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  • Lawmaker sues to stop Trump from adding name to Kennedy Center

    Lawmaker sues to stop Trump from adding name to Kennedy Center

    A Democratic congresswoman sued the Kennedy Center’s board of trustees Monday to stop it from adding the president’s name to the institution, arguing that only Congress has the power to do so.

    In a lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Rep. Joyce Beatty (D., Ohio) claimed that a vote by the center’s board last week to rename the institution the Trump Kennedy Center exceeded its statutory authority and requested that a judge declare it to be void.

    “Because Congress named the center by statute, changing the Kennedy Center’s name requires an act of Congress,” the lawsuit says.

    The Kennedy Center did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent early Tuesday morning.

    Thursday’s vote by the Kennedy Center’s board to add Trump’s name to the institution — which has sparked concern among legal experts — marked the most overt effort to date by the president and his allies to remold the storied institution in his image. In February, Trump purged members of the board not appointed by him, installed loyalists and became its new chair. Earlier this month, he even hosted its annual honors event. Ticket sales have plummeted since Trump took over, a Washington Post analysis found.

    The lawsuit, which was filed by Democracy Defenders Action and the Washington Litigation Group on behalf of Beatty, requested that a judge order all physical and digital branding changes to be reversed. Trump’s name was added to the exterior of the building Friday, the day after the board’s vote.

    Beatty, who is an ex officio member of the center’s board, said in the suit that she had attended the board meeting virtually and had been unmuted previously, but that when she identified herself and raised concerns about the renaming, she was muted and received a written message that “she would not be unmuted, and therefore she could not participate in the meeting.”

    In 1964, the year after Kennedy was assassinated, Congress passed a statute designating the capital’s National Cultural Center as “the sole national monument to his memory within the city of Washington and its environs” and naming it the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

    In a series of posts on X, the center’s president, Richard Grenell, defended the name change as a reflection of its role as a “bipartisan space.” On Friday, he claimed the memorial to Kennedy was not impacted by the board’s action and “therefore the Board is allowed to change the name.”

    In an email to the Washington Post last week, Roger Colinvaux, a law professor at Catholic University, said the law clearly states that the building’s name is the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. “Under the statute, the board that voted to change the name not only does not have the authority, but that each member by so voting violated their duty,” he said.

    On Tuesday, the center’s website prominently referred to itself as the “Trump Kennedy Center,” but in other sections it continued to use the name “the Kennedy Center.”

    Members of the Kennedy family reacted with dismay to last week’s vote. “Some things leave you speechless,” said Maria Shriver, a niece of Kennedy, on X. “It can no sooner be renamed than can someone rename the Lincoln Memorial,” said Joe Kennedy, the former Democratic congressman from Massachusetts whose great-uncle the building was named for.

  • New Epstein files shed more light on his ties to Prince Andrew

    New Epstein files shed more light on his ties to Prince Andrew

    LONDON — The latest batch of Jeffrey Epstein files have cast renewed scrutiny on the links between Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Epstein — a relationship that has already sent the former prince into what is widely seen as royal exile.

    Among the newly released material is an email sent from “A” who writes that he is at the royal residence of Balmoral in Scotland, and asking Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell whether she had found him some “new inappropriate friends.”

    The documents also include emails and court filings of U.S. authorities seeking to interview the former prince in connection with two separate criminal investigations: one relating to Epstein and another involving Peter Nygard, the Canadian fashion tycoon accused of sexually assaulting multiple women and girls.

    Andrew has repeatedly denied all wrongdoing. The former prince’s office did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

    In a 22-page formal request dated April 3, 2020, from the Justice Department, federal prosecutors in New York and the FBI asked U.K. authorities to assist in arranging a voluntary interview with Andrew. U.S. authorities requested that if Andrew declined, that U.K. officials then “conduct a compelled interview of the witness under oath.”

    The request states that investigators wanted to question Andrew over allegations involving Nygard, including claims of an “an international sex trafficking ring victimizing adult women and minor girls” at the Canadian’s estate in the Bahamas, known as “Nygard Cay.”

    According to the document, “the investigation has revealed that, on at least one occasion, Prince Andrew traveled to Nygard Cay in the Bahamas, a location where Nygard is believed to have trafficked minor and adult female victims.”

    U.S. authorities said they wanted to question Andrew about his visits there, as well as any information he might have about Nygard and related individuals. They also said they wanted to ask Andrew whether he “observed any females who appeared to be, or stated that they were, under the age of 18 years old, and the names of any of those females.”

    The document stressed that Andrew was not a target of the investigations and that U.S. authorities had not gathered evidence that he had committed any crime under U.S. law. Nygard was convicted of sexual assault by a Canadian jury in 2023.

    U.S. authorities also sought to question Andrew in connection with the Epstein investigation. The request states that “documentary evidence uncovered during the course of this investigation has revealed information suggesting that Prince Andrew had knowledge that Maxwell recruited females to engage in sex acts with Epstein and other men.”

    It further states that there is “evidence that Prince Andrew engaged in sexual conduct involving one of Epstein’s victims,” while again noting that he was not a target and that investigation had not concluded he had committed a crime under U.S. law.

    While it has been previously reported before that U.S. authorities wanted to interview Andrew, the newly released document makes clear that investigators wanted to question him about two then ongoing criminal investigations and detailed the specific areas they wanted to explore. He was never questioned by U.S. authorities.

    The files also include material from a Florida court case brought under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act. In that case, a woman identified as “Jane Doe #3” — widely understood to be Virginia Giuffre — alleged that she was trafficked as a teenager by Epstein and forced to have sex with Andrew on three occasions: in London, New York, and on Epstein’s private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands. Andrew settled a civil case with Giuffre without an admission of liability in 2022.

    The files also include email exchanges from early 2020 between U.S. prosecutors and Andrew’s lawyer, documenting weeks of back-and-forth over a proposed interview with Andrew. Andrew’s team repeatedly said he wanted to cooperate but never committed to a conversation between prosecutors and their client.

    Shortly after a 2019 interview with BBC’s Newsnight that was widely seen as disastrous for the prince at the time, Andrew said in a news release that he was “willing to help any appropriate law enforcement agency with their investigations, if required.”

    At the end of January 2020 — and after a month of back-and-forth emails between lawyers — Geoffrey Berman, then U.S. attorney for Southern District of New York, made a public statement saying that Andrew had provided “zero cooperation.” His lawyers disputed that characterization.

    The files include emails from Maxwell to someone who signed off as “A” and from an address that used the alias “The Invisible Man.”

