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Caught In The Crackdown: As Arrests At Anti-ICE Protests Piled Up, Prosecutions Crumbled

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from the lying-liars dept

This story was originally published by ProPublica and Frontline. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.

The National Guard soldiers in desert camo piled out of unmarked vans in East Los Angeles last June, cordoning off East Sixth Street, a residential street lined with single family houses, and blocking a nearby road leading to an elementary school.

A squad of federal agents moved in flinging flash-bang grenades — explosives designed to disorient — into a small home before storming inside. They’d come for Alejandro Orellana, a Marine Corps veteran and UPS employee accused of being a central figure in a secret confederacy of insurrectionists. A news video had shown the 30-year-old distributing water, food and face shields to people protesting the Trump administration’s immigration roundups in Los Angeles.

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Bill Essayli, a former state legislator who leads the federal prosecutor’s office in Los Angeles, joined the raid along with a Fox News crew.

With cameras rolling, Orellana, his parents and brothers were led out in handcuffs as agents searched their home.

On Fox News, Essayli, sporting a blue FBI windbreaker, hyped the arrest of Orellana, a quiet, wiry man with a long mane of coal-black hair. “It appears they’re well-orchestrated and coordinated, and well-funded,” he said. “And today was one of the first arrests — first key arrests — that we did.”

Essayli would charge Orellana with conspiracy — under a federal statute typically used to build cases against drug traffickers and organized crime — and with aiding and abetting civil disorder.

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Within weeks, the prosecutor’s marquee case would quietly fall apart. Agents who searched Orellana’s house found little that could be considered incriminating, and prosecutors never charged anyone else as part of the supposed conspiracy. By late July, they moved to have the charges dismissed.

It wouldn’t be the only such case.

Over the past 10 months, President Donald Trump’s administration has made much of its success in sweeping through U.S. cities, capturing unauthorized immigrants and arresting people who publicly oppose the operations, routinely accusing dissenters of being domestic terrorists or extremists. Federal agents have arrested hundreds of U.S. citizens like Orellana — including protesters, activists observing the immigration enforcement operations, bystanders and, in some cases, the family members of people targeted for deportation.

Less clear to the public is what has happened to those charged.

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To find out, ProPublica and FRONTLINE combed through social media, court records and news stories. Reporters identified more than 300 protesters and bystanders who were arrested by federal agents during immigration sweeps and were accused of crimes such as assaulting or interfering with law enforcement. 

But over and over those accusations fell apart under scrutiny. Our reviews of court files found that statements made by the arresting officers were repeatedly debunked by video footage. In more than a third of the cases, prosecutors quickly dismissed charges that couldn’t be substantiated, refused to file charges at all, or lost at trial. The tally of cases that end this way will likely climb as many of the arrests remain unresolved.

“What’s happening now is not comparable to anything that’s happened in the past,” said

Cuauhtémoc Ortega, the chief federal defender for the Central District of California, who personally represented Orellana and other protesters. “We’ve never had a situation where it seems like you arrest first and then try to justify the reasons for the arrests later.”

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The Department of Homeland Security, which includes Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the arrests and declined to answer detailed questions from ProPublica and FRONTLINE.

But in a statement in response to an earlier story, DHS said, “The First Amendment protects speech and peaceful assembly — not rioting. DHS is taking reasonable and constitutional measures to uphold the rule of law and protect our officers.”

Watch FRONTLINE and ProPublica’s Documentary: “Caught in the Crackdown”

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Given the unprecedented nature of the urban sweeps, it is difficult to compare the rate of failed cases to another time period or context. But current and former federal prosecutors and other legal experts said having that number of arrests come to nothing is particularly striking in the federal system, where U.S. attorneys usually secure convictions or guilty pleas in more than 90% of the cases they bring; only 8.2% of federal criminal cases were dismissed in 2022, according to data compiled by that court system.

The failures highlight the challenges of sending large numbers of federal agents into major cities to conduct roving immigration sweeps: They aren’t accustomed to dealing with crowds of angry protesters 

Border Patrol agents are typically stationed at the border where their day-to-day work entails scooping up people who have crossed illegally. ICE agents, who often work in urban settings, had little prior experience handling hostile crowds. And FBI agents, who have aided in the immigration sweeps, would normally spend months or years painstakingly amassing evidence before making arrests.

That lack of experience in street policing and crowd control, coupled with the Trump administration’s demand for huge numbers of deportations, led agents to make a wave of unjustified arrests, legal experts say.

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To be sure, protesters have often engaged in hostile behavior, hurling expletives, getting in agents’ faces and occasionally becoming violent. A woman in Minnesota is accused of biting off part of an agent’s finger during a scuffle after the killing of Alex Pretti in late January; in Los Angeles, an officer outside an immigration detention facility suffered a dislocated finger after a protester allegedly grabbed his bulletproof vest and shook him. 

But the agents’ conduct has also frequently been violent. As ProPublica and FRONTLINE reported last year, they have routinely shot pepper balls or tear gas at protesters in ways that violate their own rules, causing severe injuries to demonstrators in several cities. 

“The agents, they don’t know how to operate in these situations,” said Christy Lopez, a former Justice Department attorney who spent years investigating misconduct by law enforcement. Their behavior, she said, “is on par with the worst protest policing and just law enforcement that I’ve seen from any department, even in their worst days.

In its earlier statement, DHS said that “rioters and terrorists” have repeatedly attacked immigration agents, but ICE and Customs and Border Protection personnel “are trained to use the minimum amount of force necessary to resolve dangerous situations to prioritize the safety of the public and themselves.”

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The arrests are not without consequence. Even unsuccessful prosecutions can be costly and emotionally taxing for defendants, said Jared Fishman, a former career prosecutor in the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. The aggressive tactics of the agents and the gleeful social media posts by DHS accusing protesters of serious crimes, Fishman said, affect people’s willingness to publicly challenge the mass deportation policies. 

“If the goal of the Trump administration is to keep people out of the streets, then it doesn’t matter if the people are getting convicted,” said Fishman, now the executive director of the Justice Innovation Lab, a nonprofit focused on creating a more equitable and effective justice system. “I’m sure it’s having a chilling effect.”

After reviewing data and some court records for ProPublica and FRONTLINE, Fishman said, “The numbers seem to indicate a pattern and practice of illegal arrests.”

“We Must Identify Him”

The crackdown on protesters began in June of 2025, when the Department of Homeland Security launched its wave of major immigration sweeps in Southern California. The campaign was led by Gregory Bovino, a veteran Border Patrol chief who normally presided over a remote stretch of sand and scrub deep in the state’s Imperial Valley.

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Bovino from the start encouraged his agents to shut down or arrest protesters.

“Arrest as many people that touch you as you want to. Those are the general orders, all the way to the top,” Bovino told his officers, footage from an agent’s body-worn camera shows. “Everybody fucking gets it if they touch you.”

He went on to remind them that their actions should be “legal, ethical, moral” while encouraging them to use so-called less lethal weapons on protesters.

“We’re gonna look at shipping tractor trailers full of that shit in here,” he said. 

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Bovino’s forces repeatedly fired tear gas canisters and rubber bullets at the heads and faces of demonstrators and journalists. 

Bovino’s aggressive tactics sparked intense opposition from Angelenos, including those gathered in the streets in front of the sprawling federal office complex in downtown Los Angeles on June 9. 

That day Orellana drove his Ford F-150 pickup truck loaded with bottled water, snacks and cardboard boxes containing Uvex brand face shields — clear plastic masks designed to protect industrial workers from flying debris and chemical splashes — to the protest.

When he arrived in front of the federal building, another person hopped into the bed and began handing out the supplies to protesters gathered outside the entrance.

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Orellana told FRONTLINE and ProPublica that he decided to help distribute the supplies after watching federal agents fire tear gas and rubber bullets into crowds at an earlier demonstration.

