(The Center Square) – The Pentagon is on lockdown, with hazmat on site after air-quality issues were detected, possibly hazardous material found inside the heart of America’s defense industry.
Sean Parnell, the Pentagon's chief spokesman, released a statement regarding the incident.
“The Pentagon has sophisticated systems to ensure the safety of the building and its occupants. Those systems have detected an air quality issue necessitating precautionary measures until we determine its significance,” the statement read. “The Department is executing standard protection protocols, including a shelter-in-place order for the affected area. Response teams are in place and ready to support building occupants.”
Arlington Fire and EMS confirmed the department’s Hazardous Materials Team was on scene in support of a “hazardous materials incident.”
The Pentagon, located in Arlington, Va., comprises over 6.5 million square feet and over 17 miles of corridors, making it the largest low-rise office building in the world, with over 20,000 people working there.
Part of the Pentagon was struck during the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, killing 189 people.
(The Center Square) – U.S. Rep. Barry Moore, R-Ala., is projected to become the Republican nominee for U.S. Senate in Alabama, setting him up to succeed retiring Tommy Tuberville in a historically conservative seat.
(The Center Square) – U.S. Rep. Kevin Hern, R-Okla., is projected to win the Republican nomination for Oklahoma’s U.S. Senate seat in an effort to succeed recently installed Homeland Security Chief Markwayne Mullin. Hern’s opponent in the general election on Nov. 3 will be determined in a Democratic runoff later this summer.
(The Center Square) – The race for California’s Congressional District 6 is a “priority race” for Democrats. That is according to Dr. Richard Pan, the Democrat who appears headed to the Nov. 3 general election against incumbent Kevin Kiley, I-Rocklin.
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(The Center Square) – U.S. Rep. Barry Moore, R-Ala., is projected to become the Republican nominee for U.S. Senate in Alabama, setting him up to succeed retiring Tommy Tuberville in a historically conservative seat.
Moore will face attorney Everett Wess, the projected winner in the Democratic runoff, on Nov. 3 in a race to determine who will become Alabama's new senator.
Alabama's U.S. Senate seats have been held by Republicans for 30 years, apart from Democrat Doug Jones' tenure between 2018 and 2021. Republicans intend to maintain this historical trend as they work to keep their 53-45 majority in the Senate after the midterm elections this fall.
Republican runoff
Moore, who represents Alabama’s 1st congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, defeated opponent Jared Hudson in the Republican runoff on Tuesday night. Moore led by 11.6 points with 98% of the vote counted.
After Tuberville announced his candidacy for Alabama governor last year, Moore jumped into the race for the state’s vacant Senate seat. Moore clinched President Donald Trump’s endorsement, a coveted asset for Republican candidates, and ran a campaign built on loyalty to the president.
“With President Trump's complete endorsement, a double-digit win in the May 19 primary, and the support of Alabama conservatives from Mobile to Muscle Shoals, we're confident in the campaign we've put together and look forward to victory on Tuesday,” Moore told The Center Square last week.
As a fiscal hawk and member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, Moore pushed for deeper spending cuts in Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act last year, but eventually voted for the sprawling spending package with his party.
Despite polling released earlier in June showing him trailing Hudson, Moore pulled ahead in Tuesday’s runoff and secured the Republican nomination. Moore outspent his opponent nearly two-fold, bringing in almost $3 million compared to Hudson’s $1.8 million, per the candidates’ latest Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings.
Democratic runoff
Wess, an attorney and political newcomer, is projected to win Tuesday’s Democratic runoff for Senate in Alabama. With 99% of the vote counted, Wess led his opponent by 9.2 points.
Wess advanced to the runoff after taking 39.6% in the primary in May. Alabama requires a winning candidate to receive at least 50% of the vote to avoid a runoff.
With roots as the son of a union shipyard worker and veteran, Wess utilized his working-class upbringing to appeal to voters.
