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‘We’re not North Korea.’ Newsom signs bills to limit immigration raids at schools and unmask federal agents

In response to the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration raids that have roiled Southern California, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Saturday signed a package of bills aimed at protecting immigrants in schools, hospitals and other areas targeted by federal agents.
He also signed a bill that bans federal agents from wearing masks, making California the first state to do so. Speaking at Miguel Contreras Learning Complex in Los Angeles, Newsom said President Trump had turned the country into a “dystopian sci-fi movie” with scenes of masked agents hustling immigrants without legal status into unmarked cars.
“We’re not North Korea,” Newsom said.
Newsom framed the pieces of legislation as pushback against what he called the “secret police” of Trump and Stephen Miller, the White House advisor who has driven the second Trump administration’s surge of immigration enforcement in Democratic-led cities.
SB 98, written by Sen. Sasha Renée Pérez (D-Alhambra), will require school administrators to notify families and students if federal agents conduct immigration operations on a K-12 or college campus.
Assembly Bill 49, drafted by Assemblymember Al Muratsuchi (D-Rolling Hills Estates), will bar immigration agents from nonpublic areas of a school without a judicial warrant or court order. It will also prohibit school districts from providing information about pupils, their families, teachers and school employees to immigration authorities without a warrant.
Sen. Jesse Arreguín’s (D-Berkeley) Senate Bill 81 will prohibit healthcare officials from disclosing a patient’s immigration status or birthplace — or giving access to nonpublic spaces in hospitals and clinics — to immigration authorities without a search warrant or court order.
Senate Bill 627 by Sens. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) and Jesse Arreguín (D-Berkeley) targets masked federal immigration officers who began detaining migrants at Home Depots and car washes in California earlier this year.
Wiener has said the presence of anonymous, masked officers marks a turn toward authoritarianism and erodes trust between law enforcement and citizens. The law would apply to local and federal officers, but for reasons that Weiner hasn’t publicly explained, it would exempt state police such as California Highway Patrol officers.
Trump’s immigration leaders argue that masks are necessary to protect the identities and safety of immigration officers. The Department of Homeland Security on Monday called on Newsom to veto Wiener’s legislation, which will almost certainly be challenged by the federal government.
“Sen. Scott Wiener’s legislation banning our federal law enforcement from wearing masks and his rhetoric comparing them to ‘secret police’ — likening them to the gestapo — is despicable,” said DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin.
The package of bills has already caused friction between state and federal officials. Hours before signing the bills, Newsom’s office wrote on X that “Kristi Noem is going to have a bad day today. You’re welcome, America.”
Bill Essayli, the acting U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, fired back on X, accusing the governor of threatening Noem.
“We have zero tolerance for direct or implicit threats against government officials,” Essayli wrote in response, adding he’d requested a “full threat assessment” by the U.S. Secret Service.
The supremacy clause of the U.S. Constitution dictates that federal law takes precedence over state law, leading some legal experts to question whether California could enforce legislation aimed at federal immigration officials.
On X, Essayli said California has no jurisdiction over the federal government, adding he’s directed federal agencies not to change their operations.
“If Newsom wants to regulate our agents, he must go through Congress,” he wrote.
Representatives for the California Highway Patrol and Los Angeles Police Department did not immediately respond to questions about how the mask law would be enforced. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department officials said they would consult with agency attorneys to “evaluate” the new law.
California has failed to block federal officers from arresting immigrants based on their appearance, language and location. An appellate court paused the raids, which California officials alleged were clear examples of racial profiling, but the U.S. Supreme Court overrode the decision and allowed the detentions to resume.
During the news conference on Saturday, Newsom pointed to an arrest made last month when immigration officers appeared in Little Tokyo while the governor was announcing a campaign for new congressional districts. Masked agents showed up to intimidate people who attended the event, Newsom said, but they also arrested an undocumented man who happened to be delivering strawberries nearby.
“That’s Trump’s America,” Newsom said.
Other states are also looking at similar measures to unmask federal agents. Connecticut on Tuesday banned law enforcement officers from wearing masks inside state courthouses unless medically necessary, according to news reports.
