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Alan and Liz Dowd met at a hospital in England. Alan was a doctor, Liz a nurse.

They moved from their birth country to the United States in 1974 for a career opportunity, and raised three boys in Huntsville, Alabama.

Neither Alan nor Liz was too sports oriented, but they got their boys into hockey, perhaps more for the social aspect than anything. Matt and Josh Dowd became strong travel players. Their third son, Nic, 10 and 12 years younger than his brothers, became an NHL center.

“Without them, I would not be where I am today,” Nic Dowd, now a 32-year-old standout with the Washington Capitals, said of his parents. “As a parent myself, I’m just realizing how much of a time commitment that’s required for your kid to get to just practices and the games. And that doesn’t even guarantee they’re gonna be in any good.”

Dowd’s parents navigated his youth sports journey carefully, and did four core things he says helped him get where he is today:

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Allowed experimentation and prevented burnout by not pushing for specialization in a particular sport.Built his confidence through unconditional love and support.Put in the time, trekking to practices, games.Enjoyed the journey, turning road trips and game days into lifelong memories.

Yet there was so much more to that journey. As Nic played mini-sticks hockey with his older brothers in the basement, and then street hockey when he got older; as he tagged along to Nashville, Atlanta, Memphis and Knoxville on weekends for their games; and as their teammates’ called him “Puck,” a family identity with sports was forming.

“I kind of followed in their footsteps,” Dowd told USA TODAY Sports. “It wasn’t like I blew the doors off of it and I was like a phenom when I was like 12 years old. I rarely ever felt any pressure from my parents to succeed at sports at all. Sports for me, and then for them, was looked upon as something that should be enjoyed rather than work.”

His parents, brothers and now his wife, Paige, and their two young children, Louie (3 years old) and Ruby (3 1/2 months) helped drive him to the mountaintop, where Nic and Paige run the Dowd’s Crowd foundation to support autistic kids. 

Dowd’s hockey career from the day he got his first pair of skates from Benton Wilcoxon at Huntsville’s ice complex, as well as his work with Dowd’s Crowd, offer lessons for parents of kids who play any sport. 

After all, Nic tried most of them: Hockey, baseball, soccer, basketball, golf. 

“If I didn’t like it, I moved on,” Nic said. “I joined the swim team for one day and remember I faked an injury and never went back because I hated it.” 

Let kids try out multiple sports

“If anybody tries to make you decide between one or two or three sports at too young of an age,” Dowd said, “I think those types of people need to be — I’m not gonna say cut out of your life, but I think it’s the parents’ responsibility to advocate for their kids to be able to try and do as much they possibly want to do. I believe playing multiple sports is the best thing for a kid. You don’t want to burn him out too early and, on top of it, you just get so much better at all three sports.”

Nic credits his athleticism to him chasing around his older brothers as they played sports. Alan Dowd found the differing sports still blended together. Baseball helped your hand-eye coordination at hockey, or you could kick the puck with your feet because you played a lot of soccer.

“I think you can come across parents who really push sports on their kids to the point where the kid gets burned out and doesn’t want to do it anymore,” says Paige Dowd, who grew up near St. Cloud, Minn., where she got into gymnastics and golf. “In Minnesota, you can see that because hockey is such a big sport that’s everywhere. And so, I think when I met Nic, I realized his parents are just super supportive of whatever he wanted to do. And they provided everything he needed to get to where he is.”

Paige has already enrolled Louie in tee ball, golf and soccer. And, of course, they have him on skates. They were nervous he would fall before the instructor let him go off on his on, and Louie could do it.

“I think the biggest thing in hockey and for children is confidence,” Nic says.

He admits he will be disappointed if his son doesn’t get into his sport.

“Yeah, for sure,” he says. “I would never tell him that. If he wanted to be a musician, I’d be more than happy to sit through all those performances as well.”  

Build confidence through love and advocacy

Through Dowd’s Crowd, families with autistic children can apply to attend a Capitals game, after which they meet Dowd. He said the parents who advocate for their children shine through in the letters they write as part of the nomination form. 

“Those are the ones who get selected,” he said. “It’s not as much about raising a child as it is about cultivating a kid and allowing them to grow in the direction that they want to grow but also providing them with the ability to be safe and responsible and be loved.

‘We try and let Louie know we love him every single day and how big a piece of our life he is. I don’t need Louie to love me every single day, but I need him to know that he’s loved every single day.”

