Michael Jordan's fight against NASCAR heads to court, could shake up motorsports

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Michael Jordan'sbitter fight against NASCARheads to federal court Monday in a jury trial that could rip apart the top motorsports series in the United States.

Theantitrust allegationsleveled by Jordan-owned 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports has exposed salacious personal communications, NASCAR's finances and a deep contempt between some of the top executives in the sport and its participants.

Three-time Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin, who owns 23XI alongside Jordan and less than a month ago had the Cup Series championshipslip through his fingers, warned this weekend that the gloves will be off during the two-week trial in the Western District of North Carolina.

"Our fans have been brainwashed with (NASCAR's) talking points for decades," Hamlin wrote on social media. "Lies are over starting Monday morning. It's time for the truth. It's time for change."

NASCAR Commissioner Steve Phelps has said that the series has tried hardto settlethecaseahead of Monday's trial.

What is the lawsuit about?

The lawsuit was filed by 23XI Racing, which is owned by Basketball Hall of FamerJordan,Hamlin and Jordan's longtime business manager, Curtis Polk. They were joined by Front Row Motorsports, a team owned by entrepreneur Bob Jenkins that won the 2021 Daytona 500. The two were theonly teams out of 15 to refuse to sign renewalson the charter agreements NASCAR presented to them in late 2024.

All 15 teams had been fighting formore favorable termsin the charter agreements over more than two years of negotiations, and the final terms fell short of what the teams had been seeking. 23XI and Front Row accused NASCAR of being a monopoly and sued under antitrust grounds.

What is a charter?

The charter system was introduced in 2016 and is NASCAR's version of the franchise model used by most other professional sports leagues. Being chartered guarantees that car a spot in the 40-car field for all 38 races, as well as a defined payout from the weekly purse.

Even with the charters, the teams have argued that the revenue model is not viable. The teams wanted the charters to become permanent (they are renewable and revocable), a larger percentage of revenues and a voice in governance.

23XI and Front Row felt the new charter agreements fell short of meeting those demands and refused to sign. The two organizations argue NASCAR holds too strong of a hold on all aspects of the racing series and allege a monopoly based on exclusivity clauses, ownership of most of the race tracks on the Cup schedule, and its control of the rules and regulations.

23XI and Front Row are now also pursuing a large monetary sum from NASCAR to cover their legal fees and financial losses suffered this year from not being chartered plus the lawsuit.

NASCAR's defense

NASCAR was founded 76 years ago by the Florida-based France family and says it has not violated antitrust law because it has done nothing to restrain trade beyond normal business practices.

NASCAR has argued that payouts in the 2025 charter agreement increased and prove it is not anticompetitive. NASCAR has also cited the option for cars to enter races as "open teams" and try to make the field in one of four nonchartered spots on qualifying speed. 23XI and Front Row have been open teams, and while their combined six cars made every race, it cost both organizations millions of dollars in purse money.

The pretrial discovery process revealed NASCAR made more than $100 million in 2024.

Behind-the-scenes drama

Thediscovery phasehas been brutal for both sides with the exposure of unseemly personal communications from top NASCAR executives as well as the two teams.

Phelps was among leadership who in a discussion with other NASCAR executives called Hall of Fame team owner Richard Childress a "dinosaur," an "idiot" and a "stupid redneck." The discussion also included a reference that Childress "owes his entire fortune to NASCAR" and needed "to be taken out back and flogged."

Another NASCAR executive alleged that fans of the sport can't read, and multiple series leaders admonished Hall of Fame driver Tony Stewart's summer short-track series, SRX, and threatened to have it killed because NASCAR drivers were participating.

On the other side, the president of 23XI was found to have said NASCAR chairman Jim France had to die in order to receive favorable charter terms, Hamlin admitted his dislike for the France family, one of Jordan's advisers said Hamlin wasn't a good businessman and Jordan joked that he loses more money in a casino than he pays one of his drivers.

Who will be in court?

NASCAR has indicated it wants Rick Hendrick and Roger Penske, the two most powerful team owners in the United States, and neither Hall of Famer wants to testify. They both filed a motion asking not to even be deposed, and if they must be, then the questioning must be limited to charters.

