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Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., says he will attempt to dismiss claims from Republicans about rising crime rates in New York City as he defends Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg during a field hearing held by the House Judiciary Committee next week.

Slated to take place in the Big Apple on Monday, the committee said this week the hearing will ‘examine how Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s pro-crime, anti-victim policies have led to an increase in violent crime and a dangerous community for New York City residents.’

But Nadler isn’t on board with the notion that Bragg is responsible for a rise in crime, or if there’s even a rise in crime at all, according to comments he offered to the New York Post.

‘We will show the essentially fraudulent nature of what Jim Jordan and company are claiming about the crime rates in New York and compared to other cities, including Republican-led cities,’ Nadler told the outlet.

Nadler — who represents New York’s 12th congressional district, which includes central Manhattan — also said he will use the opportunity in New York to talk ‘about how this whole hearing is part of Jim Jordan and the Republicans’ general attempts to obstruct justice and to attack the DA in Manhattan and to obstruct justice in the Trump case.’

Despite Nadler’s claim about the ‘fraudulent nature’ of Republican criticism about criminal justice in most populous city in the United States, certain violent crimes have increased in recent years.

Violent felony offense complaints jumped from 35,964 in 2020 to 38,645 in 2021 and then to 45,529 in 2022, according to New York Police Department data released earlier this year. Additionally, the total number of felony offenses — both violent and non-violent — rose from 95,593 in 2020 to 102,741 in 2021 to 126,589 in 2022.

While the city has experienced a recent jump in crime for certain offenses, it is not at a record high like it was in past decades. Previous NYPD data revealed there were nearly 530,000 major felony offenses in 1990 and more than 160,000 major felony offenses in 2001.

Nadler’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on this issue of crime in New York City.

The announcement for the New York City field hearing came less than a week after former President Donald Trump was arraigned for 34 felony counts of falsifying business records following Bragg’s years-long investigation into Trump. Trump pleaded not guilty.

After the indictment, House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, accused Bragg of ‘unprecedented abuse of prosecutorial authority’ and demanded that he testify before Congress.

‘In light of the serious consequences of your actions, we expect that you will testify about what plainly appears to be a politically motivated prosecutorial decision,’ Jordan wrote in a letter to Bragg last month.

Last week, Jordan subpoenaed former New York County Special Assistant District Attorney Mark Pomerantz to testify on the role he played investigating Trump’s finances before resigning in protest when Bragg initially declined to charge Trump with crimes. Jordan alleged that Pomertantz instigated a political investigation.

Bragg said the subpoena is an ‘unprecedented campaign of harassment and intimidation’ from House GOP members.

New York City Councilman Robert Holden, a Democrat who has represented New York City’s 30th district since 2018, told Fox News Digital earlier this week that he plans to testify at the Monday hearing that Bragg has contributed to the ‘lawlessness’ on city streets.

Holden said he is a life-long New Yorker who has had his ‘issues’ with Bragg since he took over as DA in January 2022.

‘When Bragg came in, he issued that ridiculous edict that he was not going to prosecute smaller crimes,’ Holden said. ‘What do we have in New York City? We have lawlessness on the streets.’

Additionally, Holden said he has ‘never seen the lawlessness we are seeing now.’

Fox News’ Brianna Herlihy and Brooke Singman contributed to this article.

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EXCLUSIVE: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his family visited first lady Casey DeSantis’ hometown in Troy, Ohio, this week, touring her elementary school and paying a visit to a favorite local diner for hamburgers and milkshakes between political events in the Buckeye State.

The governor and first lady, along with their children Madison and Mason, took a trip down memory lane Thursday between speaking events for the Republican governor in Akron and West Chester Township.

According to DeSantis’ office, the family visited K’s Hamburger Shop, a favorite local eatery of Casey DeSantis growing up, and met with employees and diners. They also looked through the first lady’s yearbook over burgers and milkshakes.

Later, they toured Heywood Elementary School, meeting teachers and staff before finding Casey DeSantis’ class picture from her days as a student and the classroom where her mother taught as a speech pathologist.

Ron and Casey spoke to a crowd of 900 at a dinner hosted by the Butler County Republican Party. The governor also spoke to a crowd at the Summit County GOP’s Lincoln Day Breakfast in Akron, Ohio.

DeSantis, a former congressman, saw his popularity soar among conservatives across the country over the past three years due to his forceful pushback against COVID-19 pandemic restrictions and fighting against the media, corporations and teachers unions while improving the state’s economy. He won re-election by a comfortable 19 points last year.

DeSantis is widely considered an eventual candidate for president in 2024 and has already been the target of attacks from former President Trump, the polling front-runner for the GOP nomination next year.

After visiting Ohio Thursday, DeSantis gave speeches Friday in Lynchburg, Virginia, and Manchester, New Hampshire. The governor didn’t mention his anticipated presidential campaign in his speech in New Hampshire, other than to repeat his frequently used line that ‘I have only begun to fight.’

Fox News’ Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

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Disgraced former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who at one time was widely discussed as a potential Democratic presidential candidate, took the far left to task for being soft on crime, arguing progressives are hurting the very people they claim to represent with their approach to criminals.

