The Iranians arrested over the weekend in the UK were planning on carrying out a large terror attack at the Israeli embassy in London, The Times reported on Wednesday. The police have refused to comment on the details of the case, but according to the report, “it is understood the embassy was the main target.” “Dan Jarvis, the security minister, refused to give details of the immigration status of the suspects citing the continuing police inquiry,” the report added. The suspects were reportedly “hours away” from carrying out the attack before being arrested. Authorities said that the suspects’ plots were “some of the biggest counter-state threats” the UK has seen in recent years.

Israeli security forces overnight Wednesday arrested the terrorist who carried out the shooting attack on Wednesday evening at a checkpoint near Jenin, in the Shomron. Following the attack, the terrorist fled the scene, and IDF and police forces launched a manhunt. Eventually, with the aid of precise Shin Bet intelligence, the forces located the terrorist hiding in his home in the Arab village of Barta’a. They surrounded his home, and he eventually surrendered to the forces. The condition of the two IDF reservists injured in the attack, who were initially listed as being in moderate condition, later deteriorated and they are both now in serious condition. They were evacuated by helicopter from the scene of the attack to the hospital.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. once urged the Obama administration to scrutinize an audio recording believed to contain the sound of his father’s 1968 assassination, suggesting it captured more shots than the firearm used by the convicted shooter was capable of firing.
The appeal was made in a letter Kennedy Jr. sent in September 2012 to then-Attorney General Eric Holder. That correspondence was among a large batch of documents released Wednesday by the National Archives, which pertain to the government’s investigation into the assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.

President Donald Trump has issued a proclamation designating Thursday as a day for the United States to celebrate victory in World War II as countries in Europe already do. Cities from London to Moscow are holding parades, flyovers and memorials this week as the world observes Thursday’s 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day, when Nazi Germany surrendered to Allied forces, including the U.S. Here’s what to know about Trump’s plans: What is Trump doing and why? The Republican president is designating specific days for the U.S. to celebrate being on the winning side in World War I and World War II. He complained in recent social media posts that Americans don’t spend enough time celebrating those achievements, which he said wouldn’t have been possible without the U.S.

Today, the Orthodox Union Advocacy Center (OUA) met with senior leaders of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) to discuss ongoing efforts to combat antisemitism and protect Jewish communities across the United States as part of its two-day Mission to Washington. The meeting included Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Harmeet Dhillon, Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Policy Aaron Reitz, and Senior Counsel to the Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Leo Terrell.

U.S. intelligence agencies are reportedly stepping up intel-gathering efforts in Greenland to advance President Donald Trump’s ambition to take over the territory. Several officials under Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard sent a message to intelligence-agency heads last week ordering them to learn more about Greenland’s independence movement, two sources familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal. They also directed agencies to learn more about national attitudes toward American resource extraction on the island and identify residents in both Greenland and Denmark who support Trump’s ambitions for the autonomous territory.

Am I allowed to make egg and onion on Shabbos? How to choose a shirt from a pile of clothing and not transgress borer on Shabbos? Can you put food in the oven on Shabbos? Numerous Shabbos questions are impossible to answer without thorough knowledge of its laws. Shabbos comes once a week, so if a person is not well-versed in its intricacies, then it is inevitable that transgressions will take place. The many books of basic laws are wonderful, but to really understand the halachos and to apply them, it is essential to learn and remember hilchos Shabbos with the background discussion.  What is the challenge we face? It takes several years for a full-time advanced Torah learner to cover the laws of Shabbos in depth.  Kinyan Hilchos Shabbos for men offered a solution.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced a plan Wednesday to use medical data and records from people on Medicaid and Medicare to help study autism although experts say it’s unlikely to help reveal the condition’s root causes. The program will involve a data sharing agreement between the National Institutes of Health, the government’s health research arm, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which has access to claims data from nearly 150 million Americans across the country. “We’re using this partnership to uncover the root causes of autism and other chronic diseases,” Kennedy said in a statement. The agreement will be “consistent with applicable privacy laws to protect Americans’ sensitive health information,” the HHS statement said.

Despite recently undergoing a medical procedure, Rav Yitzchok Ezrachi, rosh yeshiva at Yeshivas Mir in Yerushalayim, displayed remarkable mesirus nefesh by delivering his weekly shmuess to talmidim via a live Zoom broadcast from his hospital room.

Rep. Elise Stefanik gained fame in December 2023 for her grilling of the presidents of Ivy League universities in congressional hearings on the vicious antisemitism that broke out on university campuses following the October 7 massacre. The presidents’ outrageous responses, including refusing to unequivocally say that calling for the genocide of the Jewish people violates their institutions’ code of conduct, led to the resignation of Harvard President Claudine Gay and University of Pennsylvania President Liz Magill. On Wednesday, Stefanik questioned several university presidents, including Haverford College President Wendy Raymond, whose responses seemed scripted.

A new Pentagon oversight report has sharply criticized the Biden administration’s failed Gaza pier initiative, revealing that the project resulted in one death, 62 injuries, and at least $31 million in equipment losses. According to the findings, both the Army and Navy launched the effort without sufficient planning, training, or inter-service coordination.
The temporary floating pier, which President Joe Biden introduced during his 2024 State of the Union address as a response to left-wing outrage over Israel’s conflict with Hamas, was supposed to be a lifeline for humanitarian aid into Gaza. But the structure was operational for only 20 days before being scrapped entirely.

Three former Memphis officers were acquitted Wednesday of all state charges, including second-degree murder, in the fatal beating of Tyre Nichols after he ran away from a traffic stop, a death that sparked nationwide protests and prompted renewed calls for police reforms in the U.S. An out-of-town jury from a majority-white county took about 8 1/2 hours over two days to find Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley and Justin Smith not guilty on all charges after a nine-day trial in state court in Memphis, which is majority-Black. After the jury’s verdict was read, the defendants hugged their lawyers as relatives of the former officers cried. One relative yelled, “Thank you, Jesus!” Martin Zummach, Smith’s attorney, told The Associated Press by text: “It’s easy to defend a good person.

WATCH: CCTV cameras capture a drone crashing into a field in Gujranwala, Pakistan. No injuries were reported.

President Trump announces a big news conference tomorrow morning regarding a “MAJOR TRADE DEAL.”

UPDATE: An NYPD bus transporting arrested pro-Palestinian protesters has departed Columbia University. Additional arrests were made inside Butler Library, bringing the total number taken into custody to approximately 75.

WILLIAMSBURG: An NYPD cruiser was involved in an accident at Willoughby Avenue and Walworth Street after a passenger in the other vehicle reportedly suffered a medical episode, which may have distracted the driver. Williamsburg Hatzalah treated the officer at the scene and transported him to Kings County Hospital in serious condition. FDNY and EMS also responded, and the area remains closed as the NYPD investigates. (Via WMSBG News)

Air traffic controllers are grappling with nearly 1,000 technical malfunctions each week — a crisis expected to worsen unless the federal government invests in a complete overhaul of the outdated systems in place, according to a former FAA executive and multiple airline industry sources who spoke to The NY Post.
This alarming revelation follows a communications and radar failure that lasted for 90 seconds at Newark Liberty International Airport, leading to widespread flight delays and cancellations that extended well beyond the initial incident.
The April 28 disruption was traced back to a burnt copper wire. In the aftermath, five employees from the FAA’s control center in Philadelphia reportedly took up to 45 days of “trauma leave,” as reported by CNN.

TERRIFYING FOOTAGE: A driver in Lakewood nearly struck TWO children in a local development this afternoon after they ran and scootered into the street. Parents: be better than this!

Pages