Monday, July 13, 2026

Georgia family says they're forced to sell home to help power AI data centers: "It's theft"

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Family says they're forced to sell home to help power data centers

Georgia family says they're forced to sell home to help power AI data centers: "It's theft"

Sell your home, or the state will take it — that's the ultimatum some homeowners in Georgia say they are facing amid the AI boom.

Utility giant Georgia Power is planning to build a new transmission line to in part help power new data centers. It estimates 70-80% of the power on the new line will help serve data centers and the remaining 20-30% of power will serve the state's growing residential and commercial demand.

According to the company, increasing demand has outpaced the capacity of its existing grid and building a new transmission line requires acquiring more than 300 parcels of land, including residential properties. 

Ansley Brown's childhood home that she said was built when she was 5 or 6 years old is just one of the properties impacted.

"It's ours," she told CBS News. "It's our family. We belong here."

Her mother wanted the property to serve as "true generational wealth," Brown said, adding that now "it's being stripped from us."

"It's theft"

Brown's mother recently came to an agreement with Georgia Power to sell. If she didn't, Brown said the utility could have sought to acquire the property through eminent domain — which is a legal process that allows private property to be taken, with compensation, for projects determined to serve a public purpose.

"To us it's theft. It's literally a billion dollar company stealing land from smaller people, people who can't fight back. We don't have the money to fight Georgia Power," Brown said.

Holly Lovett, a spokesperson for Georgia Power, said eminent domain "is always … a last resort for us and it's something we never want to do."

The company said it feels as if it's done the process responsibly, but Brown disagrees.

"You can't tear down 35 miles of rural Georgia and it not hurt something or somebody. And to say that you're doing it in the name of data centers is a slap in the face to us, our community, our animals," she said.

A few months ago Brown took her story to TikTok and began sharing stories of others in similar situations. She said that while she knows it's too late to save her home, she doesn't want to see this happen to others.

"My mom wants an apology. She wants an apology from Georgia Power. That's it," Brown said. "For an entire year, they have bullied her and there is no sorry. So that's what we want. We want an apology from Georgia Power. "

When asked if the utility company is willing to apologize, Georgia Power told CBS News they "have worked hard to be transparent, negotiate in good faith" and "make the process as easy as possible."

As for who is behind the data centers, the company said it doesn't publish lists of customers to protect safety and security.

Male Bisons (Buffalo) are in rut now and so you need to stay far far away from them (hopefully in your cars and not walking around them

 though the man survived it it shows that when male bisons are in serious rut they cannot be trusted at all even if people are 100 yards away. The man was lucky enough to shelter his grandson but not himself and wound up in the hospital. People need to realize that Bison do not run away because they are herd Animals so they protect their herd and when they are in Rut they are completely nuts and frustrated from fighting all the other bulls. Only the biggest strongest Male Bisons get to mate. All the rest are extremely frustrated and dangerous this time of year.

Also, more people are killed by Bisons (buffalo) in the U.S. every year than by any other animal here. This is something to think about too. This is not a cow or a steer this is a wild herd animal that can and will kill you if you aren't paying enough attention. And even that doesn't help when the bulls are in rut as you can see in this video. 

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Bison tosses man 8 feet in the air at Yellowstone, video shows

 

Bison tosses man 8 feet in the air at Yellowstone National Park, video shows

A man was seriously injured after being tossed eight feet into the air by a bull bison in Yellowstone National Park, video shows. 

The animal, clearly agitated, appeared to target the man in footage captured Friday at one of the park's campgrounds. The animal charged toward the visitor, chased him back and forth through a patch of trees, and, ultimately, struck the man with its horns, launching and flipping him over. 

The man, 65, suffered serious injuries in the incident and was taken by the park's emergency responders to a nearby hospital, officials said. Yellowstone has not identified the man publicly. Before the incident, he was seen on video standing beside his grandchild, about 100 yards or so from where the bison was initially lying on the ground, snapping pictures with his phone. 

Video of the subsequent encounter, in which the bison stands up and runs over to the man, was filmed by Mike MacLeod, a professional photographer who happened to be at the campground. MacLeod told "CBS Mornings" that he eventually helped chase the bison away after it had knocked the grandfather over.

"I charged the bison, yelling and screaming and kind of been trying to put my camera up in the air," said MacLeod. "And a bunch of other men joined me, and we successfully hazed the bison off of the, the victim."

Male bison, also called bulls, can weigh up to 2,000 pounds and run at least three times faster than humans, according to the National Park Service, which notes on its website that more people have been injured by bison in Yellowstone than any other animal. Bison "are unpredictable" and may become aggressive when protecting their space, the agency says.

Yellowstone visitors are asked to remain at least 25 yards away from wildlife such as bison, elk, bighorn sheep, deer moose and coyotes. They are advised to remain at least 100 yards away from bears, wolves and cougars. 

This latest incident involving a Yellowstone bison came just a few weeks after a 12-year-old was hurt by a bison in the park at the end of June. At the time, few details were released about the incident, but officials said an investigation into what happened as underway. 

Several bison encounters resulted in injuries to Yellowstone tourists last year. In one of them, a New Jersey man was hurt after being gored by a bison near the park's famous geyser Old Faithful. In another, a Florida man was gored and injured by a bison in the Lake Village area, where restaurants and hotels are located.

