Rep. Chuck Edwards Accused Of Hitting Man At Rotary Club Event

This article was co-published by TPM and The Assembly, which publishes deep reporting on power and place in North Carolina.

Update: On Tuesday morning, the Asheville Police Department released a statement about the incident. “After reviewing the findings and consulting with the Buncombe County District Attorney’s Office, it was mutually determined that no criminal charges against any party involved in the incident will be initiated,” the department said. Read the full statement at the end of this story. Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-NC) issued a statement in response to the Police Department’s statement, also included at the end of this story.


A regional Rotary conference in Asheville on Saturday night appears to have ended with a confrontation between Western North Carolina’s U.S. Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-NC) and an unknown man, with witnesses attesting that the congressman struck the attendee. 

“He got into an argument at one of the tables with another Rotarian and Chuck got upset and hit the guy with a binder and said ‘love you man’ as he walked out,” said a Rotarian, who requested anonymity so as not to jeopardize his relationship with the organization.

“The guy he hit called the police and claimed he was assaulted,” the emailer continued.  

McClatchy newspapers published a similar story on Monday evening, quoting Rotarian Guy Gooder, who said he heard the fracas, but didn’t see it.

The man exchanged words with Edwards after the congressman delivered his remarks, Gooder said. “Chuck stops and kind of bends over, kind of in-his-face type of stuff,” Gooder told McClatchy, saying Edwards “hit the guy with his clipboard” while the man was still seated. According to Gooder, the two men then exited the conference room. 

Neither Edwards’ D.C. office nor his district office responded to our requests for comment as of Monday night.

McClatchy reported on early accounts of the incident on Sunday, including a statement from Edwards claiming he had “refused to engage with an intoxicated man that was cursing” after his speech. 

“He became more belligerent and later called the police,” the statement continued. “His behavior was embarrassing to people at the event and was duly noted by the police. To my knowledge, there was no further action taken by police.”    

Asheville Police Department PIO Rick Rice confirmed via text message on Saturday night that the department was investigating a disturbance, and that Edwards “was present at the time.” Rice said he did not have the gender or age of the person who filed the complaint, and said he would have more information on Monday. He also directed this reporter to file a public records request for a police report. (As of Monday evening, that request had not been fulfilled.)

On Monday morning, Rice responded to further inquiries via text that “the investigation is ongoing. There are no further updates at this time.” 

Rumor Mill in Overdrive

Reports began to emerge over the weekend that some kind of confrontation had occurred at the Embassy Suites Hilton Downtown Asheville where the conference was taking place. But what actually happened and who was the aggressor has remained the subject of mystery and plenty of rumors.

Rotary Clubs throughout Western North Carolina came together for a conference on the theme “Peace in Action,” which included dedicating a peace pole in Pritchard Park. Any other regional Rotary District 7670 event may have been a ho-hum affair, of interest only to other Rotarians. But word spread quickly Saturday night that police had responded to an incident involving Edwards. 

In the absence of more information, rumors flew through the weekend and into Monday, with multiple versions of events reaching reporters. 

In a text message, Rotary District 7670’s Governor Connie Molland said it was her understanding the Buncombe County District Attorney’s Office decided “there was not enough probable cause and that they were dropping the investigation … It was a pretty vague situation.” 

Buncombe County District Attorney Todd Williams’ office did not respond to a late Monday request for comment.

Molland continued: “Our conference was entitled Peace in Motion relating to Rotary’s extensive work in building peace and understanding throughout the world. We are committed to ensuring that every individual who participates in Rotary activities understands their obligation to maintain an environment that promotes safety, courtesy, dignity and respect for all.”

A Heated Conversation in the Hotel Parking Lot

Additional accounts of Saturday night’s disturbance suggest an alternative to allegations of an assault-by-office-supply. It may have been a bump or shoulder check, possibly accidental.

“I just happened to be in the lobby as part of the incident played out,” wrote another tipster, who was not there for the Rotary event but was in the hotel lobby. “I was exiting the lobby to the parking area, a man in a suit was walking briskly in the same direction calling out ‘he assaulted me.’”