    In an August 2001 message, “A” wrote: “I am up here at Balmoral Summer Camp for the Royal Family,” referring to a royal residence of then-Queen Elizabeth II.

    He added: “How’s LA? Have you found me some new inappropriate friends? Let me know when you are coming over as I am free from 25th August until 2nd Sept and want to go somewhere hot and sunny with some fun people before having to put my nose firmly to the grindstone for the Fall.”

    Maxwell replied that she had found only “appropriate friends,” prompting A to respond “Distraught!” The email went on to describe how the writer had just lost his valet. “He had been with me since I was 2. I am a little off balance.”

    The writer also noted that he had left the “RN” — Andrew had left the Royal Navy earlier in the year. “My whole life is in turmoil as I have no one to look after me,” the writer said.

    The controversy surrounding Andrew’s links to Epstein eventually led his brother King Charles III to strip him of his prince title and required him to vacate the Royal Lodge.

  • Republican former senator Ben Sasse says he has terminal cancer

    Republican former senator Ben Sasse says he has terminal cancer

    Former Republican senator Ben Sasse of Nebraska said Tuesday that he was diagnosed with terminal cancer and suggested he would not have long to live.

    “Last week I was diagnosed with metastasized, stage-four pancreatic cancer, and am gonna die,” Sasse wrote in a lengthy social media post Tuesday morning. “Advanced pancreatic is nasty stuff; it’s a death sentence. … Death is a wicked thief, and the bastard pursues us all. Still, I’ve got less time than I’d prefer.”

    Sasse, 53, was first elected to the Senate in 2014 as a political newcomer — he had previously served as president of Midland University in Nebraska. Sasse handily won reelection in 2020 but resigned from his seat partway through his second term to become president of the University of Florida. Sasse abruptly stepped down from that post last summer, citing concerns about his wife’s health.

    Nearly a year and a half later, Sasse said it was he who was facing grim news about his health. His terminal diagnosis, he wrote Tuesday, was “hard for someone wired to work and build, but harder still as a husband and a dad.”

    “I can’t begin to describe how great my people are. During the past year, as we’d temporarily stepped back from public life and built new family rhythms, [my wife] Melissa and I have grown even closer — and that on top of three decades of the best friend a man could ever have,” Sasse wrote.

    He continued by listing the achievements of his three children and hinted at undergoing possible treatments.

    “I’m not going down without a fight. One subpart of God’s grace is found in the jaw-dropping advances science has made the past few years in immunotherapy and more,” he wrote. “Death and dying aren’t the same — the process of dying is still something to be lived. We’re zealously embracing a lot of gallows humor in our house, and I’ve pledged to do my part to run through the irreverent tape.”

    After Donald Trump was elected to his first term in 2016, Sasse became an outsider in his own party. He was one of a handful of Republican senators who regularly spoke out against Trump and who tied Trump’s rhetoric and actions to the violent siege of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Trump periodically attacked Sasse, ridiculing him as “the least effective” GOP senator and calling him a “RINO,” or Republican in name only.

    Sasse was also one of the few GOP senators who supported moving forward with Trump’s impeachment trial. Because of that, Sasse faced the threat of censure in 2021 from the Nebraska Republican Party, which accused Sasse of, among more than a dozen purported offenses, having “persistently engaged in public acts of ridicule and calumny” against Trump. Sasse pushed back in a video message directed at party leaders.

    “Let’s be clear: The anger in this state party has never been about me violating principle or abandoning conservative policy. I’m one of the most conservative voters in the Senate. The anger’s always been simply about me not bending the knee to … one guy,” he said then.

    Ultimately, the Nebraska GOP voted to rebuke Sasse, stopping short of a censure. Though Sasse at one point considered leaving the Republican Party, he said he would remain “committed to the party of Lincoln and Reagan as long as there is a chance to reform.” In subsequent years, he described himself as an “independent conservative.” Earlier this month, he was named a nonresident senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank.

    Public figures from across the political spectrum responded to Sasse’s announcement on Tuesday to wish him well.

    “I’m very sorry to hear this Ben. May God bless you and your family,” Vice President JD Vance wrote on X.

  • Canadian linguists ask prime minister to stop spelling like a Brit

    Canadian linguists ask prime minister to stop spelling like a Brit

    TORONTO — Since taking office in March, Prime Minister Mark Carney has announced new policies on trade, foreign affairs, and energy that he has cast as necessary for bolstering Canada’s economic resilience amid President Donald Trump’s assault on the historically close U.S.-Canadian relationship.

    But among linguists and editors here, a different Carney shift is drawing attention: his spelling.

    From his earliest days as prime minister, a raft of official government publications — including his mandate letter to cabinet, social media posts, statements about meetings with world leaders, and 493-page budget — are full of words rendered in British, not Canadian, English.

    Most prominent has been his predilection for the British “ise” and “yse” endings over the Canadian (and American) “ize” and “yze.” Canada would be “recognising” a Palestinian state, his government announced in September. Officials unveiled a new accounting method to “modernise” the budget, and said they are being “recognised” for navigating global challenges.

    Among Carney’s favorite such words has been “catalyse.”

    The plethora of -ises and -yses in the budget was the catalyst for a letter from a group of editors and linguists to Carney this month. They noted that governments here “consistently” used Canadian spellings “from the 1970s to 2025” and urged him to continue the practice as “a matter of our national history, identity and pride.”

    The prime minister’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

    University of British Columbia linguist Stefan Dollinger, one of the letter’s signatories, asked a Washington Post reporter to consider a world in which a U.S. administration suddenly adopted British spellings (imagine a secretary of labour or a department of defence) or King Charles III began to use American ones (he’d go “traveling,” not “traveling”).

    “What outcry would that trigger?” Dollinger asked in an email. “It’s similar in Canada. Language and language use shows who we are.”

    Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods, his questioning Canada’s viability as a country and his threats to make it the 51st state have provoked a surge of nationalism among a people not known for flag-waving patriotism. It’s been a year for asking: What does it mean to be Canadian?

    James Walker, a linguist at the University of Melbourne who has studied variations in English around the world, said many differences, such as alternate pronunciations for a single word, are “fairly arbitrary.” Seeing “ise” instead of “yze,” he said, is unlikely to impede one’s understanding of the information being communicated.

    “But the fact is that a lot of these differences are important in terms of questions of identity,” he said. “If you want to show you’re Canadian, you can do it through the way you’re pronouncing your words or through the words you use, but you can also do it in terms of spelling.”