“Those experiences have shaped my commitment to protecting Social Security and Medicare, supporting organized labor, expanding economic opportunity, and ensuring that every Alabamian has a fair shot at the American Dream,” Wess told The Center Square.
Wess took the lead in Tuesday’s runoff despite raising roughly half as much as his opponent Dakarai Larriett. According to FEC filings as of May 27, Wess reported $74,000 compared to Larriett’s $147,000.
Road to November
Moore and Wess will go head-to-head in the general election on Nov. 3 when Alabama voters decide who will succeed Tommy Tuberville in the Senate. Tuesday’s runoffs conclude a long primary process beginning with a pool of 10 candidates and ending with runoff races to secure nominations in both parties.
Wess faces an uphill battle as a Democratic candidate vying for a Senate seat the Cook Political Report rates “Solid Republican.”
The race for Alabama Senate in November will play a part in the battle for control of the Senate, with Republicans counting on keeping Tuberville’s seat red as they defend their slim majority.
Hern projected to win Oklahoma GOP Senate primary
(The Center Square) – U.S. Rep. Kevin Hern, R-Okla., is projected to win the Republican nomination for Oklahoma’s U.S. Senate seat in an effort to succeed recently installed Homeland Security Chief Markwayne Mullin. Hern’s opponent in the general election on Nov. 3 will be determined in a Democratic runoff later this summer.
With the nonpartisan Cook Political Report rating Oklahoma’s Senate seat “Solid Republican,” Hern is the favorite to win this fall.
Oklahoma’s seat in the Senate was left vacant after Mullin resigned in March to join President Donald Trump’s cabinet as head of the Department of Homeland Security. Per state law, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt named a temporary replacement, energy executive Alan Armstrong, until Oklahoma voters could decide their next senator in an election.
That time has come, and the race for Oklahoma’s open Senate seat will play a part in determining which party takes control of Congress after the 2026 midterm elections. Senate Republicans have a slight 53-45 majority and are banking on keeping Mullin’s open seat red in their effort to maintain control of the chamber for the remainder of Trump’s term in the White House.
Republican primary
Hern held the lead in the Republican Senate primary Tuesday night, surpassing the 50% vote threshold needed to avoid a runoff in August.
“Oklahomans deserve strong conservative leadership and a Senator who will fight for our values,” Hern said on social media Tuesday evening. “I look forward to earning your support again in November and serving as your next United States Senator.”
Hern currently represents Oklahoma’s 1st district in the U.S. House of Representatives, a seat he’s held since 2018. Before entering politics, Hern became a multimillionaire businessman through a career owning 24 McDonald’s franchises.
During his tenure in the House, Hern was the chairman of the powerful Republican Study Committee and built a voting record as a fiscal conservative.
Hern led the Republican field in fundraising going into Tuesday’s primary, pulling in $9.3 million in total funds, according to his latest filings with the Federal Election Commission (FEC). The next closest opponent was firefighter-paramedic Brian Ragain with $27,000 in funds.
Democratic primary
The Democratic primary advanced to a runoff on Tuesday night. N'Kiyla “Jasmine” Thomas and Jim Priest will face each other on Aug. 25 in a race to determine the Democratic nominee for Oklahoma’s open U.S. Senate seat.
Thomas is a nurse and active-duty military spouse. She built her campaign on her healthcare background and has committed to expanding rural healthcare and protecting the Affordable Care Act if elected to the Senate. She did not release details of the taxpayer costs of her proposals.
Jim Priest, a lawyer and ordained minister, was in second place as of Tuesday night. Priest’s campaign focused on cost-of-living concerns affecting voters on both sides of the political aisle.
"Paychecks will still fall short, healthcare will still be too expensive and the cost of groceries will just keep going up," Priest said. "And instead of solving these problems, Washington attempts to divide us into us and them."
Thomas led in the primary despite trailing Priest in fundraising. In her latest FEC filings, Thomas reported $45,000 in total funds compared to Priest’s $263,000. She has spent nearly all those funds, with just $547 remaining as of May 27.
