Hollywood filmmaker Carl Rinsch will be serving prison time for a multi-million dollar scheme against Netflix.
New
York judge Jed S. Rakoff sentenced Rinsch to 30 months behind bars
followed by three years of supervised release on Monday, June 29, United
States Attorney Jay Clayton announced in a press release. The "47
Ronin" director was also ordered to pay $11 million in forfeiture and
$700 in mandatory special assessments.
This comes six
months after a jury found Rinsch guilty of misusing funds in connection
with the production of an unfinished Netflix series.
“Carl
Erik Rinsch orchestrated a scheme to steal millions by seeking $11
million from a subscription streaming service, falsely claiming that
money would be used to finance a television show that he was creating,”
Clayton said in a statement.
Between
2018 and 2019, Netflix paid Rinsch $44 million for a sci-fi series
called "White Horse." In March 2020, Netflix gave Rinsch $11 million
after he demanded additional funds, according to the U.S. Attorney's
Office.
While the money was intended to
complete the remaining episodes of the show, Clayton said "Rinsch made
risky bets on highly speculative stock options and cryptocurrency,"
ultimately losing more than half of the $11 million within two months of
receiving it.
Ann
Blyth, who was nominated for an Academy Award for playing the wicked,
manipulative daughter in the 1945 noir melodrama “Mildred Pierce,” has
died at age 98.
Announced by her family, her death occurred in Rancho Santa Fe. No further details were given.
Just
17 years old when she shot the part in “Mildred Pierce,” the petite
Blyth brought big-scale venom to the role of Veda, the resentful,
murderous daughter of the hard-working title character played by Joan
Crawford. Blyth’s facility with the mean-girl role caused many at the
time to refer to her as “a young Bette Davis.”
An
adaptation of the 1941 novel by James M. Cain, directed by Michael
Curtiz, the film was nominated for five Academy Awards, including best
picture, with Crawford winning for her lead performance.
Asked
about the role by The Times in 2013 and about the depth of her
performance at such a young age, Blyth said simply, “I always had a
terrific imagination and the ability to be somebody else.”
Film
noir historian Alan Rode said of Blyth in the film, “She just blew
everybody away. It’s certainly Joan Crawford’s movie, but she is really
the spine of the movie. She is the epitome of the film noir daughter
from hell. It’s just an amazing performance that stands the test of
time.”
As
one of the first celebrity activists involved in the AIDS epidemic,
Morgan Fairchild feared the worst when her dear friend Rock Hudson
suddenly became sick in 1984.
In
March of that year, she had been the veteran actor's date when he
received a lifetime achievement award from the Actors Fund of America at
the Sands Hotel & Casino in Atlantic City.
Months
later, they found themselves working on the same lot as Fairchild
appeared on the CBS primetime soap opera Falcon Crest during Hudson's
run as wealthy horse breeder Daniel Reece on ABC's Dynasty — and she
says the Academy Award nominee's poor health was all the gossip around
the studios.
"I heard Rock wasn't looking well
on Dynasty, so I knew immediately what it was," Fairchild recalls to
Entertainment Weekly. "America didn't know Rock was gay, but everybody
in Hollywood knew Rock was gay. And I knew how great he looked when I'd
seen him just a few months before [at the Actors Fund event], so I knew
immediately what it was."
Rock
Hudson's episode on DYNASTY aired from December 19, 1984 to April 3,
1985. Morgan Fairchild was on FALCON CREST e[ospdes in the fall of 1985
to spring of 1986. She was not filming episodes in April of 1985.
April of 1985 was still season four and she joined in season five -- in
the fall of 1985. She was not hearing gossip as Rock was filming his
DYNASTY episodes. She might be confused and thinking of when she was
filming PAPER DOLLS. She did that show the year prior. But, no, she
was not on the same lot as him when she was doing FALCON CREST.
I don't know why people aren't required to do a basic fact check before they publish a bad article.
Again,
Morgan is probably confused about it and meant PAPER DOLLS. And that's
fine. But a reporter writing an article should have caught what I did
-- at least when fact checking before publication -- and called Morgan
back and said, "Hey, did you mean PAPER DOLLS because you filmed FALCON
CREST a TV season after Rock had done DYNASTY?"
In July of 1985, when Morgan might have started filming FALCON CREST though it was probably August when that happened, the world learned Rock had AIDS.
