North Korean leader recalls ‘good memories’ of Trump, urges US to drop denuclearization demands

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By KIM TONG-HYUNG, Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un says he still has good memories of U.S. President Donald Trump and urged Washington to drop its demand the North surrender its nukes as a precondition for resuming long-stalled diplomacy.

Speaking to Pyongyang’s rubber-stamp parliament on Sunday, Kim stressed that he has no intention of ever resuming dialogue with rival South Korea, a key U.S. ally that helped broker Kim’s previous summits with Trump during the American president’s first term, according to a speech published by state media on Monday.

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Kim suspended virtually all cooperation with the South following the collapse of his second summit with Trump in 2019 over disagreements about U.S.-led sanctions against the North. Tensions on the Korean Peninsula have worsened in recent years as Kim has accelerated his weapons buildup and aligned with Russia over the war in Ukraine.

Kim’s comments came as South Korean President Lee Jae Myung departed for New York to attend the U.N. General Assembly, where he is expected to address nuclear tensions on the Korean Peninsula and call on North Korea to return to talks.

Trump is also expected to visit South Korea next month to attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, prompting media speculation that he may try to meet Kim at the inter-Korean border, as they did during their third meeting in 2019, which ultimately failed to salvage their nuclear diplomacy.

During his latest speech at the Supreme People’s Assembly, Kim reiterated that he would never give up his nuclear weapons program, which experts say he sees as his strongest guarantee of survival and the extension of his family’s dynastic rule.

“The world already knows well what the United States does after forcing other countries to give up their nuclear weapons and disarm,” Kim said. “We will never lay down our nuclear weapons … There will be no negotiations, now or ever, about trading anything with hostile countries in exchange for lifting sanctions.”

He said he still holds “good personal memories” of Trump from their first meetings and that there is “no reason not to” resume talks with the United States if Washington “abandons its delusional obsession with denuclearization.”

Kim has stepped up testing activities in recent years, demonstrating weapons of various ranges designed to strike U.S. allies in Asia and the U.S. mainland. Analysts say Kim’s nuclear push is aimed at eventually pressuring Washington to accept the idea of the North as a nuclear power and to negotiate economic and security concessions from a position of strength.

Kim is also trying to bolster his leverage by strengthening cooperation with traditional allies Russia and China, in an emerging partnership aimed at undercutting U.S. influence.

He has sent thousands of troops and huge supplies of military equipment to Russia to help support President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine. He visited Beijing earlier this month, sharing the spotlight with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Putin at a massive military parade. Experts say Kim’s rare foreign trip was likely intended to boost his leverage ahead of a potential resumption of talks with the United States.

There’s growing concern in Seoul that it could lose its voice in future efforts to defuse the nuclear standoff on the peninsula, as the North seeks to negotiate directly with the United States. Such fears were amplified last year when Kim declared that he was abandoning North Korea’s long-standing goal of peaceful unification with South Korea and ordered a rewriting of the North’s constitution to cement the South as a permanent enemy.

Gophers Hockey: Cal Thomas emerges from his shell in captain role

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Presenting a case to the officials, leading the drills in practice and vocally kicking the locker room garbage can to spur on teammates come to mind when you think of a hockey team captain.

For Minnesota Gophers senior defenseman Cal Thomas, none of those images seem to fit. And yet, his unique style of leadership has the Maple Grove product wearing a ‘C’ on his sweater for the second consecutive season. The way he conducts his business is perfect for the Gophers’ needs, per coach Bob Motzko.

“Communication can be talk, but it can also be your energy level and how you get dirty. You jump in the mud and play,” Motzko said. “He jumps in the mud every day and is not afraid to play. That sends a message. So leadership comes in all forms. Sometimes that’s the best way, too.”

Gophers defenseman Cal Thomas celebrates scoring his lone goal of the 2024-25 season at home against Notre Dame on Jan. 17, 2025. (Brad Rempel / Gopher Athletics)

Thomas, 22, heads into his final season of college hockey after what was his most challenging campaign, physically and mentally.

While the Gophers eked out a share of the Big Ten regular season title and advanced to the NCAA playoffs for the fifth consecutive season, Thomas missed 13 games with ankle injuries. Amid the ailments, which included separate injuries to both ankles at different points in the season, he posted a goal and eight assists in 27 games.

