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WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMIf Someone in Your House Has the Flu, This Is How to CleanWhile you worry about washing your hands to keep your body safe, your home could be working beneath you to harbor and spread germs. READ MORE...0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 89 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMThe One Design Trend That Pros Say Wont Fade by SpringThe movement focuses on a pattern, not a color.READ MORE...0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 90 Vistas 0 Reseñas
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APNEWS.COMA scheme to rig college basketball games has been uncovered. Heres what we knowNCAA logo displayed on the fence before an NCAA softball game between Jacksonville and FGCU, March 24, 2024, in Jacksonville, Fla. (AP Photo/Gary McCullough, File)2026-01-15T21:59:21Z HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) A federal investigation into a sprawling betting scheme to fix basketball games stretched from the Chinese Basketball Association to the NCAA and has ensnared 26 people, including current and former college players, prosecutors revealed Thursday.The charges filed in federal court in Philadelphia include bribery, wire fraud and conspiracy. How did the scheme work?A group of fixers, including gamblers, recruited players with the promise of a big payment in exchange for purposefully underperforming during a game, prosecutors said. Those fixers would then bet against the players teams in those games, defrauding sportsbooks and other bettors, authorities said.How did the players get paid?In cash, hand-delivered by fixers after a game was successfully rigged, prosecutors say. That meant fixers flying into more than a dozen states to drop off cash to players on their campuses or while they were traveling between games. How much money was involved?Prosecutors didnt say exactly how much the fixers allegedly received in ill-gotten gains. However, they said that the fixers wagered millions of dollars, generating substantial proceeds for themselves, and paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to players in bribes.Payments to players typically ranged from $10,000 to $30,000 per game. Meanwhile, fixers put nearly $200,000 in bribe payments and shared winnings from two rigged Chinese Basketball Association games into one players storage locker in Florida, authorities said. How many games were involved?At least 29 NCAA games as recently as January 2025, the indictment said, plus two games in the Chinese Basketball Association.Did any of the charged players compete this season?Four of the players charged Simeon Cottle, Carlos Hart, Oumar Koureissi and Camian Shell played for their current teams within the last few days, although the allegations against them dont involve this season, but the 2023-24 season.When did this start?Fixers started in 2023 with the two games in the Chinese Basketball Association and, successful there, moved on to rigging NCAA games after that. Who were the alleged fixers?Six men primarily, prosecutors say. Three had connections to players through coaching and training, two were described as gamblers and sports handicappers, and one is former NBA player Antonio Blakeney, prosecutors say.Is the investigation over?The indictment suggests that many others, including unnamed players, had a role in the scheme but werent charged, and U.S. Attorney David Metcalf said the investigation was continuing.How does this fit into broader concerns about sports gambling?The indictment is the latest gambling scandal to hit the sports world since a 2018 U.S. Supreme Court decision unleashed a meteoric rise in legal sports betting. It follows a federal takedown of illegal gambling operations linked to professional basketball, NCAA lifetime bans on at least 10 basketball players for betting and two Major League baseball players facing federal charges that they took bribes to help gamblers.___Follow Marc Levy at http://twitter.com/timelywriter MARC LEVY Levy covers politics and state government in Pennsylvania for The Associated Press. He is based in Harrisburg. twitter0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 83 Vistas 0 Reseñas
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WWW.NATURE.COMPhD students taste for risk mirrors their supervisorsNature, Published online: 15 January 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-00160-4Learned risk-taking behaviours can persist for years after leaving the lab and even after taking on a new research topic.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 108 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COM49ers: Warner progressing but out vs. SeahawksKyle Shanahan said Fred Warner will not come off injured reserve this week, ruling him out for Saturday's game in Seattle, but he said he was encouraged that the NFC title game timeline remains in play.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 81 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMUniversity of Arkansas Withdraws Job Offer for Emily Suski Over Transgender StanceThe University of Arkansas withdrew a job offer to a legal scholar after state officials learned that she had signed a legal brief concerning transgender athletes, lawmakers said.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 80 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMDarnold expects to play despite new oblique injurySam Darnold expects to play Saturday in the team's divisional round playoff game against the 49ers despite being added to the injury report Thursday with an oblique injury.