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Major League Soccer’s referee lockout hit a major inflection point on Saturday, just hours before Lionel Messi and Inter Miami play in a nationally televised match.

Referee Guiherme Ceretta was removed for the officiating crew from Inter Miami’s match against Orlando City, set for a 4:30 p.m. kickoff on FOX and Apple TV, after photos of him wearing Inter Miami apparel surfaced online.

“Referee Guiherme Ceretta was removed from the game due to a potential conflict,” the Professional Referee Organization (PRO) said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports before the match.

Here’s how the change happened:

– Ceretta was among the Inter Miami vs. Orlando City referees at 9 a.m.

– Photos of Ceretta appeared on the X account, @MLSRefStats, at 10:30 a.m.

– PRO announced Ceretta was replaced by Jamie Herrera as center referee at 11:45 a.m., according to The Athletic, which first reported referee change.

MLS and its officials remain at a standstill in negotiations for a new bargaining agreement, as the league’s 29th season began last week with replacement referees.

The lockout has extended into the second week of the MLS season. PRO informed members of the Professional Soccer Referees Association (PSRA) on Friday it has a midnight deadline on Match 11 to accept negotiated terms, according to ESPN.

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Missouri Gov. Mike Parson announced Friday that he has commuted the prison sentence of former Kansas City Chiefs assistant coach Britt Reid, who was convicted in a 2021 drunk driving incident that left a girl with severe brain injuries.

Reid, the son of Chiefs head coach Andy Reid, was sentenced on Nov. 1, 2022 to serve three years in state prison after pleading guilty to a felony count of driving while intoxicated resulting in serious physical injury. Britt Reid had served less than half of that sentence by Friday, when he was among 39 individuals on a list released by the governor’s office of people who had their sentences pardoned or commuted − the latter of which means lessening a sentence, either in severity or duration.

‘Mr. Reid has completed his alcohol abuse treatment program and has served more prison time than most individuals convicted of similar offenses,’ a spokesperson for Parson said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports explaining the decision.

Parson’s office confirmed local media reports that Reid will be under house arrest until Oct. 31, 2025 ‘with strict conditions of probation, including weekly meetings with a parole officer, weekly behavioral counseling attendance, weekly meetings with a peer support sponsor, and stringent community service and employment requirements.’

Reid’s conviction stems from an incident on Feb. 4, 2021, when he was working as the outside linebackers coach on his father’s staff. According to charging documents, the younger Reid was intoxicated and speeding when his truck struck two sedans on the shoulder of Interstate 435 near the Chiefs’ headquarters in Kansas City. Six people were injured in the crash, including two children.

All things Chiefs: Latest Kansas City Chiefs news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

One of those children, Ariel Young, suffered life-threatening head injuries, including a skull fracture, and she ultimately spent 11 days in a coma and more than two months in the hospital.

‘She tried to relearn how to walk and talk and eat before we left the hospital. But she couldn’t,’ Young’s mother, Felicia Miller, said in a statement read in court prior to sentencing. ‘She couldn’t run in the yard anymore like the sweet, innocent Ariel we had known.’

Young’s family wanted Reid to stand trial in connection with the incident, but he ultimately struck a plea deal with prosecutors. The charge to which Reid, now 38, pleaded guilty carried a maximum prison sentence of up to seven years. Prosecutors sought four years. A judge sentenced him to three.

Jackson County prosecutor Jean Peters Baker released a statement Saturday expressing her office’s displeasure with Reid’s sentence being commuted.

‘The Governor did not contact anyone who handled this case, or those directly impacted, including Ariel’s family. There simply can be no response that explains away the failure to notify victims of the offender,’ the statement said.

‘I simply say I am saddened by the self-serving political actions of the Governor and the resulting harm that it brings to the system of justice,’ Baker’s statement read. ‘But my office will fight for just outcomes regardless of social status, privilege or one’s connections. This system of justice still stands and will prevail over any fleeting political knock.’

Reid’s attorney, J.R. Hobbs, said he had no comment Friday on Parson’s decision to commute his client’s sentence. An attorney for Young’s family did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment on the decision.

Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @Tom_Schad.

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President Joe Biden is 81 years old, setting a record as the oldest president in history.

The following is a list of celebrities who are younger than the president.

1. Michael Douglas; 79

2. Robert de Niro; 80

3. Stevie Wonder; 73

4. Mick Jagger; 80

5. Martin Scorsese; 81

6. Dolly Parton; 78

7. Bill Murray; 73

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Iran claims to allow the country’s Christian minority to practice its faith in peace. The reality for many Iranian Christians, however, is plagued by whippings, arrests, imprisonment, surveillance and harassment, according to a February report from the religious freedom NGO Article 18. 

