Melissa Hortman in 2024. (Glen Stubbe / Star Tribune via Getty Images file)

The children of slain Minnesota state lawmaker Melissa Hortman are urging President Donald Trump to remove a post on Truth Social that promotes a conspiracy theory alleging the state's governor, Tim Walz, was involved in Hortman's death.

Hortman — a Democrat — and her husband, Mark, were killed in June at their home in what authorities described at the timeas "politically motivated" shootings. State Sen. John Hoffman, a Democrat, and his wife, Yvette, were also shot and wounded in their home the same day.

Vance Boelterof Minnesota is accused of the shootings. The manhunt to arrest Boelter was the largest in Minnesota history. He wasindicted on federal murder chargesin July andpleaded not guilty in August.

Trump shared the video — which seems to have been made by another social media user, who shared yet another video — on Saturday. It made unsubstantiated claims tying Walz and alleged fraud in Minnesota's state programs to the murders. There has been no evidence to suggest there is such a link.

On Saturday, Walz — who was the Democratic nominee for vice president in 2024 —called Trump's post"dangerous, depraved behavior from the sitting president of the United States," saying he would "get more innocent people killed."

"America is better than this," Walz said.

On Sunday, the Hortmans' children, Colin and Sophie, each released statements condemning the video.

"I am asking President Trump to remove the video that he shared and apologize to me and my family for posting this misinformation and for using my mother's own words to dishonor her memory," Colin Hortman wrote.

Sophie Hortman echoed the sentiment, calling the video "a painful, false twisting of my mother's final vote."

"We must create a society in which we do not harbor hatred and violence toward our political opponents, and this video promotes a false narrative which fuels the flames of political division," Sophie Hortman wrote.

"The video being shared by the president is another hurdle our family must overcome in grieving the loss of my parents, Mark and Melissa, and their beloved [dog] Gilbert," she added. "I ask President Trump to please consider the pain and sadness we have faced, and to honor the spirit of the holidays we have just spent without our parents by taking down the post on Truth Social."

The Hoffman family said in a statement that it "stands with Sophie and Colin Hortman."

"We ask President Trump to take down the post spreading conspiracy claims about their parents' deaths," the family said in a statement. "Those claims reflect the same hateful falsehoods that motivated violence and cause more harm."

"This moment calls for responsibility and compassion. Removing the post would be a necessary step toward decency," the family said.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the Hortman children's statements or to inquiries about why Trump shared the video.

Trump shared the video as his administrationhas seizedon viralallegations of fraudin some Minnesota state programs in recent weeks.

The Justice Department has investigated allegations of fraud in Minnesota for a few years. One investigationinvolved the nonprofit group Feeding Our Futureand has netted, since 2022, criminal charges for more than 70 people so far — some of whom are members of the state's Somali community.

Slain lawmaker's children urge Trump to remove post with false claims about her death

The children of slain Minnesota state lawmaker Melissa Hortman are urging President Donald Trump to remove a post on Truth Social that prom...
Officers who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6 say their struggles linger, 5 years after the riot

WASHINGTON (AP) — As Donald Trumpwas inaugurated for the second timeon Jan. 20, 2025, former Capitol Police Sgt.Aquilino Gonellput his phone on "do not disturb" and left it on his nightstand to take a break from the news.

That evening, after Gonell spent time with family and took his dog on a long walk, his phone started to blow up with calls. He had messages from federal prosecutors, FBI agents and the federal Bureau of Prisons — all letting him know that the new president had justpardoned about 1,500 peoplewho had been convicted for their actions at the Capitol onJan. 6, 2021. The pardons included rioters who had injured Gonell as he and other officers tried to protect the building.

"They told me that people I testified against were being released from prison," Gonell said. "And to be mindful."

Gonell was one of the officers whodefended the central West Front entrance to the Capitolthat day as Congress was certifying Democrat Joe Biden's victory and hundreds of Trump's supportersbroke into the building, echoing his false claims of a stolen election. Gonell was dragged into the crowd by his shoulder straps as he tried to fight people off. He almost suffocated. In court, hetestified about injuriesto his shoulder and foot that still bother him to this day.

"They have tried to erase what I did" with the pardons and other attempts to play down the violent attack, Gonell said. "I lost my career, my health, and I've been trying to get my life back."

Five years since the siege, Gonell and some of the other police officers who fought off the rioters are still coming to terms with what happened, especially after Trump was decisively elected to a second term last year and granted those pardons. Their struggle has been compounded by statements from the Republican president and some GOP lawmakers in Congressminimizing the violencethat the officers encountered.