The winning Democratic nominee will face an uphill battle securing a Senate seat that hasn’t been held by a Democrat since 1994.
Road to November
After a Democratic nominee is determined in August’s runoff, Hern and his opponent will face each other in the general election on Nov. 3.
The midterm election season is shaping up as a tight contest, with both parties vying for control of Congress in the final two years of Trump’s term.
Republicans are seeking to defend their majorities in both the U.S. Senate and the House. Democrats, on the other hand, see the midterms as their chance to take back control of Congress and set the terms for the rest of Trump’s presidency.
Pan criticizes Kiley as California congressional race heats up
(The Center Square) – The race for California’s Congressional District 6 is a “priority race” for Democrats. That is according to Dr. Richard Pan, the Democrat who appears headed to the Nov. 3 general election against incumbent Kevin Kiley, I-Rocklin.
The area was known as District 3 until it was redrawn to favor Democrats under Proposition 50.
Speaking at a press conference Tuesday outside the California Democratic Party office in Sacramento, Pan said that, as a doctor, he has devoted his life to protecting the life and safety of the region's families. Now, Pan said, he is running for Congress to improve lives and make government work for people.
“Kevin Kiley chose a different path,” said Pan, who is also an educator, small business owner and former state senator for the Sacramento region. “As a career politician, Kiley first ran for Congress in 2022, taking extreme positions on immigration, voting rights, public health and earned Trump's endorsement as his MAGA champion.”
Pan then said U.S. Rep. Kiley, who was a Republican until earlier this year, voted with President Donald Trump 90% of the time, including backing Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Kiley is now an independent who caucuses with Republicans.
“Now his families here in the 6th District struggle with the increasing cost of food, gas above $6 a gallon, and draconian cuts to their healthcare,” said Pan. “These are the results of Kevin Kiley's unquestioning support of Donald Trump's extremist Project 2025 agenda.”
Pan added that “Kevin Kiley is hoping voters forget what he's done to them to pursue his own personal ambitions and Trump's Republican Party,” but Pan is not buying that Kiley is going to be an independent voice.
“The Republican leadership continued to help support and finance his campaign, and the chair of the California Republican Party recently called Kevin Kiley a Republican at his core,” said Pan. “He will say whatever he needs to keep himself in office.”
With 24 days remaining in the vote count, Kiley is leading the race with 46,942 votes or 24.3% of the vote.
Pan has 44,839 or 23.2%.
There are five other candidates in the race. Four of them are Democrats who collectively have 32.5% of the vote as of Tuesday. Republican candidate Michael Stansfield has 20.1%. The Center Square’s figures come from the California Secretary of State’s website.
On June 10, the District 6 race was added to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s Red to Blue program.
“CA-06 is one of the top chances to flip a House seat and take back the majority,” saidPan in an X post on June 10. “I’m running to defeat Kevin Kiley and deliver for the families of this district.”
Republicans currently have a razor-thin majority in the House, and Democrats could take control by flipping a few seats in the November midterm election.
The Center Square asked Kiley for a comment and did not hear back by publication time.
In May, Kiley told The Center Square that he too was running to deliver for families in this district.
Like other politicians and voters, Kiley wants something done about the affordability crisis.
“We lead the nation in highest gas prices, highest electricity prices, with water and housing and groceries, and much of that is because of overreaching state policies, which are not well adapted to what will make things affordable in our state,” Kiley told The Center Square in May.
The average in California for a gallon of regular gas was $5.71 on Tuesday. That's according to AAA, which has the national average at $4.04. While California has the highest price in the nation, the rates show a decrease from previous weeks during the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran. Trump recently announced the U.S. and Iran would sign a peace deal Friday to end the conflict and reopen the Strait of Hormuz to ships.
U.S. Department of Justice investigates Newsom's associates
(The Center Square) - The U.S. Department of Justice has been investigating people close to California Gov. Gavin Newsom over the past year for reasons that have not been fully disclosed, according to information obtained by The Center Square.
