The Government Acts First. The Public Gets the Explanation Later.
From a deadly ICE operation in Maine to election claims, Supreme Court security and Columbus development financing, today’s brief tracks institutional power moving before the public record catches up.
OFF THE TOP
Here is the part we are supposed to accept as normal:
The government acts. Somebody gets hurt. Somebody gets killed. Somebody’s neighborhood gets rezoned. Somebody’s tax bill changes. Somebody’s right to vote gets pulled into another political fight.
Then, after the power has already moved, the public gets a statement.
Not the evidence. Not the full video. Not the complete financial record. Not every name attached to the decision.
A statement.
That is what happened in Biddeford, Maine, where an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer shot and killed a 26-year-old Colombian man during an operation aimed at somebody else. The agents were not wearing body cameras. The Department of Homeland Security says the man attempted to flee and that an officer fired because of a threat to public safety. The homeland security secretary reportedly told a senator that the man used his vehicle as a weapon.
Those are not identical explanations. That difference matters.
And that is the larger story running through today’s Kin Daily.
The White House is preparing a national address about voting machines and the 2020 election. The Supreme Court is asking Congress for millions more in security funding while the institution remains under ethics scrutiny.
Here in Columbus, an authority most residents have probably never heard of is preparing to levy development charges and issue bonds connected to Jeffrey Park, Grant Park, and Weinland Park.
Every one of these stories comes down to the same question:
When an institution exercises power, how quickly can the public see the receipts?
Because government power without public visibility is not accountability.
It is simply authority asking to be trusted.
THE LEAD
ICE Killed a Man Who Wasn’t the Target
WHAT HAPPENED
An ICE officer fatally shot a 26-year-old Colombian man Monday morning in Biddeford, Maine, during surveillance of an address connected to another person’s final removal order.
The man who was killed was not the person named in that order.
The Department of Homeland Security said agents attempted to stop a vehicle leaving the address. According to the department, the driver tried to flee and an officer fired while fearing for public safety.
Maine Sen. Angus King gave a more specific account after speaking with Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin. King said he was told that the driver had attempted to use the vehicle as a weapon against the agents.
The ICE agents involved were not wearing body cameras.
WHAT THE RECORD SAYS
The known record establishes several important facts:
The operation was connected to a removal order for someone else.
The man who was killed was coming from the address under surveillance but was not the target of the warrant.
Federal officials have offered related but materially different descriptions of what prompted the officer to fire.
There is no body-camera footage from the agents.
Immigrant-rights organizations say the man was authorized to work in the United States. The Colombian Embassy says it is assisting his family. The FBI and other authorities have been involved in examining the scene and evidence.
THE DAILY FIVE
BLACK AMERICA WATCH
Nolan Wells’ Family Is Still Waiting for the Most Basic Answer
The investigation into the death of 18-year-old Nolan Xavier Wells continues, but authorities have not released an official cause or manner of death.
Wells disappeared during a July 4 trip to Horn Island, Mississippi. His body was found in the water more than a day later. The Jackson County Sheriff’s Office has said it does not currently suspect foul play, but investigators are still gathering witness accounts, photographs, videos and other evidence.
Wells’ family, represented by civil-rights attorney Ben Crump, is pursuing an independent investigation and autopsy. The family has raised questions about conflicting timelines, why Wells was allegedly left on the island and why he was separated from his phone and keys.
Why it matters: The responsible position is neither blind acceptance nor social-media prosecution. The responsible position is demanding an investigation complete enough to withstand both.
What happens next: Official and independent autopsy findings remain pending. Until those records are released, every claim about precisely how Wells died should be treated with caution.
THE NEW BLACK ECONOMY
Inflation Cooled. The Household Economy Is Still Hot.
The Consumer Price Index fell 0.4% in June, bringing annual inflation down to 3.5% from 4.2% in May. Core inflation—which excludes food and energy—was unchanged for the month and rose 2.6% over the year.
That sounds like relief.
But look underneath the headline.
Gasoline prices fell 9.7% during June and drove much of the overall decline. Those prices have already started climbing again as conflict involving the United States and Iran has intensified.
