PODCAST · news
True News Briefing
by The Truesdell Companies
True News Briefing
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April 19, 2026
Welcome to True News Briefing for Sunday, April 19th. Story number one. Right here in our backyard, Marion County is dealing with a major scandal involving Adams Homes. Tasha Adams, an executive and the wife of a local division manager, was arrested for allegedly forging the notary signature of a former employee. The forged signatures appeared on Notices of Commencement, often called N O Cs. For folks who haven't joined our private discussions on this, a Notice of Commencement is the legal document filed with the county that officially launches a construction project. It tells the world who owns the land, who is building, and who has rights to claim against the property if they aren't paid. That single piece of paper is the foundation of everything that follows. When you forge it, you don't just commit a crime. You poison the entire chain of title for every home built on top of it. This is exactly the kind of breakdown in basic accountability we have warned about in our casual conversations with clients for years. Hard work and honest paperwork built this country. Shortcuts and forged signatures tear it down.Our next story stays close to home. The Adams Homes investigation that started as a one hundred home audit has now ballooned to include hundreds of additional properties across Marion County. Because those forged Notices of Commencement were the foundational legal document for construction, every home built on top of them now carries what the title industry calls a clouded title. A clouded title means there is a legal defect, a question mark hanging over your ownership rights. It does not matter how nice the house looks or how faithfully you have paid your mortgage. If the paperwork at the start was bad, the paperwork at the end is bad. We have talked about this with clients over coffee and at our small group sessions for years. The paperwork is the deal. When the paperwork breaks down, everything breaks down. This is law and order at its most basic level, and right now Marion County is paying the price for someone deciding to cut corners.Story number three brings us to the dollars and cents of the Adams Homes mess. Title insurance companies are now issuing what are called blanket exclusions for these affected developments. A blanket exclusion means the insurer simply refuses to cover any title defects for that whole neighborhood. No coverage, no closing, no refinance, no sale. Owners are stuck. Many are now facing thousands of dollars in legal fees to file what is called a Quiet Title Action. That is a lawsuit you bring against the world, basically, asking a judge to declare once and for all that you and only you own your property. It is slow, expensive, and stressful. For our clients, this is exactly why we sit down one on one and walk through the real risks of any major asset purchase. There is no substitute for verified ownership and clean paperwork. Substance over appearance always wins in the long run.You are listening to True News Briefing from Truesdell Wealth, a true fiduciary based registered investment advisor headquartered in Ocala, Florida. Call or text three five two, six one two, one thousand.As we continue, the Strait of Hormuz is once again sealed shut. After a brief and chaotic attempt to reopen the waterway, Iran fired on two commercial tankers Saturday and slammed the door shut again. For folks who haven't heard us discuss this in our private briefings, the Strait of Hormuz is a narrow passage between Iran and Oman through which roughly twenty percent of the world's oil flows every single day. Tankers from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Iraq, and Qatar all squeeze through that bottleneck. When Iran closes it, global energy markets feel it within hours. President Trump's response has been firm and measured. America stands ready to keep commerce moving and to make sure Tehran understands that this kind of behavior carries a real cost. This is what strong American leadership looks like on the world stage. Clear lines, firm resolve, and no apologies.Now we have the American response to Tehran's aggression. President Trump remains absolutely firm on the United States naval blockade of Iranian ports. The President's demand is straightforward. Iran must fully and verifiably abandon its nuclear weapons program. No more games. No more inspectors being walked in circles. No more decade-long stalling tactics. This is a return to the kind of clear, principled American foreign policy that our clients tell us they have missed for years. A naval blockade is a serious instrument of national power. The United States Navy is positioned to control what goes in and out of Iranian harbors, and that kind of pressure is precisely what brings rogue regimes back to the negotiating table. We have talked many times about how peace is achieved through strength, not through endless concessions and one-sided deals. This is strength in action.Story number six takes us to Western Europe. German manufacturers are accelerating what is being called a Pivot to the Atlantic. With Middle East shipping lanes choked off by the Hormuz crisis, German