Tuesday, June 30, 2026. Chump tries to low profile it as the war with
Iran continues and his state fair turned out to be a disaster, the
electorate appears to be rejecting Republicans, Pete Hegseth attempts to
destroy the military, and much more.
Ben (MEIDASTOUCH NEWS) notes Donald Chump will not be available to the press again today.
Iranian and U.S.
negotiators were gearing up for meetings on Tuesday in Qatar, a key
mediator between the two countries, days after a surge of attacks cast a
pall over efforts to reach a lasting peace deal.
A
spokesman for Qatar’s foreign ministry said on Tuesday that there were
no plans for high-level meetings or direct talks between the United
States and Iran, adding that the American delegation would meet with
Qatari officials.
What
might the current war on Iran be without Senator Lindsey Graham who has
pimped it non-stop? Who knows but we might find out in Chump's next
war. Fernando Alba (THE MIRROR) reports:
Lindsey Graham's seat in ruby red South Carolina could be at risk.
According
to a new poll by Impact Research, the four-term U.S. senator, is near
neck-and-neck with his Democratic opponent, Dr. Annie Andrews.
The 70-year-old is polling just three points ahead of Andrews, 48% to 45%, and scored just a 40% approval rating.
Andrews,
45, is framing her race to unseat the longtime senator as a changing of
the guard. Graham was first elected to Congress in 1994 and later to
the senate in 2002.
“Lindsey Graham has been in politics since I was in the eighth grade, and people are sick of these career politicians,” she told the Daily Beast, arguing his MAGA stance has alienated voters by prioritizing war and cuts to Medicaid.
“Casual
observers are pretty disgusted by Lindsey Graham’s behavior. Imagine
how South Carolinians feel. That’s exactly what this poll reflects.”
Old man Graham could get kicked out of the Senate. On GOP chances in the November midterms, Will Neal (DAILY BEAST) notes:
CNN’s
resident numbers wizard has cast President Donald Trump’s thoroughly
debunked claims of election rigging in 2020 as a losing strategy ahead
of the November midterms.
“It is a losing
message!” data guru Harry Enten, 38, told network viewers Monday,
framing the divide it casts among the voting public as near-total. “The
Republican Party is in one camp all the way over here on the right, and
the rest of the American public is in the same camp.”
The
claim still sells with the base, which is why, Enten went on,
Republicans keep making it. About 60 percent of GOP voters called the
2020 contest stolen, a share that has since climbed to 63 percent, even
though “there is no proof of that whatsoever!” He was blunter about the
conviction itself, scoffing that Republicans “just believe this
garbage.”
The
trouble, as the polling analyst put it, is everyone else. Among
Americans overall, 64 percent now call the 2020 result legitimate, up
from 59 percent in 2021—a majority moving the opposite way from the
voters the party is courting. That, Enten argued, is the trap: a message
that wins a primary and loses a general election.
Other problems facing the Republicans in the lead up to the midterms? Thomas Kika notes:
GOP
lawmakers are eager to try and get legislation passed that could
address affordability concerns that are weighing heavily on voters'
minds, but Trump has continually made their prospects more difficult. In
recent months, lawmakers have been frustrated by his remarks about not
caring that Americans are struggling against rising costs, as well as
his recent insistence that he will not sign a bipartisan affordable
housing bill unless Congress passes new voter registration restrictions.
"Trump’s
refusal to sign the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act is the latest
troubling sign for GOP senators, who have pressed Trump for weeks to pay
more personal attention to voters’ concerns about rising costs," The
Hill detailed in a Monday morning report. "Instead, Trump’s off-the-cuff
statements professing 'love' for higher inflation numbers
and declaring he’s not thinking about the financial situations of
American families while negotiating an end to the conflict with Iran
have GOP candidates bracing for a tough election season."
The
launch of President Donald Trump’s Freedom250 group last year has led
to a fierce rivalry with America250, the nonpartisan Congressional
commission that has been planning the nation’s 250th birthday
celebrations for a decade, according to a report.
America250
is the organization created by Congress in 2016 to lead the
commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration
of Independence. The idea behind the group was to put on events across
the country that everyone could enjoy.
