• Police seek suspects in deadly birthday party shooting
  • Lawmakers launch inquires into U.S. boat strike
  • Nov. 29, 2025, 10:07 PM EST / Updated Nov. 30, 2025,…
  • Mark Kelly says troops ‘can tell’ what orders…

Be that!

contact@bethat.ne.com

 

Be That ! Menu   ≡ ╳
  • Home
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Contact Us
  • Politics Politics
☰

Be that!

Nov. 11, 2025, 1:35 PM EST / Updated Nov. 11, 2025, 3:06 PM ESTBy Allan Smith and Raquel Coronell UribeWhen President Donald Trump hosted Republican senators for lunch at the White House on Oct. 21, Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, came prepared. Moreno, who was born in Colombia, has become a key voice on policy involving the Latin American nation — and one that’s deeply critical of the current left-wing president, Gustavo Petro. Two days before the lunch, Trump, at odds with Petro for months, posted on social media that Petro was “an illegal drug leader strongly encouraging the massive production of drugs” in Colombia. Trump said he was stopping all U.S. aid to the country and told reporters he would soon announce new tariffs on Colombia. Moreno wanted to encourage Trump to take a more targeted approach — directly aimed at Petro. To do so, the senator brought along a document titled “The Trump Doctrine For Colombia and the Western Hemisphere.” In addition to five policy ideas, the one-page outline featured large images of Petro and Nicolás Maduro, the president of Venezuela, in orange prison jumpsuits. The images appear to be generated by artificial intelligence. NBC News obtained the memo from a person familiar with the episode.Now that document is at the center of an even further strain in diplomatic relationships between Colombia and the U.S. On Sunday, the publication Cambio Colombia first reported on the existence of the document when it discovered that the White House had posted a photo from the Oct. 21 event showing James Blair, a deputy chief of staff, holding Moreno’s memo. Petro posted on X that he was recalling the Colombian ambassador to the U.S. for the second time in a month and demanding to know why he is being portrayed “as if I were a prisoner,” calling the print-out “a brutal disrespect” to his supporters and nation. And on Monday, Colombian Foreign Minister Rosa Villavicencio told journalists in Santa Marta that her government had “sent verbal notes to the United States through our diplomatic representation” to “request clarification regarding” Moreno’s memo.The episode also marks the latest chapter in the use of fake images in politics. The Trump administration has made extensive use of AI-generated images and videos in online political messaging, with the president himself often sharing them on social media. The White House directed NBC News to Moreno’s office for comment. Moreno’s office declined to comment.Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, is a key voice on Republican policy toward Latin America.Daniel Heuer / Bloomberg via Getty Images fileMoreno, who was born in Bogota and immigrated to the U.S. as a child, is among a few lawmakers advocating on Colombia policy to the president. A Treasury Department official told NBC News that both Moreno and Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who endorsed Trump’s call to impose new tariffs on the South American nation, have been backchanneling on Colombia to the White House for a while, with their advocacy culminating at the Rose Garden lunch in October. This person, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly, added that Secretary of State Marco Rubio has been heavily involved as well.Tensions between the two nations have risen in recent months with the U.S. building up its military deployment in the Caribbean in an effort to target Venezuela. U.S. forces have killed dozens aboard boats officials say are trafficking drugs into the U.S. as lawmakers in both parties have called for the Trump administration to share evidence to support its claims.Moreno’s memo called for the president to designate more cartels as foreign terrorist organizations; target Petro, his family and associates for further sanctions; and launch an investigation into Petro’s campaign finances, among other measures. The proposal did not include advocacy for new Colombian tariffs or the cutting off of aid to the country. It also did not call for the U.S. to engage in a regime-change effort.Moreno’s document is below. (NBC News added in the watermarks indicating the images are fake.) Three days after the lunch with senators, the Treasury Department announced sanctions against Petro, his family and a government official over allegations of involvement in the global drug