Put in the work: Youth sports takes a lot of time and coordination

Nic remembers his mom picking him up for soccer and taking him straight to hockey practice. He’d go right from a baseball game to a hockey game and vice versa. 

By the time he finished ninth grade, he was an elite travel player at all three sports and he felt he had to choose. His parents sent him to Culver Military Academy in Indiana to focus on hockey.

“His mom still talks about that,” Paige said. “And now that I have my own kids, I can totally relate to how it would be sad to have them leave that young. But I think they knew in Alabama he wasn’t gonna get what he needed.”

Along the way, Nic’s parents sent him to hockey camps in New York and Chicago. When they were home, they drove him to tournaments across the Southeast almost every weekend. 

But even if you don’t have the financial means, there are simpler ways to improve. Alan Dowd, for example, was always big into making his sons better skaters. Nic said he felt being that specific was more work than play, but he regrets not listening more to his dad.

“Like the same stuff that he was harping on when I was 10 years old is literally the same stuff that people tell me in exit meetings of NHL coaches,” he said. “I guess if I had to think of something that I would pass down to Lou it’s that there’s gonna be people that are better than you, but what you lack in talent, you can make up with in work ethic and a lot of people don’t want to work. So you can build your career on outworking people. And not even in sports, but in life.

“I would try and make Lou to be, like, an incredible skater and make that the most important thing and then kind of build on top of that.”

Enjoy the road trips, have fun and create memories

Liz Dowd asked Nic when he was about 5 what he wanted to be when he grew up. 

“If I don’t play in the NHL, I’ll be veterinarian,” he told her. “I went to school for biomedicine and I ended up playing in the NHL.” 

He remembers how excited his father was when he got into the St. Cloud State University, where he played hockey for four years and met Paige. 

These days, his dad, mom and brothers watch almost every Capitals game on TV. In March, Alan Dowd and brother Josh, an occupational therapist, attended a road trip to New York as part of a trip the Capitals hosted for dads and mentors to players.

“There’s been two fathers trips, he’s been to four games, and I have a goal in each game,” Nic says. “Getting to see my dad after the game, that’s a capstone memory for sure.”

Capitals coach Peter Laviolette had the players introduce their special guests at a dinner. Alan, now 83 and retired from practicing family medicine, and Josh hadn’t arrived yet, but Nic still thought about what he would have said:

“This is my dad, Alan. This is his second father’s trip and without him, I wouldn’t be standing in front of you guys today. It means everything for me to have him here and watching his kid play hockey. And now that I’m a dad, I hope I get the same moment in my life.”

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ youth teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now loving life as sports parents for a high schooler and middle schooler.

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This Saturday marks the 10th anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombing that killed three people and injured hundreds more on April 15, 2013. It’s one of the more cataclysmic events in the history of the city. That moment of terror, and the aftermath, is chronicled with both skill and extreme bluntness in the Netflix documentary ‘American Manhunt: The Boston Marathon Bombing.’

The three-part series chronicles the moments the initial bomb exploded and the events that led to the capture of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. 

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Memphis men’s basketball signee Mikey Williams is being linked to an arrest Thursday afternoon on five felony counts of assault with a firearm, according to multiple reports.

Michael Anthony Williams, whose birthdate is listed as June 26, 2004 on an arrest report obtained by NBC 7 San Diego, was released on $50,000 bail shortly after midnight Friday. According to a copy of the arrest report obtained by NBC 7 San Diego, Williams was booked at 3:24 p.m. PT. The arrest report lists Williams as 6-foot-3, 180 pounds.

NBC 7 San Diego reported it provided multiple photos of Williams to a sheriff’s department spokesperson. The spokesperson said those photos matched the booking photo for the person the sheriff’s office had in custody. Williams is due in court April 20, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Text messages sent by The Memphis Commercial Appeal, an affiliate of the USA TODAY Network, to Williams’ father, Mahlon, as well as his uncle and business adviser, Patrick McCain, were not immediately returned.

The University of Memphis issued the following statement Friday morning: ‘We are aware of the situation and are gathering more information.’

California is widely considered to have the toughest gun laws in the country.

In November 2022, Williams signed a national letter of intent to play college basketball for coach Penny Hardaway at Memphis. Williams, rated a five-star guard and the No. 26 overall recruit in the Class of 2023 by 247Sports Composite, recently completed his senior season at San Ysidro High School in San Diego.

A social media sensation with a following on Instagram of more than 3.8 million, Williams’ name, image and likeness is worth an estimated $3.3 million, according to On3.com.

Williams’ Instagram account was deactivated early Friday morning.

Williams is one of four high school seniors signed by Memphis last fall. Hardaway’s Tigers finished 26-9 this season, losing in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

Reach sports writer Jason Munz at jason.munz@commercialappeal.com or on Twitter @munzly.

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The Anaheim Ducks slumped down the stretch to finish last in the league and gain the best odds for the NHL draft lottery.

But Dallas Eakins won’t be around to coach Connor Bedard if the Ducks manage to land the top overall pick on May 8 and draft the generational talent.

The Ducks announced Friday that the team wasn’t renewing Eakins contract after he had spent four seasons with the parent club and eight in the organization.

“This was a very difficult decision, one that comes after careful and considerable deliberation,” Ducks general manager Pat Verbeek said in a statement. “At the end of the day, I simply feel that a fresh perspective and new voice will be beneficial for the team. Dallas has handled himself with class and character through a difficult season, and we wish him the best in the future.”

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Verbeek, who was hired in February 2022, inherited Eakins as coach. After trading away several pending unrestricted free agents that season, Verbeek made offseason moves to try to improve on the team’s 76-point finish.

Veterans Ryan Strome, Frank Vatrano, John Klingberg and Dmitry Kulikov were added to help bring along youngsters Troy Terry, Travis Zegras, Mason McTavish and Jamie Drysdale. But Drysdale suffered a season-ending shoulder injury in October.

With the team struggling, Verbeek moved defensemen Klingberg and Kulikov at the trade deadline. Anaheim had only three wins after the deadline and went 0-11-2 down the stretch to finish with a league-worst 58 points and 13 regulation wins. The Ducks ranked second-to-last in power play and penalty kill and last in goal differential (-129).

Eakins, who previously coached the Edmonton Oilers, finished his Ducks tenure with a 100-147-44 record.

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The Denver Police Department is asking the public for help identifying a suspect who attacked Colorado Rockies mascot ‘Dinger’ during a recent home game.

The incident occurred Monday night as the Rockies played the St. Louis Cardinals at Coors Field. Dinger was dancing atop the Rockies’ dugout when a fan tackled Dinger and brought him down.

The incident is under investigation.

‘We’re working with the Rockies to try to identify the individual who was involved,’  Denver Police spokesman Doug Schepman said in a statement provided to the Denver Post. ‘We’re looking at all the available evidence.’

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A video of the attack has surfaced on social media. The attacker was wearing a blue jacket at the time of the incident. Denver Police are deeming the attack as an assault case. They are hoping more evidence comes forward to find the attacker.

Police also released a photo of the suspect and anyone with information to contact Metro Denver Crime Stoppers. According to Fox 31 KDVR, any new information could be subject to a potential $2,000 reward.

Dinger has been a part of the Rockies organization since 1994. He is a beloved fan favorite that hypes the crowd during home games.

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The NBA fined the Dallas Mavericks $750,000 ‘for conduct detrimental to the league in an elimination game against the Chicago Bulls on April 7,’ the league said in a news release on Friday.

The league said the Mavs ‘violated the league’s player resting policy and demonstrated through actions and public statements the organization’s desire to lose the game in order to improve the chances of keeping its first-round pick in the 2023 NBA draft. The league did not find that the players who participated in the game were not playing to win.’

NBA executive vice president and head of basketball operations Joe Dumars said, ‘The Dallas Mavericks’ decision to restrict key players from fully participating in an elimination game last Friday against Chicago undermined the integrity of our sport. The Mavericks’ actions failed our fans and our league.’

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On April 7, the Mavs were in position to make the postseason, but against the Bulls, they rested several players, including healthy players. Star guard Luka Doncic played just 12 minutes, 35 seconds in Chicago’s 115-112 victory, eliminating Dallas from the postseason.

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Dallas coach Jason Kidd said before the game an ‘organizational decision’ was made by owner Mark Cuban and general manager Nico Harrison to limit Doncic to the first quarter while sitting Kyrie Irving and four other regulars when Dallas still had a chance to catch Oklahoma City for the final play-in spot as the 10th seed in the West.

‘It’s not so much waving the white flag,’ Kidd said. ‘It’s decisions sometimes are hard in this business. We’re trying to build a championship team. With this decision, this is maybe a step back. But hopefully it leads to going forward.’

By missing the postseason, the Mavs could have a top-10 pick in the 2023 draft. That pick would’ve been in jeopardy and possibly been New York’s pick had the Mavs made the postseason. As part of the trade that sent Kristaps Porzingis to Dallas from the Knicks in 2019, the Mavs gave the Knicks a first-round pick that is protected picks 1-10.

By finishing as one of the 10 worst teams, it’s unlikely the Mavs will fall out of the top 10 in the draft lottery, meaning they would retain their first-round pick in the draft.

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LSU softball coach Beth Torina couldn’t help but smile.

A pair of trading cards were tucked into the back pocket of a 10U softball player on her daughter’s team. The cards featured LSU softball Danieca Coffey (third base) and Ali Newland (outfield/catcher).

‘She had Danieca so she could run fast and Ali so she could throw it far,’ Torina told USA TODAY Sports. ‘It was cute.’

Torina had to capture the moment. It symbolized the unique bond LSU women’s sports have with the local community.

According to LSU, women’s athletics has seen a sharp increase in attendance for multiple sports. For example, LSU softball averaged 1,580 fans at home games in 2018 and the number jumped to an average of 2,023 last season. 

This year, LSU softball has already eclipsed 42,000 total fans. A recent home game against top-ranked Oklahoma drew 3,073 fans. They say the increased support has positively impacted LSU’s ability to recruit and build successful programs.

‘I think it’s really awesome to bring up recruiting and show our facilities and our commitment to women’s athletics,’ Torina said. ‘It is something we can be really proud of and something that draws a lot of great athletes to LSU.’ 

Attendance soars for LSU women’s sports

LSU has 11 women’s sports, including basketball, gymnastics, beach volleyball, soccer and softball. The LSU women’s basketball team set records during their NCAA championship run. The Tigers drew 148,468 total fans across 36 games. Earlier this season, LSU had 11,475 fans against Auburn and 15,157 fans attended the Pete Maravich Assembly Center against Tennessee.

In the NCAA national championship game, LSU and Iowa set records as the most-viewed game in tournament history, according to ESPN. The game reached 9.9 million viewers and peaked at 12.6 million during the contest.

LSU gymnastics has also thrived with devoted fan support, averaging 12,075 fans at home meets to lead the Southeastern Conference.

‘Fans have so much admiration for [the players] and they are role models,’ Torina said.

In 2021, LSU soccer set a record with 3,021 fans for a single home game. Meanwhile, the LSU volleyball team reached 105,000 followers and generated 1.6 million viral impressions, which are engagements from non-followers, across platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

What has led to the increased fan support? LSU gymnastics coach Jay Clark said fans are drawn to the allure of the campus and its athletic teams.

‘This place is unique and different in terms of the passion that people have,’ Clark said. ‘It really wasn’t hard to build it. Now, you have to win to sustain it. They really got behind us very quickly.’

Geaux Tigers: NCAA championship runs trickle down

LSU made a big splash by hiring women’s basketball coach Kim Mulkey after the 2020-21 season. Mulkey brought a championship pedigree to the athletic program. There was increased visibility for the basketball team, and it trickled down to other women’s sports.

‘I think women’s basketball winning the national championship puts LSU in front of a lot of faces and on a lot of TV screens,’ Torina said. ‘I think that’s good for all of us.’

LSU soccer and volleyball then both made the NCAA tournament. The women’s track team climbed to No. 1 in the nation, the women’s golf team is ranked No. 3 overall and beach volleyball is No. 5.

Meanwhile, the LSU gymnastics team is headed to the NCAA finals.

‘We knew we had unique situation in terms of a fan base that was kind of untapped 10 years ago,’ Clark said about his early years at LSU. ‘To be able to get out in the community and give our fans access to our athletes was sort of the key for driving that. Along with that, the program has become more successful than it has been before.’

A cultural shift for women’s sports helps drive recruiting at LSU

Overall interest in women’s sports has also impacted recruiting, according to LSU women’s coaches. Clark said recruits are drawn to LSU’s culture. He outlined vast facilities, fan support and athletic programs as key factors. Those things also helped Mulkey recruit nine new players ahead of the 2022 season. 

She recalled key standout Kateri Poole, who transferred from Ohio State, saying the Tigers’ fans swayed her decision to enroll.

‘She goes, ‘I’ve never seen anything in my life, like the LSU fans inside the PMAC,” Mulke said.

This offseason, LSU women’s basketball has the No. 1 recruiting class in nation. The Tigers will welcome top high-school recruit Mikaylah Williams to Baton Rouge. She won two gold medals and is the Louisiana Gatorade Player of the Year. Williams will be joined by Aalyah Del Rosario, who the No. 7 in the 2023 class, Angelica Velez and Jane Kent.

LSU gymnastics has also recruited well. Clark brought in top athletes Haleigh Bryant, Aleah Finnegan and Bryce Wilson. Each have earned All-SEC honors. LSU also has Tik Tok sensation Olivia Dunne, who helps keep LSU in headlines and shattered records for NIL deals for women athletes.

‘I think it’s really awesome to bring up recruiting and show our facilities and our commitment to women’s athletics,’ Torina said. ‘It is something we can be really proud of and something that draws a lot of great athletes to LSU.’

Other top women athletes on campus include track stars Thelma Davies and Shani’a Bellamy and swimming sensation Maggie MacNeil.

‘I call it the light that draws the flies,’ Clark said of the fan support and team facilities . ‘I tell everybody, if I can get them on campus, I have an 80% chance of getting them.’

LSU continues to build towards sustained success. 

From top-notch facilities to increased benefits in sports psychology and cryotherapy, LSU has built a program that interests fans and prospective athletes.

‘Everybody in the state of Louisiana loves the LSU Tigers,’ Clark said.

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FIRST ON FOX: The Democrats in the Oregon state legislature were excoriated by the legislature’s Republican leaders for passing the ‘most extreme abortion and gender-altering legislation in our nation’s history’ out of committee.

Thursday saw Oregon House Bill 2002A expanding abortion access and ‘gender-affirming treatment’ pass through the Beaver State’s Joint Committee on Ways and Means on Thursday without any Republican support.

Oregon Senate Republican Leader Tim Knopp and House Republican Leader Vikki Breese-Iverson released a lengthy statement condemning the passage of the bill out of committee.

‘Tonight, during the Joint Committee on Ways and Means, despite uncertain facts and unanswered questions, Oregon Democrats passed the most extreme abortion and gender-altering legislation in our nation’s history,’ the GOP leaders wrote.

‘The legislative manipulation witnessed tonight was too fast and too extreme for Oregon. In less than an hour of debate in tonight’s meeting, without public input and minimal time for Q&A, Democrat leadership forced this bill through knowing that there will be no further opportunity for public input,’ they continued.

‘During the committee meeting, Democrat committee leadership audibly gasped when Legislative Counsel confirmed that 10-year-olds would be able to get abortions without parental knowledge under the legislation they were ‘intimately involved with crafting,’’ the lawmakers wrote.

Knopp and Breese-Iverson said that as ‘Democrat committee leadership stated tonight, Republicans ‘should have known this was coming’ and prepared accordingly.’

‘We did know, we did prepare, we did come equipped with thorough questions,’ the GOP leaders said. ‘They simply could not answer them and would not give us more time.’

‘If this policy was truly a well-crafted, well-vetted Democrat priority, why were government attorneys unable to answer the questions asked of them tonight with even an ounce of certainty?’ they asked.

The lawmakers noted there ‘are 73 days left in this Legislative Session’ and said the ‘time constraint argued by the Democrats is self-imposed,’ as they ‘are in the majority, and they set the agenda.’

‘House and Senate Republicans will continue to stand for the safety of children and the rights of parents,’ Knopp and Breese-Iverson said. ‘This is a day we won’t soon forget.’

The bill would shield patients and providers from civil or criminal liability as more states ban abortion following the Dobbs ruling and allow a person to sue someone who interfered with their receipt of reproductive health care.

The bill prohibits health care providers from disclosing minor patients’ use of ‘reproductive health care information or services’ to their parent or legal guardian without authorization from the patient.

The measure would allow doctors to provide reproductive health care services, including abortion, ‘to any person without regard to the age.’

‘If a physician, physician assistant, nurse practitioner, pharmacist or naturopathic physician provides reproductive health care information or services to a minor as described in ORS 109.640 (2), the physician, physician assistant, nurse practitioner, pharmacist or naturopathic physician may not disclose to the minor’s parent or legal guardian information regarding the information and services provided unless: (a) The minor has authorized the disclosure in writing; (b) The disclosure is authorized under ORS 192.567; or (c) The disclosure is otherwise required by federal law.’

A spokesperson for the Oregon Senate Democratic Caucus told Fox News Digital this ‘bill protects Oregonians’ basic rights and freedoms, specifically the right to make decisions about their own bodies.’

‘This is a right our state has protected for decades. We’re taking common sense steps to restore the rights Oregonians’ had before Roe was overturned,’ the spokesperson continued. ‘This bill does not tell doctors or patients what medical decisions to make, nor change parental consent protocols, nor allow doctors to go against standard medical procedure.’

‘Following standard process, this bill has been thoroughly vetted by multiple committees, subject-matter experts, and the public,’ they continued. ‘Republicans followed these same procedures when they were in the majority.’

Additionally, the bill would require gender-affirming care that is medically prescribed to be covered under insurance. 

Oregon Democrats made the bill one of their top priorities after Roe v. Wade was overturned last year.

Democrat Rep. Tawna Sanchez did not immediately responded to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment.

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Pentagon files leaker Jack Teixeira faces a lengthy prison sentence and hefty fines for his crime, but any sentence will depend on the full impact of the leaked information. 

‘If he downloaded 50 documents at one time, they could charge him with the retention of 50 documents or they could do 50 different charges of retention,’ Cully Stimson, senior legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation and former Navy JAG, told Fox News Digital. ‘There’s sort of an art in how you charge these things or how you indict these things.’

FBI agents arrested Teixeira, a Massachusetts Air National Guardsmen, at a home in North Dighton, Massachusetts, on Thursday in relation to a trove of classified documents that have been leaked online in recent months.

President Biden has said nothing leaked was ‘of great consequence,’ but White House national security spokesman John Kirby warned Wednesday, ‘We don’t know what else this individual or individuals might have and might still release.’  

Prosecutors on Friday charged Teixeira with unauthorized retention and transmission of national defense information and willful retention of classified documents. He did not enter a plea and was ordered detained pending a hearing set for Wednesday, April 19, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts.

Merrick Garland, the U.S. attorney general, used the 1917 Espionage Act when discussing charges against Teixeira, which would carry a sentence of up to 15 years in prison – ten years for the first charge, and five for the second. 

‘This criminal complaint gives us a hint, a big hint, about what the government thinks they have, what he did and where they’re going,’ Stimson said. He explained that if the case is as ‘cut and dry’ as the current facts indicate, the case will not take long to try. 

‘You can predict what a defense would be here,’ he continued. ‘This is a young, confused man. He was lonely. He had no one outside his little chat group to see this. He trusted them. He’s not a foreign agent. He’s not acting at the behest of a foreign agent. He’s a young guy. There’s no reason to ruin his life.’

The evidence may be so clear that Pentagon files leaker Jack Teixeira’s guilty sentence is just a matter of time, but the scope of his punishment depends on how damaging the leak proved to be – meaning that nothing is off the table, including the death penalty. 

‘In federal law, depending on how this is charged and depending on what they find out in their exploitation and collection of evidence – if, for example, we found out that the disclosures resulted in the death or deaths of individuals, and that was reasonably foreseeable, I can envision a hypothetical, factual scenario where the government asks for capital punishment.’ 

He pointed to the case of Chelsea Manning, who downloaded hundreds of thousands of files and gave them to WikiLeaks, who subsequently published the documents in full. The leak included the identities of people in Afghanistan who were helping the U.S. military. 

‘It was reasonably foreseeable that the Taliban and al-Qaeda would hunt those Afghan translators and others down and kill them, and in fact, that’s what happened,’ Stimson said. ‘But we didn’t know that at the beginning of the case, and we don’t know yet the full extent of what [Teixeira’s] done, and we don’t know the full extent of the damage that these disclosures have done.’

Biden has publicly opposed execution as a method of punishment, but his Department of Justice pushed for the use of capital punishment in the case of the Boston Marathon bomber, seeking to overturn a lower court ruling that vacated the decision. 

