Wacko NYC subway slasher was set to be held on bail — until he talked the judge out of it: records

A deranged vagrant charged in a random Manhattan slashing this week was set to be locked up on bail after a hauntingly similar attack last month — until he talked the judge out of it, court records show.
Demitri Marshall, 32, who was busted Monday for allegedly slashing a 27-year-old straphanger outside a Lower East Side subway station, went before Bronx Criminal Court Judge Ralph Wolf on Sept. 15 on charges that he attacked another passenger in the Bronx in August.
Bronx prosecutors asked the judge that Marshall, a repeat offender with a stint in state prison under his belt, be held on $50,000 cash bail or a $150,000 bond in the Aug. 28 Bronx attack.
“Well, certainly I have information before me that I would be perfectly — it would be perfectly reasonable for me to set bail here,” Wolf said during the proceedings.
“I don’t have no bail on me,” Marshall shouted, according to a transcript of the arraignment.
“I know,” the judge responded. “Based on the allegations and the record and what I’m supposed to consider, so I think you understand….”
“As long as I stay out of trouble,” Marshal said.
Wolf then warned him to check in regularly for supervised release and cut him loose without bail.
Marshall was still free on Monday when police said he snuck up behind his latest victim and slashed his face outside Manhattan‘s East Broadway station.
He ran off but cops nabbed him hours later and charged him with felony assault — enough to finally get him jailed.
The victim, who identified himself only as Fernando, told The Post he needed seven stitches to close the gash on his face — and wondered how the brute was free to attack him.
“He’s a criminal who got released by a judge and he could’ve killed me,” he said. “I don’t know why the justice system lets him go free.”…
Russia hands over JFK assassination files to GOP Rep. Anna Paulina Luna in Washington

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., on Tuesday said she received Russia’s report related to the assassination of former President John F. Kennedy.
Luna said she received the 350-page document from Russia’s ambassador to the United States.
“A team of experts is en route to my office in the morning to begin translation and a full review of the documents,” she wrote on X. “We will be uploading as soon as we can.”
“I am uploading the files as they were given to me,” she said in another post. “There are no redactions from what I can see.”
Russia’s embassy in Washington confirmed the handover, saying it provided Luna with the archives and that the documents would be published in Russia in November.
In May, Luna, the chairwoman of the Task Force on the Declassification of Federal Secrets, called the death of JFK a “momentous and tragic day for the Kennedy family, this country, and the world.”
Kennedy was shot and killed on Nov. 22, 1963, while traveling in an open-top motorcade in Dallas.
Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested for the killing but was fatally shot days later by Jack Ruby, a Dallas nightclub operator…
Push to use taxpayer dollars on illegal migrants sparks MAJOR controversy
Fox News correspondent Bill Melugin reports on efforts by Los Angeles County leaders to direct taxpayer money toward illegal migrants and their families; Assistant DHS Secretary Tricia McLaughlin offers analysis on ‘America’s Newsroom.’
Jonathan Conricus on Hamas ‘settling scores’ with crackdown in Gaza — Fox News
Jonathan joins Fox & Friends First to discuss the latest on the Israel-Hamas peace agreement, Hamas’ refusal to return the remaining bodies of deceased hostages, Hamas’ crackdown in Gaza, and more.
FLASHBACK: Judicial Watch EXPOSES CIA at Capitol on January 6!
Judicial Watch received 88 pages of Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) records from the Department of Justice in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit that show the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) deployed personnel to Washington, DC, on January 6, 2021.
Congress collected 30 million lines of phone data in Trump J6 probe, raising civil liberty concerns

Congressional investigators collected a stunning 30 million lines of phone data mapping contacts between conservatives and the Trump White House in the name of investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol breach, a massive dragnet that raises civil liberty concerns about the lack of limits on the ability of lawmakers to snoop on Americans’ private phone calls.
The mountainous collection of phone records were revealed to the FBI led by Chris Wray in late 2023 by former Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a GOP member on the Democrat-run House Jan. 6 select committee. The cache was offered to the bureau on the eve of the 2024 presidential election as evidence without requiring a warrant, according to an FBI document memorializing the offer that was reviewed by Just the News.
The memo says Kinzinger told the FBI that the phone data had been collected by then-former Rep. Denver Riggleman, an ex-Republican who was a staffer on the Capitol riot committee and who later helped Hunter Biden’s legal team in its efforts to cast doubt on the laptop belonging to Joe Biden’s son….
Mike Davis, a former top lawyer for the Senate Judiciary Committee and the founder of the Article 3 Project, told Just The News that the revelations in the FBI memo could prompt legal challenges that may rein in congressional oversight powers.
“This episode will test the limits of the congressional immunity afforded by the Constitution’s Speech and Debate Clause and whether that affords protection to activity that constitutes a criminal conspiracy to violate Americans’ civil rights,” he said.
Mike Howell, the president of the conservative Oversight Project, told Just the News that “the January 6th Committee was an absolute violation of civil rights that far exceeded anything it ever purported to be investigating” and that “they abused their authority to engage in a political mapping exercise to surveil their political opponents.”
He added that “whoever turned this information over to the Committee is exposed here, and we will be exploring ways to hold them accountable.”
Grassley’s office said Tuesday that he had sent letters to four telecom companies: Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile, and Lumen “requesting they provide to Congress all records that were handed over to former Special Counsel Jack Smith as part of his elector case against President Trump.”….
Israel demands return of all hostages as Hamas violates deal; Turkey warns Israel TV7 Israel 15 Oct.
1) Hamas fails to return all of the deceased hostages within the timeframe of Trump’s 21-point plan.
2) Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warns Israel not to breach the cessation of hostilities.
3) A UN Commissioned Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment indicates that reconstruction of the Gaza Strip will cost 70 billion U.S. Dollars.
Holocaust Tattoos And Digital IDs: From Forced To Willing Submission

In 1941, Auschwitz, the largest Nazi concentration camp in Europe, became a place of unspeakable evil. It was there that Holocaust victims were tattooed with identification numbers—initially on the chest, later on the inner forearm. Upon arrival, prisoners faced a gruesome selektion process: those sent to the right went immediately to the gas chambers, while those to the left were stripped, shaved, and sent into forced labor. Their dignity, identity, and freedom were stolen—reduced to a number burned into their flesh.
Decades later, some descendants of those survivors have chosen to replicate those tattoos on their own arms, as a solemn memorial to their family’s suffering and survival. For them, it’s an act of remembrance. Yet for those who discern spiritual patterns in history, the parallel is chilling. What was once forced upon humanity under tyranny may soon be welcomed under convenience.
We are witnessing a technological progression that mirrors an ancient spiritual deception, a deception that began in the Garden of Eden.
From the Garden to the Gadgets: satan’s Old Tricks in a New Form
In Genesis 3, the serpent tempts Eve. In Matthew 4, satan tempts Jesus. Both were approached by the same enemy, but their responses were worlds apart. Eve yielded; Jesus resisted by quoting the Word of God.
The Apostle John identifies satan’s strategy in 1 John 2:16 as “the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life.” These remain his tools today but now they are packaged in sleek, modern forms: devices, digital trends, and so-called “smart” innovations that appeal to the same old human weaknesses.
What began as spiritual temptation has evolved into technological seduction.
The Days of Noah—and the Tower of Babel Rebuilt
Jesus warned that the end times would resemble the days of Noah (Matthew 24:37). In Genesis 6, people were consumed with violence, corruption, and self-centered living—ignoring God’s commands. But after the Flood, humanity again rebelled at the Tower of Babel. They built a monument of defiance, waterproofed it with bitumen (tar), the same material Noah used to seal the ark (Genesis 6:14). In essence, they were saying: “God will never judge us again; we can outsmart Him.”
God responded by confusing their languages, scattering humanity, and halting the rebellion. That confusion became a divine safeguard, a barrier to unified global rebellion.
But technology has now torn that barrier down.
Technology Restores What God Divided
With new breakthroughs like Apple’s AirPods Pro 3, real-time Live Translation allows users to communicate across languages instantly. Other companies, like Timekettle, offer earbuds that translate 40 languages—including Hebrew. Languages once divided by God at Babel are now being reunited by man through digital innovation.
It seems brilliant. It seems helpful. But spiritually, it resurrects the same human arrogance that declared, “We will be like God.” And again, temptation leads to rebellion.
From Innovation to Identification
This fusion of technology and identity is moving from the fascinating to the frightening. On September 25, 2025, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced plans for a new “Britcard”—a digital identity system for all adult residents of the United Kingdom. According to the official UK government website, this digital ID will be stored on mobile devices and required for access to government services, employment verification, and proof of residency.
The rollout is expected to be complete by the end of the current Parliament. Citizens will no longer merely show paper documents—they’ll need their digital identity to work, live, or access public systems.
Eighty years ago, identification numbers were forced upon innocent people. Today, identification systems are welcomed as progress. The world is being conditioned to accept digital control as convenience—just as it was once deceived into believing rebellion was freedom.
History Repeats: From Numbers to the Mark
What was once inked on flesh is now encoded in chips, apps, and QR codes. What was once enforced by tyranny is now embraced by temptation. The Holocaust tattoos were forced upon people; the mark of the beast (Revelation 13:16–17) will be accepted willingly.
Both lead to bondage. Both end in tragedy. Humanity’s greatest danger is not that evil will appear as evil—but that it will appear as helpful, efficient, and “for your safety.”
A Final Warning
As technology advances and global systems merge, the spirit of Babel rises again—uniting humanity not under God, but under control. What began in rebellion will end in judgment. The question for today’s believer is simple yet sobering: are we discerning the difference between convenience and control? Between innovation and iniquity?
Because once again, the world is lining up—some to the right, some to the left.
And just like in Auschwitz, one path leads to survival, and the other to destruction.
“Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away first…” — 2 Thessalonians 2:3
Report: Turkey Deported 350 Christians As ‘National Security Threats’ Since 2020

Turkey has deported hundreds of Christians and barred them from reentering the country, according to a new report. Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) International legal officer Lidia Rieder told the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) on Monday that Turkey’s government is labeling Christian foreigners “national security threats” in order to deport them and block them from returning to the country.
Turkey’s “labeling of peaceful Christian residents as ‘security threats’ is a clear misuse of law and an attack on freedom of religion or belief,” Rieder asserted at the OSCE conference. “When governments manipulate administrative or immigration systems to exclude people based solely on their faith, it undermines both the rule of law and the very principles of tolerance and peaceful coexistence that the OSCE was founded to protect.”
According to ADF International, approximately 350 Christians have been deported from Turkey since 2020. Despite a constitutional protection for religious liberty, the Turkish government has used “security codes” to designate deported Christian foreigners as “national security threats.” ADF International, which is representing deported Christians in over 30 cases before the European Court of Human Rights, noted, “These actions have deprived many Protestant congregations of pastoral leadership and disrupted religious life across the country.”
“Entry bans and deportations have increasingly been used as tools to silence foreign Christian workers, while theological training remains heavily restricted — the historic Halki Seminary remains closed, and Protestant seminaries continue to be denied legal status,” ADF International observed in its report. “At the same time, Bible education is prohibited even as Islamic theological courses are freely permitted under state oversight.” Additionally, Christians have even been forced out of their places of worship in some cases. “Taken together, these practices reveal a pattern of systemic discrimination against Christians in clear violation of Articles 9 and 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights and [Turkey’s] own constitutional guarantees.”
Teens guilty of DOGE employee assault that sparked DC federal surge given probation

Two teenagers at the center of the assault which triggered President Donald Trump’s federalization of the Metropolitan Police Department and the deployment of National Guard troops in D.C. were in back in court Tuesday.
A 15 year-old-boy and a 15-year-old girl, whom WUSA9 has agreed not to name, were accused of assaulting a Department of Government Efficiency staffer on Aug. 3.
On Tuesday, the 15-year-old boy was sentenced to 12 months probation. The girl pleaded guilty to simple assault and will serve nine months probation, according to a judge.; her lawyer had asked for four-and-a-half months.
Both of the teens have been ordered to not contact each other or spend any time in the District outside of school, job or family obligations.
The judge emphasized that the purpose of juvenile court is to rehabilitate, not to punish. She said she hopes the teenagers learn from their probationary period.
Trump has long suggested crime and violence are on the rise in Washington, and has criticized things like litter and graffiti. But the catalyst for the order to increase police presence was the August assault on the DOGE employee. The victim, Edward Coristine, was among the most visible figures of DOGE, which was tasked with cutting jobs and slashing the federal bureaucracy….
Rumble is Restored in France After Court Rejects Government’s Censorship Demand

Rumble, the video-sharing and cloud services platform, has reopened access to its site for users in France following a decisive legal development.
A court ruled that a French official’s demand for content removal, delivered via email, held no legal authority.
In response, Rumble has restored full access to its platform across the country.
The dispute dates back to 2022, when a French government representative attempted to pressure the platform into censoring certain videos.
Rather than complying with the demand to erase content under threat of legal consequences, Rumble took the bold step of withdrawing service from France entirely.
That stand against political interference has now been vindicated by the court’s finding that the email in question could not be treated as an enforceable action.
Chris Pavlovski, founder and CEO of Rumble, responded to the ruling with optimism and a clear message about the platform’s values:
“Freedom wins out again, and we are thrilled that the French people will once again have access to the Rumble public square, where the free exchange of ideas happens around the clock. France has a rich history of fighting for individual freedoms, which aligns seamlessly with Rumble, as we are a freedom-first platform in everything we do. We look forward to turning the page in France and beginning a new chapter.”
Rumble has long positioned itself as a defender of free expression in the face of growing state-led pressure to control online narratives…..