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 80 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMVictor Wembanyama, Keldon Johnson shaved each other's heads following loss to OKCSpurs center Victor Wembanyama and forward Keldon Johnson showed up to shoot around on Thursday with bald heads.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 80 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMWolverine legacy: Jamal Crawford's son, JJ, earns offer from his father's alma materOnly a freshman in high school, JJ Crawford's Michigan offer marks his 12th in Division I.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 85 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COM'This was too easy': Inside six college basketball games the feds allege were riggedProsecutors allege a gambling ring bribed 39 NCAA players to fix dozens of games. Here's a closer look at six games.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 80 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMWas Renee Good Obligated to Comply With an ICE Agents Orders?The agent told Ms. Good to get out of her car before fatally shooting her. Legal experts said immigration agents may sometimes, but not always, have the authority to make such commands.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 83 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMHumanities Endowment Awarding Millions to Western Civilization ProgramsThe National Endowment for the Humanities is giving more than $40 million to programs that have been embraced by conservatives as a counterweight to liberal-dominated academia.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 84 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMHow Activists in Iran Are Using Starlink to Stay OnlineActivists spent years preparing for a communications blackout in Iran, smuggling in Starlink satellite internet systems and making digital shutdowns harder for the authorities to enforce.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 81 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMNumber of Businesses in New York City Plunged Last Spring, Report SaysRoughly 8,400 businesses closed in the second quarter of 2025, according to the most recent city data, creating the largest net decline in business activity since before the pandemic.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 81 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTrump Threatened to Send the Military to MinneapolisAlso, Israel and Arab countries asked the U.S. not to attack Iran. Heres the latest at the end of Thursday.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 82 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMI Made My Tiny 90s Bathroom Feel Bigger Without Moving WallsIm actually excited to get up and get ready every day in my new space.READ MORE...0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 87 Vistas 0 Reseñas
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WWW.ESPN.COMBruins retire No. 33 jersey of Hall of Famer CharaThe Boston Bruins retired Zdeno Chara's number in a ceremony before Thursday night's game against the Seattle Kraken.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 84 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
Leonard D. Jacoby, 83, Dies; Brought Legal Services to the MassesHe and Steven Z. Meyers opened their first low-cost legal clinic in 1972. Within a decade, they had revolutionized the legal industry, and Jacoby & Meyers had become a widely known brand.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 68 Vistas 0 Reseñas
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMKathleen Kennedy, Lucasfilm President and Star Wars Boss, Steps DownKathleen Kennedy stepped down as Lucasfilms president and returned to producing. Two studio veterans took over.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 77 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMPentagon Will Refocus Military Publication Stars and StripesThe agencys chief spokesman outlined plans to intervene in the previously independent newspapers coverage.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 70 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMN.S.A. Nominee Promises to Protect Elections From Foreign InterferencePresident Trump fired the National Security Agencys chief back in April and has weakened cyberattack protections.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 74 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMHesitant to Visit the U.S. for the World Cup? We Want to Hear From You.International soccer fans face hurdles like travel bans, long visa delays and high ticket prices for U.S. matches. Will they be enough to keep you away?0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 77 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMNacua's brother won't be charged after taking carSamson Nacua, the brother of Rams wide receiver Puka Nacua, will not be charged after he was arrested last month for allegedly taking a vehicle without the owner's consent, with investigators now telling ABC7 that they believe it was accidental.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 74 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMVandy LB among 5 denied injunction for 5th yearFive college football players seeking to play a fifth season this fall had their motions for a preliminary injunction denied Thursday by a federal judge.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 84 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGA Black Teen Died Over a $12 Shoplifting Attempt. 