sprouted across Puerto Rico, according to González-Ramos.</p>

<p>A protester holds a sign reading "ICE melts" during the "No Kings" demonstration in San Juan on June 14. (Ricardo Arduengo / AFP via Getty Images)</p>

<p>One of them is in a federal General Services Administration building in Guaynabo. Equipped with almost 20 beds, it's been nicknamed "la neverita," or the icebox, by immigrants who have spent time there before being transferred to the U.S.</p>

<p>An old ICE facility in Aguadilla that shuttered in 2012 was recently reopened to temporarily hold detainees, according to Godreau and Martínez, who have heard from immigrants taken there.</p>

<p>Before its closure over a decade ago, "complaints were made at the time about the inhumane and inadequate conditions in which detainees in that center were held," Martínez said in Spanish.</p>

<p>Mayor Julio Roldán approved an ordinance Thursday to declare Aguadilla a "sanctuary city" for immigrants in response to escalated enforcement efforts in the area.</p>

<p>When at least two dozen detainees are at the temporary holding facilities, ICE planes come to Puerto Rico to transport them to permanent detention centers in different states, according to González-Ramos.</p>

<p>Many of them are placed in immigration detention centers in Florida and Texas. But detainees from Puerto Rico have also been found in facilities in Louisiana and New Mexico.</p>

<p>"We're seeing a pattern of disappearances," Martínez said, pointing out that in Terrero's case, it took the ACLU and her attorney weeks to find out where she was being held.</p>

<p>The situation raises concerns over "multiple violations of human rights and civil rights," Martínez said, adding that the ACLU is continuing to monitor these cases and call for changes in local policies to ensure immigrants' rights are protected.</p>

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How Trump's policies are reshaping immigration enforcement in Puerto Rico

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Trump Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent knocks Elon Musk's new political party

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  • Trump Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent knocks Elon Musk's new political party</p>

<p>Riley Beggin, USA TODAY July 6, 2025 at 7:11 PM</p>

<p>Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent criticized Elon Musk's new political party, saying the world's wealthiest man wasn't a popular part of the Trump administration.</p>

<p>Asked about Musk's move, Bessent told CNN's Dana Bash that the ideas behind the administration's Department of Government Efficiency effort, also known as DOGE, were "very popular."</p>

<p>But "I think if you looked at the polling, Elon was not," Bessent said of the president's former advisor who led the White House's effort to slash the size of the federal government.</p>

<p>On July 5, Musk announced he would be forming a new political party amid frustration with President Donald Trump's sweeping tax policy bill, which is expected to add at least $3.3 trillion to the federal deficit in the next ten years.</p>

<p>"I believe that the boards of directors at his various companies wanted him to come back and run those companies, which he is better at than anyone," Bessent said of Musk's departure from the federal government.</p>

<p>"So I imagine that those boards of directors did not like this announcement yesterday and will be encouraging him to focus on his business activities, not his political activities," he added.</p>

<p>A Quinnipiac University poll released last month found that 30% of American voters said they have a favorable opinion of Musk. Sixty-two percent of Republicans backed the billionaire, but that was down from 78% in the university's March survey.</p>

<p>Bessent and Musk repeatedly clashed during the billionaire's time in the administration, culminating in Bessent calling Musk a "fraud" and Musk throwing his shoulder into Bessent's rib cage in the White House, setting off a "scrum" between the two, according to multiple reports.</p>

<p>Musk and Trump, too, have feuded in recent weeks. Musk has been critical of Trump and congressional Republicans' efforts to pass the sweeping tax bill, arguing that it is reckless to saddle the country with so much additional debt. GOP leaders have contended that the bill will spur economic growth.</p>

<p>Trump signed the bill into law on July 4. The Tesla and SpaceX CEO shared on X the next day that he was starting the "America Party," though the party's broader beliefs weren't immediately clear.</p>

<p>"When it comes to bankrupting our country with waste & graft, we live in a one-party system, not a democracy," Musk said on X on July 5. "Today, the America Party is formed to give you back your freedom."</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Elon Musk: Trump treasury secretary Scott Bessent knocks America Party</p>

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Trump Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent knocks Elon Musk's new political party

<p>- Trump Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent knocks Elon Musk's new political party</p> <p>Rile...

