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  • APNEWS.COM
    Michigan up to No. 3 in AP Top 25 mens basketball poll, Michigan State and Iowa State into top 10
    Michigan celebrates as they defeat Gonzaga in an NCAA college basketball game in the Players Era tournament in Las Vegas, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)2025-12-01T18:02:09Z Michigan jumped to No. 3 in the Associated Press Top 25 mens basketball poll on Monday as rival Michigan State and Iowa State both climbed into the top 10.No. 1 Purdue and No. 2 Arizona remained atop the rankings. The Boilermakers received 40 first-place votes from a 61-person media panel, Arizona got six and Michigan got 15 after its dominating run through the Players Era Championship.Duke and UConn held their positions from last week to round out the top five. Louisville remained No. 6, followed by Michigan State, which moved up four spots and No. 8 Houston, which dropped five places after losing to then-No. 17 Tennessee at Players Era.Michigan made a run to the Sweet 16 in coach Dusty Mays first season a year ago and is looking like a title contender. The Wolverines opened the Las Vegas tournament with a 94-54 win over San Diego State, crushed then-No. 21 Auburn 102-72 and handed Gonzaga coach Mark Few his worst loss in 902 career games with a 101-61 win over the 12th-ranked Zags. Thats three wins by a combined 110 points and four straight wins by at least 20 points, the last two over ranked teams.Today was to put the world on notice that were here to be the best team in the nation and well continue to do that, Michigan forward Yaxel Lendeborg said after the win over Gonzaga. RisingNo. 17 Vanderbilt had the biggest jump of the week, moving up seven spots after winning the Battle 4 Atlantis title in the Bahamas. No. 10 Iowa State climbed five places after winning three games at the Players Era championship. No. 7 Michigan State moved up four places following lopsided wins over East Carolina and No. 16 North Carolina in the Fort Myers Tip-Off. No. 13 Tennessee also gained four spots after beating Houston and losing to Kansas, which moved back into the poll at No. 21.FallingNo. 23 St. Johns had the biggest drop among teams still in the poll, losing nine places after wrapping losses to Iowa State and Auburn around a win over Baylor at the Players Era.Reigning national champion Florida fell five places to No. 15 after losing to TCU in the Rady Childrens Invitational. No. 12 Alabama dropped four places after losing to Gonzaga in its opener of the Players Era. In and outNo. 21 Kansas returned to the poll after dropping out last week with three wins at the Players Era.No. 24 Southern California is ranked for the first time since the 2023-24 season following three wins in three days to take the Maui Invitational title.UCLA fell out of the poll from No. 18 after losing to California 80-72 in the Empire Classic championship game. North Carolina State dropped out of the poll from No. 23 and didnt receive a single vote following a 1-2 run through the Maui Invitational.Conference watchThe Southeastern Conference had the most teams in the AP Top 25 for the second straight week with seven. The Big 12 matched the Big Ten with six ranked teams, the Big East had two and the West Coast Conference one.___Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball
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    Land and security are the main sticking points as Russia and Ukraine mull Trumps peace proposal
    Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff shakes hands during their meeting at the Kremlin, in Moscow, on Aug. 6, 2025. (Gavriil Grigorov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)2025-12-01T04:28:25Z Diplomats face an uphill battle to reconcile Russian and Ukrainian red lines as a renewed U.S.-led push to end the war gathers steam, with Ukrainian officials attending talks in the U.S. over the weekend and Washington officials expected in Moscow early this week. U.S. President Donald Trumps peace plan became public last month, sparking alarm that it was too favorable to Moscow. It was revised following talks in Geneva between the U.S. and Ukraine a week ago.Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said the revised plan could be workable. Russian President Vladimir Putin called it a possible basis for a future peace agreement. Trump said Sunday theres a good chance we can make a deal.Still, officials on both sides indicated a long road ahead as key sticking points over whether Kyiv should cede land to Moscow and how to ensure Ukraines future security appear unresolved. Here is where things stand and what to expect this week: US holds talks with Kyiv then MoscowTrump representatives met the Ukrainian officials over the weekend and plan to meet with the Russians in coming days. Ukraines national security council head Rustem Umerov, the head of Ukraines armed forces Andrii Hnatov, presidential adviser Oleksandr Bevz and others met with U.S. officials for about four hours on Sunday. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the session was productive but more work remains. Umerov praised the U.S. for its support but offered no details. Zelenskyys former chief of staff and former lead negotiator for Ukraine, Andrii Yermak, resigned Friday amid a corruption scandal and is no longer part of the negotiating team. It was only a week ago that Rubio met with Yermak in Geneva, resulting in a revised peace plan. Trump said last week that he would send his envoy Steve Witkoff to Russia. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed Monday that Putin will meet Witkoff on Tuesday afternoon. Trump suggested he could eventually meet with Putin and Zelenskyy, but not until there has been more progress.Witkoffs role in the peace efforts came under scrutiny last week following a report that he coached Yuri Ushakov, Putins foreign affairs adviser, on how Russias leader should pitch Trump on the Ukraine peace plan. Both Moscow and Washington downplayed the significance of the revelations. Where the two sides standEager to please Trump, Kyiv and Moscow have ostensibly welcomed the peace plan and the push to end the war. But Russia has continued attacking Ukraine and reiterated its maximalist demands, indicating a deal is still a ways off. Putin implied last week that he will fight as a long as it takes to achieve his goals, saying that he will stop only when Ukrainian troops withdraw from all four Ukrainian regions that Russia illegally annexed in 2022 and still doesnt fully control. If they dont withdraw, well achieve this by force. Thats all, he said.The plan, Putin said, could form the basis for future agreements, but it is in no way final and requires a serious discussion.Zelenskyy has refrained from talking about individual points, opting instead to thank Trump profusely for his efforts and emphasizing the need for Europe whose interests are more closely aligned with Ukraines to be involved. He also has stressed the importance of robust security guarantees for Ukraine. The first version of the plan granted some core Russian demands that Ukraine considers nonstarters, such as ceding land to Moscow that it doesnt yet occupy and renouncing its bid to become a member of NATO. Zelenskyy has said repeatedly that giving up territory is not an option. One of the Ukrainian negotiators, Bevz, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that Ukraines president wanted to discuss the territory issue with Trump directly. Yermak then told The Atlantic in an interview on Thursday that Zelenskyy would not sign over the land.Zelenskyy also maintains that NATO membership is the cheapest way to guarantee Ukraines security, and NATOs 32 member countries said last year that Ukraine is on an irreversible path to membership. Since he took office, Trump has made it clear that NATO membership is off the table. Moscow, in turn, has bristled at any suggestion of a Western peacekeeping force on the ground in Ukraine, and stressed that keeping Ukraine out of NATO and NATO out of Ukraine was one of the core goals of the war. Putin seems to have time on his sideZelenskyy, meanwhile, has been under pressure at home.Yermaks resignation was a major blow for Zelenskyy, although neither the president nor Yermak have been accused of wrongdoing by investigators.Russia really wants Ukraine to make mistakes. There wont be mistakes on our side, Zelenskyy said. Our work continues, our struggle continues. We dont have a right not to push it to the end. An activist with Ukraines nongovernmental Anti-Corruption Center, Valeriia Radchenko, said letting go of Yermak was the right decision and would open a window of opportunity for reform. Putin, meanwhile, seeks to project confidence, boasting of Russias advances on the battlefield.The Russian leader feels more confident than ever about the battlefield situation and is convinced that he can wait until Kyiv finally accepts that it cannot win and must negotiate on Russias well-known terms, Tatiana Stanovaya of the Carnegie Russia and Eurasia Center wrote on X. If the Americans can help move things in that direction fine. If not, he knows how to proceed anyway. That is the current Kremlin logic. Europes conundrumNATO and the EU are holding several meetings this week focused on Ukraine.Zelenskyy is holding talks with French President Emmanuel Macro n in Paris on Monday. In Brussels, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte is hosting Ukrainian Defense Minister Denys Shmyhal and EU defense and foreign ministers are gathering to discuss European military support for Ukraine and Europes defense readiness. On Wednesday, NATO foreign ministers will gather again in Brussels. The main issue for the EU right now is what to do with the frozen Russian assets in Belgium that the Trump peace plan in its initial version sought to use for post-war investment in Ukraine. Those funds are central to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyens strategy to ensure continued help for Ukraine while also maintaining pressure on Russia. But Belgiums prime minister is holding out, worried about the legal implications of tapping the frozen assets for Ukraine, the impact that could have on the euro and of Russian retaliation. The diplomacy set in motion by Trumps peace plan painfully exposed Europes weakness, Nigel Gould-Davies of the International Institute for Strategic Studies wrote in a recent commentary. Despite being the main source of Ukraines economic and military support, it is marginal to the diplomacy of the war and has done little more than offer amendments to Americas draft peace plan, Gould-Davies wrote. DASHA LITVINOVA Litvinova is an Associated Press correspondent covering Russia, Belarus, Central Asia and the Caucasus. She is part of the team that covers the Russia-Ukraine war. She has covered Russia and the region for over a decade. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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    Starbucks to Pay $39 Million in Landmark N.Y.C. Labor Law Settlement
    The settlement with Starbucks stems from more than half a million violations, including failing to give workers stable schedules.
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    I Gave a Designer $100 to Shop at Anthropologie Here's Her Haul
    Shop like a pro this holiday at this designer-fave store.READ MORE...
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    Russian Launch Site Mishap Leaves Countrys Space Program in Limbo
    The ability of Russia to launch astronauts to the International Space Station remains in limbo after an incident last week at the Baikonur base in Kazakhstan.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    White House says admiral ordered follow-on strike on alleged drug boat, insists attack was lawful
    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks during a press briefing at the White House, Monday, Dec. 1, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)2025-12-01T20:20:23Z WASHINGTON (AP) The White House said Monday that a Navy admiral acted within his authority and the law when he ordered a second, follow-up strike on an alleged drug boat in the Caribbean Sea in a September U.S. military operation that has come under bipartisan scrutiny.White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt offered the justification for the Sept. 2 strike after lawmakers from both parties on Sunday announced support for congressional reviews of U.S. military strikes against vessels suspected of smuggling drugs in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean, citing a published report that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth issued a verbal order for a second strike that killed survivors on the boat in that incident.Leavitt in her comments to reporters on Monday did not dispute a Washington Post report that there were survivors after the initial strike in the incident. Her explanation came after President Donald Trump a day earlier said that he wouldnt have wanted that not a second strike when asked about the incident. Secretary Hegseth authorized Admiral Bradley to conduct these kinetic strikes, said Leavitt, referring to U.S. Navy Vice Admiral Frank Bradley, who at the time was the commander of Joint Special Operations Command. Admiral Bradley worked well within his authority and the law, directing the engagement to ensure the boat was destroyed and the threat to the United States of America was eliminated. The lawmakers said they did not know whether last weeks Post report was true, and some Republicans were skeptical. Still, they said the reports of attacking survivors of an initial missile strike posed serious legal concerns and merited further scrutiny. This rises to the level of a war crime if its true, said Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va.Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, when asked about a follow-up strike aimed at people no longer able to fight, said Congress does not have information that happened. He noted that leaders of the Armed Services Committee in both the House and Senate have opened investigations. Obviously, if that occurred, that would be very serious and I agree that that would be an illegal act, Turner said.Trump on Sunday vigorously defended Hegseth.Pete said he did not order the death of those two men, Trump said. He added, And I believe him.Leavitt said Hegseth has spoken with members of Congress who may have expressed some concerns about the reports over the weekend.After the Posts report, Hegseth said Friday on X that fake news is delivering more fabricated, inflammatory, and derogatory reporting to discredit our incredible warriors fighting to protect the homeland.Our current operations in the Caribbean are lawful under both U.S. and international law, with all actions in compliance with the law of armed conflictand approved by the best military and civilian lawyers, up and down the chain of command, Hegseth wrote.Leavitt also confirmed that Trump later on Monday would be holding a meeting with his national security team to discuss the ongoing operations in the Caribbean Sea and potential next steps against Venezuela. The U.S. administration says the strikes in the Caribbean are aimed at drug cartels, some of which it claims are controlled by Venezuelan President Nicols Maduro. Trump also is weighing whether to carry out strikes on the Venezuelan mainland.Trump on Sunday confirmed that he had recently spoken by phone with Maduro but declined to detail the conversation.The September strike was one in a series carried out by the U.S. military in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean as Trump has ordered the build up a fleet of warships near Venezuela, including the largest U.S. aircraft carrier.More than 80 have been killed the strikes on small boats that the Trump administration alleges smuggle narcotics for drug cartels.Venezuelas National Assembly has announced the launch of an investigation into the lethal strikes carried about by the U.S.Sundays announcement by the Assemblys president, Jorge Rodrguez, marked the first time that a Maduro government official explicitly acknowledged that Venezuelans have been killed in the monthslong U.S. military operation.Rodrguez, Maduros chief negotiator, said a group of lawmakers will come together to investigate the serious events that led to the murder of Venezuelans in the waters of the Caribbean Sea.___Associated Press writer Regina Garcia Cano in Caracas, Venezuela contributed to this report. AAMER MADHANI Madhani covers the White House for The Associated Press. He is based in Washington. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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    Federal review finds 44% of US trucking schools dont comply with government rules
    A student driver gets on a truck as the instructor watches in Calif., Nov. 15, 2021. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)2025-12-01T20:04:04Z Nearly 44% of the 16,000 truck driving schools in the U.S. may be forced to close after a review by the federal Transportation Department found they may not be complying with government requirements.The Transportation Department said Monday that it plans to revoke the accreditation of nearly 3,000 schools unless they can comply with training requirements in the next 30 days. Another 4,000 schools are being warned they may face similar action.This crackdown on trucking schools is the latest step in the governments effort to ensure that truck drivers are qualified and eligible to hold a commercial license. This began after a truck driver that Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says was not authorized to be in the U.S. made an illegal U-turn and caused a crash in Florida that killed three people. Duffy has threatened to pull federal funding from California and Pennsylvania over the issue, and he proposed significant new restrictions on which immigrants can get a commercial drivers license but a court put those new rules on hold. We are reigning in illegal and reckless practices that let poorly trained drivers get behind the wheel of semi-trucks and school buses, Duffy said. The Transportation Department said the 3,000 schools it is taking action against failed to meet training standards and didnt maintain accurate and complete records. The schools are also accused of falsifying or manipulating training data. The list of schools being targeted wasnt immediately released. JOSH FUNK Funk is an Associated Press reporter who covers transportation including aviation safety and airlines along with all the major freight railroads. Funk also covers Warren Buffetts Berkshire Hathaway, the impact of the ongoing bird flu outbreak, agriculture and other news out of the Midwest. twitter mailto
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    TSA Imposes $45 Fee for Travelers Without REAL ID Starting February 2026
    As of February, passengers without the government-approved identity card will be required to pay for alternative screening at U.S. airports.
