Thursday, September 4, 2025
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Thursday, September 4, 2025

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Kaul Botches Crime Lab: 2021 Delays Worse Than Schimel Despite Plunging Cases

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A new report issued by AG Josh Kaul shows that former AG Brad Schimel’s crime lab was more productive and effective. Schimel was hammered relentlessly by Kaul and the news media on the topic. Will Kaul get the same scrutiny?

Attorney General Josh Kaul’s crime lab is taking in far fewer cases than his predecessor Brad Schimel even as violent crime skyrockets throughout the state, yet is taking longer to process them in key areas like DNA analysis and controlled substances, Kaul’s own numbers show.

Furthermore, Kaul’s crime lab is taking in almost 30% fewer cases than Schimel did in 2016.

Kaul released the report the Thursday before Easter, which raises the question of whether he was trying to bury the findings. Kaul touted a first-ever crime symposium being held and a new unit devoted to crime scene response. Kaul admits in a throwaway line that “the average turnaround time (TAT) for DNA analysis was up in 2021.”

But “turnaround time” is where the rubber meets the road. Slower processing of evidence leads to slower prosecutions and can result in offenders remaining on the streets longer. Kaul’s own mother, Peg Lautenschlager, learned this the hard way when she was Attorney General, and a delay in processing a DNA sample left an offender on the street who was later accused of being involved in the murder of a state drug agent.

Kaul crime lab

The Democratic Attorney General, who has prioritized partisan fights and a new diversity/equity position as violent crime explodes in the state’s largest city, released the 2021 annual state crime lab report on April 14, 2020. The report shows that, by key measurements, Kaul’s crime lab performed worse in 2021 than it did in his first year in office, which was 2019. Kaul was sworn into office on January 7, 2019.

His annual report left out a direct comparison to Republican Attorney General Schimel, whom Kaul and the media relentessly hammered on the same issue. We did what Kaul did not; we looked up the numbers for Schimel’s last year in office, 2018, and we compared them to Kaul’s 2021 numbers.

See Kaul’s 2021 annual report here: 4.15.21_Annual_Report

In 2021, the crime labs under Kaul handled 9,297 cases. That’s a slight increase from 2020, when the pandemic hit, but it’s a drop from 10,613 cases in 2019, when Kaul took office. In 2016, under Schimel, the crime lab took 13,029 cases. In his last year, in 2018, the crime lab took 12,680 cases.

Kaul crime lab

That’s almost a 30% decrease under Kaul since 2016 under Schimel.

Although Kaul blistered Schimel on the crime lab, by key measurements, he’s managing it MUCH worse, the data, from DOJ reports, shows. For example, in the key area of DNA Analysis, Kaul’s office handled 3,612 cases in 2021, with a mean turnaround time of 128. Schimel’s crime lab handled 8,626; the turnaround time was 80. Some of the additional cases might be explained by a glut of old rape kits being analyzed; however, the fact is that Kaul’s crime lab took in far fewer cases but took more days on average to turn them around.

Another example: In controlled substance cases, Schimel took and completed far more cases than Kaul, but processed them in less time. In 2021, Kaul took in 4,430 cases and the mean turnaround time was 61; Schimel in 2018, took in 5283, and processed them in an average 43.

Water street shooting
Crime is skyrocketing in milwaukee

Trace evidence is another example. His office handled fewer cases in 2021 than in Schimel’s last year and took more time to do it. Latent footwear is one of the only areas where Kaul definitively improved things over Schimel.

Even in cases where Kaul’s turnaround time improved over Schimel’s, it turns out that his office is being FAR LESS productive, even though violent crime has skyrocketed. For example, Schimel’s office took in 1,304 latent print cases and finished 1,706; Kaul, in 2021, took in 1,000, with a case output of 963. Not surprisingly it took Kaul’s analysts less time to process them – they were handling and completing far fewer cases.

Fond du Lac County DA Eric Toney, who is running in the Republican primary for a chance to square off against Kaul, said, “Josh Kaul campaigned on fixing the crime and is trying to bury his abysmal failure of mismanaging the crime lab. Kaul is playing politics with public safety by limiting the amount of evidence prosecutors and cops can submit to the lab in a failed effort to improve his testing turnaround times. Kaul is testing significantly less items than former AG Brad Schimel and is still taking longer to test many categories of key items in comparison to Schimel, including DNA. Wisconsin can’t afford another 4 years of Kaul’s failures.”