Newsom alleged that President Donald Trump had weaponized the DOJ to investigate him in an effort to thwart a potential 2028 presidential campaign. The Center Square found multiple investigations into people close to Newsom.
For this story, The Center Square contacted the U.S. Department of Justice and the White House, which referred all questions to the DOJ.
A source familiar with the investigations told The Center Square that the DOJ had several ongoing investigations related to Newsom. The source, who declined to give a name for publication, added that the investigations had started in 2025 and have been underway for roughly a year. The Center Square decided to use the anonymous source's information because Newsom already said an investigation was happening and because there was no other way to independently confirm it.
“They're being run through [the] U.S. Attorney's Office in the Eastern District of California, and they were triggered by local sources and whistleblowers in California,” the source said of the investigations.
“Not by the President, not by the main justice in D.C.," the source said, answering The Center Square's questions by email.
The source added that one of the investigations is related to the nonprofit “tax activities” of Jennifer Siebel Newsom, Newsom's wife. Another investigation is related to a former chief of staff for the governor and potentially some current staffers.
Siebel Newsom’s feminism-focused nonprofit work has previously been the subject of scrutiny by opponents, who have alleged Newsom has illegally used his office to support the work.
A report by the Sacramento Bee found the governor had solicited $4.8 million in donations since 2020 for the California Partners Project, of which Siebel Newsom is an unpaid co-founder. Reportedly $1.8 million came from a Native American tribe that runs a Sonoma County casino, which has lobbied for legislation in the past. California officials are required by law to disclose donations made to organizations at their request.
On Tuesday, Newsom posted on the social media site X a Freedom of Information Act request for any documents mentioning his name or Siebel Newsom since Jan. 20, 2025 - Trump's Inauguration Day - within the DOJ. The request is in the form of a letter that David Sapp, Newsom's legal affairs secretary, wrote to the Office of the Attorney General's FOIA Request Center in Washington, D.C.
"Trump’s DOJ is on a fishing expedition for a crime that doesn’t exist," Newsom posted, noting his office was demanding all communication, including emails, texts, memos and Signal messages that refer to him or his wife.
Newsom initially discussed being investigated during a video posted to his X social media account Monday afternoon.
“In recent days, federal agents have knocked on the doors of family friends and former employees,” Newsom said. “Not because they found a crime – because they’re simply trying to find one.”
“You can subpoena my records, you can investigate me, you can harass me, put my name on every and any enemies list you have,” said Newsom. “But leave my wife and family out of your personal vendetta.”
Advocates say price transparency alone won’t fix healthcare prices
(The Center Square) – Letting patients see hospital prices can help, but it will not fix the high cost of health care by itself. That's what witnesses told members of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health at a hearing on health care price transparency.
The recent hearing came as the Trump administration pushes hospitals to follow federal price transparency rules. The administration recently warned more than 500 hospitals that they must post clearer price information or risk fines.
The rules require hospitals to post prices online so patients, employers and insurers can see what care may cost before a bill comes.
However, several witnesses told lawmakers that price transparency alone will not bring down costs.
“Transparency is necessary, but it is not sufficient,” Shawn Gremminger, president and CEO of the National Alliance of Healthcare Purchaser Coalitions, told lawmakers.
Gremminger said Congress should also look at site-neutral payments, facility fees, and contract terms that make it harder for patients and employers to find cheaper care.
Christopher Whaley, an associate professor at Brown University’s School of Public Health, said large hospital systems have gained more power through mergers.
“Over the last two decades, roughly 2,000 hospital mergers have produced massive health system conglomerates, increasing prices with no quality improvement,” Whaley said.
He also claimed some cancer patients at hospitals in the federal 340B drug program can face drug markups near 700%.
Sophia Tripoli, senior director of health policy at Families USA, said hospital consolidation has cost Americans money.
“Over the last 25 years, unchecked hospital consolidation has driven up prices by over 220%, costing hardworking Americans nearly a trillion dollars in lost wages since 2012,” Tripoli said.
