She Is Dead - Announcement Rocks Washington DC After It Is Confirmed That The Wife Of Khamenei Was killed in Strikes....

WASHINGTON, D.C. — April 21, 2026
In a dramatic escalation that has rocked the Middle East and sent shockwaves through radical Islamic regimes worldwide, Iranian state television has confirmed the death of Mansoureh Khojasteh Bagherzadeh — the 79-year-old wife of the now-deceased Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
She died two days after her husband was eliminated in the same precise US-Israeli airstrike that destroyed his compound in Tehran. State television tearfully announced that her “long dream of martyrdom became true,” while declaring her death would ignite “a massive uprising in the fight against oppressors.”
President Donald Trump, who authorized the bold military operation alongside Israel, continues to project unmatched strength and America First resolve on the global stage. While Iran enters a 40-day mourning period and a seven-day national holiday, the radical regime’s house of cards is collapsing faster than anyone predicted.
The couple had been married since 1965 and raised four sons and two daughters. In a 2011 interview, Bagherzadeh described her role as keeping a calm home so Khamenei could focus on his tyrannical work. She admitted to minor revolutionary activities like distributing pamphlets but downplayed them as “not worth mentioning.”
Her death comes amid heavy fighting. The Iranian Red Crescent reports at least 555 killed across Iran, with over 130 cities struck. Iranian officials are screaming “unlawful, criminal and brutal,” especially after strikes hit the Natanz nuclear site. They continue to lie, claiming Iran has no nuclear weapons ambitions.
Senior Iranian figures like Ali Larijani declared they “will not negotiate with the United States,” yet a senior White House official revealed that Iran’s “new potential leadership” has already signaled willingness to talk.
President Trump told The Atlantic: “They want to talk, and I have agreed to talk, so I will be talking to them.”
He made clear the military operation “continues unabated” for now, while leaving the door open for future negotiations on American terms.
Retaliatory attacks by Iran and its proxies have been largely ineffective. A reported strike on the U.S. embassy compound in Kuwait caused no casualties, though Kuwaiti defenses mistakenly downed three American F-15E Strike Eagles — all six aircrew ejected safely and are stable. Pro-Iran militias hit targets in Iraq and Cyprus with minimal impact. A drone boat struck an oil tanker near Oman, killing one mariner, and Saudi Aramco briefly shut a refinery as a precaution.
In Israel, 11 were killed; in Lebanon, 31. Iran’s combat fleet entered the fray for the first time but achieved little.
This sequence of events proves once again that President Trump understands real power. Unlike the weak, appeasing approach of previous administrations that allowed Iran to grow bolder, Trump’s decisive action — working with Israel — has decapitated the regime’s top leadership and left radicals scrambling.
The radical left and deep state apologists who spent years defending the Iran nuclear deal and pouring cash into the regime are now silent or in panic. Their failed policies empowered terrorists; Trump’s America First strategy is dismantling them.
While Iran frames these deaths as “martyrdom,” the truth is clear: the oppressive Khamenei regime that sponsored terrorism, threatened Israel, and pursued nuclear weapons is crumbling. The American and Israeli strikes have delivered justice and weakened one of the world’s most dangerous adversaries.
President Trump’s strength projects peace through strength. He is open to talks, but only from a position of total dominance — exactly how a true leader protects American interests and allies.
The death of Khamenei’s wife marks another chapter in the collapse of radical Islamic tyranny. With strong Republican leadership in Washington and Trump guiding the nation, America is once again respected and feared by its enemies.
The house of cards of the Iran regime is collapsing. MAGA foreign policy is working. America First is winning.
We are winning big — and the world is safer because of it.
New US Attorney Jeanine Pirro Announces Major ARREST

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The era of "strategic patience" with violent crime in the nation’s capital has ended with a decisive, high-velocity strike. In her first full month as the interim U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, Jeanine Pirro has sent a shockwave through the D.C. underworld, executing a "Law and Order" mandate that is fundamentally reshaping the city’s judicial landscape.

Following a high-level phone call with President Donald J. Trump, Pirro emerged to announce a series of massive arrests and sentencings that signal the end of the "revolving door" justice system. From dismantling fentanyl-trafficking syndicates to securing convictions against domestic terrorists, Pirro’s office is proving that the 2026 Renaissance is not just a political slogan—it is a lived reality for the residents of Washington.
I. THE FALL OF "ONION" AND "CHEESE": DISMANTLING THE VIETNAM CREW
The most significant victory of the past week came with the sentencing of two high-ranking members of the notorious "21st and Vietnam" crew. This criminal enterprise had established a dominant, open-air drug market in Northeast D.C., holding the 2100 block of Maryland Avenue in a grip of fentanyl and crack cocaine.
1. The Fentanyl Kingpins
Jamiek “Onion” Bassil (32) and Charles “Cheese” Manson (34) were sentenced on Thursday to 135 months and 175 months in federal prison, respectively. Their conspiracy didn't just distribute narcotics; it flooded the streets with fentanyl—a substance so lethal that just two milligrams can be a death sentence.
Bassil was convicted of distributing more than 400 grams of fentanyl, much of which was sold directly to undercover federal agents during a months-long investigation. Manson, his primary lieutenant, was convicted not only of drug trafficking but of a March 2024 shooting that terrorized the 1900 block of I Street NE.
2. The Shooting of the Dogwalker
The details of Manson’s violence are particularly chilling. According to Pirro, Manson engaged in a shooting near his own residence, targeting a bystander walking their dog after a disagreement with a member of his crew. Evidence showed Manson entering an apartment complex, receiving a ski mask from an associate, and emerging with a revolver to fire multiple shots.
When officers apprehended Manson eight days later, they found a Glock 17 loaded with 22 rounds, a box of ammunition, and 50 grams of fentanyl analogue. “D.C. will no longer be a playground for those who think a ski mask and a handgun make them untouchable,” Pirro declared.
II. A MONTH OF RESULTS: FROM FELONY MURDER TO DUMPSTER HOMICIDES
While the sentencing of the Vietnam Crew made headlines, it was only a fraction of the activity pouring out of Pirro’s office. In a relentless series of press releases, the U.S. Attorney’s office announced a "clean sweep" of violent offenders that has the D.C. bureaucracy reeling.
1. Justice for the Vulnerable
Pirro’s office secured a guilty verdict for a mother charged with the felony murder of her own 16-month-old daughter. In a city where child welfare had long been a secondary concern, Pirro has made it clear that the most vulnerable residents will have a champion at the DOJ.
2. Violent Crime Crackdown
The office also announced major arrests in:
The D.C. Jail Homicide: Holding inmates accountable for violence within the system.
Kidnapping and Strangulation: Securing a guilty verdict against a predator who terrorized the city.
The Dumpster Murder: Arresting a suspect for the brutal murder of a woman whose body was discovered in a dumpster.
The 69-Month Mandate: Sentencing a previously convicted felon to nearly six years for illegal firearm possession.
Pirro’s strategy is simple: Maximum prosecution for maximum deterrent. By targeting every level of violent crime—from gang leaders to lone predators—she is restoring a sense of safety that has been absent from the capital for a decade.
III. THE TARANTO CONVICTION: SECURING THE NATIONAL INTEREST
The reach of Pirro’s office extends beyond local street crime and into the realm of national security. This week, a federal judge found Taylor Taranto (39) guilty on all charges, including illegally carrying firearms and spreading false information and hoaxes.
1. The Car Bomb Threat
In June 2023, Taranto livestreamed himself driving a van near National Harbor, Maryland, claiming he was "working on a detonator" and intended to drive a car bomb into the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). His target was a neutron generator on the NIST grounds—a move that could have had catastrophic consequences for the entire D.C. metro area.
2. The Livestreamed Terror
Taranto used his platform to show his audience how he could create "emergency" scenarios, even stopping his van in the middle of a busy street in Alexandria to demonstrate his ability to cause chaos. Judge Carl J. Nichols found Taranto guilty on all counts, rejecting the defense’s attempts to downplay the threats as mere "online bravado." Pirro’s office is expected to seek the maximum sentence for Taranto, sending a clear message to those who would use digital platforms to incite terror against federal infrastructure.
IV. THE TRUMP MANDATE: CLEANING THE SWAMP FROM THE INSIDE
The appointment of Jeanine Pirro as interim U.S. Attorney is seen as a key component of President Trump’s broader 2026 Restoration. The President has been vocal about his desire to "clean up Washington, D.C.," transforming it from a "crime-ridden swamp" into a safe, functional capital city.
1. The Coordination
Pirro’s regular communication with the President—including the "Massive Arrest" call mentioned this week—shows a level of coordination between the White House and the DOJ that is focused entirely on results. Trump’s "America First" agenda requires a capital that is secure, and Pirro is the "Central Casting" prosecutor delivering on that promise.
2. Restoring Sovereignty
The "Victorious American" mandate of 2026 is about reclaiming sovereignty—not just from foreign adversaries, but from the criminal elements that have hollowed out American cities. By dismantling the "21st and Vietnam" crew and securing the NIST grounds, Pirro is proving that the rule of law is the ultimate guarantor of freedom.
CONCLUSION: A NEW DAY FOR THE CAPITAL
Washington, D.C., in early 2026 is a city in transition. For years, the residents of the Northeast and Southeast districts felt abandoned by a legal system that prioritized the rights of the offender over the safety of the victim. With Jeanine Pirro at the helm of the U.S. Attorney’s office, that dynamic has been inverted.
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The sentencing of "Onion" and "Cheese" Manson is a milestone, but it is not the destination. As Pirro moves forward with the Taylor Taranto sentencing and the continued prosecution of D.C.’s most violent gangs, the message to the criminal underworld is unmistakable: The party is over.
The 2026 Renaissance is being built on a foundation of strength, accountability, and the "ruthless precision" of a DOJ that actually follows the law. Jeanine Pirro has just started, but in one month, she has already done more to secure the streets of Washington than the previous decade of "strategic patience."