Newsom on Saturday also signed Senate Bill 805, a measure by Pérez that targets immigration officers who are in plainclothes but don’t identify themselves.
The law requires law enforcement officers in plainclothes to display their agency, as well as either a badge number or name, with some exemptions.
“Ensuring that officers are clearly identified, while providing sensible exceptions, helps protect both the public and law enforcement personnel,” said Jason P. Houser, a former DHS official who supported the bills signed by Newsom.
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Men of the Trump Administration, 2026
Are Democrats ugly? Asking for a friend.
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Direct Confirmation Of Two Baby Planets Forming Around A Young Sun-like Star
As the number of exoplanet detections has breached 6,000 and continues to grow, scientists are finding a wide variety of different solar system architectures. Critical to understanding how these architectures take shape is finding young planets forming around very young stars. In 2025 a team of astronomers announced the discovery of a planet about 5 times more massive than Jupiter around a star that’s very much a younger version of our Sun.
The star is called WISPIT 2, is about 437 light-years away, and has around 1.08 solar masses. It’s very young, at only about 5 million years old. It’s so young it hasn’t yet commenced its life of fusion on the main sequence. That also means that it’s in the stage where young planets are still forming. Taken together, it’s a helpful analogue for our Solar System.
The exoplanet discovered around the star last year is named WISPIT 2-b, following convention. It was found with the Very Large Telescope (VLT) and its Spectro-Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet REsearch (SPHERE) instrument. The powerful VLT was able to image the planet, and that image became the ESO’s Picture of the Week.
This ESO Picture of the Week from August 26, 2025 shows the exoplanet WISPIT 2b as it forms in the protoplanetary disk around the star WISPIT 2. The ESO said it’s “the first clear detection of a baby planet in a disc with multiple rings.” Astronomers think that the gaps in the disk are created by young planets as they accrete material from the disk. Image Credit: ESO/R. F. van Capelleveen et al.
Now some of the same astronomers behind the detection of WISPIT 2b have found another planet in the same young solar system, WISPIT 2c. The discovery is in new research published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters titled “Direct Spectroscopic Confirmation of the Young Embedded Protoplanet WISPIT 2c.” The lead author is Chloe Lawlor, a PhD student from the University of Galway’s Centre for Astronomy and the Ryan Institute.
“WISPIT 2 is a nearby young star with a multiringed disk that was recently confirmed to host a ∼4.9 MJup gas giant planet embedded in a large (60 au) gap at a radial separation of 57 au from the host star. We confirm and characterize a second, close-in planet in the WISPIT 2 system…” the authors write. WISPIT 2c is likely twice as massive as its sibling, and also closer to the host star, “with a mass range of 8–12 MJup and a radial separation of 14 au.,” the authors add.
The “Direct Spectroscopic Confirmation” in the study’s title refers to observations with VLT/SPHERE and VLTI/GRAVITY.
Exoplanets can sometimes appear as little more than anomalies in astronomical data, and background stars can mimic exoplanets, so direct spectroscopic confirmation is important. This type of confirmation can also constrain exoplanet physical models, tell us about an exoplanet’s composition, and provide other important data. Direct spectroscopic confirmation is also technically demanding, boosting the relevance of this work.
This image shows two planets forming around the young star WISPIT 2. The top images were captured with the ESO’s VLT/SPHERE. WISPIT 2c’s spectrum was captured with the VLTI/GRAVITY+ instrument. It shows the presence of carbon dioxide which is a common atmospheric component of gas giants. The CO2 detection is further confirmation that the object is an exoplanet. Image Credit: ESO/C. Lawlor, R. F. van Capelleveen et al.
The WISPIT 2 system is also important because the star is so similar to our Sun, and that always attracts the interest of astronomers. “WISPIT 2 is the best look into our own past that we have to date,” lead author Lawlor said in a press release.
The system is only the second instance of two exoplanets observed forming around their star, after PDS 70. PDS 70 is a young T-Tauri star about 370 light-years away with two confirmed and one unconfirmed exoplanet.