The hearing also brought attention to nonprofit hospitals. Critics say some large nonprofit hospital systems receive tax benefits while charging high prices, paying executives large salaries, and using their size to dominate local markets.
Consumer Action for a Strong Economy Chairman Gerard Scimeca said lawmakers should not stop with price transparency.
“When five experts from different sides of the country start singing the same song in Washington, it’s clear that something needs to be done to save our healthcare system,” Scimeca said. “They’re right - transparency isn’t enough and that’s why we’ve been working to bring legislation demanding reform to the state level. I hope Congress sees the need to pop open the hood on these ‘nonprofits’ and finds a way to bring true relief to taxpayers at the federal level.”
The Center Square previouslyreportedthat some taxpayer advocates also support the Trump administration’s push to get more claims data in federal employee health plans.
Trent England, executive director of Save Our States, told The Center Square in April that hospitals and other providers benefit when patients and taxpayers cannot easily see prices.
“Hospitals and other medical providers set their prices, and they benefit from the opacity,” England said. “They benefit from the fact that it’s just hard to see.”
Andrew Bremberg, who served as director of the Domestic Policy Council during Trump’s first term, told The Center Square that claims data can help the government find fraud.
“It’s vital that OPM get this claims data so they can detect fraud and fight back against it,” Bremberg said.
Trump alsocreatedthe federal Task Force to Eliminate Fraud earlier this year. The White House said the task force will target waste, fraud and abuse in federal programs, including health care.
Hospitals have raised concerns about some price transparency rules. The American Hospital Associationsaysthe rules can create more paperwork and may not always help patients know what they will pay.
Still, witnesses told lawmakers that patients need better price information. They also said Congress must look at the power large hospital systems have over prices.
Feds move education programs to other agencies
(The Center Square) – The Trump administration announced Tuesday it is moving civil rights and special education programs to other federal agencies in efforts to continue the dismantling of the U.S. Department of Education.
In partnership with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Justice, the Department of Education will shift oversight of special education and rehabilitative services to HHS. The DOJ will assume responsibility for civil rights enforcement, student privacy protection, and related training and advisory services.
The Center Square contacted the Department of Education for comment and was referred to Tuesday’s press release announcing the changes.
“The Trump Administration has been clear: as we scale back federal micromanagement when it hinders success, we are equally committed to bolstering the efficacy of federal oversight where it is essential,” U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said in a statement.
The transfers mark another step in the administration’s broader effort to reduce the role of the Department of Education and redistribute some of its responsibilities across the federal government.
Secretary of HHS Robert F. Kennedy Jr. noted how this move will cut bureaucratic tape and align federal resources to improve education and employment outcomes.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said that, through the partnership, the department will further its commitment to ensuring that every student is treated with dignity and respect and has an equal opportunity to succeed in the classroom.
Feds name five individuals charged in UFC terror plot
(The Center Square) – Federal court records made public Tuesday reveal the identities of five individuals in the alleged terror plot to disrupt the Ultimate Fighting Championship event at the White House over the weekend.
The suspects in custody are 19-year-old Tycen Proper from central Ohio; Bryan Omar Roa and Michael Alan Thomas from central California; Daniel Eskridge from Missouri; and Abraham Hermosillo Alvarez from Omaha, Nebraska.
The group was part of a larger Signal chat with at least 23 users across the country discussing plans for the attack, authorities allege.
Their plan, which the FBI said it learned of on June 10, involved using drones with attached explosives to hit buildings near the event, prompting a mass evacuation that would steer crowds toward a group of snipers.
Affidavits filed by federal agents who questioned the suspects noted that the murder plot “appears to have been motivated by their anti-government ideology,” with the conspirators mentioning hating “billionaires” and “capitalist elites.”
Proper, who authorities allege admitted to being a “team leader” in the operation, had singled out specific politicians as targets due to their support of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).
Five of the politicians he named are Republicans from West Virginia, including U.S. Sens. Shelley Moore Capito and Jim Justice, U.S. Reps. Riley Moore and Carol Miller, and State Delegate Tristan Leavitt.