"It's been a difficult year," said Officer Daniel Hodges, a Metropolitan Police Department officer who was also injured as he fought near Gonell in a tunnel on the West Front. Hodges was attacked several times, crushed by the rioters between heavy doors and beaten in the head as he screamed for help.

"A lot of things are getting worse," Hodges said.

An evolving narrative

More than 140 police officers were injured during the fighting on Jan. 6, which turned increasingly brutal as the hours wore on.

Former Capitol Police Chief Thomas Manger took over the department six months after the riot. He said in a recent interview that many of his officers were angry when he first arrived, not only because of injuries they suffered but also "they resented the fact that theydidn't have the equipment they needed, the training they needed" to deal with the unexpectedly violent crowd.

Several officers who fought the rioters told The Associated Press that the hardest thing to deal with has been the effort by many toplay down the violence, despite amassive trove of video and photographic evidencedocumenting the carnage.

Trump has called the rioters he pardoned, including those who were most violent toward the police, "patriots" and "hostages." He called their convictions for harming the officers and breaking into the building "a grave national injustice."

"I think that was wrong," Adam Eveland, a former District of Columbia police officer, said of Trump's pardons. If there were to be pardons, Eveland said, Trump's administration should have reviewed every case.

"I've had a hard time processing that," said Eveland, who fought the rioters and helped to push them off the Capitol grounds.

The pardons "erased what little justice there was," said former Capitol Police Officer Winston Pingeon, who was part of the force's Civil Disturbance Unit on Jan. 6. He left the force several months afterward.

Pushback from lawmakers and the public

Hodges and Gonell have been speaking out about their experiences since July 2021, when theytestifiedbefore the Democratic-led House committee that investigated Jan 6. Since then, they have received support but also backlash.

At a Republican-led Senate hearing in October on political violence, Hodges testified again as a witness called by Democrats. After Hodges spoke about his experience on Jan. 6, Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., asked the other witnesses whether they supported Trump's pardons of the rioters, including for those who injured Hodges. Three of the witnesses, all called by Republicans, raised their hands.

"I don't know how you would say it wasn't violent," says Hodges, who is still a Washington police officer.

It has not just been politicians or the rioters who have doubted the police. It also is friends and family.

"My biggest struggle through the years has been the public perception of it," Eveland said, and navigating conversations with people close to him, including some fellow police officers, who do not think it was a big deal.

"It's hard for me to wrap my head around that, but ideology is a pretty powerful thing," he said.

Improvements in safety and support

As police officers struggled in the aftermath, Manger, the former Capitol Police chief, said the department had to figure out how to better support them. There were no wellness or counseling services when he arrived, he said, and they were put in to place.

"The officers who were there and were in the fight — we needed to make sure that they got the help that they needed," Manger said.

Manger, who retired in May, also oversaw major improvements to the department's training, equipment, operational planning and intelligence. He said the Capitol is now "a great deal safer" than it was when he arrived.

"If that exact same thing happened again, they would have never breached the building, they would have never gotten inside, they would have never disrupted the electoral count," Manger said.

Pingeon, the former Capitol Police officer, said he believes the department is in many ways "unrecognizable" from what it was on Jan. 6 and when he left several months later.

"It was a wake-up call," he said.

Pressing on

Pingeon, who was attacked and knocked to the ground as he tried to prevent people from entering the Capitol, said Jan. 6 was part of the reason he left the department and moved home to Massachusetts. He has dealt with his experience by painting images of the Capitol and his time there, as well as advocating for nonviolence. He said he now feels ready to forgive.

"The real trauma and heartache and everything I endured because of these events, I want to move past it," he said.

Gonell left the Capitol Police because of his injuries. He has not returned to service, though he hopes to work again. He wrote a book about his experience, and he said he still has post-traumatic stress disorder related to the attack.

While many of the officers who were there have stayed quiet about their experiences, Eveland said he decided that it was important to talk publicly about Jan. 6 to try to reach people and "come at it from a logical standpoint."

Still, he said, "I've had to come to terms with the fact that just because something happened to me and was a major part of my world doesn't mean that everyone else has to understand that or even be sympathetic to that."

He added: "The only thing I can do is tell my story, and hopefully the people who respect me will eventually listen."

Officers who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6 say their struggles linger, 5 years after the riot

WASHINGTON (AP) — As Donald Trumpwas inaugurated for the second timeon Jan. 20, 2025, former Capitol Police Sgt.Aquilino ...

Venezuela is entering a new and very uncertain era after the sudden capture andremoval of Nicolás Maduro, the country's president for the last 12 years.

Amid widespread apprehension about what comes next, the streets of the capital Caracas and other cities have been quiet. People are apprehensive about being out and about, with the security forces on edge. But there has been little sign of the government-backed paramilitary groups known as colectivos on the streets.

Those that have ventured out have one priority: Stocking up on basic supplies in case the capital sees clashes or looting. There's no sign of panic buying but Venezuelans are used to stocking up whenever there is a crisis.

Videos obtained by CNN on Saturday showed mostly empty streets, but long lines as people gathered at supermarkets and pharmacies.

People queue at a store to get groceries in Caracas on January 3, 2026, after US forces captured Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro. - Jacinto Oliveros/AFP/Getty Images

"You can't hear anything on the streets except the birds singing," reported journalist Mary Mena Sunday.

Opposition supporters are celebrating in private, but there have been no rallies supporting the US action. Mena said they are likely to keep their heads down unless leading opposition figures can show they have support among Venezuelan officials or military commanders.

Little information is trickling in from other cities. Reuters reported long lines for groceries in the city of Maracaibo, an oil hub. Jairo Chacin, 39, a mechanic and workshop owner there, said he had "gone out to check on my business because I was afraid of looting, but the street is deserted."

"I wanted to fill up my gas tank, but the service stations are already closed, so I took the opportunity to buy food because we don't know what's coming," Chacin told Reuters. "Honestly, I have a mix of fear and joy."

"I've just taken the dog out and it feels like an abandoned city, people are shut inside," said Alejandra Palencia, 35, a psychologist in the city of Maracay. "There is fear and ⁠uncertainty," she told Reuters.

That uncertainty is pervasive.

"I want to know what will come next," said Nancy Pérez, a 74-year-old woman who went out to a bakery near her home in Valencia, central Venezuela.

Wilman Gonzalez stands at his home, which he says was hit during US military operations to capture Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, in Catia La Mar, Venezuela. - Matias Delacroix/AP

Some Venezuelans are unhappy at the prospect of decisions for Venezuela being taken at the White House. As she stocked up on groceries in Caracas, Jenny Salazar told CNN: "I don't agree with another president, outside of Venezuela, taking control of us Venezuelans."

Trump said at a news conference Saturday that his administration will govern Venezuela "until there can be a transition."

Teo Tilin, who lives in Miami and had traveled to Venezuela to visit his mother, was also apprehensive about how Venezuela would be governed. "How is it that (Donald Trump) is going to have control? What kind of control will you have? Where are the people who are going to control that? (…) I don't know."

A doctor in the capital who declined to give his name said the role of the military would be crucial.

"The position of the Venezuelan Armed Forces is fundamental. We have to wait and see how they are going to define themselves," he said. He hoped for a rapprochement between the US and the Venezuelan opposition.

View of an empty street in Caracas, on January 4, 2026, a day after Venezuela's president Nicolas Maduro was captured in a US strike. - Federico Parra/AFP/Getty Images

Under the Venezuelan Constitution, the acting president,Delcy Rodríguez, is meant to call fresh elections within 60 days.

"I'm very interested in knowing what the transition will be like. What is the plan? Will she be in charge of the country and the organization of the elections? How can we trust it?" asked another Caracas resident.

State media in Venezuela has featured supporters of the regime with defiant messages for Trump. One young man told a live broadcast by Telesur on Saturday: "We are the children of (Hugo) Chávez, we achieved sovereignty, and we will not allow you, who think you are the world's police, to change this."

Chavez was president before Maduro, from 1999 to 2013, and the founder of what became known as Venezuela's Bolivarian movement.

Rodriguez, who has been nominated as president by the Supreme Court now that Maduro is gone, has not spoken Sunday – but the government appears to be focused on continuity. Maduro frequently said that the regime will continue regardless of whether he was still president.

Authorities have said that the main international airport remains open and that the National Assembly will be sworn in on Monday as scheduled.

Many Venezuelans were surprised that Trump suggested the US could work with Rodriguez as the new head of state in Venezuela – deepening the uncertainty over the country's future.

CNN's Anabella González, Mary Mena and Alessandra Freitas contributed to this report.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Venezuelans hunker down, apprehensive about what comes next

Venezuela is entering a new and very uncertain era after the sudden capture andremoval of Nicolás Maduro, the country's president for t...
Novak Djokovic cuts ties with the PTPA players' association he co-founded

Novak Djokovic is cutting ties withthe Professional Tennis Players Association, a group he co-founded that sued the sport's governing bodies last year, writing on social media Sunday that "my values and approach are no longer aligned with the current direction of the organization."

