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America needs the full truth on Fauci's coverups and ALL federal pandemic abuses

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Legal Prosecution: david morens faces charges for destroying official records linked to the origins of covid 19
  • Administrative Deception: records and emails indicate government officials intentionally bypassed public disclosure requirements using private communication channels
  • Funding Controversies: federal agencies directed grants toward research involving virus manipulation at wuhan based laboratories
  • Natural Origin Theory: high level officials promoted specific narratives regarding the virus to deflect accountability for research activities
  • Censorship Allegations: government and technology entities allegedly coordinated to suppress dissenting views and questioning of the official pandemic timeline
  • Political Pardons: recent executive action provides legal immunity to anthony fauci despite widespread public criticism of his regulatory conduct
  • Accountability Demands: observers advocate for the removal of pensions and further congressional testimony from figures involved in pandemic era health policy
  • Institutional Mistrust: public confidence remains eroded due to the perceived politicization of federal health initiatives and school closure mandates

The prosecution of Dr. David Morens on charges of blocking investigations into COVID’s origins can’t be the end of the nation’s search for truth in this affair: Even if the 11th-hour Biden pardon of Dr. Anthony Fauci keeps him out of prison, Americans need the full facts.

Morens worked under Fauci at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; he stands charged with destroying and concealing official records on the bug’s birth — in an evident effort to protect his boss.

Plenty of evidence shows Fauci conspired with National Institutes of Health head Francis Collins to quash any inquiry into COVID’s origins within the Wuhan Institute of Virology — which did NIH/NIAID-funded research into coronaviruses in the years before the pandemic, despite the federal ban on such “gain of function” experiments. 

Emails show Moren bragging of his coverups despite the Freedom of Information Act: “[I] learned from our foia [sic] lady here how to make emails disappear after I am foia’d [sic] but before the search starts”; “There is no worry about FOIAs. I can either send stuff to Tony on his private Gmail, or hand it to him at work or at his house.”

All this helped conceal Fauci’s ongoing coordination with Peter Daszak — the chief of the EcoHealth Alliance, the outfit Fauci directed grants for that gain-of-function research at WIV.

That work specifically aimed to manipulate coronaviruses at the “furin cleavage site” — the crucial mutation that practically fingerprints the COVID virus. 

This is almost certainly why Fauci & Co. ran their con game around insisting the virus had a natural origin: If the then-locked-down public learned US officials had funded reckless scientists possibly creating the pandemic bug at a poorly-secured overseas lab, those officials could face prison for life.

Especially when the Fauci crew also endorsed the policies that closed schools, ruined businesses and forced loved ones to die alone in hospitals.

The CIA, FBI and the Department of Energy’s renowned Livermore Labs all now view COVID-19 as most likely man-made.

While we — thanks in large part to Fauci & Co. — can never be 100% sure of that, the balance of probabilities lies strongly against the natural-origin theory. 

Fauci, Collins, and Morens lied to conceal this fact.

The media took up their lies and declared them canon; so too did countless law- and policymakers. 

Morens faces more than five decades if convicted on all charges, yet he’s clearly a little fish compared to Fauci, who repeatedly played word games to deny his involvement in funding gain-of-function research, brazenly lying to Congress and conspired with Collins to use their power to bully researchers into endorsing the natural-origin theory.

He demonized anyone daring to criticize him, on this or any other issue, as attacking science itself — and created the atmosphere in which any dissent from or even curiosity about the natural-origin theory was swiftly punished by public opprobrium.

Or, in the case of this newspaper, naked censorship via an unholy collaboration between Big Tech and Big Government.

Fauci’s pardon means he can’t plead the 5th if called to testify before Congress on all this — and if he doesn’t come clean, it won’t protect him from perjury charges; the House and Senate should be requiring him to answer publicly now.

He should also lose his hefty government pension: This already vastly wealthy (after a lifetime in public service, hmm) man doesn’t deserve a single dime more from the taxpayers he lied to.

Nor can this be the end of the search for truth and justice: The public also needs to learn the full facts on the Biden administration’s campaigns to conceal vaccine risks and otherwise politicize the nation’s COVID response.

Force testimony from Randi Weingarten and the health officials she worked with to keep the nation’s schools closed, too.

Epic COVID-era abuses of federal power have rightly brought public trust in science and government to epic lows; the only way to repair that damage is to uncover all the rocks and bathe the squirming bugs beneath them in the brightest possible sunlight.

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‘We Know You Live Right Here’: No Secrets in America’s New Surveillance Dragnet - WSJ

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Expanding Federal Surveillance: hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars are fueling an extensive dragnet that tracks citizens through personal data and real time location monitoring
  • Corporate Data Exploitation: federal agencies increasingly rely on private contractors like palantir deloitte and nec to synthesize public and private information for state use
  • Invasive Technological Tools: agents utilize advanced equipment including facial recognition social media scrapers and phone hacking software to monitor daily movements
  • Questionable Tactical Usage: surveillance tools originally intended for terror prevention are now deployed against mundane domestic observers and peaceful protesters
  • Constitutional Boundary Testing: legal and ethical standards are being eroded as agents conduct warrantless arrests and intimidate citizens who document government activities
  • Bureaucratic Information Hoarding: the government maintains a vast repository of biometric and travel data on hundreds of millions of people to facilitate aggressive enforcement
  • Questionable Official Claims: departmental denials regarding the misuse of civil liberties contrast sharply with reports of agents targeting individuals for political dissent
  • High Cost Enforcement: congress and the current administration continue to inflate spending on secretive surveillance apparatuses despite growing public and legislative unease

Illustration of a hand holding a cell phone between two human silhouettes in red and black, representing surveillance. Alexandra Citrin-Safadi/WSJ

April 30, 2026 9:00 pm ET

Liz McLellan spent a morning in January witnessing the work of federal agents who had arrived in Maine to pursue the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

Like other community activists, protesters and passersby around the U.S., McLellan took photos, including of an arrest. Then she followed a federal officer driving an unmarked vehicle to see where the agent was headed next.

McLellan was surprised when the agent led her to her own house and blocked her driveway. Other federal officers quickly arrived, boxing in her car with their own vehicles.

