CA, US & World
Trump Condemns Iran Drone Strike as Leon Black Subpoenaed and John Bolton Pleads Guilty
PALM DESERT, Calif. — President Donald Trump is confronting a volatile mix of international aggression and high-profile domestic legal battles today as a fragile Middle East ceasefire faces a direct challenge and several explosive investigations reach a boiling point in Washington, D.C.
On the international front, maritime safety was thrown into jeopardy after Iran fired upon and damaged a commercial ship navigating through the critical Strait of Hormuz lanes. Speaking from the White House, President Trump condemned the strike, characterizing the deployment of four military drones as a foolish and direct violation of the ongoing ceasefire framework. The president revealed that American and allied defense systems successfully intercepted and knocked down three of the incoming unmanned aerial vehicles. Although the target vessel sustained localized structural damage from the remaining drone, it was able to safely maintain power and continue along its transit route. The geopolitical provocation comes at a delicate time, as United States and Iranian diplomats remain engaged in active negotiations to permanently codify their preliminary memorandum of understanding and bring a definitive end to the regional war.
Domestically, the president is facing intense resistance on Capitol Hill as he attempts to unify a fractured legislative branch. A hardline faction of House Republicans has vowed to completely block all legislative business and freeze committee work until leadership passes a sweeping new election security measure known as the SAVE America Act. However, party leaders acknowledge that the controversial bill currently lacks the baseline floor votes required to clear the chamber, creating a significant legislative gridlock.
Despite the deep partisan divides on spending and security bills, members of both political parties found rare unity during a high-stakes House Oversight Committee investigation into the financial web surrounding late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Wall Street billionaire Leon Black, the co-founder of Apollo Global Management, appeared before the committee for a voluntary transcribed interview regarding his decades-long professional relationship with Epstein, which included paying the disgraced financier approximately one hundred fifty million dollars. However, the session quickly turned combative when Black repeatedly refused to answer questions regarding various non-disclosure agreements he maintained with several women. In response to the stonewalling, lawmakers immediately issued two formal subpoenas forcing Black to return for a mandatory, under-oath videotaped deposition on July 16, 2026, and to surrender the hidden non-disclosure documents. Representative Robert Garcia, a California Democrat, emphasized the severity of the probe, noting that survivors have accused Black of horrific actions and that the public still deserves to know exactly what services Epstein rendered to earn such an astronomical sum of money.
Simultaneously, the federal court system secured a major victory for the Department of Justice as John Bolton, the former national security advisor turned outspoken administration critic, officially entered a guilty plea in a Maryland federal courtroom. Bolton pleaded guilty to a felony count of unlawfully retaining national defense information, admitting that he utilized unsecure personal email and messaging accounts to transmit more than one thousand pages of highly sensitive, diary-style notes to two unauthorized family members, later revealed to be his wife and daughter. Federal Prosecutor Kelly Hayes addressed reporters outside the courthouse, emphasizing that Bolton’s extensive experience at the highest echelons of government meant he fully understood the strict rules governing classified records and the grave risk that mishandling them posed to national security. Under the terms of the negotiated plea deal, Bolton will return to court for formal sentencing on October 28, 2026. He faces a maximum prison term of up to five years, is required to perform one hundred hours of community service, must forfeit his federal retirement benefits, and has agreed to pay more than two million dollars in criminal fines.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 26, 2026