U.S. Sens. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Tom Cotton, R-Ark., were also targeted by the group.
“It is incredibly chilling that this suspect named me as a potential target along with other lawmakers,” Blackburn posted on social media Tuesday. “I will not let maniacs like this one deter me from celebrating or serving this great nation, and I am grateful to law enforcement for keeping us safe.”
All five terror plot suspects could face lifetime imprisonment if convicted.
Eskridge, Roa, Thomas, and Alvarez have been charged with conspiracy to commit murder, the latter additionally being charged with conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States.
Proper is charged with conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States, attempted murder of any officer or employee of the United States, possession of a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence, and receipt or transfer of a firearm used to commit a felony.
According to the suspects’ cell data and online activity, as well as testimony from Proper, the group began communicating with one another sometime around March via a TikTok group named “Vanguard of the Old,” court records allege.
The “more serious members” of the TikTok group, including all five suspects, later switched to a Signal chat where they allegedly began planning the attack, according to the records.
Based on TikTok and cell data obtained by the FBI’s Domestic Terrorism Targeting Unit, federal officials believe Alvarez to be the alleged ringleader of the group, going by the online username “Shepherd.”
Proper and Thomas each admitted to helping plan the attack when questioned individually by law enforcement, court documents show.
Eskridge’s spouse told law enforcement that he had “told her that he was a recruiter for the group” and had “purchased a large amount of tactical equipment over the past few months,” per court documents.
Roa admitted that he attempted to travel to Washington, D.C., to protest the UFC fight, but denied any involvement in the conspiracy.
Among other evidence, searches by law enforcement discovered ammunition, firearms, and other weaponry in Roa’s vehicle and in the respective residences of Proper, Eskridge, and Thomas.
All suspects are considered innocent until proven guilty.
Central Ohio man linked to foiled terror plot at White House UFC event
(The Center Square) – A rural Central Ohio mother apparently reported her son’s actions to local police, leading to the arrest of a 19-year-old man in connection with what federal authorities are calling a terror plot to create chaos at Sunday’s UFC fight on the White House lawn, according to multiple media reports.
Tycen Proper was arrested Wednesday after his mom called the Danville Police Department and the Knox County Sheriff’s Office, raising concerns about her son’s “recent conduct, including firearms purchases and communicating with certain individuals online,” a federal affidavit said.
Proper is charged with conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States; attempted murder of any officer or employee of the United States; possession of a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence; and receipt or transfer of a firearm used to commit a felony.
He is being held in the Franklin County jail.
According to the law enforcement affidavit, Danville Police and sheriff deputies responded to a disturbance call at a Knox County address around 9:38 p.m. on Wednesday, when Proper’s parents said he had recently met people only and planned “recons” with them over the weekend.
The parents also said Proper used $3,000 of his graduation money to recently buy camping gear, food, ballistic plates, a new shotgun, a rifle, “lots" of ammunition, extra magazines and a plate camera.
According to the government’s affidavit, Proper’s mother said her son had recently started interacting with a group of ex-military and Christian-based people, who only expressed ultra-religious anti-government sentiments – specifically talking about government corruption, handling of the Epstein files, and data centers taking up all the water in communities.
Law enforcement officials said in their affidavit that Proper told them the group planned to stage a demonstration on the north side of the White House and then fly drones with explosive devices to detonate over the north side of the UFC arena.
Proper told law enforcement the plan was to force the crowd and high-value targets to evacuate south, and members of his group would act as snipers and begin shooting people as they evacuated the area.
Knox County deputies took Proper to a local hospital for an emergency admission based on homicidal ideations, and FBI agents arrested Proper in Knox County.
FBI Director Kash Patel said federal officials first learned of the plan last week on Wednesday. The plot involved using drones with attached explosives to hit buildings near the event, prompting a mass evacuation and steering crowds toward a group of snipers.