“This is a warning,” an agent told her, according to court records and a video recording. “We know you live right here.” 

Immigration agents conducting an arrest in Westbrook, Maine.Liz McLellan took this photo of federal immigration agents making an arrest on Jan. 21 in Westbrook, Maine. Then an agent held up his phone to McLellan’s face. Agents went to McLellan’s house not long after. Liz McLellan

In the battle against illegal immigration, the U.S. is spending hundreds of millions of dollars on tools that give federal agents easy access to the home and workplace addresses of American citizens, their social-media accounts, vehicle information, flight history, law-enforcement records and other personal information, as well as data to track their daily comings and goings, The Wall Street Journal found. 

This newly expanded domestic surveillance system, a high-tech dragnet built to locate, track and deport people residing illegally in the U.S., allows thousands of federal agents nationwide to peruse a trove of data belonging to more than 300 million people, including citizens.

The government's tracking system relies on an amalgam of public and private information sifted, sorted and packaged by contractors that include Palantir Technologies, Deloitte, Japanese conglomerate NEC and smaller spyware specialists.

The Department of Homeland Security has put these surveillance tools—facial-recognition software, location tracking and social-media scrapers once aimed largely at suspected terrorists and drug-traffickers—in the hands of federal immigration agents, who can identify, research and track virtually anyone by entering a name, license plate or by simply taking a person's photo.

The government surveillance system has advanced since the 9/11 terrorist attacks with the aid of artificial intelligence and the linking of government records with far-reaching commercial databases. It has been used against people whom the government alleged opposed or obstructed the immigration crackdown.

As agents gain more powerful tools—including the ability to crack encrypted messaging apps and scan a person’s WhatsApp and Reddit—department limits on their use are shrinking, according to interviews and a Journal review of DHS policy documents.

Privacy experts and former department employees say the administration is aggressively interpreting existing rules and ignoring limits set by prior administrations. The immigration crackdown is testing the legal and ethical boundaries of citizen surveillance and privacy rights, according to former department officials. 

In addition to McLellan, 48 years old, at least four other Maine residents say they were singled out and threatened after observing the work of federal agents, according to court records. Two of the people in a continuing civil rights lawsuit accuse DHS of unlawfully using their license plates and biometric data to track and intimidate them for exercising their First Amendment rights. DHS said it operates in full accordance with the law.

“The retaliation we’ve seen against Americans who chose to lawfully record DHS activities should alarm everyone,” said Rush Atkinson, a former Justice Department attorney who is representing the two people in the case. “This is a fundamental First Amendment right, and the public has the right to know why the government is collecting data on those who peacefully protest.”

ICE agents in tactical gear face a group of observers filming them with cell phones in a snowy, wooded area.Observers recording ICE agents on Feb. 5 in Minneapolis. Stephen Maturen/Getty Images
Law enforcement agents in tactical vests knock on a house door in a snowy neighborhood.Federal immigration agents knocking at a residence in Minneapolis on Jan. 9. Bridget Bennett for WSJ

With the backing of Congress and President Trump, DHS spent a record $425 million on surveillance tech in the past year, a 17% increase from the prior year. Federal spending is on pace to set another record in 2026, according to an analysis of federal contract data by the Journal. DHS received $191 billion for immigration enforcement in last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. 

Some Democratic lawmakers have questioned the department’s use of surveillance technology, including cellphone hacking tools. In response to those concerns, the DHS inspector general announced in February an investigation into the department’s collection of biometric data.

Civil rights groups and others have filed four federal lawsuits alleging the department’s use of surveillance tools to revoke visas and arrest immigrants without warrants, or to threaten bystanders observing federal agents, were all violations of the Constitution. DHS denied wrongdoing in those cases.

Enforcing immigration law “is essential to protecting America’s national security, public safety and economic strength,” DHS said in response to questions.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement is responsible for tracking more than 7 million immigrants, including those ordered out of the U.S., released from detention or who await an immigration court hearing, DHS said. 

“We are not going to divulge law enforcement-sensitive methods,” DHS said, but the department employs various forms of technology, while “respecting civil liberties and privacy interests.”

“We do of course monitor and investigate and refer all threats, assaults and obstruction of our officers to the appropriate law enforcement,” DHS said. “Our law enforcement methods follow the U.S. Constitution.”

Who’s who

Palantir is the top beneficiary of DHS’s stepped-up spending on deportation and surveillance work, according to a Journal review of government records, contracts, documents describing privacy concerns and people familiar with the matter.

Palantir quadrupled its DHS contracts to $81.3 million after Trump’s return to the Oval Office last year, largely for work linking data streams for use in immigration enforcement. The department in February signed a four-year, $1 billion blanket agreement that allows for continuing work from the Miami-based data analysis company.

Last year, DHS paid Palantir $30 million to put a broad span of information about individuals into an app on agents’ smartphones, allowing them to plot the location of people in the U.S. The app, known as Enhanced Leads Identification and Targeting for Enforcement, or ELITE, lets officers research and track individuals based on criminal history, license plate searches, name, date of birth or locations. 

The results display on a map or as a list, according to ICE agents. The app pulls from a variety of government databases, including information compiled by private investigators known as “skip tracers” who track the current addresses of individuals. “Our work is focused on the address fidelity of noncitizens,” a Palantir spokeswoman said.

An ICE agent during court testimony last year compared ELITE to Google Maps: Targets appear as pins on a map, clustered around addresses where immigrants, including “lawful permanent residents,” are likely to live, court records show. 

Attendees and U.S. Customs and Border Protection and Border Patrol agents at the Border Security Expo.Federal immigration agents chatting in April at the Border Security Expo in Phoenix. Rebecca Noble/Reuters
Palantir CEO Alex Karp talking with employees in an office setting.Palantir CEO Alex Karp speaking with employees at a company office in Washington last year. Stephen Voss for WSJ

Immigration agents used ELITE to identify an apartment complex outside Portland, Ore., in a town populated by agricultural workers, according to court records. On an early October morning, federal officers watched a white van leave the parking lot. 

They radioed the van’s license plate number to a field team, and the query returned the name of an immigrant on their target list. Agents pulled the van over and, without a search or an arrest warrant, handcuffed the driver and passengers, according to court records from a continuing federal lawsuit.