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    Trump Becomes the Wild Card in Razor-Thin Honduras Election
    President Trump warned that if his favored candidate didnt win, the United States would not be throwing good money after bad to the country.
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  • THEONION.COM
    Man Proudly Saves $8 On Pubic Hair Trimmer
    The post Man Proudly Saves $8 On Pubic Hair Trimmer appeared first on The Onion.
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    Cory Booker Delivers Historic 25-Hour Wedding Vows
    The post Cory Booker Delivers Historic 25-Hour Wedding Vows appeared first on The Onion.
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    FEMA Wont Reinstate Suspended Workers Who Signed Letter Criticizing Trump
    Employees suspended in the summer after signing a letter critical of the president were told they could return to work. But the reinstatement was short-lived.
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    This Year, a Smaller Christmas at the White House
    The White House is decorated in a classic red-and-green Christmas theme. But with the East Wing reduced to rubble, there are fewer decorations this year.
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    Pete Hegseth Wakes Up At 3 P.M. With Dozen Missed Calls From The Hague
    The post Pete Hegseth Wakes Up At 3 P.M. With Dozen Missed Calls From The Hague appeared first on The Onion.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Son of drug kingpin El Chapo pleads guilty in US drug trafficking case in a plea deal
    This image provided by the U.S. Department of State shows Joaqun Guzmn Lpez after he was arrested by U.S. authorities in Texas. (U.S. Department of State via AP, File)2025-12-01T16:13:01Z CHICAGO (AP) One of the sons of notorious Mexican drug kingpin El Chapo pleaded guilty on Monday to U.S. drug trafficking charges, months after his brother entered a plea deal.Known locally in Mexico as the Chapitos, or little Chapos, Joaquin Guzman Lopez and brother Ovidio Guzman Lopez are accused of running a faction of the Sinaloa cartel. Federal authorities in 2023 described the operation as a massive effort to send staggering quantities of fentanyl into the U.S.Joaquin Guzman Lopez, 39, pleaded guilty to two counts of drug trafficking and continuing criminal enterprise after acknowledging his role in overseeing the transport of tens of thousands of kilograms (pounds) of drugs to the U.S., mostly through underground tunnels. With the plea deal, his attorney said, he is expected to avoid life in prison. Security was tight at Chicagos federal court ahead of the hearing in which prosecutors detailed events leading up to Guzman Lopezs dramatic arrest with another longtime Sinaloa leader on U.S. soil in July 2024. Wearing an orange jumpsuit and matching shoes, Guzman Lopez spoke little in court. At the start of the hearing, U.S. District Judge Sharon Coleman asked him what he did for work.Drug trafficking, he said. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on Oh thats your job, Coleman said with a chuckle. There you go.If Guzman Lopez cooperates with the U.S. government, prosecutors said, they would reduce the life sentence attached to the charges. Regardless, he faces at least 10 years in prison, said Andrew Erskine, an attorney representing the federal government. Guzman Lopez would have no opportunity to appeal the sentence as part of the plea deal.His defense attorney, Jeffrey Lichtman, commended both U.S. and Mexican authorities. The government has been very fair with Joaquin thus far, he told reporters after the hearing. I do appreciate the fact that the Mexican government didnt interfere. Guzman Lopez and another longtime Sinaloa leader, Ismael El Mayo Zambada, were arrested in July 2024 in Texas after they landed in the U.S. on a private plane. Both men have previously pleaded not guilty to various drug trafficking, money laundering and firearms charges. Their surprising capture prompted a surge in violence in Mexicos northern state of Sinaloa as two factions of the Sinaloa cartel clashed.As part of the plea deal, Joaquin Guzman Lopez admitted to helping oversee the production and smuggling of large quantities of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, marijuana and fentanyl into the United States, fueling a crisis that has contributed to tens of thousands of overdose deaths annually.Guzman Lopez also admitted to kidnapping an unnamed individual purported to be Zambada. Erskine described the alleged kidnapping in court, saying Guzman Lopez had the glass from a floor-to-ceiling window removed. During a meeting in the room with the unnamed person, Guzman Lopez allegedly had others enter through the open window, seize the individual, put a bag over his head and take him to a plane. On board, he was zip tied and given sedatives before the plane landed at a New Mexico airport near the border with Texas. Erskine said the alleged kidnapping was part of an attempt to show cooperation with the U.S. government, which did not sanction those actions. He said Guzman Lopez would not receive cooperation credit because of that. Zambadas attorney has previously claimed that his client was forcibly kidnapped by Guzman Lopez onto the flight to the U.S. Lichtman said he would try to seek a lower sentence. I dont know how this ends up, Lichtman said. If he gets a 10-year sentence, its still a lot of time for anybody to spend in prison.In court, observers were instructed to turn off electronic devices while authorities used police dogs to sniff bags and equipment in the lobby of the downtown courthouse. In July, Ovidio Guzman Lopez became the first son of drug lord Joaquin El Chapo Guzman to enter a plea deal. He pleaded guilty to drug trafficking, money laundering and firearms charges tied to his leadership role in the cartel. Legal experts called that plea deal a significant step for the U.S. government in their investigation and prosecution of Sinaloa cartel leaders. Joaquin El Chapo Guzman is serving a life sentence after being convicted in 2019 for his role as the former leader of the Sinaloa cartel, having smuggled mountains of cocaine and other drugs into the United States over 25 years. The brothers allegedly assumed their fathers former role as leaders of the cartel.__Associated Press writer Sophia Tareen in Chicago contributed to this report. CHRISTINE FERNANDO Fernando is a democracy reporter covering misinformation, reproductive rights and state supreme courts for The Associated Press. twitter mailto
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    USA Gymnastics and Olympic sports watchdog failed to stop coachs sexual abuse, lawsuits allege