But
since Trump launched Freedom250 in January 2025, the group behind the
Great American State Fair, a violent UFC fight on the White House South
Lawn and an exhibition curated by a right-wing educational organization
PragerU, a “feud” has broken out between the two organizations,
according to a report by TIME.
America250, made
up of lawmakers, private citizens and cabinet officials, as a result,
“does not want to be affiliated with the kind of celebrations that Freedom 250 has set up,” according to TIME, citing internal documents and conversations with people working closely on the events.
Freedom250’s 16-day Great American State Fair, which kicked off last week, failed to attract large crowds on the National Mall this weekend.
Organizers promoted the fair as a patriotic showcase featuring all 50
states, family attractions, live entertainment, and exhibits celebrating
the country's history and culture.
Despite
photographs of sparse crowds, Trump claimed the event was “packed with
happy people” and touted his team for a “fantastic job” in a Truth
Social post Monday.
The groups are reportedly
butting heads over similar programming, budget and vying over major
marketing campaigns that have led to confusion among the public.
Freedom250 reportedly sends a representative to America250’s meetings,
but “there is no sense of collaboration between the two groups.”
MAGA lawmakers accidentally posted the receipts for President Donald Trump’s underwhelming Great American State Fair.
A
string of Republican selfies, reels, and promotional posts from the
National Mall show exactly what the White House-backed bash has been
accused of becoming: a sparse, strangely empty celebration of America’s
250th birthday.
Rep. Blake Moore of Utah posted an
Instagram reel from the fairgrounds, urging visitors to check out his
state’s booth. But the sales pitch came with the unfortunate visual aid
of Moore standing in an almost empty park, with an empty Ferris wheel
turning behind him.
“Down here at the Great
American State Fair—it’s gonna be open for two weeks. So if you’re here
traveling in Washington, D.C. at all over the 4th, make sure to come
check out the Utah booth,” Moore said.
He then seemed to all but beg people to let his office help them get there.
“Contact our office if there’s any help that you need to organize things or tours or get more information,” he added.
“Please, please reach out. We’d love to help out in that way.”
Rep.
French Hill of Arkansas posted his own reel from the top of the Ferris
wheel, where the view behind him showed the vast, empty National Mall
grass stretching toward the Capitol.
“I hope if you have any plans to visit Washington for the 4th of July that you let us know,” Hill said from the ride.
Sen.
Roger Marshall of Kansas also shared a montage of himself and his wife
walking around the fair, riding the Ferris wheel, inspecting an
agriculture display, and visiting the Kansas state booth.
But the cheery video appeared to show mostly empty grounds as they moved through the event.
Chump
and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth are 'celebrating' the country's
250th anniversary by attempting to destroy the Pentagon. Alex Henderson reports:
Prominent
military experts, from retired U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling to
retired U.S. Navy Adm. William H. McRaven, are sounding the alarm about
the Trump administration forcing Gen. Chris Donahue to step down from
his role as commander of U.S. Army Europe. The departures of Donahue and
other military leaders, according to Hertling and McRaven, are making
the military dangerously unstable. Similarly, legal scholars Michael N.
Schmitt and Ryan Goodman are warning that President Donald Trump and
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth are robbing the military of a wealth of
expertise.
Writing
for Just Security, Schmitt (a law professor at New York University)
emphasizes that nothing good can come of the Trump/Hegseth purges at the
Pentagon — especially in light of the caliber of military leaders being forced out.
"Since
January 2025," the legal scholar explains, "the Defense Department has
removed, replaced, or forced the early retirement of a remarkable
concentration of operationally experienced senior officers. Among them
are the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, the chief of naval operations, the
chief of staff of the Army, and the commander of U.S. Cyber Command,
who concurrently serves as director of the National Security Agency.
Most recently, Gen. Christopher Donahue, one of the most decorated and
combat-experienced officers of his generation, has been forced out as
commander of U.S. Army Europe and Africa and, in his NATO (North
Atlantic Treaty Organization) role, as commander of Allied Land Command.
Public explanations have been sparse and, to the extent they have been
offered, largely general."
Schmitt
continues, "The question regarding these departures is not whether the
president and secretary of defense have broad lawful authority to
reshape the senior officer corps. They unequivocally do. Nor is it a
question of whether personnel decisions of this kind are ever warranted.
