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Illinois man pleads not guilty to allegedly assaulting Rep. Nancy Mace on Capitol grounds

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Illinois man charged with attacking U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace


Illinois man charged with attacking U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace

00:25

Washington – An Illinois man who was charged with misdemeanor assault after allegedly shaking U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace’s hand in an “exaggerated, aggressive” manner has entered a not-guilty plea. 

James McIntyre, 33, of Chicago, was charged following an encounter at Rayburn House Office Building on Tuesday evening. Mace, a South Carolina Republican, said in a social media post earlier this week that the encounter left her needing a brace for her wrist, and icing her arm. 

Mace told police that McIntyre said, “Trans youth serve advocacy,” while shaking her hand. The Rayburn building was open at the time of the incident and Capitol police reported that McIntyre had been through a security screening. 

She added at the time that she would be “fine just as soon as the pain and soreness subside,” but on Wednesday issued a series of posts on X that accused the media of “using the assault on me to prop up misogyny on the Left,” adding, “Maybe when the Left said ‘believe all women,’ they really meant men who claim to be women.” 

She said President-elect Donald Trump called to check in on her after the incident. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a New York Democrat, told reporters Wednesday that “no member of Congress should be accosted or assaulted or attacked based on their political beliefs,” calling the incident “very troubling.”

Last month, Mace stepped into the center of controversy over transgender rights when she introduced legislation to change House rules to prohibit transgender women from using women’s bathrooms and other facilities on Capitol Hill. 

Mace’s two-page resolution would bar House members, officers and employees from using single-sex facilities in the Capitol or House office buildings that do not correspond with their “biological sex,” but that proposal came just before the House prepared to swear-in the first openly transgender member of Congress, Rep.-elect Sarah McBride of Delaware. 

After the encounter earlier this week, Mace declined to be treated by a paramedic. She has since posted multiple photos of herself in an arm brace on social media. 

A magistrate judge ordered McIntyre’s release after an arraignment in Superior Court of the District of Columbia. 

Efforts to reach an attorney for McIntyre weren’t immediately successful. 

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Trump rings opening bell at New York Stock Exchange

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Trump rings opening bell at New York Stock Exchange – CBS News


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President-elect Donald Trump visited Wall Street and the New York Stock Exchange Thursday morning where he rang the opening bell to start trading for the day. CBS News MoneyWatch correspondent Kelly O’Grady and CBS News contributor J.D. Durkin have more on Trump’s visit and the state of the economy.

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Ex-FBI informant Alexander Smirnov pleads guilty to lying about the Bidens

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FBI’s Biden informant accused of lying before


FBI’s Biden informant accused of lying as far back as 2016

03:56

A California man who was charged with lying to the FBI about fake criminal allegations against President Biden and his son Hunter is pleading guilty, according to an agreement filed in federal court on Thursday.

Alexander Smirnov was indicted in February by special counsel David Weiss, who was appointed to lead the now-defunct investigations into Hunter Biden. The president pardoned his son earlier this month.

A longtime confidential informant, Smirnov told his FBI handler in 2020 that the two Bidens each accepted $5 million from the Ukrainian energy company Burisma several years earlier. The claims “were false, as the Defendant knew,” according to the charging documents filed against him.

The fake allegations were memorialized in an FBI document that became a central piece of evidence in congressional Republicans’ efforts to investigate the Biden family. 

In this courtroom sketch, defendant Alexander Smirnov speaks in federal court in Los Angeles, Feb. 26, 2024.
In this courtroom sketch, defendant Alexander Smirnov speaks in federal court in Los Angeles, Feb. 26, 2024. 

William T. Robles / AP


On Thursday, prosecutors from Weiss’ office wrote Smirnov will plead guilty to one count of creating a false federal record —the FBI document filed with his false information — and three tax-related counts. The new tax charges were filed last month.

With the agreement and the pardon of Hunter Biden, Weiss’ cases, and likely his time as special counsel, are coming to a close. Weiss was appointed U.S. attorney during the Trump administration, and the Biden administration kept him on to continue his Hunter Biden probe. Attorney General Merrick Garland elevated him to special counsel earlier this year. 

Weiss’ office declined to comment on the plea agreement, and an attorney for Smirnov did not immediately respond to a request for comment.



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