*This is the VLT/SPHERE image of PDS 70, the first clear image of a planet forming around its star. The planet is visible as a bright point to the right of the centre of the image, which is blacked out by the coronagraph mask used to block the blinding light of the central star. Image Credit: By ESO/A. Müller et al., CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=70463981*
“The young T Tauri star PDS 70 once acted as a lone candle in the dark for early planet formation studies, owing to its two confirmed planets, PDS 70b,” the authors write.
“WISPIT 2 now becomes an analog to PDS 70, offering a second laboratory for studying the formation and early evolution of a multiplanet system within its natal disk,” the researchers explain in their paper.
But WISPIT 2 has a more extended and resolved system of rings and gaps. “These structures suggest that more planets are currently forming, which we will eventually detect,” Lawlor said.
“WISPIT 2 gives us a critical laboratory not just to observe the formation of a single planet but an entire planetary system,” said study co-author Christian Ginski, a researcher at the University of Galway.
Watching as young planets form and an entire solar system takes shape was unattainable only a short time ago. It’s all possible because of powerful telescopes and their attached instruments.
“This detection of a new world in formation really showed the amazing potential of our current instrumentation,” said Richelle van Capelleveen, PhD student at Leiden Observatory, the Netherlands, leader of the previous study and a co-author on the new one.
“Critically our study made use of the recent upgrade to GRAVITY+ without which we would not have been able to get such a clear detection of the planet so close to its star,” said study co-author Guillaume Bourdarot, Bourdarot is a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Germany. GRAVITY+ allows the imaging of even fainter astronomical objects at further distances than the original GRAVITY instrument.
With these detections, and with others on the way from even more powerful upcoming telescopes and instruments like the ELT, our understanding of solar system formation is poised to take a forward leap. The ELT features a gargantuan 39 meter primary mirror, and should see first light in March 2029.
There may even be another exoplanet detection waiting in the WISPIT 2 system itself. Both of the discovered exoplanets reside in gaps in the star’s protoplanetary disk, and there’s evidence of another gap in the disk that’s more distant from the star. “We suspect there may be a third planet carving out this gap” says Lawlor, “potentially of Saturn mass owing to the gap’s being much narrower and shallower.” Co-author Ginski noted that “with ESO’s upcoming Extremely Large Telescope, we may be able to directly image such a planet.”
Overall, the WISPIT 2 system is a rare opportunity to probe the emergence of solar system architectures. The authors speculate that the orbital separations in both PDS 70 and WISPIT 2 suggest a sort of Goldilocks Zone for giant planet formation, though that’s far from clear right now.
“While the available data remain limited, these results bring us one step closer to making direct connections between the initial conditions of planet formation and the final architectures of planetary systems,” the authors conclude.
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Wannabe Kim Kardashian died from lethal butt injections. Her injector was just convicted

A Florida woman faces years in prison after she flew to the Bay Area and met a woman in a hotel where she performed an illegal, deadly silicone injection into the woman’s buttocks for money.
Vivian Alexandra Gomez, 50, was convicted by a jury of felony involuntary manslaughter and practicing medicine without a valid license, resulting in the death of another, San Mateo County Dist. Atty. Steve Wagstaffe announced on Tuesday.
Gomez’s attorney didn’t respond to a request for comment.
In April 2023, Gomez flew to San Francisco International Airport to meet Christina Ashten Gourkani, a San Jose resident and social media model known for resembling Kim Kardashian.
Gourkani contacted Gomez, who ran an unlicensed cosmotology business out of Florida, about silicone injections to increase the size of her buttocks, Wagstaffe said.
Gomez met Gourkani and her fiance at a Marriott hotel in Burlingame, a few miles south of the airport, for the procedure.
Gourkani got at least two injections of what was supposed to be gluteal silicone but right after the injections, she began to go into distress, including convulsions.
She died the next day of respiratory failure and a pulmonary embolism. Gomez then flew back to Florida, where she was eventually arrested and returned to California.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2021 warned against using silicone injections to enlarge or shape parts of the body, saying the injections can cause long-term pain, embolisms, disfigurement, stroke and death.
Last October, a woman was convicted in Riverside County of murder for a lethal silicone injection after she’d previously been convicted of manslaughter for the practice.
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