trade, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent saying in a statement that Petro “has allowed drug cartels to flourish and refused to stop this activity.” Petro has strongly denied involvement with the drug trade and has said he will fight the sanctions in U.S. courts.Trump has yet to announce new tariffs on Colombia. And CNN reported last week that there has been no interruption yet to U.S. assistance to the country.Petro, a socialist, accused the U.S. of killing a fisherman last month in one of its attacks on a boat the U.S. claimed was involved in drug smuggling. The U.S. revoked Petro’s visa during the United Nations General Assembly in September after the Colombian leader spoke at a pro-Palestinian rally in New York and called for U.S. soldiers to resist Trump.Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro speaks in Bogota on Oct. 24.Ovidio Gonzalez / Colombian Presidency via AFP-Getty ImagesWriting for Time magazine, Petro on Sunday countered Trump’s claims, saying that his government had delivered “record cocaine seizures” and that the U.S. government’s support “was crucial in this fight.”“Whatever the attitudes of the current administration, I will continue to pursue a counter-narcotics and broader security policy that is in the interests of Colombians and Americans alike,” he wrote.Petro himself has called out Moreno as leading the charge against him. After the Trump administration announced the sanctions on him last month, Petro posted on X that Moreno’s “threat has come true.”Separately, Moreno pushed back on claims Petro made that he and Trump sought to overthrow him in a coup.“That’s 100% completely false,” Moreno wrote on social media last month. “The United States wants the people of Colombia to have a free and fair election, as scheduled, without any influence from outside agitators or narco traffickers.”Colombian officials who spoke with NBC News said they believed the country avoided new tariffs because of the advocacy of some Colombians in government and in business who are close to both Moreno and Trump-allied lawmakers in South Florida. Andrés Pastrana, who was the president of Colombia from 1998 through 2002 and aligned with the right, said Moreno and Republican Reps. Maria Elvira Salazar, Carlos Gimenez and Mario Diaz-Balart, all of Florida, have had “big influence” in convincing the Trump administration. He also said the U.S. should not equate all Colombians with Petro and his views, adding that imposing tariffs on the entire country could carry a significant “political risk” and help to “re-elect the left” by giving Petro the ability to tap into nationalistic fervor. Allan SmithAllan Smith is a political reporter for NBC News.Raquel Coronell UribeRaquel Coronell Uribe is a breaking news reporter. Julie Tsirkin and Michelle Acevedo contributed.

admin - Latest News - November 11, 2025
admin
14 views 15 secs 0 Comments




Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, recalled his ambassador from the U.S. when the image in the document from Sen. Bernie Moreno was spotted a White House photo.



Source link

TAGS:
PREVIOUS
Nov. 11, 2025, 3:00 PM ESTBy Berkeley Lovelace Jr.As President Donald Trump touts new deals to cut the cost of blockbuster drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound, he’s barely mentioned Medicare’s drug price negotiation program — even though the government is expected to announce lower prices before the end of the month.The program, created under President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, gave Medicare the authority to negotiate directly with drugmakers on some of the costliest medications. A Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) spokesperson said the agency is preparing to release the second round of negotiated prices by Nov. 30 — covering 15 drugs, up from 10 last year, and adding Ozempic and Wegovy to the list. The newly negotiated prices won’t take effect until 2027. Trump announces deal to lower cost of weight loss drug01:59The lack of attention has puzzled health policy experts, who say the program could play an important role in lowering prescription drug costs for millions of older adults in the U.S.About 1-in-5 adults say they’ve not filled a prescription because of cost, according to a poll from the nonpartisan health policy research group KFF.