Sometimes, they certainly are. Instead, at its core, a central question
is their impact on the combat effectiveness, indeed the lethality, of
our armed forces."
Schmitt, in his article,
lists 25 U.S. military leaders who have been forced out during Trump's
second presidency and notes that collectively, they had a combined 901
and one-half years of experience.
Schmitt
argues that the military purges that occurred in the Soviet under Josef
Stalin during the 1930s offer a sobering history less for the U.S., as
Stalin's Red Army purges made the Soviet Union more "vulnerable" to
Adolf Hitler's aggression.
Congress entrusted
military promotions largely to the respective promotion boards and
Secretaries of the Military Departments, not the Secretary of Defense.
Although 10 U.S.C. § 629 empowers the President with removal authority, a longstanding executive order limits the Secretary of Defense’s removal authority
to grades below colonel or captain, not the general or admiral
promotions Hegseth has blocked. The Pentagon’s own regulations restrict grounds for removing
an officer from a promotions list to specific circumstances like moral,
mental, or professional deficiencies, none of which were present in
Hegseth’s removals.
It’s obvious that a disproportionate number
of Hegseth’s blocked, delayed, or demoted officers are women and people
of color. However, while mainstream headlines suggest Hegseth is
motivated by race and gender animus, an even worse—and more dangerous—
likelihood is that he is weeding out those he deems “ideologically
incompatible” with how he and Trump plan to use the military.
Hegseth likes to emphasize that “every officer serves at the pleasure of the president,”
arguing that Trump’s policy goals require removing commanders “tied to
the culture” of previous administrations. He argues that past promotions
were based on race and gender instead of qualifications, but military
records dispute those claims, and there is no evidence that any promotions he blocked were attributable to anything other than merit.
Hegseth,
a former Fox News bobble head, is notoriously unqualified to serve as
Secretary of Defense, which seems to have been Trump’s point in naming
him. He was a mid-level National Guard officer, had no senior leadership role in the military, and had no experience anywhere that qualified him to oversee three million personnel and an annual budget of $800 billion.
Which is perfectly in keeping with the War Crime that Hegseth and Chump committed. Jon Duffy (LOS ANGELES TIMES) notes,
"It has been more than 100 days since the United States struck an
elementary school in Minab, Iran, and killed at least 175 people, most
of them children." They are not governing, they are murdering. Hegseth
was confirmed via JD Vance offering the tie breaking vote. He was not a
good nominee and shame on those who supported him by voting for him. John Bowden (INDEPENDENT) reports:
Defense
Secretary Pete Hegseth is facing heat from a key House Republican as he
continues reshaping the Pentagon to fit Donald Trump’s agenda.
Rep.
Don Bacon, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, told CNN on
Sunday that the firings at the Pentagon and the reported campaign of
Hegseth slow-walking or denying promotions to senior officers,
disproportionately women and people of color, was harming America’s
fighting forces.
[. . .]
In
his CNN interview, Bacon added that he’d known some of the dismissed
commanders personally, and vouched for their credentials and
professionalism.
“He’s fired about 20 admirals
and generals. I’ve worked with some of them personally...these are great
people. We had the head of U.S. Cyber Command fired for no reason,”
said Bacon.
In June, it was reported by CNN
that a sense of paranoia and fear was gripping the top ranks at the
Pentagon, a direct result of the firings and interference in promotions.
The atmosphere was so intense that troops were being forced to submit
to polygraph tests and nondisclosure agreements to be read in on
sensitive topics, potentially adversely affecting readiness.
Senior officials told the outlet that decisions were now being made with the constant undertone of fear about job security.
MARGARET BRENNAN: We turn now to Virginia Democratic Senator Tim Kaine, who joins us from Brussels.
Good morning to you, Senator.
SENATOR TIM KAINE (D-Virginia): Great to be with you, Margaret. Thanks.
MARGARET
BRENNAN: Because you are in Europe, I want to ask you about exactly
what is going on with the U.S. Army Europe General Chris Donahue. We
know he was ordered by Secretary Hegseth to turn in his retirement
papers. He's going to relinquish command July 2, relinquish NATO command
July 9.
Do you have any indication why this very well-respected general is getting pushed out the door?
SENATOR TIM KAINE: Margaret, I am in Europe with a bipartisan
delegation of senators visiting NATO allies and our troops, talking
primarily about NATO summit next week and support for Ukraine.
