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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — The Atlantic Coast Conference accused Florida State of breach of contract Wednesday, saying the Seminoles broke promises when they legally challenged an agreement that binds the school to the league for the next dozen years.

The ACC initially sued the Florida State Board of Trustees in North Carolina in late December, asking a court to uphold the grant of rights as a valid and enforceable contract. The league insisted FSU cannot challenge the binding document that the Seminoles signed and that all related issues should be decided in the state where the conference is located.

The league formally amended its complaint Wednesday, alleging FSU violated the signed agreement when it chose to challenge the exclusive grant of rights. The conference also accused the school of releasing confidential information — “trade secrets” between the league and television partner ESPN — in its legal filing in the Sunshine State.

The ACC, in its 55-page filing, is seeking a trial and damages it “reasonably believes will be substantial.” The league also asked the court for a permanent injunction barring FSU from participating in the management of league affairs while it “has a direct and material conflict of interest” with the ACC’s purposes and objective. It also asked for a permanent injunction barring the Seminoles from disclosing confidential information about the TV agreement.

Both sides have agreed to respond to the complaints by mid-February. It could result in more motions filed.

No one expects a merger of the two complaints because they involve two separate state courts. One court could defer to the other or both could proceed independently. Both sides have requested a trial.

Florida State is looking for a way out of a conference it has been a member of since 1992. During its time in the ACC, Florida State won three football national championships, the most recent in 2013, and made the first College Football Playoff in 2014.

The Seminoles were left out of this season’s playoff despite an unbeaten record. Florida State President Richard McCullough said the playoff snub did not prompt the lawsuit.

However, the first sentence of Florida State’s claim states: “The stunning exclusion of the ACC’s undefeated football champion from the 2023-2024 College Football Playoff in deference to two one-loss teams from two competing Power Four conferences crystalized the years of failures by the ACC to fulfill its most fundamental commitments to FLORIDA STATE and its members.”

Florida State leaders believe the ACC locked its members into an undervalued and unusually lengthy contract with ESPN that leaves the Seminoles’ athletic programs at a massive disadvantage against schools in the Big Ten and Southeastern Conference, which have TV deals that pay more over a shorter period of time.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay was found unresponsive when first responders were called to his home last month, according to police records obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

The report said that emergency crews were dispatched around 4:30 a.m. on Dec. 8 to Irsay’s home in Carmel, Indiana, where they found the 64-year-old unresponsive and laboring to breathe. Officers said that Irsay had fallen in the bathroom and been transferred to his bed.

The complainant, whose name was redacted and only identified in records as a 66-year-old male, led authorities to where Irsay was.

The report logged the incident as a suspected ‘overdose,’ and that authorities were called to ‘assist fire (officials) with a male that was unresponsive, breathing, but turning blue.’

‘Irsay was unconscious with abnormal breathing (agonal breathing), a weak pulse, and he was cold to the touch,’ the report said, noting the incident was recorded by police body cameras.

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Officers were close to using an automated external defibrillator to shock Irsay’s heart, but paramedics arrived on the scene and took Irsay to a local hospital. The responders did administer Narcan, which is used to reverse opioid overdoses.

The team said last week that Irsay was ‘being treated for a severe respiratory illness’ and couldn’t perform a scheduled performance with his band in Los Angeles, and added that he was ‘receiving excellent care’ and looked forward to ‘returning to the stage as soon as possible.’

The Colts issued another statement on Wednesday about Irsay’s health:

‘Mr. Irsay continues to recover from his respiratory illness. We will have no further comment on his personal health, and we continue to ask that Jim and his family’s privacy be respected.’

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Golden State Warriors assistant assistant coach Dejan Milojević died after suffering a heart attack, the team announced on Wednesday. He was 46 years old.

Milojevic died one day after suffering a medical emergency during a private team dinner in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, prompting the NBA to postpone Wendesday’s matchup between the Warriors and Utah Jazz.