Hendrick and Penske are among a large group of owners whosubmitted declarationson NASCAR's behalf in defense of the charter system. The declarations showed unity among the non-suing teams, who do not want the charter system to be disbanded, which could happen if NASCAR loses the case.

But, what NASCAR doesn't spotlight is that many of theteam ownersstill noted that the 2025 charter agreements are still short of all their asks.

Additionally, NASCAR has asked that Polk and Hamlin of 23XI not be allowed to sit in court ahead of their testimony. A ruling on that had not been made as of Sunday early evening.

Jordan, a North Carolina native who led the University of North Carolina to a national championship and once owned the NBA's Charlotte Hornets, received an exemption to be in the courtroom for the entire jury. A spokesperson for the two teams said that Jordan and Jenkins plan to be the faces of their case.

What are some outcomes

The case could still be settled at any time, even if a ruling is made and it goes to appeal.

If 23XI and Front Row win, the jury will determine actual monetary damages and Judge Kenneth Bell can adjust the figure and even triple it. Bell also would be charged with unraveling any found monopoly.

Among the threats to NASCAR are orders that the France family sell the sport, sell the tracks it owns, dismantle the charter system, order permanent charters — anything is possible.

If NASCAR wins, it is unlikely that 23XI and Front Row stay in business beyond 2026 and the six charters being held aside likely will be sold to other interested parties. The last charter sold went for $45 million, and NASCAR has indicated there is pressing interest from potential buyers including private equity firms.

AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Michael Jordan's fight against NASCAR heads to court, could shake up motorsports

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Michael Jordan'sbitter fight against NASCARheads to federal court Monday in a jury trial that ...
Bedard's 4 points lead Blackhawks to a 5-3 comeback win over Ducks

CHICAGO (AP) — Connor Bedard scored the tie-breaking goal at 9:55 of the third period, added an empty-net score and had two assists as the Chicago Blackhawks rallied from an early three-goal deficit to top the Anaheim Ducks 5-3 on Sunday and snap a five-game slide.

Tyler Bertuzzi, Ryan Greene and Colton Dach also scored as Chicago tied it 3 by 12:34 of the second. Chicago converted two of four power-play chances and killed all three Anaheim advantages.

Bedard beat Ville Husso with a nifty move from the front of the crease to put Chicago ahead 4-3 following a turnover by Alex Killorn. Husso had entered the game 44 seconds earlier after starter Petr Mrazek exited with an undisclosed injury.

Bedard fired into an empty net with 1:55 remaining to seal it.

Spencer Knight rebounded from a shaky start to finish with 23 saves.

Cutter Gauthier had a goal and an assist as the Ducks jumped out a 3-0 lead midway through the first period.

Chris Kreider scored for the second straight game to give him 600 career points. Olen Zellweger also scored and Troy Terry set up two goals to extend his point streak to seven games.

Mrazek made stopped 13 of 16 of shots before exiting in his first start against the Blackhawks since they traded him to Detroit in March. Anaheim No. 1 goalie Lukas Dostal missed his third game withan upper-body injury.

Gauthier and Zellweger beat Knight on two of Anaheim's first three shots, giving the Ducks a 2-0 lead 47 seconds in. Kreider's off-the-skate deflection upped it to 3-0 at 10:25

Bertuzzi cut it to 3-1 with 2:03 left in the first, deflecting in a power-play score. Greene made it 3-2 at 6:43 of the second, finishing a 2-on-1-break with Bedard.

Dach tied it 3-all during a power-play at 12:34 of the second.

Ducks: Visit St. Louis on Monday

Blackhawks: Start a four-game trip at Vegas on Tuesday.

AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Bedard's 4 points lead Blackhawks to a 5-3 comeback win over Ducks

CHICAGO (AP) — Connor Bedard scored the tie-breaking goal at 9:55 of the third period, added an empty-net score and had t...
NFL Winners and Losers: After Rams loss, it's hard to find any reliable Super Bowl contenders

Through this wild, up-and-down NFL season, the one reliable team that seemed to emerge was the Los Angeles Rams. After last week's blowout win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, they wereeveryone's pick as the best team in football.

What we're learning in Week 13 is that there are no reliable teams this season.