I
will say, on General Donahue, a lot of questions and very few answers.
He was very well regarded in the Armed Services Committee, where I sit.
Both sides of the aisle thought really highly of him. And so the news
that he was being ushered out caught us all by surprise, and we don't
yet have good answers from the Pentagon.
MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, it's part of a bigger question as to the changes Secretary Hegseth is making at the Pentagon.
Retired
Admiral Bill McRaven, people know him from commanding the raid to take
out Osama bin Laden. He wrote a piece in "The Atlantic" raising concerns
about the exit and the firing of at least 12 other high-ranking
military officials.
He explained officers need to be brutally
candid in order to give good advice. He said: "These recent firings
raise a real risk senior officers will be overly cautious about
providing their best advice, and therefore the chance for military
miscalculation will grow dramatically."
How concerned are you? Can Congress intervene and do anything here?
SENATOR TIM KAINE: Well, I don't think that concern is misplaced. We're worried about the same thing.
Are you – are you pushing out the truth-tellers to surround yourself
by yes-men? And, in particular, it looks like the secretary is coming
down hardest, coming down hardest on the Army. He served in the Army. He
felt like he wasn't treated well by the Army. That's a grudge he's
carried that he's described publicly.
And so, when you see Army
officers forced out, you got to wonder, is this a personal thing, or is
it really what's best for the nation? So we are working on the defense
bill right now. We've – we voted it out of the Senate Armed Services
Committee. There's nothing in the bill at this point that would address
this situation.
But, when we bring it up on the floor, I think by
then, we'll have some of our questions answered. And if we need to go
farther to put some guardrails in place, you'll probably find bipartisan
support to do that.
MARGARET BRENNAN: What are you hearing from your NATO partners there about the American plans to reduce the presence in Europe?
SENATOR
TIM KAINE: So the – it would be difficult to reduce the presence in
Europe, based upon some NDAA provisions that we have put in place that
kind of set a floor in terms of U.S. troop strength.
And here's
the good news, Margaret. Both because of President Trump, but also,
frankly, because the actions of Vladimir Putin, European nations are
really stepping up their investment in their collective defense. They
see the need to do it, and they understand that the United States is
right there with them.
There's some political churn. No doubt
about it. European nations are not only concerned about rhetoric coming
out of the White House. They see a chaotic tariff policy as hurting
their economies. But they also see the U.S. continuing to make sizable
investments in European defense, troop presence.
A
woman who alleges Donald Trump sexually assaulted her more than 30
years ago says she believes the network of people connected to Jeffrey
Epstein is on the verge of being fully exposed as more survivors will
come forward this year to detail their experiences.
Beatrice Keul, a former Miss Switzerland and Miss Europe contestant, made the prediction in a recent interview, telling PunchUp
that "the dam is about to burst." Keul, now 55, has previously alleged
that Trump assaulted her in 1993 at the Plaza Hotel during his "American
Dream Pageant" in New York when she was 23, and that Epstein separately
approached her the same day, introducing himself as "Don's best
friend."
Keul's
renewed prediction comes alongside new claims about ongoing
intimidation she says she's faced since going public with her
allegations in October 2024. She told PunchUp she received an
AI-generated audio message on her personal cellphone from an anonymous
number around the time of Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre's death in
April 2025.
"We know where you are, and we will get you," the message repeatedly warned.
Keul
says similar messages have continued since, with the most recent
arriving about a month ago. She says she doesn't know who is behind them
but believes they were designed to frighten her into silence.
Powerful
figures connected to Epstein, Keul says, have strong incentives to keep
survivors from speaking, and she believes some women have stayed quiet
after watching others get targeted or publicly discredited. She also
rejected the official finding that Epstein died by suicide in 2019,
telling PunchUp, "This is not a guy who would commit suicide."
Keul
first came forward in October 2024, alleging that Trump—then 47, while
she was a 23-year-old banking executive and part-time model—lured her to
his Donald J. Trump American Dream Pageant in New York. She says an
aide then asked her to join the property developer for a “private
meeting” before he allegedly groped her in a suite at the Plaza Hotel.
Her
allegations prompted author and Daily Beast Inside Trump’s Head podcast
co-host Michael Wolff to release some of the 100 hours of interviews he
conducted with Jeffrey Epstein, including a recording of Epstein
describing himself as Trump’s “closest friend.”