In 2018, Kaul slammed Schimel over Wisconsin crime lab backlogs, saying, “I’m glad to see that, in an election year, Brad Schimel has finally found the motivation to take action, but we need an Attorney General who is consistently committed to ensuring that justice isn’t delayed for victims.”

The best positive spin Kaul could come up with in the 2021 report: He’s claiming that there are fewer DNA cases pending in the “queue.” But that’s only because his office has taken in fewer cases.

Kaul admitted in his 2020 report that “the legislature made a significant investment in the crime labs in the last state budget.” Yet he’s still trying to blame staffing this time around.

Kaul has admitted previously that he’s taken actions that artificially reduced the caseloads handled by the crime labs, saying the drops were driven in part by changes his office made to the submission guidelines restricting what law enforcement and prosecutors can send to the Wisconsin crime labs in the first place.

In 2019, Josh Kaul told Wisconsin Public Radio that one change in the submission guidelines involved the crime labs mostly testing felony controlled substance cases instead of misdemeanors. Indeed, Kaul’s own website shows that his agency has changed submission guidelines in all areas from 2019 through 2021.

The DNA unit is not accepting misdemeanor cases, fired cartridge cases, touch DNA evidence in some property crimes and collected in public places and cases with a jury trial date that is less than eight weeks from the date of submission to the laboratory. The crime lab also has a list of cases where it won’t accept firearms or toolmark evidence, including shootings without a named victim or suspect being charged and misdemeanor crimes.

Kaul is also blaming a “spike in jury trials” for delays.

Here’s the tale of the tape:

Total Receipted Cases: SHARP DROP IN CASES TAKEN

The total number of cases taken collectively by the crime labs in Madison, Milwaukee, and Wausau, has sharply declined since Schimel was AG, Kaul’s report admits. That’s for everything from DNA analysis to firearms, latent prints, toxicology, trace evidence and more, taken collectively.

Kaul was sworn into office in January 2019.

In 2021, 9,297 cases were handled. That’s a slight increase from 2020, when the pandemic hit, but it’s a drop from 10,613 cases in 2019, when Kaul took office.

In 2016, under Schimel, the crime lab took 13,029 cases. In his last year, in 2018, the crime lab took 12,680 cases.

DNA analysis

Kaul’s office took fewer cases in but processed them more slowly when compared to his first year in office. Schimel took in more cases, but his turnaround time was still better.

2021: Kaul’s office handled 3,612 cases, case output 3526, with a mean turnaround time of 128.

2020: Kaul’s office handled 3,820 , case output 3144, cases with a mean turnaround time of 94.

2019: Kaul’s office handled 4,400 cases, case output 4960, with a mean turnaround time of 97.

2018: SCHIMEL’s office handled 8,626 cases, case output 5664, with a mean turnaround time of 80.

The median TAT also grew, from 50 in 2018 (Schimel’s last year) to 65 in 2019 to 115 in 2021.

The DNA databank took in thousands of fewer cases: 20,736 cases came in compared to 26,808 in 2019; there were 19,888 CODIS uploads in 2021 compared to 24,882 in 2019. The average and median turnaround time for the DNA databank grew.

Controlled substances

Kaul is taking fewer controlled substances cases than when he first take office, but it’s taking his crime lab longer to process them. He’s taking in far fewer cases than Schimel but taking longer to process them.

2021: Kaul took in 4,430 cases, with a case output of 3522, with mean turnaround time of 61

2020: Kaul took in 3,813 cases, with case output of 3,675 cases, mean TAT of 44.

2019: Kaul took in 4861 cases, case output 4725, with mean TAT of 33.

2018: Schimel took in 5,283 cases, case output 5422, turnaround time 43.

Toxicology

There were more cases submitted in 2021 than during Kaul’s first year. They took longer to process. Schimel took in fewer cases in 2018 but processed them faster.

We would note, however, that Schimel’s office completed about the same number of cases in less time than it took in and more than Kaul’s office – case output in 2018 was just over 4,000 in both cases.

2021: Under Kaul, 4,073 cases taken, 4078 output, mean TAT 48.

2020: Under Kaul, 3,972 cases taken, 3829 output, mean TAT 39.

2019: Under Kaul, 3,609 cases taken, 3622 output, mean TAT 36.

2018: Under SCHIMEL, 3,897 cases taken, 4051 output, mean TAT 37.

Trace evidence

Kaul’s office handled fewer cases than his first year in office but is taking more time to process them.

His office handled fewer cases in 2021 than in Schimel’s last year and took more time to do it.

2021: 95 cases handled, 87 case output, mean TAT 85

2020: 145 cases handled, 133 case output, mean TAT 68

2019: 118 cases handled, 115 case output, mean TAT 45

2018: 126 cases handled, 134 case output, mean TAT 71.

Automated fingerprint identification system

Kaul is taking in fewer fingerprint comparisons and verifications.

Crime scene response

The office responded to more crime scenes in 2021 than his first year in office but is taking longer to process them. Schimel’s office responded to fewer crime scenes but had a faster turnaround time.

2021: Kaul’s office handled 155 responses, with average TAT of 54.

2020: Kaul’s office handled 104 responses, with average TAT of 49.

2019: Kaul’s office handled 106 responses, with average TAT of 37.

2018: SCHIMEL’s office handled 122 responses, with an average TAT of 33.

Firearms and Toolmarks

The number of firearms cases was basically level. The mean turnaround time dropped.

Schimel’s office handled slightly more cases and took longer to turn them around.

2021: Kaul’s office handled 437 cases, with a case output of 399, with an average TAT of 157.

2020: Kaul’s office handled 451 cases, with a case output of 403, with an average TAT of 247.

2019: Kaul’s office handled 428 cases, with a case output of 577, with an average TAT of 258.

2018: SCHIMEL’s office handled 446 cases, with a case output of 419, with an average turnaround time of 209.

The median TAT worsened since 2018 though, from 87 to 104.

On toolmarks there aren’t many cases, but they are taking a really long time to process, and that’s gone up since 2019.

2021: Kaul’s office handled 7 cases, with case output of 12, with an average TAT of 763.

2020: Kail’s office handled 23 cases, with case output of 20, with an average TAT of 1,164.

2019: Kaul’s office handled 14 cases, with case output of 48, with an average TAT of 235.

2018: Schimel’s office handled 25 cases, with case output of 0 and average TAT 0.

Forensic imaging

Kaul’s office handled more cases and took longer to complete them than in 2019, his first year in office.

Schimel’s office handled fewer cases but turned them around faster.

2021: Kaul’s office handled 84 cases, case output 71, with an average TAT of 70.

2020: Kaul’s office handled 86 cases, with a case output of 77, with an average TAT of 56.

2019: Kaul’s office handled 52 cases, with a case output of 52, with an average TAT of 69.

2018: SCHIMEL’S office handled 62 cases, with a case output of 59, with an average TAT of 62.

Latent prints

Kaul’s office handled about the same number of cases and took less time to complete them when compared to his first year in office. He handled fewer cases than Schimel and turned them around faster.

2021: Kaul’s office handled 1,000 cases, case output 963, with an average TAT of 71

2020: Kaul’s office handled 941 cases, case output 870, with an average TAT of 55.

2019: Kaul’s office handled 1,003 cases, case output 1274, with an average TAT of 124.

2018: SCHIMEL’s office handled 1,304 cases, with case output of 1706, and media TAT of 224.

Latent footwear

Kaul’s office handled fewer cases and processed cases faster when compared to his first year. This is one year where his office handled about the same number of cases as Schimel but dramatically improved turnaround time.

2021: Kaul’s office handled 18 cases, with 19 output, with a mean TAT of 12.

2020: Kaul’s office handled 21 cases, with 18 output, with a mean TAT of 140.

2019: Kaul’s office handled 28 cases, with 32 output, with a mean TAT of 195.

2018: Schimel’s office handled 19 cases with 26 output and a mean TAT of 263.

Trump

Trump Administration Pushes to Remove Noncitizen Medicaid Enrollees

The Trump administration is cracking down on noncitizens receiving Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program benefits, according to an announcement by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

The center launched an oversight program on Tuesday, in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, to provide states with reports of individuals enrolled in Medicaid who do not appear on federal databases.

“We are tightening oversight of enrollment to safeguard taxpayer dollars and guarantee that these vital programs serve only those who are truly eligible under the law,” said Robert F. Kennedy Jr., secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

States are required to review the federal reports, identify immigration status discrepancies, request information and enforce noncitizen eligibility rules.

Federal law typically does not allow noncitizens to enroll in Medicaid. However, 1.4 million people are enrolled in Medicaid who do not meet citizenship and immigration status requirements, according to data from the Congressional Budget Office.

Some states, like California, Oregon and Colorado have extended Medicaid eligibility to undocumented immigrants, which accounts for the large number of recipients. It is unclear how cooperation will go between states who have expanded Medicaid enrollment.

“Every dollar misspent is a dollar taken away from an eligible, vulnerable individual in need of Medicaid,” said CMS administrator Mehmet Oz.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law July 4, implemented tighter restrictions on Medicaid eligibility including a crackdown on work requirements for able-bodied adults, frequent eligibility redeterminations and increased restrictions on noncitizens.

The move from the health department comes as the Trump administration has worked to share more data on individuals enrolled in Medicaid. The health department first gave Immigration and Customs Enforcement access to enrollment records for individuals on Medicaid in June.

Twenty states, including California, Colorado and New York, filed a lawsuit against the department in July. A federal judge temporarily blocked the health agency from sharing information in those states last week.

“Using CMS data for immigration enforcement threatens to significantly disrupt the operation of Medicaid—a program that Congress has deemed critical for the provision of health coverage to the nation’s most vulnerable residents,” Judge Vince Chhabria wrote in the order.

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Think tank, election attorney support Trump’s vow to end mail-in voting

While most Democrats are opposed, President Donald Trump’s vow to end mail-in voting, which he says is ripe for fraud, has been met with approval from both an election attorney as well as the America First Policy Institute.

“President Trump should be applauded for leading the charge to ensure that every American's vote matters and is not undermined by corruption,” the America First Policy Institute (AFPI) told The Center Square by email.

“This is not just a policy fight,” AFPI said. “This is a fight for the survival of our republic.”

AFPI is a non-profit and non-partisan research institute aiming to “advance policies that put the American people first,” according to its website.

Election attorney and founder of law firm OGC Law, LLC Greg Teufel told The Center Square that “eliminating mail-in balloting would go a long way toward restoring confidence in our election procedures."

“Mail-in voting has long been recognized as the most vulnerable type of voting for election fraud,” Teufel said.

“Because ballots are not completed in front of election officials, coercion, bribery, and voting on behalf of people of limited competence is all possible,” Teufel told The Center Square.

AFPI likewise told The Center Square that “President Trump is right in saying that our elections will never be secure so long as we have widespread use of mail-in ballots.”

“With rare exception, mass mail-in voting is a recipe for fraud and chaos,” AFPI said. “Other nations recognize this, and many abandoned this broken system decades ago.”

“The United States of America is the greatest nation in the world, and our electoral system should set the global standard for security and transparency,” AFPI said.

AFPI listed to The Center Square examples of the issues of mail-in voting.

For instance, “in some states, one now can apply to be on the voter rolls as a ‘permanent absentee voter,’ which means one automatically gets an absentee ballot application every election,” AFPI said.

Additionally, “reliance solely on mail-in voting may lead to the disenfranchisement of America’s eligible citizen class and could also lead to fraud through ballot trafficking,” AFPI told The Center Square.

“Mass mail-in voting presents vulnerabilities with the chain of custody of a ballot and increases the prevalence of error in states that do not maintain clean voter rolls,” AFPI said.

The Center for Election Innovation and Research did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Trump posted on his Truth Social account Monday: “I am going to lead a movement to get rid of MAIL-IN BALLOTS.”

“ELECTIONS CAN NEVER BE HONEST WITH MAIL IN BALLOTS/VOTING, and everybody, IN PARTICULAR THE DEMOCRATS, KNOWS THIS,” Trump said.

The president further said that “while we’re at it,” he will get rid of “Highly ‘Inaccurate,’ Very Expensive, and Seriously Controversial VOTING MACHINES, which cost Ten Times more than accurate and sophisticated Watermark Paper, which is faster, and leaves NO DOUBT, at the end of the evening, as to who WON, and who LOST, the Election.”

Trump said the efforts to protect elections will be brought about by an executive order “to help bring honesty to the 2026 Midterm Elections.”

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DOJ Launches Grand Jury Probe into ‘RussiaGate’

The U.S. Department of Justice is reportedly opening a grand jury investigation into an alleged plot by members of the Obama administration accusing President Donald Trump of colluding with Russia during the 2016 election.

The move, scooped by Fox News, marks the latest step by the second Trump administration to expose what it sees as attempts by former President Barack Obama, 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, and former intelligence officials to undermine Trump’s character and delegitimize his 2016 victory.

Three weeks ago, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard began declassifying documents appearing to show Obama – along with his senior advisors and top intelligence officials – pressured the intelligence community to contrive evidence that Russia tried to manipulate the 2016 presidential election in Trump’s favor.

Another document showed that the DNI’s 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment, which concluded that Moscow “aspired to help President-elect Trump’s election chances,” appeared not only false but also the result of apparent bad faith.

To reach their conclusion that Putin had attempted to help Trump win, top intelligence officials cherry-picked inconclusive information that supported the narrative, omitted or suppressed information contradicting the narrative, and based their “high confidence” assumptions on untrustworthy and dishonest sources, according to declassified documents.

Gabbard’s most recent bombshell, however, revealed unverified emails between Clinton campaign staffers and the vice president of a George Soros-affiliated group, planning to falsely tie Russia’s cyber interference attempts during election season to Trump.

According to the declassified Office of Special Counsel (OSC) investigation, the emails show that Clinton apparently approved of her campaign’s plan to “demonize” Trump by propagating the idea of “Trump and Russian hackers hampering U.S. elections.”

The emails also appeared to show that Clinton ally Leonard Bernardo expected the FBI “put more oil on the fire,” as a way to distract from Clinton’s previous email scandal, The Center Square reported.

Despite Trump administration rhetoric that the emails are a “smoking gun,” the declassified investigation noted that OSC never definitively determined “whether the purported Clinton campaign plan [to implicate Trump] was entirely genuine, partially true, a composite pulled from multiple sources, exaggerated in certain respects, or fabricated in its entirety.”

OSC did assess that “it is a logical deduction that [Clinton foreign policy advisor Julianne] Smith was, at a minimum, playing a role in the Clinton campaign’s efforts to tie Trump to Russia,” and that available evidence “supports the notion that the campaign might have wanted or expected the FBI or other agencies to aid the effort” via a formal investigation.

Gabbard nevertheless sent a criminal referral to Attorney General Pam Bondi. The DOJ’s grand jury probe is the first step towards securing a potential indictment, which would allow prosecutors to subpoena further evidence and collect testimonies.

Though no charges have yet been filed, unsparing rhetoric by administration officials – including Trump, who flat-out accused Obama and Clinton of “treason” – suggest that some could be formally accused of sedition, conspiracy or other charges.

Given the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling last year that presidents have broad immunity from criminal prosecution of official acts taken while in office, Obama will likely escape indictment.

As of Tuesday, the DOJ has not yet confirmed the grand jury investigation.

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Border Patrol Agents Continue to Arrest Iranians, Weapons Traffickers at Northern Border

At the northern border, Border Patrol agents continue to arrest Iranians and weapons traffickers and are helping seize record amounts of fentanyl.

While illegal border crossings are down at the northern border under the Trump administration, Border Patrol agents in the busiest northern border Swanton Sector are continuing to interdict crime. The sector includes all of Vermont, six upstate New York counties, and three New Hampshire counties.

Earlier this month, Border Patrol Agents from the Champlain Station in New York responded to a report of suspicious activity near Mooers Forks, New York. Upon arrival, they located a minivan occupied by five Iranian citizens and two Uzbekistan citizens – all adult men in the country illegally.

Border Patrol agents then determined all seven men “had previously illegally entered the United States at various locations along both the U.S./Mexico border and the U.S./Canada border,” Swanton Sector Chief Border Patrol Agent Robert Garcia said. They were detained and are being processed for removal.

“Border security is national security and directly correlates to public safety,” Garcia said, adding that “Swanton Sector agents remain vigilant and committed to protecting our borders and enforcing immigration laws.”

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers are also arresting Iranians in the country illegally, including Revolutionary Guard soldiers, after more than 1,500 Iranians illegally entered the U.S. under the Biden administration, with more than 700 released into the U.S., The Center Square exclusively reported.

In another instance, Border Patrol agents notified the New York State Police about a suspected driver of a vehicle allegedly involved in smuggling activity in upstate New York. State troopers responded, located and stopped the vehicle near Albany, Garcia said. A subsequent vehicle search resulted in a seizure of roughly 4.7 pounds of powdered fentanyl, enough to kill more than one million people.

“This seizure is a powerful reminder of why strong partnerships between federal, state, and local law enforcement are vital to our national security and public safety,” Swanton Sector Chief Patrol Agent Robert Garcia said.

In another instance, Border Patrol agents helped ATF federal partners apprehend a criminal foreign national wanted for weapons trafficking. Honduran national Yubert Yasiel Lopez-Lopez, 31, was arrested in North Attleboro, Mass., after he illegally reentered the country after he was previously deported.

He was first apprehended in 2014 after illegally entering the U.S. in Hidalgo, Texas, under the Obama administration. A federal immigration judge in Houston ordered his removal, which occurred four years later under the first Trump administration. In 2022, he again illegally entered the country in Yuma, Arizona, under the Biden administration. It took another three years to arrest him, this time in Massachusetts, with authorities learning he was wanted in Honduras on weapons trafficking charges. A federal grand jury indicted him last month in Vermont, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Vermont announced. He faces up to two years in prison if convicted and removal from the U.S. for a third time.

“We continue to enforce federal immigration laws and seek maximum consequences against those who violate them,” Garcia said.

Garcia also regularly thanks members of the public for supporting Border Patrol efforts, sometimes acting as the eyes and ears for agents in rural areas by calling in sightings of illegal border crossers or suspicious activity. He continues to encourage members of the public to report suspicious border activity in the Swanton Sector by calling 1-800-689-3362.

The sector was hit hard under the Biden administration with illegal border crossings from Canada reaching record levels, totaling nearly one million, according to CBP data and gotaway data exclusively reported by The Center Square. The greatest number ever reported in U.S. history in the sector was in fiscal 2024 of nearly 200,000, excluding those who evaded capture, The Center Square reported.

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Wisconsin Republicans Introduce Bill to Repeal Evers’ 400-Year Veto

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin state legislators have started circulating a bill to repeal Gov. Tony Evers’ 400-year school funding veto.

Evers’ veto in July 2023, which turned a temporary $325 per student K-12 funding increase – originally slated for the 2023-24 and 2024-25 school years – into a permanent increase through the year 2425, was recently upheld by the Wisconsin Supreme Court in April, The Center Square previously reported.

However, the court’s ruling suggested lawmakers could still draft legislation as a recourse to the governor’s partial veto, and Republicans are seeking to do just that.

“The pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock 402 years before this veto. It is hard to justify locking in a funding increase for just as long into the future,” the bill’s four co-authors said in a cosponsorship memo circulating at the state Capitol, WPR reported.

The bill would effectively reverse Evers’ 400-year veto, eliminating the $325 per pupil adjustment in the school district revenue limit formula beginning with the 2026-27 school year.

“One man locked in a tax-raising mechanism that no one voted for and no one approved,” the cosponsorship memo reads. “Evers’ move bypassed both the elected Legislature and the hard-working people who pay the bills.”

However, if the bill passes both chambers of the Legislature, it would ironically require Evers to not veto it in order to become law.

While the Senate had voted to override Evers’ original veto in September 2023, the Assembly never held a vote on the override, so the effort failed and the veto stood.

Will Flanders, the research director at Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty, previously wrote, “The Governor is not a king, even if the state Supreme Court says he is. Given this increase, the legislature should fight hard against any further increases for public schools that are now set up for a boondoggle.”

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Wisconsin Cities, Counties Saw Drop in June Unemployment Rate

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin saw the June unemployment rate go down in 24 of the state’s largest 35 cities over the month while the rates lowered in 63 counties and stayed the same in eight more, according to new numbers from the state’s Department of Workforce Development.

Wisconsin’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate went down to 3.2% in June, less than the 4.1% national rate.

Wisconsin’s labor force participation rate went down to 65.1% in June while the national rate decreased slightly to 62.3%.

Wisconsin saw 10 of its largest metropolitan areas show unemployment decreases while three of those areas remained the same. Twelve of the metropolitan areas saw unemployment decreases over the year while the rate in Sheboygan remained the same.

Menominee, meanwhile, was the only county that saw a month over month increase in unemployment rate while the rate increased in just four counties year over year.

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Tulsi Gabbard Releases New Intel Claiming FBI, CIA ‘Knowingly created’ Russia Hoax

Federal officials have released more documents indicating a Democratic-led intelligence community politically targeted President Donald Trump by claiming that Russian President Vladimir Putin influenced the 2016 presidential election to help Trump win.

U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard declassified a 2020 House Intelligence Committee report Wednesday that “exposes how the Obama Administration manufactured the January 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment that they knew was false.”

“The Russia Hoax was a lie that was knowingly created by the Obama Administration to undermine the legitimacy and power of the duly elected President of the United States, Donald Trump,” Gabbard posted on X.

Notably, the report found that the majority of the intelligence community’s judgements on Russia’s confirmed attempts to meddle with the 2016 election were “sound,” including its findings that Putin ordered “conventional and cyber influence operations” to undermine faith in the U.S. democratic process and the legitimacy of an expected Hillary Clinton presidency.

However, further judgments from the intelligence community alleging that Putin “developed a clear preference for candidate Trump” and “aspired to help his chances of victory” were not only false but also the result of apparent bad faith, the oversight investigation reveals.

To reach their conclusion that Putin had attempted to help Trump win, top intelligence officials cherry-picked inconclusive information that supported the narrative, omitted or suppressed information contradicting the narrative, and based their “high confidence” assumptions on untrustworthy and dishonest sources.

The report builds upon other documents that Gabbard declassified over the weekend showing that Obama, along with his senior advisors, reportedly pressured the intelligence community to contrive evidence that Russia intended to manipulate the vote count in Trump’s favor.

The Trump administration believes these efforts amounted to a “coup” meant to delegitimize the results of the 2016 election and cast doubts on Trump’s presidency.

Rep. Rick Crawford, R-Ark., said Wednesday that the “Russia hoax will go down as one of the most troublesome events in U.S. history” that caused the country to become “more polarized than ever before.”

“A President of the United States was falsely accused, and a nation had to endure lies fabricated by rogue personnel within their own Intelligence Community,” Crawford said on X. “There are still Americans who passionately believe the fabricated narrative. That is why releasing this document to the public has been so important.”

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ron tusler

Governor Caught Playing Politics with Brillion Residents’ Lives & Livelihood [COLUMN]

This is a column by state Rep. Ron Tusler At 1:30 a.m., while most of Wisconsin was asleep, Governor Evers quietly vetoed a project that...
Brown Deer Police

Boy Invites Brown Deer Cops to His Lemonade Stand & Gets His Wish

A boy invited Brown Deer police over to his lemonade stand and got his wish! It's the heartwarming story of the day, and Brown Deer...
jerome powell

Fed Chair Candidates & New York’s Mayoral Race

Before we talk about the candidates for the Fed Chair position, let’s discuss for a moment the problem with Chair Powell’s current thinking. Right...

Q&A with Tommy Clark, Author of The 2020 Portland Riots: A Fight Against Domestic Terrorism

By Chris Mann Read part 1: Chris Mann's review of The 2020 Portland Riots: A Fight Against Domestic Terrorism by Tommy Clark. Tommy Clark and...