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Hello, this is Michael Moss.
Heather Cox Richardson is unable to read the letter today, so I will be reading it in
her place.
January 30th, 2026.
As the American people continue to express their fury over the violence of federal agents
in Minneapolis and elsewhere, officials from the Trump administration today tried to
shift the public narrative to shore up their softening base and silence their opponents.
Late last night, more than two dozen federal agents took independent journalist Don
Lemmon, formerly of CNN, into custody, charging him with violating the freedom of access
to clinic entrances or face act, which criminalizes people who move past peaceful protests
to threaten someone or obstruct their access to a reproductive health clinic or place of
religious worship.
That law has usually been used to prosecute anti-abortion activists who block reproductive
health clinics.
As soon as he took office in 2025, Trump praised dozens of right-wing protesters who had
been convicted of violating the face act when they committed acts of violence at women's
health care clinics.
Lemmon is also charged with conspiring to hurt the exercise of rights.
A law originally passed after the Civil War to combat Ku Klux Klan members who were trying
to force black Americans back into a form of quasi-slavery.
Lemmon filmed protesters who disrupted a church service in St. Paul, Minnesota on Sunday,
January 18th.
Kira Butler of Mother Jones reports the ultra-conservative white nationalist church has ties to the
Trump administration.
One of the church pastors, David Easterwood, is an official from Immigration's and Customs
Enforcement, or ICE.
Jared Lay and Samuel Oakford of the Washington Post reviewed the video Lemmon filmed at the
church protest.
They wrote that the video shows that Lemmon identified himself as a journalist and followed
protesters into the church.
Inside for about 45 minutes, he interviewed four parishioners and five protesters.
Eight of those nine exchanges appeared calm.
The video does not show Lemmon participating in the chance with which the protesters disrupted
the service.
A pastor asked Lemmon to leave, and seven minutes later, he exited the church.
Federal prosecutors tried to charge Lemmon, his producer, and about six others shortly
after the protest.
But a magistrate judge refused a warrant for Lemmon and his producer, saying prosecutors
had not shown evidence that would justify the arrests.
The administration then asked a federal judge to overturn the magistrate judge's decision.
When he too refused, calling the request unprecedented, the administration rushed the case to the
eighth circuit.
It too refused.
At that point, it appears the administration went to a federal grand jury to indict Lemmon.
The arrests also arrested independent journalists Georgia Fort of Minnesota, along with two participants
in the protest, Trayhurn Jean Cruz, and Jamal Lydel Lundy.
The arrests of Lemmon and Fort are windows into the deep concern of administration officials
about how dramatically Americans have turned against ICE and the Trump administration.
At its most basic level, the attack on two independent journalists is undoubtedly designed
to intimidate other independent news producers from covering the Trump administration, particularly
the violence of ICE and Border Patrol agents.
It is a dramatic assault on the First Amendment to the Constitution, which prohibits the government
from curtailing the freedom of the press.
It is also a transparent attempt to change the popular narrative.
The killing of two white American citizens, Renee Good and Alex Pretty, by federal agents
hammered home to white Americans that they are as much at risk from the authoritarian system
Trump is building as are black Americans and people of color who are not citizens.
With that realization, especially when administration officials including Trump blamed Pretty's
killing on the fact that he carried a gun, although he did not use it, solidarity against
the administration has been building with white Americans often leading the way.
All four of the people arrested in the past 24 hours are black.
This morning, the official social media account of the White House posted a picture of Lemmon
with the caption, when life gives you lemons and an emoji of chains evoking the chains
of enslavement.
In case this appeal to the mega-base wasn't clear enough, Attorney General Pam Bondy
took to social media to highlight the religious claim behind this profound attack on the freedom
of the press enshrined in the First Amendment.
Make no mistake, she said, under President Trump's leadership and this administration,
you have the right to worship freely and safely.
And if I haven't been clear already, if you violate that sacred right, we are coming
after you.
The administration is appealing to the mega-racist and Christian nationalist base by demonstrating
that it is willing to violate the Constitution to impose magas ideology on the nation.
But it is also apparently trying to signal to white American citizens that they should
think they are safe from an authoritarian administration.
Its top victims remain black Americans and people of color.
Lemmon will be pleading not guilty.
After appearing in court Friday, he told reporters, I have spent my entire career covering
the news.
I will not stop now.
I will not be silenced.
I look forward to my day in court.
The growing concerns of administration officials that they have lost control of the narrative
over ICE and federal authority might have been behind their willingness to drop what they
say is the last of the Epstein files they will be releasing.