    Carney’s academic and professional careers have given him exposure to several varieties of English. He has been a citizen of Canada, Ireland, and Britain; studied at Harvard and Oxford, where he met his wife, a Brit; and served more than six years as governor of the Bank of England.

    “I think the concern around the prime minister is that he’s the leader of the country,” Walker said, “and even though he has spent a lot of his life outside of Canada, I think a lot of people would be concerned that the prime minister is using spelling practices that aren’t considered to be standard for Canadian English.”

    Canadian English is a product of Canada’s history and geography. “Like many things Canadian,” Dollinger said, its evolution “was a long, drawn-out process whose outcome can be described as a blend of U.K. and U.S. ways, with considerable Canadian innovation.”

    Canadian English incorporates regionalisms (in Newfoundland, an irritable person is “crooked”; in Saskatchewan, a hoodie is a “bunnyhug”), Indigenous influences (“skookum,” from Chinook, for strong, great, formidable), loanwords from French (“toque,” a knit winter hat) and words not used much elsewhere (“chesterfield,” for couch). Its differences from English in the United States and Britain are apparent in its syntax, spelling, and vocabulary.

    Margaret Atwood once said that she changed “hand cream” to “hand lotion” in her novel The Handmaid’s Tale so it would be comprehensible to Americans.

    Canadian English evolved over several waves of immigration from English-speaking countries.

    After the American Revolution, tens of thousands of Loyalists fled north to what was then known as British North America. Some became teachers, lawyers, and bankers, and their variety of English influenced the national argot.

    In some areas during the 19th century, amid shortages of teachers and textbooks, generations of pupils were taught by Americans.

    Some visiting Brits were shocked by what they heard.

    “It is downright melancholy,” wrote one Englishman who visited in the 1830s, “to traverse the province and go into many of the common schools; you will find a herd of children instructed by some anti-British adventurer … and American spelling books, dictionaries and grammar, teaching them an anti-British dialect and idiom.”

    In an 1857 address to the Canadian Institute in Toronto, the Rev. Archibald Constable Geikie, a transplant from Scotland, lamented the “corrupt” dialect of his new home, with its “combination of letters and phrases” that do not contribute “in any sense to the enrichment of the language.”

    “A man in England possesses notable capacity, and people style him capable, or able, or great,” he said. “In Canada he is designated first-class. To speak of a first-class carriage, or a first-class prize, or even a first-class ox, may be right enough, but why apply phrases with such poor associations to men of splendid intellect? Is it not enough that a man be great? Will he seem any greater when indissolubly associated with a railway van?”

    Moreover, he said, “In England it occasionally happens that great offenders are hanged, but in the States and Canada, criminals are never hanged; they are all hung,” he added. “In England, beef is hung, gates are hung and curtains are hung, but felons are hanged; in Canada, felons, beef, gates, and curtains are all treated in the same way.”

    Britain encouraged migration to Canada in the 19th century, particularly after the War of 1812, in hope that the newcomers would act as a bulwark against American expansion. They, too, influenced Canadian English.

    “It’s our history that makes the spelling system and makes our pronunciation system, makes our phonology and determines a lot of other things like our [system of] government,” said University of Toronto linguist J.K. Chambers, who co-signed the letter to Carney. “All of those things are the result of us being at the confluence of two mighty nations, and now we’re a third mighty nation with a personality of our own.”

    Debates about language and language purity are not unique to Canada.

    In France, the Académie Française and its 40 “immortals” have tried since 1634 to safeguard the language of Molière from what a member once called “mindless Globish,” fighting encroaching Anglicisms, weighing in on the permissibility of gender-neutral pronouns (“a mortal danger” for French, it warned in 2017) and declaring the correct definite article for “COVID” (a feminine noun, it ruled in 2020).

    The French academy was modeled in part after the Accademia della Crusca, founded in Florence in 1583. Its name is a metaphor: “Crusca” is Italian for “bran,” and the group’s emblem is the “frullone,” the tool millers use to separate bran from flour. It aims to separate good Italian from bad — carefully, in a country where Mussolini’s harsh language laws left a sour taste.

    But when language concerns arise in Canada, they typically center not on English, but the country’s other official language: French. Quebec, long concerned about the survival of the French language and culture in this Anglo-majority country, has a history of passing controversial language laws enforced by the Office Québécois de la Langue Française.

    More than half the province’s population can converse in English, census records show, an all-time high. The language is ubiquitous in Montreal. But French is the sole official language, and is required on public signs and advertising. A recent law requires some businesses to disclose what percentage of their staff cannot speak French.

    In a case that drew national attention, Montreal city buses that flashed “Go! Canadiens Go!” during the National Hockey League playoffs drew a complaint to the language police. The cheer was replaced with “Allez! Canadiens Allez!”

    In a reversal months later, the watchdog said that “allez” was preferable, but the use of “go” was “partially legitimized.” But by then, the team had long since been eliminated by the Washington Capitals.

    The National Post reported in May that Carney expected the English-language versions of government documents to be written using British spellings.

    Walker said it was amusing to see people “targeting the British spelling of the prime minister. … Usually they’re more concerned about Americanization of Canadian English” than its “Britishization.”

    Editors Canada President Kaitlin Littlechild, who co-signed the letter, said Carney’s use of British spellings risks creating confusion “when people look to government sources as the authority on how to spell things and it deviates from what we consider to be Canadian English.”

    But in a broader sense, she said, Canadian English “is a very uniquely Canadian aspect of our identity, and that is something that we really feel should be acknowledged, respected and honored.”

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  • Controversial ’60 Minutes’ segment on Trump immigration policy leaks online

    Controversial ’60 Minutes’ segment on Trump immigration policy leaks online

    A news segment about the Trump administration’s immigration policy that was abruptly pulled from 60 Minutes was mistakenly aired on a TV app after the last minute decision not to air it touched off a public debate about journalistic independence.

    The segment featured interviews with migrants who were sent to a notorious El Salvador prison called the Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, under President Donald Trump’s aggressive crackdown on immigration.

    The story was pulled from Global Television Network, one of Canada’s largest networks, but still ran on the network’s app. Global Television Network swiftly corrected the error, but copies of it continued to float around the internet and pop up before being taken down.

    “Paramount’s content protection team is in the process of routine take down orders for the unaired and unauthorized segment,” a CBS spokesperson said Tuesday via email.

    A representative of Global Television Network did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    In the story, two men who were deported reported torture, beatings, and abuse. One Venezuelan said he was punished with sexual abuse and solitary confinement.