“He kept saying ‘that’s assault, I have five witnesses, you hit me, I’m calling the police’ and a lady in yellow was following him begging him ‘Please don’t do this!’”

The man in the suit eventually caught up with Edwards, the witness said, and continued saying that he’d been assaulted. “They all started a relatively quiet discussion,” the witness wrote, providing a photograph of Edwards talking to several men and a woman in a yellow dress. 

(Obtained by TPM and The Assembly.)

The emailer described bystanders, including herself, as skeptical and confused. This person “assumed that Chuck had not outright hit the man, as nobody else in the vicinity got involved and nobody else in the lobby came forward to say what they’d seen.” The lobby and bar were very full of conference attendees, but no one seemed to know what had happened. 

“Someone said, ‘He’s a congressman, there’s no way he just hauled off and slapped a man in public.” 

Chris Cooper, professor of political science and public affairs at Western Carolina University, said he had heard rumors about a “disturbance,” but none of them have been firsthand or particularly detailed. 

While “wild rumors” abound in politics, Cooper noted the specific allegation of assault with a binder or clipboard “seems to run counter to what we know about Chuck Edwards” and his buttoned-up demeanor. 

But Cooper also acknowledged political tensions are sky-high. The fact that there was a confrontation at a Rotary event, which is “a relatively apolitical” organization, is worrisome, he explained.

“If the Rotary Club isn’t a safe space for people to have friendly disagreements, then I don’t know what is.”


Read the full Tuesday morning statement from the Asheville Police Department:

Following an investigation by the Asheville Police Department, no criminal charges will be filed in connection with a reported disturbance at a downtown hotel Saturday night.

Asheville Police Department officers initially responded to the Embassy Suites in downtown Asheville around 6:37 p.m. on May 10th, following an event to investigate a report of a disturbance, in which an individual alleged they were assaulted by Congressman Chuck Edwards.

The Asheville Police Department Patrol and Criminal Investigation Divisions conducted a thorough investigation, which included interviews with the reporting party and multiple witnesses. After reviewing the findings and consulting with the Buncombe County District Attorney’s Office, it was mutually determined that no criminal charges against any party involved in the incident will be initiated.

Read the full Tuesday statement from Edwards:

I was just informed of the Asheville Police Department’s decision to discontinue their investigation into the events that transpired this weekend due to inconclusive evidence and a lack of probable cause. I thank the department for doing their due diligence. It is an honor to serve the people of Western North Carolina, and I will continue to work on their behalf to represent them in Congress.

Dems Call For IG Investigation Into Trump’s Reckless Library Of Congress Upheaval

The top Democrat on the congressional committee that oversees the Library of Congress, Rep. Joe Morelle (D-NY), is calling for an investigation into the White House’s recent actions involving the library and the U.S. Copyright Office.

Continue reading “Dems Call For IG Investigation Into Trump’s Reckless Library Of Congress Upheaval”

5 Points On How Crypto—And Trump Crypto Corruption—Are Causing Drama In The Senate

A $2 billion Trump-branded crypto deal. Access to the President auctioned off to top holders of $TRUMP coin. Businesses bragging about spending $20 million on the President’s branded crypto coin in a bid to gain influence.

Continue reading “5 Points On How Crypto—And Trump Crypto Corruption—Are Causing Drama In The Senate”

A Novel Concept: Will Judges Start Enforcing the Law With DOGE?

Since late in Donald Trump’s first term as President something called “Schedule F” has figured high in his plans to gut and/or make the federal workforce personally loyal to him as opposed to the constitution. The gist of it is that Schedule F would allow Trump to redefine large numbers of civil servants as the equivalent of “policy-making” political appointees who are fireable at will. After he was forced to leave the White House in 2021, Schedule F played a big role in plans for a second term. For a long time I hadn’t looked that close at the specific legal details of Schedule F as opposed to its potential impact. It was usually presented to me as a kind of ingenious bit of lawyering which allowed Trump to undo the Civil Service system from the inside. And I don’t mean Trumpers calling it ingenious I mean either by supporters of non-partisan federal employment and/or journalists who cover these matters.

Continue reading “A Novel Concept: Will Judges Start Enforcing the Law With DOGE?”

Don’t Get Conned By Trump’s Big, Beautiful Air Force One Boondoggle

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

Who’s Conning Whom Exactly?

Before jumping ahead to the constitutionality of President Trump accepting as a “gift” from Qatar a $400 million 747 jumbo jet as short-term replacement for Air Force One and the legality of then transferring the plane to his corrupt presidential library foundation for him to use post-presidency – before ALL of that – can we discuss whether this can even be accomplished as a practical matter?

Much of the coverage treats it as a foregone conclusion that the Air Force can simply retrofit the Qatari plane and Trump can be soaring in luxury by the end of the year. It was that timeline, reported by the NYT, that caught my eye. First off, the Air Force doesn’t have this capability; it has to contract out the work.

The WSJ reported on some aspects of this a couple of weeks ago, suggesting that L3Harris had already been commissioned to retrofit a Qatari plane for use as Air Force One (but the NYT reported yesterday that no agreement on a contract has been reached yet). The plane in the WSJ story seems to be the same plane Trump is talking about now, with delivery on a similarly unrealistic timeline. “Trump wants to have the plane available for use as early as the fall,” the WSJ reported.

It’s clear though a bit buried in the reporting that retrofitting a 747 (Boeing stopped 747 production in 2022) is not some clever workaround to the challenges Boeing has faced in producing a new generation Air Force One. The array of capabilities that Air Force One currently has are the nut of the contracting problem. There’s nothing to suggest that you can solve that problem merely by starting with a lux 747. Here’s how the WSJ described it in a May 1 story:

Building out an interim airplane by the end of this year poses its own challenges. The plane might not be a true VC-25A that is as capable as the current jets. A quick turnaround would likely limit modifications, said Andrew Hunter, the Air Force’s acquisition chief during the Biden administration, who wasn’t familiar with the new plans. “You could do some paint, you could do some communications upgrades, and I suspect it would be hard to do too much beyond that on that timeline,” he said. 

So the best case is that Trump would end up an Air Force One Lite?

What features and capabilities exactly would be sacrificed for an Air Force One Lite? Its complex communications systems? Its elaborate defense systems? Its intense security protections? These do not seems like the kinds of tradeoffs anyone would – or necessarily could as a practical matter – make to get a plane in service quickly, let alone to preserve continuity of government in an attack or other crisis.

“We’re talking years, not months,” an anonymous Defense Department official told the NYT.

This whole episode has all the trademarks of another Trump boondoggle. While the apparent lawlessness of such an arrangement is alarming, there’s an emperor has no clothes aspect to the whole thing. Trump wants what he wants, and no one wants to tell him no. And so everyone pretends it’s possible, even to the point of entertaining wildly corrupt scenarios to make it happen. But in the end, the whole thing collapses under the weight of its own ridiculousness.

🚨RED ALERT🚨

Every utterance by Stephen Miller needs to be caveated with “Not a lawyer; never a lawyer”:

Stephen Miller says they are “actively looking at” suspending the writ of habeas corpus, which is only allowed when the US has been invaded or during an insurrection, which would not allow people to challenge their incarceration in court if they are arrested and detained.

[image or embed]

— Ron Filipkowski (@ronfilipkowski.bsky.social) May 9, 2025 at 3:05 PM

But CNN reports it’s not just Miller who’s toying with unlawfully suspending habeas corpus: “President Donald Trump has been personally involved in discussions inside the administration over potentially suspending habeas corpus, a legal procedure that allows people to challenge their detention in court.”

For a deeper dive on habeas corpus and why suspending it for migrants means suspending it for everyone, Steve Vladeck has you covered.

Good Read

Politico’s Kyle Cheney: Judges warn Trump’s mass deportations could lay groundwork to ensnare Americans

Ozturk Set Free And Returns To Boston

Early Friday afternoon, U.S. District Judge William Sessions of Vermont ordered the immediate release of Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk from federal detention while her case is pending. When the Trump administration did not immediately comply with his order – delaying her release while it fitted her with an ankle monitor – Sessions issued a follow-up order late in the afternoon that she was to be released unconditionally without any monitoring devices or travel restrictions.