    The Chow's Gymnastics & Dance Institute is seen Aug. 4, 2025, in West Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Scott McFetridge, File)2025-12-01T21:40:11Z IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) Two gymnasts who say they were sexually abused at an elite academy in Iowa filed lawsuits Monday against the sports oversight bodies, alleging they failed to stop Sean Gardner from preying on girls despite repeated complaints about the coachs behavior.The lawsuits allege USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Center for SafeSport were told about inappropriate and abusive behaviors in December 2017, including that Gardner was hugging and kissing girls and engaging in other grooming behaviors while coaching at a Mississippi gym.The organizations failed to properly investigate, revoke Gardners coaching credentials, report him to law enforcement or take other actions to protect athletes, the lawsuits allege. They claim the inaction enabled Gardner to get a job at Chows Gymnastics and Dance Institute in West Des Moines, Iowa, in 2018, where the gymnasts say they and other preteen and teenage girls were abused despite additional complaints about Gardner.The institute was founded by prominent coach Liang Chow Qiao, who is known for producing Olympic champions and was also named as a defendant in the lawsuits. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on Lawsuits are first filed since Gardners arrestThe lawsuits, filed in Polk County, Iowa, are the first civil cases brought in an abuse scandal that came to light in a series of reports by The Associated Press after the FBI arrested Gardner in August. They allege USA Gymnastics and SafeSport, the watchdog created by Congress to investigate misconduct in Olympic sports in the aftermath of the Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal, missed repeated opportunities to stop Gardner.The center said Monday it had not been served with the lawsuit and typically does not comment on litigation. It noted that its 2022 temporary suspension of Gardner came upon receiving the first report of sexual misconduct against him and was published on its online database of disciplinary action. That was the only reason Gardner was barred from coaching young athletes in the years until his arrest, it said. Gardners sanction escalated from temporary suspension to ineligible on Sept. 12 due to his arrest. Responding to questions in August about the original AP reporting, the center said it had been notified by USA Gymnastics that a gym where Gardner worked had resolved a 2018 case involving the coach that didnt pertain to sexual misconduct. The center said coaches at Chows were aware of subsequent allegations involving sexual misconduct but failed to report them.USA Gymnastics spokesperson Jill Geer said Monday the organization appreciates the seriousness of this case but declined further comment.Gardner faces federal child pornography charges for allegedly placing a hidden camera in a bathroom at a gymnastics studio in Purvis, Mississippi, between December 2017 and April 2018 to record his students. Investigators say he created videos showing close-up images of at least 10 minors naked or undressing, which they recovered from his computers last year while investigating reports of sexual abuse.Gardner has pleaded not guilty and has been jailed pending trial, which is scheduled for next month. His attorney didnt immediately return a message seeking comment. Plaintiffs in lawsuits are now college studentsThe lawsuits allege the plaintiffs were 11- and 12-year-old trainees at Chows who dreamed of one day competing in the Olympics when they began training under Gardner in 2018. They say they were subjected to physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, harassment and molestation until they quit the gym years later.The plaintiffs include Iowa State gymnast Finley Weldon, who reported claims of abuse by Gardner to police and later went public in an AP interview. The other is 19-year-old University of Iowa student Hailey Gear, who also wants to go public with her allegations, according to her attorney, Elizabeth Pudenz. They seek unspecified damages for their injuries and treatment expenses. Several other former gymnasts have reported abuse, and more lawsuits are expected.The AP generally does not identify victims of sexual abuse unless they come forward publicly. In addition to USA Gymnastics and SafeSport, the defendants named in the lawsuit are Qiao, the former Chinese gymnast who opened Chows in 1998 and coached Olympic gold medalists Shawn Johnson and Gabby Douglas; Qiaos wife, Liwen Zhuan, a coach who helps run the gym; and their family corporations that own the business and the property on which it sits.Lawsuits detail concerns over Gardners grooming behaviorThe lawsuits allege all the defendants were negligent in how they responded to reports of Gardners misconduct.The parents of a gymnast filed reports with USA Gymnastics and SafeSport in December 2017 alleging Gardner required girls to give him long hugs after every training in Mississippi and that he kicked one girl out who refused, the lawsuits claim. He allegedly had an improper closed-door meeting with a girl whom he verbally abused, kissed gymnasts on their foreheads, drank alcohol excessively in front of them, made sexual jokes to girls and inappropriate comments on social media, and stalked one girl who he was instructed to stop contacting, the lawsuits claim. Gardners then-boss also reported to USA Gymnastics in January 2018 that Gardner had engaged in grooming behaviors, but he was allowed to continue coaching.The lawsuits allege SafeSport received another report from a parent at Chows concerning improper behaviors by Gardner in September 2020 but failed to investigate. The lawsuits allege Qiao and Zhuan failed to conduct an adequate background check before hiring Gardner and continued to employ him even after receiving complaints that he inappropriately touched girls while spotting them during exercises.Qiao and Zhuan didnt immediately return a message left at Chows. The gym has said that Gardner passed a standard background check, and it fired Gardner after he was suspended by SafeSport in July 2022, even though there had been no finding of misconduct at that time.___Pells reported from Denver. RYAN J. FOLEY Foley covers national news for The Associated Press and is based in Iowa City, Iowa. A 21-year AP veteran, he was part of the AP team honored as a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in investigative reporting for the 2024 series, Lethal Restraint. twitter mailto
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    Reginald T. Jackson, A.M.E. Bishop With Political Power, Dies at 71
    Influential up and down the Eastern Seaboard, he was part of a long tradition among Black clergy of fighting bias and getting out the vote. No vote, no clout, hed say.
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    Son of El Chapo Pleads Guilty to Kidnapping Fathers Former Cartel Partner
    Joaqun Guzmn Lpez admitted to having the once-untouchable drug kingpin Ismael Zambada Garca abducted and flown to the United States, among a sweeping set of other crimes.
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    A Crucial Week in Ukraine Peace Negotiations
    Plus, a court voids another Trump appointee. Heres the latest at the end of Monday.
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    This IKEA Cabinet Transformed Into a Japandi Stunner for Just $140
    It feels amazing that such a simple and budget-friendly update could transform an old piece into something that looks like a custom design item, the DIYer says.READ MORE...
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    Trumps Crackdown in Wake of Shooting Blocks Legal Pathways for Migrants
    The new measures represent some of the most significant changes to immigration policy since President Trump returned to the White House.
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    Hegseth Ordered Lethal Boat Strike but Not the Killing of Survivors, Officials Say
    Amid talk of war crimes, the details and precise sequence of a Sept. 2 attack on a boat in the Caribbean are facing intensifying scrutiny.
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    For Trump, Hegseths Approach to Venezuela Strikes Is a Growing Liability
    Investigations are mounting into the legality of strikes that have killed scores of people in the waters off Venezuela.