‘We are absolutely devastated by Dejan Milojević’s sudden passing,’ the Warriors wrote in a social media tribute. ‘This is a shocking and tragic blow for everyone associated with the Warriors and an incredibly difficult time for his family, friends, and all of us who had the incredible pleasure to work with him. We grieve with and for his wife, Natasa, and their children, Nikola and Masa.’

Here’s everything to know about Milojević:

Where is Dejan Milojević from?

Dejan (DAY-hahn) Milojević (mi-lo-yo-vihch) was born in Belgrade, Serbia, on April 15, 1977. Milojević participated in boxing and karate as a child before he started playing basketball for Serbian club KK Tašmajdan at age 13, ‘which is late by some of today’s standards,’ he recalled in 2018.

Milojević started getting recognition for his skills on the basketball court as a teen and was even nicknamed the ‘Serbian Charles Barkley’ after he dropped 141 points in his 16U team’s win when he was just 14: ‘I scored 58 points at halftime and then (coach) Miša (Lakić) said, ‘Let’s see how many you can score’. In the second half, all the balls went to me… They really forced me in the second part and we broke the record.’

Milojević said he was dubbed the ‘Serbian Charles Barkley’ because they were ‘similar in height’ and they both played the same position.

Dejan Milojevic was a star in Europe

At 6-foot-7, 250-pounds, Milojević had a 14-year playing career overseas before retiring in 2009. During his career, he played for several clubs, including Budućnost, where he was named ABA League MVP (2003–04), and Partizan, where he won two more MVP honors and led the league in scoring (2004-2006).

He had a bruising style and showcased his skills in the Euroleague, featuring Europe’s top teams, and was named All-Europe second team in 2004. In 2005 for Partizan Belgrade, Milojevic averaged 22.3 points, 8.4 rebounds and 3.0 assists and shot 57.6% from the field.

‘I love basketball, as I am, as I will continue to do so,’ Milojević said in 2018 during an interview with Serbian news outlet RTVBN. ‘I have always loved to play, and I see basketball as a game, and throughout my career I gave my best at every moment, and things happened around me. I was never chasing MVP or anything, I just wanted to play the best I could. And what was it enough for, sometimes more, sometimes less.’

He became an important part of the country’s national basketball team, representing Yugoslavia, Serbia and Montenegro. He helped Serbia and Montenegro to a gold medal at the 2001 Eurobasket tournament, one of the most competitive basketball events in the world. He retired from his playing career in 2009.

Dejan Milojević coached NBA MVP Nikola Jokic

After his playing career ended, Milojević said he ‘didn’t know that one day I would become a coach.’ He started his head coaching career at Mega Basket (2012-2020), where he coached NBA star Nikola Jokić, from just a teen and not on anyone’s radar to become a two-time NBA MVP.

“I’m not sure he believed in himself from the very beginning,” Milojevic said on The Basketball Podcast. On Jokic, he said: “The hardest thing is to play simple. And even now if you talk about Nikola [Jokic] . . he’s doing so many great things, but the majority, like 80% of the things that he’s doing, are fundamentals, and then he can build up on that.”

Milojevic was instrumental in Jokic’s development and helped Jokic see the game from a different perspective – he could be a passer, shooter and scorer, and not limited offensively.

“For me, playing a set and running a set, all the players should know what the goal is and what is the point of the set,” Milojevic added. “So, you should know movement for any position on the court. It doesn’t matter if you’re playing big, you should know what your point guard is doing. So, in the practices, I was mixing players at each position.”

Where else did Dejan Milojević coach?

Milojević joined the Warriors’ coaching staff in 2021. He had prior NBA coaching experience on the summer league staff of the Atlanta Hawks (2016), San Antonio Spurs (2017) and Houston Rockets (2018).

‘The NBA mourns the sudden passing of Golden State assistant coach Dejan Milojević, a beloved colleague and dear friend to so many in the global basketball community,’ NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said. ‘In addition to winning the 2022 NBA championship in his first season with the Warriors and mentoring some of the best players in the world, Dejan had a decorated international playing career and was a distinguished head coach in his native Serbia.’

