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Sam Bankman-Fried was sentenced Thursday to 25 years in prison for his role in defrauding users of the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX.

In a federal courtroom in lower Manhattan, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan called the defense argument misleading, logically flawed and speculative.

He said Bankman-Fried had obstructed justice and tampered with witnesses in mounting his defense — something Kaplan said he weighed in his sentencing decision.

Bankman-Fried, wearing a beige jailhouse jumpsuit, struck an apologetic tone, saying he had made a series of ‘selfish’ decisions while leading FTX and ‘threw it all away.’

‘It haunts me every day,’ he said in his statement.

Prosecutors had sought as much as 50 years, while Bankman-Fried’s legal team argued for no more than 6½ years. He was convicted on seven criminal counts in November and had been held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn since.

In a statement following Thursday’s sentencing, Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, said Bankman-Fried had orchestrated one of the largest frauds in financial history.

“Today’s sentence will prevent the defendant from ever again committing fraud and is an important message to others who might be tempted to engage in financial crimes that justice will be swift, and the consequences will be severe,” he said.

Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement that there are “serious consequences for defrauding customers and investors.”

“Anyone who believes they can hide their financial crimes behind wealth and power, or behind a shiny new thing they claim no one else is smart enough to understand, should think twice,’ he said. 

Bankman-Fried plans to appeal both the conviction and the sentence. A spokesperson for his parents said in a statement on their behalf: “We are heartbroken and will continue to fight for our son.”

Bankman-Fried’s lawyers had pleaded for leniency, citing what they described as mental health struggles and his purported generosity in his personal life. They also argued that FTX users had not ultimately suffered substantial losses — something current FTX administrator John Ray said was false in a letter to Kaplan in advance of Thursday’s sentencing.

But prosecutors argued the brazenness of the crime, the extent of the victims’ losses and damages and Bankman-Fried’s evident lack of remorse meant a harsher sentence was warranted.

Late Tuesday, prosecutors filed documents from victims testifying about how Bankman-Fried’s actions had harmed them.

“My whole life has been destroyed,” wrote one, whose name was redacted, in a letter dated March 15. “I have 2 young children, one born right before the collapse. I still remember the weeks following where I would stare blankly into their eyes, completely empty inside knowing their futures have been stolen through no fault of our own. I did not gamble on crypto. I did not make any crypto gains. I had my [bitcoin] which I had collected over years deposited on FTX as a custodian. I did not agree to the risk that SBF took with my funds.” 

The man added he was suffering from depression and that his wife had become suicidal.

“I know we can never make that kind of money back ever again,” he wrote.

Another person wrote about how the loss of funds had affected numerous life plans, including a wedding.

“Each passing day is a painful reminder of the opportunities stolen from me, compounding feelings of hopelessness and despair,’ the person wrote. ‘The burden of financial ruin weighs heavily on my shoulders, leading me to grapple with constant thoughts of suicide and significantly impairing my ability to perform at work.”

In the recent annals of white-collar crime, Bankman-Fried’s sentence is similar to what others found guilty have received. Former WorldCom CEO Bernie Ebbers received 25 years. Former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling received 24 years.

Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes received about 11 years. Bernie Madoff received 150 years and died in prison at age 82.

FTX was once valued at more than $30 billion, with Bankman-Fried’s net worth estimated at more than $20 billion. FTX collapsed in November 2022 after it was revealed that it had a major cash shortfall.

At his trial, prosecutors said Bankman-Fried robbed FTX customers of as much as $8 billion to fund a vast array of outside interests, including political initiatives, speculative investments and funding of FTX executives’ lifestyles.

Three other FTX executives testified against him.

Bankman-Fried “didn’t bargain for his three loyal deputies taking that stand and telling you the truth: that he was the one with the plan, the motive and the greed to raid FTX customer deposits — billions and billions of dollars — to give himself money, power, influence. He thought the rules did not apply to him. He thought that he could get away with it,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Danielle Sassoon told the jury.

Bankman-Fried’s defense argued that he was merely borrowing the funds to run his Alameda Research investment group, which he believed was allowed, and that he was unaware of how much debt he had racked up.

He said he “made a number of small mistakes and a number of larger mistakes.’

Yet many experts agreed Bankman-Fried came across as an unsympathetic figure. Paul Tuchmann, a former federal prosecutor who is now a partner with Wiggin and Dana LLP, told CNBC that Bankman-Fried’s testimony had been ‘unpersuasive’ and noted it took the jury only three hours to convict him on each count.