13 Years Later, Two Men Plead Guilty in His Killing.A judge in Milwaukee brought a 13-year quest for justice by a grieving father to a close on Thursday, accepting a plea deal for two men charged criminally for their role in the killing of his teenaged son.Robert W. Beringer and Jesse R. Cole pleaded guilty to felony murder under a deferred prosecution agreement that allows them to avoid jail time yet publicly stand accountable for their actions leading to the 2012 death of Corey Stingley. The men helped restrain the 16-year-old inside a convenience store after an attempted shoplifting incident involving $12 worth of alcohol.What happened to Corey Stingley should have never happened. His death was unnecessary, brutal and devastating, Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne told the judge in a letter filed with the court.Both of Stingleys parents spoke directly to the judge in an hourlong hearing in a courtroom filled with family members, community activists, spiritual leaders and some of the teens former classmates.Corey was my baby. A mother is not supposed to bury her child, Alicia Stingley told the judge. She spoke of the grace of forgiveness, and after the hearing she hugged Beringer. The Stingleys surviving son, Cameron, shook both mens hands.The agreement requires Cole and Beringer to make a one-time $500 donation each to a charitable organization of the Stingley familys choosing in honor of Corey. After six months, if the two men comply with the terms and do not commit any crimes, the prosecution will dismiss the case, according to documents filed with the court.ProPublica, in a 2023 story, reexamined the incident, the legal presumptions, the background of the men and Stingleys fathers relentless legal campaign to bring the men into court. The three men previously had defended their actions as justified and necessary to deal with an emergency as they held Stingley while waiting for police to arrive.Ozanne, who was appointed in 2022 to review the case, recommended the agreement after the two men and the Stingley family engaged in an extensive restorative justice process, in which they sat face to face, under the supervision of a retired judge, and shared their thoughts and feelings. Ozanne said in the letter that the process appears to have been healing for all involved.From the bench, Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Laura Crivello said she found the agreement to be fair and just and commended the work of all the parties to come to a resolution.Maybe this is the spark that makes other people see similarities in each other and not differences, she said. Maybe this is the spark that makes them think about restorative justice and how do we come together. And maybe this is part of the spark that decreases the violence in our community and leads us to finding the paths to have those circles to sit down and have the dialogue and to have that conversation. So maybe theres some good that comes out of it.Craig Stingley, Coreys father, said during the hearing that his 13-year struggle has turned into triumph.Earlier, the Stingley family filed a statement with the court affirming its support for the agreement and the restorative justice process.We sought not vengeance, but acknowledgement of Coreys life, his humanity, and the depth of our loss, it states. We believe this agreement honors Coreys memory and offers a model of how people can come together, even after profound harm, to seek understanding and healing.The family remembered Stingley as a vibrant, loving son, brother, and friend and found that the restorative dialogues brought truth, understanding, and a measure of healing that the traditional court process could not.Jonathan LaVoy, Coles attorney, told reporters after the hearing: This has been a long 13 years. Hes been under investigation with multiple reviews over that time. I think everyone is just so happy that this day has come, that theres been some finality to this whole situation.In a joint written statement provided to the court, Beringer and Cole said they came to recognize the profound ripple effects of the incident and their connection to Stingleys death. They expressed sorrow that Stingleys time on this earth ended far too soon.The proceeding followed years of work by Craig Stingley to force the justice system to view his son as a crime victim whose life was unlawfully cut short by Beringer, Cole and another store patron, Mario Laumann, who died in 2022.Prosecutors at the time declined to charge anyone, saying the men did not intend to kill Corey Stingley when they tackled him and pinned him to the floor of VJs Food Mart, in West Allis, Wisconsin. They were detaining him for police after the youth attempted to steal bottles of Smirnoff Ice. In surveillance video, Laumann can be seen holding Stingley in a chokehold while the other two men aided in restraining him. A witness told police Laumann was squeezing the hell out of the teenager.The Milwaukee County Medical Examiners Office found that Stingley died of a brain injury due to asphyxiation after a violent struggle with multiple individuals. It ruled the death a homicide.Under Wisconsin law, the charge of felony murder is brought in cases in which someone dies during the commission of another alleged crime in this case false imprisonment.Ozanne wrote to the court that his analysis found that there is no doubt Cole, Beringer and Laumann caused Corey Stingleys death.All three men, he wrote, restrained Stingley intentionally and without his consent and without legal authority to arrest him. Simply put, Corey, a teenager, was tackled and restrained to the ground by three grown men because they suspected him of shoplifting, Ozanne wrote. They killed him while piled on top of his body awaiting the police.But he noted that there is no evidence that Beringer or Cole knew that Stingley was in medical distress during the incident. He described their hold on him as rudimentary detention techniques.It was Laumann, Ozanne concluded, who strangled Corey Stingley to death. Ozanne wrote that surveillance video shows Laumanns arm for several minutes across Stingleys neck as he fades out of consciousness.If Laumann were still alive, Ozanne said in court, prosecutors likely would have been seeking a lengthy prison term for him.Defendant Jesse Cole sits in the courtroom on Thursday before a hearing on his case. Taylor Glascock for ProPublicaDefendant Robert Beringer walks into the Milwaukee County courtroom. Taylor Glascock for ProPublicaStingley died the same year as Trayvon Martin, a Black Florida teen shot to death by a neighborhood volunteer watchman, who was acquitted in 2013. Martins case drew national attention and led to the formation of the Black Lives Matter movement. But Stingleys death after being restrained by three white men did not garner widespread notice outside Wisconsin.Over the years, Craig Stingley unsuccessfully advocated for the men to face charges. Two prosecutors reviewed the case, but nothing came of it.He then discovered an obscure John Doe statute, dating back to Wisconsins territorial days, that allows a private citizen to ask a judge to consider whether a crime has been committed and, if so, by whom when a district attorney cant or wont do so.Stingley filed such a petition in late 2020. That led to the appointment of Ozanne as a special prosecutor to review the matter yet again. In 2024, Ozanne informed the Stingley family that his office had found evidence of a crime but that a guilty verdict was not assured for the remaining two men.That set in motion an effort to achieve healing and accountability through a restorative justice process. Restorative justice programs bring together survivors and offenders for conversations, led by trained facilitators, to work toward understanding and healing and how best to make amends. Last year, Stingley and members of his family met on separate occasions with both Cole and Beringer through the Andrew Center for Restorative Justice, part of the law school at Milwaukees Marquette University.The discussions led to the deferred prosecution agreement.In an interview, Anthony Neff, a longtime friend of Craig Stingleys, recalled seeing Corey Stingley in a hospital bed, attached to tubes and a ventilator in his final days. Corey Stingley had been a running back on his high school football team. Everyone in the program showed up for the funeral, Neff said.Coaches. The ball boys. The cheerleaders. I mean, theyre all standing in solidarity with Craig and the family, he said.In the years since, he and other golfing buddies of Craig Stingleys have provided emotional support in his quest. Neff called it a lesson in civics, a master lesson in civics.The post A Black Teen Died Over a $12 Shoplifting Attempt. 13 Years Later, Two Men Plead Guilty in His Killing. appeared first on ProPublica.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 107 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMVenezuelan Opposition Leader Gives Trump Her Peace PrizeThe opposition leader Mara Corina Machado gave the prize to President Trump at the White House. The Nobel Committee has said that the honor is not transferable.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 79 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTrump Administration Lawsuit Seeking California Voter Data Is DismissedThe Justice Department has sued about two dozen states over access to voter rolls, as the federal government pushes to create a national database.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 75 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMVenezuelas Interim Leader Delivers State of the Union AddressIn her State of the Union address, Delcy Rodrguez echoed her predecessors fiery rhetoric but tried to hew to President Trumps agenda.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 89 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMFormer Senator Kyrsten Sinema Accused of Affair With Member of Security TeamIn a lawsuit, the ex-wife of Ms. Sinemas onetime staff member accused her of showering him with gifts and breaking up their marriage.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 72 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTaiwan Strikes Trade Deal with Trump, Vows More U.S. Chip FactoriesThe United States agreed to lower tariffs on Taiwanese goods from 20 to 15 percent, while Taiwan says it will invest in more chip manufacturing in the U.S.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 83 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMDodgers strike again, land Tucker, sources sayThe World Series champion Dodgers added another big bat to an already-potent lineup Thursday night, agreeing to a 4-year, $240 million deal with prized free agent Kyle Tucker, sources told ESPN.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 77 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMOklahoma QB Mateer, LB Lewis to return in '26Oklahoma quarterback John Mateer and linebacker Kip Lewis will return in 2026, the school announced on Thursday.