Here's where Trump's approval ratings stand on key issues

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<p>-

  • Here's where Trump's approval ratings stand on key issues</p>

<p>Julia MuellerJuly 6, 2025 at 12:00 PM</p>

<p>President Trump's approval ratings remain underwater as he gets mixed reviews on his immigration crackdown, economic handling and foreign policy five months into his second administration.</p>

<p>Trump's approval on the economy, one of his biggest strengths throughout 2024, has appeared to improve slightly after taking a hit from chaotic tariff moves and stock market losses earlier this year, though it largely remains negative. And support for his handling of immigration, while still his strongest issue, has shown signs of weakening as he pursues his campaign promise of mass deportations.</p>

<p>At the same time, his favorability and job approval numbers have ticked up slightly since the Israel-Iran ceasefire took hold, noted Scott Tranter, the director of data science for Decision Desk HQ (DDHQ) — signaling some recovery even as the figures remain significantly lower than they were when Trump took office.</p>

<p>Here's what voters think of Trump's job performance and moves on major issues heading into the July 4 holiday weekend:</p>

<p>Overall job approval</p>

<p>Trump started his second term with some of his highest approval numbers but crossed into net-negative territory this spring amid blowback over his whiplash moves on tariffs.</p>

<p>After hitting a disapproval high in April, his numbers started to recover slightly in May and early June, according to averages from DDHQ. Last month, though, his numbers sank again, with a roughly 45 percent approval and 51 percent disapproval rating.</p>

<p>At the same time, DDHQ's tracker has seen some improvement for Trump, as last week his net approval reached minus-8 points.</p>

<p>"Both favorability and job approval numbers for President Trump had an uptrend since last week's ending of the Iranian conflict," Tranter said. "We are seeing a range for both of these metrics that is for now, higher than the range was in his first term."</p>

<p>"So, over the course of last week, it's gone up. But it is certainly lower than it was post-inauguration."</p>

<p>Gallup's tracker puts Trump at a 40 percent approval rating as of early June, before developments including the U.S. strikes against Iran. That figure is not far from the 38 percent approval he logged in June of 2017, during his first term, but is well behind former President Biden's 56 percent at this point during the Democrat's first year.</p>

<p>New polling from The Economist/YouGov conducted June 27-30 found Trump with a net approval of minus 11 points, down from a minus 4 point net approval at the end of May. An Emerson College Polling survey taken last week found a similar slide, with Trump once again underwater.</p>

<p>Economy</p>

<p>In a positive sign for the president, his economic numbers appear to be in recovery mode after his aggressive trade moves earlier this year dealt a blow to his approval.</p>

<p>A tracker from pollster Nate Silver shows Trump's approval rating on the economy has appeared to even out after a significant downturn in March and April, now sitting at a minus-12 net rating.</p>

<p>Trump had a 43 percent approval rating on jobs and the economy in the latest Economist/YouGov numbers, on par with the 42 percent logged at the end of last month — though he fell on inflation and prices from a negative 15 points to a minus-24 net score.</p>

<p>Americans' assessments of the economy improved slightly in Gallup's June Economic Confidence Index, climbing from minus 22 points in April to minus 18 points in May and then minus 14 points this month.</p>

<p>Trump scored a major legislative win this week when Congress passed his "big, beautiful bill," sending the sweeping package that could add trillions to the federal deficit to Trump's desk. Approval for the bill has been underwater in some polling, and it remains to be seen how its passage could impact the president's broader numbers.</p>

<p>Immigration</p>

<p>Immigration, another issue that bolstered Trump through both of his presidential campaigns, continues to be one of his strong suits in his second term, but some new polls suggest support for his hard-line stances are slacking.</p>

<p>"He's lost ground," Tranter said. "Some polls show he is underwater, and some are back and forth. So I think the consensus is: We can argue whether or not he still has a net positive support on immigration or not, but we can say that it's gone down."</p>

<p>The Economist/YouGov poll had Trump's approval on immigration at a positive net 7 points at the end of May, before it flipped to a net negative 3 points at the end of June.</p>

<p>In the first few months of his second term, Trump has spearheaded a deportation blitz and worked to end birthright citizenship as part of a major crackdown on immigration. After Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) workplace raids sparked protests in Los Angeles last month, Trump sent thousands of National Guard members and Marines to California as he clashed with Democrats over the issue.</p>

<p>A new poll from PBS News, NPR and Marist released this week found a minus-9 point net approval rating for Trump's immigration handling.</p>

<p>A majority of Americans, or 54 percent, described ICE's actions to uphold immigration laws as having "gone too far," a figure bolstered largely by Democrats and independents. Meanwhile, 49 percent of surveyed Republicans described the actions as appropriate.</p>

