Morning Wire - Evening Wire: DOJ Probes Epstein Links & Operation Southern Spear | 11.14.25
Episode Date: November 14, 2025President Trump calls for investigations into Democrats’ ties to Epstein, War Secretary Hegseth announces “Operation Southern Spear,” and yet another illegal sports gambling case drops. Get the ...facts first with Evening Wire. - - - Wake up with new Morning Wire merch: https://bit.ly/4lIubt3 - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy morning wire,morning wire podcast,the morning wire podcast,Georgia Howe,John Bickley,daily wire podcast,podcast,news podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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President Trump calls for investigations into Democrats' ties to Epstein,
War Secretary Hegsetth announces Operation Southern Spear,
and yet another illegal sports gambling case drops.
I'm Georgia Howe with Daily Wire Executive Editor John Bickley.
It's Friday, November 14th, and this is Evening Wire.
President Trump is calling for the DOJ to investigate Jeffrey Epstein's ties
to several high-profile Democrats and major banks.
Daily Wire assistant editor Andy Valdez has
has the latest.
In a series of posts, Trump said Democrats are using what he called the Epstein hoax to distract
from the government shutdown, accusing them of ignoring Epstein's long-standing connections
to figures like Bill Clinton, Larry Summers, and tech billionaire Reid Hoffman.
Meanwhile, Democrats released newly unearthed Epstein emails that referenced Trump, prompting the White
House to accuse them of selectively leaking documents to smear the president.
Here's press secretary Caroline Levitt earlier this week.
These emails prove absolutely nothing other than the fact that President Trump did nothing wrong.
And what President Trump has always said is that he was from Palm Beach and so was Jeffrey Epstein.
Jeffrey Epstein was a member at Maralago until President Trump kicked him out because Jeffrey Epstein was a pedophile and he was a creep.
The fight comes as both parties demand the release of all Epstein files and as the political fallout from the shutdown continues to grow.
The BBC issued an official apology to President Trump.
on Thursday for a grossly misleading edit of his January 6 speech, but it denied his allegation
of defamation. Here's Daily Wire political reporter Cameron Arcand.
The BBC said that it's splicing together portions of Trump's January 6th speech in a way that made
it appear that he was calling for violence was an error. The apology comes after Trump threatened
to file a $1 billion defamation suit against the outlet over its Trump A Second Chance documentary.
In a statement posted on its correction page, the BBC said that the editing,
quote, gave the mistaken impression that President Trump
had made a direct call for violent action.
The BBC would like to apologize to President Trump
for that error of judgment.
In a separate letter to the White House,
BBC chair, Samir Shah, again apologize to Trump,
but stopped shore saying they defamed him,
right in quote,
while the BBC sincerely regrets the manner
in which the video clip was edited,
we strongly disagree there is basis for a defamation claim.
A new prosecutor is taking the lead
on Georgia's high-profile election interference case
against President Trump. Daily Wire reporter Amanda Prestige Giacomo has the details.
After Fulton County District Attorney Fawney Willis was disqualified from the case due to her
romantic relationship with a top prosecutor, the state's prosecuting attorney's counsel was ordered
to find a replacement. After every outside prosecutor declined, Director Peter Scandalakis
appointed himself just hours before the judge's deadline. Scandalacus now has full authority
to push the case forward or even seek dismissal. Trump's attorneys,
the prosecution is politically driven and it should end. The Georgia case, which now is a very uncertain
future, remains the only state-level prosecution in which Trump himself faces charges tied to the so-called
2020 fake electors effort. Secretary of War, Pete Hexeth, is announced Operation Southern Speer,
a mission designed to defend the U.S. against narco-terrorism. Daily Wire reporter Tim Pierce says more.
The announcement comes as tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela mount over the Trump administration's
ongoing operations against drug cartels in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean.
Hegg Seth announced the operation in a statement Thursday, saying,
quote, led by Joint Task Force Southern Spear and U.S. Southern Command,
this mission defends our homeland, removes narco-terrorists from our hemisphere,
and secures our homeland from the drugs that are killing our people.
The Western Hemisphere is America's neighborhood, and we will protect it.
The War Secretary said that the operation was ordered by President Donald Trump.
The Justice Department has officially stepped into California's redistricting fight,
The DOJ is backing a lawsuit that challenges Governor Gavin Newsom's push to redraw the state's congressional map ahead of the 2026 midterms.
Federal civil rights lawyers argue California uses race as a proxy to craft districts favoring Democrats,
including efforts to build a new Latino majority seat to counter GOP gains in Texas.
Meanwhile, AG Pam Bondi told this to Fox.
They're trying to create seats based on race, and they can't do it.
And we're going to hold them accountable, just like in.
other state. I mean, they've very publicly said, Sean, what they're trying to do and it's illegal
gerrymandering. They cannot do it. So yeah, we sued them today. We're going to continue suing California
until they start complying with the laws of our country. A new report reveals that Chinese hackers
unleashed the first autonomous AI cyber attack against dozens of U.S. companies and government
agencies earlier this fall. AI executed some 80 to 90 percent of operations at physical
impossible speeds, the report says. Daily Wire writer Nathan Gay has the details.