“It’s really just hard mentally. You play through injuries, everybody’s playing through injuries. But coming back and then injuring the other ankle right after, that was kind of the hard part for me,” Thomas said. “You learn a lot through those experiences, though, and I think it makes you tougher in the long run.”

Learning from elders

Drafted by the Utah Mammoth in 2021 when they were still known as the Arizona Coyotes, Thomas has attended NHL development camps in Phoenix and Salt Lake City.

His game is one of relentless attention to defensive details. It comes from his work on the ice at Maple Grove High School and with Sioux Falls in the USHL.

But college hockey was an immediate educational experience when he joined a superbly talented U blue line crew as a freshman in 2022 and got to watch and learn from current NHLers like Anaheim’s Jackson Lacombe, Buffalo’s Ryan Johnson and Brock Faber of the Wild. Along with their obvious talent, Thomas learned from watching that trio’s daily routines.

“They were pros while they were here, and you got to see that every day. Be the first one here, and they’re taking care of their body and on the ice after every practice,” Thomas said. “Ryan Johnson ran himself through the same drills, and he was the best skater on the ice before. He did them every single day. And then he was the last one in the showers, and then he goes upstairs and he goes and shoots pucks for an hour. It was unbelievable to watch all those guys and their preparation.”

Now skating with the Wild in training camp, Mike Koster played alongside Thomas on the Gophers’ blue line for three seasons and was a co-captain last season. He said it has been fun to see Thomas emerge from the shadows of older defensive partners and grow into a leadership role.

“He’s one of those guys where, when he does talk, everyone listens,” Koster said. “I know him as more of a talker, because I sat next to him for three years. He’s the best guy ever, and it’s kind of one of those things where when you come in, you get accustomed to the room and stuff and feel welcome. It was kind of nice that I saw him come out of the shell first.”

Last season’s injuries were surely one factor in the ultimate results for a Gophers team that finished 25-11-4 and hung another conference title banner, but won just two of its final six games and went one-and-done in the national tournament.

Well accustomed to the bumps and bruises that come with playing defense at a high level, Thomas can look back with some humor at one of the ankle injuries, which was due to a clumsy play.

“You know your body’s gonna take a beating, and as it was, I fell into the wall on my own. So I can’t really blame anybody else but myself for that one,” he said. “You come back stronger.”

Motzko rarely comments on his team’s schedule, but admits the Gophers face a gauntlet from the opening faceoff on Oct. 3, with series versus Michigan Tech, Boston College, North Dakota and Minnesota Duluth, followed by a Big Ten opener at Wisconsin all before the Halloween decorations come down.

Having a defensive stalwart like Thomas playing at 100% is expected to be key for Minnesota.

“He’s healthy. What he battled with last year, he was hobbling on one leg almost the whole year last year,” Motzko said. “You can see he feels free again. He’s got the handcuffs off.”

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Officials Said They Busted a Tren de Aragua Party. Attendees Beg to Differ.

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On the night of March 31, María, a 40-year-old Venezuelan mother of four who asked that her last name not be published for fear of government retaliation, was home alone in her two-bedroom Austin apartment. Around 9 p.m., her adult son and daughter, along with her teenage son, had left for a birthday party at a six-bedroom Airbnb half an hour down the road. Then, about 4:30 a.m., she got a shocking message from her daughter on WhatsApp: Her kids had been swept up in a multi-agency police raid. For three days, she didn’t hear from them—and the next six months of her life would be turned upside-down.

In the early hours of April 1, law enforcement agents had arrested three of her kids and more than 40 others outside the rented mansion near the well-off Hays County suburb of Dripping Springs. The participating agencies—the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS), and the Hays County Sheriff’s Office—claimed they had busted a suspected gathering of Tren de Aragua, a transnational Venezuelan prison gang that the Trump administration designated a foreign terrorist organization earlier this year. In recent months, Venezuelan immigrants have been accused of gang membership on flimsy or non-existent evidence.

The day after the raid, DPS put out a press release stating that law enforcement agencies at all levels, including San Antonio police, had been investigating “Tren de Aragua (TdA)” for more than a year, and that: “In recent days, the FBI developed intelligence regarding a possible gathering of suspected TdA members or TdA associates in Hays Co.” The agencies’ operation led to both arrests and a drug seizure, DPS said, and prosecutors were evaluating potential charges.

