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The Justice Department (DOJ) has sided with the United Nations in defending in court its relief agency for Palestinians after some workers were found to have likely been involved in the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks in Israel. 

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) fired at least nine of its employees in August after finding that they likely participated in the Hamas slaughter of 1,200 people, including more than 30 Americans. 

Victims of the massacre and their families sued UNRWA in a New York federal court, accusing the group and the individuals involved of aiding and abetting Hamas ‘in the commission of international torts.’

The United Nations (U.N.) says the lawsuit should be dismissed, claiming the charter between the U.S. and the U.N. gives the group and its subsidiaries diplomatic immunity. ‘Since the U.N. has not waived immunity in this instance, its subsidiary, UNRWA, continues to enjoy absolute immunity from prosecution, and the lawsuit should be dismissed,’ the U.N. stated in response. 

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams of the Southern District of New York filed a brief in July supporting that argument, saying, ‘In light of the United Nations’ immunity, the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the United Nations.’

The brief notes that ‘the United States acknowledges and deplores the profound losses suffered on October 7,’ and that ‘the United States takes no position on the factual allegations in the complaint.’

‘The United Nations is absolutely immune from suit and legal process absent an express waiver of immunity,’ Williams said, citing the Charter of the United Nations, to which the United States acceded in 1945, that says the U.N. ‘shall enjoy in the territory of each of its Members such privileges and immunities as are necessary for the fulfilment [sic] of its purposes.’

Similarly, the individual defendants in the lawsuit also enjoy immunity from suit as U.N. employees, the brief said.

Among other things, the DOJ’s brief says that the victims’ lawsuit alleges that UNRWA ‘knowingly provided monetary and material support to Hamas to build its ‘terror infrastructure’ leading up to the Oct. 7 attacks, facilitated the construction of Hamas command and control centers, permitted weapons storage in UNRWA facilities, concealed rocket and rocket-launching materials on UNRWA premises, and that that UNRWA chose Hamas-approved textbooks for its schools that were used to indoctrinate children against Israel.’

The suit also alleges UNRWA ‘knew several local staff were affiliated with Hamas and paid staff ‘in a fashion calculated to further enrich Hamas,’ according to Williams’ brief.

Mark Goldfeder, director of the National Jewish Advocacy Center, said that DOJ’s brief outlining the scope of UNRWA’s immunity ‘makes a lot of assumptions’ and exhibits a ‘lack of appetite on behalf of the executive branch to go after supporters of terror.’

‘There are also multiple technical arguments to be made here that UNRWA is not actually immune,’ Goldfeder said in a statement on X, directed at the Justice Department. 

‘The treaties above are not self-executing; it is only an affiliated organization and was never itself designated under the International Organizations Immunities Act of 1945,’ he continued. ‘It saddens me that you chose to simply assume that UNRWA’s positions are correct, instead of engaging on any of these points.’ 

‘Perhaps the most egregious assumption you accept is the idea that the claims made by the plaintiffs against all the individual defendants here relate to actions undertaken or omissions made by them in the performance of their official function,’ Goldfeder said.

‘To be clear… [the complaint is] chock-full of allegations that these defendants aided and abetted Hamas, and that they did so consciously, voluntarily, and culpably.’ 

‘Is it, pray tell, your contention that all of those actions were what UNRWA was supposed to be doing?’ Goldfeder questioned on the social media platform.

Goldfeder continued in an interview with Fox News Digital, arguing, ‘The basic premise of what makes it so absolutely crazy is this – the U.N. is claiming that immunity from civil suits for invading a country and massacring its citizens is necessary for the exercise of its functions. And again, the Biden-Harris administration just filed that they agree. So the point is, if you think that immunity for mass murder is necessary for the U.N. to function, maybe it’s time to rethink the U.N. entirely.’

Anne Bayefsky, president of Human Rights Voices and Director of the Touro Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust, says that the practical effect of DOJ’s position is ‘unaccountabillity’ for UNRWA.  

‘Regardless of the empty protestations to the contrary, the practical effect of the DOJ position is to contribute to unaccountability for UNRWA and its employees despite their demonstrable connections to Hamas and heinous behavior on multiple fronts,’ Bayefsky said. 