One ICE agent testified in court that the arrests were justified because at least one individual refused to share their name. That made the individual a flight risk with “no way to go locate this person again,” the agent said. Immigration law allows officers to make warrantless arrests if someone is both in the U.S. illegally and likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained.

In February, the federal judge in the case found that ICE was “casting dragnets over Oregon towns” and held that warrantless arrests made, in part, from use of ELITE violated the Constitution because federal agents determined several people were flight risks only after they were in custody—rather than because agents had probable cause before making an arrest.

A federal immigration officer uses a facial recognition program on a man attending a hearing.A federal immigration agent using a facial recognition tool on a person at a hearing with his family last year at an immigration court in New York. The man was detained briefly and released. David Dee Delgado/Reuters
Silhouettes of two people walk past the entrance of the GEO Group Adelanto ICE Processing Center, with the DHS flag visible inside.Visitors leaving a detention facility used by ICE last year in Adelanto, Calif. Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images


Through the year beginning in January 2025, the U.S. paid consulting firms, including Deloitte, $130 million, to aid ICE’s deportation efforts and law enforcement support work. New consultant contracts call for analysts to monitor people on social media, identify threats and create dossiers about people who make them.

DHS awarded $15 million to tech company Cellebrite for forensic tools to unlock phones and extract call logs, GPS location data, text messages, deleted photos, contacts and email addresses, DHS documents show. CBP renewed agreements with vehicle-forensics firm Berla to retrieve data, including travel history, from the vehicles of suspects.

Last year, DHS reactivated a $2 million contract with the U.S. subsidiary of Israeli spyware company Paragon Solutions, which makes Graphite, a hacking tool that can infiltrate encrypted messaging apps such as Signal and WhatsApp.

ICE agents can access vehicle information and travel history from databases that collect information from electronic license-plate readers installed on highways and at the U.S. border. DHS paid $20 million last year to data brokers, including Thomson Reuters and LexisNexis, which said its tools aren’t used for “monitoring.”

Nearly $21 million went to companies that track and identify targets with biometric technology. That included $8 million to NEC for a facial-recognition algorithm that identifies passengers boarding planes. DHS rolled out an app last year that allows agents to identify people from images, using NEC technology. DHS also expanded its use of Clearview AI, another facial-recognition database, which contains more than 70 billion photos. 

NEC, which for years has aided airport screening for CBP, processed photo images of roughly 200 million travelers, according to congressional testimony. “We provide technology in accordance with U.S. law and contractual agreements,” an NEC spokesperson told the Journal.

In March last year, DHS deployed Mobile Fortify, an app that allows agents to point their phone camera at a person’s face and retrieve names, birth dates, citizenship or immigration status and information about family members, government documents show.

Around the same time, DHS officials deleted policy memos that set limits on the use of facial recognition in investigations, according to former department officials. The department archived and later restored mention of a policy that said the government can’t investigate individuals lawfully protesting government activities.

One DHS staffer who worked last year in the office that developed policies on border and immigration practices said even his team wasn’t sure what the agency’s rules were.

DHS policies governing facial-recognition and face-capture technologies remain unchanged, the department spokeswoman said.

In the Oregon case, agents took a photo of one individual and Mobile Fortify gave two possible identities, both of them wrong, according to court records.

‘Domestic terrorist’

In October, Marimar Martinez, en route to a Chicago church to donate clothes, saw an unmarked vehicle she suspected was carrying federal agents. She called out a warning to residents in Spanish, La migra! La migra! 

Martinez, a 31-year-old teaching assistant, had no clue she was under government watch.

Marimar Martinez, a U.S. citizen who was shot by a U.S. Border Patrol agent, in a portrait with half of her face in sunlight and half in shadow.Marimar Martinez, a U.S. citizen who was shot by a Border Patrol agent in 2025, at a relative’s home on April 11 in Chicago. Jamie Kelter Davis for WSJ

Federal agents knew Martinez had reshared a Facebook post ostensibly identifying an immigration officer’s personal YouTube account. Within a day of her sharing the post, CBP circulated her name and photo with a warning to agents in the field: Martinez, a U.S. citizen, was a potential threat.

She was following the unmarked vehicle and shouting her warning less than a week after she drew the government’s scrutiny. The two vehicles collided, officers got out and the driver, a Border Patrol agent, shot her five times.

Martinez, who survived her injuries, was called a “domestic terrorist” by DHS officials. She was charged with assaulting an officer by using her car as a weapon, a felony crime that carried a maximum prison sentence of 20 years. 

Martinez said the vehicle carrying federal agents sideswiped her. “They said I, quote unquote, rammed federal agents,” she said at a congressional hearing in February. “If they only knew I was a month away from paying off my truck, and I would never intentionally damage my vehicle, much less be crazy enough to hit” law-enforcement officers.

Body camera video from a responding officer shows Border Patrol Agent Charles Exum exiting the vehicle with his gun drawn. The shots he fired at Martinez can be heard seconds later. Cheronis & Parente LLC
A person holding a phone shows a photo of Marimar Martinez in a hospital bed with a visible injury on her right arm.A photo of Marimar Martinez’s injuries after her shooting by a federal agent in October 2025. Jamie Kelter Davis for WSJ

Federal investigators used data from a network of license-plate readers and traffic-surveillance cameras collected by local police to retrace her movements in the days before the shooting, court documents show. They showed her running errands and commuting to work, according to Martinez’s lawyer.

The tracking information originated from Flock Safety, which contracts its services to about 100 police departments in the Chicago metropolitan area. “It is not Flock’s job to determine who should share or collaborate with the federal government,” said Joshua Thomas, a spokesman for the company, which operates in 49 states.

The government moved to drop its case against Martinez a month after the shooting, and the judge dismissed the charges. 

Martinez would see her bullet scars for life, she said at the congressional hearing, but “perhaps even worse, the mental scars will always be there as a reminder of the time my own government attempted to execute me.”

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Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Appeared in the May 2, 2026, print edition as '‘We Know You Live Right Here’: No Secrets in America’s New Surveillance Dragnet'.