House Dems Threatened With Arrest

Following the arrest of Newark Mayor Ras Baraka for alleged trespassing during an ICE detention center protest in his city, the Trump administration sent not-so-subtle signals that Democratic members of Congress who were present at the protest may also face arrest.

Trump Tries To Stiff-Arm The Senate

The NYT’s Charlie Savage unpacks President Trump’s attempt to install Jeanine Pirro as interim U.S. attorney for D.C. and bypass the Senate confirmation proess.

Investigating The Investigators

Jay Bratt, who as a top deputy to Special Counsel Jack Smith led the Mar-a-Lago documents investigation, appears to be the first member of Smith’s team hauled before Congress by House Republicans for a deposition, scheduled for Wednesday, The Guardian reports.

D’oh! Pam Bondi Got O’Keefe’d

The Daily Beast: Pam Bondi Spilled Epstein Secrets to Bogus ‘Nanny’ at Brunch

IMPORTANT

In perhaps the most sweeping order by any judge confronted with Trump II lawlessness, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston of San Francisco blocked a wide range of administration layoffs and agency dismantlings. In the case brought by labor unions, nonprofit organizations, and local governments, Illston ordered a two-week pause in the Trump administration’s rampage through the federal government.

“It is the prerogative of presidents to pursue new policy priorities and to imprint their stamp on the federal government,” Illston wrote. “But to make large-scale overhauls of federal agencies, any president must enlist the help of his coequal branch and partner, the Congress.”

Thread Of The Day

Responding to Judge Illston’s order above, Roger Parloff explores how slowly and reluctantly most federal judges have been to confront the DOGE-driven Trump II rampage:

Will courts ever declare that Trump is unlawfully dismantling Congressionally created agencies? Or will they just treat his actions as if they were ordinary cuts & trims—albeit on an unusually large scale? Will courts ever see the forest for the trees? Thread … 1/11

— Roger Parloff (@rparloff.bsky.social) May 11, 2025 at 8:22 PM

The Purges

  • CPSC: President Trump purported to fire the three Democrats on the five-member Consumer Product Safety Commission.
  • U.S. Copyright Office: President Trump fired Register of Copyrights Shira Perlmutter, who was appointed head of the U.S. Copyright Office by the Librarian of Congress, whom Trump fired last week.

The Dumbing Down Of The U.S. Military

Most of the focus on book bans and stifled academic freedom has involved the U.S. Naval Academy, but the Pentagon is launching a broad attack against the service academies:

  • AP: ” The Pentagon has ordered all military leaders and commands to pull and review all of their library books that address diversity, anti-racism or gender issues by May 21, according to a memo issued to the force on Friday.”
  • NYT: The Pentagon’s Culture Wars Strike West Point
  • Graham Parsons, a tenured professor of philosophy at West Point who is resigning at the end of this semester in protest of the Trump-led attack on the U.S. Military Academy:

Academic freedom is important at any institution of higher learning, but it has an additional importance at a military academy. The health of our democratic system depends on the military being politically neutral. Protecting freedom of thought and speech in the academic curriculum at West Point is an important way to avoid political partisanship. By allowing the government to impose an ideological orthodoxy on its classrooms, West Point is abandoning its neutrality and jeopardizing a critical component of the very constitutional order that the military exists to protect.

David Souter, 1939-2025

On the occasion of former Supreme Court Justice David Souter’s death, Adam Liptak revives a 2012 pre-Trump warning from Souter: “I don’t believe there is any problem of American politics and American public life which is more significant today than the pervasive civic ignorance of the Constitution of the United States and the structure of government.” A portion of his warning:

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Funds-Ghosting At EPA Too

The Post has a good piece up about all the hidden ways the Trump White House is trying to break different parts of the government — through non-payment of grants (different from cancelations), arbitrary limits on purchase authority, etc. They note something very similar to the funds-ghosting I’ve reported on at the National Institutes of Health, only here with the EPA.

Here’s the key passage that TPM Reader SS flagged to my attention …

Continue reading “Funds-Ghosting At EPA Too”

Qatari Royals Give Trump a Plane

Fascinating details emerging with the Qatari royal family giving Donald Trump the personal gift of a fully blinged out 747. Yes, they’re giving him a plane.