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 82 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMMany Fiery Remarks, Little Clarity on Whats Next at Security Council Meeting on IranIrans representative denied the country had killed protesters, as the U.S. ambassador said President Trump had made clear all options are on the table to stop the killing.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 77 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMCalifornias Pacific Coast Highway Fully Reopens After Three YearsThe famed highway reopened this week after consecutive landslides shuttered two sections of the road in Big Sur and forced major repairs.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 79 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMWhat Did the White House and Denmark Agree to on Greenland? Depends Whom You Ask.The White House and Denmark contradicted each other in public about what they had agreed to this week as President Trump continued to demand U.S. ownership of Greenland.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 73 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMIsrael and Arab Nations Ask Trump to Refrain From Attacking IranPrime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel asked the president to postpone any planned attack. Israeli and Arab officials fear Iran could retaliate by striking their countries.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 75 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMDid a Supreme Court Loss Embolden Trump on the Insurrection Act?In refusing to let the president deploy National Guard troops in Illinois under an obscure law, the justices may have made him more apt to invoke greater powers.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 74 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMFantasy baseball: Kyle Tucker's outlook rises with move to loaded Dodgers' lineupTrack all the latest MLB free agency and trade news with fantasy baseball analysis from Tristan H. Cockcroft and Eric Karabell.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 72 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMFive new SEC coaches in a day? College football's wild 2025 coaching carousel by the numbersA $50 million-plus buyout. Thirty-plus open gigs. Five new SEC head coaches in a day. Here are all the numbers behind a whirlwind college football coaching carousel.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 83 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMFull list of 2026 NFL draft declarations: Which underclassmen joined the class?Sixty-three underclassmen have declared for the 2026 NFL draft, which begins April 23 in Pittsburgh. See who is on the list.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 76 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMBattles Over Truth Rage Online Amid Irans Internet BlackoutThe shutdown of online discourse within Iran has allowed both the government and its critics to flood social media outside the country with disinformation campaigns and fake images.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 80 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMUbers Quest to Crack Japan Leads Through a Rural Hot-Springs TownThe ride-hailing giants chief executive has made a bet on how it can finally grab a bigger piece of one of the worlds largest taxi markets.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 88 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMU.S. Says It Erred in Deporting Student Traveling for ThanksgivingThe Trump administration acknowledged it mistakenly deported a college student to Honduras despite a court order barring the removal. But the government has not moved to drop the case.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 83 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
Video Analysis of ICE Shooting Sheds Light on Contested MomentsNewly available videos and existing footage synchronized and assessed by The Times provides a millisecond by millisecond look at how an ICE officer ended up shooting and killing a motorist in Minneapolis.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 84 Vistas 0 Reseñas
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMIrans Regime Is Losing Its Greatest Weapon: FearThe bulwark of Iranian oppression is fear. The latest round of demonstrations shows it has been breached.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 86 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.ESPN.COMWarriors prove Kuminga 'not a distraction' in winThe Warriors kept their focus on the court, saying the talk of Jonathan Kuminga's trade demand was "not a distraction" in Thursday's win over the Knicks.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 87 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMEx-South Korean Leader Gets Prison Term in First Ruling Over Martial LawA court handed down five years in prison to former President Yoon Suk Yeol, who is facing multiple trials stemming from his short-lived imposition of martial law.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 80 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMCanada Breaks With U.S. to Slash Tariffs on Some Chinese Electric VehiclesChina will in turn cut its own tariffs on Canadian canola products. The countries leaders met in Beijing on Friday and hailed a new strategic partnership.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 83 Vistas 0 Reseñas -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMA Tale of Two Meetings: Trump Chooses Oil Over DemocracyTwo conversations this week confirmed that President Trump backs the remnants of Nicols Maduros regime over the Venezuelan opposition seeking to hold elections.0 Comentarios 0 Compartidas 79 Vistas 0 Reseñas