Last December, multiple women came forward with similar accounts in a New York Times investigation, in which Keul further detailed the alleged assault.
Keul
is one of at least 28 women who have accused Trump of sexual
misconduct, including writer E. Jean Carroll, whose sexual abuse claims a
New York jury found credible. The Supreme Court rejected his push
to throw out that jury’s finding on Monday. Trump, 80, has denied all
allegations, calling them “unequivocally false” and insisting he has
“never met” some of his accusers. He has not taken legal action.
(White
House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, then serving as press secretary
for Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign, also said in October 2024 that
Keul’s claims were “fake allegations.”)
Let's wind down with this from Senator Elizabeth Warren's office:
Brokers have been caught
selling the location data of people visiting abortion clinics, risking
the safety and security of women seeking basic health care
Updated bill would protect Americans’ privacy and ban brokers from selling Americans’ health and location data
Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and
Representative Mary Gay Scanlon (D-Pa.) announced that they will
reintroduce the Health and Location Data Protection Act, legislation banning data brokers from selling Americans’ sensitive personal information.
“It’s more important than ever that we crack down on data brokers
that are raking in giant profits from selling Americans’ most sensitive
information,” said Senator Warren. “Especially as more
people enter their private health data into AI systems, we need to make
sure that information isn’t exploited by the highest bidder.”
Data gathered by brokers has been used to circumvent the Fourth
Amendment, out LGBTQ+ Americans, and stalk and harass individuals. Data
brokers’ unfettered access to people’s health and location data has
become increasingly dire as states continue to ban abortion care and law
enforcement agencies may attempt to use this data to criminalize
abortion seekers and providers.
The $300 billion data broker industry is largely unregulated by
federal law. Data brokers gather personal data, such as location data
from weather or prayer apps, often without consumers’ consent or
knowledge. Brokers sell this data in bulk to virtually any willing
buyer, reaping massive profits. These predatory and invasive practices
pose real dangers to Americans’ privacy and safety.
The Health and Location Data Protection Act would:
Ban data brokers from collecting, selling, or transferring location
data and health data, including data entered into AI systems.
Empower the Federal Trade Commission, state attorneys general, and
injured persons to sue to enforce the provisions of the law, allowing
for remedies such as damages and injunctions to stop any illegal
practices.
Provide $1 billion to the Federal Trade Commission over the next
decade to carry out its work, including the enforcement of this law.
This bill is cosponsored by Senators Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Sheldon
Whitehouse (D-R.I.), and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Representatives Nydia
Velázquez (D-N.Y.), Adriano Espaillat (D-N.Y.), Pramila Jayapal
(D-Wash.), and Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.).
The bill is endorsed by the National Partnership for Women &
Families, All* Above All, the Guttmacher Institute, the National Network
of Abortion Funds, and the National Council of Jewish Women.
Senator Warren has fought to protect the sensitive data of American consumers from Big Tech companies and data brokers:
In May 2026, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) joined U.S. Senator
Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and U.S. Representative Pat Harrigan (R-N.C.) in
releasing information confirming for the first time that hostile foreign
adversaries are using commercial location data to target American servicemembers in active war zones.
In October 2024, Senators Warren, Ron Wyden, and Richard Blumenthal, along with Representative Katie Porter, wrote to
the Department of Justice (DOJ) urging the investigation and
prosecution of major tax preparation companies for illegally sharing
protected and sensitive taxpayer information with Big Tech firms.
In May 2024, Senators Warren, Ron Wyden, and Sheldon Whitehouse, along with Representative Katie Porter, sent a letter
to Attorney General Merrick Garland, among others, calling on them to
investigate use and disclosures of legally protected and sensitive
taxpayer information by tax prep companies.
In April 2024, Senators Warren, Bill Cassidy, and Richard Blumenthal wrote to
the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) urging an
assessment of the cybersecurity landscape leading up to, and after, the
Change Healthcare cyberattack.
In April 2024, at a hearing of the U.S. Senate Finance Committee, Senator Warren pushed back
on Big Tech’s misleading claims that “free data flows” provisions in
trade agreements will help combat China’s digital authoritarianism, when
the opposite in fact is true.