industry is moving its supply chains away from Asian routes and toward Atlantic partners. That means more business flowing toward American ports, American suppliers, and American workers. For decades, German industry was the engine of Europe, but it leaned heavily on cheap Russian energy and long Asian supply chains. Both pillars are now cracking. The companies smart enough to read the room are coming closer to the United States. This is the kind of structural shift that creates real opportunity for American workers, American manufacturers, and American shipping. Our clients have heard us discuss this trend for the better part of a year. Globalism built on fragile chains is giving way to something stronger and more local.You are listening to True News Briefing from Truesdell Wealth, a true fiduciary based registered investment advisor headquartered in Ocala, Florida. Call or text three five two, six one two, one thousand.Our next story comes from the Pacific. Rebuilding efforts in Saipan and Tinian, the two American territories hammered by the recent super typhoon, are running into serious trouble. The reason is simple. There is a global shortage of construction materials because so much steel, lumber, and concrete is being diverted to defense projects. Saipan and Tinian are part of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, an American commonwealth that sits in a strategically vital part of the Pacific. These islands are American soil, American citizens, and American responsibility. The shortage shows the real-world cost of decades of letting our domestic manufacturing base hollow out. When you outsource production, you also outsource your ability to respond in a crisis. The path forward is clear. Bring manufacturing home, expand domestic capacity, and make sure that when American territory needs to rebuild, American factories can deliver.Story number eight. A new intelligence report highlights Russia's successful deployment of what analysts are calling a sovereign drone ecosystem. That means Russia has built, from the ground up, its own complete chain of drone production using artificial intelligence to maintain front-line pressure in Ukraine despite Western sanctions. For folks new to this topic, A I in this context refers to software that lets the drone identify targets, navigate, and react without a human pilot at every step. Sanctions were supposed to break Russia's ability to wage modern war. Instead, Russia adapted. This is a hard lesson about the limits of sanctions when an adversary is willing to invest in domestic capability. It is also a wake-up call for American defense planning. We have talked with clients about this exact dynamic for some time. Real st...
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April 18, 2026 - Ocala & Marion County Focus
OCALA AND MARION COUNTY COMMUNITY UPDATE. News from the past seventy-two hours and events through Tuesday, April twenty-eighthThis is Saturday, April eighteenth, two thousand twenty-six.Good morning, and welcome to your Ocala and Marion County community update. Coming up, we have the top local news stories from the past seventy-two hours, followed by a full rundown of events and things to do across Marion County over the next ten days. Let's get started. number one. The Ocala Police Department is asking the city to spend two hundred twenty-six thousand four hundred ninety-five dollars to replace four vehicles that were all declared total losses following major collisions last year. The request is on the agenda for the Ocala City Council's next regular meeting on Tuesday, April twenty-first. The four vehicles were involved in separate accidents spanning from February to November of two thousand twenty-five. City staff recommends replacing the damaged units with three marked and one unmarked police pursuit vehicle. number two. A junior at Belleview High School has made history, becoming the first student in Marion County ever named a Grand Award Ying Scholar. Briana Stephens received the prestigious distinction at the seventy-first Florida State Science and Engineering Fair, making her one of only eight students statewide to earn the honor. She was awarded a one thousand dollar cash prize, a traveling trophy, and an all expenses paid trip to the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair. Her winning project addressed tympanic membrane perforations, a condition that impacts more than three hundred twenty million people globally. number three. In crime news, a forty one year old woman was jailed over the weekend after a Marion County resident caught her trying to steal his work truck. Desiree Ann Wilbur was arrested on Saturday, April eleventh, following the incident outside a Dunnellon home, and has now been formally charged. Her bond has been set at two thousand five hundred dollars. She is facing charges of grand theft of a motor vehicle and possession of drug paraphernalia, and is scheduled to appear in a Marion County courtroom on Tuesday, May twelfth. number four. A local veteran has been displaced after his mobile home was destroyed by fire on Tuesday, April fourteenth. Marion County Fire Rescue units were dispatched at three forty five in the afternoon following multiple nine one one calls reporting smoke and flames in the two hundred block of East Gleneagles Road. Firefighters reported a large column of black smoke while still en route. The mobile home was fully engulfed when crews arrived. Firefighters from South Forest Station Six and Anthony Station One deployed multiple hose lines and brought the blaze under control. No injuries were reported. number five. Turning to education news. Thirty five non instructional employees were laid off by the Marion County Public School District this month. Several residents spoke before the school board on the issue during its April fourteenth meeting. In related local news, the Rotary Club of Ocala awarded scholarships to six outstanding high school seniors this week, and Ocala Fire Rescue received a new grant to support operations.This podcast was produced by Truesdell Wealth, in conjunction with the other professional service firms, commonly known as The Truesdell Companies. number six. Authorities have charged Michael Rowland of Jacksonville with second degree murder and evidence tampering in the death of Diane German, the former owner of Wolfy's in Ocala. German, who was seventy two years old, was found dead in her swimming pool at her home on Northeast Sixth Street in late December. Rowland, who is fifty years old, was her boyfriend at the time of her death. He reportedly called nine one one around seven in the morning to report finding her in the pool. The arrest came several months after investigators pieced together the case. number seven. In community highlights this week, Lauren's Kids has embarked on a fifteen hundred mile trek across the state and is also launching a new survivor storytelling project. The organization continues its mission of preventing childhood abuse and helping survivors heal. Also in the headlines, the Marion County photo contest and the Visitors and Convention Bureau postcard contest are both underway, a hospital expansion has been announced, and several local Realtors were recognized with industry awards. number eight. On the public health front, the Florida Department of Health is providing an update on the ongoing measles situation. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as of April sixteenth, one thousand seven hundred forty eight confirmed measles cases have been reported in the United States so far this year, with Florida among the thirty three jurisdictions reporting cases. Residents with questions about vaccination are encouraged to contact the Florida Department of Health in Marion County. number nine. Looking ahead on the civic calendar, the Ocala City Council meets Tuesday, April twenty first, for its regular session. Along with the police vehicle request mentioned earlier, the council is expected to address routine business and community matters. Residents who wish to attend or comment are encouraged to review the agenda in advance on the City of Ocala website. number ten. And now for your weekend weather outlook. The National Weather Service in Jacksonville is forecasting sunny skies and near record high temperatures this weekend. Saturday is expected to reach a high near ninety degrees with light winds from the south southwest. Sunday will be similar, topping out in the upper eighties. Overnight lows will dip into the mid sixties. A cool down arrives on Monday, with highs in the upper seventies. Rain chances remain low through the middle of next week, so it looks like a beautiful stretch of spring weather across Marion County.This podcast was produced by Truesdell Wealth, in conjunction with the other professional service firms, commonly known as The Truesdell Companies.That wraps up our news segment. Now let's turn our attention to events and things to do across Ocala and Marion County over the next ten days. There is plenty to keep you busy, from garage sales and festivals to concerts, theater, and community gatherings. number eleven. Starting with today, Saturday, April eighteenth, the Ocala Two Hundred Lions Club is holding a flea market from eight in the morning until one in the afternoon at the Bank OZK parking area, located at eight three seven five Southwest Highway Two Hundred in Ocala. Close to fifty vendors will be on hand, with food and drink available for purchase. The Lions will also be collecting non perishable food s for Interfaith Emergency Services, eyeglasses for recycling, and aluminum pop top rings for the Ronald McDonald House. All proceeds support community projects throughout the year. number twelve. Also today, the residents of Oak Run are hosting their annual community garage sale from eight in the morning until two in the afternoon. Shoppers from the surrounding area are invited to browse household goods, decor, clothing, tools, collectibles, and other unique finds throughout the community. The event is open to the public, and visitors are encouraged to arrive early for the best selection. number thirteen. Continuing with today's events, Transitions Life Center's Community Navigator, in partnership with the Florida Department of Health in Marion County, is hosting the two thousand twenty six Disability Resource Fair from eleven in the morning until two in the afternoon. The event takes place at the Mary Sue Rich Community Center at eighteen twenty one Nort...
