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Is the US spending $50 million for condoms for Hamas? Here are the facts behind White House claim

During a signing ceremony Wednesday for the Laken Riley Act, President Donald Trump claimed that his administration had “identified and stopped $50 million being sent to Gaza to buy condoms for Hamas.”

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, made a similar claim on Tuesday during her debut press briefing, stating that the Department of Government Efficiency and the Office of Management and Budget “found that there was about to be 50 million taxpayer dollars that went out the door to fund condoms in Gaza.” She called the alleged aid “a preposterous waste of taxpayer money.”

But there’s no credible evidence to support these claims. Here’s a closer look at the facts:

CLAIM: The Trump administration stopped $50 million from being sent to the Gaza Strip to buy condoms for Hamas.

THE FACTS: Trump and his spokesperson appeared to be referring to a grant or grants that USAID awarded to a group called the International Medical Corps worth $102.2 million to provide medical and trauma services in Gaza. The State Department earlier Wednesday described this as an example of “egregious funding” not aligned with American interests or the president’s policies.

State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce similarly wrote Tuesday on X that the agency had “prevented $102 million in unjustified funding to a contractor in Gaza, including money for contraception” thanks to a pause in foreign assistance.

However, the vast majority of that money was to fund mobile emergency hospitals and trauma centers and to send doctors, surgeons and other medical and mental health professionals to assist with the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, according to IMC. This included water, sanitation and hygiene services and prenatal and postnatal care.

If condoms were part of the hygiene component, they would not have accounted for nearly half of the grant money.

Refugees International President Jeremy Konyndyk, who oversaw USAID’s COVID-19 assistance portfolio for the Biden administration, refuted Trump and Leavitt’s claims Wednesday on X.

“USAID procures condoms for around $0.05 apiece,” he wrote. “$50m would be ONE BILLION condoms. What’s going on here is NOT a billion condoms for Gaza. What’s going on is that the bros at DOGE apparently can’t read govt spreadsheets.”

USAID’s financial year 2023 report on contraceptive and condom shipments, the most recent data available, notes that only one Middle Eastern country — Jordan — received a small shipment of injectables and oral contraceptives valued at $45,680 for government programs only. This was USAID’s first shipment to the Middle East since financial year 2019.

USAID reports from the first three-quarters of 2024 show the only family planning programs funded by the agency in the Middle East were in Jordan and Yemen.

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High school football coaches have mixed reactions to Super 7 championships in Mobile

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Decatur man, 70, dies after crash between car, tractor-trailer in north Alabama

A 70-year-old man was killed and a 73-year-old woman was injured following a wreck between a car and a tractor-trailer Tuesday night in Lawrence County, authorities said Wednesday.

Daniel G. Chenault, 70, of Decatur, was driving a 2025 Hyundai Santa Fe on Alabama State Route 20 around 6:30 p.m. Tuesday when the car struck a 2023 Freightliner Cascadia tractor-trailer near Trinity, in Lawrence County, said Alabama Law Enforcement Agency Senior Trooper Gregory Corble.

Chenault was taken to Decatur General Hospital, where he died of his injuries, Corble said.

Patricia Chenault, 73, who was a passenger in the Santa Fe, was injured and taken to Decatur General Hospital for treatment of unspecified injuries.

Further information was unavailable as state troopers continued investigating the wreck.

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Woman charged with murder in fatal shooting of father of 5 in Birmingham

A woman has been charged in the Monday night shooting death of her ex-boyfriend in Birmingham.

Vivian Simone Brantley, 24, is charged with murder in the slaying of 47-year-old Damian Dawson, a father of five.

Brantley surrendered to police hours after Dawson was killed and booked into the Birmingham City Jail. The warrant against her was issued Wednesday by Jefferson County District Attorney’s Office.

The fatal shots rang out about 5:40 p.m. in the 100 block of Ninth Court West. That area is near the College Hills community.

Officer Truman Fitzgerald said North Precinct officers were dispatched to the neighborhood on a report of a person shot.

They arrived to find Dawson in the driveway of a family member’s home.

Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service rushed him to UAB Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 6:01 p.m.

Family members are devastated by his death.

Dawson was in a new relationship, and Brantley couldn’t take it, they said..

“Five minutes of anger,’’ said his sister, Jennifer Pritchett, ended with his life being taken.’’

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What Miami teammates said about new Alabama WR Isaiah Horton: ‘He’s ready to blow up’

Alabama football fortified its wide receivers room through the transfer portal early in the offseason, signing former Miami wideout Isaiah Horton. His Hurricane teammates who spoke to reporters in Mobile Wednesday ahead of the Senior Bowl said the Crimson Tide is getting better with Horton’s addition.