The house to be raided as included in the affidavit for a search warrant (Hays County court records)

Elected leaders chimed in to applaud the operation. “The Venezuela-based prison gang Tren de Aragua (TdA)—among the worst groups that have infiltrated the nation—was operating right in the heart of suburban Austin in Hays County, Texas, where I call home,” said right-wing GOP Congressman Chip Roy. Governor Greg Abbott added on X: “Over 40 TdA vicious criminals are now behind bars and off our streets.”

But authorities never offered any evidence that the party attendees actually were Tren de Aragua members. María told the Observer that none of her kids were involved with the gang; four other party attendees also denied any affiliation. DPS and ICE referred questions to the FBI. The FBI did not answer Observer questions, and the Hays County Sheriff’s Office did not respond.

As a result of the raid, ICE arrested 35 people on federal charges of attempted illegal entry, according to a report obtained from DPS, which was previously reported on by the Texas Tribune. Federal court records suggest that none of these charges were actually prosecuted, and interviews suggest arrestees were simply funneled into civil immigrant detention and in many cases deported. Two additional Venezuelan men were charged with felony-level possession of a controlled substance, resulting from traffic stops near the Airbnb earlier in the evening; police say both had left the party location, though one denied this to the Observer. ICE has said nine minors were taken into custody—one of whom was María’s youngest son, who was transferred into the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) shelter system. In the Airbnb, police found two pink pills, 10 bags of pink powder, and a small bag of a leafy substance all believed to be drugs, according to a search warrant inventory, but authorities did not charge anyone with crimes in relation to the substances, according to two prosecutors at the Hays County DA’s office.

Party attendees told the Observer that some friends had rented the Airbnb for three days to celebrate a pair of birthdays. There were beers, arepas, and a birthday cake. They were planning to blow out candles and sing the following day.

Xavier Peña, who briefly deejayed at the party before the beginning of the raid, recalled hearing a voice outside on a loudspeaker around 4 a.m. “Come outside with your hands up,” a voice boomed through a megaphone, he recalled. “It’s the state police.” 

María’s 23-year-old son, Eliangel—who has since been deported back to Venezuela and whose last name is being withheld to protect his mother’s identity because they share the same last name—told the Observer by phone that he was asleep that morning when flashbangs woke him up. In a WhatsApp call, he described seeing camouflaged officers outside pointing guns with infrared lasers inside the house. 

In ICE detention, “I cried everyday,” he said, knowing how his mother would struggle to make rent without his and his adult sister’s help. He also has a two-year-old daughter, he said, who remains in the United States.

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The SWAT-style nature of the April operation has alarmed advocates. “It’s just deeply disturbing, that level of militarization for a raid,” said Karen Muñoz, a Hays County-based attorney for LatinoJustice, a national advocacy law firm focused on civil rights. 

Among Muñoz’s concerns is the entanglement of state police with ICE agents—and the use of a drug investigation as a pretense for immigration enforcement. When state police obtained a search warrant at 2:39 a.m. in neighboring Comal County, the probable cause affidavit cited the narcotics obtained during the two traffic stops near the Airbnb in addition to information from an unnamed “cooperating individual” who told police there would be a party at the address.

Antonio Vizcaino González was a passenger in a car stopped for ignoring a stop sign at 8:35 p.m at a 7/11 gas station about two miles from the Airbnb. A DPS officer wrote that Vizcaino González had “Tattoos common with Tren De Aragua membership.” ICE deportation officers arrived, per the DPS report, conducted a pat-down, and found narcotics in his inner waistband (he was later charged with ketamine possession), according to police and court records. He was booked into Hays County Jail at 12:50 a.m. on charges of possession of a controlled substance, soon bonded out into ICE custody, and was deported to Spain (where he was born, though he grew up in Venezuela). Vizcaino González declined an interview request but said in a Facebook message: “All I can tell you is that at that party, no one belonged to a criminal gang. … It was a friend’s birthday party.”