Alexandra Citrin-Safadi is a senior illustrator and art editor at The Wall Street Journal, with a focus on editorial art for sensitive reporting beats. She joined the Journal in 2022, working with the finance desk before taking on a broader newsroom position in 2024.

Previously, she held art director positions at the New York Times, Quartz and Penguin Random House, among others. She has illustrated regularly for a number of national publications and books.

Alexandra's award-winning work has been recognized by the Society of Illustrators, American Illustration, the Society for News Design, 3x3 and the Society of Publication Designers.

She graduated from Skidmore College with a B.S. in Fine Art and received her M.F.A. in Illustration from the Maryland Institute College of Art. She is based in Brooklyn.

Hannah Critchfield is a reporter on The Wall Street Journal's investigations team. She specializes in narrative-driven investigative stories, often at the intersection of health care, criminal justice and immigration. Prior to joining the Journal, Hannah was an investigative reporter at the Tampa Bay Times, where her work earned recognition as a Goldsmith Award semifinalist in 2024 and won an Investigative Reporters and Editors Award in 2023. She chronicled hundreds of overdoses due to a virtually unregulated substance and revealed deaths of immigrant workers that had previously been obscured from federal officials. She was also part of the breaking news team that responded to back-to-back hurricanes in in Tampa Bay in 2024, the worst natural disasters to hit the region in more than century.

Previously, Hannah was a Report for America corps member in North Carolina and a reporter for the Phoenix New Times in Arizona. She is a graduate of Columbia Journalism School.

Shane Shifflett is a reporter for The Wall Street Journal covering topics at the intersection of finance and climate change. His stories have explored how regulators, small businesses, tech companies and debt collectors influence the economy. He joined the Journal in 2016 as a graphics reporter building interactive data visualizations. In 2019, he was among the paper's finalists for the Pulitzer Prize.

Before joining the Journal, he worked for the Huffington Post on a range of topics from the business of college athletics to the World Bank's policies protecting indigenous people. He began his career in California covering judicial conflicts of interest, local elections and transit for the Center for Investigative Reporting and the Bay Citizen.

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The People vs. Anthony Fauci // Prosecuting him is our last chance for Covid justice

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  • Statute of limitations deadline: Legal action against Dr. Anthony Fauci regarding potential false testimony to Congress must be initiated by May 11, marking five years since the relevant period.
  • Lab-leak hypothesis vs. official narratives: Public skepticism has grown toward the early zoonotic origin claims, while support for the theory that the virus escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology has been echoed by elements of the U.S. intelligence community.
  • Recent legal developments: The Department of Justice has indicted David Morens, a former NIAID official, for allegedly concealing federal records and conspiring to protect specific research grants related to the pandemic's origins.
  • Gain-of-function controversy: Testimony from NIH officials and internal documents suggest that U.S.-funded research at the Wuhan lab utilized techniques that meet technical definitions of gain-of-function work, contradicting previous categorical denials provided to Congress.
  • Allegations of deceptive conduct: Records indicate Dr. Fauci was involved in reviewing scientific papers designed to dismiss the lab-leak theory while simultaneously testifying that the NIH did not fund the controversial research activities in question.
  • Requirement for accountability: Proponents of further investigation argue that transparent legal proceedings are necessary to determine the full extent of U.S. government involvement in potentially dangerous viral research and to address alleged perjury regarding these expenditures.

Time is running out to prosecute Dr. Anthony Fauci. After May 11, Fauci — the man touted as “America’s doctor” during the pandemic and who led the US response — will be clear of the five-year statute of limitations. Past that date, he can’t be indicted over allegations that he lied to Congress about the origins of Covid or the US government’s role in funding research that may have led to the pandemic.

Six years after a contagion that killed millions and wrecked the global economy, one of the great unanswered questions of Covid is, how did it begin? Today, an overwhelming majority of Americans reject what in 2020 was more or less the official (but outlandish) story: namely, that the novel coronavirus sprang from a wet market in Wuhan, China, and somehow jumped from bats — or pangolins? — to humans. 

This zoonotic theory of Covid’s origins still enjoys the backing of some scientists, but it is bedeviled by questions proponents can’t seem to shake off. For one thing, what was the intermediate animal that supposedly facilitated transmission? Who was Patient Zero? And how was it that the epicenter of the pandemic just happened to be located in Wuhan — one of a few virology labs in China authorized for research on dangerous coronaviruses?

That latter question points to a different hypothesis for Covid’s origins: that it resulted from a lab leak at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, where researchers had been conducting cutting edge “gain-of-function” research, combining different viruses to create dangerous hybrids for the purpose of better understanding future infectious diseases. The lab-leak theory has been endorsed by at least one agency in the US Intelligence Community — the CIA.

Yet Americans and the wider world may never know the full truth unless these questions are subjected to a deep and rigorous examination — and a Fauci trial, conducted to the standard of “beyond a reasonable doubt,” may be the only means left for this. 

The justice system already appears to be tending in this direction. The Department of Justice this week charged David Morens — a former senior adviser to Fauci, then the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health. The government accuses Morens of conspiring against the United States and destroying records related to Covid’s onset, among other crimes (Morens is presumed innocent until proved guilty).

The Morens indictment mentions “co-conspirators.” Americans must know: was his then-boss, Fauci, one of them? What we already know makes it implausible that he wasn’t. That makes a formal indictment all the more urgent for truth and accountability.

Since the early days of Covid, much of the scientific establishment has been working to discredit the lab-leak theory. As head of NIAID during the pandemic and the face of the government’s response, Fauci was a key player in this effort. Early on, he dismissed as a “conspiracy theory” the notion that Covid might have been created in a lab and leaked by accident. Yet there are reasons to suspect that NIAID under the leadership of Fauci funded the research that may have created Covid.

The case against Fauci, if the Justice Department brings one in the coming days, will likely revolve around charges that he perjured himself in testimony before Congress about this question of research funding and Covid’s origins. At a Senate committee hearing in May 2021, Fauci categorically stated in a tense exchange with Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) that the NIH and NIAID did not fund gain-of-function research in Wuhan. 