Trial attorney James Koutoulas said in an CNBC interview, “No one had a shred of support for SBF, nor should they have.”

The U.S. Bureau of Prisons will consider which federal penitentiary to send him to.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

Brazilian soccer star Neymar Jr. has spent the week in Miami, begging the question: Will he attend Inter Miami’s soccer game on Saturday night?

While Neymar’s close friend Lionel Messi won’t play Saturday against New York City FC, could Neymar attend the match, watch his former Barcelona teammates Luis Suarez, Jordi Alba and Sergio Busquets now shining with Inter Miami, and take in the MLS scenery?

Neymar has already indulged in an action-packed sports week in Miami, attending a Heat game, watching some Miami Open tennis with Heat star Jimmy Butler, and he even threw the opening pitch at the Marlins season opener.

He also spent Thursday night having dinner with Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham, to which Beckham playfully acknowledged in an Instagram post on Friday morning.

‘Welcome to Miami my friend (only for dinner),’ Beckham wrote to caption his photo with his wife Victoria posting with Neymar.

Neymar says he wants to play with Messi again

Neymar, who also experienced a tough time like Messi did with Paris Saint-Germain, recently expressed his desire to play with Messi again.

‘Hopefully, we can play together again,’ Neymar said at the Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix last month.

‘Leo is a great person, everyone knows him in football and I think he is very happy and if he is happy, I am too.’

Could Neymar actually join Messi, Inter Miami?

Neymar is under contract with Saudi Arabian powerhouse Al Hilal through 2025, but details of his salary are murky.

French publication L’Equipe reported Neymar would make $175 million, while another report said he agreed to a deal of $300 million that could reach up to $400 million. The Athletic reported Al Hilal paid $104 million transfer fee just to get Neymar from PSG.

It’s also important to note Neymar signed with Al Hilal despite previously being under contract with PSG until 2025, so contracts could be amicably broken.

Along with Neymar’s statement he would like to reunite with Messi again, Neymar previously expressed interest in wanting to play in Major League Soccer during a podcast in February 2022.

‘I’d love to play in the U.S., actually,’ Neymar said. ‘I’d love to play there at least for a season.’

Neymar is recovering from a torn ACL and meniscus in his left knee, suffered during a World Cup qualifying match with Brazil last October. It’s unclear when he’ll be healthy to return to action, including Brazil’s bid to win Copa America 2024 this summer.

Neymar throws first pitch at Marlins season opener

Neymar threw the first pitch in the Marlins’ season opener on Thursday afternoon.

Neymar attends another Miami Heat game

Neymar attended the Miami Heat game against the Golden State Warriors on Tuesday, speaking with his former Barcelona teammate Busquets and meeting Warriors stars Klay Thompson and Draymond Green.

Neymar attends Miami Open with Jimmy Butler

Neymar and his close friend Butler watched tennis star Carlos Alcaraz in action on Monday night.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Angel Flores wants people to understand something about transgender athletes. These are frightening times for them.

“All athletes need that good mental game to keep things in check,” Flores, herself a multisport athlete, told USA TODAY. “I don’t see how a trans athlete can have a good mental game with everything that’s going on with the news, with waking up every morning and seeing another bill dropped, another law passed, another person has been persecuted, or jailed, or assaulted, or killed.” 

What’s often missing from the discussion of transgender athletes is hearing from those athletes themselves. They are talked about, but their own words are often ignored by the mainstream media. Or what they say isn’t reported.

This project seeks to change that. USA TODAY journalists interviewed four transgender athletes, including Flores, to provide a space to tell their stories.

We’re using a video format so you can hear the true experience of trans athletes in their words. 

This project is needed now more than ever. Laws in several dozen states restrict trans athletes from participating in teams or divisions that align with their gender identities. Similar bills or regulations have been introduced in other parts of the country.

One of the main goals of supporters of these bills is to both demonize and spread misinformation about the trans community. They’ve identified sports as a vehicle to attack transgender people. Some cisgender athletes, in fact, have taken legal action to try and stop trans athletes from competing in various events across the country.

Flores and other athletes said they want to dispel myths. Like others, Flores, a cast member from season six of the show ‘Queer Eye,’ said people pushing to ban trans athletes often cite their unfair advantage because of hormone therapy. 

Flores explained that isn’t true. Hormone replacement therapy can, in fact, lessen some people’s abilities, she and other trans athletes say. Other factors, like improved mental health after receiving HRT, could contribute to people excelling at their sport.