Rebekah Koffler, president of Doctrine & Strategy Consulting and a former Defense Intelligence Agency officer, claimed that the disclosures could have a ‘destructive impact’ on the country’s ability to collect intelligence.

‘It takes years to recruit human sources who are willing to betray their country and steal secrets from his/her country’s government and provide them to the United States,’ she explained. ‘It takes years and billions of dollars to map out access to adversarial (or allied) networks and systems, in order to intervene in their communications,’ Koffler said.

‘Now, some of these sources and channels will be patched up, closed and unusable by U.S. spy agencies. And massive amounts of taxpayers’ money will be wasted,’ she added. ‘Overall, the impact of this leak is disastrous.’

The evidence against Teixeira, who shared the documents with a small group of friends in a private online chat server, creates what Stimson referred to as a ‘slow plea,’ in which the guilt is ‘so overwhelmingly obvious that the defense can either try the case if the defendant wants to have a trial, or they just seek the best plea they can get and get it over with.’

‘You’re either an authorized recipient of classified information or you’re not – there’s no gray zone,’ Stimson added. ‘It doesn’t matter if you have a super secret cabal of little gamer weirdos and there’s only 12 or 15 or 25 in your little weirdo group.’

‘If they haven’t been vetted by the government and given top-secret security clearances, it doesn’t matter if it’s private or not: It matters whether it’s authorized to receive classified information.’

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The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has charged itself with damaging the habitat of threatened and endangered birds it is legally bound to protect.The Garden State’s Division of Fish and Wildlife was sent a violation notice for unauthorized habitat construction for the American woodcock, which unwittingly displaced barred owl and red-shouldered hawk populations in Gloucester County.’This never should have happened. They must also take steps to improve their clearly inadequate internal review process and meaningfully engage the public,’ New Jersey Conservation Foundation head Tom Gilbert said.

New Jersey’s Department of Environmental Protection has charged itself with damaging habitat for threatened and endangered birds that it was supposed to protect.

The work was designed to create habitat for one species of bird, but actually wound up destroying habitat for two others.

The department acknowledged it sent a violation notice and threatened penalties against its own Division of Fish and Wildlife regarding unauthorized work in February and March at the Glassboro Wildlife Management Area in Clayton, Gloucester County.

It was unclear how any penalties might work when the DEP is both the accuser and the accused. It also was not immediately clear whether any money might actually change hands. The department did not respond to questions about potential fines.

The work involved the clearing of vegetation and disturbance of soils on nearly 3 acres of what the state calls ‘exceptional resource value freshwater wetlands.’ Before the work was done, this land was considered suitable habitat for the barred owl, which is listed as a threatened species, and the red-shouldered hawk, an endangered species.

The project also cleared and disturbed an additional 12 acres of land near wetlands known as transition areas, which also are protected.

The DEP refused Friday to discuss how the work happened without authorization.

On its website, the department wrote on Feb. 1 that the work sought to create 21 acres of habitat for the American woodcock, a member of the sandpiper family that uses its long, narrow beak to forage for earthworms in damp soil. The project was designed to create ‘meadow habitat.’

But in doing so, the state destroyed mature oak and pine forests in and near wetlands, and filled in some wetlands, four conservation groups said in a letter to the department in early March complaining about the work. The agency issued the violation notice on April 6.

‘The wetland soil and flora that were previously undisturbed have been destroyed, and the mature forest that was already habitat for numerous rare species of plants and birds was clear-cut logged,’ the groups wrote. ‘All trees have been cut, and all stumps bulldozed.’

Tom Gilbert, a leader of the New Jersey Conservation Foundation, said, ‘This never should have happened. They must also take steps to improve their clearly inadequate internal review process and meaningfully engage the public.’

Jaclyn Rhoads, assistant executive director of the Pinelands Preservation Alliance, commended the state for owning up to its mistake, but said the DEP should provide a list of current projects on its website for public review.

‘It is because of the public that we were able to stop further destruction of this landscape,’ she said.

Agency spokesman Larry Hajna said the Fish and Wildlife Division’s Bureau of Land Management must implement appropriate soil conservation measures within 10 days and submit a plan within 30 days to restore the site. That must include removal of wood chips placed there.

By the end of April, the DEP intends to issue a notice of penalty assessment.

Fish and Wildlife will propose additional environmentally beneficial measures, which will be subject to a public comment period, Hajna said.

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