One shocking finding of the Article 18 40-page study, titled ‘Faceless Victims: Rights Violations Against Christians in Iran,’ states, ‘By the end of 2023, at least 17 of the Christians arrested during the summer had received prison sentences of between three months and five years, or non-custodial punishments such as fines, flogging, and in one case the community-service of digging graves.’

The report noted, ‘Despite a comparable number of Christians being arrested in 2023 as in previous years – 166 arrests were documented in 2023, compared to 134 in 2022 – fewer names and faces could be publicized.’

Rev. Johnnie Moore, the president of the Congress of Christian Leaders, told Fox News Digital, ‘The Department of State’s absolutely insane policy toward the Islamic Republic, which is wreaking havoc worldwide, also has real life-and-death consequences for the people in Iran. The mullahs presently feel they have a license to kill whoever they want and no one will do anything. So more people are being captured and killed and the terrorist leaders of the Islamic Republic particularly lust for the blood of women and Christians. ‘

Moore, an influential evangelical leader, explained that Iran’s regime persecutes Christians ‘Because these mullahs fear the power and resolve of Iranian women, and they know that Iranian Christians, who only fear God, do not fear the ayatollah himself. The more the mullahs threaten, imprison and kill us, our movement just multiplies. No church in the world is growing, secretly, and faster than the Iranian church and Iran’s women look very much forward to the day when the world greets the first woman president of a free Iran.’

He continued, ‘I predict she and her cabinet, inclusive of evangelical Christians, the Baha’i and others, will make their maiden international trip to Jerusalem and Washington. The mullahs want to kill us for one reason: they know we are winning. It would be nice to have more help from the State Department but it isn’t required.’

A State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital, ‘The persecution of Christians and other religious minorities in Iran is longstanding and well documented. The U.S. continues to condemn these actions and use all the tools at our disposal to address such egregious violations.’

The spokesperson added, ‘The Department’s most recent Report on International Religious Freedom in Iran notes, ‘Officials continued to disproportionately arrest, detain, harass, and surveil Christians, particularly evangelicals and other converts from Islam, according to Christian NGOs.’’

When Fox News Digital asked if the State Department will impose new human rights sanctions on Iran’s regime for the persecution of Christians, the spokesperson said, ‘While the Department does not preview sanctions, Iran has been designated as a ‘Country of Particular Concern’ and imposed Presidential Actions under the International Religious Freedom Act for having engaged in or tolerated particularly severe violations of religious freedom every year since 1999.’

The raw violence used by Iran’s theocratic state against Iranian Christians was documented in the Article 18 report. Ali Kazemian said his interrogators ‘discovered that I had a metal implant in my left leg from an historic break’ and ‘for this reason, one of the agents kicked my left leg several times. Then they put me on a chair, tied my hands together, and the interrogator said: ‘You are now in an electric chair’… Then they violently punched me several times.’

He said the security forces threatened him, declaring: ‘We’ll harm your wife and children!… We’ll bring your wife to the interrogation room and strip her naked in front of everyone, to see if you can really resist and stay quiet!’

Iran’s regime has targeted all forms of Christianity for persecution, including Protestants and the arrest of Catholics.

Article 18, which published the report in collaboration with Open Doors, Christian Solidarity Worldwide and Middle East Concern, said there might be as many 800,000 Christians in Iran. The report extrapolated the number 800,000 based on a ‘A survey of Iranians’ attitudes toward religion in 2020, conducted by a secular Netherlands-based research group, revealed that 1.5% of Iranians from a sample size of 50,000 self-identified as Christians.’

The report was published on Feb. 19 to draw attention to the 45th anniversary of the Iranian regime’s brutal execution of Anglican pastor Arastoo Sayyah in his church in Shiraz, a mere eight days after the Islamic Revolution. Sayyah was the first Christian murdered by the regime.

Sheina Vojoudi, an Iranian Christian who fled the Islamic Republic, told Fox News Digital, Christianity in Iran is classified under political-security crimes, Despite this, more and more Iranians are converting to Christianity every day. Christianity is considered by the Islamic Republic in Iran as a Western religion and works against the Islamic Republic.’

Vojoudi, who is an associate fellow for the U.S.-based Gold Institute for International Strategy, added, ‘The persecution and killing of the Christians started after the occupation of Iran by the Islamic Regime and since then the Islamic Republic has murdered at least 15 Iranian pastors.’

According to Vojoudi, Iran’s regime ramped up its persecution of the struggling Christian community following the Green revolution movement in 2009 against the widely documented fraudulent election of former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. 

‘The regime in Iran increased the persecutions and arrests due to fear of its downfall and that, of course, doesn’t exclude the Christians in Iran,’ Vojoudi said.

She said, ‘The regime burned 300 Persian Bibles and seized 650 Bibles and until today having a Persian Bible is a crime. A prohibition on preaching in Persian in the churches was announced by the intelligence organizations.’

Vojoudi converted to Christianity and fled to Germany due to religious persecution. Article 18’s report stated, ‘Christian converts from Islam are numerically the largest Christian community in Iran, but they are not recognized by the state and are frequently targeted by the authorities and, in some cases, by their extended families and society. ‘

Vojoudi said, ‘I used to go to a church near this cathedral church in Tehran, of course secretly. This church was open to the public, but I forgot on which days, but is extremely under [the] watch of the regime.

‘The picture of [Ayatollah Ruhollah] Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic regime, sits right next to the church, means that they watch everyone, and they have no respect for other religions.’

Article 18 wrote, ‘With converts constituting the largest – albeit unrecognized – Christian community in Iran, the issue of ‘apostasy’ is a central concern… a Christian convert was sentenced to be hanged for apostasy in 2010, the charge of apostasy and death sentence were overturned in response to international pressure, but many converts have since been threatened with a similar fate upon arrest and during interrogations.’ 

The dire fate of Iranian Christians has forced them to organize house churches as part of an underground movement.

Vojoudi said Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, declared in a speech the ‘importance of confronting the house churches and provoked his followers against the Christians by claiming that the house churches are created by the ‘enemies of Islam’ and must be stopped.’

Article 18 listed a number of demands for the international community, including that foreign nations urge Iran ‘to ensure and facilitate freedom of religion or belief for all its citizens’ and ‘highlighting human rights infractions during bilateral and multilateral dialogues with Iran.’

Fox News Digital sent numerous press queries to Iran’s U.N. mission and its Foreign Ministry in Tehran.

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Former President Trump attacked his Republican opponent Nikki Haley on Saturday, claiming that former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi is ‘a little bit’ smarter than her.

Trump addressed an enthusiastic crowd in Richmond, Virginia on Saturday night, days before the Super Tuesday votes are scheduled to take place. 

Earlier on Saturday, Trump won the Idaho, Missouri, and Michigan Republican contests. Speaking to a crowd of supporters in the evening, the former president lamented about media coverage of his statements referring to President Biden as ‘President Obama.’

Trump maintained that he refers to Biden as ‘Obama’ intentionally. He also acknowledged that he has mixed up Haley, who he calls ‘Birdbrain,’ with Pelosi.

‘I purposely mix up a name, like Birdbrain… you know who Birdbrain is, right, Nikki, with Nancy Pelosi,’ he began.

‘I put them in because they’re interchangeable in my mind,’ Trump added. ‘Except I have to say, I shouldn’t say this about a semi-Republican, but I think Pelosi’s probably a little bit smarter, actually.’

In January, Haley said that Trump was not ‘mentally fit’ for office after he referred to Pelosi as Haley during a speech.

‘Last night Trump is at a rally and he’s going on and on, mentioning me multiple times as to why I didn’t take security during the Capitol riots. Why I didn’t handle Jan. 6 better. I wasn’t even in D.C. on Jan. 6. I wasn’t in office then,’ Haley said during a January rally in Keene, New Hampshire.

‘They’re saying he got confused, that he was talking about something else, he’s talking about Nancy Pelosi. He mentioned me multiple times in that scenario.’

Fox News Digital reached out to the Haley campaign for comment.

Fox News Digital’s Brie Stimson contributed to this report.

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House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan wrote a letter to Alphabet, Google’s parent company, on Saturday, demanding the company explain what influence the Biden administration may have had on its controversial Gemini AI program. 

The Judiciary Committee asked for documents on the creation and deployment of the artificial intelligence chatbot. 

‘The Committee is investigating how and to what extent the Executive Branch has coerced or colluded with Big Tech and other intermediaries to censor Americans’ speech,’ the House Judiciary Committee said in a Saturday news release. 

Gemini has faced backlash after it reportedly showed historical figures like George Washington appearing wrongfully as Black and a search for a ‘pope’ prompting a Black woman in Vatican garb. White Supremacist Nazis also were not White. 

The chatbot also wasn’t sure whether Adolf Hitler or Elon Musk was a worse influence on society. 