The 24-time Grand Slam champion announced at the 2020 U.S. Open that he and now-retired Canadian player Vasek Pospisil were launching the PTPA. They said they were aiming to offer representation for players who are independent contractors in a largely individual sport.

One of the goals made clear along the way was to become a sort of full-fledged union that negotiates collective bargaining agreements like those that exist in team sports, although that sort of thing hasn't happened.

Djokovic said Sunday on X that he had "ongoing concerns regarding transparency, governance, and the way my voice and image have been represented."

ThePTPA filed a class-action lawsuitin March against the women's and men's tours, the International Tennis Federation and the sport's integrity agency, accusing the organizations of "systemic abuse, anti-competitive practices, and a blatant disregard for player welfare." The four Grand Slam tournaments were later added as defendants.

Djokovic was not listed as a plaintiff when the suit was filed; Pospisil and other players were.

That's because, Djokovic said in March, "I want other players to step up."

The lawsuit says players should gain access to more earnings, arguing that the governing bodies that oversee the four Grand Slam tournaments — Wimbledon, the U.S. Open, the French Open and the Australian Open — and other professional events "cap the prize money tournaments award and limit players' ability to earn money off the court."

Djokovic said Sunday he "will continue to focus on my tennis, my family, and contributing to the sport in ways that reflect my principles and integrity. I wish the players and those involved the best as they move forward, but for me, this chapter is now closed."

AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Novak Djokovic cuts ties with the PTPA players' association he co-founded

Novak Djokovic is cutting ties withthe Professional Tennis Players Association, a group he co-founded that sued the sport...
Colts wideout Alec Pierce receives controversial ejection after making contact with official during career day

Indianapolis Colts wideout Alec Pierce was well on his way to shattering a handful of career-highs Sunday before being forced out of the game early. After nearly catching his third touchdown of the day, Pierce was ejected after making contact with an official.

The incident occurred with under two minutes to play in the third quarter. Pierce attempted to haul in a pass in the back of the end zone, but was pushed out of bounds by a Houston Texans defender. Pierce, looking for a flag, got up to talk to an official about the play. As Pierce extended his arm out behind the official, his shoulder bumped the official's arm. The ref immediately threw a flag, and disqualified Pierce from the rest of the game.

Alec Pierce has been disqualifiedpic.twitter.com/v5QiRjlQj1

— NFL on CBS 🏈 (@NFLonCBS)January 4, 2026

The broadcast seemingly disagreed with the penalty, with J.J. Watt calling it "harsh." Play-by-play man Ian Eagle threw it to former NFL ref Gene Steratore who noted, "It's not a lot of contact."

The ejection ended a career-day for Pierce, who hauled in four passes for 132 yards and two scores earlier in the contest. That was only two yards off his previous career-high and marked just the second time in his career Pierce scored multiple touchdowns in a game. Had he been allowed to keep playing, there's a decent chance Pierce would have exceeded his previous career-high of 134 receiving yards.

There's also a chance he could have helped the Colts win the game. After leading most of the way, the team coughed up a late lead,eventually losing the contest 38-30.

While he didn't get to realize that dream Sunday, he picked a tremendous time to post his best-ever game. Pierce is set to hit the free-agent market in the offseason, and stands to make quite a bit of money there. Though he's never had a 1,000-yard season as a receiver, Pierce has proven to be one of the game's best deep threats. He's led the NFL in yards per reception in each of the past two seasons.

Given Pierce's ability to get open deep, there's bound to be some teams that are convinced he could take a huge step forward in a good offense. Pierce hasn't had many opportunities to play with elite quarterbacks over his career, and could really benefit from joining a team with an accurate, deep-ball passer.

But that will have to wait until the offseason. Following Pierce's early exit in Week 18, the next time he'll take the field could come with a new team next year. If he can build off his career day — and his strong second half — Pierce could wind up being one of biggest free-agent additions of the offseason.

Colts wideout Alec Pierce receives controversial ejection after making contact with official during career day

Indianapolis Colts wideout Alec Pierce was well on his way to shattering a handful of career-highs Sunday before being fo...
Infielder Kazuma Okamoto and Blue Jays finalize $60 million, 4-year contract

TORONTO (AP) — Infielder Kazuma Okamoto and the Toronto Blue Jays finalized their $60 million, four-year contract Sunday.

Okamoto will get a $5 million signing bonus, a $7 million salary this year and $16 million in each of the following three seasons.

To open a roster spot, Toronto designated right-hander Paxton Schultz for assignment.

A six-time All-Star, Okamoto has a .277 average with 248 homers and 717 RBIs in 11 Japanese big league seasons, leading the Central League in home runs in 2020, 2021 and 2023. Hehomered off Colorado's Kyle Freelandto help Japan beat the U.S. 3-2 in the 2023 World Baseball Classic final.

Okamoto, a 29-year-old third baseman and first baseman, hit .327 with 15 homers and 49 RBIs in 69 games last year for the Central League's Yomiuri Giants. He injured his left elbow while trying to catch a throw at first base on May 6 when he collided with the Hanshin Tigers' Takumu Nakano, an injury that sidelined Okamoto until Aug. 16.

With five-time All-Star Vladimir Guerrero Jr. at first, Okamoto presumably would play mostly at third. Addison Barger had 67 starts there last year, Ernie Clement 66, Will Wagner 22, Isiah Kiner-Falefa six and Buddy Kennedy one.

Barger also plays right field, and the addition of Okamoto could mean Andrés Giménez would move from second to shortstop if free agent Bo Bichette doesn't re-sign. Clement and Davis Scheider could share time at second.

Under MLB's posting agreement with Nippon Professional Baseball, the Blue Jays owe the Giants a posting fee of $10,875,000.

Aftercoming within two outs of their first World Series title since 1993, the Blue Jays have made significant additions to the roster. Toronto signed right-hander Dylan Cease to a$210 million, seven-year contract, agreed to a $30 million, three-year contract with right-hander Cody Ponce and reached a$37 million, three-year dealwith reliever Tyler Rogers.

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Infielder Kazuma Okamoto and Blue Jays finalize $60 million, 4-year contract

TORONTO (AP) — Infielder Kazuma Okamoto and the Toronto Blue Jays finalized their $60 million, four-year contract Sunday....
Trump says that Ukraine didn't target Putin residence in a drone strike as Kremlin claims

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE (AP) — President Donald Trump on Sunday told reporters that U.S. national security officials have determined that Ukraine did not target a residence belonging to Russian PresidentVladimir Putinin a drone attack last week,disputing Kremlin claimsthat Trump had initially greeted with deep concern.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov last week said Ukrainelaunched a wave of dronesat Putin's state residence in the northwestern Novgorod region that the Russian defense systems were able to defeat. Lavrov also criticized Kyiv for launching the attack at a moment of intensive negotiations to end the war.

The allegation came just a day after Ukrainian PresidentVolodymyr Zelenskyyhad traveled to Florida for talks with Trump on the U.S. administration's still-evolving20-point plan aimed at ending the war, and had Zelenskyy quickly denied it.

"I don't believe that strike happened," Trump told reporters as he traveled back to Washington on Sunday after spending two weeks at his home in Florida.

Trump addressed the U.S. determination after European officials argued that the Russian claim was nothing more than an effort by Moscow to undermine the peace effort.

But Trump, at least initially, had appeared to take the Russian allegations at face value. He told reporters last Monday that Putin had also raised the matter during a phone he had with the Russian leader earlier that day. And Trump said he was "very angry" about the accusation.

By Wednesday, Trump appeared to be downplaying the Russian claim. He posted a link to a New York Post editorial on his social media platform that raised doubt about the Russian allegation. The editorial lambasted Putin for choosing "lies, hatred, and death" at a moment that Trump has claimed is "closer than ever before" to moving the two sides to a deal to end the war.

The U.S. president has struggled to fulfill a pledgeto quickly end the warin Ukraine and has shown irritation with both Zelenskyy and Putin as he tried to mediate an end to a conflict he boasted on the campaign trail that he could end in one day.

Both Trump and Zelenskyy said last week they madeprogress in their talksat Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort on a 20-point peace plan.

But Putin has shown little interest in ending the war until all of Russia's objectives are met, including winning control of all Ukrainian territory in the key industrial Donbas region and imposing severe restrictions on the size of Ukraine's post-war military and the type of weaponry it can possess.

Madhani reported from Washington.

Trump says that Ukraine didn't target Putin residence in a drone strike as Kremlin claims

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE (AP) — President Donald Trump on Sunday told reporters that U.S. national security officials have de...

 

HOT POINT © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com