Food prices still rose 0.2% during June. Shelter rose another 0.1%. Food away from home is up 3.4% over the year, while shelter is up 3.3%.
Why it matters: Black households generally have less liquid wealth available to absorb price shocks. Inflation can slow nationally while rent, groceries, utilities and transportation remain painfully expensive at the kitchen table.
The Kin+ read: Wall Street measures the direction of inflation. Families live with the accumulated price level. Slower increases do not put yesterday’s money back into anybody’s pocket.
POLITICS AND POWER
Trump Is Preparing Another Election Legitimacy Fight
President Donald Trump is expected to deliver a national address Thursday night about newly declassified intelligence connected to the 2020 election and what the White House describes as vulnerabilities in voting machines.
Election officials and cybersecurity experts have said no evidence has established that foreign intrusion or voting-machine manipulation changed the result of the 2020 election. Numerous courts, audits and Trump’s first-term Justice Department also found no evidence supporting his claims of widespread fraud.
The speech comes before the November midterms and as the administration has pushed for greater federal influence over election administration.
Why it matters: Black voting power has historically been weakened through mechanisms presented as neutral administration—poll closures, voter-roll removals, identification requirements, aggressive challenges and unequal access.
The Kin+ read: Do not merely listen for what Trump says happened in 2020. Listen for what he says should be done in 2026.
The speech is the message.
The policy being prepared behind the message may be the real story.
COURTS AND ACCOUNTABILITY
The Supreme Court Wants More Protection—and More Money
Supreme Court Justices Elena Kagan and Amy Coney Barrett are appearing before Congress as the court requests approximately $228 million for the next fiscal year, roughly 10% more than its current budget.
Nearly $15 million would expand personal protection for the justices, while another $2 million would support an off-site residential-security post and faster emergency responses.
The U.S. Marshals Service reported 564 threats against federal judges during the last fiscal year. Threats, intimidation and swatting incidents against judges are real and unacceptable.
But the court is also making this request after years of declining public confidence, expansive rulings on presidential authority and unresolved ethics criticism.
Why it matters: The judiciary cannot function if judges fear violence for issuing decisions. But physical security cannot become a substitute for institutional accountability.
The Kin+ read: Protect the judges. Protect the public’s right to enforceable ethics, disclosure and transparency too.
Those principles are not enemies.
MONEY AND DEVELOPMENT
Columbus, OH Development Money Is Moving Through an Authority Few Residents Know
The Jeffrey Place New Community Authority is scheduled to hold an organizational and fiscal meeting today involving Jeffrey Park, Grant Park and Weinland Park Homes.
The board is expected to consider:
Electing its officers.
Budgeting and appropriating available funds.
Levying a community-development charge.
Issuing bonds to acquire and construct additional public improvements.
Adopting a virtual-meeting policy.
The meeting is open to the public and scheduled for 10 a.m. at 842 N. Fourth Street.
Why it matters: New community authorities can impose charges, issue debt and finance infrastructure tied to private development. Those decisions affect property costs, neighborhood development and who captures the value created by public improvements.
The Kin+ read: Weinland Park has already experienced dramatic redevelopment and demographic change. The unanswered questions are how much debt is being issued, who pays the development charge and which property owners receive the benefit.
Franklin County, OH Government
Franklin County, OH lists a county commissioners’ general session, two rezoning hearings and another public meeting for today.
The calendar confirms that the meetings are occurring, but it does not make the underlying consequence obvious from the index alone. The newsroom question is which parcels, ownership entities, contracts and neighborhoods are involved.
What Kin+ is watching:
Land ownership behind the rezoning requests.
Whether public infrastructure is being promised.
Proximity to Black neighborhoods.
Housing, traffic and environmental consequences.
Contracts or spending moving through the general session.
A meeting notice is not the story.
Who gains, who pays and who was never told—that is the story.
PULL UP TO THE COOKOUT
Today’s question:
When a government agency uses force, moves public money or changes the rules, what evidence should it be required to release before asking the public to trust its explanation?
Pull up and tell us what public accountability should actually look like.
KEEP THE HOUSE INDEPENDENT
Kin+ is building Black Columbus’s independent newsroom for money, power, ownership, and accountability.