A week ago, Google admitted to Fox News Digital that a failure by its AI chatbot to outright condemn pedophilia is both ‘appalling and inappropriate’ and a spokesperson vowed changes. 

‘Recent reporting alleges that the Executive Branch, most notably the Biden White House, may have influenced the development of Alphabet’s Gemini AI model,’ Jordan’s letter to Alphabet said. ‘On October 30, 2023, President Biden issued an Executive Order on the ‘Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence,’ which claimed to serve as an overarching guide to how the Biden Administration will approach issues like AI development and deployment.’

Jordan added that a report from Google’s Gemini Team said the tool was evaluated by external groups, ‘which were selected based on their alignment with the Biden White House Executive Order and ’White House Commitments’’ and the company ‘claimed that it worked with these external groups ‘to help identify areas for improvement,’ including ‘societal risk,’ such as alleged ‘representational harms.’’

Jordan’s letter said the ‘improvements’ to Gemini showed its ‘clear bias.’ 

He added that reporting has suggested that Jack Krawczyk, who leads the Gemini program, and Jen Gennai, the Director of Google’s Responsible Innovation team, ‘expressed significant racial and political bias.’

He continued, ‘Given that Alphabet has censored First Amendment-protected speech as a result of government agencies’ requests and demands in the past, the Committee is concerned about potential First Amendment violations that have occurred with respect to Alphabet’s Gemini model.’

Fox News Digital has reached out to Google and Jordan for comment.

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SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — San Francisco Giants manager Bob Melvin, who has been lobbying for the front office to sign Gold Glove third baseman Matt Chapman all winter, finally got his man late Friday night.

Chapman has agreed to a three-year, $54 million contract, a person with direct knowledge of the contract negotiations told USA TODAY Sports.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly since Chapman’s contract won’t become official until he takes a physical.

Chapman, who rejected a contract offer in excess of $100 million from the Toronto Blue Jays before he became a free agent, comes to the Giants on a heavily discounted price with the market drying up on him. The four-time Gold Glove and two-time Platinum Glove winner also rejected the $20.325 million qualifying offer.

Chapman will earn $20 million this season, $18 million in 2025 and $16 million in 2026. He can opt out of the contract after the 2024 and 2025 seasons.

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

Chapman’s value on the free agent market took a hit after his offensive struggles after April. He posted a .384 batting average with a 1.152 OPS in April, but wound up hitting just .240 last season with 17 homers and a .659 OPS.

Champan, who spent five seasons with the Oakland A’s after attending Cal State Fullerton, now returns to the Bay Area. He finished in the top 10 in MVP balloting in 2018 and 2019 while playing for Melvin with the A’s.

The signing leaves the Giants under the luxury tax at about $231 million, and could signal a move with third baseman J.D. Davis, who’s earning $6.9 million this season.

Follow Bob Nightengale on X @BNightengale

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Messi predominantly — well, always — speaks Spanish.

That hasn’t changed much outside of a “No, Michelob Ultra” during a Super Bowl commercial with Miami Dolphins Hall of Fame quarterback Dan Marino, and Ted Lasso star Jason Sudeikis.

But Messi has been communicating with English-speaking teammates during games since he arrived to Inter Miami last summer.

Inter Miami’s Julian Gressel, whose experience winning the MLS Cup twice will be valuable for the club in 2024, said Messi gave him clear directions in English during a preseason match in Saudi Arabia.

Gressel, near the 30-minute mark of the first episode of the Player/Manager podcast he released Friday, said of Messi:

“He covers his mouth and goes ‘Now, we change. You stay and Jordi runs. Jordi goes more behind. I was just like ‘Yes, okay. Okay, sounds good.’

“This is the funny part about it: After, he goes ‘English, pretty good, no?’ I was like ‘Yes, very very good. I understood everything!’”

Messi might not be itching to speak English in a public setting just yet, but his legendary left boot speaks its own language understood around the world.

Other Inter Miami teammates have previously disclosed Messi’s ability to communicate with them in English.

Inter Miami’s DeAndre Yedlin, after Messi’s arrival last July, said:

“He’s spoken. I mean, it’s not a whole ton of English, but you know, it’s enough to get by. And when there is a conversation to be had, then one of the guys that speaks fluent Spanish will come over and translate a little bit,” Yedlin said.  

“He’s been great about it. You can tell he’s really he’s really trying.”

Messi said he was learning English for a year and half, during an interview in Aug. 2021 when he signed with French club Paris Saint-Germain.