‘Legally-speaking immunity applies here when employees act within the boundaries of their official capacities. So is the DOJ now arguing that aiding and abetting an officially-designated terrorist organization is just UNRWA doing its job?’ she added.

UNRWA and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York did not respond to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Some House Democrats are already looking at the possibility of investigating former President Donald Trump if they win the House majority in November.

Two top lawmakers, Reps. Richard Neal, D-Mass., and Jamie Raskin, D-Md., did not rule out probing Trump if he wins the White House in November.

Neal, the top Democrat on the House Ways & Means Committee who led the probe into Trump’s tax returns in the last Congress, told Fox News Digital it would be ‘hard to assess’ whether he would see himself resuscitating that effort, but he added that the Supreme Court’s recent decision expanding presidential immunity could change the calculus.

‘That would be speculative, but I certainly would not back away from the positions I’ve taken over the years on that issue,’ Neal said.

Raskin, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, told Fox News Digital, ‘I’d rather look to the future than the past, but we’ll do our job.’

In a longer statement provided to Fox News Digital on Wednesday, Raskin accused Republicans of ignoring issues like gun violence and prescription drug costs.

‘Instead, for two years, House Republicans have used the gavel to pursue a laughingstock flop of an impeachment investigation to help their presidential nominee and personal cult leader, Donald Trump. Even worse, they have blocked and obstructed Democrats’ efforts to investigate the corruption of Donald Trump and his autocrat allies,’ Raskin said.

‘Investigating this endless corruption is critical for Congress to create legislative fixes to ensure government serves the people and to put an end to efforts to exploit the presidency and sell out our government to the highest bidder.’

Meanwhile, rank-and-file Democratic Reps. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., and Dan Goldman, D-N.Y., said investigations could be warranted into Trump’s family and their business dealings even if the former president lost his re-election bid.

Both singled out his son-in-law and former White House adviser Jared Kushner, whose investment firm got a $2 billion investment commitment from a fund led by Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman. 

‘His family has some ongoing deals that we learned about after we went out of the majority that I think are worth visiting,’ Swalwell said. ‘The Kushners and the Saudi deal – I think people want some closure on that.’

He took a shot at the House GOP’s probes into the foreign business dealings of President Biden’s son, Hunter, adding, ‘If you tell me you’re interested in Hunter Biden, then you probably owe it to the country to be interested in what happened there.’

Goldman, an Oversight Committee member, told Fox News Digital, ‘I think if Trump wins, obviously that’ll be the principal purpose [of the committee], is to provide the checks and balances that Congress needs to check, and that Donald Trump especially requires.’

‘I think there are a lot of really important, substantive issues that the committee has not investigated this year that are not partisan, that we should be focused on,’ he said, adding, ‘But we also were frustrated this term that obvious, obvious concerns were not investigated.’

‘How did Jared Kushner get $2 billion from Mohammed bin Salman for an investment company in something that he had never done before…That’s a tremendous amount of money. There’s been no investigation into that.’

Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt responded, saying, ‘Swalwell and Goldman should get a life. President Trump has endured two fake impeachments, four baseless witch-hunt indictments, and endless investigations into his businesses — all of which have failed because they are not based on facts but rather, they are fueled by the vitriolic Trump Derangement Syndrome that has taken over the Democrat Party.’

Raskin’s investigatory efforts into Trump during this Congress, as leader of the Oversight Committee’s Democratic minority, could also offer a possible preview of what Democrats’ probes could look like in a second Trump term.

Earlier this month, he and Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif., sent a letter to Trump demanding that the former president prove he did not take a ‘cash bribe’ from Egypt’s president in 2017. The letter was spurred by a Washington Post report that also alleged former Attorney General Bill Barr had blocked a probe into the matter.

Investigating Biden and his family has been a core focus of the committee under Chairman James Comer’s tenure. Comer, R-Ky., released a report recently accusing the president of having committed impeachable offenses – something the White House denies.