But also, and perhaps more importantly, like many other trans athletes, she is doing what she loves. This is her story. This is the story of many transgender and gender-nonconforming athletes. Told by them. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Less than a week after head men’s basketball coach Mark Byington left to take over at Vanderbilt, James Madison University has found his successor.

JMU announced on Friday the hiring of Morehead State’s Preston Spradlin, giving the two-time Ohio Valley Conference coach of the year a six-year deal to come to Harrisonburg, Virginia.

Under Byington, the Dukes tied for the most regular-season wins in Division I men’s basketball this season, posting a 31-3 record and then upsetting fifth-seeded Wisconsin in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. After Duke eliminated 12th-seeded JMU in the tourney’s second round, Byington took the job at Vanderbilt.

Spradlin led Morehead State to back-to-back OVC regular-season titles in 2022-23 and 2023-24. The Eagles went 26-9 this season and were a No. 14 seed in the NCAA Tournament, losing to No. 3 seed Illinois in the first round.

‘Preston stood out at the top of our list as we researched candidates based upon the resume that he’s built at a very young age as a head coach,’ JMU Director of Athletics Jeff Bourne said. ‘Once we met with him, it was even more evident that he’s the total package in a head coach.’

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Spradlin, 37, began his coaching career as a graduate assistant to Rick Pitino at Kentucky before moving to Morehead State in 2014 as an assistant. He took over, first as interim coach in 2016 and later as permanent head coach, leading the Eagles to an overall record of 140-109 (.562) with two NCAA Tournament and one NIT appearance over eight seasons.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NFL free agency has already seen the bulk of its action, and the draft will be held from April 25-27.

But April is also the month when NFL teams begin the first of three phases of their voluntary offseason workout programs.

The earliest ones will start on April 2 for teams that have new head coaches. That group includes the Los Angeles Chargers’ Jim Harbaugh, Atlanta Falcons’ Raheem Morris and Washington Commanders’ Dan Quinn.

The Carolina Panthers, New England Patriots, Seattle Seahawks and Tennessee Titans, who also have new coaches, will start on April 8.

The two-time defending champion Kansas City Chiefs and the rest of the NFL teams will open on April 15.

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Here are the dates for each team’s offseason programs plus rules on the three phases:

​Arizona Cardinals

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-22, May 28-30, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Atlanta Falcons

First day: April 2

Voluntary minicamp: April 22-24

OTA offseason workouts: May 13-14, May 16, May 20-21, May 23, June 3-4, June 6

Mandatory minicamp: June 10-12

Baltimore Ravens

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20, May 22-23, May 28, May 30-31, June 3-4, June 6-7

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Buffalo Bills

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-30, June 3-4, June 6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Carolina Panthers

First day: April 8

Voluntary minicamp: April 23-25

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 3-4, June 6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Chicago Bears

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

Cincinnati Bengals

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 28-30, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Cleveland Browns

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 21-23, May 28-30, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Dallas Cowboys

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 21-23, May 29-31

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

Denver Broncos

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 21-23, May 28-30, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Detroit Lions

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 21-23, May 29-31, June 10-12

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

Green Bay Packers

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 3-4, June 6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Houston Texans

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 29-31, June 3-4, June 6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Indianapolis Colts

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 21-23, May 29-31

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

Jacksonville Jaguars

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 10-12

Kansas City Chiefs

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-22, May 28-30, June 4-7

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Las Vegas Raiders

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Los Angeles Chargers

First day: April 2

Voluntary minicamp: April 22-24

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 29-31, June 4-7

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Los Angeles Rams

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 10-12

Miami Dolphins

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

Minnesota Vikings

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 10-13

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

New England Patriots

First day: April 8

Voluntary minicamp: April 23-24

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 29-31, June 3-4, June 6-7

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

New Orleans Saints

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 21-23, May 28-30, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

New York Giants

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 3-4, June 6-7

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

New York Jets

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 3-4, June 6-7

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Philadelphia Eagles

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20, May 22-23, May 28, May 30-31

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

Pittsburgh Steelers

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 21-23, May 28-30, June 3-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