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After Diamond Sports, owner of 18 local sports networks aligned with the Bally Sports Network, filed for bankruptcy in March 2022, they’ve been searching for investors. Well, as part of a restructuring agreement with Amazon, Diamond Sports may have found their temporary savior. As part of the deal, Amazon will be able to provide access to Diamond Sports’ content through Prime Video, according to an Associated Press report.

The complexity of this bankruptcy case cannot be understated. Apart from Amazon, Diamond also has a separation agreement in place with Sinclair, which bought regional sports networks from the Walt Disney Co. in 2019 for approximately $10 billion. Sinclair will pay Diamond Sports $495 million and provide ongoing use of its equipment and service to support Diamond Sports’ reorganization.

Will Prime Video air local sports teams in 2024?

Yes. Although they do not seem to have access to the entirety of Diamond Sports’ catalog yet, they do have the direct-to-consumer rights to MLB teams such as the Tampa Bay Rays, Kansas City Royals, Detroit Tigers, Miami Marlins, and Milwaukee Brewers.

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

Diamond recently agreed to terms with the NBA and NHL to keep rights to televise local games through the end of the 2024 season. Thanks to the $450 million that is being invested by creditors, Diamond Sports will operate beyond 2024, but the company will need approval from a federal bankruptcy judge in order to make that happen.

What does this mean for MLB’s immediate broadcasting future?

Diamond currently has the broadcasting rights to 11 MLB teams. MLB and Diamond were in discussion to create a deal that would include a 12th team — the Minnesota Twins, whose contract with Diamond Sports ended after the conclusion of the 2023 season. After 2024, all 12 of those teams would have received their broadcasting rights back. However, the deal Diamond made with Amazon puts them back in the driver’s seat of these negotiations.

Diamond is now likely to retain its long-term contracts that it has with nine MLB teams: the five teams that Amazon bought the rights to plus the Los Angeles Angels, St. Louis Cardinals, Cincinnati Reds, and Atlanta Braves.

A lawyer for Diamond, Andrew Goldman, added that the company looks to broadcast Texas Rangers, Cleveland Guardians, and Minnesota Twins games as well in 2024. Should any of those teams be unwilling to have their games broadcasted under the terms determined by Diamond, Diamond will not force their hand. Instead, Goldman claims the company is interested in discussing long-term plans will all three teams.

How does the new deal affect the major sports?

As more information becomes available, it has become increasingly clear that the NHL, NBA, and MLB were each caught by surprise by news of this deal and are currently weighing all of their options. With Diamond’s contracts with the NHL and NBA set to expire after this current season, Amazon was expected to be a major bidder to purchase a package of NBA franchise broadcasting rights. The new agreement with Diamond Sports does not give the NBA as much liberty to shop packages around anymore.

Jim Bromley, an MLB lawyer, told The Athletic, ‘All of this came as a surprise, we knew nothing about it.’ He continued, ‘Until yesterday we were operating with the assumption that we were mediating… and nearing the conclusion of an agreement that was heavily negotiated.’

To sum it all up

Essentially, Diamond Sports had no bargaining power with any of the pro sports leagues that it was working with in 2024: the NBA, NHL, and MLB. Each of those leagues wanted their contracts with Diamond to expire by the end of 2024 so that they could shop the broadcasting rights to other competitors, of which Amazon was expected to be a major player and likely recipient.

Amazon’s agreement with Diamond puts a damper on the leagues’ plans. The entity that was likely to bid highest is now in partnership with the company they are currently working with. The NHL, NBA, and MLB have lost most of their leverage in broadcasting negotiations and will likely have to settle for a much smaller sum than they previously anticipated and will likely have to keep working with Diamond Sports beyond 2024.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Newport Beach (California) Police Department was ‘unable to corroborate any criminal activity related to’ social media posts that alleged Oklahoma City Thunder guard Josh Giddey may have had an improper relationship with a minor.