“A bunch of us took it upon ourselves to, you know, go downtown and give out these resources — the food, water and of course the PPE,” he said, referring to personal protective equipment.

Video and photos quickly made their way onto social media. An X user with more than 30,000 followers posted a photo of Orellana. “A photograph of the man delivering boxes of gas masks to the rioters has emerged,” wrote the poster. “We must identify him, so we can track down who is funding this coordinated attack.”

From there the thread was picked up by the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who has a vast audience on the platform. Jones, who repeatedly claimed that financier and philanthropist George Soros was funding the protests, eventually named Orellana as the driver of the pickup. More than two million people saw the post. 

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Within 48 hours, the soldiers and federal agents arrived to arrest Orellana.

Over the next five months, they arrested more than one hundred U.S. citizens in Los Angeles and other cities in Southern California — most of them demonstrators — charging them with assaulting federal law enforcement personnel or interfering with agents’ activities. Others were accused of damaging government property. At least 16, like Orellana, were charged with conspiracy, which can carry a sentence of up to six years in prison.

ProPublica and FRONTLINE found that more than a third of those cases crumbled. In eight instances, juries acquitted defendants at trial. But more frequently, prosecutors dropped charges when the claims made by immigration officers and agents didn’t match video evidence or other inconsistencies emerged. In several cases, prosecutors declined to file charges at all. 

There have been some successful prosecutions: 32 of the 116 people whose arrests in California we reviewed have been convicted, many pleading guilty to misdemeanor charges. And in late February, jurors convicted two activists on stalking charges after they livestreamed themselves following an immigration agent to his home; the pair were acquitted of conspiracy.

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Today 38 cases are still pending.

Essayli has stated on social media that his office brought more than 100 cases and secured convictions in more than half of them. When asked about the discrepancy between his claims and the data compiled by ProPublica and FRONTLINE, he declined to comment. 

“The U.S. attorney’s office does not lose cases because they’re bad lawyers,” said Carley Palmer, who spent eight years as a federal prosecutor in the office Essayli now runs. “They are excellent trial attorneys. So if they’re losing a case, it may mean that the evidence isn’t there, or it may mean that the community doesn’t believe it should be a federal crime.”

Palmer, who is now in private practice, said the glut of protest and low-level criminal immigration cases have shifted resources away from the complex prosecutions the DOJ is uniquely equipped to handle: environmental crimes, public corruption, financial fraud, cyberscams, civil rights violations.

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Essayli declined to be interviewed for this story or an accompanying FRONTLINE documentary set to air Tuesday. He was appointed by the Trump administration in early 2025, but he has never been confirmed by the Senate, raising ongoing questions about the legality of his role as top prosecutor for the region. His office did not respond to detailed questions sent by email.

Like Orellana, Julian Pecora Cardenas, 31, was charged with conspiracy last summer after following a convoy of federal agents in his car.

On the morning of July 5, Pecora Cardenas followed vans full of Border Patrol agents after they left a Coast Guard station in San Pedro, south of Los Angeles, livestreaming their movements on Instagram. “It’s every citizen’s duty to conduct oversight of their government,” he said. “I was within my First Amendment rights.”

After roughly 30 minutes, the agents stopped, pulled Pecora Cardenas from his Hyundai and slammed him to the pavement. “I honestly thought it was going to be like a George Floyd moment,” Pecora Cardenas recalled in an interview, alleging that multiple agents pinned him to the asphalt with their knees. He suffered a concussion, needed stitches over his left eye and wore an orthopedic collar to stabilize his injured neck.

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Federal prosecutors charged Pecora Cardenas and another activist with conspiracy to impede the federal agents, saying that they “were illegally maneuvering their vehicles through traffic, stop lights, and stop signs to stay behind the agent’s vehicles,” that they tried to block the Border Patrol vehicles, and that they created “hazardous conditions on the road.”

Pecora Cardenas’ own video of the day’s events told a different story. The footage, which ProPublica and FRONTLINE have reviewed, contradicts the claims that the men had interfered with the agents. Within days of seeing the images, Essayli’s office jettisoned the charges “in the interest of justice.”

Pecora Cardenas hasn’t tried to observe federal agents or participate in a protest since his arrest. “I don’t want to be assaulted again. I don’t want to wind up back in federal prison for something that I didn’t do.”

“They Were Just Randomly Grabbing People”

When Bovino, the Border Patrol chief, left California and took his forces to Illinois last fall, their focus on protesters intensified.

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In roughly one month, federal agents arrested more than a hundred American citizens, many of them activists participating in demonstrations or documenting the movements of immigration agents as their convoys of rented SUVs rolled through the streets of Chicago and surrounding communities.

But Justice Department prosecutors in Chicago had less success prosecuting those arrested than their peers in California.

On the morning of Oct. 3, 2025, about two hundred demonstrators gathered near the ICE facility in Broadview, a small town in the western suburbs of Chicago. Tucked away in a quiet industrial park, the nondescript building had become the locus of ongoing protests since Bovino and his forces had arrived in Illinois.

Then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, accompanied by a DHS video team, was on site that day wearing a baseball cap and a black ballistic vest.

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Also present was Benny Johnson, a prominent podcaster and online influencer who is close to the Trump administration. Johnson, who had brought his own camera crew to shoot video for his YouTube channel and other social media accounts, was effectively embedded with Noem, Bovino and the immigration agents.

At about 9 a.m., Bovino and a phalanx of heavily armed agents in combat gear began striding down Harvard Street toward the protesters. “Walk slowly,” Bovino told his men.

Without a bullhorn or any sort of amplification, Bovino informed the crowd that they were being dispersed. Then he and his colleagues began shoving people to the ground and arresting them.

In a matter of minutes, a dozen protesters had been handcuffed. Three arrestees interviewed by ProPublica and FRONTLINE told us they were confused because they’d been standing in a “free speech zone” set up by state officials. 

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“I felt somebody grab my shoulder and pull me to the ground,” said Juan Muñoz, a business owner and elected leader in nearby Oak Park Township. “And once I fell onto my back, that’s when I saw it was Greg Bovino.”

Kyle Frankovich, a Harvard data scientist and Chicago resident, was also arrested. “They were just randomly grabbing people,” he recalled. “There was nowhere to go, people were falling all over the place, and several of the people they arrested simply had the misfortune of tripping over all of the other protesters” as federal agents surged into the crowd.

Frankovich said FBI agents who questioned him asked who had paid for him to participate in the demonstration and who “covered the transportation cost for you to be here today.”

Johnson’s video team and a DHS camera crew filmed the arrested protesters as they were lined up outside the ICE building, while Noem looked on. DHS posted photos of Frankovich in handcuffs on X and Facebook with the message, “We will NOT allow violent activist to lay hands on our law enforcement.”

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Johnson, who has more than more than 4 million followers on X and more than 6 million subscribers on YouTube, posted a video on X panning across the arrested protesters and wrote: “I saw dozens of Democrat domestic terrorists arrested today for VIOLENT ASSAULT on federal law enforcement. Every activist here attacked ICE agents in broad daylight just for enforcing American law.” He made the same claim in a nearly 13-minute-long YouTube video.

Such social media content had become a central feature of the Trump administration’s deportation campaign. DHS, Border Patrol and a raft of allied social media influencers regularly produced slick videos showing agents in action: riding in helicopters, striding through city streets clutching rifles, breaking down doors, and apprehending immigrants and activists. 

But on that day in Chicago, DHS had strayed far from the facts. And so had Johnson, a 38-year-old former journalist who turned to social media after being embroiled in plagiarism scandals at BuzzFeed and the Independent Journal Review. 

After about eight hours in custody, Frankovich, Muñoz and nearly all the others were released without charges. In the end, only one person would be prosecuted.

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Neither DHS nor Johnson have taken the posts down. Johnson did not respond to emailed requests for comment.

The lone person charged with a crime that day was Cole Sheridan, who was accused of attacking Bovino and sending him to the hospital with an injured groin muscle.