San Francisco 49ers

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

Seattle Seahawks

First day: April 8

Voluntary minicamp: April 22-24

OTA offseason workouts: May 20, May 22-23, May 28, May 30-31, June 3-4, June 6-7

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

First day: April 15

OTA offseason workouts: May 21-23, May 28-30, June 4-6

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

Tennessee Titans

First day: April 8

Voluntary minicamp: April 22-24

OTA offseason workouts: May 20-21, May 23, May 28-29, May 31, June 10-13

Mandatory minicamp: June 4-6

Washington Commanders

First day: April 2

Voluntary minicamp: April 22-24

OTA offseason workouts: May 14-15, May 17, May 21-22, May 24, June 4-5, June 7

Mandatory minicamp: June 11-13

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

BOSTON — Terrence Shannon Jr. picked up his fourth foul with 11:17 left in the NCAA men’s tournament East Region semifinal, sending Illinois’ senior star to the bench with the No. 3 Illini holding a 51-42 lead against No. 2 Iowa State. The Cyclones had trimmed that edge to 55-51 when he returned with 5:38 left, taking advantage of Shannon’s absence to inch closer to the Big Ten tournament champions.

‘We just had to step up,’ said senior forward Quincy Guerrier. ‘Everybody had to step up. We didn’t think about anything. We were just in the flow of the game.’

Thirty seconds later, Shannon swished a 3-pointer from the right corner to make it 59-54. He’d score another six points down the stretch, including an exclamation-point slam to make it 70-64 with 24 seconds left, as Illinois won 72-69 to book a matchup with No. 1 Connecticut on Saturday in the East Region final.

In 30 minutes of action sandwiched around his extended stint on the bench, Shannon poured in 29 points on 10 of 19 shooting, along with five rebounds, three steals and a pair of assists.

‘People who know Terrence know what a great, great competitor he is and how he loves to win,’ coach Brad Underwood said. ‘To do that cold shows he stayed in the game mentally. He was always cheering and excited in the time-outs and on the bench. He was dialed in mentally, and that’s not an easy thing to do, to step in and bury a three. It was a big one.’

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He is the most polarizing player still competing in this year’s NCAA men’s tournament: Shannon was suspended by the university in December after being arrested and charged with rape, a suspension that was reversed after six games by a federal judge who ruled that Illinois had violated Shannon’s civil rights. On the advice of his legal counsel, Shannon has not spoken to the media during the tournament.

Against the backdrop of a case that has threatened to engulf Illinois’ first Elite Eight berth since reaching the national championship game in 2005, Shannon has elevated his game to a level that places him among the top players in program history.

He’s scored in double figures in 41 consecutive games. He’s scored at least 20 points 21 times this season, a new Illinois record. Shannon is the first player in program history to score at least 25 points in three tournament games in a row – he had 26 against No. 14 Morehead State and 30 against No. 11 Duquesne – to give him 85 points through three games, the fourth-most by an Illinois player in a single tournament; every other player ranked in the school’s top 10 played at least four tournament games.

On his first basket of the game, Shannon became the first Illinois player to score 700 points in a season. Overall, Shannon has scored 20 or more points in seven games in a row to boost his average to 23.5 points per game, the fourth-best single-season mark in school history,

‘He’s amazing,’ senior guard Justin Harmon said. ‘That’s what’s expected from him.’

With him sidelined with foul trouble, Illinois turned to senior forward Coleman Hawkins, the only other player in double figures with 12 points, and continued a surge in defensive production that began following a 77-71 loss to Purdue earlier this month. The Illini have held three opponents in a row under 70 points for the first time since November.

‘We have a saying in our program that offense wins games, defense wins championships, and these guys are all mature, old, they’ve been through it and understood,’ said Underwood. ‘Tonight we did that, and we’ll have to continue to do that to keep playing.’

Illinois will continue to lean heavily on Shannon’s hot hand against Connecticut, an opponent with the length and depth to throw waves of elite athletes in his direction and force the Illini to look elsewhere for production. That the offense had to grind out possessions in his absence against the Cyclones speaks to the inherent difficulty behind replacing one of the elite scorers in the country.

Players and coaches looked at the positive: Illinois stepped up when it counted with Shannon a bystander, doing just enough on both ends to keep Iowa State at bay and deliver the program’s biggest postseason win in nearly two decades.

‘I loved our resiliency playing through those moments especially without (Shannon) on the court,’ Underwood said. ‘We made plays when we had to down the stretch. We got a couple of stops when we had to.’

But with the defending national champions looming, it’s obvious that the Illini will go only as far as Shannon can carry them. It’s also becoming more and more obvious that no team − not even the big, bad Huskies − will be able to keep the senior All-America pick under wraps.

‘He’s just a dog out there,’ Guerrier said. ‘He’s one of the best players in the country. You can’t stop him.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY