Trump Attorney General: No New Details in Tariff Challenges as Focus Shifts to NFL Free Agency Move
At 9: 00 am ET, trump attorney general remains a top-trending search phrase, but the latest verified development in the material available to Filmogaz is not from Washington—it is from NFL free agency. A report states Eagles safety Reed Blankenship is signing with the Houston Texans for three years and $24. 75 million. The move lands as Monday’s legal tampering period begins, accelerating roster turnover for a defense that already looks headed for major change by 2026.
What is confirmed right now
The report says Blankenship, a free agent safety, is signing with the Houston Texans on a three-year deal worth $24. 75 million, and the news emerged Monday evening. The timing matters: the report frames Blankenship as the third defensive starter from the Eagles’ 23-19 home playoff loss to San Francisco to depart as free agency opened Monday. The same report names the other two departures as Jaelan Phillips to Carolina and Nakobe Dean to Las Vegas.
Blankenship’s exit also sharpens the immediate roster picture for Philadelphia at safety. With him leaving, the report describes the Eagles as “pretty thin” at the position. It notes that Drew Mukuba, the team’s second-round pick last year, will return from injury to start the season, while the player expected to line up next to him may not currently be on the roster.
Trump Attorney General in the headlines, but the only supplied facts point to the Texans deal
Filmogaz is working under strict context-only limits for this update, and in the information provided for publication there are no new verified details about the separate legal challenges referenced in the day’s headline slate. That means no added court filings, no named plaintiffs, no identified justices, and no official statements are available here for attribution.
What is available is the NFL transaction detail and the on-the-record perspective from Blankenship captured after the playoff loss. In that moment, Blankenship acknowledged the uncertainty around where teammates land as rosters turn over: “Who knows where we all end up?” he said. “That’s just part of the business side of it. They can’t keep us all. I wish they could. ”
Within the same report, Blankenship is described as a three-year starter, a captain, and the “quarterback” of the Eagles’ defense. His statistical production is listed as 308 tackles, 23 pass breakups, nine interceptions, and three fumble recoveries across 56 regular-season games over four seasons with the Eagles.
Roster implications in Philadelphia and what Houston is getting
On the Eagles side, the internal options mentioned for the safety spot are Sydney Brown, Andre’ Sam, and Michael Carter II. The report also notes Marcus Epps—who “started down the stretch” for the Eagles—is a free agent. The central takeaway is blunt: the report signals a depth squeeze, with at least one starting role not clearly filled by anyone currently penciled in.
For Houston, the report’s only explicit detail is the contract length and value. Still, the description of Blankenship’s role—captaincy and defensive command—underscores why a team would invest three years and $24. 75 million in a safety, particularly one credited with leadership responsibilities and turnover production.
What’s next
More clarity on the Eagles’ next steps at safety will depend on who is ultimately on the roster beside Mukuba, an open question the report itself flags. For now, at 9: 00 am ET, the most concrete development tied to today’s provided material is this: Blankenship’s reported move to the Texans, and the widening churn on Philadelphia’s defense—while trump attorney general continues to trend without any additional confirmed legal details included in the current context.