“You are entirely and completely incorrect,” Fauci snapped at Paul. “The NIH has not ever and does not now fund gain-of-function research in the Wuhan Institute of Virology.” At a follow-up hearing in July 2021, Fauci got into it again with the Kentucky senator, saying he didn’t retract his May statement about gain-of-function funding. At one point, he jabbed a finger at Paul and shouted, “If anybody’s lying here, senator, it is you!”

But this week’s indictment of Morens for concealing federal records related to the pandemic has revived the debate about Fauci and created new pressure on the Trump DOJ to revisit Fauci’s truthfulness before Congress. 

The records in question have to do with precisely what Fauci has repeatedly denied: gain-of-function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology — funded by an NIH grant. According to the indictment, Morens pledged to help “Co-Conspirator 1,” described in the indictment as the head of a US-based nonprofit, restore a canceled NIH grant for “Company #1.” The canceled grant was titled, Understanding the Risk of Bat Coronavirus Emergence, and it was canceled amid allegations that Covid came from the Wuhan institute.

“Fauci was in a position to shed light on the origins of Covid at the moment the pandemic arrived on American shores.”

The descriptions of Co-Conspirator 1 and Company #1 point directly to Peter Daszak, former head of the now-defunct EcoHealth Alliance, which subcontracted a 2014 NIH grant to the Wuhan lab for gain-of-function research on bat coronaviruses. (Neither Daszak nor EcoHealth Alliance are named in the indictment, but reporting in The New York Times and elsewhere imply that they are indeed the person and entity referred to in the indictment). 

What’s more, the indictment alleges that these co-conspirators gave Morens “illegal gratuities” and wine for his “behind-the-scenes shenanigans.” As Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche put it in a statement: “Morens … allegedly identified an official act that he could perform to ‘deserve’ the gift, which was a scientific commentary in a prominent medical journal advocating that Covid-19 had natural origins.”

To put the dots together: The government’s case against Morens suggests that the NIH did approve a grant that funded precisely the kind of research that could have created Covid, in the very city where Covid first appeared. Once the pandemic broke out and EcoHealth Alliance lost its NIH funding, Morens allegedly tried to help restore this funding in his official capacity as a senior NIH official, but concealed his efforts to do so. It follows that Fauci’s statements before Congress categorically denying such funding were false.

The indictment also corroborates a statement by NIH principal deputy director Lawrence Tabak, who at a 2024 House committee hearing admitted that the US government funded gain-of-function research in Wuhan. Asked directly by then-Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-Ariz.) whether NIH funded gain-of-function research at the Wuhan lab through EcoHealth Alliance, Tabak said: “It depends on your definition of gain-of-function research. If you’re speaking about the generic term, yes, we did.”

Splitting hairs over what exactly constitutes gain-of-function research, or what the accepted definition of the term is, was a recurring feature of Fauci’s sparring in Senate hearings with Paul and other lawmakers during the pandemic. At a Senate hearing in November 2021, Paul brought up the gain-of-function research on bat coronaviruses that EcoHealth Alliance subcontracted to the Wuhan lab through its 2014 NIH grant. Fauci responded by calling Paul’s line of questioning an “egregious misrepresentation,” and insisting that his characterization of the research didn’t meet the NIH’s definition of gain of function, which was formalized by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy in January of 2017.

Yet Fauci’s own past statements uphold Paul’s definition of gain of function. In a June 2021 letter, Reps. James Comer and Jim Jordan — then the Republican ranking members of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform and the House Committee on the Judiciary, respectively — asked Fauci to reconcile his past statements with his May 2021 assertion under oath that the NIH never funded gain-of-function research at the Wuhan lab. 

The letter quoted Fauci at a 2012 conference on gain-of-function research at which he said: “what historically investigators have done is to actually create gain of function by making mutations, passage adoption, or other genetic techniques, such as reverse genetics.” The letter then quoted the 2014 NIH grant to EcoHealth Alliance, which allowed it to “test predictions of [coronavirus]…transmission…using reverse genetics…” In other words, NIH was contracting research that fit Fauci’s own definition of gain of function. 

“Using your own definition,” wrote Comer and Jordan, “it appears the NIH funded gain-of-function research at the [Wuhan Institute of Virology].” They closed their letter by asking Fauci to “explain the apparent discrepancy in your recent testimony.”

Fauci, who once claimed to personally embody science, has been widely criticized for playing fast and loose with the facts. In addition to his shifting statements about masking and social distancing protocols during the pandemic, he was secretly involved in a widely cited March 2020 paper published in the prestigious journal Nature Medicine on the “proximal origins” of Covid. The paper was designed specifically to discredit the idea of a lab leak. “Our analyses clearly show that SARS-CoV-2 is not a laboratory construct or a purposefully manipulated virus,” the authors stated. “We do not believe that any type of laboratory-based scenario is plausible.”

Fauci mentioned this paper to White House reporters in April 2020 as evidence against the lab-leak theory of Covid’s origin — without revealing that he had been involved in its creation, as emails released in a congressional inquiry eventually revealed. RealClearInvestigations journalist Paul Thacker uncovered that Fauci admitted during a multiday deposition by the House Oversight Committee in 2024 that he had indeed read multiple drafts of the paper, and even emailed with the authors about it. Yet Fauci had previously told The New York Times that he wasn’t sure if he ever got around to reading the paper.

It’s easy to dismiss all this as water under the bridge. The pandemic is over, Fauci is out of the government. In the words of that infamous 2022 essay in The Atlantic, can’t we just declare a “pandemic amnesty” and move on?

In a word, no. As RealClear’s Thacker has noted elsewhere, while “dissembling to the media is not a crime, lying to Congress is illegal.” More than any other single person, Fauci was in a position to shed light on the origins of Covid at the moment the pandemic arrived on American shores. It might have required coming clean about what the NIH and NIAID had been funding in China on his watch, and it might have even required him to resign in disgrace over the scandal such an admission would cause.

But it would have been the right thing to do. In addition to helping government officials and medical providers better understand what we were dealing with, possibly even saving American lives, it would have opened up space for a reckoning about what US tax dollars had been paying for overseas. Later, there might have been a chance at accountability for those responsible for funding reckless gain-of-function research.