When I first heard this story a few days ago it at least sounded like Trump had finally lost patience with Boeing because they either couldn’t or wouldn’t or wouldn’t quickly enough produce a decked-out new Air Force One to meet Trump’s wishes. The U.S. has been trying to buy a new AF1 for a number of years and it had gotten caught up between the very different demands of Trump and Biden and maybe also Boeing’s woes. I figured the Qataris were either gifting the plane to the U.S. government or selling it. In either case it would be the U.S. government’s and it’s for the use of future Presidents, too. That’s not what’s happening.

Continue reading “Qatari Royals Give Trump a Plane”

The Tip Of The Birthright Citizenship Iceberg Floats Towards The Supreme Court

Hello, it’s the weekend. This is The Weekender ☕️

The Supreme Court on Thursday will hear arguments related to President Trump’s executive order that purports to white out the guarantee of birthright citizenship from the Constitution.

Continue reading “The Tip Of The Birthright Citizenship Iceberg Floats Towards The Supreme Court”

The Wheels Come Off Trump’s Attempt To Pass A ‘Big, Beautiful’ Bill

The true extent of the confusion between the Trump White House and Republicans in Congress on Trump’s fiscal agenda came crashing out into the open this week. 

Amid brutal intraparty tensions over how exactly they will enact sweeping cuts to Medicaid, far-right members of the House Republican conference jammed things up substantially this week when they demanded their own “big, beautiful” budget bill not add to the federal deficit. President Trump reportedly issued his own befuddling directive to Congress that complicates his initial push for an extension of his 2017 tax cuts, while Senate Republicans signaled they’re not sure how they feel about most aspects of the bill being cobbled together in the House. 

But Republican handwringing over how to discreetly slash Medicaid remained the main hurdle.  

Continue reading “The Wheels Come Off Trump’s Attempt To Pass A ‘Big, Beautiful’ Bill”

In The Trump II Presidency, Things Can Always Get Worse … And Often Do

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

The Trump II Cancer Metastasizes At DOJ

I hate to break it to you, but the failure of Ed Martin’s nomination to be D.C. U.S. attorney has not produced an outcome that looks appreciably better. That’s not to say Martin’s nomination should not have been opposed or that it’s pointless to fight the good fight. It’s merely to try to preserve a little sanity by acknowledging that in the dystopian Trump II world things can always get worse and often do.

Instead of being a Senate-confirmed U.S. attorney, Martin will now hold three significant roles at Main Justice that don’t require Senate confirmation:

  1. associate deputy attorney general;
  2. U.S. pardon attorney (the previous U.S. pardon attorney was fired after refusing to go along with restoring Mel Gibson’s gun rights following a domestic violence conviction); and
  3. director of the Weaponization Working Group.

Don’t let the Orwellian name of that last role, which has never existed at the Justice Department until this presidency, confuse the issue. Martin will be taking his bag of tricks as acting U.S. attorney – politicization, intimidation, and threats – to lead the weaponization of the Justice Department.

With the blessing of the President through his weaponization executive order and of Attorney General Pam Bondi through her weaponization memo executing that order, Martin will be at the epicenter of turning the Justice Department itself into a threat to the rule of the law.

Don’t Normalize Jeanine Pirro

I’m still shook by how otherwise reasonable people treated Pam Bondi’s nomination as attorney general as normal, calling her qualified and a more traditional pick for the office. That was on the basis of her having served as Florida state attorney general and, critically, her having replaced the insanely unqualified and unfit Matt Gaetz as nominee. Those two attributes alone should not have been enough to obscure all of the other ways in which Bondi was not normal, including her deeply alarming confirmation hearing, but they did.

The same dynamic is at play with Trump’s decision to replace Martin with Jeanine Pirro, the unhinged Fox News personality. This line from the WSJ story on Pirro is literally true but you can see the bar-lowering already underway: “Still, Pirro, who has experience as a prosecutor, is a more conventional choice than Martin, 54, who was a lightning rod from the outset.”

Pirro hasn’t been a prosecutor in two decades. Since then, she became a unsuccessful political candidate then a right-wing media personality whose brain has pickled in the Fox News ecosystem. Her whole TV schtick is as an over-the-top, indiscriminate bomb-thrower, and I’ll concede it may not be a schtick. These are not the attributes one looks for in a prosecutor, let alone the top federal prosecutor in the nation’s capital.

Fun fact: In the waning minutes of his first term, Trump pardoned Pirro’s ex-husband Albert, who had been convicted in 2000 on federal tax charges while they were still married and she was still Westchester County district attorney.

Is Pirro’s Appointment Valid?

By swapping out Martin for Pirro before the end of Martin’s 120-day maximum tenure as an acting official, President Trump appears to be taking the position that he can avoid Senate confirmation indefinitely via a rotating cast of D.C. U.S. attorneys. This is a complicated and tricky area of law, with two different authorizing statutes, so I’m not going to unpack it all here. But the NYT briefly touches on the issue and the risk it poses of criminal defendants challenging their prosecutions on the grounds that Pirro is not validly appointed.

DOJ Weaponization Fully Underway Now

New York Attorney General Letitia James appears to be the highest profile initial target of the new Trump-directed DOJ. Federal prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation into mortgage loan fraud allegations that have circulated online among Trump allies for months:

  • A federal grand jury has been empaneled in the Eastern District of Virginia and begun issuing subpoenas (one of James’ properties is in Norfolk);
  • FBI agents in Virginia and New York are involved in the investigation;
  • To give you some sense of the tone and tenor of things, this is what U.S. Attorney John A. Sarcone III of the New York Northern District – whose office is not handling the case – had to say about it on the record: “Unlike Letitia James, who unethically ran around the state campaigning on getting Donald Trump … my office conducts itself in a manner that is proper and professional.”

Trump Hijacks DOJ’s Voting Rights Section

Devastating news in this Associated Press exclusive: “The Justice Department unit that ensures compliance with voting rights laws will switch its focus to investigating voter fraud and ensuring elections are not marred by ‘suspicion,’ according to an internal memo obtained by The Associated Press.”

Quote Of The Day

For many American citizens and organizations, then, the cost of opposition has risen markedly. Although these costs are not as high as in dictatorships like Russia — where critics are routinely imprisoned, exiled or killed — America has, with stunning speed, descended into a world in which opponents of the government fear criminal investigations, lawsuits, tax audits and other punitive measures and even Republican politicians are, as one former Trump administration official put it, “scared” out of their minds “about death threats.”

political scientists Steven Levitsky, Lucan Way, and Daniel Ziblatt

Good Read

TPM’s Josh Kovensky: Inside One Venezuelan’s Last-Minute Escape From a Flight to CECOT

The Damage SCOTUS Has Done

The Supreme Court’s decision to allow President Trump’s purge of trans service members to proceed while the legal challenge is on appeal is already producing the easy-to-predict and hard-if-not-impossible-to-reverse result: “The Pentagon will immediately begin moving as many as 1,000 openly identifying transgender service members out of the military and give others 30 days to self-identify under a new directive issued Thursday.”

The Purges

  • Library of Congress: President Donald Trump fired Carla Hayden as the Librarian of Congress. She was the first woman and first African American to hold the position.
  • FEMA: Cameron Hamilton was fired as the acting administrator of FEMA one day after he took issue with eliminating the agency in an appearance before Congress.

A Creole Pope

Pope Francis elevates to cardinal US prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops Robert Francis Prevost during a consistory to create 21 new cardinals at St. Peter’s square in The Vatican on September 30, 2023. Pope Francis elevates 21 clergymen from all corners of the world to the rank of cardinal — most of whom may one day cast ballots to elect his successor. (Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP) (Photo by TIZIANA FABI/AFP via Getty Images)

Of all the deeply resonant chords struck by the elevation of the first American to lead the Roman Catholic church, none hits quite like his mother being the product of a Creole family from New Orleans:

The pope’s maternal grandparents, both of whom are described as Black or mulatto in various historical records, lived in the city’s Seventh Ward, an area that is traditionally Catholic and a melting pot of people with African, Caribbean and European roots.

The grandparents, Joseph Martinez and Louise Baquié, eventually moved to Chicago in the early 20th century and had a daughter: Mildred Martinez, the pope’s mother.

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