Wide receiver Xavier Restrepo spoke of Horton’s attributes.

“He’s a one-on-one nightmare,” Restraepo said. “Matchup nightmare. He’s a great guy off the field as well. He;s created some really good habits just watching me and Cam (Ward) this past year. The guy’s dangerous. He knows football, has great hands, great size and he has deceptive speed.”

Former Miami tight end Elijah Arroyo said he and Horton remain good friends. He raved about what the wideout can bring to Tuscaloosa.

“That’s my guy,” Arroyo said. “They’re getting a dog. He’s a hard worker. He’s gonna put his head down and do what he has to do to succeed on the field.”

Horton caught 56 passes throughout the 2024 season, going for 616 yards and five touchdowns. The Murfreesboro, Tenn. spent three seasons with Miami before entering the portal.

Arroyo later praised Horton’s presence off the field.

“He cares about other people,” Arroyo said. “A lot of people say wide receivers are kind of selfish people. He’s not that at all. He cares about us. He cares about the team. He’s very selfless, he puts the team first as well, and that’s what I admire about him.”

Offensive lineman Jalen Rivers agreed with his teammates’ assessment of the new Alabama receiver. He described the physical attributes that make Horton effective.

“A long body,” Rivers said. “Tall. Catches the ball. He can make plays. He’s consistent and he has that edge about him that he wants to get better. He doesn’t want to settle. To be great you have to think that, you have to have that mindset, so he has that.”

Alabama will have two starting receivers return for the 2025 season, in Germie Bernard and Ryan Williams. Still, Horton will have the opportunity to make a major impact.

Restrepo explained what Horton needs to do in order to make a step for the Tide next season.

“He has to just keep on being consistent,” Restrepo said. “There were highs and lows last year, but that guy’s ready to take the step. I’ve talked to him recently, I mean he’s ready to blow up.”

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Cousins charged with capital murder in death of missing man found in Birmingham woods

Charges have been filed in the slaying of a 32-year-old found dead in a west Birmingham wooded area.

Juan Chapman, who had been missing since the weekend, died from a gunshot wound, the Jefferson County Coroner’s Office said Wednesday.

Birmingham police have charged Wilbert Reynolds Jr., 51, of Birmingham, and Dexter Jemison, 54, of Bessemer with capital murder. The suspects are cousins.

They were taken into custody by the department’s Crime Reduction Team at a west Birmingham home. Officer Truman Fitzgerald said they were arrested within hours of the discovery of Chapman’s body.

Detectives have identified the potential motive but are not releasing it at this time.

Fitzgerald said the charge is capital murder because Chapman was in a vehicle when he was killed.

Birmingham police on the scene of a homicide in the 2100 block of Carlos Avenue on Jan. 27, 2025.Carol Robinson

Family members of Chapman found him in the woods in the 2000 block of Carlos Avenue just before 3 p.m. Monday.

Chapman was reported missing to police by family earlier Monday. He had, however, been missing since the weekend and relatives had been out searching for him.

Roughly two dozen friends and relatives flocked to the crime scene, visibly distraught and emotional.

The suspects will be held without bond in the Jefferson County Jail.

Anyone with additional information is asked to call detectives at 205-254-1764 or Crime Stoppers at 205-254-7777.

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Why Hugh Freeze is taking different approach to spring practice in 2025

Auburn football will start spring practice later than usual in 2025, creating a practice schedule head coach Hugh Freeze compared to an NFL schedule.

When speaking to reporters at Senior Bowl practice Wednesday, Freeze said Auburn won’t start spring practice until after spring break (March 10-14) and 247Sports reported that the start date will be March 25.

Freeze joked that he wished they didn’t have spring ball, adding that he’d prefer to have OTAs in June, similar to the NFL.

“I wish they could just be with Dom (Studzinski) and work and get their bodies in the best shape of their life, and us do individual and walk throughs,” Freeze said. “Now I’m not saying not do any ball, but no hitting.

“I wish we would try that one spring and see if our kids aren’t in better shape, better health and ready to roll come fall camp, obviously with, give us 10 days in June, and then you get back in the weight room for July.”

Auburn’s A-Day Spring Game is scheduled for April 12, meaning spring practice will last around three weeks. Freeze said the team will practice four days per week.

“One day is going to be truly NFL. Teach, no pads. So we’ll go Tuesday, Thursday mornings. Friday afternoons will be that, and Saturdays we’ll get after it pretty good,” Freeze said.