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April 16, 2026
MARKET, BUSINESS, AND GENERAL UPDATE FOR THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 2026, brought to you by Truesdell Wealth, Incorporated, a true fiduciary based investment advisor. The following is a summary of items we are followed or are following in the last 48 hours, and based on public sources. Truesdell Wealth, Inc. A Registered Investment Advisor The Truesdell Professional Building200 NW 52nd Avenue Ocala, Florida 34481352-612-1000Paul Grant Truesdell, J.D., AIF, CLU, ChFC, RFCThis content is provided solely for informational and educational purposes. It does not constitute, and should not be relied upon as, legal, tax, accounting, investment, or other professional advice. No information contained herein should be construed as a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security or financial product. Truesdell Wealth, Incorporated, is a Registered Investment Advisor. Let's begin. Story one. The S&P 500 closed at a historic all-time high of 7,022 on Wednesday, and what makes this remarkable is the backdrop against which it happened. With geopolitical tensions still simmering in the Middle East and ongoing uncertainty about the Iran conflict, you would expect markets to be pulling back. Instead, investors are essentially looking right through the noise, choosing to bet on a swift resolution to the hostilities and placing their confidence in what is shaping up to be a strong corporate earnings season. The rally now stretches roughly 30 percent over the past 12 months, and the message from Wall Street seems to be: until proven otherwise, the fundamentals win.Story two. The Nasdaq Composite has now recorded 10 consecutive sessions of gains, its longest winning streak since 2021, and the engine driving that run is renewed artificial intelligence optimism. Tech stocks surged as investors rotated capital away from energy and materials — two sectors that have been under pressure from war-related supply disruptions — and back into the names they know best. The sentiment shift has been notable, with money managers who had trimmed their tech exposure suddenly reversing course to avoid being left behind.Story three. One of the more encouraging developments of the day involves the Strait of Hormuz. Traders and logistics analysts had been pricing in what many were calling a "Hormuz Premium" — essentially an elevated cost embedded in everything from oil to shipping contracts to global freight. Today, according to public sources, more than 20 commercial ships moved through the strait without incident following reports that the United States and Iran may be close to extending their current ceasefire arrangement. Markets reacted positively to that news, and while the situation remains fluid, the easing of that bottleneck provided measurable relief to supply chain concerns.Story four. The broad market index tracked by public financial analysts closed at 17,076.76 today, setting its own all-time high. According to public sources, while macro risks are clearly elevated, collective corporate free cash flow remains resilient enough that a significant near-term market decline appears unlikely. The takeaway from most market strategists is that corporate America, despite the headwinds, is still generating enough cash to keep investors reasonably comfortable — at least for now.Story five. The CBOE Volatility Index, commonly known as the VIX or the "fear gauge," has pulled back considerably after spiking during the early weeks of the Middle East conflict. What has happened is a classic dynamic in markets: cautious investors who moved to the sidelines during the initial panic are now being forced back in as the market continues to grind higher. When you are sitting in cash and watching the S&P 500 break records, staying on the sidelines becomes its own form of risk.Story six. Earnings season is off to a strong start, with early results from Bank of America and Morgan Stanley both coming in ahead of analyst expectations. The financial sector needed this. After mixed results from other major banks earlier in the week, these beats have helped restore confidence in a sector that is uniquely sensitive to the interest rate environment. Strong trading revenues and better-than-expected net interest income appear to be the primary drivers, giving investors reason to believe the big banks can navigate the current high-rate landscape more effectively than feared.Story seven. The utilities sector has become one of the most talked-about areas of the market, and according to public sources, the reason is straightforward: investors are betting heavily on the power demand that artificial intelligence data centers are expected to generate. These facilities consume enormous amounts of electricity, and power companies are being revalued accordingly — treated less like the sleepy defensive stocks they used to be and more like growth plays. The caution being raised by analysts is that the sector may be getting ahead of itself; after a significant surge in valuations, some utilities are starting to look stretched.Story eight. Markets are watching today's release of March industrial production data closely. The number will provide the first clear look at how the recent spike in energy