 Instead, Fauci dissembled about what he knew, the government’s role, and the part he himself played in all of it. There is still a chance to hold him at least partially accountable. But time is running out.

 


John Daniel Davidson is a senior editor of The Federalist.

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You Have No Idea How Much You Still Use BlackBerry - WSJ

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Corporate Survival: the entity formerly synonymous with obsolete mobile handsets clings to existence by abandoning consumer hardware for obscurity.
  • Market Repositioning: the company survives solely by licensing internal software components to automotive manufacturers who prefer remaining unnamed.
  • Operational Scope: proprietary systems are currently embedded within the infrastructure of approximately two hundred seventy five million vehicles globally.
  • Hidden Utility: the software operates as a background utility for driver assistance features while remaining completely invisible to the end user.
  • Diversification Efforts: reach has expanded into medical robotics and industrial sectors where automation replaces human oversight.
  • Financial Reality: quarterly profits have surfaced only after the company essentially pivoted away from its failed legacy consumer brand.
  • Stock Performance: market valuation remains a minor fraction of historical peaks despite recent speculative rallies following erratic corporate maneuvering.
  • Strategic pivot: internal focus shifted toward backend systems after the realization that consumer-facing infotainment segments were lost to tech giants.

Emil Lendof/WSJ, Getty Images
Ben Cohen

May 1, 2026 9:00 pm ET

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John Wall has spent nearly his entire career working for the same company. And when he tells people where he works, nobody has any clue what he’s talking about. 
“If I tell them I work at QNX,” he said, “they don’t know what that means.”
But once he explains that he technically works at the company that owns QNX, he knows exactly how they will respond: BlackBerry BB 0.14%increase; green up pointing triangle still exists? 
Yes, it does. And no, it doesn’t make phones. 
The company formerly known as Research In Motion abandoned hand-held devices a decade ago, and it feels more like a century ago when phones had clicky keyboards and everyone was obsessed with Brick Breaker.
But an astonishing number of people still rely on BlackBerry—and they don’t realize it. 
The company’s most lucrative product is not hardware but the hidden software in 275 million cars on the road today. In fact, BlackBerry’s essential technology can be found in all sorts of unexpected places, and you wouldn’t find it even if you went looking for it. 
“On a car, you’ll never see QNX’s logo,” said Wall, the division’s president. “What you will see is a better experience.” 
He likes to think of QNX engineers as plumbers and electricians, responsible for the stuff we need and never see. In a house, it’s pipes and wiring. In a car, it’s the software underpinning safety features that we take for granted. QNX is the operating system that enables all kinds of driver assistance: collision warnings, blind-spot notifications, adaptive cruise control, pedestrian detection and steering you back into a lane when you’re drifting into trouble. 
“We’re the foundation,” Wall said. “Everything pretty on top wouldn’t work without a strong foundation.” 
QNX’s operating system, which controls a number of safety features, is found in 275 million cars on the road.QNX’s operating system, which controls a number of safety features, is found in 275 million cars on the road. QNX
That foundational software has never been so valuable. As cars become computers on wheels, QNX is trusted by the world’s largest automakers because its simple, real-time operating system is designed to never, ever fail. “The only way to make this software malfunction,” a user once raved to Fortune magazine, “is to fire a bullet into the computer running it.” 
With its bulletproof reputation, the software has spread to factory floors and other workplaces that value safety, precision and tech that won’t glitch. In hospitals, for example, QNX tech is embedded in surgical robots and dozens of medical devices, which means patients are regularly putting their lives in the hands of doctors, nurses—and BlackBerry.
QNX has even become the foundation of a company left for dead long ago. 
The division that was once a rounding error is the reason that BlackBerry is suddenly making money again. Instead of being ignored by the rest of the company, QNX now accounts for half of its total revenue, and BlackBerry has strung together four straight profitable quarters for the first time since its signature product was competing with the iPhone. 
Since a bullish earnings call last month, the stock is up 50%. It’s still down 96% since its peak. But after everything the company has been through, executives are firing off a new message: BlackBerry is back. 
“The BlackBerry story,” its CEO declared on that call, “is now a growth story.” 
The story began when QNX was acquired in 2010 to help with the next generation of BlackBerrys. But by then, nothing could have helped. The company’s market cap had topped out two years earlier at $83 billion. It’s now worth $3 billion and Apple does more sales in a morning than BlackBerry does in the whole year.
Created with Highcharts 9.0.1BlackBerry's QNX FactorCars enabled by the company's QNX techSource: the company
Created with Highcharts 9.0.12018'20'250255075100125150175200225250275300 million
John Wall had a front-row seat to this spectacular crackup. 
QNX was founded in 1980 and Wall has worked for the Canadian company since he graduated college in the early 1990s. After the acquisition in 2010, many engineers moved over to RIM to build a mobile operating system for the BlackBerry. Wall stayed behind. 
While others worked on phones, his team kept plugging away at car software—and kept their QNX email addresses. 
For years, they benefited from a fantastic competitive advantage: complete and utter neglect. 
“Nobody paid attention to us,” Wall said. 
Left to their own devices, they made enough progress in car infotainment systems that Silicon Valley began paying very close attention. 
Google unveiled its own Android infotainment system, then Apple picked off QNX engineers to help build a whole car. Once again, it looked like BlackBerry was about to be squashed. 
But in 2014, with the tech giants closing in, Wall made a pivotal trip to Silicon Valley to see one of his favorite QNX customers. He also saw his future. 
Once considered obsolete, the company is now in growth mode.Once considered obsolete, the company is now in growth mode. Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Over hefeweizens, Audi’s engineering chief told him the automaker was moving to Google for infotainment. But he wasn’t breaking up with Wall. The next generation of cars would need reliable safety features that didn’t exist yet, he explained. Instead of battling for control of the screen, Wall decided, QNX could own the software under the hood. It turned out to be the most productive beer of his life. 
“The circumstances that led to us losing infotainment pivoted the company in the right direction,” Wall said, “whether or not we knew it at the time.”
What they did know was that they didn’t have a choice. 
“There was no alternative,” he said. “We had to take what we had and figure out: Where do we go now?” 
There was only one place to go: much deeper into the car.    
After proving itself in cars, the software has found its way into medical devices, industrial automation and robotics. But going to more places hasn’t led to any more recognition for software’s plumbers and electricians. 
“The customer cares about the function of lane-keep assist,” Wall said. “They don’t care about the fact that the operating system below is blah, blah, blah.” 
Or that the blah, blah, blah is made by BlackBerry or QNX—or wherever he works.

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2.8 Days to Disaster: Scientists Warn Low Earth Orbit Could Suddenly Collapse

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Orbital Fragility: reliance on constant human intervention creates an artificial vulnerability in low earth orbit infrastructure
  • Collision Timeline: bureaucratic model predicts catastrophe within 2.8 days if automated maintenance and tracking systems fail
  • Space Congestion: infinite growth of corporate megaconstellations results in objects traveling at 17000 miles per hour in overcrowded corridors
  • Solar Vulnerability: geomagnetic storms create atmospheric drag that renders expensive satellite maneuver cycles unreliable and inefficient
  • Operational Dependence: starlink satellites currently require active avoidance maneuvers every 1.8 minutes to prevent self-destruction
  • Measurement Metric: crash clock functions as a speculative anxiety gauge for estimating the duration until debris-generating events occur
  • Resource Density: artificial expansion of satellite shells creates areas with record-breaking concentrations of hardware despite obvious collision risks
  • Systemic Instability: global reliance on corporate satellite networks leaves terrestrial communications at the mercy of unpredictable physical interference in space

Space Debris Junk Satellites Orbiting Planet EarthA new study suggests that modern satellite networks may be far more fragile than they appear, with the risk of orbital collisions rising sharply if control systems are disrupted. Credit: Shutterstock

A new study warns that if satellite operators suddenly lose control during a major disruption, a catastrophic collision in orbit could happen in as little as 2.8 days.

A major solar storm does not need to smash satellites apart directly to create a crisis in orbit. It may only need to interrupt the tracking, commands, and avoidance maneuvers that keep today’s crowded satellite environment under control.

That risk is growing as low Earth orbit fills with mega constellations, large networks of satellites launched and replaced in rapid cycles. These spacecraft support internet access, communications, weather monitoring, navigation, and other services. However, they also add congestion to an orbital region where objects travel at roughly 17,000 miles per hour (27,000 kilometers per hour).

A new paper led by Sarah Thiele, who began the work as a PhD student at the University of British Columbia and is now at Princeton, attempts to measure how fragile this system has become. The study introduces a metric called the Collision Realization And Significant Harm (CRASH) Clock, which estimates how long it could take for a serious collision to occur if satellites could no longer maneuver or if operators lost reliable awareness of where objects were.

The result is alarming. Using satellite catalog data from June 2025, the researchers calculated that if operators lost the ability to send commands for avoidance maneuvers, a catastrophic collision could occur in around 2.8 days. A broader version of the CRASH Clock, based on all resident space object interactions, was 5.5 days. Back in 2018, before the rapid expansion of mega constellations, that value was 164 days.

Solar storms as a systemic threat

Satellites in low Earth orbit do not simply coast along fixed paths. They depend on station keeping, tracking updates, and collision avoidance maneuvers. According to SpaceX’s most recent biannual report cited in the study, Starlink satellites performed 144,404 collision avoidance maneuvers between December 1, 2024, and May 31, 2025. That averages 41 maneuvers per satellite per year, or one avoidance maneuver every 1.8 minutes across the Starlink network.

Paths of Starlink Satellites As of Feb 2024Paths of Starlink satellites as of Feb 2024. Credit: NASA Scientific Visualization Studio

During a major solar storm, this carefully managed system can become harder to control. Solar storms heat Earth’s upper atmosphere, causing it to expand. That increases drag on satellites, pulls spacecraft away from predicted paths, forces operators to use fuel to maintain altitude, and makes orbit forecasts less reliable.

The May 2024 “Gannon Storm” showed how disruptive this can be. Nearly half of all active satellites in low Earth orbit maneuvered because of increased atmospheric drag. The study notes that widespread repositioning, combined with unpredictable drag, made collision assessment during and after the storm much harder.

The danger grows if a storm also disrupts navigation, communications, or ground control. In that case, satellites may be harder to track just as they become less able to respond.

Why one collision matters

Kessler syndrome is the most well-known version of this kind of catastrophe, where cascading collisions fill orbit with debris and eventually make it extremely difficult to safely launch or operate spacecraft. But that runaway scenario would take years or decades to fully unfold.

To highlight the much more immediate danger, the researchers introduced a new metric called the Collision Realization and Significant Harm (CRASH) Clock, which estimates how quickly a major, debris-generating collision could become possible if active satellite control and coordination were disrupted.

Even one high-speed impact can have lasting consequences. A collision between large objects can create thousands of fragments, each becoming another hazard. Today’s debris environment is still shaped by China’s 2007 anti-satellite test involving Fengyun 1C and the 2009 collision between Iridium 33 and Kosmos 2251.

The new study finds that the densest parts of today’s satellite networks are now especially concerning. Starlink’s main shell, around 550 kilometers (342 miles) above Earth, reaches densities more than an order of magnitude higher than the peak in tracked debris near 800 kilometers (497 miles).

A shrinking margin for error

The researchers estimate that across all of low Earth orbit, close approaches within 1 kilometer (0.62 miles) occur every 36 seconds. Encounters involving at least one satellite occur about every 41 seconds, while those involving Starlink and another resident space object occur about every 47 seconds.

A close approach is not the same as a collision. Operators weigh distance, uncertainty, object size, and collision probability before deciding whether to move a satellite. Still, the frequency of these encounters shows how dependent orbit has become on fast, accurate, coordinated control.

Major solar storms are rare, but they are not hypothetical. The May 2024 Gannon Storm was the strongest geomagnetic storm in decades. The Carrington Event of September 1859 was at least twice as intense, according to the paper, and included two strong storms within a few days.

If a Carrington-scale storm occurred today, it would hit a world that relies heavily on satellites for communications, timing, Earth observation, weather forecasting, military operations, disaster response, finance, and navigation. It would also strike an orbital environment far more crowded than it was even a decade ago.

Beyond collision risk, mega constellations also contribute to debris, reentry hazards, interference with astronomy, and atmospheric pollution.