On Thursday and Friday, all four favorites lost and all the losers were exposed in various ways. TheDetroit Lions,Kansas City Chiefs,Baltimore RavensandPhiladelphia Eagles lostand none looked close to being Super Bowl contenders. It didn't matter because the Rams were rock solid.

And then Sunday happened.

The Rams, who were getting a historic run of mistake-free football from Matthew Stafford, lost 31-28 to a Carolina Panthers team that looked absolutely terrible six days earlier in a Monday night loss to the San Francisco 49ers.

Stafford threw two interceptions,including a pick 6, and lost a crucial fumble late in the third quarter with his team trailing. Stafford hadn't thrown an interception since Week 3. Stafford had thrown 28 straight touchdowns without an interception, an NFL record, before even he looked vulnerable.

Stafford's turnovers weren't the only issue. The defense let down too. Bryce Young hit a huge go-ahead 43-yard touchdown pass to Tetairoa McMillan on fourth down late in the fourth quarter, and that was a key turning point. Young had 206 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions. Everything that worked for the Rams last week against the Buccaneers vanished Sunday.

The Rams are still a good team. We're just seeing that every team this season is prone to a bad loss. There is no historically great team this season. One has to win a Super Bowl, however, even if the eventual champions won't exactly be the 1972 Miami Dolphins. Maybe it's the Rams. Perhaps it's someone like the Eagles, who figure out their issues, or the Denver Broncos, who keep flying under the radar. The key to the postseason might be who avoids playing their worst game for a month, because every team this season has shown they're capable of bad performances. Even the Rams.

Here are the rest of the NFL's winners and losers from Sunday's action of Week 13:

WINNERS

Bills' defense:Buffalo hasn't had a great season on defense. The Bills were 17th in points allowed and 13th in yards allowed heading into Sunday's game against the Pittsburgh Steelers. That's decent but not at a championship level.

The Bills might not be back to a championship level yet, but their defense came up big against the Steelers.

Pittsburgh was stuck on 90 yards through three quarters of a26-7 loss to the Bills.The Buffalo defense scored as many touchdowns as Pittsburgh's offense, as a huge sack by Joey Bosa on Aaron Rodgers led to a fumble recovery for a touchdown. Thatchanged the entire game, and 249 rushing yards by the Bills helped get the win.

Buffalo is 8-4 and has shown glimpses of being a dangerous postseason team. But until the defense makes a big improvement, it will be tough to go on a long playoff run. Maybe Sunday was a sign of a turnaround.

Robert Saleh:The San Francisco 49ers' defense has few stars on the field this season. They do have a star calling the defense.

Saleh, San Francisco's defensive coordinator, is getting the most out of a unit that lost stars Nick Bosa and Fred Warner due to injuries. A young defense is getting better as the season goes along, and that's a testament to Saleh's coaching. The49ers held Shedeur Sanders and the Cleveland Browns downin a 26-8 win with some terrible weather. It was a good follow-up to a strong performance in Week 12, when the 49ers shut down the Panthers (who looked pretty good against the Rams on Sunday).

Saleh didn't succeed as a head coach of the New York Jets, but poor ownership makes that a difficult situation. Teams might not hold his record in New York against him, especially as they see him maximizing a 49ers defense for a team that is in good shape to make the playoffs despite numerous injuries on both sides of the ball.

Baker Mayfield and Bucky Irving:The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have been surviving in spite of injuries. It's starting to look better for them on that front.

Mayfield left last week's game with a left shoulder injury and there was a lot of doubt if he would play this weekend. He played and had another strong outing in a20-17 win over the Arizona Cardinals. He had 194 yards and a touchdown. He found an old reliable target in Chris Godwin Jr., who led the Bucs with 78 receiving yards and is another Tampa Bay star rounding into form after dealing with injuries.

Even more promising was the return of Irving. The second-year back played for the first time since Week 4, having missed almost three months with foot and shoulder injuries, and he looked sharp. Irving scored a touchdown and generally looked like his old self. Irving had 81 yards from scrimmage, which was reasonable considering he was returning after a long layoff. He gives the Buccaneers another playmaker down the stretch.

Tampa Bay has a very easy schedule the rest of the season and should win the NFC South. If the Bucs keep getting healthy, they could be dangerous in the postseason too.

Dolphins defense:After seven weeks, the Dolphins' defense looked like perhaps the worst in the NFL. Miami was allowing 29.3 points per game and hadn't allowed fewer than 21 in a game. The Dolphins were 1-6.

Then, suddenly, it changed. The Dolphins' defense faced a bad New Orleans Saints team and it started pouring rain in the second half, but it was still another strong defensive performance in a21-17 win. New Orleans rallied to score a late touchdown, but when the Saints went for the 2-point conversion and the tie, the Dolphins came up with a huge play as Minkah Fitzpatrick picked off Tyler Shough and returned it for 2 points.

Then after the Saints got a rare onside kick and Miami's defense was forced to get back on the field, the Dolphins got a quick stop that culminated with a fourth-down stuff on a Tyler Shough quarterback sneak.

The Dolphins have won four of five, perhaps saving head coach Mike McDaniel's job in the process. They probably have saved defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver's job, too.

Since that awful start on defense, the Dolphins allowed 10, 28, 13 and 13 points in their four games heading into Week 13. The 28-point game was the only loss in that stretch, to Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens. The Dolphins have turned it around despite dealing pass rusher Jaelan Phillips to the Eagles before the trade deadline. It's an impressive transformation, and it came out of nowhere.

LOSERS

Pete Carroll:As the season goes on, it gets harder to make a case for Carroll to get a second season with the Las Vegas Raiders.

Last week there was a big shakeup, as Carroll fired offensive coordinator Chip Kelly. Nothing got better. Ashton Jeanty was quiet again, Geno Smith had another mediocre day and even though Brock Bowers was great with two touchdown catches (including a fantastic one for his second score), the Los AngelesChargers beat the Raiders soundly, 31-14. The Raiders had 156 yards of offense.

Once a coach starts firing coordinators, it's a sign he's in trouble. You have only so many coordinators to blame your problems on. The Raiders have fired their offensive coordinator and special teams coordinator over the past few weeks. With the Raiders at 2-10, and having lost 10 of their last 11, Carroll's future will be a big topic of discussion over the next few weeks.

Max Brosmer's moment of infamy:We knew the most likely outcome for Brosmer, an undrafted rookie making his first NFL start, was he would struggle against a tough Seattle Seahawks defense.

He just had to avoid a blooper that would be replayed a million times. Nope.

Brosmer had one of the most embarrassing plays of the season in theMinnesota Vikings' loss on Sunday. On a fourth down, Brosmer was stumbling down when he tossed away the ball, without looking, praying for a positive result. Instead, his pass went right to Seahawks linebacker Ernest Jones IV, who went 85 yards for a pick 6.

That might have been OK if Brosmer had otherwise played well in place of J.J. McCarthy. He didn't. He looked very much like an undrafted rookie making his first start against one of the NFL's best defenses. Brosmer had 126 yards and threw four interceptions. His passer rating was 32.8. The Vikings were shut out for the first time since 2007. The Seahawks didn't play particularly well against the Vikings' defense, but Jones' pick 6 was really all they needed.

Nothing is saving the Vikings this season. And now they're embarrassing themselves.

Indianapolis Colts' hold on AFC South:A few weeks ago, there was chatter that the Colts were the best team in football. They might not even end up winning their division.

The Colts took a damaging loss Sunday. The Houston Texans continued their hot streak, with their defense making several big plays and their offense doing enough tobeat the Colts 20-16. The Texans failed to convert a tush push on third and fourth downs late in the game, giving the Colts a chance. Daniel Jones got the Colts into Texans territory but the drive stalled and Jones' fourth-down pass was knocked down to give Houston a huge stop.

Jones' fractured fibula was reported this past week, and that has to be a reason the Colts' offense has taken a step back. Indianapolis has lost three of four and the only win was an overtime victory over a bad Atlanta Falcons team in Berlin.

The Colts are now 8-4. TheJaguars are also 8-4 after they beat the Titans on Sundayand the Texans are back in the race at 7-5. A dream start to the season is evaporating quickly.

Tennessee Titans and their coaching search:The bad part about the Titans firing head coach Brian Callahan so early in the season is it allowed the top candidates in the 2026 head-coaching cycle ample opportunity to watch Tennessee play.