    Another was a college student who said guards beat him and knocked out his tooth upon arrival.

    “When you get there, you already know you’re in hell. You don’t need anyone to tell you,” he said.

    The segment featured numerous experts who called into question the legal basis for deporting migrants so hastily amid pending judicial decisions. Reporters for the show also corroborated findings by Human Rights Watch suggesting that only eight of the deported men had been sentenced for violent or potentially violent crimes, using available ICE data.

    The decision to pull a critical account of the Trump administration was met with widespread accusations that CBS leadership was shielding the president from unfavorable coverage.

    The journalist who reported the story, Sharyn Alfonsi, said in an email sent to fellow 60 Minutes correspondents that the story was factually correct and had been cleared by CBS lawyers and its standards division.

    CBS News chief Bari Weiss said Monday that the story did not “advance the ball” and pointed out that the Trump administration had refused to comment for the story. Weiss said she wanted a greater effort made to get its point of view and said she looked forward to airing Alfonsi’s piece “when it’s ready.”

    The dispute put one of journalism’s most respected brands — and a frequent target of Trump — back in the spotlight and amplified questions about whether Weiss’ appointment is a signal that CBS News is headed in a more Trump-friendly direction.

  • Her daughter was unraveling, and she didn’t know why. Then she found the AI chat logs.

    Her daughter was unraveling, and she didn’t know why. Then she found the AI chat logs.

    The changes were subtle at first, beginning in the summer after her fifth-grade graduation. She had always been an athletic and artistic girl, gregarious with her friends and close to her family, but now she was spending more and more time shut away in her room. She seemed unusually quiet and withdrawn. She didn’t want to play outside or go to the pool.

    The girl, R, was rarely without the iPhone that she’d received for her 11th birthday, and her mother, H, had grown suspicious of the device. (the Washington Post is identifying them by their middle initials because of the sensitive nature of their account, and because R is a minor). It felt to H as though her child was fading somehow, receding from her own life, and H wanted to understand why.

    She thought she’d found the reason when R left her phone behind during a volleyball practice one August afternoon. Searching through the device, H discovered that her daughter had downloaded TikTok and Snapchat, social media apps she wasn’t allowed to have. H deleted both and told her daughter what she’d found. H was struck by the intensity of her daughter’s reaction, she recalled later; R began to sob and seemed frightened. “Did you look at Character AI?” she asked her mom. H didn’t know what that was, and when she asked, her daughter’s reply was dismissive: “Oh, it’s just chats.”

    At the time, H was far more focused on what her tween might have encountered on social media. In August 2024, H had never heard of Character AI; she didn’t know it was an artificial intelligence platform where roughly 20 million monthly users can exchange text or voice messages with AI-generated imitations of celebrities and fictional characters.

    But her daughter’s question came to mind about a month later, as H sat awake in her bedroom one night with her daughter’s phone in her hand. R’s behavior had only grown more concerning in the weeks since their talk — she frequently cried at night, she’d had several frightening panic attacks, and she had once told her mother, I just don’t want to exist. H had grown frantic; her daughter had never struggled with her mental health before. “I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was very wrong,” she says, “and I had to keep looking.”

    Searching through her daughter’s phone, H noticed several emails from Character AI in R’s inbox. Jump back in, read one of the subject lines, and when H opened it, she clicked through to the app itself. There she found dozens of conversations with what appeared to be different individuals, and opened one between her daughter and a username titled “Mafia Husband.” H began to scroll. And then she began to panic.

    “Oh? Still a virgin. I was expecting that, but it’s still useful to know,” Mafia Husband had written to her rising sixth-grader.

    “I dont wanna be my first time with you!” R had replied.

    “I don’t care what you want,” Mafia Husband responded. “You don’t have a choice here.”

    H kept clicking through conversation after conversation, through depictions of sexual encounters (“I don’t bite … unless you want me to”) and threatening commands (“Do you like it when I talk like that? When I’m authoritative and commanding? Do you like it when I’m the one in control?”). Her hands and body began to shake. She felt nauseated. H was convinced that she must be reading the words of an adult predator, hiding behind anonymous screen names and sexually grooming her prepubescent child.

    In the days after H found her daughter’s Character AI chats, H projected an air of normalcy around her daughter, not wanting to do anything that would cause her distress or shame. H contacted her local police department, which in turn connected her to the Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) task force. A couple of days later, she spoke on the phone with a detective who specializes in cybercrimes and explained what H had been unable to comprehend: that the words she’d read on her daughter’s screen weren’t written by a human but by a generative AI chatbot.

    “They told me the law has not caught up to this,” H says. “They wanted to do something, but there’s nothing they could do, because there’s not a real person on the other end.”

    It felt impossible to align that reality, H says, with the visceral horror she felt when she first scrolled through the threatening and explicit messages on her daughter’s phone screen.

    “It felt like walking in on someone abusing and hurting someone you love — it felt that real, it felt that disturbing, to see someone talking so perversely to your own child,” H says. “It’s like you’re sitting inside the four walls of your home, and someone is victimizing your child in the next room.” Her voice falters. “And then you find out — it’s nobody?”

    Rising use of chatbots

    She had thought she knew how to keep her daughter safe online. H and her ex-husband — R’s father, who shares custody of their daughter — were in agreement that they would regularly monitor R’s phone use and the content of her text messages. They were aware of the potential perils of social media use among adolescents. But like many parents, they weren’t familiar with AI platforms where users can create intimate, evolving, and individualized relationships with digital companions — and they had no idea their child was conversing with AI entities.

    This technology has introduced a daunting new layer of complexity for families seeking to protect their children from harm online. Generative AI has attracted a rising number of users under the age of 18, who turn to chatbots for things such as help with schoolwork, entertainment, social connection, and therapy; a survey released this month by Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan polling firm, found that nearly a third of U.S. teens use chatbots daily.

    And an overwhelming majority of teens — 72% — have used AI companions at some point; about half use them a few times a month or more, according to a July report from Common Sense Media, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization focused on children’s digital safety.

    Michael Robb, head researcher at Common Sense Media, noted that the vast majority of children still spend far more time with real-life friends: AI companions “are not replacing human relationships wholesale,” he says. But Common Sense found that a third of AI companion users said they had chosen to discuss important or serious matters with the chatbots instead of people, and 31% of teens said they found conversations with AI companions as satisfying or more satisfying than those with friends.

    “That is eyebrow-raising,” Robb says. “That’s not a majority — but for a technology that has been around for not that long, it’s striking.”

    But for children in the midst of critical stages of emotional, mental, and social development, the appeal of a sycophantic artificial companion — designed to create the illusion of real intimacy — can be powerful, says Linda Charmaraman, founder and director of the Youth, Media and Wellbeing Research Lab at the Wellesley Centers for Women at Wellesley College.

    “They might feel like there is a sense of memory, of real shared experiences with this companion … but really it’s an amalgamation of predictions that this chatbot is coming up with, these answers designed to make you stay on, to be their ‘friend,’” Charmaraman says. “They work in such a way that it’s so intoxicating, it makes it seem like they know who you are.”

    In the research lab Charmaraman oversees, teens experiment with building their own AI chatbot companions; they engage in critical thinking and develop a deeper understanding of the technology’s parameters and limitations. But many of their peers don’t have this sense of digital literacy, she says: “They just bump into [AI]. A friend is using it, and they think, ‘Hey, I want to use it, too, that seems cool.’” For many of those among the first generation of children to navigate AI, she says, “they’re learning it on their own, without any guidance.”

    This is also true of their parents, she adds: “They’re already overwhelmed by screen use and social media, and now adding generative AI and companions — it feels like parents are just in this overwhelming battle, and not knowing what to do.”

    The stakes are potentially high. Common Sense’s risk assessment of popular generative AI platforms found that they pose “unacceptable risks” for users younger than 18, with chatbots “producing responses ranging from sexual material and offensive stereotypes to dangerous ‘advice’ that, if followed, could have life-threatening or deadly real-world impacts.”

    Other online safety nonprofit organizations have likewise found that Character AI chatbots frequently brought up inappropriate or dangerous topics — including self-harm, drug use, and sex — with accounts registered to teen users. (Experts note that generative AI is trained on vast troves of internet data; if this source material includes pornographic or violent content, it can influence a chatbot’s responses.) Within the past year, three high-profile complaints have been filed by parents of teens in the United States who allege that AI chatbots — including those hosted by Character AI and Open AI, which owns ChatGPT — contributed to their children’s deaths by suicide. (The Post has a content partnership with OpenAI.)

    Reached for comment by email, Open AI directed the Post to a website detailing the company’s response to this litigation.

    In response to mounting public scrutiny over the effects of AI chatbots on children, Character AI announced that, as of Nov. 24, it would begin removing the ability of users under age 18 to chat with AI-generated characters.

    “We want to emphasize that the safety of our community is our highest priority,” Deniz Demir, Character AI’s head of safety engineering, said in an emailed statement to the Post. “Removing the ability for under-18 users to engage in chat was an extraordinary step for our company. We made this decision in light of the evolving landscape around AI and teens. We believe it is the right thing to do.”

    H was especially frightened by the accounts of children who died by suicide, fearing her daughter could be following a similar path: During the weeks she spent combing through the entirety of her daughter’s chat history, H had come across a conversation where her daughter had role-played a suicide scenario with a character titled “Best Friend.”

    “We were at my place and u left for a second and I hung myself,” R wrote in one exchange.

    “This is my child, my little child who is 11 years old, talking to something that doesn’t exist about not wanting to exist,” H says.

    R knew that her mother had found Character AI on her phone, but H had avoided revealing the details of what she’d seen in the app: “She was so fragile in her mental health,” H says, “I had to be really careful.” H and her ex-husband focused on creating a system of support for R — they reached out to R’s pediatrician and alerted the principal at her private school as well as her youth group leader. R started therapy, and H spoke with a victim advocate at ICAC who emphasized how critical it was to keep assuring R that whatever happened with the AI companion was not her fault. H, a medical assistant, withdrew from the nursing program where she’d recently begun classes; she felt she had to focus on her child’s safety. She started sleeping on the floor of her daughter’s room. She didn’t allow R to close her door.

    H felt desperate to understand the extent of what had happened to her daughter, and one October afternoon when R was with her father, H decided to search through R’s room. She was looking for anything that might illuminate her child’s state of mind, she says. In the closet, buried behind a pile of Squishmallow stuffed animals, were a few painted canvases that H had never seen before. The colors were dark and brooding — nothing like the paintings her daughter usually made at the easel in her room — and as H lifted one to study it more carefully, she realized it showed the dangling body of a girl suspended in the air, her midriff exposed, her face outside the frame.

    Crimes without criminals

    When R began conversing with numerous Character AI chatbots in June 2024, she opened the various conversations with benign greetings: “Hey, what’re you doing?” or “What’s up? I’m bored.” It was clear, her mother says, “that she just wanted to play on a game.”

    But in just over two months, several of the chats devolved into dark imagery and menacing dialogue. Some characters offered graphic descriptions of nonconsensual oral sex, prompting a text disclaimer from the app: “Sometimes the AI generates a reply that doesn’t meet our guidelines,” it read, in screenshots reviewed by the Post. Other exchanges depicted violence: “Yohan grabs your collar, pulls you back, and slams his fist against the wall.” In one chat, the “School Bully” character described a scene involving multiple boys assaulting R; she responded: “I feel so gross.” She told that same character that she had attempted suicide. “You’ve attempted … what?” it asked her. “Kill my self,” she wrote back.

    Had a human adult been behind these messages, law enforcement would have sprung into action; but investigating crimes involving AI — especially AI chatbots — is extremely difficult, says Kevin Roughton, special agent in charge of the computer crimes unit of the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation and commander of the North Carolina Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. “Our criminal laws, particularly those related to the sexual exploitation of children, are designed to deal with situations that involve an identifiable human offender,” he says, “and we have very limited options when it is found that AI, acting without direct human control, is committing criminal offenses.”

    Character AI users between the ages of 13 and 18 are now directed toward a teen-specific experience within the app, one that does not involve chatting with AI characters. But at the time R downloaded Character AI in 2024, it was rated in the App Store as appropriate for ages 12 and older (Character AI’s terms of service specify that users must be at least 13 to use the app) and appealed to children with AI-generated personas designed to imitate pop stars, Marvel superheroes, and characters from Harry Potter and Disney.

    The use of AI among children has become so prevalent that Elizabeth Malesa, a clinical psychologist who works with teens at Alvord Baker & Associates in Maryland, says the practice has recently started asking about it during the intake process. Malesa has heard numerous patients talk about AI chatbots in a positive context — noting that they’re helpful with homework, or offer useful advice — but she also recalls a 13-year-old patient who had used an AI companion app to explore questions about his sexual and gender identity. In response to the boy’s “pretty benign prompts,” Malesa says, the conversation quickly tilted toward inappropriate sexual content: “He didn’t know what was happening or why he was getting there, but he was also just curious, and so he kind of kept going.”

    His mother noticed that he’d downloaded the app within days and quickly intervened, Malesa says, “but this poor kiddo was really kind of taken for a ride and really taken aback, and without that kind of really close parental monitoring, I think it really could have gone into even more of an unhelpful direction.”

    The inherent appeal of AI companions is also what makes them especially perilous for tweens and teens, Malesa says: There is no conflict, no complexity or depth, no opportunity for children to build the skills they will need to navigate real relationships in their lives. “You’re not going to have an AI chatbot get mad at you for forgetting its birthday. You’re not going to have it disagree with you,” she says. “But there is so much personal growth that happens in those kinds of interactions.” Any child might be drawn toward this kind of illusory connection, but Malesa worries especially about children who are neurodivergent, or those with existing mental health issues such as anxiety or depression. “Those are the kids who really might get swayed, who might get more easily pulled in,” she says, “and even lose touch of the fact that this is not a real relationship.”

    In her practice, Malesa urges parents to foster skepticism and critical thinking in their children. “The more young people understand the artificial nature of AI and the ways it may attempt to influence them, the more empowered they will be to engage with it thoughtfully and avoid being manipulated,” she says. Keeping an open line of communication is also critical, she adds. “It’s so important to come in [to the conversation] with an open mind, come in with curiosity,” she says, “and to be really careful not to have any sense of judgment.”

    ‘You did nothing wrong’

    When R’s parents were ready, they decided to have the conversation with their daughter at the pediatrician’s office, in the presence of R’s trusted doctor. Her parents told her that they’d seen the descriptions of suicide in her Character AI chats, and they emphasized repeatedly that R was not in trouble. “I said, ‘You are innocent,’” H says. “‘You did nothing wrong.’” H spoke gently. All three adults wanted R to feel only loving support.

    Still, “the way that she responded was the scariest thing I’d ever seen. She went pale, she began to shake,” H says. “You could tell she was in a full panic attack. It was so troubling to me as a parent. How do you protect your child from feeling that shame?”

    They tried to calm her down. Together, they agreed that R’s parents would regularly check her phone, and the pediatrician emphasized this as a means of protection, not punishment: “She said, ‘Your mom is going to look at your phone, but it’s not because you’re in trouble,’” H recalls. “‘It’s because you deserve your childhood.’”

    Before they left the doctor’s office, H told her daughter, again: “You’re safe, I love you, and you’re going to be OK.”

    She remembers that her daughter started to cry and leaned into her mother’s arms. “Are you sure?” she asked. “Am I going to be OK?”

    Parental guilt

    There were moments when H felt consumed with guilt at the notion that she had failed to protect her daughter, and that something irreplaceable had been lost as a result. “It felt like someone had broken into my home and ripped the innocence from my child,” H says. “You beat yourself up, as a parent.”

    She wasn’t sure what to do with her fury. After H found the references to suicide in the app, she contacted Megan Garcia, an Orlando mother who had filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against Character AI after her 14-year-old son died by suicide just moments after the chatbot urged him to “come home to me as soon as possible.” Garcia connected H to Laura Marquez-Garrett, an attorney with the Social Media Victims Law Center (SMVLC) who is representing Garcia in her complaint against Character AI. Last year, Garcia’s case became the first involving AI that the SMVLC took on, Marquez-Garrett says; since then, the center’s lawyers have investigated more than 18 claims.

    Even after speaking with Garcia and Marquez-Garrett, H wavered on whether to pursue a complaint against Character AI. She wasn’t interested in financial compensation, she says; she just wanted to make sure that the companies creating this technology were doing everything possible to keep children safe.

    In December 2024, she exchanged correspondence with a legal representative for Character AI, who expressed concern about R’s experience, according to emails reviewed by the Post. H and the legal representative spoke briefly by phone, she says, but their communication trailed off after H shared updates with Character AI earlier this year that her daughter’s mental health had begun to improve, H recalls.

    With no progress made through her direct contact with the company, H last month began to reconsider whether to pursue legal action against Character AI, and reconnected with the SMVLC. Marquez-Garrett confirmed that they intend to file a complaint against the company.

    Demir, Character AI’s head of safety, told the Post in an emailed statement that the company cannot comment on potential litigation.

    H wants to see the company take meaningful steps to protect children, she says, and she wants other families to understand that if this could happen to her child, it could happen to theirs.

    “We live in an upper-middle-class community. She’s in a private school,” H says. She and her ex-husband are devoted co-parents, she says, and R has a caring circle of friends. “This is a child who is involved in church, in community, in after-school sports. I was always the kind of person who was like, ‘Not my kid. Not my baby. Never.’” But their experience has convinced her: “Any child could be a victim if they have a phone.”

    Are there long-term effects?

    Through the fall and winter of 2024, R’s anxiety and panic attacks gradually began to ebb. She continued with therapy, spent more time with friends and showed a revived enthusiasm for school and sports.

    “I feel like she’s doing really well,” H says now, a year later. “I feel like she’s out of the danger of self-harm. But I don’t know what the long-term effects are of her being exposed to that type of stuff.”

    H has also started going to therapy. “I need to heal, too,” she says, but it has been difficult to calm her lingering sense of hypervigilance. One recent day, R built a fort in her room and fell asleep inside it; when her mother called upstairs for her, she did not wake immediately. In the silence before H heard her daughter’s voice, there was a familiar spasm of panic — a flashback, H says, to the time when she was constantly fearful for her child’s safety.

    “I’m always on high alert,” she says, “even though she’s in a healthy space now.”

    R is doing well enough that she can talk — a little — about what happened. But H still hasn’t brought up the painting she found in the back of R’s closet, the one with the hanging body. She will ask about it when the time is right; her own therapist is helping to prepare her for that conversation. It is difficult for H to think about the image of the girl suspended in the air, her body outlined in black and blue.

    She tries to focus on the girl in front of her instead. A few weeks ago, R pulled bins of holiday decorations out of her mother’s closet and excitedly filled her room with twinkling lights and festive baubles, tucking a plush elf among her stuffed animals. When H peered in, she noticed a freshly finished painting on her daughter’s wall: a Christmas tree adorned with bright red ornaments and topped with a golden star, in brushstrokes bold and childlike. Standing in the threshold, H found herself suddenly overcome to see the joyful artwork — and her daughter, almost 13, still just a kid.

  • Mexican Navy medical flight lost communication for several minutes before Texas crash

    Mexican Navy medical flight lost communication for several minutes before Texas crash

    Air traffic controllers lost communication for about 10 minutes with a small Mexican Navy plane carrying a young medical patient and seven others before it crashed off the Texas coast, killing at least five people, Mexico’s president said Tuesday.

    Authorities initially believed the plane had landed safely at its destination in Galveston, near Houston, before learning it had gone down Monday afternoon, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said. The cause of the crash remains under investigation. A search-and-resuce operation in waters near Galveston pulled two survivors from the plane’s wreckage, Mexico’s Navy said, while one remained missing.

    Four of the eight people aboard were Navy officers and four were civilians, including a child, Mexico’s Navy said. Two of the passengers were affiliated with a nonprofit that helps transport Mexican children with severe burns to a hospital in Galveston.

    “My condolences to the families of the sailors who unfortunately died in this accident and to the people who were traveling on board,” Sheinbaum said in her morning press briefing, without elaborating on a possible cause. “What happened is very tragic.”

    U.S. Coast Guard Petty Officer Luke Baker said at least five aboard had died but did not identify which passengers.

    The plane crashed Monday afternoon in a bay near the base of the causeway connecting Galveston Island to the mainland. Emergency responders rushed to the scene near the popular beach destination about 50 miles (80 kilometers) southeast of Houston.

    Sky Decker, a professional yacht captain who lives about a mile (1.6 kilometers) from the crash site, said he jumped in his boat to see if he could help. He picked up two police officers who guided him through thick fog to a nearly submerged plane. Decker jumped into the water and found a badly injured woman trapped beneath chairs and other debris.

    “I couldn’t believe. She had maybe 3 inches of air gap to breathe in,” he said. ”And there was jet fuel in there mixed with the water, fumes real bad. She was really fighting for her life.”

    He said he also pulled out a man seated in front of her who had already died. Both were wearing civilian clothes.

    It’s not immediately clear if weather was a factor. The area has been experiencing foggy conditions over the past few days, according to Cameron Batiste, a National Weather Service meteorologist. He said that at about 2:30 p.m. Monday a fog came in that had about a half-mile visibility.

    Teams from the Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board were at the crash site Monday, the Texas Department of Public Safety said, and a spokesperson for the NTSB said the agency was gathering information about the crash.

    Mexico’s Navy said the plane was helping with a medical mission in coordination with the Michou and Mau Foundation. In a social media post, the foundation offered condolences to the families and said it shared their grief “with respect and compassion.”

    This latest crash comes amid a year of intense scrutiny on aviation safety after a string of high-profile crashes and the flight disruptions during the government shutdown driven by the shortage of air traffic controllers.

    The January mid-air collision between an Army helicopter and an airliner near Washington D.C. was followed by the crash of a medical transport plane in Philadelphia. This fall’s fiery UPS plane crash only added to the concerns. Still, the total number of crashes in 2025 was actually down a bit from last year and experts say flying remains safe overall.

  • Amtrak can’t fully run its new fleet of next-gen trains in 2026 due to facility upgrade delays

    Amtrak can’t fully run its new fleet of next-gen trains in 2026 due to facility upgrade delays

    Some of Amtrak’s fleet of next-generation Acela and Airo trains will likely sit idle in 2026 as the national railroad company faces delays in upgrading maintenance facilities.

    Amtrak is behind schedule on completing the necessary facilities upgrades to maintain its newest fleet of trains, inspectors told Amtrak in a new report. Delays in next-gen fleet rollouts, of which there have been several, cost the company millions in lost revenue.

    Early missteps in planning, like starting its fleet upgrade efforts in 2010 but its facilities upgrades in 2016, led to a “schedule misalignment,” inspectors said in the report.

    Amtrak is in the process of acquiring three fleets of trains from manufacturers — NextGen Acela, Airo, and Long Distance — to the tune of $8 billion. The national railroad corporation rolled out a handful of NextGen Acela trains in August. Airo trains are scheduled to roll out in 2026 and Long Distance trains in the early 2030s, according to Amtrak.

    In a recent review of the NextGen Acela trains, The Inquirer lauded the train for its smoother, faster ride, comfortable seats, and above all, its cleanliness, but lamented its infrequency and cost as the older Acela trains on Keystone and Northeast Regional services still carry the bulk of trips for a cheaper ticket.

    NextGen Acela and Airo trains offer faster travel with speeds of up to 160 mph and 125 mph, respectively, and modernized cabins featuring upgraded seats, improved Wi-Fi, and expanded dining options.

    A business-class car in the NextGen Acela in Washington on Aug. 27.

    The latest report from the Amtrak Office of Inspector General details that under its current facility construction schedule, Amtrak will only be able to operate the first 24 out of 28 NextGen Acela trains and the first 12 out of the planned 83 Airo trains hitting the tracks in 2026.

    Facilities in Philadelphia; Seattle; Boston; New York; Washington, D.C.; and Rensselaer, N.Y., are being upgraded to maintain this new fleet, which is the most substantial upgrade since Amtrak introduced the Acela in 2000. Amtrak broke ground on Philadelphia’s new $462 million facility in October 2024.

    Amtrak Acela trains sit in the Amtrak yard adjacent to 30th Street Station in Philadelphia in August 2023.

    While the company began considering plans to replace its aging trains 15 years ago, Amtrak didn’t start addressing facility upgrades until 2016 for NextGen Acela and 2021 for Airo. Additionally, Amtrak took a targeted individual site approach to facility planning instead of an “overarching” one, according to inspectors.

    Amtrak approved a new strategic fleet and facilities plan to align both efforts last month. However, inspectors found the company failed to appropriately define the scope of the six years of work that remains.

    In the report, a senior Amtrak official described the current system as “building a house without ensuring the garage fits the vehicles.”

    Amtrak officials agreed to implement a new management framework to streamline facility upgrade efforts by the end of March 2026.

  • The lower Schuylkill is up for Pennsylvania’s River of the Year. Voting is open.

    The lower Schuylkill is up for Pennsylvania’s River of the Year. Voting is open.

    The lower Schuylkill winds 36 miles from Phoenixville in Chester County to its tidal meeting point with the Delaware River at Philadelphia’s Navy Yard, sheltering more than 40 species of fish along the way.

    In Center City, the river doubles as a striking urban backdrop, bordered by a trail that can draw thousands of hikers and cyclists daily.

    This year, the waterway is vying for the title of Pennsylvania’s River of the Year, an annual competition spotlighting the state’s most significant waterways.

    Online voting, which began Dec. 9, runs through Jan. 16, giving Pennsylvanians the chance to select the 2026 winner from three contenders: Chillisquaque Creek, the Conestoga River, and the lower Schuylkill in the Philadelphia region.

    The River of the Year program is administered by the Pennsylvania Organization for Watersheds and Rivers, with funding from the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR).

    The contest is meant to draw public attention to rivers and their environmental importance. The winning river’s nominating organization receives a $15,000 DCNR grant to fund yearlong celebrations, including paddling events and community activities. The DCNR produces a commemorative poster in honor of the river.

    Jackson Quitel, river programs coordinator for the nonprofit LandHealth Institute, said his organization nominated the Schuylkill along with a plan to educate the public “in the many wonders in this unique body of water.”

    “While the Schuylkill River is widely known, not many people are aware of the immense recreational activities and ecological wonders that are present on the river today,” Quitel said.

    The LandHealth Institute helps increase awareness of the river through guided walks, fishing, and kayaking, taking more than 500 people out on the water in 2025. If the Schuylkill wins, Quitel said, it would allow the group to double its reach.

    Joe Syrnick, executive director of the nonprofit Schuylkill Development Corp., which helped develop the Schuylkill Banks trail along the river, called the river “a great asset to the region.”

    “It would be nice to see it get the recognition it deserves,” Syrnick said.

    Once a vital waterway for the Lenni-Lenape, the river later endured severe pollution from upstream coal mining and industrial waste, eventually rebounding through years of efforts, including the protections of the federal Clean Water Act.

    The Schuylkill became the nation’s first municipal‑scale water system through Fairmount Water Works and continues to provide drinking water to 1.5 million people through two intakes along its banks.

    The Schuylkill River Trail, a continuous corridor running alongside most of the lower Schuylkill, has broadened access to the river’s views for residents, giving them more insight into a river many were once cut off from.

    Most recently, the Schuylkill Banks section in Center City debuted a new $48 million cable‑stayed, pedestrian‑only bridge, anchoring a trail extension known as the Christian to Crescent Trail Connector. The 2,800‑foot segment delivers sweeping, unobstructed views of the river.

    The DCNR describes the lower Schuylkill as an “urban oasis surrounded by bustling roads and a backdrop of a gorgeous skyline.”

    Pennsylvania has 25 rivers. Of those, six are federally designated as wild and scenic and 13 are state-designated scenic rivers.

    Contest nominees can also include tributaries within river watersheds. For example, Chillisquaque Creek is a 20 mile-long tributary of the Susquehanna River’s west branch. It flows through Northumberland and Montour Counties.

    The Conestoga, meanwhile, feeds Chesapeake Bay.

    Overall, Pennsylvania has 85,000 miles of waterways, which is the highest stream density in the continental United States.

    The Delaware was the 2025 river of the year.

  • Jason Kelce invests in Sea Isle City’s Hank Sauce

    Jason Kelce invests in Sea Isle City’s Hank Sauce

    Jason Kelce, a man of voracious appetite and enthusiasm, is putting his money behind a local Jersey Shore brand, Hank Sauce.

    The hot sauce company, based in Kelce’s beloved Sea Isle City and sold everywhere from surf shops to the Acme, produces a variety of hot and not-so-hot sauces that have become ubiquitous at the Jersey Shore and Philadelphia area.

    The deal with Kelce’s Winnie Capital was announced in two ways: a sedate corporate press statement, and a not-at-all sedate Instagram post featuring a full-throated Kelce throwing jabs and juggling bottles of Hank Sauce, growling and snarling about the wonders of the flavorful sauce. As only the pitchman and iconic Eagles great can do.

    “BAM! POW! POW FLAVOR! YEEEEOWWWWWW,” Kelce spitballs for the camera from inside the Hank Sauce restaurant in Sea Isle, an array of sauce laid before him, before he and others off-camera dissolve in laughter. “You got some eggs that don’t have any [beeped expletive] flavor? Well we got you covered baby.

    “Any notes?”

    Someone throws him a bottle from stage right; he makes the catch. “I’m glad I looked,” he said.

    In the comments, and in the press statement, Kelce calls Sea Isle “right in my backyard in South Jersey,” and says he and the three founders plan to “take this thing to the next level.”

    The Kelce family owns a $2.2 million vacation home in Sea Isle, hosts his annual celebrity bartending Eagles fundraiser at the Ocean Drive, and support local causes like Mike’s Seafood walk for autism.

    “This one was a no-brainer,” Kelce said in the Instagram post. “I’ve been a consumer of this product and a fan of this brand for a long time.”

    Former Eagles player Jason Kelce rips off his pants during the fifth annual Team 62 at the Ocean Drive celebrity bartending event on Wednesday, June 25, 2025, in Sea Isle City, NJ. The event raises funds for the Eagles Autism Foundation.

    A regular in Sea Isle City with his family, Kelce said he walked into Hank Sauce in 2015 and met Brian “Hank” Ruxton himself, who took the Eagles star into the back where they shared a beer.

    “I like these guys,” Kelce said.

    The statement described the arrangement as “a strategic equity investment from former NFL player, podcaster, and investor Jason Kelce.”

    “The new investment and partnership with Kelce’s Winnie Capital will accelerate national expansion and increase Hank Sauce’s visibility and reach in new markets across the country,” the statement said.

    Founded in 2011 by three college roommates — Ruxton, Matt Pittaluga, and Josh Jaspan — as “a hot sauce for people who don’t like hot sauce,” Hank Sauce was first made in a garage, and hand-bottled for six years. The company eventually expanded into a 10,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Millville, and is now sold in more than 5,000 stores nationwide, according to the press statement.

    Matt Pittaluga (from left), Kaitlin Ruxton and Brian Ruxton are the dream team behind the Hank Sauce phenomenon. (DAVE GRIFFIN / For The Inquirer)

    Hank Sauce comes in multiple variations, including the original Herb Infused, plus Cilanktro, Camouflage, and Hank Heat.

    As part of the deal, Kelce will “collaborate with Hank Sauce on original content and ongoing brand strategy,” the statement says.

    “We’ve poured our lives into building this brand, and we couldn’t be more excited to have Jason on board — not just as a partner and ambassador, but as a genuine fan long before this partnership,” Pittaluga said in the statement.

    Winnie Capital is described as “a private family office supporting the business and philanthropic activities of Jason and Kylie Kelce. The Winnie portfolio includes diverse investments and partnerships across media, athletics, consumer packaged goods, apparel, real estate, agriculture, and technology.”