Congress passed a law requiring the full disclosure of those files by December 19th, but
until today, the Department of Justice had released less than 1% of them.
Today, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the department is continuing to withhold
nearly 3 million pages of documents because they contain child sexual abuse material and
the department has an obligation to protect victims' rights.
He said the department is withholding another 200,000 pages because of legal privileges.
Today's release marks the end of a very comprehensive document review process to ensure transparency
to the American people, Blanche told reporters.
For all the talk of protecting the personal information about Epstein's victims, the
new files release the names and identifying information of a number of survivors, including
some who have not previously been associated with the Epstein operation.
Wanted Epstein's survivors release the statement saying, this latest release of Jeffrey
Epstein files is being sold as transparency, but what it actually does is expose survivors.
As survivors, we should never be the ones named, scrutinized, and retraumatized while
Epstein's enablers continue to benefit from secrecy.
This is the betrayal of the very people this process is supposed to serve.
Journalists are scrutinizing the new material and have already found that billionaire commerce
secretary Howard Lutnik, who said last year he and his wife had been so repulsed by Epstein
that they cut ties with him around 2005, in fact, visited with him in 2012, four years
after Epstein's first conviction of procuring a child for prostitution and continued to correspond
with him until at least 2018. Other administration figures also show up in the files.
First lady Melania Trump wrote a friendly email to Galein Maxwell in 2002. Before she married
Trump and when Maxwell was Epstein's girlfriend, Melania Nouse wrote to compliment Maxwell on
the picture of her in a New York magazine profile of Epstein. Nouse added,
I know you are very busy flying all over the world. How is Palm Beach? I cannot wait to go down.
Give me a call when you're back in New York. Have a great time. She signed the email, Love Melania.
Billionaire Microsoft founder Bill Gates appears in the files. Elon Musk appears repeatedly in the
files with messages suggesting he was a big fan of Epstein's parties. Trump too appears frequently
in the files, but a spreadsheet listing accusations against him and other prominent people
disappeared shortly after it appeared today. The lead sponsors of the Epstein Files Transparency
Act represented as Rokana, a Democrat of California, and Thomas Massey, a Republican of Kentucky,
wrote to Blanche today, formally requesting access to the unredacted Epstein Files as soon as possible.
Connital Jenna Sundell of Newsweek, the Department of Justice,
said it identified over six million potentially responsive pages, but is releasing only
about 3.5 million after review and redactions. This raises questions as to why the rest are being
withheld. Today, Trump announced plans for a massive automobile race into downtown Washington.
The Freedom 250 Grand Prix of Washington, D.C., in August, as part of the celebration of the
250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence this summer. In an executive order,
he called the proposed race a tribute to IndyCar racing and said the race would showcase the
majesty of our great city as drivers navigate a track around our iconic national monuments
in celebration of America's 250th birthday. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said,
to think 190 miles an hour down Pennsylvania Avenue, this is going to be wild.
The attempt to change the narrative around ICE does not appear to have been effective at least so far.
Today, the Senate passed the appropriations bill to fund the government in 2026 with funding for
the Department of Homeland Security pulled out for longer discussion. Now, it heads to the House.
In the Senate, two Republicans joined all the Senate Democrats to vote in favor of an amendment
proposed by Bernie Sanders, an independent of Vermont, to repeal the $75 billion funding
increase for ICE that Republicans included in their July 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
Sanders proposed using those savings to reverse the cuts to Medicaid that were also in that law.
The amendment failed by a vote of 49 to 51, but that it got so many votes shows that senators
are feeling the pressure over ICE. As we speak, ICE agents are shooting American citizens in
cold blood, breaking down doors to arrest people, and sending five-year-olds to detention centers
all in clear violation of our Constitution, Sanders said. Instead of funding Trump's domestic
army, we should instead use that money to prevent hundreds of thousands of Americans from losing
the healthcare they desperately need by investing in Medicaid. Across the nation today,
people turned out into the streets in a scheduled nationwide protest. CNN's Shimon Procupes
watched the tens of thousands of people protesting in Minneapolis today and said,
I've covered many protests, and I have to tell you, I've not seen a crowd like this before.
I mean, it is eight degrees out here. Eight degrees. It feels like five. It is freezing,
but nothing. Nothing is stopping these people.
Letters from an American was written by Heather Cox Richardson. It was produced at Soundscape
Productions, Death in Massachusetts, recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.