He denied that the intensity of his Biden probe could give Democrats cover to investigate Trump, however – insisting their inquiries into Trump were political.

‘If the Democrats want to waste taxpayer dollars and time investigating the Trump administration again for the second time, then that’s their prerogative. But we focused on waste, fraud and abuse and mismanagement by the federal government,’ Comer told Fox News Digital.

‘If Trump wins…They’re going to harass and obstruct every step of the way.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

RENTON, Wash. — Cash-strapped Boeing is facing mounting costs from an ongoing machinist strike as workers push for higher pay. A failure to get a deal done could be even more expensive.

In the shadow of a factory outside Seattle where Boeing makes its best-selling planes, picketing Boeing machinists told CNBC they have saved up money and have taken or are considering taking side jobs in landscaping, furniture moving or warehouse work to make ends meet if the strike is goes on much longer.

The work stoppage by Boeing’s factory workers in the Pacific Northwest just entered its second week. The financial cost of the strike on Boeing depends on how long it lasts, though ratings agencies have warned that the company could face a downgrade if it drags on too long.

That would add to the borrowing costs of the company, already $60 billion in debt. Boeing has burned through about $8 billion so far this year in the wake of a near-catastrophic door plug blowout from one of its 737 Max planes in January.

Boeing hasn’t turned an annual profit since 2018, and its new CEO Kelly Ortberg is trying to restore the company’s reputation after months of manufacturing crises that have slowed deliveries to customers, depriving it of cash.

At the local union office in Renton, machinists were preparing for what may become a lengthy strike: Union members carried in large pallets of bottled water, while someone mixed a giant tuna salad in the kitchen to make sandwiches for workers. Union vans visited demonstration sites around Renton offering transportation to bathroom breaks for workers on picket duty. Burn barrels provided heat for chilly overnight pickets.

Many workers spoke of their love for their jobs but fretted about the high cost of living in the Seattle area, where the majority of Boeing’s aircraft are made.

The median home price in Washington state increased about 142% to $613,000 as of 2023, from $253,800 a decade earlier, according to the state’s Office of Financial Management. That outpaces the roughly 55% increase nationally over that period, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

“We can’t afford [to own] a home,” said Jake Meyer, a Boeing mechanic who said he will start driving for a food delivery service during the strike and is looking at picking up odd jobs such as moving furniture. Meyer said although he’s striking for higher pay from Boeing, he enjoys the job of building airplanes.

“I take pride in my work,” he said.

Another Boeing machinist said he has been saving for months, forgoing things such as restaurants and paying three months of mortgage payments early.

“I can last as long as it takes,” said the worker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

More than 30,000 Boeing machinists walked off the job at midnight Sept. 13 after turning down a tentative labor deal in a nearly 95% vote — 96% voted in favor of a strike. They received their last paychecks Thursday, and health benefits are set to end on Sept. 30. A strike fund from the union will soon give them $250 a week.

The strike is costing Boeing some $50 million a day, according to estimates by Bank of America aerospace analyst Ron Epstein. The strike halted production of most of Boeing’s aircraft, and that is rippling out to the aerospace giant’s vast network of suppliers, some of which have already been told to halt shipments. Boeing is still making 787 Dreamliners at its non-union factory in South Carolina.

The battle pits a struggling Boeing against a workforce seeking wage increases and other improvements. Boeing’s most recent offer included 25% general wage increases over a four-year deal and was endorsed by the machinists union, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers District 751.

Workers said they were looking for wage increases closer to the 40% that the union had proposed as well as annual bonuses and a restoration of pensions lost more than a decade ago.

Boeing and the union were at the negotiation table this week, but both Boeing and union negotiators have said they were disappointed with the lack of progress.

“We continue to prioritize the issues you defined in the most recent survey,” union negotiators wrote to members Wednesday, “yet we are deeply concerned that the company has not addressed your top concerns. No meaningful progress was made during today’s talks.”

Ortberg, who is just six weeks on the job, announced temporary furloughs this week of tens of thousands of Boeing staff, including managers and executives, on the heels of a hiring freeze and other cost-cutting measures announced this week.