According to a detailed report published by the AI company Anthropic, hackers, believed to be
sponsored by the Chinese state, manipulated the company's AI coding tool, Claude, to target roughly
30 entities that included major technology corporations, financial institutions, chemical manufacturing
companies, and U.S. government agencies. The hackers bypassed Claude's safeguards by
claiming to be part of a credible cybersecurity firm conducting defensive testing. The
hackers were able to evade detection by the company for months. It's what Anthropic calls the first
documented case of a large-scale cyber attack executed without substantial human intervention.
Texas A&M is taking action to rein in what critics call ideological overreach.
Regents voted unanimously to restrict courses from promoting race or gender ideology without
explicit approval from campus leadership. Supporters say the reforms will restore accountability
and protect students from taxpayer-funded indoctrination,
citing cases where instructors pushed material far outside of their approved syllabi.
Some faculty pushed back, warning of limits on academic freedom.
But university leaders argue the policy simply ensures courses stick to established curriculum.
California Democrat Congressman Eric Swalwell faces a potential federal investigation
after a housing official referred him to the DOJ over alleged mortgage and tax fraud on Thursday.
I think they were a reporter's actual has a story.
Swalwell is accused of making false statements on loan documents related to a house in D.C.
That's according to a letter sent by the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency to Attorney General Pam Bondi.
The allegations stem from Swalwell's purchase of a $1.2 million home in Washington that he reportedly claimed as his primary residence.
In so doing, Swalwell qualified for millions of dollars worth of loans and refinancing according to the New York Post.
His campaign has also faced scrutiny over payments made to a Haitian-American staffer that totaled over $360,000
and for expenditures on luxury hotels and car services.
Chaos broke out outside an ICE processing center near Chicago as anti-enforcement agitators
clashed with federal agents and Illinois State Police.
On Thursday, demonstrators blocked traffic, ignored dispersal orders, and scuffled with officers
before multiple arrests were made.
The processing center has long been a magnet for activist protests,
but tensions surged as a federal judge ordered the release of 13 detainees,
with hundreds more potentially eligible for home confinement,
undercutting the Trump administration's operation Midway Blitz.
Authorities say they will continue enforcement efforts
despite increasingly confrontational demonstrations.
Oregon Democrats are expressing outrage over reports
that the Trump administration may build a new ICE detention facility near Portland.
After meeting with state officials, Homeland Security Secretary Christy Noam said this week
that she may have to take more drastic steps to make sure federal immigration law is being enforced in Oregon.
Her department, she said, is doubling down and looking to possibly purchase new facilities in the state.
Officials in Newport have since told ABC that they've spoken with state and federal lawmakers
about reported plans to convert a municipal airport in Newport into an ICE facility.
American Energy is poised to see a major boost after the Trump administration,
cleared the way for new oil and gas drilling in Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve.
Interior Secretary Doug Bergam says the move, which reverses a Biden-era restriction in the region,
will create north slope jobs and restore longstanding regulations dating back to the 1970s.
While environmental groups vow legal challenges, Alaska lawmakers are praising the decision as a major
win for U.S. energy dominance. The administration argues it's essential for lowering costs
and strengthening America's position abroad.
At least one Chinese company has found a way to access restricted American semiconductors,
and it seems to be perfectly legal.
Aidly Wire senior editor Joel Needler explains.
A Wall Street Journal investigation traced the path of coveted Blackwell chips from AI powerhouse
Nvidia to a U.S.-based server manufacturer to the workflow of a Chinese company.
In short, an American-based company can buy Blackwell chips,
even if that company is partially owned by a Chinese firm.
The chips can then change hands to a company in Indonesia.
which rents out cloud space using the Blackwell chips to a company in China.
As long as the chips are being used for non-military applications,
this process does not violate export control laws.
Advocates for export controls say the overlap between China's private and military sectors
is caused for concern as civilian technology can readily be recruited for military use.
Blue Origin notched another major milestone in its bid to compete with SpaceX.
The company successfully launched its new Glenn.
orbital rocket and landed the booster for the first time. The towering 321-foot vehicle lifted off
from Cape Canaveral, carrying two NASA satellites bound for Mars to study the planet's atmosphere.
About 10 minutes later, the booster touched down on a barge in the Atlantic, a recovery the company
failed to pull off during January's debut flight. Jeff Bezos, watching for mission control,
celebrated the win as Blue Origin pushes to ramp up launches and reuse hardware.
And in yet another illegal sports gambling case,
14 people have been charged in connection to a nationwide sports betting ring
that involved college athletes and the mafia.
Daily Wire reporter Lyndon Blake reports.
New Jersey authorities announced Thursday that Lukasey crime family member Joseph Little
Joe Perna and his associates were running an illegal network of bookies using offshore websites.
As detailed by ESPN, the network facilitated approximately 2 million in bets
between 2022 and 2024. New Jersey's Attorney General says several college athletes operated sports books
at the direction of Perna's organization. That's according to ESPN. The outlet reported Perna allegedly
acted as the financier while his son Joseph R. Perna conducted the daily operations and facilitated
dozens of subordinate agents. The NCAA is aware of the charges and they're looking into it.
Those are your drive home updates this evening. To learn more about these stories,
to Dailywire.com. And in case you missed it earlier today, we covered some major stories,
including the fight over the fate of Obamacare, Hollywood's monstrous October slump,
and the fraud claims leveled at a federal DEI contracting program. Thanks for tuning in.
We'll be back tomorrow morning with a weekend edition of Morning Wire.