Last year, Auburn started spring practice on Feb. 27, almost a month earlier than when the Tigers will start spring ball in 2025. It compacts the practice window, a change from last year when A-Day was not until April 6, over a month after spring practice began.

Peter Rauterkus covers Auburn sports for AL.com. You can follow him on X at @peter_rauterkus or email him at [email protected]m

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Montgomery police warn person who shot a child: ‘We are coming for you’

Overnight gunfire in Montgomery left a young boy with critical injuries.

Police and fire medics were dispatched about 12:30 a.m. Wednesday to the 3200 block of Raintree Drive on a report of a person shot.

They arrived to find the boy with life-threatening injuries. He was rushed to the hospital.

“This type of offense touches everyone in this department deeply,’’ Montgomery Police Chief Jim Graboys said in a 5 p.m. press conference.

Few details have been released about the shooting.

The chief said he would not provide the victim’s age but described him as a “young child.”

The shooting happened, he said, “inside of a building.” He did not elaborate.

Graboys said the shooting appeared to be targeted at someone, but not the child.

“I do not believe this was a random event,’’ he said.

Central Alabama Crime Stoppers said a red Nissan Altima was seen in the area at the time of the shooting.

The agency is offering a $5,000 reward for information that leads police to the suspect or suspects.

To the victim and his family, Graboys said, “Our hearts, prayers and feelings are extended to you with the hope of a good and healthy recovery for the young victim.”

“That ultimately our deepest wish in all of this, for the welfare of the family and the welfare of that victim,’’ he said. “And I cannot over-emphasize and overstate that.”

He said police have been working on the case non-stop since it happened.

To the criminal who committed what the chief described as a senseless and heinous act, Graboys said, “Your actions harmed an innocent child. Turn yourself in before things get worse for you because the Montgomery Police Department and our local, state and federal partners will not tolerate or accept it. We will find you and hold you accountable.”

“You will be looking over your shoulder because we are coming for you,’’ he said.

“I will not hide may anger at this,” Graboys said, “and it translates to the people who work with me.”

Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 334-215-STOP, Montgomery police at 334-625-2831 or the Secret Witness tip line at 334-625-4000.

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Alabama museum leader says Trump freeze is ‘Existential threat to our organization’

Turmoil generated by the Trump administration’s abortive attempt at a broad freeze on loans and grants has generated a fiery response from the head of one Mobile arts institutions, who decries it as part of an attempt to pull the plug “on any microphone or platform that uplifts voices that are otherwise unheard.”

The missive from elizabet elliott, executive director of the Alabama Contemporary Art Center (ACAC) in Mobile, follows chaotic developments in federal funding. As reported by the Associated Press, on Monday the Office of Management and Budget issued a memo saying that federal agencies “must temporarily pause all activities related to obligation or disbursement of all Federal financial assistance.”

According to CNN, the memo specified that the pause would not affect Social Security or Medicare, or “assistance provided directly to individuals.” And a White House press secretary said it was “not a blanket pause on federal assistance and grant programs.”

However, its apparent breadth and abruptness generated both concern and lawsuits. On Tuesday a federal judge stayed it until at least Monday, and on Wednesday the Trump administration rescinded the specific memorandum, though White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that “The Executive Orders issued by the President on funding reviews remain in full force and effect and will be rigorously implemented by all agencies and departments.”

RELATED: Trump rescinds federal funding freeze that set off panic, confusion

Amid Wednesday’s developments, elliott issued a call to action titled “I believe in what we do.” Aimed at the ACAC’s base of supporters, it encouraged them to donate to the center, to help protect it from funding cuts, and to contact state and local officials with their concerns.

“The impending freeze on National arts funding is an existential threat to our organization and the local arts community,” elliott said in the message. “In the coming weeks we will find out whether or not we must cancel $100,000 worth of project spending that was scheduled to support artists who’ve been working on projects for two years already. There is a further $250,000 annual injury between federal and State managed arts funding as the impact cascades through our community. We depend on these resources and have always worked to bring resources into this community that are otherwise inaccessible. On multiple fronts our leaders are divesting the cultural agency of small communities. They are pulling the plug on any microphone or platform that uplifts voices that are otherwise unheard and they are doing so to keep unaccountable power intact.”

“We believe our community deserves investment in the arts,” elliott said in her call. “We put that belief into action everyday and we build new paths forward for our community’s most talented and innovative thinkers. We facilitate risk and support grand new ideas, we lean into not what is, but what is possible. … The world I want to create is as complex and varied as the folks in it, and sees quality of life as a shared responsibility that cannot be divided up into private interests. I make the world for you, and you make it for me. The world I want to create lifts up art for the sake of lifting up what we love, what we hope for, and who we aspire to be to each other.”