“During mediation with the union this week, we continued our good faith efforts to engage the union’s bargaining committee in meaningful negotiations to address the feedback we’ve heard from our team,” Ortberg said in a note to staff Friday.

“While we are disappointed the discussions didn’t lead to more progress, we remain very committed to reaching an agreement as soon as possible that recognizes the hard work of our employees and ends the work stoppage in the Pacific Northwest,” Ortberg wrote. 

The strike, which includes Boeing machinists in the Seattle area, Oregon and a few other locations, is just the latest in a series of labor battles in recent years that has included actors, autoworkers, port workers and airline employees, all of which have won raises after strikes or strike threats.

The Biden administration has encouraged Boeing and the union to reach a deal.

“I do believe that both parties want to get to a resolution here, and hoping to see one that makes sense for the workers and it works for a company that really needs to find its way forward on so many fronts,” Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Thursday.

Boeing is facing a tight labor market. During the last strike, in 2008, which lasted less than two months, the company was in better financial shape, and there was less job competition in the area.

One Boeing supplier told CNBC that furloughing or laying off workers would cause problems for months down the road because it takes so long to train staff on such technical and detailed work.

During the pandemic, Boeing and its suppliers shed thousands of workers. They’ve since struggled to hire and train workers in time for the resurgence in air travel and aircraft demand.

“You’re in an environment where skilled, technical labor is hard to get right now, particularly in aerospace and defense,” said Bank of America’s Epstein. “So what do you do to not only retain them but attract them? If they really want a pension, maybe that gives you a competitive advantage over people who are trying to attract talent.”

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

ATLANTA – It’s become such a thing with the Kansas City Chiefs: Where’s Taylor Swift? 

The NFL surely can’t get enough of the buzz attached to the global icon and her legion of Swifties, against the backdrop of her romantic connection with one of the greatest tight ends in NFL history. The cameo shots of Swift watching her beau from a private box, bonding with Brittany Mahomes and cheering wildly over big plays is, well, cute. 

Yet football purists have come lately with another relevant question as it pertains to the back-to-back Super Bowl champs: Whatever happened to Travis Kelce? 

Relax, everybody. Even with Kelce putting up pedestrian numbers during the 3-0 start for the Chiefs, this is hardly a critical emergency that threatens the bid for a three-peat – at least not yet. 

Sure, if you’re a fantasy football owner with Kelce on your squad, you may be in panic mode. In three games, Kelce has logged eight catches for 69 yards. He’s still looking for his first touchdown of the season. 

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During Kansas City’s tight, 22-17 victory against the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday night, Kelce was targeted on five passes from his running buddy, Patrick Mahomes, and caught four passes for 30 yards. That’s undoubtedly not the stat sheet production we’re used to seeing from Kelce, 34, who in the previous six seasons averaged 100 catches and tallied 52 touchdowns. 

On a critical third-and-2 early in the fourth quarter on Sunday night, Mahomes threw over to middle to No. 87 and Jessie Bates III, one of the NFL’s best playmaking safeties, ripped the football out of Kelce’s clutches. Incomplete. 

Still, no need to panic. 

“Just living the dream, bro,” Kelce said when approached in the locker room afterward. 

Then came some boorish Chiefs security guard, executing a seal block that would have been textbook for a power sweep but in this case facilitated a violation of the NFL’s stated – but poorly administered – media policy that maintains players are available after games for comment. The security guard cleared a path for Kelce to scoot out the door without weighing in on the nail-biting victory. Since Kelce’s profile has gone to new heights (pun intended) with his connection to Swift, he has routinely dodged postgame questions. 

What a shame. Kelce, a 12th-year pro, has been good for engaging insight for so long, podcast or not.  

In any event, Mahomes broke it down in Football 101 terms. What’s up with Kelce? 

“It’s crazy,” Mahomes said. “Teams still…the respect factor they have for Travis is unreal. It’s well deserved.’

‘We’re calling a lot of plays for Travis. It’s like two or three people are going to him. He understands. That’s the great thing about him. He wants to impact the game. He wants to win at the end of the day.” 