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    As Trump Deepens Immigration Crackdown, Exceptions Disappear for Afghans and Others
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    Trump Administration Fires 8 Immigration Judges in New York
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    Putin to Meet With Trumps Envoy as U.S. Pushes for Ukraine Deal
    In Moscow, Steve Witkoff, President Trumps special envoy, is expected to present President Vladimir V. Putin with a revised proposal to end the war in Ukraine.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Abortion opponents coming before the Supreme Court in challenge to state investigation
    With flowers in the foreground, construction on the front of the U.S. Supreme Court continues Monday, Nov. 24, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)2025-12-02T05:02:25Z WASHINGTON (AP) A faith-based pregnancy center will come before the Supreme Court on Tuesday to challenge an investigation into whether it misled people to discourage abortions. The facilities often known as crisis pregnancy centers have been on the rise in the U.S., especially since the Supreme Courts conservative majority overturned abortion as a nationwide right in 2022. Most Republican-controlled states have since started enforcing bans or restrictions on abortion, and some have steered tax dollars to the centers. They generally provide prenatal care and encourage women to carry pregnancies to term. Many Democratic-aligned states have sought to protect abortion access and some have investigated whether pregnancy centers mislead women into thinking they offer abortions. In New Jersey, Democratic attorney general Matthew Platkin sent a subpoena to First Choice Womens Resource Centers for donor information. First Choice pushed back, arguing the investigation was baseless and the demand for donor lists threatened their First Amendment rights. They tried to challenge the subpoena in federal court, but a judge found the case wasnt yet far enough along. An appeals court agreed. First Choice then turned to the Supreme Court. Executive director Aimee Huber said she hopes the high court will rule in their favor and send a message that protects facilities like hers. I would hope that other attorneys general who have prosecuted or harmed or harassed other pregnancy centers, or are considering that, would back off as a result of our legal battle, she said. New Jersey counters that First Choice is seeking special treatment. The group hasnt even had to hand over any records since the judge overseeing the case hasnt ordered it. The Subpoena itself does not require Petitioner to do anything, and compliance is entirely voluntary, state attorneys wrote in court documents. If the Supreme Court sides with First Choice, it would open the federal courts to a flood of litigation challenging myriad state and local subpoenas, they argued. First Choice said access to federal court is important in cases where government investigators are accused of misusing investigative power. The American Civil Liberties Union joined the case in support of First Choices free speech argument. Erin Hawley, an attorney for the conservative Christian legal group Alliance Defending Freedom, said subpoenas can hurt advocacy groups with unpopular points of view. It is a broad non-ideological issue that really does transcend ideological boundaries, she said. LINDSAY WHITEHURST Whitehurst covers the Supreme Court and legal affairs for The Associated Press. Shes won multiple journalism awards in a career thats spanned two decades. twitter mailto
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    Northeast prepares for first major snowstorm of season
    A pedestrian walks on a snow-covered sidewalk in Wheeling, Ill., Monday, Dec. 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)2025-12-02T05:17:33Z PORTLAND, Maine (AP) The Northeast was getting ready Tuesday for its first major snowstorm of the season, just as the Midwest began to escape snow and ice that snarled travel after the Thanksgiving holiday.Some parts of northern New England were expecting up to 10 inches (25.4 centimeters) of snow. A windy, potentially icy storm was headed to the region and could soak some parts of the areas six states while piling snow in others, forecasters said.The National Weather Service issued winter storm warnings and winter weather advisories in states including Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, Connecticut and New York ahead of the snows arrival.The winter blast is set to arrive days after more than 8 inches (20.32 centimeters) of snow fell at Chicago OHare International Airport over the weekend, setting a record for the highest single calendar day snowfall in November at the airport, according to the weather service. The previous record was set in 1951. Snow in the Great Lakes region was tapering off, but the new storm was heading to the mid-Atlantic and Northeast, with up to a foot (30 centimeters) of snow by Tuesday, said National Weather Service meteorologist Andrew Orrison.Its going to be the first snowfall of the season for many of these areas, and its going to be rather significant, Orrison said. Winter weather on tap in Northeast nextThe National Weather Service issued a warning for coastal Maine from Tuesday morning until Wednesday morning, stating that residents should delay all travel if possible due to snow. The state is one of many that is in for its first wallop of snow of December, forecasters said.In New Hampshire, the Department of Transportation on Sunday invited residents to submit names for its second annual name-a-plow competition.Welcome to The Department of the Seven Snowplows, our winter twist on a classic tale. Hawthorne had gables. We have orange snowplows just waiting for the perfect name, the department said on social media.Last winners top name was Ctrl-Salt-Delete. This seasons winners will be announced in January. Pennsylvania prepares for snowWith plowable snow expected to coat large parts of Pennsylvania, crews began to treat lanes along the 565-mile (909-kilometer) Pennsylvania Turnpike system on Monday, said the agencys press secretary, Marissa Orbanek. Vehicle restrictions on many interstates in the eastern half of Pennsylvania, including on the turnpike systems Northeast Extension, from the Lehigh Valley to Clarks Summit, will be imposed at 5 a.m. Tuesday.More than 600 equipment operators and safety workers are available to help clear the turnpikes 2,900 miles (4,667 kilometers) of lanes, Orbanek said. The turnpikes winter staffing schedule began in mid-November, and 23 maintenance sheds are staffed around the clock.We really prepare for snow all year long, Orbanek said. Travelers recovering in MidwestIn Chicago, Don Herrian was among the crowds of travelers at OHare on Sunday, hoping to make it back home after Thanksgiving as hundreds of flights were delayed and canceled following a winter storm in the Great Lakes region.The 76-year-old retiree from Ardmore, Oklahoma, had visited his daughter and her family in Indianapolis. He said his first flight was three hours late, and his connecting flight to Oklahoma City from Chicago was already running another two hours behind.It is what it is, Herrian said. Its congested, but thats expected due to the snow, the delays and the holidays.Roads leading to OHare were packed Sunday with slow-moving vehicles, even after the roads had been cleared of snow. Planes were being de-iced at several airports across the country on Sunday, including at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and MinneapolisSaint Paul International Airport, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.___Associated Press reporters Adam Schreck in Chicago, Jamie Stengle in Dallas and Mark Scolforo in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and photojournalist Nam Y. Huh in Chicago contributed to this report. PATRICK WHITTLE Whittle is an Associated Press reporter based in Portland, Maine. He focuses on the environment and oceans. twitter mailto
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    Japans New Clarity on Taiwan Is a Wake-Up Call
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    Wealthy Ranchers Profit From Public Lands. Taxpayers Pick Up the Tab.