The study does not call for eliminating satellites, but it highlights a critical vulnerability. Low Earth orbit now relies on constant, precise control, and if that control is disrupted, the window to prevent a major collision could be just days.

Reference: “An orbital house of cards: Frequent megaconstellation close conjunctions” by Sarah Thiele, Skye R. Heiland, Aaron C. Boley and Samantha M. Lawler, 10 December 2025, arXiv.
DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2512.09643

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Top AI Companies Agree to Pentagon Deals for Classified Work - WSJ

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LLM (google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview-20260303) summary:

  • Corporate Compliance: several tech giants bowed to pentagon demands to integrate their products into classified military operations.
  • Market Diversification: the defense department desperately scrambled for new vendors after labeling anthropic a supply chain risk.
  • Obedient Contractors: openai google spacex microsoft amazon and nvidia signed agreements to embed their software into day to day warfare.
  • Startup Integration: the pentagon included the unproven startup reflection ai in its portfolio of state sanctioned vendors.
  • State Narrative: military officials claim these tools are necessary to maintain an unfair advantage and achieve absolute decision superiority.
  • Open Source Ploy: the defense sector is pushing for open source models to avoid proprietary restrictions and customize tech for state use.
  • Strategic Competition: administration officials framed the shift toward american controlled models as a necessary response to chinese artificial intelligence.
  • Convenient Assurances: tech firms accepted vague pentagon promises that the tools would avoid mass surveillance or autonomous weapons usage.

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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth attended a House Armed Services Committee hearing on April 29.Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited Capitol Hill for testimony this week. Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters

  • The Pentagon completed agreements with several technology companies including OpenAI and Google to use their AI in classified settings.
  • The contracts give the Defense Department more AI options after it declared Anthropic a supply-chain risk.
  • The Defense Department’s deals with Nvidia and Reflection AI emphasize a desire for open-source models.
This summary was generated with AI and reviewed by an editor. Read more about how we use artificial intelligence in our journalism.
  • The Pentagon completed agreements with several technology companies including OpenAI and Google to use their AI in classified settings.
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The Defense Department has completed agreements with seven technology companies, including many of the industry’s biggest, to use their artificial-intelligence capabilities in classified settings, boosting the Pentagon’s efforts to gain access to cutting-edge AI tools.
The department said Friday it is now capable of using in classified settings the technology and models from the ChatGPT maker, OpenAI; Alphabet’s GOOGL -1.22%decrease; red down pointing triangle Google; Elon Musk’s SpaceX; Microsoft; Amazon AMZN -0.76%decrease; red down pointing triangle; Nvidia NVDA 1.27%increase; green up pointing triangle; and a startup, Reflection AI. SpaceX owns Musk’s AI company, xAI.
While some of the companies, including OpenAI and SpaceX, had initial deals with the Pentagon agreeing to have their AI tools used by the military in all lawful scenarios, completing the contracts is an important step toward embedding them in day-to-day operations. The deals show how much of Silicon Valley is agreeing to the Defense Department’s terms in a way that Anthropic didn’t when it rejected the Pentagon’s contract earlier this year in what spiraled into a monthslong feud. The deals also highlight how the Pentagon is racing to incorporate AI into its systems.
For many months, Anthropic’s Claude models were some of the only tools available in classified settings through the data-mining company Palantir Technologies, which offers AI tools to the military through its platform Maven. In response to a contract dispute, the Pentagon declared Anthropic a supply-chain risk unsuitable for military work, increasing the urgency of offering other models to servicemembers in classified settings. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, while testifying in Congress on Thursday, called Anthropic Chief Executive Dario Amodei an “ideological lunatic.”
Emil Michael, undersecretary of defense for research and engineering and a former tech executive, said in a statement: “We are equipping the warfighter with a suite of AI tools to maintain an unfair advantage and achieve absolute decision superiority.”
Microsoft and Amazon, two of the largest providers of cloud-computing infrastructure and leading partners to model developers, already have deep relationships with the Pentagon. The two companies have their own AI tools.
The Pentagon’s deals with Nvidia and Reflection are new and highlight a desire to offer open-source models, the details of which are publicly available to developers. Most leading AI models are closed, limiting how users can customize them.
Nvidia, the world’s biggest chip company, develops its own open models. Its agreement with the Pentagon covers its Nemotron open-source models, which support AI agents capable of carrying out tasks on their own.
Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang, who has cultivated ties with President Trump, has said he thinks open models are better than closed models in many national-security contexts because their attributes are fully known and they can easily be tailored for specialized use cases. “Safety and security is frankly enhanced with open-source,” he said in a recent conversation with the head of the Special Competitive Studies Project think tank that was posted online.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang presenting at conference.Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang has said he supports open-source models over closed-source. Jason Henry for WSJ
Leading AI companies in China specialize in open models that they hope to sell to other countries, adding to the importance of developing U.S. alternatives, administration officials said.
Nvidia is an investor in Reflection, which specializes in open-source models and has forged close ties with the Trump administration. Led by former researchers at Google’s DeepMind lab, the company is involved in a deal supported by the government to develop models tailored for the South Korea market and is in talks to raise money from investors at a $25 billion valuation. The company hasn’t yet released any AI models.
“This shared understanding with the Pentagon is a first step in supporting U.S. national security, and sets a precedent for how AI labs could work across the U.S. government—from supporting our servicemembers to our scientists,” a Reflection spokeswoman said.
Anthropic is fighting the administration’s ban on use of its software for defense work in two separate legal cases. The company’s models have been used during the Iran war and the operation to capture then-Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro earlier this year.
Many of the companies with newly completed agreements have said their Defense Department deals include commitments that their tools wouldn’t be used for mass surveillance or autonomous weapons. The Pentagon has said that it wouldn’t carry out those illegal activities and that companies should trust the military to use AI responsibly.

Watch: Anthropic CEO on the Key to Making AI ‘Safe and Controllable’

In January, Dario Amodei answered a WSJ reader’s question about potential breakthroughs in AI development in an interview with WSJ Editor-in-Chief Emma Tucker. Photo: Maurizio Martorana for The Wall Street Journal
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