“Certainly, the flurry of announcements and lack of details [on negotiations] make things confusing,” said Dr. Benjamin Rome, a primary care physician and health policy researcher at Harvard Medical School. Trump’s approach to lowering drug prices has leaned heavily on executive orders and voluntary deals with drugmakers, rather than legislation. Last week, he announced agreements with Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly — the makers of Wegovy and Zepbound, respectively — to lower prices for some doses in exchange for tariff relief and accelerated Food and Drug Administration review of new drugs. Several experts described the details as murky and questioned whether the agreements would translate into real savings for Americans. Trump has struck similar deals with Pfizer and Astrazenca.Rome said the Medicare negotiation program is seen as the steadier, more reliable path to lowering costs for Americans.Drugmakers can decline to participate — but doing so would likely require pulling their drugs from Medicare entirely, cutting them off from one of the nation’s largest markets. Several companies have challenged the negotiation program in court, but those lawsuits have so far been unsuccessful. “Although it’s great that the Trump administration wants to aggressively negotiate lower prices with pharmaceutical companies, these ad hoc negotiations seem to be more about announcing short-term political victories,” Rome said. “I would be very skeptical of relying solely on voluntary deals with drug manufacturers as a main policy for making medications more affordable to Americans,” Rome added. “By contrast, the IRA absolutely will save money for taxpayers through the negotiation process.”Despite the looming announcement, the White House has said little publicly about the negotiation program or how it fits into Trump’s broader push to lower drug prices.In an emailed statement, White House spokesperson Kush Desai said: “Democrats endlessly touted the Inflation Reduction Act, which ironically under Biden’s watch did little but increase Medicare premiums. The Trump administration is focused on results, and our historic drug pricing deals with global pharmaceutical giants are proof that we will continue to deliver meaningful change for the American people.”Last year, the Biden administration announced agreements to lower prices on 10 prescription drugs under Medicare, with those cuts set to take effect in 2026. The drugs included the blockbuster blood thinner Eliquis, along with several cancer and diabetes treatments. At the time, administration officials projected the negotiations would save Medicare enrollees $1.5 billion in out-of-pocket costs in the first year. Experts say the second round may have an even larger impact than last year’s since some of the drugs on the list — particularly Ozempic and Wegovy — are becoming the most widely used and most expensive in Medicare.The Congressional Budget Office, a nonpartisan government group that provides budget and economic information to Congress, projects that, because of negotiations, the net price of Ozempic and Wegovy will “fall substantially” beginning in 2027 — cutting Medicare’s spending on each patient who uses the drugs by one third. The CBO also expects that those lower prices are likely to put pressure on other GLP-1 drugs, including Mounjaro and Zepbound.Stacie Dusetzina, a health policy professor at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, said it’s possible the negotiations may have factored into Trump’s deal on Wegovy and Zepbound last week. When asked on a call with reporters whether Trump’s deal was related to the negotiations, senior administration officials insisted it was not. “We’re all eagerly awaiting the announcement of what prices have been negotiated,” Dusetzina said. “It could very well be that this is where the negotiations landed.”Other experts raised questions about how Trump’s deal fits with the negotiations — or whether the two efforts are even aligned at all. Tricia Neuman, executive director of the program on Medicare policy at KFF, said it’s “not clear how the recent White House announcement dovetails with the Inflation Reduction Act when it comes to negotiated prices for GLP-1s.”Rome said Trump’s deals are unlikely to interfere or undermine the negotiation process.“That process is very clearly spelled out by CMS and has been ongoing throughout the year and will repeat for another 20 drugs early next year,” he said. “I don’t think these side deals with Lilly and Novo will change that.” Neuman added that while the voluntary deals may be drawing more attention from the White House, they don’t replace the long term impacts of Medicare negotiations.“The IRA’s Medicare negotiations program is baked into the law, and is up and running, and could ultimately lead to lower prices for far more drugs over time,” she said. Berkeley Lovelace Jr.Berkeley Lovelace Jr. is a health and medical reporter for NBC News. He covers the Food and Drug Administration, with a special focus on Covid vaccines, prescription drug pricing and health care. He previously covered the biotech and pharmaceutical industry with CNBC.