Sources: FBI fires 2 analysts who raised concerns about Georgia 2020 election probe

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Sources: FBI fires 2 analysts who raised concerns about Georgia 2020 election probe 

 

12 states sue to block Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger

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12 states sue to block Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger

ICE agent shoots and kills motorist in Maine, senator says

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ICE agent shoots and kills motorist in Maine, senator says

Judge rebukes Trump and DOJ over IRS lawsuit in scathing decision

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Judge rebukes Trump and DOJ over IRS lawsuit in scathing decision 

Judge rebukes Trump and DOJ over IRS lawsuit, refers lawyer for disciplinary proceedings

Washington — A federal judge on Monday imposed professional penalties against lawyers representing President Trump in a civil lawsuit he brought against the IRS and harshly criticized the Justice Department for its handling of the case, concluding that the suit was brought for an "improper purpose."

In a scathing 56-page decision, U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams referred one of Mr. Trump's lawyers, Alejandro Brito, to the Florida Bar for potential disciplinary action. The judge limited the ability of a second lawyer, Daniel Epstein, to practice in the Southern District of Florida.

Williams also barred the Justice Department, IRS and Mr. Trump from citing or using provisions of a deal the two sides reached in judicial, administrative, regulatory or other proceedings as evidence of a settlement in the case.

The case, Williams wrote, "was brought for an improper purpose — to gain the imprimatur of judicial legitimacy for a 'settlement' that had no viable basis in law or fact." Additionally, the president and his two older sons, who were plaintiffs alongside Mr. Trump, "acted in bad faith," she concluded.

"In sum, the facts before this Court demonstrate there was never adverseness between the Parties; there was never a case or controversy; and there was never a question as to who would prevail," she said.

Williams also directed a copy of her order to be mailed to the State Bar of New York and to the District of Columbia Bar, of which acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward are members, respectively. Blanche and Woodward signed documents relating to the settlement with Mr. Trump. 

A spokesman for Mr. Trump's legal team said in response to the decision, "The IRS wrongly allowed a rogue, politically-motivated employee to leak private and confidential information about President Trump, his family, and the Trump Organization to the New York Times, ProPublica and other left-wing news outlets, which was then illegally released to millions of people. President Trump continues to hold those who wrong America and Americans accountable."

Williams' extraordinary order came in response to concerns raised by a group of 35 former judges about the settlement agreement reached in May. The deal brought to an end the $10 billion civil lawsuit the president and his two oldest sons filed against the IRS earlier this year over the leak of Mr. Trump's tax returns by a government contractor.

The settlement initially included the creation of a $1.776 billion "anti-weaponization" fund that aimed to provide taxpayer-funded payouts to individuals who alleged the federal government had been "weaponized" against them. But after immense blowback from Congress and a federal judge's ruling, Blanche said the Justice Department was "not moving forward" with the program.

Another provision of the settlement that permanently bars the IRS from pursuing tax claims against Mr. Trump, his oldest sons, his company or affiliated companies of his family remains intact.

The former judges asked Williams in May to reopen the case between Mr. Trump and his administration, arguing that the agreement they reached to resolve the president's civil lawsuit was "the product of collusion" and a "fraud on the court." The settlement was reached as Williams was weighing whether she even had jurisdiction over the case. 

In her order, Williams said that there was no case or controversy for the court to decide. Since it was filed by Mr. Trump against a federal agency and officials that he, as president, had control over, there would be no adverse litigant, she found. Williams determined that Mr. Trump "improperly employed this lawsuit to justify a particular award in this matter — access to taxpayer funds and exemption from audits and other investigations — which was accomplished by leveraging control over Defendants."

"President Trump did not pursue his claims until he once again occupied the White House and had appointed his former lawyer, and the former lawyer of persons who are putative beneficiaries of the 'Anti-Weaponization Fund' to prominent positions in the DOJ," she wrote in her order. "These officials then negotiated on behalf of the United States, with his current lawyers, including his former White House Counsel to reach a 'settlement.' It is risible to suggest that there was ever adverseness between the Parties."

Williams excoriated the Justice Department for its handling of the case and accused it of "abdicating its responsibility to zealously defend the interests of the United States." By entering into the settlement with Mr. Trump, Williams said the administration "disregarded DOJ policies, and accomplished objectives beyond those authorized, as well as those specifically prohibited, by law."

"The nature of the suit itself and the conduct of the Parties and counsel from its filing make plain that this was an attempt to use the Court to provide some legitimacy to an agreement to confer immunity to people and entities affiliated with the President and to earmark billions of dollars from American taxpayers to redress grievances not defined in the law," Williams wrote. "The President may be the functional 'dominus litus' of the Executive Branch, but as a party to a civil suit, he, as well as all the parties and lawyers before a court, are bound by the rules."

The judge, who was appointed by President Barack Obama, rejected characterizations of the case as "ordinary" by Mr. Trump and his lawyers, calling it a "startling misstatement."

"Lead Plaintiff and Defendants are public servants — the pinnacle of the Executive Branch — sworn to uphold the law, faithfully perform the duties of their office, and protect the interests of the American public," she wrote. "The issue before the Court is whether, instead, they ignored ethical norms, court rules, and legal authority to manipulate the judicial process. The issue is whether they did so to gild their efforts to gain unprecedented access to the public fisc with the patina of legitimacy. There is nothing 'ordinary' about this case."

Williams also took aim at the government lawyers working the case, saying the Trump administration "failed to defend this lawsuit or to respond to the Court's jurisdictional inquiry because its position would not withstand judicial scrutiny."

She said the $1.776 billion pledged for the "anti-weaponization" fund "speaks of a 'branding' effort rather than a deliberate and thoughtful calculation of damages."

The judge's order comes days before Blanche is set to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee for his confirmation hearing for attorney general. He is expected to face sharp questions regarding the creation of the "anti-weaponization" fund and the effective grant of immunity to Mr. Trump. The president formally nominated Blanche, who served as Mr. Trump's private criminal defense attorney, to lead the Justice Department last month.