Morning Wire - Boasberg Threatens Contempt & Letitia James Investigated | Afternoon Update | 4.16.25
Episode Date: April 16, 2025An Obama-appointed judge moves to hold Trump in contempt, The administration sues Maine over Title IX, and New York AG Letitia James stands accused of a federal crime. Developing stories you need to k...now just in time for your drive home. Get the facts first on Morning Wire. Beam: Head to https://shopbeam.com/WIRE and use code WIRE at checkout for up to 40% off. Fast Growing Trees: Get 15% off your first purchase when using the code WIRE at checkout or by visiting https://fastgrowingtrees.com/wire Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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percent off. An Obama appointed judge moves to hold Trump in contempt. The administration sues
Maine over Title IX and New York AG Letitia James stands accused of a federal crime. I'm Georgia
Howe with Daily Wire editor-in-chief John Bickley. It's Wednesday, April 16th, and this is your
Morning Wire afternoon update. A federal judge claims he has probable cause to hold the Trump
administration in contempt for defying a court order. Obama appointed judge James Bowsberg
ruled today that the administration showed willful disregard by failing to return two planes of migrants
to the U.S. after his March 15th order. He's demanding answers by April 23rd, or he'll
refer the case for prosecution. Boesberg calls the government's response unsatisfactory and warns
those responsible could face legal consequences. The U.S. is kicking off trade talks with Japan
today, making them the first country to test Trump's 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs. President
and Trump alongside Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will meet with Japan's economic revitalization
minister. They're planning to discuss a wide range of things from tariffs and military support all the way
to energy and currency issues.
Ahead of the meeting, Japan's prime minister signaled Japan won't rush into a deal or other major
concessions, but ruled out retaliation for now. Japan was recently hit with 24% levies and still
faces a 25% duty on auto exports.
And as more and more countries begin trade negotiations with Trump, California became the first state to announce legal action in response.
Governor Gavin Newsom announced he's suing the president, claiming that his sweeping tariffs are unlawful and harmful to the golden state's economy.
Here's Newsom.
No state will be impacted more than the state of California as it relates to the unilateral authority that's being asserted by the Trump administration to impose the largest tax increase in modern American history.
The suit challenges Trump's use of emergency powers to impose a 10% tariff on all imports and higher rates on Mexico, Canada, and China.
Newsom claims the levies are wreaking chaos on families and businesses, driving up prices and threatening jobs.
Trump says his tariffs are justified under the International Economic Emergency Powers Act.
The law allows the president to employ certain economic policies in the event of an emergency.
The Trump administration is filing suit against the state of Maine for refusing to comply with
Title IX. Daily Wired reporter Amanda Presta Jacamo has the latest. Attorney General Pam Bondi says
the administration has given the state plenty of warning to align itself with Title IX. We have
exhausted every other remedy. We tried to get Maine to comply. We don't like standing up here and
filing lawsuits. We want to get states to comply with us. That's what this is about. She cited
specific incidents, including a male athlete winning a girl's pole vaulting state.
final and another dominating a women's 5K ski race. The lawsuit demands that Maine halt its current
policies on transgender sports, and it also seeks to retroactively revoke federal funding tied to past
noncompliance. Bondi was joined on stage by Maine State Representative Laurel Libby, Advocate
Riley Gaines, and several other female athletes. All of them praise President Trump for bringing
accountability back to the White House. The lawsuit follows Governor Janet Mills defying a federal
order banning males from girl sports, citing state law.
The noncompliance sparked widespread investigations into her state.
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New York Attorney General Letitia James is facing a federal criminal referral over
suspected mortgage fraud. Daily Wire Deputy Managing editor Tim Rice has more.
The referrals sent by Federal Housing Finance Agency Director William Pulte accuses James
of falsifying loan records to secure favorable terms on a Virginia property she claimed was her
primary residence while still serving in New York. Additional allegations involve a Brooklyn
property misrepresented to lenders. Pulte says James's actions could also constitute wire and
bank fraud among other federal charges. James's office denies wrongdoing,
calling the referral a political attack by the Trump administration.
Legal experts and others have been quick to point out the irony,
with James once saying,
no one is above the law while prosecuting President Trump.
A Texas teen charged with murder has come under new scrutiny.
17-year-old Carmelo Anthony is accused of fatally stabbing Austin Metcalf
at a track meet earlier this month.
He was released Monday on $250,000 bond and is now under house arrest.
Anthony has reportedly moved into a 900,000,
thousand-dollar gated community home that's despite claiming financial hardship to reduce his $1 million
bond. Neighbors in the upscale Frisco neighborhood say they're shocked and concerned about his presence.
Meanwhile, a fundraiser for Anthony's legal defense is approaching half a million dollars.
And the UK's Supreme Court appears to have answered Matt Walsh's infamous question,
What is a woman?
The unanimous decision of this court is that the terms woman and sex in the Equality Act,
2010 refer to a biological woman and biological sex.
The landmark decision arose from a Scottish gender equality quota law.
It clarifies that transgender women, even with legal gender recognition, do not qualify as women for public board representation.
The justice is emphasized that trans individuals remain protected from discrimination, but that biological sex is central to sex-based rights.
All right, there's your drive home updates this afternoon.
To learn more about these stories, go to Dailywire.com.
and in case you missed it this morning, we covered several key stories, including another
immigration legal battle brewing, Trump seeking to defund NPR PBS and Harvard, and Mark Zuckerberg
taking the stand in META's antitrust trial. Thanks for tuning in. We'll be back tomorrow morning
with another full edition of Morning Wire.
