Politics
Through T-REX, DoD seeks to fill technology gaps

The Defense Department’s Technology Readiness Experimentation is all about finding the technology needles in the haystack.
Through this live-fire and prototype demonstration, T-REX is trying to validate the technical maturation and military utility of specific technologies to fill gaps in the warfighters’ arsenal.
These gaps could be urgent operational needs or from an integrated priority list developed by the goals set by the Joint Staff.
“T-REX is unique in the case that we’re take technologies right out of the laboratory. We’re talking technology readiness levels anywhere between four and six, which is our initial entry criteria. There are special use cases, where we go a little earlier than that, if it’s software use initiatives, but we need to make sure that as prototypes come into fruition from concept and we’re driving the capability and fielding into the warfighters hands, that it works,” said Lt. Col. Matt Limeberry, the commander of the Rapid Assessment of Prototype Technology Readiness (RAPTR) Task Force in Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, on Ask the CIO. “That technology come with their white sheets, their quad charts, and we say, ‘Hey, if you have an unmanned aerial system that can fly an endurance of eight hours and carry a 10-pound payload, well, prove it in any platform, any domain, outside of the laboratory and outside of a controlled environment.’”
Limeberry said his team of about 100 uniformed personnel on the RAPTR Task Force, stationed at Camp Atterbury-Muscatatuck in Indiana, puts these technologies through their paces in an environment that closely duplicates certain operational environments.
Indiana National Guard industry partners test launch unmanned aerial systems designed to enhance real-time surveillance and battlefield awareness at the Department of Defense’s 10-day Technology Readiness Experimentation event, hosted by the Indiana National Guard’s Rapid Defense Experimentation Reserve Task Force at Camp Atterbury, near Edinburgh, Indiana, on Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025. (Photo by Staff Sgt. Jonah Alvarez, Indiana National Guard Headquarters)
“As these technologies come through and use T-REX as a venue, we want to be that publisher, that clearinghouse and underwriting authority for technologies going to the warfighter. That speed of relevancy matters,” he said. “As technologies are being assessed in T-REX, they get that military utility feedback from the warfighter, and can iterate on the spot. That’s purposeful for a reason because it helps us buy down risk now for the future warfighter. What we say is let the warfighter fight tonight with tomorrow’s technology. T-REX does that. It helps us buy down risk. It helps us save costs and iterate technology fast and early, fail often and fast, because when the warfighter needs it.”
Brandon Bean, the senior director for artificial intelligence and machine learning solutions in the chief technology office in the defense division at General Dynamics-IT (GDIT), said his team experienced these concepts in action. He called T-REX “the ideal proving ground. It created realistic, fast-paced and unforgiving circumstances.”
DOGMA platform put through its paces
At the T-REX exercise in the summer of 2024, GDIT and its partners, including Amazon Web Services, tested out the Defense Operations Grid-Mesh Accelerator (DOGMA) platform, which is an AI software that is aiming to modernize long-range communications to support U.S. air defense systems.
GDIT says DOGMA integrates cloud and AI technologies with satellite connectivity capabilities in order to streamline data processing, analysis and decision making.
Bean said the Army and GDIT used T-REX to validate the platform’s adaptability, latency and ability to perform under pressure, while still being able to show how modular edge AI capabilities can extend decision making to the tactical edge, even without reliable communications.
“We combine resilient mesh networking edge optimized compute and real time AI and machine learning inference to process sensor data without the reliance on the persistent cloud connectivity when necessary, but when we’re in a disrupted, degraded, intermittent and low-bandwidth (DDIL) condition, we’re able to also extend connectivity beyond the edge of the battlefield using AWS as a secure cloud backbone,” Bean said. “It was originally built for NORAD and the Alaskan command to predict aircraft trajectories in low visibility radar denied environments, using historical and real-time sensor data. It was originally built for looking for what we call big hunks of metal in the sky. We quickly were able to adapt the solution for T-REX to adapt to the counter UAS mission.”
Bean said GDIT pivoted its use case toward counter UAS in about two weeks leading up to the exercise and then during T-REX, it modified the technology again in about eight hours to test it at the edge with low-bandwidth.
“In an environment like T-REX, there’s always something that’s going to be thrown at you. The first was being able to identify when we wanted to design our model retraining triggers. When you’re working on data like UAS data, over time, that data will drift, and that could be from a compendium of things and it’s mainly just the way the data is being sent and we are adding new sensors. So we really were able to get a good sense of what the real world conditions would be, allowing us to essentially model the auto-retraining of our models based on that live data drift and orchestrate how we do that at the edge when we’re actually in detail,” he said. “Another one would be our edge orchestration logic. We’re currently working to harden how DOGMA prioritizes its edge workloads when compute is constrained. That was one of the big things we dealt with out there.”
T-REX is a twice-a-year exercise
Limeberry said during T-REX, the Army has key performance measures to evaluate the technologies against to ensure they meet warfighter needs. These include everything from supply chain risk management to scalability to being able to change, correct and adjust in near-real time.
Bean said DOGMA could be used by other agencies beyond DoD. He said the Department of Homeland Security, for example, is another agency with UAS mission areas, whether it’s Customs and Border Protection or FEMA. The Agriculture and Interior departments also are using drones to measure and manage land and wilderness areas.
“There are a lot of a lot of places out there where people don’t really assume DOGMA is beneficial, but anywhere that you need analytics and you need data moved off of the objective, whether that objective is an internet of things sensor, whether it’s a camera, whether it is edge compute, some type of a radar sensor, DOGMA is applicable,” he said. “It’s that secure backbone that allow you to get that data off of the objective and somewhere that you can use it, whether it is out at the edge or back at the core data center.”
Limeberry said DoD has used T-REX to look at an assortment of other technologies too, including resiliency in that communication, predictability in the AI modeling and deterring, detecting and defeating adversarial aerial platforms that threaten the security of bases.
“We are prefacing into 2026 and we’re looking at what we call ‘Top Gun,’ which is a first-person view UAS platforms and drone-on-drone conflict. We are looking at offensive and defensive swarming capabilities, multi domain, collaborative autonomy, so controlling air, maritime and aerial platforms at the same time through learning autonomous stacks,” he said. “It’s all about how we achieve some of the latest administration executive orders of American drone dominance. These tie into those policies and procedures that we want to achieve in American made and manufactured requirements to build our defense industrial base moving forward into the future.”
The post Through T-REX, DoD seeks to fill technology gaps first appeared on Federal News Network.
Politics
Black Lives Matter Activist in Boston Pleads Guilty to Federal Fraud Charges – Scammed Donors to Fund Her Lifestyle

Screencap of YouTube video.
A Black Lives Matter activist in Boston named Monica Cannon-Grant pleaded guilty to federal charges this week, admitting that she scammed donors and used their money to fund her own lavish lifestyle.
Cannon-Grant was previously held up as an admired figure. The city of Boston named her the Bostonian of the year at one point for her ‘social justice activism’ and she was even recognized by the Boston Celtics basketball team for her efforts.
She is now facing a minimum of two years in prison.
The New York Post reports:
BLM-linked activist admits conning donors to fund her lavish lifestyle
A once-celebrated Boston social activist has pleaded guilty to defrauding donors — including Black Lives Matter — out of thousands of dollars that she used as a personal piggy bank.
Monica Cannon-Grant, 44, pleaded guilty Monday to 18 counts of fraud-related crimes that she committed with her late husband while operating their Violence in Boston (VIB) activists group, according to the US Attorney’s Office in Massachusetts.
The activist scammed money — including $3,000 from a BLM group — while claiming it was to help feed children and run protests like one in 2020 over the murder of George Floyd and police violence.
Cannon-Grant also conned her way into getting $100,000 in federal pandemic-related unemployment benefits — which she used to pay off her personal auto loan and car insurance policy.
But she has now confessed to transferring funds to personal bank accounts to pay for rent, shopping sprees, delivery meals, visits to a nail salon — and even a summer vacation to Maryland.
Just amazing.
Monica Cannon-Grant stole from donors, scammed the government, and lived it up while preaching about oppression. BLM grift is the only nonprofit where fraud is part of the mission statement. https://t.co/ir3q9lqYrh
— Matthew Newgarden (@a_newgarden) September 23, 2025
BREAKING: BLM activist Monica Cannon-Grant pleads guilty to 27 fraud charges, misusing over $1M from Violence in Boston for personal gain. Echoes Sir Maejor Page’s $450K scam conviction. A wake-up call for nonprofit accountability. pic.twitter.com/N9vvD369gB
— (@pr0ud_americans) September 14, 2025
Here’s a local video report:
She should pay back every penny.
The post Black Lives Matter Activist in Boston Pleads Guilty to Federal Fraud Charges – Scammed Donors to Fund Her Lifestyle appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
Keith Olbermann Backpedals Furiously With Apology for Threatening CNN’s Scott Jennings – Jennings Responds (VIDEO)

As the Gateway Pundit reported yesterday, former MSNBC host and generally unhinged leftist Keith Olbermann, appeared to threaten CNN’s conservative pundit Scott Jennings on Twitter saying, ‘You’re next motherf**ker.’
Well, Olbermann may have gotten a phone call or a visit from the FBI because today he walked back those comments with a full-throated apology.
RedState has an update:
To quickly recap, Scott Jennings, a Salem Media Network radio host and conservative CNN political commentator, reacted to breaking news on Monday that Kimmel had been reinstated by tweeting, “So basically his employer suspended him for being an insensitive pr**k, and we don’t live in an authoritarian regime? Got it.”
This enraged Olbermann, who proceeded to tweet what many, including Jennings, perceived to be a threat. “You’re next, motherf**ker. But keep mugging to the camera.” Jennings tagged Patel and included a screengrab of the tweets in response.
Though the FBI hasn’t commented as to whether an investigation was launched, Olbermann ostensibly appears to have thought twice about what he tweeted and deleted, apologizing profusely in tweets posted on Tuesday and claiming what he wrote was “misinterpreted”:
See Olbermann’s tweet below:
I apologize without reservation to @ScottJenningsKY
Yesterday I wrote and immediately deleted 2 responses to him about Kimmel because they could be misinterpreted as a threat to anything besides his career. I immediately replaced them with ones specifying what I actually meant. pic.twitter.com/SPWLb73nEk
— Keith Olbermann (@KeithOlbermann) September 23, 2025
I oppose and condemn political violence, and the threat of it. All times are the wrong time to leave even an inadvertent impression of it – but this time is especially wrong
I should've acknowledged the deletion and apologized yesterday. I'm sorry I delayed.
— Keith Olbermann (@KeithOlbermann) September 23, 2025
Scott Jennings, always a class act, offered this hilarious response:
SCOTT JENNINGS: “Marking myself SAFE from that NUT, Keith Olbermann!” pic.twitter.com/EYZX6vm5Oh
— Dustin Grage (@GrageDustin) September 23, 2025
Keith Olbermann really needs help. The guy is just so out of control.
The post Keith Olbermann Backpedals Furiously With Apology for Threatening CNN’s Scott Jennings – Jennings Responds (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
Where is Lance Twiggs? Kirk Assassin’s Transgender Lover Has Vanished

Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson and roommate Lance Twiggs
Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson lived with his transgender partner – a male-to-female trans named Lance “Luna” Twiggs.
The FBI used Robinson’s texts with his transgender partner to solidify that Robinson was the assassin. Lance Twiggs has not been charged with any crime; however, federal authorities are still investigating.
Last week, Utah authorities released the text exchange between Tyler Robinson and his transgender lover, Lance Twiggs, sent shortly after Kirk’s assassination.
Utah County District Attorney Jeff Gray announced seven charges against Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson. They will also be seeking the death penalty.
Robinson was charged with:
– Count 1: Aggravated murder (capital offense)
– Count 2: Felony reckless discharge of a firearm causing bodily injury
– Count 3: Felony obstruction of justice for hiding the firearm
– Count 4: Felony obstruction of justice for discarding the clothing he wore during the shooting
– Count 5: Witness tampering for asking roommate to delete incriminating messages
– Count 6: Witness temperating for demanding trans roommate stay silent, and not speak to police
– Count 7: Commission of a violent offense in the presence of a child
Jeff Gray released the chilling texts between Tyler Robinson and his “love” Lance Twiggs.
Read the text exchange here:
Tyler Robinson texts with transgender lover Lance Twiggs / 1
Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson texts with transgender lover Lance Twiggs / 2
Lance Twiggs was reportedly cooperating with the FBI, however, according to the Daily Mail he has seemingly vanished.
“If [Lance Twiggs] ever comes back, it will be in a body bag,” a neighbor said to the Daily Mail. “That’s not a threat – I’m just saying that there are so many people who want a piece of him he’d be mad to show his face in public again. This was a generational event.”
The Daily Mail reported:
The Trans boyfriend of Charlie Kirk’s alleged assassin has fled their former lovenest – and locals tell the Daily Mail they never want to see him again.
Lance Twiggs, 22, was led away for questioning when police swooped on the smart three-bed condo he shared with accused gunman Tyler Robinson, 22.
Shaken neighbors say the part time plumber has not been back to the $320,000 property in St. George, Utah – one declaring: ‘Good riddance. I never want to see either of them again.’
His beaten-up Infinity compact is still parked in his space with his work gear tossed across the back seat and a sandwich wrapper and a drink on the front passenger seat.
Upstairs lights have been left on for more than a week and notes and Amazon packages are piling up outside the home owned by Twiggs’s devout Mormon family.
The post Where is Lance Twiggs? Kirk Assassin’s Transgender Lover Has Vanished appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
-
Entertainment6 months ago
New Kid and Family Movies in 2025: Calendar of Release Dates (Updating)
-
Entertainment3 months ago
Brooklyn Mirage Has Been Quietly Co-Managed by Hedge Fund Manager Axar Capital Amid Reopening Drama
-
Tech6 months ago
The best sexting apps in 2025
-
Entertainment5 months ago
Kid and Family TV Shows in 2025: New Series & Season Premiere Dates (Updating)
-
Tech7 months ago
Every potential TikTok buyer we know about
-
Tech7 months ago
iOS 18.4 developer beta released — heres what you can expect
-
Tech7 months ago
Are You an RSSMasher?
-
Politics7 months ago
DOGE-ing toward the best Department of Defense ever