Yankees wipe out Jays' 5-run lead, stay alive in ALDSNew Foto - Yankees wipe out Jays' 5-run lead, stay alive in ALDS

NEW YORK -- Aaron Judge hit a tying three-run homer in the fourth inning, Jazz Chisholm Jr. socked a go-ahead solo homer in the fifth and the New York Yankees avoided elimination in the American League Division Series with a 9-6 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 3 on Tuesday. The Yankees stormed back from a 6-1 deficit through 2 1/2 innings thanks to the homers from Judge and Chisholm off Louis Varland (0-1). New York forced Game 4 at Yankee Stadium on Wednesday, when rookie Cam Schlittler will start for the hosts while the Blue Jays are expected to use a bullpen game. New York also overcame Vladimir Guerrero Jr.'s third homer of the series. Guerrero went deep on Carlos Rodon's 2-0 changeup three batters into the contest and scored on a headfirst slide on a single by Ernie Clement in Toronto's four-run third. The Blue Jays led 6-3 with one out in the bottom of the fourth when New York's Austin Wells reached on a fielding error by third baseman Addison Barger. Trent Grisham walked, and Varland replaced Mason Fluharty on the mound. Judge swung and missed at a 100 mph fastball for an 0-2 count and took a timeout. On the next pitch, the AL batting champion and two-time MVP hit a fastball off the left field foul pole to forge a 6-6 tie. It was Judge's 17th career postseason homer. Before connecting, Judge was seen consulting with Giancarlo Stanton in the dugout during the pitching change. Judge ended the night 3-for-4 with a walk, his second career three-hit game in the postseason. He set a career playoff high with four RBIs. After Varland fanned Stanton for the first out of the fifth, Chisholm sent a 1-1 fastball into the second deck of the right field seats for a 7-6 lead. Wells added an RBI single later in the inning. In the sixth, Judge was intentionally walked with the bases empty and one out. After Cody Bellinger doubled Judge to third, Ben Rice lifted a sacrifice fly. For the Blue Jays, Daulton Varsho hit an RBI single and Anthony Santander had a two-run single in the third. Rodon allowed six runs on six hits in 2 1/3 innings and was lifted after Santander's hit. After Rodon's short start, five New York relievers combined on 6 2/3 scoreless innings. Fernando Cruz got four outs, and Camilo Doval recorded three outs. Tim Hill (1-0) stranded Clement at second with the score tied in the fifth before pitching a 1-2-3 sixth. Devin Williams pitched a perfect seventh and got the first out of the eighth. David Bednar ended a five-out save by retiring Guerrero on a grounder to third base. --Larry Fleisher, Field Level Media

Yankees wipe out Jays' 5-run lead, stay alive in ALDS

Yankees wipe out Jays' 5-run lead, stay alive in ALDS NEW YORK -- Aaron Judge hit a tying three-run homer in the fourth inning, Jazz Chi...
Video of deadly crash involving late LSU player released after lawyer claims his innocenceNew Foto - Video of deadly crash involving late LSU player released after lawyer claims his innocence

The Louisiana State Policepublished new videoTuesday from the deadly pileup involving LSU wide receiver Kyren Lacy, defending its investigation of the crash as "supported by facts," after Lacy's lawyer claimed to have new evidence exonerating the late college football star. Lacy, 24,died by suicide on April 12as prosecutors were pushing a case against him in a fatal crash on Dec. 17 on Louisiana Highway 20 in Lafourche Parish, which is about an hour outside New Orleans. "The Louisiana State Police is committed to providing a thorough and objective investigation grounded in science and supported by facts," state police said in a release Tuesday. "While we recognize that external narratives may arise, often based on selective information, we urge the public to rely on the full body of facts," the release said. At the start of an11½-minute video presentation, Col. Robert Hodges, superintendent of the state police, said the probe was ongoing. "As this comprehensive investigation develops, our understanding of the incident may change as additional evidence is collected, analyzed and reviewed," he said. Video released Tuesday showed the green Dodge Charger driven by Lacy passing in opposite lanes of traffic before the sound of cars crashing. "A green Dodge Charger is seen traveling south in the opposing lane on LA 20 at a high rate of speed, passing three passenger vehicles and one loaded 18-wheeler in a designated no passing zone with a 40 mph posted speed limit," a narrator of the video said. "As the green Dodge Charger returns to the southbound lane, aggressive braking and engine deceleration are immediately followed by a crash that can be heard on the surveillance footage." Lacy's attorney, Matt Ory, insists newly discovered video exonerates his late client, claiming Lacy was more than 70 yards behind the crashing cars. Herman Hall, a 78-year-old Vietnam War veteran, was killed in the crash that led to Lacy's being booked on suspicion of negligent homicide, hit-and-run driving and reckless operation of a vehicle. "He's 72.6 yards behind the vehicles at the time of impact, key word 'behind' the vehicles,"Ory told HTV in Houmaover the weekend. "That is not how this story was ever painted [by authorities]. Never." The 11½-minute package of videos included body camera video from a trooper who arrived shortly after the crash. As soon as he steps out of his cruiser, the trooper is immediately greeted by a witness who asks: "Is there still a green Charger flying that way?" The trooper specifically asks whether the Charger hit anyone, and witnesses say cars in the pileup were forced to take evasive action to dodge the car and the driver, later found to be Lacy. "A green Charger caused all of this," another witness says. Lacy played five seasons of college football, the first two at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette before he transferred for three seasons in Baton Rouge. He caught 58 passes for 866 yards and nine touchdowns in 2024. The nine scoring grabs were tied for the most in theSEC last season. Lacy had been projected to be a high NFL draft pick before his involvement in the deadly crash. Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrell defended local prosecutors and said they were right to escalate Lacy's case to the grand jury. "The evidence is not disputed here. The Lafourche Parish District Attorney's Office was prepared to present the case to a grand jury that showed Kyren Lacy returning to his lane. However, that does not absolve Kyren Lacy of responsibility in this matter," she said in a statement. "Every witness identified the green Charger Kyren Lacy was determined to be driving, as having put the events in motion that led to the head-on collision, which killed 78-year-old veteran Herman Hall," she said.

Video of deadly crash involving late LSU player released after lawyer claims his innocence

Video of deadly crash involving late LSU player released after lawyer claims his innocence The Louisiana State Policepublished new videoTues...
Report: North Carolina assistant coach suspended for allegedly giving a player's family extra sideline passesNew Foto - Report: North Carolina assistant coach suspended for allegedly giving a player's family extra sideline passes

North Carolina assistant coach Armond Hawkins has reportedly been suspended after allegations of providing players with extra benefits became public on Monday. According to the Athletic, Hawkins has been suspended following the publication of a lengthy storyabout frustrations around Bill Belichick's first year in charge of the North Carolina football programby WRAL. Per the Athletic's report, the suspension stems from allegedly giving a player's family sideline passes — a violation of NCAA rules and something mentioned in WRAL's story. [Yahoo Sports TV is here! Watch live shows and highlights 24/7] From WRAL: According to several sources, some Belichick-recruited transfers have preferential parking for themselves and their parents, as well as more tickets for games. Khmori House and Thaddeus Dixon played for Belichick's son, Steve Belichick, at the University of Washington. Their names come up repeatedly when talking to sources about preferential treatment. Dixon's family has field access on game days, something that no other family is believed to have. Hawkins came to North Carolina from Washington with defensive coordinator Steve Belichick. Hawkins was a defensive analyst with the Huskies in 2024 after previously working at Arizona, Colorado and USC. North Carolina is 2-3 heading into its second and final off week of the season. The Tar Heels' only victories have come against FCS-level Richmond and Charlotte, one of the worst teams at the top level of college football. UNC has been outscored by 77 points in its three losses to TCU, UCF and Clemson. The Tigers were up 28-3 in the first quarter of their 38-10 win in Chapel Hill in Week 6. The anecdote about Hawkins wasn't the only revelation about Belichick's program in the WRAL story. The school cited multiple sources that said Belichick didn't meet with returning players for weeks after he was hired in December and one source told the station that Steve Belichick "has not talked or had a conversation with most of the guys on the defense." Steve Belichick is in his second year as a college defensive coordinator after running Washington's defense in 2024 following his father's departure from the New England Patriots.

Report: North Carolina assistant coach suspended for allegedly giving a player's family extra sideline passes

Report: North Carolina assistant coach suspended for allegedly giving a player's family extra sideline passes North Carolina assistant c...
Bondi rips Democratic senators, dodges questions on 'weaponization' in fiery hearingNew Foto - Bondi rips Democratic senators, dodges questions on 'weaponization' in fiery hearing

President Donald Trump's tightening grip over the Justice Department totarget his political opponentsand lawmakers' increasing calls for the release of more files from federal investigations into deceased sex offenderJeffrey Epsteintook center stage at a contentious Senate hearing Tuesday for Attorney General Pam Bondi. The hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee is the first time since July that Bondi has faced questions from lawmakers and follows a tumultuous summer for the department that included deployments of federal law enforcement to Democratic-run cities, a growing number of investigations announced into Trump's political foes and the controversialindictment of former FBI Director James Comey. Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley kicked off the hearing with extensive remarks seeking to highlight instances of what Republicans have labeled "weaponization" of the Justice Department under the Biden Administration, citing selective disclosures by FBI Director Kash Patel of the investigation into President Trump's attempt to overturn his 2020 election loss. "These are indefensible acts," Grassley said. "This was a political fishing expedition to get Trump at all costs." Specifically, Grassley singled out a timely disclosure by the FBI on Monday that showed former Special Counsel Jack Smith's investigators at one point sought limited phone toll records of several Republican senators around the time of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. As part of his investigation, Smith extensively investigated Trump and his allies' pressure campaign on lawmakers to block the certification of former President Joe Biden's election win -- including calls that were made to senators after the Capitol was breached by the pro-Trump mob. There's no indication that Republican senators were a target of Smith's investigation, and the toll records sought by investigators would not include any information about the content of conversations they may have had. "We're pointing this all out because we can't have this repeated in the United States," Grassley said. "We want to end it right now, whether we have Republican or Democrat administrations." Grassley made no mention of recent directives from Trump to have the Justice Department act "now" to carry out prosecutions of his political foes, or other instances of alleged politicization during Bondi's tenure that have led to scores of departures of longtime career officials who have sounded alarm about the department being used as a tool to enact political retribution. Ranking Democratic member Dick Durbin said in his opening statement assailed the Trump administration for the conduct in Chicago, a city in which Durbin represents. "As President Trump turns the full force of the federal government on Chicago and other American cities, the assault on the city I am proud to represent is just one example of how President Trump and Attorney General Bondi shut down justice at the Department of Justice, even before the president's party controlling the white House, Senate and House of Representatives shut down the government," Durbin said. "The attorney general has systematically weaponized our nation's leading law enforcement agency to protect President Trump and his allies and attack his opponents. And sadly, the American people. You have purged hundreds of senior career officials since you first appeared before us," he added. Durbin listed various controversies for critics of Bondi's Justice Department, the closed investigation into Border Czar Tom Homan, the Eric Adams case being dropped, the hiring of a Jan. 6 defendant who attacked MPD officers, the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files, and the case against James Comey. "What has taken place since Jan. 20, 2025, would make even President Nixon recoil. This is your legacy," Durbin said. Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, also pressed Bondi on Tuesday over whether Bondi personally approved closing the investigation into Homan. "Miss Bondi, did you approve closing the Homan investigation? Bribery investigation?" Hirono said. "Senator Hirono, as I stated earlier, the Department of Justice and the FBI conducted a thorough review, and they found no credible evidence of any wrongdoing," Bondi responded. Hirono then pressed Bondi over the department's removal of dozens of prosecutors who worked on investigations involving President Trump and the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. Bondi shot back, "I'm not going to discuss personnel matters with you." Hirono concluded her questioning by accusing Bondi of deliberately politicizing the department, turning it from the Department of Justice into the "Department of revenge and corruption." In another heated exchanges at the hearing, Bondi reacted with outrage as she accused Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., of suggesting she was lying as she evaded questions about the investigation into Homan. "First of all, is there a tape that has audio and video of the transfer the $50,000?" Welch asked. "You would have to talk to Director Patel about that," Bondi replied. "No, I'm talking to you," Welch said. "I don't know the answer --" Bondi said before Welch interjected, "You do know the answer." "Don't call me a liar!" Bondi shot back. "I didn't call you a liar," Welch responded. Bondi pushed back against her critics and Democrats during the hearing. In her opening statement, she framed her tenure as the "end" of weaponization of law enforcement, while reinforcing her extensive efforts to enact President Trump's agenda. "We will work to earn that back every single day. We are returning to our core mission of fighting real crime. While there is more work to do, I believe in eight short months we have made tremendous progress towards those ends," she said. She also railed against judges who have ruled against the administration in the months since Trump took office, while highlighting the Justice Department's string of victories at the Supreme Court. "My attorneys have done incredible work advancing President Trump's agenda and protecting the Executive Branch from judicial overreach," she said. Bondi continued to hit back at Durbin, who questioned her about the federal deployment to Illinois. The attorney general taunted the senator about Chicago's crime rate. Bondi said that Patel and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche were on their way to the city. "Chairman, as you shut down the government, you voted to shut down the government and you're sitting here as law enforcement officers aren't being paid. They're out there working to protect you. I wish you love Chicago as much as you hate President Trump," she said. Durbin was taken aback by Bondi's responses. "Madam attorney general, it's my job to grill you. Investigation of your agency is part of my responsibility. And this - this committee, you mean. I'd like the experience, but others have weathered the storm and answered questions in a respectful manner," he said. Bondi faced heavy scrutiny over conflicting statements out of the administration on the Epstein files, after the Justice Department and FBI said in aJuly letterthat no further releases were warranted and that there was no evidence suggesting others participated or enabled Epstein's abuse of minor girls. Democrats have accused the administration of seeking to cover up any mentions of Trump or high-profile appointees who had past associations with Epstein, which the administration has denied. Trump was told by Bondi his name appeared multiple times in Epstein files: Report Trump and Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on charges of trafficking young girls and women, were friends in the 1990s but the president said the relationship soured after Epsteinpoached some employeesfrom Trump's Florida club after he explicitly warned him not to do so. When asked on Fox News about the alleged Epstein client list, the attorney general told Fox News in February, "It's sitting on my desk right now to review." She refused to elaborate about those past comments or the growing calls for the Epstein files while testifying. Bondi responded to individual Democrats who sought more details by surfacing donations they allegedly may have received from Reid Hoffman -- an entrepreneur and founder of LinkedIn who is known to have past associations with Epstein. She again surfaced Hoffman's alleged donations in an exchange with Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, in which she again refused to answer his direct questions about the Epstein files. Trump has recently ordered the department to ramp up investigations into so-called "radical left" organizations that he and other senior White House officials have alleged, without providing evidence, as helping to fund perpetrators who have attacked federal law enforcement officials dispatched around the country. Just days after Trump's comments, a senior official in the Justice Department ordered several U.S. Attorney's offices around the country to prepare to open sweepingcriminal investigationsin to the Open Society Foundations founded by billionaire George Soros, naming criminal statutes ranging from robbery, material support for terrorism and racketeering, ABC News previously confirmed. In a statement, the Open Society Foundations called the accusations "politically motivated attacks on civil society, meant to silence speech the administration disagrees with and undermine the First Amendment right to free speech." Bondi sought to brush off pointed questions from Democrats by repeatedly deflecting to crimes committed by undocumented immigrants in their states and districts that were among the briefing materials she brought with her to the hearings. She has also dismissed any characterization of the Justice Department appearing to work in lockstep with the White House as "politicization" of law enforcement. Bondi and other senior DOJ officials have instead argued that the two federal cases brought against Trump by a special counsel under the Biden Administration represented a far more egregious example of weaponization, echoing grievances leveled at the department by Trump. As ABC News first reported, the move to seek Comey's indictment came over the objections of career prosecutors and followed Trump's removal of his appointee to lead the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Virginia, Erik Siebert, who expressed reservations about pursuing charges against Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, sources told ABC News. Bondi faces criticism for saying DOJ will 'target' anyone who engages in 'hate speech' Trump eventually installed a White House aide and former personal attorney Lindsey Halligan to lead the office and move forward with the case against Comey, and a grand jury narrowly voted to indict him on two counts of making false statements to Congress and obstructing a congressional investigation -- while declining to indict on a third false statements charge. Comey has denied wrongdoing and is set to appear Thursday in federal court for his arraignment. While sources told ABC News that leadership at the DOJ expressed reservations about pursuing the case, Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel went on to publicly cheer news of Comey's indictment in news interviews and social media posts. The next week, the administration moved to fire a top national security prosecutor in the office, Michael Ben'Ary, over a misleading social media post that falsely suggested he was among the prosecutors who resisted charging Comey. Ben'Ary was leading a major case against one of the alleged plotters of the Abbey Gate bombing during the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. In a scathing departure letter, Ben'Ary set his sights squarely on the Justice Department's leadership and labeled his removal as just one in a series of recent moves taken to root out career officials for political reasons at the expense of the nation's security. "This example highlights the most troubling aspect of the current operations of the Department of Justice: the leadership is more concerned with punishing the President's perceived enemies than they are with protecting our national security," Ben'Ary wrote. "Justice for Americans killed and injured by our enemies should not be contingent on what someone in the Department of Justice sees in their social media feed that day." The DOJ declined to comment when asked about Ben'Ary's letter. Sen. Richard Blumenthal pressed Bondi repeatedly on Tuesday over instances of pressure on the department by Trump and what conversations she may have had with him in the days leading up to the indictment of Comey. "I'd like to know from you what conversations you had with President Trump about the indictment of James Comey," Blumenthal said. "Senator, I am not going to discuss any conversations I have or have not had with the President of the United States. You're an attorney, you have a law degree, and you know that I'm not going to do that," Bondi said on Tuesday. DOJ drops charges against another client of AG Pam Bondi's brother Brad Those actions have causedunprecedented turmoilat the Eastern District, which oversees some of the nation's most sensitive national security, terrorism and espionage investigations. Current and former officials say that turmoil has reverberated further across the Justice Department's workforce around the country, with attorneys concerned they'll face professional repercussions if they resist taking part in politicized investigations or prosecutions. On Monday, nearly 300 DOJ employees who left the department since Trump's inaugurationreleased a letteron the eve of Bondi's hearing describing her leadership as "appalling" in its treatment of the career workforce and the elimination of longstanding norms of independence from the White House. "We call on Congress to exercise its oversight responsibilities far more vigorously," the former employees said. "Members in both chambers and on both sides of the aisle must provide a meaningful check on the abuses we're witnessing. And we call on all Americans -- whose safety, prosperity, and rights depend on a strong DOJ -- to speak out against its destruction." The DOJ declined to comment on the letter.