    Stan Kroenke doesnt need federal help to make a business flourish. He is worth an estimated $20 billion, a fortune that has allowed him to become one of Americas largest property owners and afforded him stakes in storied sports franchises, including the Denver Nuggets and Englands Arsenal soccer club.Yet Kroenke, whose wife is an heiress to the Walmart fortune, benefits from one of the federal governments bedrock subsidy programs, one that props up ranching in the West.As owner of the Winecup Gamble Ranch, which sprawls across grasslands, streams and a mountain range east of Elko, Nevada, Kroenke is entitled to graze his cattle on public lands for less than 15% of the fees he would pay on private land. The public lands grazing program, formalized in the 1930s to contain the rampant overgrazing that contributed to the Dust Bowl, has grown to serve operations including billionaire hobby ranchers, mining companies, utilities and large corporate outfits, providing benefits unimagined by its founding law.President Donald Trumps administration plans to make the program even more generous pushing to open even more of the 240 million acres of Bureau of Land Management and Forest Service grazing land to livestock while reducing oversight of the environmental damage. This, members of the administration contend, will further its goal of using public lands to fuel the economy and eliminate the national debt.Thats the balance sheet of America, Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum said of federal lands at his confirmation hearing in January, and, if we were a company, they would look at us and say, Wow, you are really restricting your balance sheet.ProPublica and High Country News set out to investigate the transformation of the grazing system, established to prevent abuse of public lands, into a massive subsidy program. In the late 1970s, Congress raised the fees to graze on public lands to reflect open market prices at the time. But the fees have barely budged in decades. The government still charges ranchers $1.35 per animal unit month, a 93% discount, on average, on the price of grazing on private lands. (An animal unit month represents the typical amount of forage a cow and her calf eat in a month.)Our analysis found that in 2024 alone, the federal government poured at least $2.5 billion into subsidy programs that public lands ranchers can access, not including the steep discount on forage. Subsidies benefiting public lands ranchers include disaster assistance after droughts and floods, cheap crop insurance, funding for fences and watering holes, and compensation for animals lost to predators.Benefits flow largely to a select few like Kroenke. Roughly two-thirds of all the livestock grazing on BLM acreage is controlled by just 10% of ranchers, our analysis showed. On Forest Service land, the top 10% of permittees control more than 50% of grazing. This concentration of control has been the status quo for decades. In 1999, the San Jose Mercury News undertook a similar study and found that the largest ranchers controlled the same proportion of grazing within BLM jurisdiction as they do today.Meanwhile, as we previously reported, the agencies oversight of livestocks environmental impact has declined dramatically in recent years. Lawmakers have allowed an increasing number of grazing permits to be automatically renewed, even when environmental reviews have not been completed or the land has been flagged as being in poor condition.The Trump administrations push to further underwrite the livestock industry supports ranchers like Kroenke, whose Winecup Gamble is advertised as covering nearly 1 million acres. More than half of that is federal public land that can support roughly 9,000 head of cattle, according to an advertisement in brokerage listings. Last year, Kroenke paid the government about $50,000 in grazing fees to use the BLM land around the ranch an 87% discount on the market rate, according to a ProPublica and High Country News analysis of government data. Previous owners enjoyed similar economic benefits. Before Kroenke, the ranch belonged to Paul Fireman, the longtime CEO of Reebok, who used losses from companies affiliated with the ranch as a $22 million tax writeoff between 2003 and 2018, internal IRS data shows. And before Fireman, it was owned by others, including Hollywood superstar Jimmy Stewart of Its a Wonderful Life fame.The land where Kroenke runs his cattle has been degraded by overgrazing, according to the BLM.Kroenkes representatives did not return messages seeking comment. Fireman declined to comment.On the Winecup Gamble Ranch near the Nevada-Utah border, billionaire owner Stan Kroenke has access to steeply discounted forage on more than half a million acres of Bureau of Land Management grazing allotments. Aerial support provided by LightHawkThe Trump administrations retooling of this system is being worked out behind closed doors. In May, the BLM sent a draft of proposed revisions to federal grazing regulations what would be the first updates to them since the 1990s to the U.S. Department of the Interior, according to communications reviewed by ProPublica and High Country News.In October, the administration released a 13-page plan to fortify the American Beef Industry. In addition to instructing the BLM and Forest Service to amend grazing regulations, including those that govern how ranchers obtain permits to graze their herds and how environmental damage from their animals is assessed, the plan called for taxpayers to further underwrite ranching by increasing existing subsidies for drought and wildfire relief, for livestock killed by predators and for government-backed insurance.The Forest Service did not respond to requests for comment. The White House referred questions to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which said in a statement, Livestock grazing is not only a federally and statutorily recognized appropriate land use, but a proven land management tool, one that reduces invasive species and wildfire risk, enhances ecosystem health, and supports rural stewardship.In a statement, a BLM spokesperson said that the agencys mandate includes sustaining a healthy and economically viable grazing program that benefits rural communities, supports Americas ranching heritage, and promotes responsible stewardship of public lands. The grazing program plays an important role in local economies and land management, providing tools to reduce wildfire risk, manage invasive species, and maintain open landscapes.Ranchers say that taxpayers benefit from helping them continue their work, since public lands grazing can prevent private land from being sold and paved over. Bill Fales and his family run a ranch in western Colorado that has been in his wifes family for more than a century, and their cattle graze in the nearby White River National Forest. The wildlife here is dependent on these ranches staying as open ranch land, he said. As development elsewhere carves up habitat, Fales said, the public and private lands his cattle graze are increasingly shared by elk, bears, mountain lions and other species.Ranchers and their advocates also point to the livestock industrys production of meat, leather and wool. And as a pillar of rural economies, ranching preserves a uniquely American way of life.The major trade groups representing public lands ranchers did not respond to requests for comment.While the country loses money on public lands ranching, both ranchers and critics of the system agree on one thing: Without subsidies, many smaller operators would go out of business.The Industry That Conquered the WestSettlers covered much of the West with cattle beginning in the mid-1800s, spurred by laws and incentives meant to realize the countrys manifest destiny. As the nation expanded, settlers, with the backing of the federal government and the military, seized the Indigenous land that would later be called the public domain.Unchecked grazing followed.On the Western slope of Colorado and in nearby States I saw waste, competition, overuse, and abuse of valuable ranges and watersheds eating into the very heart of Western economy, observed Rep. Edward Taylor, a Colorado Democrat, as Congress was considering how to properly manage grazing in the 1930s. The livestock industry, through circumstances beyond its control, was headed for self-strangulation.So, in 1934, as Depression-era dust storms darkened the skies over the Great Plains, worsened by overgrazing that denuded grasslands, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Taylor Grazing Act, named for the lawmaker. It divided much of the public domain into parcels, called allotments, and established a permit system to lease them a decade at a time.Congress modernized laws governing public lands in 1976 with the passage of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, which required federal agencies to balance competing uses, such as grazing, mining, timber, oil drilling and recreation. Two years later, Congress passed a law that brought grazing fees in line with the value of forage on the open market at the time.Today, ranching interest groups justify their subsidies by arguing that their livestock feed the country. According to Agriculture Department research, ranching on federal lands accounts for $3.3 billion in economic output annually and supports nearly 50,000 jobs.But grazing on public lands sustains just 2% of the nations beef cattle while accounting for a vanishingly small proportion of the countrys agriculture industry.The Bureau of Land Management and Forest Service Oversee Millions of Acres of Grazing Allotments Across the WestSource: Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management Lucas Waldron/ProPublicaProPublica and High Country News analysis found that the government support disproportionately benefits the largest ranchers, who account for a majority of the public-land grazing.The J.R. Simplot Co. is the largest rancher on BLM land. Founded as a family business in Idaho nearly a century ago, it made a fortune in part by selling potatoes to McDonalds. The business has since ballooned into a multinational agricultural conglomerate. J.R. Simplot benefits significantly from subsidized forage, paying $2.4 million below market rate to graze nearly 150,000 animal unit months on federal lands last year, according to an analysis of BLM and Forest Service data.The company did not respond to a request for comment.Industrywide, the $21 million collected from ranchers by the BLM and Forest Service was about $284 million below market rate for forage last year.Cattle owned by the ranching company BTAZ Nevada graze in sagebrush habitat on the Forest Services Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest in central Nevada.Fales, the Colorado rancher, relies on access to cheaper forage on federal land. To him, it makes sense that grazing there is less expensive. Private leases are almost always more productive land, he said. And unlike private leases, public leases typically require ranchers to pay for the maintenance of infrastructure like fences and water tanks beyond what land management agencies fund.The full cost to taxpayers, including grazings impact on the land, is unknown.Even before Trump began to aggressively downsize the federal workforce, it was impossible for agencies limited staff to monitor the public lands for environmental damage from excessive grazing. The number of BLM rangeland managers fell by 39% from 2019 through 2024, according to the most recent Office of Personnel Management data. By June 2025, after the Trump administration spurred a mass exodus from the federal workforce, the number had shrunk by another 9%, according to internal BLM employment data.Now, each rangeland manager is responsible for an average of 716 square miles, making it impossible for them to inspect their entire territory every year, BLM employees said.Just Good BusinessFor many of the countrys largest ranchers, the benefits of running cattle on public lands extend beyond profits from selling beef.In June, Air Force Two landed in Butte, Montana, where Vice President JD Vance transferred to a motorcade of black SUVs that shuttled him south to a sprawling cattle operation near Yellowstone National Park. Vance had traveled to this remote ranch to meet with its owner Rupert Murdoch, the billionaire founder of Fox News.In 2021, Murdoch purchased the Beaverhead Ranch for $200 million from a subsidiary of Koch Industries, the conglomerate controlled by conservative billionaire Charles Koch. Peggy Rockefeller Dulany, an heir to the Rockefeller fortune, owns a massive ranch nearby. Dulanys ranch did not respond to a request for comment.This is a profound responsibility, Murdoch told The Wall Street Journal through a spokesperson when he bought the ranch. We feel privileged to assume ownership of this beautiful land and look forward to continually enhancing both the commercial cattle business and the conservation assets across the ranch.Ultrawealthy families like the Murdochs, Kochs and Rockefellers own cattle ranches for a variety of reasons. Some want a taste of cowboy-themed luxury or the status gained from controlling vast and beautiful landscapes.For some, its also good business. Even hobby ranches qualify for big property tax breaks in certain jurisdictions. Business expenses related to ranching can be deducted from federal taxes. And federal agencies assign grazing permits to the owners of nearby private ranches, called base properties, inflating the value of those properties and making them stable long-term investments. Real estate agents touted Murdochs ranch as encompassing 340,000 acres, but two-thirds of that land is public and leased from the Forest Service and BLM.As with Kroenkes operation, taxpayers help underwrite grazing at Murdochs ranch.Beaverhead paid less than $25,000, 95% below market rate, to graze on federal lands last year, according to an analysis of agency data.At least one of Beaverheads BLM allotments in the picturesque Centennial Valley a several-thousand-acre parcel known as Long Creek AMP is failing environmental standards as a result of grazing. Matador Ranch and Cattle, which was formed from the aggregation of Beaverhead and a smaller ranch purchased by Murdoch in 2021, declined to comment for this story.Public lands grazing can also help advance unrelated businesses.Nevada Gold Mines controls millions of acres of federal grazing permits around its main money-making operations, including the massive Goldstrike Mine north of Carlin, Nevada. Aerial support provided by LightHawkCattle congregate at a watering hole near northern Nevadas Cortez Mountains, cutting paths into a checkerboard of public BLM lands and private Nevada Gold Mines property. Aerial support provided by LightHawkChris Jasmine, Nevada Gold Mines manager of biodiversity and rangelands, oversees a livestock operation that grazes around 5,000 head of cattle on public and private lands.The Southern Nevada Water Authority, which serves the Las Vegas Valley, is continually searching for new sources of water. Beginning in the 2000s, the utility purchased land hundreds of miles from Las Vegas in order to acquire its groundwater rights. Those properties were associated with public lands grazing permits, which the utility inherited. Bronson Mack, the water authoritys spokesperson, said in a statement that it continues the grazing operation as part of its maintenance and management of property assets, ranch assets, and environmental resources in the area.Mining companies are among the biggest public lands ranchers, in part because grazing permits afford them greater control over areas near their mines. Copper-mining companies like Freeport-McMoRan, Hudbay Minerals and Rio Tinto all run large cattle operations in Arizona, for example.A Hudbay representative sent a statement that said, Ranching and mining have coexisted in Arizona for generations, and we operate both with the same commitment to land stewardship and care for our neighboring communities. The other companies did not respond to requests for comment.Nevada Gold Mines, which owns 11 ranches surrounding its northern Nevada operations, is the behemoth of the group. A joint venture between the worlds two largest gold mining companies, the company holds millions of acres of grazing permits.We own them for access, explained Chris Jasmine, the companys manager of biodiversity and rangelands. Access to mineral rights, water rights and mitigation credits.Many of Nevada Gold Mines grazing permits surround its open pits, including the largest gold mining complex in the world. Access to that land makes it easier for the company to participate in programs that give it credits in exchange for environmental restoration projects. Then, the company can either sell these credits to other companies or use them to offset its environmental impacts and expand its mines.Jeff Burgess, who tracks public lands grazing subsidies via a website he calls the Arizona Grazing Clearinghouse, said such massive government assistance provides little benefit to taxpayers.When does the spigot stop? When do we stop throwing away money? asked Burgess, who wants to see subsidies shrink. Its a tyranny of the minority.A Modern Grazing EmpireIn central Nevadas Reese River Valley, a redbrick farmhouse that once served as the headquarters of the Hess Ranch has been reduced to crumbling chimneys and shattered windows. Despite its dilapidated appearance, this ranch is one of the private base properties that has allowed a little-known company called BTAZ Nevada to assemble a livestock empire that stretches across roughly 4,000 square miles of public lands, according to a Western Watersheds Project analysis of BLM and Forest Service data.This empire illustrates the livestock industrys consolidation, the subsidies that prop it up and the environmental harm that often follows.Based in Fremont, Nebraska, BTAZ belongs to the Barta family, which owns Sav-Rx, an online provider of prescription medication. The contact phone number BTAZ provided to the BLM is a Sav-Rx customer service line. The family patriarch, Jim Barta, was convicted in 2013 on felony charges for conspiracy to commit bribery. (The conviction was overturned after a judge ruled that Barta had been subjected to entrapment. Barta has since died.)The Bartas operation, now among the largest beneficiaries of the public lands grazing system, includes permits in Nevada, Oregon and Nebraska. Last year, BTAZ paid the government $86,000, $679,000 less than the market rate, according to agency data.In the Toiyabe Range of Nevada, where BTAZs BLM and Forest Service grazing allotments border each other, cow feces covered the ground surrounding a stock tank fed by mountain streams. A dead raven floated on the waters surface. The BLM listed allotments in this area as failing land health standards due to grazing in 2020 and again in 2024.Paul Ruprecht, Nevada director of the environmental group Western Watersheds Project, examines a water trough that straddles a boundary between BLM and Forest Service lands in central Nevadas Reese River Valley and is used by a BTAZ herd.Cow bones litter the ground on a BTAZ grazing allotment, near a degraded creek, the type of ecosystem that once supported the threatened Lahontan cutthroat trout.The Hess Ranch sits abandoned in the Reese River Valley. It is one of several properties that allow BTAZ access to hundreds of thousands of acres of federal grazing permits across central Nevada.Higher in the mountains, the evidence of BTAZs grazing was even clearer: swaths of ground chewed and trampled bare, discarded plastic piping, cow feces and bones in an unfenced creek. Streams like these were once suitable habitat for native Lahontan cutthroat trout. But activities such as grazing and development have degraded so much habitat that the threatened species now occupies only 12% of its historical range, according to a 2023 survey by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.This is completely unnecessary, Paul Ruprecht, Nevada director of the Western Watersheds Project, said as he surveyed the damage. Its not supporting the local economy, at least in any major way; its not providing significant amounts of food for anyone; its being heavily subsidized at every turn by taxpayers; its not adding anything to the scenery or the wildlife.BTAZ did not respond to requests for comment.Youre Going to Lose Your Small RancherSmaller ranchers have access to most of the same subsidies as the wealthiest ranchers, but the money isnt enough to protect them from harsh economic headwinds.Roughly 18,000 permittees graze livestock on BLM or Forest Service land. The bottom half accounts for less than 4% of the animal unit months on BLM land and less than 10% on Forest Service land, an analysis of the agencies data found.The smaller operations lack the economies of scale available to larger corporations, making it difficult for them to survive on agricultures thin profit margins. Theyre also more vulnerable to shifting conditions on the ground. Climate change has strained their water supplies. And more than 70,000 wild horses and burros now compete with livestock for forage.Consolidation in the meatpacking industry is further squeezing ranchers. The four largest operations have taken over more than 80% of the market, giving them leverage to lower the prices paid to ranchers.Burgess, who tracks public lands grazing subsidies in Arizona, argues the federal government should stop supporting ranchers who would otherwise go out of business. They refuse to face the reality that a lot of people arent going to be able to raise cattle profitably, so theyre just throwing money at it, he said, calling the system a vestige of the past.That could have ripple effects, shuttering businesses in rural towns. It could also force small ranchers to sell their private land perhaps to developers who would build on the open spaces, perhaps to wealthy owners like Kroenke or BTAZ.Mike and Danna Camblin run a small cattle operation near the Yampa River in northwest Colorado. Years of drought have forced them to downsize their herd, while each year they must tie up much of their money in their operation until they can sell their animals. Even with beef prices breaking records, they couldnt turn a profit without subsidized drought insurance and other government support including the ability to graze cheaply on federal land.Mike Camblin, first image, and his wife, Danna, ranchers in northwest Colorado, use virtual fencing technology, second image, to help rotate their cattle without the need for physical fences that disrupt wildlife movement.Most of these BLM leases have been in the family for years and years, and, if you take care of it, the BLM will allow you to continue to stay, he said. If they lose their federal grazing permits or otherwise cant make the economics work, the Camblins might have to sell their private land. Mike has mixed feelings about the influence of government assistance on his industry, saying it tethers us to those subsidies.Thats where they screwed up, they started subsidizing a lot of these guys clear back in the Dust Bowl, Mike said of the biggest ranches. Some larger operators who dont need government assistance take advantage of the system, he said, speaking favorably of an income-based metric that limits richer producers access to certain agricultural subsidies.Smaller ranchers precarious financial situation can lead to environmental harm, as they may run too many livestock for too long on federal land where grazing is cheaper.The Camblins make environmental stewardship part of their operation monitoring soil and plant health and rotating their several hundred head of cattle among pastures to let the ground rest but that adds costs.A cow turd will tell you more than anything else, Mike remarked as he eyed a fresh one left by his cattle. If its flat, that means the cow is getting enough protein from the grass, he said. If it degrades rapidly, that means insects are attracted to the plentiful organic matter. I spend more time looking down than at the cattle.Technology helps them rotate their herds. Dannas smartphone displayed a satellite view of the area. The interface showed purple cow icons confined within red polygons virtual fences that shock the cattle via collars should they stray. Unlike physical fences, virtual fences dont get in the way of migrating wildlife, and the Camblins can redraw them in an instant to shift their cattle to less-grazed areas.Leasing the collars for the system cost nearly $18,000 last year, Mike said.Silvia Secchi, a University of Iowa economist who studies agriculture, said federal grazing subsidies need to be reimagined so they benefit the American public instead of enriching the wealthiest ranchers. She suggested potential solutions like subsidizing co-ops that allow smaller ranchers to access economies of scale, capping the size of ranching operations that pay below market rate for forage and ending disaster payments for climate change-fueled droughts that are here to stay.We have baseline subsidies that are going up and up and up because we are not telling farmers to change the way you do things to adapt, Secchi said.Secchi and the Camblins agree that ending all public support would have repercussions for rural communities and landscapes. Mike acknowledged it could put his and Dannas operation at risk.Youre going to lose your small rancher, he said.Danna Camblin, on horseback, moves her familys herd of cattle to a new pasture to give the land time to recover.MethodologyTo pull back the curtain on the federal public lands grazing system, ProPublica and High Country News pored over government documents and data gleaned from more than 100 public records requests filed with the Bureau of Land Management, Forest Service and state agencies across the West. We interviewed ranchers, conservationists, researchers and federal rangeland managers. We also toured grazing allotments in Arizona, Colorado, Montana and Nevada.To identify the largest public lands ranchers and the share of public lands ranching controlled by the top 10% of permittees we relied on BLM and Forest Service datasets, which included roughly 50,000 bills the agencies had sent to operators. We sued the BLM to obtain its data. Our analysis covered the most recent grazing fee year effectively a fiscal year for cows which ran from March 2024 through February 2025. To gauge the size of ranching operations, we used the number of animal unit months a measure of livestock foraging billed to each permittee. We researched connections among the largest operators, grouping related entities. For example, we counted subsidiaries as part of their parent companies.To calculate how much ranchers save using federal allotments instead of grazing their herds on private property, we multiplied the annual open market grazing price in that state by the number of animal unit months for which the permittee was billed, before subtracting what the federal government had billed the permittee for those animal unit months. We ascertained each states average free market rate by using U.S. Department of Agriculture research for grazing fee year 2024, which the BLM publishes annually.Our list of the largest ranchers on Forest Service land by acreage was compiled by the agency and provided to us in response to a Freedom of Information Act request. We contacted all of the ranchers named as the largest permittees to ask for comment on the accuracy of our findings, and several confirmed that the agency had provided the correct acreage.Mark Martinez of S. Martinez Livestock, which holds large permits on Forest Service lands, noted that livestock dont graze the entire permitted acreage every year. This is because some of the land is in poor condition due to wildfire and some is avoided for environmental reasons, while animals also graze each pasture for only part of the year.We consulted with various researchers as we compiled a list of subsidies the Agriculture Department pays to public lands ranchers. Our estimates were based on data from the Agriculture Departments Farm Service Agency and Risk Management Agency and included figures from the following: Livestock Forage Program; the Federal Crop Insurance Programs Pasture, Rangeland, Forage category; Livestock Indemnity Program; Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees and Farm-Raised Fish; the temporary Emergency Livestock Relief Program; Livestock Risk Protection policies specific to beef cattle; and the Grassland Conservation Reserve Program.The post Wealthy Ranchers Profit From Public Lands. Taxpayers Pick Up the Tab. appeared first on ProPublica.
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