I’ll begin by reviewing the current status of Direct Detection searches for Dark Matter, an experimental effort begun by Frank Avignone! Then I will turn to the potential discovery of Dark Stars in early data from the James Webb Space Telescope. These would have been the first stars in the Universe, made (almost entirely) of hydrogen and helium, but powered by the heat from Dark Matter annihilation rather than by fusion. The relevant types of dark matter include Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) and Self Interacting Dark Matter (SIDM). Although dark matter constitutes only ≲0.1% of the stellar mass, this amount is sufficient to power the star for millions to billions of years. They are very bright diffuse puffy objects and grow to be very massive. In fact, they can grow up to ten million solar masses with up to ten billion solar luminosities. Once the dark matter fuel runs out and the dark star dies, it may collapse to a black hole; thus dark stars may provide seeds for supermassive black holes observed at early times as well as in galaxies today. Of the 700 high redshift objects found by JWST so far, only 10 have spectra and we have access to 5 of those. Of the four JADES objects (JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey), three are consistent with an interpretation in terms of Dark Stars. Future detailed spectra will be able to differentiate between DS and high redshift galaxies. It is an exciting prospect that the first discovery of WIMPs could be via the discovery of Dark Stars!