Sheridan spent three and a half days in jail — “probably the most unpleasant thing I’ve ever had to experience,” he said in an interview with FRONTLINE and ProPublica — before being released.

In court, a prosecutor said that Sheridan had thrown a punch at Bovino and pushed him, transcripts show.

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The evidence presented by the Justice Department, though, was slim. Bovino didn’t wear a body camera, so prosecutors relied on video from the body camera of Border Patrol agent Jason Epperson. But it didn’t show Sheridan assaulting anyone — though he did call Bovino “a fucking idiot.” In statements to investigators, Bovino and Epperson had offered conflicting accounts of the encounter.

About a month after Sheridan was arrested, prosecutors moved to dismiss the case after a bystander video surfaced showing clearly that Sheridan hadn’t assaulted Bovino.

“I don’t know if I’ve ever experienced something truly that bizarre and absurd as, like, seeing a law enforcement agent concoct a narrative to arrest me, to press charges against me,” said Sheridan, who describes himself as intensely private and was initially reluctant to talk publicly about his arrest. “That was extremely unnerving.”

He remains worried that he’ll be harassed or even physically attacked because of the inflammatory social media posts about him. “What a farce. Every element of it felt staged,” he said. 

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In a statement to ProPublica and FRONTLINE, Chicago U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros said, “Our willingness to be open-minded and dismiss cases — or not file charges in the first place — reflects our commitment to do the right thing even in those cases where a crime was committed and the conduct in question clearly falls outside any protected First Amendment activity.” He declined to comment directly on Sheridan’s case.

FRONTLINE and ProPublica showed video of Sheridan’s arrest to Lopez, the former Justice Department attorney. “It’s just a gross abuse of power,” she said. “And we’ve almost normalized that this is how federal law enforcement behaves now. They just arrest people.”

Of the 109 arrests that ProPublica and FRONTLINE documented in the Chicago area, federal prosecutors dropped charges in at least 75 cases.

Felony Charges Downgraded

When Bovino and his forces arrived in North Carolina last November, they were greeted by protesters opposed to the deportation sweeps, as they had been in previous cities.

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Heather Morrow was one of them. She had joined a small group of demonstrators, chanting and banging on metal dishes outside an immigration facility in Charlotte when ICE officers confronted the group. 

They handcuffed Morrow, 45, and another activist, stuffed them in the back of a federal vehicle and, according to Morrow, kept them there for hours before finally taking her to jail.

“I was so traumatized,” Morrow, a school bus driver and dog boarder, said in an interview. “I didn’t expect them to be so overly aggressive. I really showed up there expecting conversation, making them come to their senses.”

After a full day and night in custody, she was released to face federal felony assault charges. A Department of Justice press release accused her of attacking an ICE officer just as he showed up for his work shift, grabbing his shoulders and trying to jump on his back.

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But a shaky phone video circulating on social media showed what appeared to be a very different scene. In it, an officer comes from behind and abruptly tackles Morrow to the pavement. The video doesn’t show her assaulting anyone.

When prosecutors saw the video, they dumped the felony charges. But they promptly filed a new misdemeanor case against Morrow and the other activist, alleging the pair impeded ICE officers and failed to follow their orders. It took a month for Morrow to get her phone back from federal custody, while her other confiscated possessions, including her keys, have been lost, Morrow’s attorney said. Because she’s on pretrial probation, the federal government has seized her passport. Morrow has pleaded not guilty, and her case is ongoing.

In Handcuffs and Intimidated

In early January, Bovino arrived in Minneapolis with his social media team. Within weeks, two activists — Renee Good and Alex Pretti — were shot and killed by immigration agents. The Trump administration immediately portrayed Good as an extremist; Bovino claimed that Pretti was planning to kill federal personnel when he was shot to death.

The killings, which sparked national outcry, would prompt the administration to recalibrate. By Jan. 26, Bovino had been demoted and sent back to his home station in the California desert. 

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But immigration agents continued to roam the Twin Cities, and activists continued to get arrested.

Civil rights attorneys from around the country gathered in a Minneapolis conference room on Jan. 30 to discuss those arrests.

During a break for lunch, Jon Feinberg, president of the National Police Accountability Project, stepped out of the room and spoke to reporters. “To be charged with a federal crime is something that is life-altering,” said Feinberg, who is based in Philadelphia. “The consequences of being accused and possibly convicted of a federal offense are devastating, especially when people have not engaged in criminal conduct from any reasonable person’s perspective.”

ProPublica and FRONTLINE have identified nearly 80 arrests stemming from the Minnesota immigration sweeps. Most of the cases are still ongoing, though a handful have been dismissed. 

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Daniel Rosen, the U.S. attorney for Minnesota, did not respond to requests for comment.

One of those arrested was Rebecca Ringstrom, who lives in Blaine, a quiet suburb north of Minneapolis.

Ringstrom, 42, is a member of an activist group that tracks immigration agents as they move around Blaine. “There was a vehicle with four agents inside that I could see. All four were in tactical gear,” she said in an interview with ProPublica and FRONTLINE. “I was able to look at the plate and see that it was a confirmed ICE vehicle.”

Behind the wheel of her Kia, she began following them; Ringstrom insists her driving was safe and lawful. But in a matter of minutes, she’d been arrested and accused of interfering with federal law enforcement.

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Ringstrom said an agent at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, where she was briefly held after her arrest, said he wished he’d arrested her — because he would’ve made the experience more unpleasant and violent. “There was no reason to say that. I’m already here. I’m in handcuffs. It’s just a way to intimidate,” she recalled.

She was charged with interfering with a federal agent and issued a notice of violation — essentially a ticket — for the misdemeanor offense. Since then, Ringstrom has lined up a pro bono lawyer, but she has also lost her job, “likely due to the ongoing coverage” of her arrest.

She is scheduled to make her first court appearance later this month. 

Filed Under: 1st amendment, arrests, benny johnson, bill essayli, dhs, donald trump, fbi, free speech, gregory bovino, ice, kristi noem, pretextual arrests, protests

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John Ternus to Replace Tim Cook as Apple CEO in September

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Apple CEO Tim Cook Stepping Down John Ternus
Apple announced a huge leadership shake-up earlier today. Tim Cook will step down as CEO of the company he has headed for nearly 15 years on September 1st. That post will be filled by John Ternus, who has been with Apple for 25 years, essentially crafting out the modern product line itself. Cook is leaving down but will remain executive chairman, where he will oversee global policy and board activities.



Cook first joined the Apple team in 1998 and became CEO in 2011. During his tenure, the company’s market worth increased from approximately $350 billion to $4 trillion. Each year, the company’s income nearly quadrupled, 2.5 billion gadgets were distributed worldwide, and it even began offering services on a scale that exceeded several Fortune 500 corporations. New product lines, including as watches and earbuds, emerged, as did totally new modes of computing. Supply chains have stretched all over the world, and stores have arisen on every continent imaginable, but it’s the ordinary objects you carry in your pocket that truly tells the story.


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  • HELLO, MACBOOK NEO — Ready for whatever your day brings, MacBook Neo flies through everyday tasks and apps. Choose from four stunning colors in a…
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  • POWER FOR EVERYDAY TASKS — Ready the moment you open it, MacBook Neo with the A18 Pro chip delivers the performance and AI capabilities you need to…

John Ternus, on the other hand, began working at Apple in 2001, a year after finishing his mechanical engineering degree. He joined the product design team and worked his way up the hardware engineering hierarchy. By 2013, he was a vice president in charge of all hardware engineering, and he was promoted to senior vice president eight years later. Almost every major device line released by Apple has gone through his teams, including every generation of iPad, multiple iPhone models, AirPods, Apple Watch, and the transition to the Mac’s custom chips, and in recent years his focus has been on using tougher materials, making them easier to repair and less harmful to the environment. He just delivered a large presentation last September to launch the new iPhone line-up, and those who know him claim he can tell right away whether a prototype is good enough.


During the announcement, Tim Cook praised his replacement, describing Ternus as a visionary with impeccable precision and a leader with a strong sense of purpose. Ternus hailed Cook as a mentor and discussed his time working for Steve Jobs. Both guys emphasized that there will be no significant shift in direction at Apple. The values that have guided the organization for 50 years remain in place. However, the fact that Ternus, a hardware expert, is going into the senior position suggests that there may be a modest shift in direction. You see, Cook’s path to success differs significantly from Ternus’. Cook came from an operational background, but Ternus has spent his whole career working directly with the products.

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Anyone who has been following the company closely knows that the timing was not unexpected. Rumors about Cook’s plans had been circulating for months, and he had hinted in interviews that he would wait until the proper moment to act. September now gives those two leaders four months to work together harmoniously, and it appears Ternus will also join the board of directors. Arthur Levinson, who has led the board for nearly 15 years, is stepping down to become the lead independent director. Meanwhile, Johny Srouji, a long-time chip designer, has been promoted to chief hardware officer.
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Opinion: You can’t blame data centers in Seattle for our skyrocketing electricity prices

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Power lines, storm clouds, and shoes over Seattle. (Kurt Schlosser Photo)

After a vague report that some companies were seeking to build “large” data centers in Seattle, Mayor Katie Wilson is exploring a moratorium on new data centers.

This seems like the typical performative, hypocritical stunt we expect from our politicians. A distraction from harder issues, like ensuring we don’t retrace Cleveland’s history as the economic landscape fractures.

It is easy to ban data centers when you don’t have any (hello Maine!). Seattle’s high real estate and electricity prices mean “large” data centers in the city simply aren’t competitive. We have long had colocation facilities serving local businesses, but they’re quite small by modern standards.

Banning large data centers in Seattle is like banning cattle grazing in midtown Manhattan. Seattle just isn’t going to attract the cutting-edge AI and hyperscaler data centers that require lots of land and power. The Texas panhandle is a better place to put those.

Using data centers to complain about data centers (by posting on Facebook) carries more than a whiff of hypocrisy. Wouldn’t a sincere commitment to “environmental justice” and “economic resilience” mean not using any dastardly data centers? The mayor could abandon all online political messaging. Or order city departments to stop using any data center services.

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(Oddly, the City of Seattle’s data center is in Spokane. Which says something about the competitiveness of data centers in Seattle and/or the city’s inclination to support local businesses.)

The Means of Production

A self-proclaimed socialist, Comrade Katie has realized the socialist ideal of owning the means of production, at least of our city-owned utilities. But with ownership comes accountability and responsibility.

By drawing a line against new data centers, she would remove the easiest scapegoat for her performance. No blaming Big Tech. No pointing to AI. What remains is a testable proposition: will Seattle have affordable, reliable power?

Some challenges loom.

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Affordable and Reliable Power

Seattle City Light already charges some of the highest electricity prices in Washington, a state that generally enjoys low power costs thanks to abundant hydropower.

Mayor Wilson’s first move was to fire the head of City Light and nominate a replacement with no utility experience. After pushback from both the employees’ union and the City Council, a new leadership search has begun. No explanation has been provided for why the previous CEO was fired or what the mayor’s strategy is for City Light (or, for that matter, anything economic).

Seattle City Light has announced accelerating price increases, well above inflation, for the coming years:

Effective January 1, 2026, you will see the previously approved average rate increase of 5.4% start appearing on your bill.

Business customers can expect to see overall bill increases between 4% to 7%, depending on their customer class and consumption profile.

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Looking ahead to 2027 and beyond, we anticipate annual rate increases of 7 to 10%

The utility also needs to nearly double its capacity—from 2,000 to 3,800 megawatts in the next seven years—independent of any data centers. A growing population, electric vehicles, heat pumps, and broader electrification are all driving load growth.

It will take deft management to keep our grid both affordable and reliable. A moratorium on new data centers isn’t enough to keep the lights on in Seattle, and solutions that don’t fit on a bumper sticker seem like a stretch for the political class.

Fresh Water on Tap

While we’re looking at city-owned utilities, Seattle Public Utilities faces serious challenges of its own. The utility recently received a striking vote of no confidence in its ability to provide its most basic service: water.

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Eastside cities across Lake Washington, united as the Cascade Water Alliance, get their water from Seattle’s reservoirs. They have concerns about Seattle’s investment and maintenance, and after much analysis and negotiation, the Eastside is switching to get its water from Tacoma:

“[Tacoma Public Utilities’] proposal offered longer supply certainty, greater financial benefit, and an opportunity to move towards a regionalized water system.”

You can read a lot between those lines. The fact it will take 15 years to transition Eastside taps to Tacoma water suggests deep concerns about Seattle’s ability to deliver.

Beyond maintenance worries, this customer exodus also means the smaller remaining base of ratepayers will bear the system’s fixed costs, pointing to higher water bills ahead for Seattleites.

No Excuses

If data centers aren’t coming—and can’t be blamed—then rising electricity prices, capacity shortages, and reliability issues rest squarely with the mayor. The same goes for water.

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Grandstanding about data centers is easy. Making difficult and unsatisfying tradeoffs to ensure our city utilities deliver is the hard part.

So by all means, ban the large data centers that were never coming. Clear the field. Remove the distractions.

We can focus entirely on how our city utilities perform under Mayor Wilson.

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Apple TV's 'The Savant' to premiere in July after politically-motivated delay

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The Charlie Kirk assassination drove Apple to postpone the release of a politically charged series called “The Savant.” The decision led to pushback, but a new release has been set for July 2026.

Close-up of Jessica Chastain in large glasses with a cracked digital reflection and cursor, text reading Who keeps you safe? Apple TV+ Jessica Chastain The Savant
‘The Savant’ will debut in July

The more products and services that Apple offers, the more likely it is to cross paths with modern events. While Apple had nothing to do with the murder of Charlie Kirk, it felt the need to push a show’s debut that hit a little too close to home.
According to a report from Variety, The Savant will finally debut in July 2026, nearly a year from its original air date. Apple hasn’t updated its release date information on the website, but the news comes direct from show lead Jessica Chastain.
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Gamer Meticulously Restores Wild Gunman Arcade Game from 1974

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Nintendo Wild Gunman Arcade FMV Cabinet
Photo credit: 2 Warps to Neptune
In 1974, Nintendo kicked off their coin-operated arcade era with Wild Gunman. This game required players to step up, pull a handgun from a holster, and face off against some unfriendly live-action gunslingers on a projection screen. Footage came from authentic film reels filmed on site in Japan, capturing the wild west-style shootouts in all their gritty grandeur. Timing was everything here. You could only draw and shoot after your eyes flashed and the word “FIRE” appeared on the screen. Get it right, and you’ll come out on top. If you mess up, draw too soon, or miss your shot, you will lose the duel.



Roughly a hundred units left the factory, the majority of which either stranded in warehouses or fell apart over time due to neglect. Today, just one original cabinet remains intact, and it is kept locked away in a private collection. That meant that for about 50 years, no one outside of that collection had the opportunity to play the game as it was intended. Everything changed when Callan Brown got wind of something unusual. The Canadian arcade collector and repair specialist spotted an eBay listing for the original 16mm film reels used in the Wild Gunman arcade cabinet, reportedly sourced from the warehouse of a retired operator in Saskatchewan. Recognizing their rarity, he moved quickly, placed the winning bid, and brought the reels home for his collection.

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  • Includes mirror screen and vibrant cabinet artwork to replicate the original arcade game’s sci-fi visuals and immersive retro aesthetic

Nintendo Wild Gunman Arcade FMV Restoration
Brown first had to preserve the reels before sending them to a competent facility in Toronto for scanning. Some of the reels showed scratches and dust from years of intensive use, while others appeared to be in perfect condition. He stored the worst pieces safely while keeping the better frames. Unfortunately, two of the four duel sequences remain absent, but there was enough solid content to bring the basic game experience back.

Nintendo Wild Gunman Arcade FMV Restoration
Brown then began the rebuild by creating a basic scale model on his workshop, but things quickly became out of control. The next thing he knew, he was drafting full-size designs, cutting plywood sheets for the cabinet frame, and assembling it piece by piece. His wife, Natasha, worked hard to hand stitch the cloth side panels so they matched the original design flawlessly. On his 3D printer, the front control panel was crisp and clear, and the LED lights worked. Brown even printed the gun’s body and attached it with infrared sensors that tracked movement in the same manner that classic console controllers did.

Nintendo Wild Gunman Arcade FMV Restoration
A single digital projector now manages film playback inside the cabinet, and everything runs on custom Unity code written by Brown. It reads the player’s time, selects the appropriate film clip, verifies the shot position, and awards a badge if the player hits a clean shot. Insert two quarters into the coin slot, and the machine will scream to life. The attract loop plays on the screen, allowing the user to grab the gun. A gunslinger appears on the screen, his eyes flare, and you receive the command to fire. Draw quickly but not too quickly, and then land that shot as the victory music begins to play. Everything feels just like the original game from the 1970s.

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PlayStation To Require Age Verification For Messages and Voice Chat

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A new email from Sony says that PlayStation will require players to verify their age later this year to keep using communication features like messages and voice chat. Insider-Gaming reports: The initiative comes from the goal of providing “safe, age-appropriate experiences for players and families while respecting their privacy” and providing “meaningful control over their gaming experiences.” The age-verification process will be implemented globally, and players will need to verify their age to continue using PlayStation communication services, such as messages and voice chat. If the player opts not to verify their age, they can still use other services, such as games, trophies, and the store. Only the communication experience will be affected if you choose not to verify your age. PlayStation didn’t provide a date for when players will need to begin the verification process.

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Rep. Mike Johnson Tries, Fails To Sneak Clean Section 702 Re-Authorization Past The Goal Line

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from the not-today,-second-rate-satan dept

Despite a bunch of Republican lawmakers being extremely (and mostly performatively) upset that their communications were accessed during investigations of the January 2021 insurrection attempt, the current version of the Trump administration seems to prefer a clean re-authorization of the surveillance powers it so recently deemed a dangerous part of the “deep state.”

The FISA court recently blessed an extension of this NSA collection, provided the government fixed the most problematic parts of it — that being other IC agencies’ warrantless access to US persons’ communications via “backdoor” searches of the foreign-facing surveillance dragnet.

Trump was having none of this, pressing the GOP to simply give the administration an un-reformed, un-repaired Section 702 that would presumably allow it to engage in the same abuses it was crying about less than a half-decade ago.

Fortunately for every American only allowed to vote by proxy every two-to-four years for surveillance reform, there is still no clean re-authorization on the books. The senator whose name is synonymous with surveillance reform — Ron Wyden — recently had this to say in his Bluesky post:

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Update on where things stand on FISA: this deal is a win. We got the House to back down from an 18 month extension, buying us time to negotiate on real reforms. I’ll be fighting like hell for reforms that put your privacy first, and will have more to share soon.

Senator Ron Wyden (@wyden.senate.gov) 2026-04-17T20:03:29.353Z

Update on where things stand on FISA: this deal is a win. We got the House to back down from an 18 month extension, buying us time to negotiate on real reforms. I’ll be fighting like hell for reforms that put your privacy first, and will have more to share soon.

Not that congressional majority leader Mike Johnson wasn’t trying his damnedest to round up GOP support for a clean renewal that would give Trump what he wanted, and very little of what the GOP actually wanted, given its years of complaining about the FBI’s warrantless access to their communications.

Johnson apparently decided he could slip this one past the goal line by holding a couple of quick votes as time ran out on the current congressional session. Here’s James Baratta with the details for The American Prospect:

Johnson’s dazzling play to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) by five years ended in an excruciating defeat, as the bill failed after 20 Republicans joined Democrats in striking it down. One major reason it lost was that the warrant language baked into that measure not only would have codified existing law, but also would have made it easier for Section 702–acquired data to be used against Americans in criminal proceedings.

The 200-220 vote was called at 1:22 early Friday morning.

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Baratta’s report refers to this as an “eleventh hour” burst of activity, but it’s actually well past that hour. We’re looking at 13th to 14th hour desperation here, especially since Johnson went back to the well again shortly after this first defeat.

The other shoe dropped during the vote on a rule to consider a clean 18-month extension of Section 702. That rule also failed at 2:07 a.m. in a 197-228 vote.

Given that the average congressional rep is pushing 58, both votes occurred well after bedtime. It’s a testimony to the resistance to clean re-authorization of Section 702 powers that these many reps were still on the floor to shut down Mike Johnson twice.

It also shows that Mike Johnson isn’t actually leading the Republican party. He’s restricted to doing whatever Trump wants, even if that clashes with what many party members want. To get skunked twice in two hours is embarrassing, which means Johnson may not remain majority leader for long, even if Democrats can’t flip the House following the mid-terms.

The good news is this: Congress only has until the end of this month to get a re-authorization passed. If it hopes to prevent this surveillance power from lapsing, Johnson and his fellow surveillance hawks are going to have to make some concessions, which may (finally!) include warrant requirements for searches of US persons’ communications by IC agencies with access to NSA collections.

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On the other hand, when push comes to shove, far too many Republicans are willing to be Trump’s doormat and argue against their own interests, along with the interests of the constituents. But this is the most concerted challenge to Section 702 mounted yet. Even the Snowden leaks didn’t manage to get this done. But even if reforms are finally put in place, the public should remember GOP lawmakers did this because they want to shield themselves from domestic surveillance. That it might better protect their constituents is just an unavoidable side effect of their self-interest.

Filed Under: backdoor searches, gop, mike johnson, nsa, section 702, surveillance abuse, trump administration, warrantless searches

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Apple CEO Tim Cook Is Stepping Down

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Tim Cook is stepping down as the CEO of Apple and transitioning to a role as the company’s executive chairman, effective September 1, the company announced on Monday. John Ternus, Apple’s senior vice president of hardware engineering, will replace Cook as CEO.

Cook’s departure had been speculated upon in recent months. In an era when every other Big Tech company has thrown significant resources at developing advanced AI, Apple is widely perceived as a laggard. Ternus’ old job will fall to Johny Srouji, who was elevated to chief hardware officer from a senior vice president on Monday. Srouji has been instrumental to Apple’s development of custom computer chips.

Cook’s legacy at Apple will be tied to the company’s tremendous financial growth over the past two decades. When he took over as CEO in 2011, the company’s market capitalization was around $350 billion; it is now north of $4 trillion. More than 2.5 billion people around the world used an Apple device as of January, according to the company.

During Cook’s tenure Apple launched both the Apple Watch and AirPods, important anchors for the company’s accessories unit, which generated nearly $36 billion in revenue during the last fiscal year. Its services business, which keeps consumers locked into Apple hardware and now accounts for over a quarter of the company’s total sales, grew from about $3 billion a quarter at the end of 2011 to about $30 billion in the final three months of last year.

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But some of the projects developed under Cook, such as Apple’s self-driving car, were less successful. Apple Vision Pro, the company’s delayed foray into virtual reality headsets, was widely considered to be too expensive and failed to gain traction. While Cook expertly managed Apple’s production cycles during the global pandemic and quickly diversified the company’s supply chain when it encountered pressure from tariffs, Cook’s legacy is likely to be that of an operations master rather than a product innovator.

Cook’s dealings with China are also a part of his operational legacy, as China became not only a critical hub of manufacturing but also an important consumer market for Apple. As of last year, Apple held the top spot in smartphone market share in the country, with an estimated 22 percent. In recent years, though, Apple has faced scrutiny over what some lawmakers allege is the use of forced labor involving Uyghur Muslims by its contractors. Apple also reportedly tried to lobby against certain provisions in a 2020 bill that would have prevented forced labor in China.