“After a thorough and exhaustive examination, we have completed our investigation into information that was circulating on social media involving Josh Giddey,’ the Newport Beach Police Department said in a news release Wednesday. ‘Our detectives have reviewed all of the available information and were unable to corroborate any criminal activity related to Mr. Giddey. The Newport Beach Police Department is committed to ensuring that accurate information is disseminated to the public, while also ensuring the rights of all those involved.’

Giddey has been under scrutiny since Thanksgiving when an anonymous user on social media posted photos and video of a man who appeared to be Giddey with a female who may have been under 18 years old. The social media posts were deleted by the original poster but other users saved the images.

On Nov. 24, the NBA acknowledged it was looking into the allegations after a post on social media just before Thanksgiving showed Giddey with the female in photos and video.

On Nov. 29, the Newport Beach Police Department said it “is aware of information being circulated online involving an alleged relationship between professional basketball player Josh Giddey and a female minor. The Newport Beach Police Department is actively seeking additional information related to these allegations and pursuing all leads and evidence to obtain the facts of the case.”

Giddey averages 11.8 points, 6.1 rebounds and 4.6 assists and is a valuable starter for the 27-13 Thunder, who are in second place in the Western Conference.

Follow NBA reporter Jeff Zillgitt on social media @JeffZillgitt

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

New England Patriots head coach Jerod Mayo laid out his vision for his new team, saying his job is to develop talent and get the team back to a championship level.

Mayo thanked owner Robert Kraft, whom the coach repeatedly referred to as ‘Thunder’ during his introductory news conference on Wednesday.

Kraft declined to say who will be making personnel decisions in the short term but said it would be an in-house and collaborative effort, adding the team would look at outside candidates for general manager at a later time. New England, which finished with a 4-13 record, has the third overall pick in the 2024 NFL draft.

Kraft said he had the same conviction in hiring Mayo as he did when he hired Bill Belichick in 2000, a decision he says was questioned at the time.

‘Football is his true passion, and I believe coaching was always his destiny,’ Kraft said. ‘I’ve learned to trust my instincts throughout my career, and I trust Jerod is the right person to lead the Patriots back to championship-level contention and long-term success.

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Mayo is the franchise’s first Black head coach, a distinction he said ‘means a lot to me.’ Kraft referred to himself as ‘colorblind’ when making decisions for the team.

Mayo says he sees it differently.

“I do see color. If you don’t see color, you can’t see racism,’ Mayo said.

The 37-year-old coach said that Belichick had been a ‘huge mentor’ over the years and that he took away many key lessons from the six-time Super Bowl-winning coach, including ‘hard work works.’ Mayo, however, is ready to implement his own approach.

‘I’m not trying to be Bill,’ Mayo said. ‘Bill is his own man. If you can’t tell, I’m a little bit different.”

After his playing career ended in 2015, Mayo went into business at healthcare services company Optum, saying ‘I needed a break from Bill.” The team hired him in 2019 as the inside linebackers coach.

“This has definitely been a dream of mine,’ Mayo said. ‘My calling is to be a teacher and develop people…to help people see what they don’t want to see, but what they need to see.’

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Last year saw new artificial intelligence products released at the most rapid pace yet, though predictions of an AI boom on the scale of last decade’s tech explosion have yet to come to fruition.

‘I think 2023 was the year that AI astonished people and 2024 will be the year of retrenchment as people learn the limitations of AI and where various AI systems have the greatest utility,’ Christopher Alexander, chief analytics officer for Pioneer Development Group, told Fox News Digital. ‘I think that the race for AI utility has just begun and AI will become a permanent fixture in people’s lives. I think that the grand predictions for AI in this past year confused the current state of AI and the future state, which has led to some confusion in the market.’

Alexander’s comments come after what was in many ways a landmark year for AI technology in 2023, with new platforms and developments making headlines throughout the year. Yet expectations of a boom that dominated headlines in the five years before it have so far failed to come to fruition, making many wonder where the new tech goes from here.