In January 2024, at a hearing of the Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, Senator Elizabeth Warren questioned
Emily Kilcrease, Senior Fellow and Director of the Energy, Economics,
and Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, on the
national security risks posed by digital trade rules that allow tech
companies to collect, sell, and store Americans’ data wherever is
cheapest, including China.
In November 2023, Senators Warren, Ed Markey, John Kennedy, and Jeff Merkley joined their colleagues
in introducing the bipartisan Traveler Privacy Protection Act, which
would ban the use of facial recognition technology and the collection of
facial biometric data by the Transportation Security Administration
(TSA) in U.S. airports.
In November 2023, Senators Warren and Bill Cassidy, M.D. released statements
after Duke University published a report highlighting the detail, ease,
and volume at which data brokers are selling the personal data of U.S.
service members to web addresses located both in the United States and
abroad.
In September 2023, Senators Warren and Richard Blumenthal sent a letter
to Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III, expressing concerns about
the implementation of the contract the Department of Defense (DoD)
awarded to Leidos Partnership for Defense Health (Leidos) for the
Military Health System (MHS) Genesis electronic health record system
after reports that the use of MHS Genesis may be contributing to delays
in military recruiting, creating barriers to accessing benefits
information, and invading the privacy of service members and military
recruits.
In July 2023, Senators Warren and Lindsey Graham unveiled comprehensive legislation that
would rein in Big Tech by establishing a new commission to regulate
online platforms. The commission would have concurrent jurisdiction with
FTC and DOJ, and would be responsible for overseeing and enforcing the
new statutory provisions in the bill and implementing rules to promote
competition, protect privacy, protect consumers, and strengthen our
national security.
In July 2023, Senator Warren opened an investigation
into a disturbing report on Google’s confidential effort to secure
exclusive access to millions of tissue samples held at the Department of
Defense’s (DoD) Joint Pathology Center (JPC).
In March 2023, Senators Warren, Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), and Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) introduced the Upholding Protections for Health and Online Location Data (UPHOLD) Privacy Act,
legislation that would expand protections for Americans’ personal
health data by preventing companies from profiting off of personally
identifiable health data for advertising purposes, allow consumers
greater access to and ownership over their personal health information,
restrict companies’ ability to collect or use information about personal
health without user consent, and ban data brokers from selling location
data.
In March 2023, Senators Warren, Cassidy, and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) reintroduced
the Protecting Military Service Members’ Data Act of 2023, a bipartisan
bill that would protect the data of U.S. service members by preventing
data brokers from selling lists of military personnel to adversarial
nations, including China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea. They first
introduced the bill in May 2022.
In June 2022, Senators Warren, Cory Booker, and Ron Wyden sent
letters to two leading mental health apps, expressing deep concerns
about the companies’ use of patients’ personal health data.
In June 2022, Senators Warren, Wyden, Patty Murray, Sheldon Whitehouse, and Bernie Sanders introduced the
Health and Location Data Protection Act, sweeping legislation that bans
data brokers from selling some of the most sensitive data available
about everyday Americans: their health and location data.
In May 2022, Senators Warren; Bill Cassidy, M.D.; and Marco Rubio introduced the Protecting Military Service Members’ Data Act of 2022
to protect the data of U.S. service members by preventing data brokers
from selling lists of military personnel to adversarial nations,
including China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea.
In May 2022, Senator Warren led thirteen of her Senate colleagues in letters to two data brokers
demanding answers regarding their collection and sale of the
cellphone-based location data of people who visit abortion clinics such
as Planned Parenthood.
In December 2021, at a hearing of the Senate Finance Subcommittee on Fiscal Responsibility and Economic Growth, Senator Warren called
on Congress and regulators to pass stronger antitrust laws, ban mergers
involving huge companies, and encourage robust enforcement to protect
the economy, consumers, workers, and data.
In March 2020, Senators Warren; Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.); and Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-La.) sent a letter to
Ascension, the second-largest health systems provider in the United
States, regarding the company’s information-sharing partnership with
Google—also known as Project Nightingale—that provides Google with the
health records of tens of millions of Americans.
In November 2019, following alarming reports of Google’s efforts to
obtain the health records of millions of Americans without their
awareness or consent, Senators Warren, Blumenthal, and Cassidy sent a bipartisan letter to Google demanding answers to the serious questions and concerns raised by “Project Nightingale.”
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