Bondi rips Democratic senators, dodges questions on 'weaponization' in fiery hearing

Bondi rips Democratic senators, dodges questions on 'weaponization' in fiery hearing President Donald Trump's tightening grip ov...
Democrats in governors races see political opportunity amid government shutdownNew Foto - Democrats in governors races see political opportunity amid government shutdown

GLEN RIDGE, N.J. (AP) — Democrats say fallout from the Trump administration's aggressive tactics during theshutdown of the federal governmentcould give them a welcome boost in the only two governors' races on the ballot this year. In Virginia, 175,000 people work for the federal government, according to the Congressional Research Service. In New Jersey, where federal workers number roughly 23,000 by the CRS's estimate, the Republican administration has announced the freezing of $18 billion in funding for arail tunnel connecting the state to New York City. The Nov. 4 elections in Virginia and New Jersey represent the next big tests of how voters view both PresidentDonald Trump'ssecond term and Democrats' reaction to it. They take place against the backdrop of the shutdown fight, ignited by Senate Democrats' decision to oppose a Republican-backed funding bill in hopes of negotiating an extension of expiringAffordable Care Act subsidies. Shutdown puts Trump 'front and center' The Republican president's threat to lay off more government workers and stop the tunnel project has left Democrats anticipating an unexpected boost in the off-year elections. "I think this decision byDonald Trumpon the Gateway tunnel is devastating for Jack Ciattarelli," said Democratic Sen.Andy Kimof New Jersey. "It puts Trump front and center." Ciattarelli is the Trump-backed Republican nominee for governor of New Jersey, a state that tilts toward Democrats but has shown a willingness to support the GOP in governor's races. He's running against U.S. Rep.Mikie Sherrill, a four-term Democratic congresswoman who has made Trump administration tactics a centerpiece of the case she's been making to Garden State voters. The shutdown, and Trump's decision to pull the plug on the tunnel project, fits seamlessly into Sherrill's narrative. Outside a suburban New York City train station recently, she said the project is a boon for New Jersey laborers and commuters and blamed the president and her rival. "We're risking the failure of a century old tunnel. That means over 200,000 people every single day," she said. "It's despicable that the president of the United States is costing us so much money and attacking our economy. And it's despicable Jack Ciattarelli is going right along." Republicans put the blame on Democrats Ciattarelli, in turn, blames Sherrill and her Democratic colleagues in Congress. "Instead of doing her job, she chose to play partisan politics," said campaign strategist Chris Russell. "She should be embarrassed." While Democrats see an opportunity in the shutdown and its aftermath, Republicans aren't ready to concede the point. Even those critical of Trump say it probably doesn't matter. New Jersey state Sen.Jon Bramnick, the lone Trump critic in this year's GOP primary, said voters he talks to all seem to have their minds made up already. They either love the president and back his policies — and Ciattarelli as his choice for governor — or dislike him intensely. "It's all baked in," he said. New Jersey Republican Assembly memberBrian Bergensaid he doesn't see the shutdown "taking" as an issue in the race. Despite the president narrowing the Democrats' margin of victory in New Jersey in 2024, he's still likely "underwater" with many in the state, he said. He said thelength of the shutdowncould be a factor but didn't see it damaging Ciattarelli. "I don't think that's gonna translate to a negative effect to Jack," he said, pausing briefly before adding: "Every day is a new day. Anything can happen, especially with President Trump." Virginia's Democratic nominee runs against Trump Virginia Democratssee opportunity in the shutdown as well. The party's nominee for governor,Abigail Spanberger, has released ad after ad casting her opponentLt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Searsas aMAGA Republicanwho "speaks for Trump" and supports his firing of federal workers and theDepartment of Government Efficiency. "Virginians are already facing the dire impacts of DOGE, reckless tariffs, and attacks on their healthcare coverage," she said. "And now, our Commonwealth faces totally unnecessary job cuts as President Trump promises to enact mass firings." The president's aggressive tactics have also surfaced in the Virginia House of Delegates campaign, where every seat will be on the ballot next month. Virginia House SpeakerDon Scott, a Democrat, said in an interview with MSNBC that Trump's visit to a Naval base in Virginia on Sunday came as the paychecks of the service members he spoke to were being jeopardized because of the shutdown, adding: "Virginia voters are going to send a very strong message to Trump this next November." Earle-Sears has not directly addressed Trump's role in the shutdown. Her campaign did not respond to an email asking about the impact of the shutdown. Sarah Lamm, a federal worker from New Jersey who said she's currently working without pay as an "excepted" employee, declined to say who she'd be voting for in the governor's race but said the shutdown would definitely be on her mind. She said she's getting by because she's been financially "responsible" but doesn't know how long her savings could hold out. Her message, she said was: "I'm somebody's community member. I exist. This is a hardship for myself and my family right now."

Democrats in governors races see political opportunity amid government shutdown

Democrats in governors races see political opportunity amid government shutdown GLEN RIDGE, N.J. (AP) — Democrats say fallout from the Trump...

 

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