Elliott said that given the uncertainties of the proposed freeze, she simply doesn’t know whether her institution will lose critical funding, or if it already has. The Alabama State Council on the Arts recently shared the news that 12 Alabama institutions had received direct funding from the NEA totaling more than a quarter-million dollars. Amid the allocations for organizations including the Alabama Symphony Orchestra, the Alabama Shakespeare Festival and the Kentuck Museum Association was $40,000 for ACAC.

“As of today the NEA award we announced on the 15th still hasn’t been reactivated,” said elliott. “The rescinded order should mean that it will, but these are not agile systems, and arts funding that otherwise seemed reliable might reverse course.”

“Like with the pandemic, the full extent of the harm isn’t immediately apparent,” said elliott. “There are ways that this, and the decisions to follow in the next few weeks, are going to fundamentally re-shape the arts funding landscape underfoot. Private foundations aren’t immune to political discourse, and the economy is deeply affected by our expectations of the future, it rises and falls with our ideas about what happens next. That’s all to say i won’t know how this fully affects us until later.”

She said she anticipates the effort to slash funding will continue.

“The arts are a favorite scapegoat for anyone looking for one,” she said. “Part of this is the arts are culturally seen simultaneously as a luxury for the elite, and a bastion for revolutionaries and radicals. Simultaneously having no relevance and too much relevance. Either of these ideas fail to map art’s role and felt experience in communities like Mobile. If the political agenda is to silence diverse voices, as it pretty clearly articulates, the arts are a primary vehicle for those voices.”

Beyond that, she said, shriveling arts funding may well create a brain-drain problem for cities the size of Mobile and for less wealthy states such as Alabama.

“Because we built the system based on the idea of ’trickle down economics’ the failures will trickle down,” she said. “If the NEA contracts, the regional agencies are next, then state level then local. The only organizations that will survive are those that are free-standing on a trust or endowment. We’ll see all arts and cultural opportunities shrink back into major cities with major donors, and we will hemorrhage all talent in our workforce and in our community harder than we do currently. Although we produce culture (music, visual art, writing) at a rate as high or higher than other places, the Deep South doesn’t have the economic muscle to fully leverage the cultural assets we create. We won’t even be able to export them and all benefit of cultural production in the South will be extracted by folks and places with means.”

At the moment, she said, it’s hard to even develop plans for a worst-case scenario.

“Lord, man,” she said. “I don’t know that there is a contingency plan that survives a long-term total freeze on arts funding.”

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Hugh Freeze shares thoughts on new quarterbacks Deuce Knight and Ashton Daniels

There was arguably no other signee with more attention in Auburn’s 2025 class than Deuce Knight, a five-star quarterback who flipped from Notre Dame.

Knight, who played high school football at George County High School in Mississippi, flipped to Auburn on Oct. 2, and the Tigers held off a push from Ole Miss to keep the blue-chip signal caller in their class.

He enrolled early at Auburn, meaning he already arrived on campus when the spring semester began in January. That allowed head coach Hugh Freeze to already spend some time around him, and he had good things to say about Knight when speaking to reporters at Senior Bowl practice Wednesday.

“Man, the maturity he’s got. Even after we recruited him, I still wasn’t quite as aware,” Freeze said of Knight. “He’s in there studying every day. And man, he doesn’t want to wait around to be great. He’s trying hard now to pick up every drop of knowledge that he can.”

Knight was one of four new quarterbacks Auburn signed going into the 2025 season, joining Jackson Arnold, Ashton Daniels and Tanner Bailey. While Arnold is the early favorite to be the starter, Freeze spoke highly of Daniels, who comes to Auburn after starting for two seasons at Stanford.

Unlike the others, though, Daniels won’t join the team until the summer. He threw for 3,947 yards, 21 touchdowns and 20 interceptions during his two seasons as a starter, but Freeze pointed out that he’ll have more talent around him at Auburn.

“I don’t want to say this has a slap toward anyone, but he didn’t have a lot around him, and he still produced significant, significant yards,” Freeze said.

Freeze was most complimentary about Daniels’ ability as runner. Daniels rushed for 669 yards and three touchdowns during his final season at Stanford, adding dual threat ability that fits what Auburn does on offense. Not only did Freeze like the physical tools the Stanford transfer brings, he praised the mental aspect of Daniels’ game.

“He’s going to come in with a mentality, and he’s got, I mean, his knowledge of the game, his IQ is extremely high,” Freeze said.

Peter Rauterkus covers Auburn sports for AL.com. You can follow him on X at @peter_rauterkus or email him at [email protected]m

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