Today in History: January 20, FBI orchestrates massive Mafia takedown

posted in: All news | 0

Today is Tuesday, Jan. 20, the 20th day of 2026. There are 345 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Jan. 20, 2011, authorities orchestrated one of the biggest Mafia takedowns in FBI history, charging 127 suspected mobsters and associates in the Northeast with murders, extortion and other crimes spanning decades.

Also on this date:

In 1841, the island of Hong Kong was ceded by China to Great Britain. It returned to Chinese control in July 1997.

Related Articles


Parts of the U.S. could see northern lights Monday


NYSE working on a new platform for trading digital tokens around the clock


100 vehicles pile up in Michigan crash as snowstorm moves across the country


Another immigrant died in a sprawling Texas detention facility. ICE says Minnesotan died by suicide


What’s open and closed on Martin Luther King Jr. Day

In 1936, Britain’s King George V died after his physician injected the mortally ill monarch with morphine and cocaine to hasten his death. The king was succeeded by his eldest son, Edward VIII, who abdicated the throne 11 months later to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson.

In 1937, President Franklin D. Roosevelt was sworn in for his second of four terms as president, becoming the first chief executive to be inaugurated on Jan. 20; prior to the adoption of the 20th Amendment in 1933, presidential terms began on March 4.

In 1961, in his inaugural address, President John F. Kennedy urged Americans, “ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.”

In 1986, the United States observed the first federal holiday in honor of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

In 1981, Iran released 52 Americans it had held hostage for 444 days, minutes after Ronald Reagan was sworn in as president of the United States, succeeding Jimmy Carter.

In 2009, Democrat Barack Obama was sworn in as the first Black president of the United States.

In 2017, Republican Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th president of the United States as protesters clashed with police blocks from the inaugural parade.

Today’s birthdays:

Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin is 96.
Olympic figure skating gold medalist Carol Heiss Jenkins is 86.
Rock musician Paul Stanley (KISS) is 74.
Comedian Bill Maher is 70.
Olympic swimming gold medalist John Naber is 70.
Country singer John Michael Montgomery is 61.
Actor Rainn Wilson is 60. Actor Skeet Ulrich is 56.
Musician Questlove (The Roots) is 55.
Nikki Haley, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and ex-governor of South Carolina, is 54.
Country singer Brantley Gilbert is 41.
Actor and singer Joshua Colley is 24.
Singer-songwriter Glaive is 21.

2026 Pioneer Press Treasure Hunt Clue 3

posted in: All news | 0

Sitting with pen musing all in ken

Twigs and dolls filled the pages

A flashing demonic offered tonic,

The rhythm of the sages

Hunt clues will be released at about midnight at TwinCities.com/treasurehunt each day of the hunt.

See the Treasure Hunt rules.

Where has the medallion been discovered in past years?

Related Articles


2026 Pioneer Press Treasure Hunt Clue 2


2026 Pioneer Press Treasure Hunt Clue 1

Indiana holds off Miami to win college football national title

posted in: All news | 0

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Fernando Mendoza bulldozed his way into the end zone and Indiana bullied its way into the history books Monday night, toppling Miami 27-21 to put the finishing touch on a rags-to-riches story, an undefeated season and the national title.

The Heisman Trophy winner finished with 186 yards passing, but it was his tackle-breaking, sprawled-out 12-yard touchdown run on fourth-and-4 with 9:18 left that defined this game — and the Hoosiers’ season.

Indiana would not be denied.

Mendoza’s TD gave turnaround artist Curt Cignetti’s team a 10-point lead — barely enough breathing room to hold off a frenzied charge by the hard-hitting Hurricanes, who bloodied Mendoza’s lip early, then came to life late behind 112 yards and two scores from Mark Fletcher but never took the lead.

The College Football Playoff trophy now heads to the most unlikely of places: Bloomington, Indiana — a campus that endured a nation-leading 713 losses over 130-plus years of football before Cignetti arrived two years ago to embark on a revival for the ages.

Indiana finished 16-0 — using the extra games afforded by the expanded 12-team playoff to match a perfect-season win total last compiled by Yale in 1894.

In a bit of symmetry, this undefeated title comes 50 years after Bob Knight’s basketball team went 32-0 to win it all in that state’s favorite sport.

Players like Mendoza — a transfer from Cal who grew up just a few miles away from Miami’s campus, “The U” — certainly don’t come around often.

Two fourth-down gambles by Cignetti in the fourth quarter, after Fletcher’s second touchdown carved the Hurricanes’ deficit to three, put Mendoza in position to shine.

The first was a 19-yard-completion to Charlie Becker on a back-shoulder fade those guys have been perfecting all season. Four plays later came a decision and play that wins championships.

Cignetti sent his kicker out on fourth-and-4 from the 12, but quickly called his second timeout. The team huddled on the field and the coach drew up a quarterback draw.

Mendoza, not known as a run-first guy, slipped one tackle, then took a hit and spun around. He kept his feet, then left them, going horizontal and stretching the ball out — a ready-made poster pic for a title run straight from the movies.

Mary Ellen Klas: The White House push to undermine the midterms is gathering steam

posted in: All news | 0

The Department of Justice is assembling a first-ever national voter database. It has demanded that states turn over their complete voter registration lists — loaded with private information such as driver’s license and Social Security numbers linked to names, home addresses and dates of birth.

It has also turned the federal immigration database into what it calls a national “voter verification” tool to remove large numbers of voters from the rolls.

Each of these moves evades federal privacy protections, but they might not seem objectionable to many Americans. After all, the government already knows much of this information, plus our TSA facial profile and our tax and business information.

But the nation’s Founders gave authority over election administration to the states precisely because they were worried about centralizing too much power in the federal government. And in the context of the Trump administration’s other activities — such as the surge of federal immigration agents into blue cities and the president’s unsubstantiated claims that “we have very dishonest elections” — the data grab is downright frightening.

First, there are no safeguards against false matches that wrongly flag eligible voters as noncitizens. A county administrator in Texas warned in a court filing in October that nearly one-fourth of the voters in Travis County were incorrectly identified by the federal program as potential noncitizens.

Second, the DOJ hasn’t said how it will keep the data safe from hackers and cybersecurity breaches, raising the risk that millions of Americans could be exposed to fraud and abuse.

Finally, there is no guarantee that the administration won’t use the voter list to undermine U.S. elections. Once the DOJ has nationwide voter information, it could use insignificant discrepancies to question the validity of election outcomes. (We saw how far President Donald Trump was willing to go down that path after the 2020 election.) And DHS could use the immigration database to send its agents into polling places in the name of “verifying” voters. Naturalized immigrants or Hispanic citizens might decide to stay home rather than risk a confrontation. Trump ally Steve Bannon bragged on his podcast last fall that “since we’re taking control of the cities, there’s going to be ICE officers near polling places.”

The federal government could use the database to go even further, voting experts told me, and seize control of state voting operations or suspend voting in certain states, something that has never happened in U.S. history.

Sound far-fetched? In a recent interview with The New York Times, Trump said “the elections in our country are rigged” and that he regretted not ordering the National Guard to seize voting machines in swing states after he lost the 2020 election. It was just the latest sign that he continues to harbor the long-discredited views that voting machines are dangerous and that the US election system is rife with fraud.

Such scenarios are why 23 states and the District of Columbia — including the Republican-controlled state of Georgia — have pushed back on the DOJ and refused to give it unrestrained access to their voter files. The DOJ has sued them all, and groups like the ACLU, Common Cause and other voting advocacy organizations have sided with the states.

Only eight states have either provided or said they will provide their full statewide voter registration lists, but a dozen others — including the Republican-controlled state of Florida — have only turned over what’s already publicly available, according to the Brennan Center for Justice, which is keeping track.

I’ve spoken to many county and state-based election supervisors over the years and am often impressed that, no matter their party affiliation, they are committed to ensuring that our one-person, one-vote system stays honest. I’ve watched rabid partisans get into the job and mellow once they see the elaborate safeguards in place and the importance of maintaining the public’s trust. They bristle at the president’s unhinged claims.

“If Donald Trump were here right now, I would look at him and I would say, ‘Mr. President, you need to get off of your darn social media and shut up. You are propagating more unrest,’” Alan Hays, a former Republican state legislator who became the supervisor of elections in Lake County, Florida, told me one week before the 2024 elections.

Hays said then that the public had undergone a “loss of confidence” in the elections system because of “just blatant lies that have been propagated across this country by a relatively small, but loudmouth group of people.” He wanted Trump to “shut up,” but the president has since kept talking — and seeding doubt.

Trump’s claims of fraud may be the predicate for the president, now underwater in the polls in every conceivable measure, to claim that if his party loses seats in the midterm elections it is because the voting was “rigged.” What’s worse, he could use such claims to pursue policies that preempt fair elections.

The surge in ICE agents to Minnesota may be the dress rehearsal for November, when armed federal forces could be patrolling polling sites across the country — and treating Americans like enemy combatants.  If Trump succeeds in undermining trust, intimidating voters and disenfranchising American citizens, he will have achieved what all authoritarians desire: Control of the people through the appearance of consent of the governed. It’s the kind of stagecraft Trump might just be able to muster.

But our system is designed to check this kind of power. At least 35 states are resisting so far. Let’s hope they prevail.

Mary Ellen Klas is a politics and policy columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. A former capital bureau chief for the Miami Herald, she has covered politics and government for more than three decades.