Phil Siegel, founder of the Center for Advanced Preparedness and Threat Response Simulation, told Fox News Digital that it is still ‘very early’ in the development phase of AI tools but noted there are signs that a takeoff is still on the way.

‘What is blowing up now is the infrastructure pieces like chips and supplies to make sure the true application of the technology can blow up,’ Siegel said.

But Siegel also cautioned that a true boom of AI will continue to take time, noting that newer products hitting the market are often priced too high to see widespread use.

‘It takes a reasonable amount of time for real products to hit the market in a big way,’ Siegel said. ‘Those are just starting to emerge but are probably being priced way too high for broad adoption, even in business. What will be a big step forward is when the data management companies figure out their product set so companies can use their own data for custom AI applications to merge with the generic applications.’

Other experts argue that the AI boom has already arrived in some ways, something that an average consumer may be missing.

‘AI has far exceeded expectations in that it’s widespread utility has become abundantly apparent. AI’s capabilities have also continued moving at a breakneck pace as developers continue to inch closer and closer towards artificial general intelligence,’ Samuel Mangold-Lenett, a staff editor at The Federalist, told Fox News Digital. ‘We probably aren’t seeing a bigger boom because the average person still doesn’t consciously interact with AI on a daily basis.’

Mangold-Lenett pointed to language learning models (LLM) such as ChatGPT, noting that the technology for such platforms is still very new but increased significantly in popularity in 2023.

‘Whether or not we’re aware of it, the AI moment is here,’ Mangold-Lenett said. ‘Development will continue at a rapid pace, and we will continue to see AI play an increasing role in our daily lives.’ 

Jake Denton, a research associate at the Heritage Foundation’s Tech Policy Center, also pointed to the rise in chatbots in 2023, but he noted the average consumer is still unlikely to interact with such platforms thanks to their unclear utility.

‘Their capabilities are often still unclear and their user interfaces remain rather clunky,’ Denton told Fox News Digital. ‘This reflects the chasm between vision and reality in AI. The long-term potential is staggering, but short-term applications remain narrow.’

Nevertheless, Denton noted that developers are well on their way to improving the tech, arguing that slow adaptation of new technology is normal at first.

‘Truly revolutionary technologies often appear useless at first. Their capabilities seem toy-like, with no clear purpose. However, with improved functionality and enhanced product design, these systems have the potential to fit seamlessly into our lives, enabling feats previously unimaginable,’ Denton said. ‘While we are still in the early stages of this Al revolution, much of the hard infrastructure and foundations have been built; it’s now up to developers to construct products of lasting value upon it.’

Siegel believes that 2024 will be a telling year for the new tech, crystallizing whether a full-fledged boom is on the horizon.

‘On the consumer side, the products are still at the ‘toy’ or simple productivity uses like drawings or stories or just fun conversations. That, however, is not a sustainable base for a business model to make money. Companies with real uses are starting to emerge in personal finance, health care and so forth, but they either aren’t fully functional, aren’t totally safe or have no way to make money,’ Siegel said. ‘2024 will tell us if this is a full-fledged revolution or the next good productivity tool for the white-collar and consumer worlds.’

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Republican hardliners are reluctantly accepting defeat in the current fight over short-term government funding.

House and Senate leaders are working to pass a stopgap funding extension – known as a continuing resolution (CR) – aimed at keeping the government from a partial shutdown. Current federal funding expires in two tranches, on Jan. 19 and Feb. 2.

The issue of federal spending has driven a wedge between different House GOP factions, with conservatives staging several protest votes and even booting former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., from leadership for passing a CR to avoid a shutdown late last year. 

But several of those same GOP rebels are backing away from the idea of repeating the move with Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. 

‘The only people I hear talking about that are you guys,’ House Freedom Caucus Chair Bob Good, R-Va., told reporters on Wednesday morning when asked about filing a motion to vacate against Johnson.

Good was one of the eight House Republicans who voted to oust McCarthy in October.

Now, however, he and other Freedom Caucus members signaled there’s little they could do to stop the bill from passing if House leaders put it forward under suspension of the rules, meaning it will skip a procedural step in exchange for needing two-thirds of the House’s support instead of just a simple majority.

‘I don’t have anything to announce at this point,’ Good said when asked about repercussions against House GOP leaders.

Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., told Fox News Digital he was ‘an optimist’ but conceded that there was likely little that conservatives could do to stop the CR from passing.

‘I guess if he puts it on suspension, a lot of Democrats vote for it, maybe that’s a correct statement. But it’s certainly not something I’m going to vote for,’ he said.

Rep. Dan Bishop, R-S.C., also dismissed talk of ousting Johnson from the speakership. He suggested it was more difficult to ‘leverage’ Johnson than it was McCarthy.

‘He’s an honest broker. He is a genuine conservative. He is in the circumstances everybody understands. And the problem is the Republican conference as a whole, and whether or not the members will stand up and demand some substantive, lasting, significant change, conservative change,’ Bishop said.

But lawmakers outside their circle took a blunter tone when discussing a potential rebellion against this CR.

‘Those individuals have now overplayed their hand,’ Rep. Greg Murphy, R-N.C., said. ‘I think they’re effectively sidelined because they’ve done it to themselves. They just don’t know when to stop, and it’s more about the fight rather than the result. And that’s just, I think it’s pretty pathetic.’

If passed, the new CR would extend the two government funding deadlines until March 1 and March 8, respectively.

It comes after conservatives spent the better part of last week trying to force Johnson to back out of a bipartisan deal on government funding for the remainder of fiscal year 2024.

But Johnson held firm to the deal and similarly defied his hardliners on Wednesday when reaffirming his intent to pass the CR.

‘We need just a little bit more time on the calendar to allow that process to play out. This is what the American people expect and deserve,’ Johnson said during his weekly press conference. ‘This is the way the law is supposed to work, where individual appropriations bills and not one big massive omnibus spending bill are duly negotiated and amended and priorities fought for. And that’s what we’re doing.’

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Former President Trump is dominating the polls in all early voting states, putting him more than 30 points ahead of his closest competitor, according to new polling.

Trump, who solidified his standing as the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination after winning the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses Monday night, now has his sights set on New Hampshire.

Trump traveled to the Granite State this week after his Iowa victory in which he dominated his GOP opponents by winning 98 of 99 counties. He ultimately collected 20 delegates in the state. 

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis came in second place in Iowa, and Haley came in third. Businessman Vivek Ramaswamy came in fourth place and dropped out later in the night, announcing his full endorsement and support for Trump.

As caucus day approached, it was anticipated that Trump, who has a commanding lead over his opponents in all primary polling across the nation, would dominate in Iowa.

While Trump is ahead by double-digits in New Hampshire, some recent polling shows Trump and Haley neck and neck. Independents can vote in the Republican primary in the state, which could be beneficial to Haley, who some have cast as a more moderate Republican option. 

Moderate voters in the Granite State are highly influential, and the state’s independents – who can vote in either major party primary – have long played a crucial role in New Hampshire’s storied presidential contest.

The poll from American Research Group Inc. released Tuesday shows Trump and Haley tied at 40% among the state’s likely Republican primary voters.

But another New Hampshire poll released Wednesday by Suffolk University, the Boston Globe and NBC10 in Boston shows Trump with 50% support among those likely to vote in the primary. Haley in that poll stands at 34% support with DeSantis at just 5%. Six percent said they are undecided and 3% are backing another candidate.

The new poll shows Trump with a massive 61%-34% lead over Haley among registered Republicans, with Haley topping Trump 44%-38% among independents.

While the former president holds a commanding 67%-18% lead over his former U.N. ambassador among self-described conservatives, Haley leads 56%-27% among those who consider themselves moderate or liberal.

According to the RealClearPolitics Average between Jan. 3 and Jan. 10, Trump stood at 43.5% and Haley at 29.4%. Next was former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who has since dropped out of the race, with 11.3%. That poll puts DeSantis at 6.5%.

But beyond New Hampshire, Trump holds an even stronger lead.

In Nevada, which holds its primary contests in early February, Trump sits at 69%, which is 58.5 points ahead of DeSantis, who has 10.5% of the vote, according to the RealClearPolitics Average from Sept. 29 through Jan. 8.

And in Haley’s home state of South Carolina, which votes on Feb. 24, Trump is up 30.2 points at 52%, with Haley in second place at 21.8% and DeSantis polling at 11%, according to that RealClearPolitics Average from Oct. 18 through Jan. 3.

But as Trump holds his massive lead and likely begins collecting the majority of delegates in the early voting states, which brings him closer to the number needed to secure the GOP nomination, he will also need to divert his attention from the campaign trail and into courtrooms in several jurisdictions.

This week, Trump is in court in New York City for the civil defamation damages trial stemming from E. Jean Carroll’s lawsuit that alleges he sexually attacked her in a department store dressing room in the 1990s. Trump has denied any wrongdoing and told Fox News Digital he has ‘absolutely no idea who this woman is.’ Trump is expected to testify in his own defense.

That appearance in court came a day after he won the Iowa caucuses and just days after closing arguments were delivered in the non-jury civil trial that stems from New York Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit against him, his family and his businesses. 

James sued Trump, his family and his business empire, claiming he inflated his financial statements and deceived banks. Trump has denied any wrongdoing. 

The former president has repeatedly said his assets were actually undervalued and his financial statements had disclaimers that requested the numbers be evaluated by the banks.

A decision is expected in the coming weeks.

Meanwhile, Special Counsel Jack Smith’s election interference trial is set to begin on March 4, the day before the March 5 Super Tuesday primary contests in which Alabama, Alaska, American Samoa, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Vermont vote to select a GOP nominee.

That has been put on pause due to a review by an appeals court, and possibly the U.S. Supreme Court, on Trump’s argument of presidential immunity. Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Next on the calendar is the trial prompted by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s yearslong investigation related to hush-money payments made during the 2016 presidential campaign. Trump pleaded not guilty to all charges.

That trial is set to begin in New York City on March 25. However, Bragg said he would be flexible on that date, pending the decision on trial timing in Smith’s Jan. 6 case.

If it does begin on March 25, court proceedings are to take place just after the Louisiana primary and ahead of April 2, which is when Connecticut, Delaware, New York, Rhode Island and Wisconsin voters hit the polls to select a GOP nominee.

Then, Smith’s classified documents trial is set to begin on May 20, ahead of the Kentucky primary on May 21, the Oregon primary on May 25 and New Jersey’s primary on June 4.

Should Trump solidify his lead in the GOP nomination, he would spend July 15-18 at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee. But Georgia’s Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has proposed that Trump’s trial in his election interference case begin just weeks later.

Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges in all cases.

Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.

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The greatest victory of the pro-life movement has been followed by some of its greatest defeats.

Two years ago, abortion was legal in every state, but a majority of Americans identified as pro-life. Today, the Roe regime has been overturned, and 21 states have passed protections for the unborn, but support for abortion has returned to record highs. 

Meanwhile, the pro-life side has lost seven out of seven state ballot initiatives – a perfect record of failure.

Some have responded to these setbacks with silence. Others have concluded that being truly pro-life is a losing position, urging Republicans to become pro-choice lite instead. Still others have punted everything to the states, claiming that Congress should stay out of the fight.

But if there is any reason to be pro-life at all, it is that an unborn child is a human being, with as much a right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness as any other American. And if that is true, then none of these positions is tenable – because each amounts to an abandonment of our Declaration, Constitution and basic human dignity.

The aforementioned positions are also untenable because they ignore one of the chief reasons for our present predicament. Americans have not shifted away from life on their own. They have done so under pressure from a sustained and calculated left-wing media campaign.

Since the day someone leaked the Supreme Court’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson, Democrats have cast an apocalyptic vision of what a supposedly pro-life future would look like. They have painted Republicans as the allies of rapists and child abusers. And they have peddled disinformation that restricting abortion means restricting treatments for miscarriage, stillbirth and ectopic pregnancy. 

This is shameless slander and fear-mongering. But tragically, it has resonated with voters – and even some poorly informed health care workers. 

The pro-life movement has been handed a serious image problem with potentially devastating policy impacts for the unborn, and time is running out for us to respond.

That’s the bad news. The good news is that we have a winning strategy at hand. As pro-life citizens, civil society leaders and policymakers, we should consider three distinct, but related steps to reverse course.

The first step is to develop and loudly promote a compassionate, pro-family agenda.

Some Americans are reluctant to support pro-life policies because they are worried that they or women they know won’t receive adequate support if they get pregnant. They don’t see the tens of thousands of volunteers and pregnancy centers that are the beating heart of the pro-life movement.

Instead, they see politicians who are willing to limit abortion, but far less willing to help mothers and babies in need. Clumsy rhetoric and austere ideology reinforce this perception – a perception Democrats and their friends in the media gleefully exploit.

We can alter this by embracing an agenda that provides generous aid to pregnant women and their born and unborn children. In doing so, we should be adamant that this is not a divergence from pro-life principles, but a fulfillment of them.

Achieving our end goal of a ‘culture of life’ requires more than abortion restrictions – it requires adequate support so mothers can reject abortion and choose life without heroic self-sacrifice.

My Providing for Life Act offers an example of how to support pregnant women and their children. It includes a host of pro-family, pro-life reforms, from an expansion of the child tax credit to guaranteed paid parental leave to enhanced child-support enforcement. The details can be debated, but this package serves as a handy template of what our party should pursue.

The second step toward changing the tide is to hold Democrats to the fire for their extremism.

Democrats support taxpayer-funded abortion, for any reason, up until the moment of birth – and in some cases, after birth. This is not an exaggeration. To quote Abhi Rahman, national communications director for the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee: ‘A ban is a ban, period…. No matter what week they try to put on it….’

The Democrat Party platform is explicit about this position, and virtually every Democrat in Congress has voted for the so-called Women’s Health Protection Act, a bill that would eliminate virtually all abortion restrictions nationwide. 

Democrats also resist even the most basic protections for babies, such as legislation requiring abortionists to render medical aid to infants who survive surgical late-term abortions. 

These are the institutional positions of the pro-abortion left. They are wildly unjust. They are also widely unpopular. Yet most Americans have no idea that their politicians believe these things, because major media outlets literally refuse to cover them.

If the Democrats are going to be held to account for their extremism, we’ll have to do it ourselves. We should use every tool at our disposal so Democrats are forced to answer the question, ‘What restrictions do you support on abortion?’ in the Capitol and back home in districts and states. If Democrats are forced to talk honestly, they will lose.

Finally, as people who call ourselves pro-life, we must recall that protecting human beings is the center and purpose of our movement – and we cannot be shy about saying so.

It’s no secret that Americans have different views on whether and how to limit abortion. Pro-lifers must engage with the public pragmatically, recognizing that this debate puts two rights in conflict with one another – the right of women to control their bodies and the right of every person to be free from unjust violence. We have to navigate tough terrain with sympathy. But we should never abandon our moral mission. 

Other developed countries have far stronger abortion restrictions than the average blue state. Switzerland, for example, prohibits abortions after 12 weeks, with few exceptions, and requires physicians to counsel women seeking abortion about the risks of the procedure and alternatives to it. 

If Republicans cannot go at least as far as Europe in seeking to limit abortion, then we will have failed those who elected us – and more importantly, we will have failed the unborn Americans whom we claim to defend.

This is not to say that the choices before us are easy – they are anything but. But they present a powerful opportunity to refocus and remember who we are. 

Our party believes in the dignity of the human person, the importance of family and the unalienable right to life. There is no cause that unites those beliefs more perfectly and motivates our party’s supporters more earnestly than the pro-life cause. We have a sacred duty to advocate for it effectively.

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