prices — a direct consequence of Middle East tensions — has impacted the manufacturing sector. Higher energy costs translate into higher input costs for factories, and investors want to know whether output has softened meaningfully or whether companies have found ways to absorb the pressure and keep production running.Story nine. Transport stocks are under pressure today, with particular attention on J.B. Hunt Transport Services, which is reporting earnings. The trucking and logistics industry sits directly in the path of rising diesel prices, which have climbed sharply as oil markets digest the Hormuz situation. Analysts are scrutinizing J.B. Hunt's operating margins closely, because if one of the largest and most well-run logistics companies in the country is feeling the squeeze, it tells you something important about the health of the broader supply chain.Story ten. With April 15 now in the rearview mirror, analysts are watching for the liquidity effects that typically follow Tax Day. When individuals and businesses write large checks to the Treasury, that money briefly exits the financial system, which can create a temporary dip in market activity. That said, the current buying momentum appears strong enough that institutional investors are absorbing any selling pressure without too much difficulty. The bigger question now is whether retail investors, flush from a 30-percent rally, will become net sellers as they reassess their portfolio positioning heading into the rest of the year.FEDERAL RESERVE AND ECONOMICSStory eleven. Cleveland Federal Reserve President Beth Hammack made clear on a major financial news network today that interest rates are going nowhere anytime soon. Her message was direct: rates will likely remain on hold for what she described as "a good while." The reasoning reflects the difficult position the Fed finds itself in. Successive supply shocks — from pandemic-era disruptions to now war-related energy spikes — keep reintroducing inflationary pressure just as the central bank thinks it has things under control. Every time a new shock arrives, the case for cutting rates weakens a little more.Story twelve. Bond traders have effectively erased all bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2026, and according to public sources, some are beginning to position for the possibility of rate increases if energy-driven inflation proves stubborn. This is a dramatic reversal from where expectations stood just a few months ago, when markets were pricing in multiple cuts this year. The culprit is a combination of resilient economic ...
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April 5, 2026
Welcome. This is a new feature for those visiting the Paul Truesdell dot come website. True News Briefing. Let us know if you find this new radio approach with an old radio style of interest by using the contact form. Before the age of streaming and screens, people gathered around the radio. It was the original on-demand companion — present in the kitchen while breakfast was made, in the garage while the car was worked on, in the background of every ordinary moment of daily life. Then came tapes, and people took their audio with them. Then came digital, and suddenly everything was portable, searchable, and available the instant you wanted it. The True News Briefing is built for exactly that world. Think of it as your personal on-demand radio station — one tuned entirely to the news that matters to you, ready whenever you are. Put it on while you make coffee. Play it on your walk. Let it run while you work in the yard or drive across town. You do not have to sit down, log in, or stare at a screen. Just press play and live your life — and the briefing comes along with you. This, True News Briefing for Sunday, April five, twenty twenty-six. is a production of the Truesdell Companies.Let’s begin with Breaking news out of Iran. President Trump confirmed the successful recovery of a downed F-fifteen-E Strike Eagle airman from deep inside Iranian territory. The President called the mission a daring success, and America brought its warrior home.Story number two. To protect classified technology during the Isfahan rescue, United States Special Operations forces made the tough call to destroy two of their own MC-one-thirty-J transport aircraft on the ground south of Isfahan. That is the kind of hard decision American warriors make to protect national security.As we continue, Iran's Revolutionary Guard is claiming they foiled the rescue operation, saying they downed additional helicopters and an MQ-nine Reaper drone. Tehran's version of events contradicts the White House account. America stands by its mission and its men.Our next story. President Trump issued a forty-eight hour ultimatum to Iran demanding the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz or face severe consequences. Markets are watching closely as that deadline approaches Monday morning. America is not blinking.Story number five. Crude oil remains above one hundred dollars per barrel as the Strait of Hormuz standoff continues. The White House points to strong construction gains and projects a hiring boom ahead. The fundamentals of the American economy remain solid.Speaking of the Pentagon, Secretary Pete Hegseth has expanded his leadership overhaul at the Department of Defense, removing Army Chief of Staff General Randy George, along with General David Hodne and Major General William Green Junior. Hegseth is putting the right people in place to build a military focused on winning.Now we have this. Reports suggest General George's removal was partly driven by internal concerns following the Signalgate scandal. Hegseth is moving decisively to restore order and loyalty inside the Department of Defense.As we continue, Anthropic has filed a federal lawsuit to challenge the administration's supply chain risk designation against the company. The case could reshape how Washington regulates the technology sector going forward.Our next story. The Justice Department filed an emergency appeal to allow continued construction of a new White House ballroom. Government lawyers argue that halting the project creates a legitimate security risk for the President of the United States.Story number ten. The administration is consolidating all Interior Department firefighting operations into a new Wildland Fire Service. The move is designed to respond more effectively to the intensifying drought-driven fire season across the American West.Retirement should feel like freedom — not like a second job. At Truesdell Wealth, we work with retirees who have spent a lifetime building something worth protecting. Our goal is simple: maximize your income, your confidence, and your peace of mind — while we minimize your time, your effort, your aggravation, and your money spent getting there. That is what we call the TEAM approach — Time, Effort, Aggravation, and Money — and it is the standard we hold ourselves to every single day. You did the hard part. Let Truesdell Wealth handle the rest. Visit Truesdell Wealth and start that conversation today.Now, Saudi Arabia's debt issuers have paused bond sales, citing a war premium driven by the Iran conflict. Global private capital is moving toward safe-haven assets as Middle East tensions strain financial markets worldwide.Speaking of the Middle East, the United Arab Emirates confirmed its air defenses intercepted twenty-three ballistic missiles and fifty-six drones launched from Iran. Tehran is expanding its attacks to include Gulf nations that host United States military bases.Our next story. The IAEA confirmed one casualty from debris following joint United States and Israeli strikes near Iran's Bushehr nuclear facility. Russia has begun evacuating its remaining staff from the plant as the conflict intensifies.Story number fourteen. Iran's Foreign Ministry is accusing the United States and Israel of war crimes, citing strikes near hospitals and civilian facilities. A drone strike on a Bahraini petrochemical facility triggered massive fires, further threatening regional energy stability.As we continue, Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund is reportedly eyeing a five billion dollar anchor investment in a potential SpaceX initial public offering. The deal would signal a major pivot by Riyadh toward defense-adjacent American technology.Now we have this. Russia is shipping upgraded Shahed-type drones to Iran. These are battle-tested weapons from the Ukraine theater, now equipped with Starlink-capable kits, jet engines, and advanced anti-jamming artificial intelligence.Our next story. Ukrainian President Zelenskyy is warning that Russian satellites are actively helping Iran target United States military bases. In exchange, China is reportedly financing oil flows back to Russia. This is a coordinated axis working against American interests.Story number eighteen. Russia's TASS and North Korea's KCNA have signed a formal agreement to jointly counter what they call Western disinformation. Approximately two thousand North Korean troops have been killed fighting alongside Russia in Ukraine to date.Speaking of adversaries, China is aggressively pitching a five-point peace plan on Iran, enlisting Pakistan and Gulf states to block any United Nations resolution authorizing force to reopen the Strait. The United States has shown no interest in Beijing's mediation.If you are retired or within a few years of retirement, it is time to take a serious look at something that has quietly become one of the most powerful tools available today—a ten year, non qualified, defined benefit, private pension plan. This is not the old system you remember. This is structured, predictable, and designed to provide reliable income you cannot outlive. In a world of market volatility, rising costs, and uncertainty, having a personal pension can change everything. At Truesdell Wealth, we specialize in helping retirees create steady, dependable income with clarity and purpose. This is not for a select few—this is something nearly every retiree should at least understand and consider. Call or text today at three five two, six one two, one thousand. That is three five two, six one two, one thousand.Now, Chinese firms are marketing intelligence that claims to expose United States military force movements across the Pacific. They are using private satellite networks and artificial intelligence to conduct what amounts to commercial espionage against America.Our next story. For the first time since nineteen eighty, the United King...
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