The job is beyond a fixer-upper. The Titans are a horrible team, and aside from having Cam Ward (which might not be the draw we think it is) and an inside track at the top overall pick in next year's NFL Draft, there's not a lot to sell any candidate with multiple options. The Titans were uncompetitive at home in a25-3 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars. The Titans are 1-11. An incredibly lucky win over the Arizona Cardinals has saved them from weeks of talk of the 0-17 possibility and being one of the worst teams ever.

Ward is a conundrum. The top overall pick of this year's draft has some impressive highlights but the body of work is not great. The Titans have scored 14 or fewer points seven times this season. You can blame the infrastructure around Ward for his struggles, but it's hard to deny he has struggled. He had just 141 yards on 38 attempts Sunday. The new head coach would have to buy into turning Ward into a franchise quarterback, which is possible but he doesn't have the post-rookie promise of someone like Caleb Williams a year ago.

The Titans will hire a decent candidate. It's one of 32 jobs and the franchise does have Ward and likely the top pick. But it needs to be built from the ground up, and that's a scary proposition for a candidate with other offers.

Raheem Morris:It's the time of year in which coaches have to worry about what will happen after the season. Another bad loss for the Atlanta Falcons won't look good on Morris.

The Falcons were facing a New York Jets team that was 2-9 coming in and using Tyrod Taylor at quarterback after benching the ineffective Justin Fields. The Falcons blew a late 24-17 lead, allowing the Jets to tie it and then drive for a game-winning field goal as time expired.

TheFalcons lost 27-24 and are now 4-8 this season. They've been a big disappointment. Even worse, their first-round draft pick in 2026 was traded to the Los Angeles Rams during this year's draft.

Morris might pay the price for the poor record. Atlanta went 8-9 last season, Morris' first full season leading the team, and this season has been even worse. A young Falcons team hasn't made progress. Over the rest of the season the Falcons will have to ask themselves if they're seeing enough to justify running it back with Morris for another season.

NFL Winners and Losers: After Rams loss, it's hard to find any reliable Super Bowl contenders

Through this wild, up-and-down NFL season, the one reliable team that seemed to emerge was the Los Angeles Rams. After la...
A retail worker wearing an apron scans a customer's item at the checkout counter. Photo: Matthew Henry / Burst

Last week's data told a clear story: the U.S. consumer is still standing, but looking increasingly tired – and businesses are starting to absorb more of the pain.

What We Learned Last WeekRetail sales:On the surface, retail sales barely grew. Once you adjust for inflation, Americans actually bought less stuff than the month before. That's a warning sign heading into the holidays.Spending is also increasingly split along income lines. Households at the top – who saw their stock portfolios, home values, and savings swell during the pandemic – are still going out to eat, traveling, and shopping. But middle- and lower-income families are clearly tightening belts: trading down to cheaper brands, delaying big-ticket purchases, and watching every dollar more closely.That "two-track" pattern – strong spending at the top, caution or cutbacks below – is what economists mean when they talk about a K-shaped economy. The risk is that as more of the spending comes from a smaller share of households, growth becomes more fragile.Producer prices (PPI):Higher tariffs and input costs are still working their way through the system. But instead of passing those cost increases on to shoppers through higher prices, many wholesalers and retailers are quietly swallowing them.In plain language:Costs are up.Final prices haven't risen as much.The gap is coming out of business profit margins.That squeeze is still modest, but it's real – and it tends to get worse when customers start pushing back on price and volumes slip. Last week's PPI report suggests we're moving further into that phase.Consumer confidence:None of this is happening in a vacuum. Surveys show households feeling gloomier about the future. Job opportunities don't look quite as plentiful as they did a year or two ago, and wage growth is cooling. That combination – softer job prospects and slower income gains – usually leads to more cautious spending, especially for families that don't have a lot of financial cushion.Put together, last week's data painted a picture of an economy that's still growing, but increasingly dependent on higher-income consumers, with businesses quietly giving up margin to keep prices in check.What to Watch This WeekNow we turn from the checkout aisle to the showroom floor, the services sector, and the Fed's favorite inflation gauge.1. Auto sales: the summer bump is goneThe upcoming auto sales report is likely to confirm what dealers and manufacturers already know: the summer pickup in sales didn't last.Sales have cooled again after that brief burst of demand.Profit margins are under pressure as incentives creep back in.New vehicle prices are basically flat compared with a year ago – a stark contrast with the big price jumps earlier in the pandemic recovery.That's good news for inflation, but it underscores how sensitive big-ticket purchases are to high interest rates and slowing income growth.2. ISM Services PMI: a slowdown in the engine of the economyServices are the backbone of the U.S. economy, and the ISM Services PMI is a real-time indicator of how that engine is running.In September, the survey's business activity index slipped to 49.9% – essentially the line between growth and contraction, and the weakest reading since early 2010. October saw a small rebound in activity, but the employment index stayed in contraction territory.That's the part to watch this week:If business activity softens again and the employment index stays in the red, it would signal that service-sector firms are losing confidence in the outlook and that layoffs could be next.Given how dominant services are in the U.S. economy, that would be a clear sign that the slowdown is broadening out.3. Personal income, spending, and PCE inflation: the Fed's key inputWe'll also get the September report on personal income, consumer spending, and PCE inflation – the Fed's preferred inflation measure. This is effectively the last big inflation print before the Fed's December interest-rate decision.Here's the setup:Since new tariffs were announced, inflation has ticked up a bit but remains relatively contained.At the same time, risks to employment are building as hiring slows and businesses turn more cautious.The recent government data blackout has made it harder than usual for the Fed to see the full picture in real time.The core issue now is not whether inflation is still uncomfortably high – it's whether the economy is increasingly being propped up by a shrinking group of households and firms. When growth rests on such a narrow base, the downside risk to jobs and incomes becomes more serious.As of December 1, futures markets were putting the odds of a December rate cut at roughly 86%.

Everyday Economics: A consumer slowdown, fraying margins, and a big test for the Fed

Last week's data told a clear story: the U.S. consumer is still standing, but looking increasingly tired – and businesses are starting ...
Democrat to push war powers resolutions after report of attack on drug boat survivors

Sen. Tim Kaine says he plans to refile his resolution demanding there be no war against Venezuela without congressional approval and expressed confidence it could pass givenrecent developmentsin the Trump administration's escalating campaign against the South American country.

"It failed, but that was before all of these assets have amassed around Venezuela, and before President Trump said that the airspace needs to be closed," Kaine said Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation."

Kaine also said he plans to reintroduce the war powers resolution that he and Democratic colleague Adam Schiff introduced in October that block the use of U.S. military force in the Caribbean Sea without an Authorization of Military Force by Congress.

Ramping up pressure, Trump says Venezuela airspace should be considered closed

"The circumstances have changed in the months since we had that vote. In each of these instances, we were able to get two Republicans to vote together with Democrats," Kaine said. "We think the escalating pace and some of the recent revelations, so, for example, the recent revelation about the 'kill everyone' order apparently dictated by Secretary Hegseth. We do believe that we will get more support for these motions when they are refiled."

Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: US-POLITICS-MILITARY

Kaine was referencing a Washington Post report that Hegseth allegedly gave an order ahead of a Sept. 2 operation in the Caribbean Sea for the military to kill everyone aboard a suspected drug boat. After an initial strike left two survivors, the commander leading the operation reportedly complied with Hegseth's alleged directive by ordering a second strike, according to the Post report.

Hegseth defended the U.S. military's operations targeting the boats in the wake of the Post report, which ABC News has not confirmed the details of.

One person familiar with details of the Sept. 2 incident confirmed to ABC News that there were survivors from an initial strike on the boat and that those survivors were killed in subsequent strikes.ABC News has not confirmed, though, the specifics of the orders.

President Donald Trump told reporters on Sunday that he would not have wanted a second strike to kill survivors, but was adamant that Hegseth denied ordering it.

"I don't know anything about it," Trump said when asked about the report. "[Hegseth] said, he said, he did not say that. And I believe him."

"But no, I wouldn't have wanted that. Not a second strike. The first strike was very lethal. It was fine, and if there were two people around, but Pete said that didn't happen. I have great confidence," Trump said.

Van Hollen: 'Very possible there was a war crime committed' in Venezuela boat strike

According to the Post report, Hegseth is said to have given an order ahead of the strike that there should be no survivors, but Hegseth did not give a specific order to target the boat again when two survivors were seen. Instead, the special operations officer commanding the mission ordered the second strike "to comply with Hegseth's instructions," two people familiar with the matter told the Post.

Handout/US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth via Getty Images - PHOTO: US-MILITARY-STRIKES-PACIFIC-DRUGS

Since September, the U.S. haslaunched at least 20 strikeson suspected drug boats in the Caribbean, killing more than 80 people.

A resolution to prevent President Donald Trump from attacking what the administration says are drug cartel smuggling boats failed to advance earlier this month by a 49-51 vote. Republican Sens. Rand Paul and Lisa Murkowski voted with Democrats on the resolution.

Sen. Roger Wicker, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and ranking Democrat on the committee Sen. Jack Reed on Friday called for "vigorous oversight to determine the facts" of allegations that the military intentionally killed survivors of a boat strike.

"The Committee has directed inquiries to the Department, and we will be conducting vigorous oversight to determine the facts related to these circumstances," Wicker and Reed said in a statement.

On Saturday, the chairman and ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee also released a joint statement calling for "rigorous oversight" of the strikes against alleged drug smugglers.

"This committee is committed to providing rigorous oversight of the Department of Defense's military operations in the Caribbean. We take seriously the reports of follow-on strikes on boats alleged to be ferrying narcotics in the SOUTHCOM region and are taking bipartisan action to gather a full accounting of the operation in question," Chairman Mike Rogers and ranking member Adam Smith wrote in their statement.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle expressed concern Sunday over the reports of the Sept. 2 incident, saying that if they were true, it would have been an illegal act.

Hegseth responds to report that boat survivors were killed as a result of his orders to military

Republican Rep. Mike Turner, a member of the House Armed Services Committee and a former chairman of the Intelligence Committee, told "Face the Nation," "Obviously, if that occurred, that would be very serious. And I agree that, that would be an illegal act."

He added that Congress has not been informed by the administration that such action has been taken.

"There are very serious concerns, questions in Congress about the attacks on the so-called drug boats down in the Caribbean and the Pacific, and the legal justification that's been provided, but this is completely outside of anything that has been discussed with Congress, and there is an ongoing investigation."

Sen. Chris Van Hollen, a member of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, told ABC News' "This Week" he believes "it's very possible there was a war crime committed" if the reports of a second strike are true.

"I think it's very possible there was a war crime committed. Of course, for it to be a war crime, you have to accept the Trump administration's whole construct here ... which is we're in armed conflict, at war with this particular -- with the drug gangs," Van Hollen said. "Of course, they've never presented the public with the information they've got here. If that theory is wrong, then it's plain murder."

Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: US-POLITICS-MILITARY-STRIKES

Rep. Don Bacon, a Republican who sits on the House Armed Services Committee, told "This Week" the report was "a big concern," but also expressed skepticism Hegseth would have issued such an order.

"We should get to the truth. I don't think [Hegseth] would be foolish enough to make this decision to say 'Kill everybody, kill the survivors,' because that's a clear violation of the law of war. So, I'm very suspicious that he would've done something like that because it would go against common sense," Bacon said.

"But," he continued, "If it was as if the article said, that is a violation of the law of war. When people want to surrender, you don't kill them, and they have to pose an imminent threat. It's hard to believe that two people on a raft, trying to survive, would pose an imminent threat."

Turner said that despite Trump's social media posts suggesting a strike on Venezuela could be imminent, Congress has not been informed of that or given a justification as to why it should.

"Well, the president did not say that, and the president certainly has not given Congress any notice that that is going to occur," Turner said when asked if a strike was imminent.

"He certainly has not made the case there is a buildup that the president has not explained in a way that relates solely to the actions that are currently going down in the Caribbean, and with respect to the drug trade that the President has been discussing with Congress, it is certainly a significant concern in Congress."

Asked Sunday if his post meant an invasion of Venezuela was imminent, Trump replied, "Don't read anything into it."

ABC News' Anne Flaherty, Quinn Scanlan, Kendall Wright and Luis Martinez contributed to this report.

Democrat to push war powers resolutions after report of attack on drug boat survivors

Sen. Tim Kaine says he plans to refile his resolution demanding there be no war against Venezuela without congressional a...

 

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