Investigators uncovered a Signal chat with at least 23 users discussing plans for the alleged attack. Individuals from multiple states participated in planning the event, FBI officials said.
Patel said "multiple individuals" were in custody in relation to the foiled attack. Investigators told Fox News five individuals were in custody as of Monday.
One suspect was taken into custody in Cincinnati, federal officials said. The White House UFC event was set to celebrate America's 250th anniversary. The event occurred on Flag Day as well as President Donald Trump's 80th birthday.
"We are built to detect, respond to, and bring to justice those who threaten the lives of American citizens – particularly during large gatherings like the historic UFC 250 fight," Patel said on social media.
Senate panel OKs limits on protests near worshippers
(The Center Square) – Protesters outside churches, synagogues and other religious places will have to keep a certain distance from places of worship if the California Legislature passes a new bill.
Assembly Bill 2664, authored by Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, D-San Ramon, would require protesters to stay at least 100 feet away from an entrance or exit of a religious facility and eight feet from people trying to enter such facilities.
After witnesses testified for and against AB 2664, the legislation passed 5-0 during the Senate Public Safety Committee hearing Tuesday, following the testimony by the bill's author and others.
“Frankly, this is our lives every day when we show up to worship in our synagogue,” Bauer-Kahan, who is Jewish, testified before the Senate Public Safety Committee on Tuesday morning. “We have seen here in California that people who are entering their synagogues or mosques, churches and other places of worship, as they enter, they are surrounded. They are yelled at.”
Existing law makes it a crime to intentionally damage religious property, intimidate or threaten those trying to practice their religion and interrupt religious services. But those who advocated for the bill on Tuesday said current laws fail to define acceptable distances between demonstrators and worshippers.
“Assembly Bill 2664 has one simple goal: to ensure that people of all faiths have the freedom to worship without fear,” Robert Trestan, vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s West Division, testified in support of the bill. “This bill does not ban peaceful political expression and protest. But rather, it is intended to ensure that worshippers can safely exercise their right to pray, while protecting the freedom of speech and assemble.”
However, opponents of the bill testified on Tuesday that public ways and sidewalks, where protesters often gather when assembling outside a place of worship, are protected places by the U.S. Supreme Court. The bill would undermine that legal precedent if it passes, Aubrey Rodriguez, a legislative advocate for ACLU California, testified at the meeting.
“If there is a record of people being harassed or assaulted near their place of worship, the government would need to show that it has attempted to enforce criminal statutes without success,” Rodriguez testified. “This seems to be an issue of enforcement and does not justify violating rights safeguarded by the First Amendment.”
According to previous reporting by The Center Square, such protests have taken place outside places of religious worship in the Golden State. A lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court Southern District of California in November 2025 alleged that protesters thought to be with a feminist organization called Code Pink harassed and intimidated Christian worshippers at The Mission Church in California.
First Liberty Institute, a law firm that represented the church in that case, did not respond to The Center Square's request for comment before publication time Tuesday.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered churches and other religious facilities to close during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, earning a reprimand from the U.S. Supreme Court, according to previous reporting by The Center Square. Representatives from Newsom’s office did not respond to The Center Square before publication time on Tuesday.
Mizzou hires Brown's Zeng as new diving head coach
Jace Denison, Columbia Missourian
Mizzou diving announced Tuesday it has hired Colin Zeng as its new head coach.
Zeng spent one season as the head coach at Brown, where both the men's and women's teams had their best finishes ever at the Ivy League Championships.
In his time at Tennessee (2023-25), Zeng helped coach Olympian Bryden Hattie to the 2024 SEC Diver of the year award. He also coached at Colorado Mesa and Iowa.
An accomplished diver in his own right, Zeng holds the Tennessee program records in the 3-meter (495.15) and platform (507.15) and is a three-time NCAA National Champion at Ohio State and Tennessee.
“I'm confident Colin will elevate our diving program, strengthen our team culture, and help us chase championships together," Mizzou swimming and diving head coach Andrew Grevers said in a release.
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