<p>Foreign policy</p>

<p>Trump sent shock waves through the political world in late June when he announced that the U.S. had bombed three Iranian nuclear sites, inserting the U.S. into a tense conflict between Israel and Iran in the Middle East.</p>

<p>The president then brokered a fragile ceasefire that ended the 12-day conflict, and he has touted that the U.S. strikes "obliterated" Iran's nuclear threat, even as some have called that claim into question.</p>

<p>"He's riding high after Iran," Tranter said of Trump, calling it "a clear win" for the commander in chief as he pointed to Trump's approval uptick over the past week.</p>

<p>But Americans in the PBS News polling were divided about the U.S. strikes, with a 50-50 split on agreement with the military action. More than 8 in 10 surveyed Republicans supported the strikes, compared with 45 percent of independents and 23 percent of Democrats. Three in 4 Americans also worried that Iran could retaliate after the U.S. strikes.</p>

<p>Americans in CNN polling were even more disapproving, with 56 percent of those surveyed against and 44 percent for the strikes, and 6 in 10 worried that the strikes could increase the Iranian threat to the U.S.</p>

<p>Meanwhile, Trump announced this week that Israel agreed to conditions that could finalize a 60-day ceasefire with the Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza amid a conflict that has ravaged the Gaza Strip for nearly two years.</p>

<p>If that deal goes through, it could mark the "next theoretical big win" for Trump, Tranter said.</p>

<p>Quinnipiac polling from mid-June found low approval for Trump's Israel-Hamas handling, at just 35 percent. He got similar marks, 34 percent approval, for his approach to Russia's ongoing war in Ukraine, a three-year conflict Trump has repeatedly claimed would not have happened on his watch.</p>

<p>Trump struggled to make progress toward an end in fighting, lashing out at various points at both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.</p>

<p>Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.</p>

<p>For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.</p>

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Here’s where Trump’s approval ratings stand on key issues

<p>- Here's where Trump's approval ratings stand on key issues</p> <p>Julia MuellerJuly 6,...

Lawsuit accusing outgoing BYU QB Jake Retzlaff of sexual assault dismissed by both parties

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<p>Lawsuit accusing outgoing BYU QB Jake Retzlaff of sexual assault dismissed by both partiesJason OwensJune 30, 2025 at 8:39 PM</p>

<p>A lawsuit accusing BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff of sexually assaulting a woman in his home has been dismissed.</p>

<p>According to multiple reports, attorneys for Retzlaff and his accuser filed a joint motion Monday in Salt Lake City's 3rd District Court to dismiss the case "with prejudice and upon the merits of the Plaintiff's complaint against the Defendant," meaning that the plaintiff cannot refile the lawsuit.</p>

<p>News of the lawsuit's dismissal arrives a day after news broke that Retzlaff reportedly intends to transfer from BYU in the wake of a pending seven-game suspension by the school stemming from the lawsuit. The suspension is reportedly not because of the now-dismissed sexual assault allegation, but because Retzlaff contended in his response to the lawsuit that he engaged in consensual premarital sex.</p>

<p>BYU is run by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The school's honor code instructs students to "live a chaste and virtuous life" and prohibits them from engaging in premarital sex. It applies to all students whether or not they are Mormon. Retzlaff is not Mormon.</p>

<p>The lawsuit and Retzlaff's response</p>

<p>In the lawsuit that was filed in May, a Salt Lake County woman referred to as Jane Doe A.G. accused Retzlaff of sexually assaulting her in his home in 2023. The lawsuit stated that she consented to kissing while in Retzlaff's room as the two watched a movie but "did not want to do anything more." Jane Doe A.G accused Retzlaff of forcibly raping her after she repeatedly told him "no" and to "stop."</p>

<p>Per the lawsuit, Retzlaff's accuser reported the alleged sexual assault to police, underwent a rape kit and had pictures taken of her injuries. According to the lawsuit, she did not initially identify Retzlaff to police. Retzlaff does not face criminal charges.</p>

<p>Retzlaff denied that he assaulted his accuser in a legal response filed Friday. In the response filed by his attorney, Retzlaff stated that he had sex with his accuser as part of a "normal evening of consensual sexual interaction."</p>

<p>The filing stated that Retzlaff and his accuser exchanged text messages for months after the alleged assault and that his accuser intended to "extort money from him" now that he's an NFL prospect. The lawsuit sought damages of at least $300,000.</p>

<p>BYU quarterback Jake Retzlaff has reportedly told teammates and the coaching staff that he intends to transfer. ()Honor code violation and transfer</p>

<p>Two days after his response asserting that he had consensual sex with his accuser, it was reported that BYU planned to suspend Retzlaff for the honor code violation. Regarding the lawsuit, BYU previously issued a statement when it was filed in May.</p>

<p>"The university takes any allegation very seriously, following all processes and guidelines mandated by Title IX. Due to federal and university privacy laws and practices for students, the university will not be able to provide additional comment."</p>

<p>Retzlaff would not be the first BYU athlete to face a lengthy suspension for an honor code violation. Former running back Jamaal Williams missed the entire 2015 season when he was at BYU before returning to the team for his senior season in 2016. When asked by the Green Bay Packers in the pre-draft process why he missed that season, Williams said he told them, "I had a girl in my room."</p>

<p>In 2011, basketball player Brandon Davies was dismissed from the team for an honor code violation. That team featuring Jimmer Fredette was ranked No. 3 in the nation at the time of Davies' dismissal.</p>

<p>Retzlaff is a graduate student and has one year of NCAA eligibility remaining. Per ESPN, he was working out with BYU with the intention of playing in the fall prior to news of his pending suspension. He has since informed his teammates and coaching staff of his intent to transfer and plans to put his name in the transfer portal in the coming days, according to the report.</p>

<p>Retzlaff initially transferred to BYU from Riverside City College in 2023. He was BYU's starting quarterback in 2024 after playing a backup role in his first season. He led the Cougars to an 11-2 season in 2024 that concluded with an Alamo Bowl victory over Colorado. Retzlaff completed 57.9% of his passes for 2,947 yards (226.7 yards per game) on 8 yards per attempt with 20 touchdowns and 12 interceptions.</p>

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Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA says

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<p>Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA saysEmily Mae CzachorJune 30, 2025 at 9:15 PM</p>

<p>NOAA via Getty Images</p>

<p>A satellite program that has historically been a key source of weather forecasting data will be discontinued by July 31, as the United States enters peak hurricane season, according to the already resource-strapped National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.</p>

<p>The federal agency, which includes the National Weather Service, initially said last week that it was going to lose access to the satellite data by June 30. But in an update posted online on Monday, NOAA said the deadline to decommission the satellite system was pushed to July 31, at the request of a top official at NASA.</p>

<p>Operated by the U.S. Department of Defense, the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program has since the 1960s collected environmental information each day from satellites orbiting Earth, in order to provide real-time details about conditions in the atmosphere and oceans to the military. The data was made available to weather scientists for traditional forecasting purposes, after being processed by a branch of the Navy that focuses on meteorology and oceanography.</p>

<p>Starting Aug. 1, that naval branch will no longer process or upload satellite data to the computing interface where meteorologists previously accessed it, according to NOAA.</p>

<p>In an email that the agency reposted online, the deputy director of its Office of Satellite and Product Operations said the Navy decided to implement that change in efforts "to mitigate a significant cybersecurity risk" but would continue to distribute the data through the end of next month. A Navy spokesperson told CBS News in an email that it is "discontinuing contributions" to the satellite program "given the program no longer meets our information technology modernization requirements."</p>

<p>NOAA spokesperson Kim Doster called it a "routine process of data rotation and replacement" in a statement to CBS News on Monday, adding that remaining data sources remaining "are fully capable of providing a complete suite of cutting-edge data and models that ensure the gold-standard weather forecasting the American people deserve."</p>

<p>"The DMSP is a single dataset in a robust suite of hurricane forecasting and modeling tools in the NWS portfolio," said Doster, citing several other satellites that feed into the National Weather Service's forecasting models, including one launched recently that, according to the U.S. Space Force, "advances weather monitoring."</p>

<p>The data cutoff from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program comes after NOAA lost a substantial chunk of its staff to layoffs and buyouts earlier this year, stemming from President Trump's initiative to reduce government spending in part by shrinking the federal workforce.</p>

<p>Hurricane season runs through Nov. 30, and NOAA forecasters said in May that they expected this one to be more active than an average year. The season typically reaches its "peak," its most active period, around August and September.</p>

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Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA says

<p>Key data used in hurricane forecasting will be cut by end of July, NOAA saysEmily Mae CzachorJune 30, 2025 at 9:15 PM...

 

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