Cook, like many tech CEOs, has cozied up to President Donald Trump since Trump’s return to the White House—sometimes even standing, grim-faced, beside the president at public events. Cook personally donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration festivities in early 2025. He also appeared at Trump’s inauguration itself, alongside Elon Musk, Sundar Pichai, Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg. In an odd display of fealty last August, Cook presented Trump with a custom Apple plaque that was nested in a 24-karat gold base. He also attended a private screening of the Melania documentary at the White House, hours after a federal immigration agent shot and killed nurse Alex Pretti during a street protest.

In 2014, the typically private Cook announced that he is gay in an op-ed in Bloomberg Businessweek. At the time, Cook wrote that being gay gave him a deeper understanding of “what it means to be in the minority and provided a window into the challenges that people in other minority groups deal with every day.” His experience had taught him to “rise above adversity and bigotry,” Cook wrote. He also cited concern for children being bullied as a motivation for him to speak out about his own experiences.

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Best Kitchen Composters and Food Recyclers (2026)

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The countertop kitchen composter is a lovely vision. Instead of a smelly bucket of vegetable scraps and coffee grounds breeding fruit flies on your counter or attracting rats to your backyard, you could just put it all into a nifty electric gadget, and at some undetermined point in the future, you’ll have a bountiful supply of nutrient-rich compost to use in your garden.

Unfortunately, none of the more popular electric machines quite do this. Even though some of these devices are marketed as “composters” and have instruction booklets and apps detailing all the ways in which one can use compost, the vast majority of kitchen composters are just going to grind up and dry your food scraps. Your waste output will be greatly reduced in volume and will no longer smell, but if you’re hoping to put eggshells and banana peels into a machine and magically scoop out the kind of compost you’d buy at the garden center, that’s just not going to happen.

That said, you can mix small amounts of these grounds into potting soil in very small ratios, or use them as feeder for a “real” compost pile, but most of these machines are meant for those wanting to reduce the volume of food waste their household produces. This is itself a legitimate goal, as cast-off food makes up 24 percent of municipal solid waste, resulting in the release of methane, a destructive greenhouse gas, as it breaks down in the landfill.

Or maybe you’d just like your food grounds to be odor-free and shelf-stable before adding them to your green waste bin for municipal composting or your backyard compost. In any case, despite critics’ cries of greenwashing and corporate astroturfing, there is still value to these devices. They make people more aware of their food waste. They don’t use as much power as you think they would (around 1 kilowatt-hour was typical). And my top pick, the Reencle Prime, even produces something close to compost.

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Read on for our assessment, and once you’re done, check out some of our other kitchen-related guides, including the Best Coffee Makers, Best Toaster Ovens, Best Meat Subscription Boxes, and Best Meal Kit Delivery Services.

Updated April 2026: I’ve added the Terra II from GEME and Clear Drop’s Organics Collector to the section of other devices I’ve tried and ensured up-to-date links and prices. I’m currently testing a composter from Airthereal.

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Side view of the Reencle Prime Electric Home Composter, a white rectangular device with a small black scooper attached to the side

Reencle

Prime Electric Composter

As I mentioned above, none of these machines makes truly ready-to-use compost, but the Reencle Prime comes closest to a traditional compost bin. Popular in South Korea years before it appeared in the US, the Reencle arrives with a starter bag of ReencleMicrobe (which can be purchased separately for $65) containing activated carbon, wood pellets, glucose, and a trio of patented microbes ready to chow down. There’s also a prefilled carbon filter that slots into the back.

Image may contain Tin Can and Trash Can

Reencle Gravity (left) and Prime (right)

Photograph: Kat Merck

At 14 x 15 x 22 inches, the Prime is too large for a kitchen counter, but it conveniently operates much like a heated trash can. The lid can be opened via a sensor at the bottom or a button on the control panel, and in goes your organic matter. That’s it. There are no cycles, tablets, or auxiliary buckets to worry about. Even the app is totally optional. Within hours to days, depending on the item, the scraps are broken down into a material resembling a cross between dirt and sawdust.

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The smell isn’t always pleasant, but it can usually be mitigated by using the control panel’s Dry and Purify buttons or by adding what, in composting lexicon, is called “browns”—dry, carbon-rich materials like bread or shredded paper.

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Photograph: Kat Merck

The Reencle also tends not to smell when it’s being fed its preferred diet of 1.5 pounds of scraps per day. Unlike other machines, it can also accept meat and dairy. For larger households, there’s the Reencle Gravity ($649), which is a couple of inches taller and can accept 3.3 pounds of waste a day. I also tested this and found it to be significantly quieter than the Prime—not that the Prime is noticeably loud, only about 30 decibels—but the Gravity is nearly silent, which is a nice bonus.

When the volume reaches the fill line, the Reencle grounds can be scooped out, mixed with potting soil at a 1:4 ratio, and left to cure for three weeks (I used a large tub in my garage). Afterward, it can be used for both outdoor and indoor plants. I have used this resultant mix to positive effect both indoors and outdoors.

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How Long Should Michelin Latitude Tour HP Tires Last & Do They Have A Warranty?

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There’s no shortage of marketing materials trying to convince you to buy Michelin Latitude Tour HP tires. But what about real life? Can drivers really expect the balance of durability, comfort, and great all-season performance that Michelin promises? According to customer reviews, real-world lifespan will vary for these tires depending on your driving habits and specific road conditions.

Latitude Tour HP tires are designed for on-road SUVs and 4×4 vehicles. They use a special “Terrain-Proof” compound, which is said to help resist wear across a wide range of environments. They also have “StabiliGrip Technology,” which is just a fancy way of saying specially positioned sipes for less vibration and noise while you drive.

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Michelin’s warranty information says drivers can expect treadwear to last anywhere from 30,000 to 55,000 miles, depending on the tire’s speed rating. (H-rated versions have a 30,000-mile warranty, W-rated models have 45,000 miles, and V- or H-rated versions get up to 55,000 miles.) These are some of the best treadwear ratings in Michelin’s catalog. The numbers give us a good idea of how long the tires are expected to last, but that’s under normal conditions. Actual results will vary depending on things like rotation and alignment.

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What people with Latitude Tour HP tires have to say

Mileage-based warranties are one thing, but actual drivers’ experiences are something completely different. The reviews on Michelin’s site paint a much clearer picture of what you can expect to get out of your Latitude Tour HPs. This is a good thing. Plenty of drivers say the tires exceeded expectations, with some sets lasting well beyond 80,000 miles. That’s not to say everybody’s experiences are the same, of course. Some users experienced uneven or premature wear, requiring replacement as early as 40,000 miles. It just goes to show how much real-world durability is influenced by driving style, road conditions, vehicle setup, and even weather.

For when something does go wrong with the tire, Michelin backs the Latitude Tour HP with a comprehensive warranty package beyond the treadwear figures mentioned earlier. They’re also covered by a standard limited warranty for defects in materials and workmanship. That warranty lasts for up to six years post-purchase (or until the usable tread is depleted, whichever comes first). They also fall under the Michelin Promise Plan, which includes a 60-day satisfaction guarantee and free roadside assistance.

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Lenovo Yoga Tab Review – Trusted Reviews

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Verdict

A great compact tablet for students that doesn’t skimp on performance and includes a brilliant stylus in the box? The Lenovo Yoga Tab has a lot to like.

  • Great, compact size

  • Good performance for the price

  • Stylus included

  • Just three years of updates

  • Bloatware

Key Features

  • Trusted Reviews IconTrusted Reviews Icon

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    Review Price:
    £479

  • Stylus included:

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    Bundled with the Lenovo Tab Pen Pro

  • Quad-speaker setup:

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    Two tweeters and two woofers

  • 3.2K resolution:

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    11.1-inch IPS LCD

Introduction

Tempted by the iPad Air’s set of features, but would rather spend a little less at the checkout? The Lenovo Yoga Tab might be the alternative you’ve been waiting for.

I have to hand it to Lenovo, there aren’t too many companies out there that offer quite the same degree of variety in the world of tablets compared to the likes of Apple and Samsung, but the brand has absolutely no shortage of options to the point where practically every type of budget is catered for.

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Sitting below the premium-level Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus, the standard Lenovo Yoga Tab is still a fairly feature-packed tablet, but thanks to a starting price of £479/$549.99, it’s more affordable than crucial options like the iPad Air M4 and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE.

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Of course, even with a head start on price, the question remains as to whether or not Lenovo can do enough with the Yoga Tab to lure potential adopters.

Despite having reviewed countless tablets from other brands, this is the first Lenovo tablet I’ve ever had the pleasure of testing, and I’ll gladly admit that I should have been paying more attention to the company’s output sooner.

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Design

  • Very compact build
  • Only 6.2mm thick
  • Just two colourways available

Being unfamiliar with Lenovo’s design language when it comes to the company’s tablets, I wasn’t too sure what to expect, but I found myself pleasantly surprised from the very first moment that I held the Yoga Tab. This is a slick tablet that brilliantly tows the line of having a decently sized display (11.1 inches) but without ever feeling cumbersome, making it a solid option for some entertainment on the go.

The Lenovo Yoga Tab speakersThe Lenovo Yoga Tab speakers
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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At just 6.2mm thick and with a starting weight of only 458g, the Lenovo Yoga Tab, from a pure design perspective, is exactly what I want from a tablet most of the time. Having recently used the excellent OnePlus Pad Go 2, as much as I loved its larger frame for a bit of productivity when working from home, it’s a little too large to be my go-to tablet if I’m travelling and would rather have something compact that can more easily fit into my carry-on luggage, which is exactly what the Yoga Tab can do.

Even though I’ve been using the device without a case for the duration of this review, because the tablet itself is so slim, I don’t think that bringing a case into the mix will diminish its portability in any meaningful way.

However, one feature that I wish the Yoga Tab had pinched from more affordable Lenovo Idea Tabs is a helpful kickstand for easy viewing. I’ve had to constantly prop the Yoga Tab against several objects, but because the backing doesn’t provide a tangible grip, this has often led to me saving the tablet from sliding away at the last second.

There are two colourways available, Seashell and Luna Grey, the former of which I’ve had in for testing. Both models have a semi-professional look about them, so if they are brought into a meeting they won’t look out of place, but I do wish that they had a bit more of a personality to them. Even the iPad Air M4, despite being a more premium tablet, comes with a hint of colour.

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For the sake of consistency, however, I’d recommend picking up the Luna Grey option as it’s colour matched with the included Lenovo Tab Pen Pro, creating a better look overall.

The Lenovo Yoga Tab features a small camera bumpThe Lenovo Yoga Tab features a small camera bump
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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Screen

  • 11.1-inch IPS LCD panel
  • 3.2K resolution
  • 144Hz refresh rate

As I’ve said before, an 11.1-inch panel is the sweet spot as it’s big enough to provide a far more immersive viewing experience than my smartphone, but it’s not too large as to feel cumbersome in the hand, which can be an issue with larger tablets like the 13-inch iPads and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S11 Ultra.

In terms of the display itself, it packs a 3.2K resolution which helps to keep everything looking crisp, whether that’s on the homescreen or when scrolling through the likes of Netflix and Disney Plus for your next watch. It’s also IPS LCD, so no OLED here, although that isn’t too surprising, as you typically have to spend a bit more in order to enjoy self-lighting pixels on a tablet.

Still, the colours look great, and when diving into my go-to stream of Avengers: Infinity War, I did find myself getting drawn into the action.

The refresh rate can also top out at 144Hz, which is great news for gamers. It’s shown off in its best light when running through a couple of matches in titles like Call of Duty Mobile, but even when giving Balatro a spin (although the game is far from the most taxing one out there), all of the animations and card twists look buttery smooth on this display.

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One thing I would have liked to see is a slightly higher brightness than the current peak of 800 nits. It certainly gets the job done in most scenarios, but I did spot a bit of dimming around the edges of the display when viewing webpages with a white background. If you’re coming up from a much older tablet then this probably won’t be noticeable, but I did find the OnePlus Pad Go 2 to be a better performer in the brightness department.

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Trusted Reviews homepage on the Lenovo Yoga TabTrusted Reviews homepage on the Lenovo Yoga Tab
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The Yoga Tab’s display is nice and responsive though, which was great to see when I was rearranging apps to have everything set up in just the right multitasking configuration. This also applies to instances of using the Pen Pro, with minimal delay present to make you feel connected with your writing. 

Cameras

  • 13MP main camera
  • The 2MP macro camera feels like an odd addition
  • 13MP front-facing camera

As much as I love tablet computers, their cameras are barely an afterthought in how I use them, and, as ever, I would not recommend choosing a tablet based on the sensors it includes. Still, if you do need to rely on cameras occasionally for scanning a document or jumping into a Zoom call, then you won’t be disappointed with what the Lenovo Yoga Tab has to offer.

On the back, there’s a 13MP wide-angle camera that can take okay pictures if you need a reference point for something, but start zooming into the shots, and you’ll notice that the detail falls apart pretty quickly. As I mentioned before, this camera is far better suited for scanning documents when needed, and I was impressed to see that even on my dimly lit desk, the camera was able to take a decent scan of a document, which could then be tweaked after the fact to distinguish the text a bit better.

Lenovo Yoga Tab picture sampleLenovo Yoga Tab picture sample
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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What I can’t quite wrap my head around is the inclusion of a secondary 2MP macro camera on the rear. This is exactly the type of useless feature that the Lenovo Yoga Tab could have done without, as it would have been much nicer to see Lenovo’s efforts focused elsewhere, or to have the price be just a tad more affordable.

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At the very least, the front-facing 13MP ultra-wide camera does a great job of capturing everything around you, so if you and several other people near you want to hop onto a video call, there’s a good chance that you’ll all appear on the screen without any need for jostling.

Performance

  • Solid power from the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3
  • Gaming works like a charm
  • Tremendous speakers

Powering the Lenovo Yoga Tab is the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset which, despite being a few years old now, is still capable of fairly impressive performance. After all, this is the same chipset that used to be reserved for flagship phones, including the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra.

I did encounter a slight slowdown during the early phase of using the tablet, whilst everything was installing in the background, with the whole thing freezing on me for a few seconds before responding, but beyond that initial period, I have very much enjoyed my time with the Lenovo Yoga Tab.

Call of Duty Mobile on the Lenovo Yoga TabCall of Duty Mobile on the Lenovo Yoga Tab
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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Because of the relatively compact size of the device, I’ve enjoyed catching up on the latest headlines, scrolling through the BBC News website with ease, as well as constantly jumping back and forth between the likes of Amazon, Currys and John Lewis on the hunt for any tech or gaming deals I can get my hands on.

When I fancied a bit of interactive entertainment, I was able to connect an Xbox controller over Bluetooth and absolutely decimate my way through a round of Call of Duty: Mobile (anyone using touchscreen controls didn’t stand a chance). Everything ran smoothly, and I didn’t pick up on any instances of lag or screen tearing, something which was partially helped by the 144Hz refresh rate.

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Multitasking is also handled incredibly well on the Lenovo Yoga Tab, with my typical use case of having Google Docs open next to the Chrome browser proving to be no issue whatsoever. When pushing it a bit further, I was even more impressed in having BBC News open on one side, Balatro playing on another, and a windowed Disney Plus stream in the corner, all without the tablet buckling. If you’re a student who needs a bit of distraction as you revise, this set-up is perfect.

Test Data

  Lenovo Yoga Tab OnePlus Pad Go 2 Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE Plus
Geekbench 6 single core 2220 1003 1230
Geekbench 6 multi core 5758 3082 3545
Geekbench 6 GPU 13300 2602
3D Mark – Wild Life 4445 874 1348
3D Mark – Wild Life Stress Test 3893 % 98.8 %

The only area where I saw limitations in the chipset was when playing more demanding 3D titles. To the Yoga Tab’s credit, it handled the exploration sections of Honkai Star Rail rather well, but it was in the game’s battles that I would spot the occasional frame jump. Still, that’s not bad for a tablet of this price, and unless you’re a serious gamer, I don’t think you’re going to hit the performance ceiling of this tablet very often (if at all).

Multitasking on the Lenovo Yoga TabMultitasking on the Lenovo Yoga Tab
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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Saving the best for last, what really gave me pause about this tablet is its speakers. I didn’t anticipate anything special from a tablet this compact, but the quad-firing set-up provides one of the best soundscapes I’ve ever come across in a tablet. Getting to run through my usual test streams has been an absolute joy, and there’s a serious amount of weight provided. If you’re on the road and the Lenovo Yoga Tab is your only source of entertainment, then I don’t think you’ll be disappointed.

Software

  • Android with the Lenovo ZUI overlay
  • An unfortunate amount of bloatware
  • Just three major software updates

As far as the user experience goes, the Yoga Tab uses Lenovo ZUI, and although this was my first experience with this specific Android overlay, I will say that I grew to like it over the course of the testing period. The UI isn’t quite as stylish as OnePlus’ Oxygen OS, but everything is clearly labelled which I appreciated.

For example, you can easily dive into a bit of multitasking by tapping on the three dots that sit at the top of an app, wherein you can have apps sit side by side or have several windowed apps around the screen. Unfortunately you can’t do 90/10 multitasking wherein a second app sits largely out of the way on the side of the display, but can be called upon quickly with a single tap, so it’s not quite as robust an experience as what you’ll find with Open Canvas on OnePlus tablets.

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Still, Lenovo’s approach to simplicity also carries over to the quick-access controls for the Pen Pro, wherein you can jot down notes, use Google’s Circle to Search or scribble on a screenshot of whatever’s on the display. I’m not typically a fan of using stylus pens on tablets either, but with the way the software is laid out and the Pen’s very satisfying haptic feedback, I found myself picking it up fairly often.

Quick settings for the Pen Pro on the Lenovo Yoga TabQuick settings for the Pen Pro on the Lenovo Yoga Tab
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Instead of having Google News pop up when swiping right from the homescreen, you’re greeted with an entertainment hub that’s mostly centred around Google services. By default, the first thing you see is a Google TV dashboard which collates all of your key streaming services, but you can also access your library of Google Play Store games and any purchased Google Play Books.

Personally, I could do without most of those options, but having quick access to Google TV is great, especially as it cuts down on needing to jump from one streaming app to another in search of what you want to watch.

What I didn’t appreciate seeing was a decent amount of bloatware preinstalled on the device. Before I ever started downloading my own apps, the likes of Adobe Express, CapCut and Perplexity were already present, alongside (strangely enough) two separate drawing/painting apps. It’s something I fully expect to see at the budget end of the market, but at £479 the Yoga Tab is much closer to the mid-range sector.

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Even with the bloatware at play, what really stands out as a major knock against the Yoga Tab is that it only carries a promise of three OS updates from the time of launch. Usability is extended slightly by four years of security updates, but it’s not great when you consider that Apple and Samsung offer far in excess of that, so if you don’t want to upgrade your tablet in just a few years, then I recommend looking elsewhere.

Battery life

  • 8660mAh cell
  • 45W charging
  • Charges to full in one hour and 28 minutes

If you do plan on using the Lenovo Yoga Tab either as a productivity device or for getting through your studies, you won’t have much to worry about in terms of battery life. There’s a sizeable 8860mAh silicon carbon cell crammed into this tablet, impressive given its slim build, but it’s meant that I haven’t ever really had to worry about topping it up as I’ve gone about my day.

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The battery settings of the Lenovo Yoga TabThe battery settings of the Lenovo Yoga Tab
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You can get a larger 10200mAh battery by opting for the more expensive Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus, but unless you really plan on spending hours editing high-quality videos in LumaFusion or CapCut, I don’t think you’ll need the extra grunt.

Charging is also set at 45W, which is fair for a tablet of this price. It’s the same charging speed as the more expensive Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 FE, although if battery is your main concern, then you can get 66W charging (and a bigger cell) on the Xiaomi Pad 8 Pro.

When using a 65W charger, which effectively allows the Yoga Tab to reach its 45W capacity, it took only 1 hour and 28 minutes to reach a full charge, which isn’t bad. Getting to the 50% mark only took 43 minutes, so if you’re in a rush, then you can get back enough juice to get you through a few lectures.

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Should you buy it?

You need a compact tablet for university

With good speeds, a stylus included and a slim build that’s easy to carry around, the Lenovo Yoga Tab is a great option for students.

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You want a tablet for the long haul

With just three years of software updates provided by Lenovo, the Yoga Tab doesn’t offer the same type of futureproofing as you’ll find with Samsung devices.

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Final Thoughts

As someone who spent most of their undergraduate and postgraduate years preferring to use a tablet rather than a laptop, the Lenovo Yoga Tab is exactly the type of device I would have loved to have during my studies. This isn’t to say that adults won’t enjoy using this tablet, only that I think the Yoga Tab excels best as an all-in-one device for students.

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The Snapdragon chipset makes multitasking very easy, and with a stylus included, you can take down handwritten notes in a pinch – perfect for when you’re brainstorming with a study group. When you’re ready to call it a day, it’s the combination of quick access to Google TV and the surprisingly powerful built-in speakers that allow the Yoga Tab to work just as well as an entertainment device.

Above all though, it’s the compact nature of this tablet that makes it feel very inviting to use. The lightweight stature makes it simple enough to carry one-handed, and you’ll barely notice its presence when flung in a backpack.

I do wish that the tablet came with a longer period of software support, and the presence of bloatware does make the experience feel a little less premium than the competition. The iPad Air M4 and the Samsung Galaxy S10 FE Plus remedy both of these issues, but they do cost a bit more than Lenovo’s tablet. Alternatively, if you want a great productivity tablet for less than the OnePlus Pad Go 2 is also worth a look.

If you still haven’t made up your mind then check out our guide to the best tablets.

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How We Test

We test every mobile phone we review thoroughly. We use industry-standard tests to compare features properly and we use the phone as our main device over the review period. We’ll always tell you what we find and we never, ever, accept money to review a product.

  • Used as a main tablet for over a week
    Tested and benchmarked using respected industry tests and real-world data

FAQs

Does the Lenovo Yoga Tab come with a stylus and keyboard?

There is a stylus included by default with the Lenovo Yoga Tab, but you’ll have to pay more for a bundle that also includes a keyboard case.

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Test Data

  Lenovo Yoga Tab
Geekbench 6 single core 2220
Geekbench 6 multi core 5758
Geekbench 6 GPU 13300
3DMark Solar Bay 8083
AI performance 3622
Time from 0-100% charge 98 min
30-min recharge (included charger) 35 %
15-min recharge (included charger) 18 %
3D Mark – Wild Life 4445
3D Mark – Wild Life Stress Test 3893 %

Full Specs

  Lenovo Yoga Tab Review
UK RRP £479
USA RRP $549.99
Manufacturer Lenovo
Screen Size 11.1 inches
Storage Capacity 256GB
Rear Camera 13MP wide, 2MP macro
Front Camera 13MP
Video Recording Yes
IP rating Not Disclosed
Battery 8660 mAh
Size (Dimensions) 255.5 x 165.8 x 8.3 INCHES
Weight 458 G
Operating System Android 16
Release Date 2025
First Reviewed Date 09/04/2026
Resolution 3200 x 2000
Refresh Rate 144 Hz
Ports USB-C
Chipset Snapdragon 8 Gen 3
RAM 12GB
Colours Luna Grey, Seashell

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