NEXT
Nov. 11, 2025, 3:14 PM ESTBy David K. Li and Nicole DuarteShortly before Dallas Cowboys defensive end Marshawn Kneeland died by suicide, the player said goodbye to friends and said he couldn’t bear to do any time behind bars, police recordings revealed on Tuesday.The Cowboys head of security, Cable Johnson, was put through to police in Plano asking for officers in that Dallas suburb to do a welfare check on the 24-year-old.“He sent out some group texts that are concerning, probably mental health,” Johnson told a police dispatcher. “The group text seemed to be saying goodbye and he made some statement about not being able to go to prison or to jail.” It wasn’t clear what Kneeland could have been referencing about possible time behind bars.The dispatcher didn’t ask Cable to elaborate and a Plano police spokesman couldn’t be immediately reached for comment on Tuesday.Johnson said he had already been in touch with top brass at the Plano Police Department, asking for a welfare check to Kneeland’s apartment at 6000 Columbus Ave. “I just was off the phone with (Plano Police) Chief (Ed) Drain so he’s aware, and I sent him the text as well,” Johnson said.Kneeland was found dead in the early morning hours of Thursday last week with a self-inflicted gunshot wound after evading authorities, crashing a car and fleeing on foot, police said.Texas Department of Public Safety troopers attempted to stop his car for a traffic violation near Frisco on Wednesday night, launching the brief pursuit, police said.Kneeland was in his second season with the Cowboys and had scored his first NFL touchdown days earlier, recovering a blocked punt in the end zone against the Arizona Cardinals on “Monday Night Football.”If you or someone you know is in crisis, call or text 988, or go to 988lifeline.org, to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. You can also call the network, previously known as the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, at 800-273-8255, or visit SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources.David K. LiSenior Breaking News ReporterNicole DuarteNicole Duarte is an assignment editor in NBC News’ Miami bureau.
Related Post
September 22, 2025
HSBC spinoff: Bank’s top execs face tense shareholders in Hong Kong calling for a breakup
October 13, 2025
Speaker of Israeli Knesset removes hostage pin following release
October 31, 2025
Oct. 31, 2025, 5:30 PM EDTBy Tim StellohFor John Diebel, she’s the suspect who got away.Diebel, a retired detective, spent more than a decade investigating the brutal murder of Steven Schwartz, a wealthy doctor whose 2014 death shook Florida’s Gulf coast. In his first interview about the case, Diebel recalled that the investigation was one of the most extensive of his nearly 50 years in law enforcement — one filled with unexpected turns and dead ends that led detectives far from the doctor’s sprawling mansion northeast of Tampa. Retired dectective, John Diebel who has spent more than a decade investigating the death of Steven Schwartz.DatelineYet in the end, Diebel’s investigation for the Tarpon Springs Police Department produced a single conviction for a crime far less serious than murder. And it did not yield criminal charges for a person who Diebel believes is responsible for the killing: Schwartz’s wife, Rebecca Schwartz.“It’s like the one case where you didn’t get the suspect that you knew in your heart that she committed a murder,” Diebel told “Dateline.” “You just didn’t have enough for the state attorney’s office to go forward with prosecution.” For more on the case, tune in to “The Death of Dr. Schwartz” on “Dateline” at 9 ET/8 CT tonight.DATELINE FRIDAY SNEAK PEEK: The Death of Dr. Schwartz01:55While Rebecca, 65, has never been criminally charged in the case, a jury in civil court — where the standard of evidence is lower than in criminal proceedings — found her liable this year for intentionally killing her husband or participating in his death. That decision, made in response to a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Steven’s family, included a judgment that required Rebecca to pay the doctor’s family nearly $200 million in damages.Lawyers for Steven’s family accused her of killing him over a possible divorce — a move that would have cut her off from the fortune he’d made as a doctor specializing in kidney disease. Steven Schwartz.DatelineAfter Steven’s death, Rebecca — who earlier in life pleaded guilty to embezzling more than $7,000 from a Mothers Against Drunk Driving chapter that she led — became the beneficiary of an estate that an attorney for Steven’s family estimated at more than $30 million. She moved the money into hard-to-track limited liability companies, according to the family’s legal team. To date, the lawyers have frozen roughly $6 million to $10 million of her assets, one of the attorneys, Wil Florin, told “Dateline.”Rebecca declined to speak to “Dateline.” In a deposition in the civil case, she invoked her right against self-incrimination and declined to answer when attorneys for Steven’s family pressed her about whether she participated in his death. She did the same when she was asked about her previous conviction. In a separate deposition last year, she said she was worth $10,000 and had transferred almost everything she owned into trusts controlled by her two sons. Her attorney, Rohom Khonsari, said there was no evidence supporting the claim that Steven wanted to divorce her. Nor was there any physical evidence linking her to the crime, Khonsari said. A staged burglary and a dead body On the evening of May 28, 2014, Rebecca dialed 911 and reported a robbery at the family’s 8,000-square-foot home in Tarpon Springs, northeast of Tampa. Jewelry, cash and her husband’s watches were gone, according to audio of the 911 call, and she told the dispatcher she hadn’t seen Steven since that morning, when she left at 8:30 and he was in bed reading a newspaper.“He’s a physician, so I don’t know where he is, actually,” she said. “One of the hospitals, I assume.” Steven Schwartz and his wife, Rebecca Schwartz.DatelineAs investigators searched the house, they found watch boxes scattered across a bedroom floor and drawers yanked from cabinets. At the bottom of a set of stairs, they found Steven’s body in a pool of blood, Diebel recalled. He was 74.He’d been shot twice — once in the head, once in the neck — with what Diebel believed was a small-caliber gun. He had a large laceration across his neck, Diebel said, and an autopsy showed his spine had been fractured — an injury he appeared to have sustained during a fall down the stairs. Investigators discovered that a crucial part of the home’s elaborate security system — a DVR — was missing, as was a large knife in a butcher block in the kitchen, Diebel said. Neither would ever be found. Nor would authorities find the gun used to shoot him.Diebel came to believe the burglary scene was staged. While the drawers had been pulled out, he said, it didn’t appear that anyone had actually rifled through them. And the jewelry and watch boxes looked like they’d just been dropped on the floor. The effort, he said, seemed designed to make the crime look like a “burglary gone bad.”A crime scene photo of the drawers pulled out during the alleged burglary of the Schwartz home.DatelineDiebel also came to believe that someone close to the Schwartzes was probably responsible for the doctor’s death. He based that suspicion on the location of the missing recording equipment — it was hidden in a closet, above the garage — and on the family’s two large dogs: Rebecca told police they’d been locked all day inside the same bedroom that had been burglarized. Those clues led Diebel to believe the person was familiar with the home’s layout and knew the pets.Shortly after the death, investigators interviewed Rebecca, who called her husband her “best bud” — they’d been married for four years but a couple for far longer — and provided an account of her whereabouts on May 28, a video of the interview shows. That account included receipts, Diebel said. When police shared their theory about who was likely to have been responsible for her husband’s killing, she responded: “You think you can find who did this?”An investigator responded in the affirmative.Fingerprints lifted from the security system and elsewhere at the crime scene provided what initially seemed like a promising lead. They matched those of Rebecca’s oldest son from a previous marriage, Diebel said, prompting Diebel to travel with a team of investigators to a small town north of Madison, Wisconsin, where the son owned a Verizon shop.They showed up at his workplace unannounced, Diebel said, and questioned him about where he’d been on May 28. It turned out he’d been nowhere near Tarpon Springs. “He had gone to the doctor’s with his wife,” Diebel said. “She was pregnant at the time.”Diebel also ruled out a startling revelation from the doctor’s past that emerged after his death. As a 21-year-old college student in New Mexico, he robbed a doctor of $400 — then fatally shot him. Steven pleaded guilty to murder and was sentenced to life in prison but granted a full pardon a decade later.While shocking — Steven had kept the crime a secret from his children — Diebel believed it had no connection to his death. It had happened in 1961, more than a half-century before, Diebel said, and the doctor had transformed into a model citizen“This was a completely different man,” Diebel said. Finally, a breakthrough in the case Nearly a year passed before DNA delivered the case’s first breakthrough. The samples were taken from two spots on Steven’s clothes — inside a pocket where he usually kept a wad of cash, Diebel said, and a section of his shirt that appeared crumpled.It wasn’t the strongest DNA match — Diebel said there had been significant contamination at the scene because of the amount of blood — but the analysis led to an unexpected person: Leo Stragaj, a man who’d worked for the Schwartzes for years doing remodeling and property maintenance. Two weeks after the killing, Stragaj, 48, provided authorities with the genetic sample they used to compare with the DNA collected at the scene. In a recorded interview obtained by “Dateline,” he told authorities that he had no idea who was behind Steven’s death but wanted to help however he could.“That guy took care of my everything,” said Stragaj, an Albanian national who first came to the United States in 2000. “He supported my family in Albania.”Stragaj provided an account of his whereabouts on May 28 — he said he’d been working on a house all day — and authorities verified it, Diebel said. But after they obtained the DNA sample, police arrested him on a first-degree murder charge and confronted him with the new finding. He initially disputed the evidence, saying that he was being framed and that there was no way it was his, according to a video of the interview. Anton Stragaj’s mug shot in Tarpon Springs, Fla.DatelineBut after an hour and a half, Stragaj provided a far different account. In the interview, he said that Rebecca had asked him to stop by their house early May 28 to pick up her purse and that when he did, he found Steven’s body in a pool of blood.Stragaj said he grabbed the doctor and shook him — “just to see if he’s OK,” he said in the interview. He retrieved Rebecca’s bag, which he said contained jewelry boxes and a knife, and left.Upon returning the purse, he started screaming at Rebecca and demanding to know why she killed her husband, Stragaj told “Dateline.” She at first said nothing, then responded, “I know you know why I did it,” Stragaj said. (Stragaj provided a similar account during a deposition in the civil case when he was questioned by an attorney for Steven’s family.) In an interview with “Dateline,” Stragaj said he didn’t go to the police for two reasons: He feared being deported and worried Rebecca wouldn’t pay him the tens of thousands of dollars he said she owed him from an investment they’d made together.Not calling the police that day, he said, was the biggest mistake of his life.In 2021, after six years in the Pinellas County Jail awaiting trial, Stragaj accepted a deal from prosecutors — a guilty plea to a lower-level felony, accessory after the fact. A few months later, he was deported to Albania.Detective’s lingering doubts Diebel said he doesn’t believe Stragaj stumbled onto the murder scene. He believes Stragaj was directly involved in the doctor’s killing and could still answer a series of unresolved questions, including what happened to the missing DVR. In the “Dateline” interview, Stragaj maintained his innocence and said he had nothing to do with killing Steven.Because of Stragaj’s repeated lies, Diebel said, his account of what happened on May 28 wasn’t considered credible evidence against Rebecca. And in the decade-plus that he spent investigating the murder, Diebel said, he uncovered no evidence that would hold up in a criminal trial.Diebel said that before he retired this year, he tried everything he could — and had other agencies review his work to see whether there was something he missed. More witnesses came forward, he said, but nothing they provided was enough.Even though he’d never been able to prove it, Diebel believed a theory of the killing that was similar to that presented in the civil case — that Steven was murdered after he told his wife he planned to end their relationship. Diebel said he was glad there had been some measure of justice for Steven’s family with the civil judgment. And even though the investigation he shepherded for years was officially closed weeks after the jury delivered that judgment, he was hopeful new evidence could someday resurrect the criminal probe.“I just would encourage anybody if you know anything, no matter how small, if you have not talked with a detective or the police department about this, please come forward,” he said. “’Cause you never know what information that you have might be the link that we need to put things together.”Tim StellohTim Stelloh is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.Meade Jorgensen and Robert Buchanan contributed.
November 27, 2025
Trump: Shooting suspect came to U.S. from Afghanistan
Comments are closed.
Scroll To Top
  • Home
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Contact Us
  • Politics
© Copyright 2025 - Be That ! . All Rights Reserved