EFTA00164042.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 223.3 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 17 pages
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Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL) - FBI Daily News Briefing - November 14, 2025
Date: Fri, 14 Nov 2025 11:15:13 +0000
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stabbing, shooting, strangling, and beating victims before disposing of their bodies in remote areas, along with
related RICO and VICAR charges. According to the article, the FBI is working alongside the Los Angeles Police
Department and Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department in the California cases and is also involved in major MS-
13—linked prosecutions in Nashville, where 38 people — including several MS-13 members — were charged with
fentanyl trafficking, violent assaults, firearm crimes, and immigration violations. Officials described these
prosecutions as the result of joint federal task force efforts aimed at dismantling the gang's leadership, curbing
border-related crime, and stopping fentanyl trafficking that has contributed to overdose deaths in Tennessee. The
article noted that prosecutors have already secured 25 convictions in the California case, additional defendants are
set for trial next year, and sentencing for the convicted MS-13 leaders will take place in July, where each faces
mandatory life imprisonment.
Texas Attorney General Files Lawsuit Against Roblox
Hill Country News (11/13, Klibanoff) reported that the state of Texas has filed a lawsuit against Roblox Corporation,
alleging that the online gaming platform has misled parents and exposed children to risk, including grooming,
sexual exploitation, and explicit content. According to the article, the lawsuit claims that Roblox's marketing and
parental controls create a false sense of safety, and that the platform's design and moderation systems have
enabled predators and harmful content, citing dozens of FBI investigations. The article noted that the FBI is
investigating a global extremist network, "764," which allegedly used Roblox to exploit children. Additional
reporting was provided by Medianama (11/13, Das).
State Department Makes First-Ever Antifa Foreign Terrorist Designations Across Europe
Fox News (11/13, Phillips) and Just the News (11/13, Mittelstadt) reported that the State Department will designate
four Antifa-linked groups operating in Europe as Foreign Terrorist Organizations and Specifically Designated Global
Terrorists, marking the first time the US has applied foreign terrorism sanctions to Antifa-affiliated cells. It
explained that the designations target groups in Germany, Italy and Greece accused of carrying out bombings,
shootings and other politically motivated attacks over the past several years. According to the articles, the action
expands President Donald Trump's prior domestic terrorism directive and will trigger asset freezes, entry bans and
potential criminal penalties for anyone under US jurisdiction who provides material support. The pieces highlighted
details of each group — including Germany's Antifa Ost, Italy's International Revolutionary Front, and the Greek
cells Armed Proletarian Justice and Revolutionary Class Self Defense — while noting US officials' assertions that
Antifa-associated extremists have waged violent campaigns across Western democracies. The articles noted that
the move represents an unusual use of foreign terrorism authorities against far-left groups typically treated as
domestic security concerns in Europe, and that several US officials and lawmakers praised the decision as an
important expansion of counterterror capabilities. The articles do not contain a direct FBI mention.
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COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
Continued Reporting: University of Michigan Smuggler From China Convinces Judge She Has Suffered
Enough
Detroit Free Press (11/13, Baldas) reported that a University of Michigan researcher from China, Junquing Jian, was
sentenced to time served and ordered deported after admitting she smuggled a dangerous agricultural fungus into
the United States and lied to the FBI about her actions. Prosecutors had sought a 24-month sentence, arguing she
was a sophisticated scientist who repeatedly smuggled prohibited biomaterials and understood the risks, but the
judge agreed with Jian's argument that she had already suffered enough through publicity, jail time and the
collapse of her academic career. According to the article, the FBI arrested Jian in June after discovering that she and
her boyfriend had brought the prohibited pathogen Fusarium graminearum into the country, with an FBI laboratory
confirming the fungus in material seized from the boyfriend's luggage. The FBI's involvement in testing and
confirming the smuggled substance underscored the seriousness of the case, with officials stressing that the fungus
can devastate crops and harm humans and livestock. The article noted that federal authorities said the scheme
could have caused major damage to the food supply and emphasized broader concerns about Chinese nationals
smuggling hazardous biomaterials into US research settings.
Colombia Walks Back Threat to End Intelligence Sharing With US
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OTHER FBI NEWS
Continued Reporting: Conservative Influencers Defend Trump as House Prepares to Vote on Releasing
Epstein Files
Reuters (11/13, Morgan, Coster) reported that some prominent conservative influencers sought to downplay newly
released emails from Jeffrey Epstein in which the convicted sex offender wrote that Donald Trump "knew about the
girls," arguing the messages were part of a broader Democratic hoax targeting the US president. The article
detailed that the emails, released by House Democrats on Wednesday, again thrust the relationship between
Epstein and Trump into the spotlight. Trump, who was friends with Epstein in the 1990s and early 2000s before the
two had a falling out, has consistently denied knowing about the late financier's abuse and sex trafficking of
underage girls. The House will vote next week on whether to require the DOJ to publish all of its unclassified files
on Epstein. The article noted that the resolution would only take effect if it passes both chambers of Congress and
Trump then signs it into law. Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune's office did not respond to a query on
whether he would bring the measure up for a vote if it passes the House. The Associated Press (11/13, Brown,
Cappelletti), The New York Times (11/13, Gold), BBC (11/13, Yousif), The New York Post (11/13, King),
MSNBC (11/13, Psaki), The Independent (11/13, Hannaford), The Guardian (11/13, Bekiempis), The
Guardian (11/13, Editorial), The Guardian (11/13, Tait), CNN (11/13, Grayer, Raju, et. al), Axios (11/13, Scribner),
USA Today (11/13, Cervantes), CBS News (11/13, Ruetenik, Kates, et. al), Politico (11/13, Messerly, Wren),
Newsweek (11/13, Cannon, Castro, et. al), and The Hill (11/13, Gans) also reported on the story. Fox News (11/13,
Video), MSNBC (11/13, Video), and CBS News (11/13, Video) provided broadcast coverage. The New York
Times (11/13, Gold) and Al Jazeera (11/13, Shankar) published analysis pieces.
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- Created
- Feb 3, 2026