Jeankey Jhonayker Castro Bravo was stopped by DPS at 10:56 p.m. for traffic violations, and a trooper called in ICE after Castro Bravo showed a Venezuelan passport. Castro Bravo, whom DPS also accused in an arrest report of Tren de Aragua affiliation because of tattoos, was then arrested for drug possession. He was booked at 2 a.m. and has been locked up ever since—facing felony ketamine possession—mostly at the Haskell County jail, a West Texas facility that contracts with Hays. At the Haskell jail, Castro Bravo denied Tren de Aragua affiliation and police claims that he had left the Airbnb, saying he was simply driving for DoorDash in the area: “I never arrived at any party,” he said. “I didn’t even know there was a party.” (Two attendees told the Observer they didn’t recognize him from his booking photo.) Marc Ranc, the Hays County prosecutor tasked with the case, told the Observer in mid-September that he was considering dropping the charge because he was still awaiting evidence from federal agents.

DPS has no formal agreement with ICE allowing it to enforce immigration law. When DPS officers executed their search warrant, they asked people to exit the house, funnelling them to immigration agents, who could then question them about their status and detain them, party attendees recounted. Task forces involving federal, state, and local police have long existed, but advocates believe this may cross a line.

On April 1, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement joined federal, state, and local law enforcement partners in an operation in Hays County, Texas, resulting in the apprehension of 47 illegal aliens. They are currently in ICE custody pending immigration proceedings. pic.twitter.com/scz4M9hEUF

— ICE San Antonio (@EROSanAntonio) April 3, 2025

“This level of collaboration, I think, makes the line between federal immigration and state criminal enforcement really, really unclear and murky,” Muñoz said. 

Meanwhile, María has been left with a broken life. Eliangel and her 22-year-old daughter were both deported to Venezuela. Meanwhile, her 16-year-old son is still in ORR custody. He hasn’t been released to his mother, she said, because of delays at the Venezuelan consulate in providing a verified birth certificate. She’s struggling to pay her bills without help from her adult kids. For much of the summer, she told the Observer, she was working as a delivery driver in a car without functional air conditioning.

The great irony, she said, is that accusations about Tren de Aragua membership have broken up her family—even though they were victimized by the gang themselves. Nearly a decade ago, outside a baby shower in Maracay, she said gang members pulled up on motorcycles and sprayed bullets, killing one person and wounding another. After that, María and her kids left for Chile, but Tren de Aragua has become active there as well, and in 2022 she came to the States partly to avoid the gang.

“We are scared of them,” María said. “We left our country because of that.”

The post Officials Said They Busted a Tren de Aragua Party. Attendees Beg to Differ. appeared first on The Texas Observer.

Dominican Republic says it seized cocaine that was on speedboat destroyed by US Navy

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By MANUEL RUEDA, Associated Press

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Authorities in the Dominican Republic said Sunday they have confiscated some of the cocaine transported by a speedboat that was destroyed recently by the U.S. Navy, as the Trump administration carries out a controversial anti-narcotics mission in the southern Caribbean.

In a press conference, the Dominican Republic’s National Directorate for Drug Control said it recovered 377 packages of cocaine from the boat which was allegedly carrying 1,000 kilograms of the drug.

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Officials said the boat was destroyed about 80 nautical miles south of Isla Beata, a small island that belongs to the Dominican Republic. They said the Dominican’s Republic Navy worked in conjunction with U.S. authorities to locate the speedboat which was allegedly trying to dock in the Dominican Republic and use the nation as a “bridge” to transport cocaine to the United States.

“This is the first time in history that the United States and the Dominican Republic carry out a joint operation against narco terrorism in the Caribbean,” the directorate said in a statement.

In August, the U.S. sent eight warships and a submarine to the southern Caribbean, in what the Trump administration has said was a mission to fight drug trafficking.

The White House says the flotilla has destroyed three speedboats carrying drugs so far in separate strikes that have killed more than a dozen people aboard the vessels.

Human rights groups have said the strikes on the boats amount to extra judicial killings, and on Friday two Democratic senators introduced a resolution in Congress that seeks to block the administration from carrying out further strikes.

The Trump administration says at least two of the boats that have been sunk left from Venezuela, whose president is often described by White House officials as a drug trafficker and leader of a gang known as the Cartel of the Suns.

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro denies the charges and has described the U.S naval build up in the Caribbean as an attack on his country.