“I understand it, but I don’t speak it,” Messi said in Spanish.

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Longtime Cincinnati Reds first baseman Joey Votto has made it clear in recent videos he’s posted that he’s disappointed to remain a free agent with MLB spring training under way.

During an appearance Friday on ‘The Dan Patrick Show,’ Votto acknowledged that his morale is ‘as low as it gets, and at this rate, I don’t see it getting any better.’

Votto added that he was hopeful that a ‘Dan Patrick push’ would get him a job.

‘Funny enough, I’ve had 10 times the analyst jobs over this offseason than I have had any baseball offers,’ Votto told Patrick. He said the extent of his offers from MLB teams have been ‘just chatter (and) just talk (with) no firm offer yet.’

Patrick asked Votto whether he thinks his beard his helping or hurting his cause.

HOT STOVE UPDATES: MLB free agency: Ranking and tracking the top players available.

‘I don’t know if it’s making a difference. I can tell you it’s a reflection of my emotional state,’ Votto joked.

Last October, Votto told Patrick he wanted to play ‘at least one more year.’

Votto told Patrick in 2022 that he needed the Mason native to call him ‘future Hall of Famer Joey Votto’ instead of asking him what he needs to be a Hall of Famer.

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One of the most brutal domestic violence cases in NFL history came to an end Friday when former Seattle Seahawks player Chad Wheeler was sentenced to 81 months in state prison after being found guilty of brutally assaulting his girlfriend in January 2021.

Wheeler, 30, had strangled his girlfriend unconscious, broke her arm and left her for dead then as blood poured from her nose and mouth and into her stomach, according to prosecutors. The woman, Alleah Taylor, still uses a brace on her arm and has scars from the incident near Seattle.

She attended the sentencing Friday in King County, Washington, after a jury convicted Wheeler in November of first- and second-degree assault/domestic violence. In addition to his 81-month term, the judge also sentenced Wheeler to 36 months of community custody.

Taylor agreed to an interview afterward with USA TODAY Sports.

“I’m very satisfied,” Taylor said by phone. “It’s very unheard of that a Black woman was able to get justice from a white NFL player. A lot of people doubted that, that I was going to receive justice and he was going to go to prison. I’m very grateful that I was able to receive justice today, and that is a message to be sent to other men in power – that they will be held accountable.”

NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.

Rare testimony at Chad Wheeler’s trial

Taylor testified against Wheeler in the trial last fall, taking the stand over the course of three days – a rare display in domestic violence cases. Such cases don’t often go to trial because the women decide not to press charges or recant their accusations out of fear or desire to reconcile.

Taylor, however, said she wanted to use this case to show other domestic violence survivors that there is another way.

“I would like for my experience to be able to help other people, to advocate for themselves and help themselves instead of giving up and living in fear,” she said.

Wheeler’s mental health issues

Wheeler played offensive tackle for the Seahawks and was cut from the team shortly after the incident. He has bipolar disorder and had resisted taking medication for his mental health issues, according to prosecutors. He suffered another bipolar episode in July 2022 when he was on home detention and found running down a road naked in King County, Washington, according to court records.

He was not taking his medication then, either. After being taken to the hospital, Wheeler announced he had killed multiple prominent people that were still alive and kept asking what year it was and where he was.

His defense in the Taylor case appeared to be that he didn’t remember the incident, Taylor said.

Taylor said Wheeler indicated he didn’t take his medication because it would slow him down in the NFL.

“Mr. Wheeler was deceitful and denied any history of substance use and psychiatric history in at least two documented visits with NFL doctors in 2017 and 2015,” state prosecutors said in a sentencing memo Thursday obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

Wheeler’s previous diagnosis

Prosecutors also said that “despite stating that his January 2021 assault of Alleah Taylor was due to a mental health condition, and knowing the physical damage he was capable of inflicting with his bare hands, Mr. Wheeler continued to disregard the risk of not taking his medication.”

Prosecutors noted another incident in 2015, when Wheeler was detained by police while in college at Southern California. In that incident, Wheeler was described as punching walls and “disorderly” as he barricaded inside an apartment with a woman and her young son. He was taken to the hospital for a psychiatric evaluation.

At the time of his discharge then, medical professionals listed his diagnoses as “polysubstance abuse with primary marijuana dependence, cannabis dependent, alcohol abuse, bipolar disorder, current episode manic, severe with psychotic features,” according to the sentencing memo.

Prosecutors recommended he serve a sentence of 108 months. The judge also ordered Wheeler to have no contact with Taylor again for life and to pay restitution in an amount to be determined.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

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