‘Democrats: When you ignore crime, you hurt the people you represent,’ Cuomo tweeted Thursday, along with a clip from Quake Media, the platform that hosts his podcast ‘As a Matter of Fact.’

The video, titled ‘Ignoring Crime: The opposite of progress,’ was posted to Cuomo’s YouTube channel.

‘The far left doesn’t want to talk about crime,’ said Cuomo. ‘They don’t want to hear the word crime spoken.’

‘There is no crime problem,’ the former governor added, using apparent sarcasm. ‘It’s all Republican propaganda.’

Cuomo then said crime most affects low-income and minority communities — the same people, he argued, Democrats should represent.

‘Do you know who are the victims of crime?’ he asked. ‘Over 70% black, brown, and poor. So, tell me, who does the Democratic Party really represent if not the Black, brown, and poor? And when you refuse to address the issue of crime, the people who are paying the price are the Black, brown and poor. They’re paying the price for your far-left politics.’

Cuomo’s comments come as some retail stores across the country are shutting their doors, citing crime as a key reason. 

This month, for example, a California beauty store closed after it was robbed or burglarized a dozen times. In Portland, Oregon, a clothing shop permanently shut down last year after facing a string of break-ins that has left the store financially gutted, according to a note posted to the front of the store. 

‘Our city is in peril,’ a printed note posted on Rains PDX store read. ‘Small businesses (and large) cannot sustain doing business, in our city’s current state. We have no protection, or recourse, against the criminal behavior that goes unpunished. Do not be fooled into thinking that insurance companies cover losses. We have sustained 15 break-ins … we have not received any financial reimbursement since the 3rd.’

Walmart has also closed several locations in Portland and Chicago, in part for financial reasons but also seemingly due to crime. The closures came after Walmart CEO Doug McMillon warned last year of rising crime’s devastating impact on retail stores.

‘Theft is an issue. It’s higher than what it has historically been,’ McMillon told CNBC’s ‘Squawk Box’ in December. He added that if the crime wave is not halted soon and if prosecutors don’t bring charges against shoplifters, ‘prices will be higher, and/or stores will close.’

In Philadelphia, convenience store chain Wawa permanently closed locations and shortened the hours at some suburban stores due to crime.

Republicans have been quite critical of progressive prosecutors in Democrat-run blue cities, arguing they’re soft on crime and contributing to high crime rates in major cities.

In a striking move last year, San Francisco voters ousted progressive District Attorney Chesa Boudin in a recall vote focused on his soft-on-crime policies, which included prosecuting significantly fewer felonies and misdemeanors than his predecessors. Boudin had said he wanted to abolish cash bail and end ‘mass incarceration.’

In St. Louis, city prosecutor Kimberly Gardner currently faces widespread backlash for pursuing similar policies — including an effort by Missouri’s attorney general to remove her from office.

Washington, D.C. also made national headlines recently for unsuccessfully attempting to implement a dramatic overhaul of its criminal code. Republicans and many Democrats complained that the proposal would ease criminal penalties in a city that is already suffering from rising crime rates.

Cuomo saw his political star in the Democratic Party rise as the COVID-19 pandemic raged and lockdowns were in full force in 2020. The governor’s candid daily press briefings and forceful action to shut down New York earned him national acclaim from many in his party, and President Biden even called him the ‘gold standard’ for governors. Members of the media pushed the prospect of Cuomo running for president. Some even called him the ‘acting president’ during former President Trump’s tenure.

Behind the scenes, however, a series of events were taking place that led Cuomo to resign from his office in disgrace.

In March 2020, Cuomo issued a directive for nursing homes to accept elderly patients with COVID-19. Thousands of people subsequently died in New York’s nursing homes.

Cuomo’s administration radically underreported the number of deaths due to COVID-19 in nursing homes. In January 2021, New York Attorney General Letitia James released a damning report showing the extent of the damage. 

Months later, James released another report concluding that Cuomo sexually harassed at least 11 women, including current and former employees. The report also found that Cuomo oversaw a workplace culture ‘rife with fear and intimidation.’

Cuomo resigned in August 2021. On his first full day as the former governor, his successor acknowledged the state had suffered nearly 12,000 more deaths from COVID than Cuomo publicly acknowledged.

Last month, a former Cuomo aide who had accused the ex-governor of sexual harassment in a federal lawsuit filed another lawsuit against New York, alleging the state government is accountable for Cuomo’s harassment and for the actions of other aides who didn’t act on the matter once it was reported.

Cuomo is also currently facing another lawsuit over nursing home deaths in New York during the pandemic, with the plaintiff alleging that Cuomo’s pride and ‘unmitigated greed’ had led to needless deaths.

The lawsuit was filed by Sean Newman in a Brooklyn federal district court. Newman is married to Janice Dean, who works for Fox News Channel as a senior meteorologist. Newman’s parents died in early 2020 at nursing homes in the state amid the COVID-19 outbreak.

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An official with the Chinese Embassy in the United States emailed a staff member of the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic Chairman Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, expressing China’s ‘grave concern’ with an upcoming hearing on the origins of COVID-19.

In an email sent on Friday at 2:15 a.m., Li Xiang, the Chinese Embassy’s liaison to Congress, emailed the staff member regarding the subcomittee’s hearing on April 18, which is titled ‘Investigating the Origins of COVID-19, Part 2: China and the Available Intelligence.’

‘I am Counselor Li Xiang with the Chinese Embassy in the US. I am reaching out to express our grave concern regarding the COVID-19 Origins hearing to be chaired by Congressman Wenstrup on next Tuesday. According to the announcement, the hearing is to examine ‘China’s complicity in the COVID-19′ crisis and hold China accountable. We firmly oppose it,’ Xiang wrote in the email.

A spokesperson for the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic told Fox News Digital that the Chinese Embassy’s attempt to silence the subcommittee’s work is ‘absurd.’

‘What is China trying to hide? The Embassy’s attempt to silence the Select Subcommittee’s investigation into the origins of COVID-19 is absurd, and it will not work. Holding China accountable for its role in this crisis is an essential part of preparing our country to address future national security threats and pandemics. Chairman Wenstrup is committed to examining all intelligence related to where and how this pandemic began. The members of the Select Subcommittee will not stop or stall their investigation on account of ‘grave concerns,’ foreign intimidation, and baseless opposition,’ the spokesperson said.

The hearing on April 18 will feature testimony from Former Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe and Former U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs David Feith.

This isn’t the first time that the Chinese Embassy has attempted to pressure lawmakers who seek information on where the virus began.

In March, Xiang sent a letter to the chief of staff for Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., saying that the lawmaker’s bill to declassify information regarding the origins of COVID-19 were an act of ‘political manipulation.’

‘I am reaching out to express our grave concern regarding the ‘Covid-19 Origin Act of 2023′ (S.619), which falsely claimed that the Covid-19 coronavirus originated from Wuhan Institute of Virology, accuses China of blocking international investigations, refusing to share information and lacking transparency etc. and required the Director of National Intelligence to declassify information relating to the origin of COVID–19. China firmly opposes and strongly condemns this,’ the letter states.

Fox News’ Elizabeth Elkind contributed to this report.

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The stock market remains in an uptrend after modest gains for the week, which occurred amid signs that the economy is slowing down while inflation is cooling. It was a period marked by large intraday moves, however, as investors digested news that Fed officials are anticipating a mild recession later this year. Also, data last week showed that, while inflation is slowing, it remains at a highly elevated level, which may lead to more rate hikes.

DAILY CHART OF S&P 500 INDEX

Fed rate hikes in the face of a possible recession is not a great backdrop for the markets, and last week’s underperformance in the Technology sector underscored investors’ concern. These high growth stocks are particularly vulnerable to higher rates and fears of a slowing economy.

At this time, investing in companies that are growing and that also fare well despite a potential slowdown in the economy would be a great way to participate in the current uptrend. Focusing on stocks that are also breaking out of a sound base would be ideal, as this chart pattern often precedes further upside price action. Below is a prime example of a recession-proof company that broke out of a base last month amid an improved growth outlook.

MCDONALD’S CORP. (MCD)

Subscribers to my MEM Edge Report are quite familiar with McDonald’s (MCD), as we added the stock to our select list of Suggested Holdings in late March after its base breakout on above-average volume. MCD’s affordable menu, coupled with their operating margins improving more than Microsoft (MSFT) and other tech companies, had Wall Street raising their growth outlook for the company into year-end. Of note, McDonald’s opened almost 600 new locations during the great recession of 2008, while most restaurants retreated. The stock is in a confirmed uptrend with further upside potential.

Below is Merck (MRK), which broke out of a 3-month base last week amid news that the FDA has accepted their Keytruda-based therapy for advanced GI cancer for review. This news adds to the company’s exceptionally deep drug pipeline, which has analysts calling for above-average earnings growth over the next five years. The 2.5% yielder is also trading at 15 times trailing 4 quarter earnings, which is below the average P/E for stocks in the S&P 500.

DAILY CHART OF MERCK (MRK)

Healthcare stocks also outperformed during 2008 and, while we’re not calling for a recession that will be anywhere close to what took place back then, precedence tells us that innovative drug companies can fare well despite a difficult economic backdrop. MRK has positive momentum, with its RSI and MACD above 50 and headed higher, and last week’s base breakout puts the stock in a position to trade higher.

While Technology stocks have underperformed over the past two weeks, the sector remains in an uptrend with select areas posting solid gains. My MEM Edge Report has several high quality Technology stocks on the Suggested Holdings List that have been outpacing the broader markets and are poised to continue to do so. We’ll stay with these stocks as long as they remain in an uptrend.

If you’d like immediate access to my Suggested Holdings List, as well as be kept on top of our detailed market and sector rotation analysis during these choppy times, use this link for a 4-week trial of my twice weekly MEM Edge Report at a nominal fee.

Warmly,

Mary Ellen McGonagle, MEM Investment Research

WASHINGTON — Fallout from the U.S. banking crisis is likely to tilt the economy into recession later this year, according to Federal Reserve documents released Wednesday.

Minutes from the March meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee included a presentation from staff members on potential repercussions from the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and other tumult in the financial sector that began in early March.

Though Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr said the banking sector “is sound and resilient,” staff economists said the economy will take a hit.

“Given their assessment of the potential economic effects of the recent banking-sector developments, the staff’s projection at the time of the March meeting included a mild recession starting later this year, with a recovery over the subsequent two years,” the meeting summary stated.

Projections following the meeting indicated that Fed officials expect GDP growth of just 0.4% for all of 2023. With the Atlanta Fed tracking a Q1 gain around 2.2%, that would indicate a pullback later in the year.

That crisis had caused some speculation that the Fed might hold the line on rates, but officials stressed that more needed to be done to tame inflation.

Federal Open Market Committee officials ultimately voted to increase the benchmark borrowing rate by 0.25 percentage points, the ninth increase over the past year. That brought the fed funds rate to a target range of 4.75%-5%, its highest level since late-2007.

The rate hike came less than two weeks after Silicon Valley Bank, at the time the 17th largest institution in the U.S., collapsed following a run on deposits. The failure of SVB and two others spurred the Fed to create emergency lending facilities to make sure banks could continue operations.

Since the meeting, inflation data has been mostly cooperative with the Fed’s goals. Officials said at the meeting that they see prices falling further.

“Reflecting the effects of less projected tightness in product and labor markets, core inflation was forecast to slow sharply next year,” the minutes stated.

But concern over broader economic conditions remained high, particularly in light of the banking problems. Following the collapse of SVB and two other institutions, Fed officials opened a new borrowing facility for banks and eased conditions for emergency loans at the discount window.

The minutes noted that the programs helped get the industry through its troubles, but officials said they expect lending to tighten and credit conditions to deteriorate.

“Even with the actions, participants recognized that there was significant uncertainty as to how those conditions would evolve,” the minutes said.

Half-point hike if not for crisis?

Several policymakers questioned whether to hold rates steady as they watched to see how the crisis unfolded. However, they relented and agreed to vote for another rate hike “because of elevated inflation, the strength of the recent economic data, and their commitment to bring inflation down to the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal.”

In fact, the minutes noted that some members were leaning toward a half-point rate hike prior to the banking problems. Officials said inflation is “much too high” though they stressed that incoming data and the impact of the hikes will have to be considered when formulating policy ahead.

“Several participants emphasized the need to retain flexibility and optionality in determining the appropriate stance of monetary policy given the highly uncertain economic outlook,” the minutes said.

Inflation data has been generally cooperative with the Fed’s aims.

The personal consumption expenditures price index, which is the inflation gauge policymakers watch the most, increased just 0.3% in February and was up 4.6% on an annual basis. The monthly gain was less than expected.

Earlier Wednesday, the consumer price index showed an increase of just 0.1% in March and decelerated to a 5% annual pace, the latter figure down a full percentage point from February.

However, that headline CPI reading was held back mostly by tame food and energy prices, and a boost in shelter costs drove core inflation higher by 0.4% for the month and 5.6% from a year ago, slightly above where it was in February. The Fed expects housing inflation to slow through the year.

There was some bad news on the inflation front: A monthly survey from the New York Fed showed that inflation expectations over the next year increased half a percentage point to 4.75% in March.

Markets as of Wednesday afternoon were assigning about a 72% chance of one more quarter percentage point rate hike in May before a policy pivot where the Fed cuts before the end of the year, according to CME Group data.

Though the FOMC approved an increase in March, it did alter language in the post-meeting statement. Where previous statements referred to the need for “ongoing increases,” the committee changed the phrasing to indicate that more hikes “may be appropriate.”

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Bloomberg LP has developed an AI model using the same underlying technology as OpenAI’s GPT, and plans to integrate it into features delivered through its terminal software, a company official said in an interview with CNBC.

Bloomberg says that Bloomberg GPT, an internal AI model, can more accurately answer questions like “CEO of Citigroup Inc?,” assess whether headlines are bearish or bullish for investors, and even write headlines based on short blurbs.

Large language models trained on terabytes of text data are the hottest corner of the tech industry. Giants such as Microsoft and Google are racing to integrate the technology into their products, and artificial intelligence startups are regularly raising funds at valuations over $1 billion.

Bloomberg’s move shows how software developers in many industries beyond Silicon Valley see state-of-the-art AI like GPT as a technical advancement allowing them to automate tasks that used to require a human.

“Both the capabilities of GPT-3 and the way that it achieved its performance through language modeling wasn’t something that I expected,” said Gideon Mann, head of ML Product and Research at Bloomberg. “So when that came out, we were like, ‘OK, this is going to change the way that we do NLP here.’”

NLP stands for natural language processing, the part of machine learning that focuses on deriving meaning from words.

The move also shows how the AI market may not be dominated by giants with massive amounts of generalized data.

Building large language models is expensive, requiring access to supercomputers and millions of dollars to pay for them, and some have wondered if OpenAI and Big Tech companies would develop an insurmountable lead. In this scenario, they would be the winners, and simply sell access to their AIs to everybody else.

But Bloomberg’s GPT doesn’t use OpenAI. The company was able to use freely available, off-the-shelf AI methods and apply them to its massive store of proprietary — if niche — data.

So far, Bloomberg says its GPT shows promising results doing tasks like figuring out whether a headline is good or bad for a company’s financial outlook, changing company names to stock tickers, figuring out the important names in a document, and even answering basic business questions like who the CEO of a company is.

It also can do some “generative AI” applications, like suggesting a new headline based on a short paragraph.

One example in the paper:

Input: “The US housing market shrank in value by $2.3 trillion, or 4.9%, in the second half of 2022, according to Redfin. That’s the largest drop in percentage terms since the 2008 housing crisis, when values slumped 5.8% during the same period”

Output: “Home Prices See Biggest Drop in 15 Years.”

How it could be used

OpenAI’s GPT is often called a “foundational” model because it wasn’t intended for a specific task.

Bloomberg’s approach is different. It was specifically trained on a large number of financial documents collected by the firm over the years to create a model that’s especially fluent in money and business.

In contrast, OpenAI’s GPT was trained on terabytes of text, the vast majority of which had nothing to do with finance.

About half of the data used to create Bloomberg’s model comes from nonfinancial sources scraped from the web, including GitHub, YouTube subtitles, and Wikipedia.

But Bloomberg also added over 100 billion words from a proprietary dataset called FinPile, which includes financial data the firm has accumulated over the last 20 years, including securities filings, press releases, Bloomberg News stories, stories from other publications and a web crawl focused on financial webpages.

It turns out that adding specific training materials increased accuracy and performance enough on financial tasks that Bloomberg is planning to integrate its GPT into features and services accessed through the company’s Terminal product, although Bloomberg is not planning a ChatGPT-style chatbot.

One early application would be to transform human language into the specific database language that Bloomberg’s software uses.

For example, it would transform “Tesla price” into “get(px_last) for([‘TSLA US Equity’]).”

Another possibility would be for the model to do behind-the-scenes work cleaning data and doing other errands on the application’s back end.

But Bloomberg is also looking at using artificial intelligence to power features that could help financial professionals save time and stay on top of the news.

“There’s a lot of work we’re doing to help clients address that data deluge of news stories, whether that’s through summarization, or monitoring, or being able to ask questions on those news stories or transcripts. There are a lot of applications there,” Mann said.

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The bracket for the 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs is (nearly) complete.

The Eastern Conference first-round matchups locked into place Thursday night as most teams completed their regular season schedule. The playoff picture in the West will not be fully complete until Friday, when the defending champion Colorado Avalanche take on the Nashville Predators in the final game of the 2022-23 NHL regular season. If the Avs win, they will overtake the Dallas Stars for the Central Division title and will play the wild card Seattle Kraken in the first round. If the Avs lose Friday, they will begin their title defense against the Minnesota Wild.  

Here’s a look at every first round playoff series that is set in stone (with team seeds in parenthesis).

(This post will be updated)

Eastern Conference

Boston Bruins (Atlantic 1) vs. Florida Panthers (Wild Card 2)

The Bruins (65-12-5) enter the playoffs having completed the best regular season of all time by wins (65) and points (135). That, of course, puts a lot of pressure on them to perform. They will look to avoid the fate of the 2018-19 Lightning, who lit up the NHL with a then record-tying 62 wins only to be swept in the first round. Boston will play last year’s Presidents’ Trophy winners, the Florida Panthers (42-32-8), who rallied for a playoff spot after an uneven season under first-year coach Paul Maurice. 

Follow every game: Latest NHL Scores and Schedules

Toronto Maple Leafs (Atlantic 2) vs. Tampa Bay Lightning (Atlantic 3)

This rematch of last year’s seven-game first-round series has been inevitable for months. The Maple Leafs (50-21-11) are making their seventh straight playoff appearance, but they have not won a series since 2004. They swung a big trade before the deadline, acquiring 2019 Conn Smythe winner Ryan O’Reilly, with the hopes of changing that. Tampa Bay (46-30-6), meanwhile, has been stumbling its way into the postseason, but it would be foolish to count the three-time defending Eastern Conference champions out. 

Carolina Hurricanes (Metro 1) vs. New York Islanders (Wild Card 1) 

Carolina had an uneven close after it lost dynamic forward Andrei Svechnikov for the season due to injury. Still, the Hurricanes (52-21-9) are the Metro champions for the third straight year. Standing in their path as they begin what they hope is a deep playoff run is the Islanders (42-31-9). New York could be a tough out. Ilya Sorokin is one of the best goalies in the NHL, and the Islanders’ core has plenty of postseason experience after back-to-back final four appearances in 2020 and 2021. 

New Jersey Devils (Metro 2) vs. New York Rangers (Metro 3) 

The longtime rivals get reacquainted in their first playoff series since the 2012 Eastern Conference final. This was a breakout year for the Devils (52-22-8), who have only made the playoffs once since they fell to the Kings in the 2012 Stanley Cup Final. They broke the franchise’s all-time points record while Jack Hughes, the No. 1 overall pick in 2019, put together the best offensive season in team history. The Rangers (47-22-13), looking to build on last year’s conference final appearance, picked up a pair of stars at the trade deadline in Patrick Kane and Vladimir Tarasenko.

Western Conference 

Vegas Golden Knights (Pacific 1) vs. Winnipeg Jets (Wild Card 2)

After missing the playoffs for the first time in the franchise’s young history last season, the Golden Knights (51-22-9) are back in the postseason, claiming their fourth division crown in six years and the conference’s No. 1 seed. Jack Eichel, the No. 2 pick in the 2015 draft, is set to make his long-awaited postseason debut with Vegas, and the Golden Knights could be getting another big boost with the potential return of captain Mark Stone. They will be playing the Jets (46-33-3), who did just enough to hold onto a playoff spot following a serious second-half swoon. Still, Winnipeg has Connor Hellebuyck, one of the league’s better goaltenders, and a core that’s made several playoff runs together at this point (though only one especially deep one). 

Edmonton Oilers (Pacific 2) vs. Los Angeles Kings (Pacific 3) 

The Oilers (50-23-9) enter the playoffs red-hot after winning 14 of their last 15 games. Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins paced a league-leading offense as they became the first trio of teammates to record at least 100 points since the 1995-96 Penguins. McDavid’s season in particular was historic; he became the first player since Mario Lemieux in that 1995-96 season to record 150 points. All told, the Kings (47-25-10) will certainly have their hands full, but they pushed the Oilers to seven games in the first round last year and they’ve gotten great play from goalie Joonas Korpisalo since he came over via trade. Could he be the difference this year?   

Battle for Connor Bedard

For all the teams not taking part in the playoffs, attention turns to the offseason and the NHL draft. One of the other big battles solidified Thursday night was the ‘race’ for last place, with the reward being a 25.5% chance of picking generational talent Connor Bedard with the first overall pick. The Anaheim Ducks (23-47-12), who ended the season on a 13-game losing streak and won just 13 games in regulation all year, have the best lottery odds after finishing 32nd in the NHL with 58 points. They needed help, though, and they got it Thursday – the Columbus Blue Jackets, who play their final game Friday, defeated the Pittsburgh Penguins in overtime to move one point clear of the Ducks. Had the Blue Jackets lost their final two games in regulation, they would have locked up the top lottery odds with 57 points.     

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I was a fan of the Washington football team from the time I was a kid. Starting around 7-years-old or so. That team was in my blood. It was in the blood of every member of my family: mom, dad, brother, cousins. It was in the blood of many of my close friends. We were Washingtonians, born in the city, and even though some of us had moved to nearby Maryland or Virginia, well, D.C. would always be our home, and that football team was our first love.

Then Dan Snyder bought the franchise.

As it became clear who and what Snyder was, some hardcore fans stomached him and stayed. Others, like me, could no longer take his greed, lack of empathy for his employees (especially the women), lack of respect for the fans, and his seeming overall disregard for human beings. We left and never looked back. We were like Luke Skywalker and the rebels after the Empire took over, waiting, patiently, for our time to come, and Snyder would be gone. Then we’d leave Planet Hoth and come home.

We waited. And waited. And shook our head at the Snyder buffoonery and clownsmanship. We waited. Years went by. Decades. We waited and waited. Hoth was cold but we didn’t care. We waited. One scandal. The next. And the next. And so on, and so on. Abuses, ugliness. We waited, in the shadows, our jerseys and hats at the ready. Then, a light came from beyond. A signal from the stars. Ordained from scripture, or, Sportico.com.

Sportico reported Thursday that a group led by billionaires Josh Harris and Mitchell Rales reached ‘an agreement in principle’ to acquire the team from Snyder for about $6 billion. The NFL Network said a deal is close but not finalized.

NFL Draft Hub: Latest NFL Draft mock drafts, news, live picks, grades and analysis

What seems certain is that while various groups may be jockeying, Snyder is going to be gone. I think it’s a forgone conclusion.

Thus, I have been waiting decades to say these six words, and it’s time:

DING DONG THE WITCH IS DEAD!

He’s gone. He’s finally gone. There is a God. I don’t even believe in God but I do now.

A close friend of mine, also born in D.C., and another Washington football team exile, texted me:

Him: ‘It’s over!’

Me: ‘I knowwwwwww.’ Except when I spoke, I was doing jumping jacks of joy.

This day should be a national holiday. It should be called: Dan Snyder Sold The Team Day. There’d be a gathering at the stadium, everyone holding candles, singing the Ding Dong song, interlocking arms, smiling and rejoicing. Darrell Green would give a speech. Doug Williams would reenact a Super Bowl moment. Riggo would tell some stories. Joe Biden would make a yearly appearance just because he was the president when it happened.

School would be canceled. Student loan debt would be canceled. Men would leave the toilet seats down. Trump would phone in congratulations from his jail cell. 

Because this is the greatest moment in the history of the franchise. In the history of sports. In history of the United States. In the history of Earth. In the history of the Milky Way. In the history of the universe. Not since the Big Bang has there been news this wonderful.

Ding.

Dong.

Why so much rejoicing? Snyder is the worst owner in the modern history of American sports. It’s not even close. For most hardcore fans, he’s not just an embarrassment. He represented everything wrong with some NFL owners and, perhaps even on a larger scale, the super rich. The arrogance, the lack of care for employees, and how under his watch some truly horrendous things happened. Some of those ugly things he’s alleged to have done himself.

So many sordid occurrences happened with him as owner, they are too numerous to list. But two things mainly caused me to abandon ship. First, the horrific treatment of women by men in the organization while he owned the team. Second, his apparent disdain for fans. He gouged them constantly and, despite the fact the team was a money-making machine and he was a billionaire, he still tried to get every ounce of money he could from fans.

It was typical behavior of some super wealthy people. No amount of money is enough. He’s not the only NFL owner to behave this way, but he was the best at it.

In the end, Snyder didn’t care about anyone but himself.

Now he’s gone.

Ding.

Dong.

I want to leave you with this great work of art you may know. It goes (something) like this:

Once there was a wicked witch in the lovely land of Landover

And a wickeder, wickeder, wickeder witch there never, never was

He filled the folks in Washington land with terror and with dread

‘Till one fine day from Chevy Chase way a billionaire caught a yacht

That brought the wicked, wicked witch his doom

As he was flying on his broom

For the yacht fell on his head and the coroner pronounced his ownership dead

And thru the town the joyous news was spread

Ding-dong, the witch is dead! Which old witch? The wicked witch

Ding-dong, the wicked witch is dead

Wake up, you sleepy head, rub your eyes, get out of bed

Wake up, the wicked witch is dead!

Goodbye, Dan.

Don’t let the door hit you, buddy.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

An hour before Justin Owen’s car flipped into the air, its motor making an eerie noise that sounded like a deafening scream, before the hush fell over Lawrenceburg Speedway in Indiana, Ryan Barr had one last conversation with his fellow sprint car driver.

Owen was smiling, laughing and telling his blush-inducing jokes during the entire 30-minute drivers’ meeting. Barr felt lucky to be by his side. Owen was the guy at the racetrack everyone wanted to talk to. He was the guy who would give the shirt off his back, or in Owen’s case, the radiator out of his car, to help a competitor. He actually did that once.

But on the evening of April 8 before USAC’s AMSOIL Sprint Car National Championship event, Barr would hear his last joke from Owen, who died in a crash during the event. He would see for the last time just how pumped Owen was to get on the track for his first race of the 2023 season.

Barr listened as Owen told him Saturday how he was hoping to repeat his Lawrenceburg Speedway title in 2023 on the racetrack where he was known as a sort of king. The track was Owen’s stomping grounds, just 15 miles from Harrison, Ohio, where he grew up.

Owen was at Lawrenceburg all the time. He welcomed new drivers, making them feel less intimidated and more confident. He showed fans around. And he raced sprint cars with abandon.

Owen wouldn’t get to see the first race of 2023 at Lawrenceburg Speedway. He crashed in his qualifying run. His fellow drivers wouldn’t see that race, either. After Owen’s accident, USAC canceled the race, drivers turned in their transponders and the racing community grieved.

It is devastating to think back now, Barr said, how happy Owen was before that race. He had camped out the night before with his racing partner and best friend, Michael Fischesser, and the two went to a nearby casino. Owen spent $20 and lost $20, but he told Barr he’d had a great time anyway.

Owen was looking forward to a few Michelob Ultras or maybe Natural Lights, his favorite beers, after the race to celebrate his season debut. He had no idea when he stepped into his car with Fischesser-Owen Racing he would never step back out.

Barr didn’t see the early seconds of the crash, but as he worked on his car, he heard the shriek of the engine, turned toward the track and saw Owen’s car airborne. ‘It just sounded like his motor was screaming and it looked like black soot was blowing everywhere.’

Then came the somber silence. ‘We didn’t know the severity, but we knew something was bad,’ said Barr. ‘You don’t hear a crash like that and not think it is bad. It felt like a punch in the gut.’

One of Owen’s best friends came running toward the trailer. He was yelling. ‘Oh no, oh no. This is not good.’ Barr looked at him and pleaded: ‘Please tell me he’s out of the car.’

Owen was out of the car, but not on his own. First responders cut the cages to get to him. Sirens wailed as EMTs performed CPR. People began to cry.

‘At that time, we all kind of knew but we all didn’t want to know,’ Barr, 21, said. ‘That’s when it all became very sober. You were in a moment of disbelief.’

Until it all became very real. Barr watched as Owen’s car was brought back to the trailer parked next to his, a mangled machine. ‘I think just about every person on every team turned their heads because we didn’t want to see it,’ Barr said, ‘because we knew what it meant.’

It meant that USAC would cancel the race. It meant that the tight knit community of sprint car racing would begin to mourn a 26-year-old driver who was their fearless, larger than life, beloved friend.

‘I could just tell … it was not good’

Tyler Kendall had just finished his hot laps Saturday evening at Lincoln Park Speedway in Putnamville, Indiana, 140 miles northwest of Lawrenceburg. He was walking around the track trying to find the lineup when a guy from another team yelled at him: ‘Hey, did you hear about Justin?’

Kendall had no idea what the guy was talking about. He and Owen had been friends since they were teenagers when they hit it off working as snowboard instructors at Perfect North Slopes in Lawrenceburg. One day up on a ski lift together during a break, Kendall asked Owen what he did for fun. Owen told him he loved to race sprint cars. Kendall’s family raced sprint cars, too. That was that.

The two started hanging out on the weekends. They watched and cheered one another on as each got more skilled and faster on the track. Kendall says Owen was happier than he was when Kendall won his first feature race.

‘What do you mean? What’s wrong with Justin?’ Kendall asked Saturday night. ‘And he said to me, ‘I don’t know, but you might want to try to find out something. I think USAC canceled the race.”

Kendall was in a panic. He immediately sent a message to Fischesser’s wife. ‘I said, ‘Please, please call me.’ And she called me right away and I could just tell by the sounds, the way she was acting, that it was not good.’

Owen was in the midst of his qualifying run when he drifted high into Turn 3, lost control and slammed into the wall. His car went airborne, flipped several times before coming to rest in the middle of the track. USAC immediately red flagged the event just before 6:30 p.m. and, 30 minutes later, the series canceled the event.

Owen’s death was announced by USAC just after midnight April 9, when he should have been drinking Michelob Ultras and Natty Lights, celebrating his first race of the season. Instead, his fellow drivers are left trying to cope, trying to find peace.

In the days since Owen died, Kendall has been thinking a lot about their years together. How he and Owen had grown together in their racing careers. How they would park next to one another at Lawrenceburg. How everyone laughed as he greeted fellow drivers with a flip of the finger, saying, ‘Hey there, sexy.’

‘He was very outgoing and funny. He was kind of the jokester of the group everywhere he went,’ Kendall said. ‘He was always making fun of us, making jokes, dogging on us.’

But mostly, in the days since that horrific crash, Kendall has been thinking about a race early last season when Owen did something he will never forget.

‘A testament to who Justin was’

During hot laps at a race in spring of 2022, Owen’s engine blew up. As Kendall pulled in to pit, Owen heard the Kendall Racing team talking about a rock lodged in the radiator and how, if Kendall raced, it would destroy it. But Kendall didn’t have another radiator.

‘Without even asking, I looked over and he’s taking his car apart and he’s pulling his radiator out to put in my car,’ said Kendall. ‘He wouldn’t accept no as an answer. We ended up running and (placing) second that night at Lawrenceburg.

‘That was a testament to who Justin was.’

Owen loved life, he loved making people happy and if he couldn’t race, he wanted others, even his competitors, to get the chance. The sport was in his blood.

He was six when he talked his dad into getting him his first go cart. ‘Justin was pretty fearless,’ Kendall said. ‘He took to it pretty quick.’ By the time he was 15, Owen was running sprint cars.

Isaac Chapple was working at a store that sold race car parts when Owen walked in years ago. The two shared their love of sprint cars and became friends. Owen came into that store all the time in his early years of racing. He didn’t have a big team behind him, Chapple said, but he would scrape his own money together to buy what he needed.

Chapple said Owen was always smiling. Always. Except when he got serious about racing. ‘He meant it when he got into that car,’ said Chapple, who drives with Isaac Chapple Racing.

‘He packed so much into 26 years of life,’ said Barr. ‘He made so many people happy. He didn’t take himself too seriously. He was just J.O. and people loved J.O.’

Remembering Justin Owen

Owen is survived by his parents, Marita (Mike) Cable, Scott (Niki) Owen, his fiancé, Kenzie Knapp, and his sister Alyssa (Eric) Stone, brother Josh Creech, and step-sister, Ryleigh Dennis. He is also survived by his grandmother, Shirley Standley and grandfather, Mike Marqua.

‘His life was his family, friends and his golden doodles, Louie and Lacie,’ Owen’s obituary says. ‘He also played baseball, football, soccer, basketball, snowboarding and lacrosse. Justin was a 2014 graduate of Harrison High School. He earned a bachelor’s degree in operations management from the University of Cincinnati in 2018. Justin was looking so forward to the next chapter in his life which he was marrying the love of his life, Kenzie Knapp.’

Visitation for Owen is at 9:30 a.m. Thursday at Spring Grove Funeral Homes, 4389 Spring Grove Ave., Cincinnati. Services will follow at 11 a.m. with a reception 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. at the funeral home.

In honor of Justin, donations can be made to Driven to Save Lives: The Bryan Clauson Legacy Fund.

Follow IndyStar sports reporter Dana Benbow on Twitter: @DanaBenbow. Reach her via email: dbenbow@indystar.com.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY