
52
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685.html> (11/24, Fowler, 1.09M) reports that a Virginia woman "pleaded guilty Monday to pointing a laser at a police airplane during protests over Confederate monuments this summer, federal prosecutors said." She "faces up to five years in prison." The FBI website says, "Those who have experienced such att
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litary officials have already been engaged in a tug of war with Mr. Trump over the president's insistence that the military continue to honor former Confederate leaders, the Tata maneuver was greeted with both resignation and consternation." In an editorial, the Washington Post <https://www.washingtonpost.c
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horization bill — legislation he has threatened to veto if it retains a provision instructing the Pentagon to rename military installations honoring Confederate generals." Trump's "Twitter activity was the latest twist in Trump's efforts to simultaneously claim credit for legislation authorizing pay increas
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minal justice system." The poll also shows "the public generally opposes calls to shift some police funding to social services or remove statues of Confederate generals or presidents who enslaved people." The Washington Times <https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2020/jul/21/most-americans-dont-support- def
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erals.html> (7/26, Epstein, 18.61M) reports Lexington, Virginia, "has long been tethered to the iconography of the Civil War and its two most famous Confederate generals, whose legacy has seeped into the town's culture like the July humidity. But Lexington is no longer a bastion of conservatism. It is a libe
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ptured on video shooting paint balls at a Black Lives Matter mural in downtown Pittsburg,' late Monday evening." One of the suspects was "wearing a Confederate flag sweatshirt and a Trump cap, while the other was wearing a mask, authorities said." According to police, "it's the second known case of vandalis
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federal sites that the mayor could consider asking the federal government to `remove, relocate, or contextualize.' The list included the statue of Confederate Gen. Albert Pike that the District has long endorsed removing...but also world-famous sites such as the Jefferson Memorial and the Washington Monume
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y "removed a trio of Civil War markers in front of the county's judicial complex, part of a broader effort in Virginia to turn a page on the state's Confederate legacy." Under a state law allotting localities discretion "over the fate of war monuments and memorials in their communities, the county's Board of
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(11/19, Haberman, Edmondson, 18.61M) reports Chief of Staff Meadows "has privately hinted that President Trump would drop his objection to stripping Confederate leaders' names from military bases, which is threatening to derail the annual military policy bill, if Democrats agreed to repeal" Section 230 of t
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(11/23, 14.2M) reports Virginia woman Amanda Robinson "pleaded guilty Monday to aiming a laser pointer at a police aircraft during the protest of a Confederate memorial in Richmond in the spring, authorities said." Robinson "traveled to the Robert E. Lee Monument traffic circle in Richmond, where she direct
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apparent lack of social distancing and masks among attendees, reporting in print and online after cast Trump's EFTA00148624 remarks as portraying Confederate leaders and racists among the American "heroes" while highlighting that Kimberly Guilfoyle, the girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr. and a top fundraiser
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"removed a trio of Civil War markers in front of the county's judicial complex, part of a broader effort in Virginia to turn a page on the state's Confederate legacy." Under a state law allotting localities discretion "over the fate of war monuments and memorials in their communities, the county's Board of
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(11/19, Haberman, Edmondson, 18.61M) reports Chief of Staff Meadows "has privately hinted that President Trump would drop his objection to stripping Confederate leaders' names from military bases, which is threatening to derail the annual military policy bill, if Democrats agreed to repeal" Section 230 of t
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ami Herald (11/24, Fowler, 1.09M) reports that a Virginia woman "pleaded guilty Monday to pointing a laser at a police airplane during protests over Confederate monuments this summer, federal prosecutors said." She "faces up to five years in prison." The FBI website says, "Those who have experienced such at
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federal sites that the mayor could consider asking the federal government to 'remove, relocate, or contextualize.' The list included the statue of Confederate Gen. Albert Pike that the District has long endorsed removing...but also world-famous sites such as the Jefferson Memorial and the Washington Monum
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litary officials have already been engaged in a tug of war with Mr. Trump over the president's insistence that the military continue to honor former Confederate leaders, the Tata maneuver was greeted with both resignation and consternation." In an editorial, the Washington Post (8/3, 14.2M) writes that "it
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aid Monday that Congress would 'probably override' a veto if the president decided to veto a Congressional plan to rename military bases named after Confederate leaders." In a call with reporters, Grassley, a "staunch ally" of the President, said, "I would hope he wouldn't veto it just based on that. ... If
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orization bill - legislation he has threatened to veto if it retains a provision instructing the Pentagon to rename military installations honoring Confederate generals." Trump's "Twitter activity was the latest twist in Trump's efforts to simultaneously claim credit for legislation authorizing pay increas
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minal justice system." The poll also shows "the public generally opposes calls to shift some police funding to social services or remove statues of Confederate generals or presidents who enslaved people." The Washington Times (7/21, Sherfinski, 492K) reports poll data shows 55% opposed "reducing funding fo
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minal justice system." The poll also shows "the public generally opposes calls to shift some police funding to social services or remove statues of Confederate generals or presidents who enslaved people." The Washington Times (7/21, Sherfinski, 492K) reports poll data shows 55% opposed "reducing funding fo

Jeffrey Epstein
PersonAmerican sex offender and financier (1953–2019)

Joe Biden
Person46th President of the United States (2021–2025)

Donald Trump
PersonPresident of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017
Leon Black
PersonAmerican billionaire businessman (born 1951)

Virginia Giuffre
PersonAdvocate for sex trafficking victims (1983–2025)

Bloomberg L.P.
OrganizationAmerican privately held financial, software, data, and media company

Stephen Hawking
PersonBritish theoretical physicist, cosmologist and author (1942–2018)

Department of Justice
OrganizationUnited States Department of Justice, federal executive department responsible for law enforcement

Julie K. Brown
PersonAmerican journalist

Mike Pence
PersonVice President of the United States from 2017 to 2021

United States
LocationCountry located primarily in North America

Prince Andrew
PersonThird child of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (born 1960)

Michael Jackson
PersonAmerican singer, songwriter, record producer, and dancer (1958–2009)
Anthony Fauci
PersonFormer Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, referenced in Epstein contact documents

Scarborough
PersonNER artifact - Scarborough media measurement company referenced in DOJ Bulletin Intelligence methodology

USA Today
OrganizationAmerican national daily newspaper

comScore
OrganizationWeb analytics company
Bulletin Intelligence
OrganizationNews monitoring and intelligence service