Although Kelce’s impact on the stat sheet didn’t please certain fantasy team owners, his presence within the game remains very real. Kelce played 54 of the 74 offensive snaps on Sunday night (77%), a rate exceeded only by the 100% count from Mahomes and the five offensive line starters. And while many measure his effectiveness by the passing game stats, Kelce’s immense value comes with his skill as a complete tight end able to play a punishing role as a blocker in the running game. 

Hey, the catches will come. Remember how it flowed last season, when Kelce missed the opener, then logged 17 catches in his first three games and didn’t score a touchdown in the final six regular-season contests. During the playoffs, though, he had four monster games – including an 11-catch, 116-yard output in the AFC title game at Baltimore, with a sweet TD catch – that were essential to the Chiefs’ mission to become repeat champs. 

So, just wait. The Chiefs’ passing game has been triggered by the emergence of second-year receiver Rashee Rice (who had his second 100-yard contest of the season on Sunday night and has posted TDs the past two games) while first-round pick Xavier Worthy has shown promising flashes. Yet Kelce’s breakout is still a major threat. 

“I’m going to do my best to keep feeding him the ball whenever he’s there, but I think the more Rashee makes plays, the more we’re able to run the ball, the more we can get Worthy involved, that’s going to open Travis us more,” Mahomes said. “People are really emphasizing trying to take him away, and it’s getting other guys open.” 

Sounds like the Chiefs, who keep winning while trying to find their stride, have the type of “problem” with Kelce’s limited stat sheet production that most teams would beg for. 

And even the Swifties could get with that. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It’s felt evident for a few years now that Russell Wilson has entered the twilight of his NFL career. But you know what? Sundown in South Florida sure can be spectacular.

If not exactly a split-screen moment Sunday afternoon, it still wasn’t hard to miss Russ yet again dressed out in his role as the emergency quarterback for the Pittsburgh Steelers, who improved to 3-0 with Justin Fields taking the snaps … while, on the other side of the country, the Miami Dolphins were getting clubbed for the second straight week courtesy of the Seattle Seahawks, Wilson’s former team.

You can already see the dots connecting here.

Wilson’s calf injury has effectively given the Steelers cover to start Fields without repercussion. But as the 25-year-old gets increasingly acclimated to an offense that fits his skill set nicely and continues to produce incrementally better personal and collective results (including a passing and rushing TD in Sunday’s victory), the Steelers will surely have to anoint him with the QB1 label at some point – and that was the sensible conclusion all along given Fields and Wilson, 35, are both headed for free agency in 2025, but only one of them was a logical candidate for a long-term marriage.

And it feels like even sometimes brusque Pittsburgh head coach Mike Tomlin is starting to fall for Fields.

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“He’s doing a good job doing what we’re asking him to do, playing and playing to win,” he said after Sunday’s 20-10 defeat of the previously unbeaten Los Angeles Chargers, “and so that’s appreciated.”

Yet what might also be nicely appreciating is Wilson’s value.

The 2024 season is only three weeks old, but several teams already seem to be entering the throes of a quarterback crisis – the Las Vegas Raiders and Tennessee Titans potential examples, though they can materialize instantaneously anywhere in the league at any time.

And that brings us to the Dolphins.

A playoff team during the first two years of coach Mike McDaniel’s tenure, the Fins have sunk copious amounts of money into a roster – which has been forced into risky cost cutting in some areas – in a bid to contend now, most notably the four-year, $212.4 million extension ($167.2 million guaranteed) granted to quarterback Tua Tagovailoa in July. Of course, now on injured reserve after his latest concussion, he won’t be eligible to play again until Oct. 27 – at the earliest and assuming his neurological outlook and family support his return.

The Dolphins were embarrassed 24-3 in Seattle on Sunday – they’ve lost their last two games by a collective 55-13 – and saw backup quarterback Skylar Thompson knocked out of the lineup with a chest injury, not that he was particularly effective beforehand. Journeyman Tim Boyle, fresh off the practice squad, mopped up.

Asked about his 1-2 team’s next steps, McDaniel replied: “I think you have to look at everything. And you have to find a way to give your team a best chance to win.

“We have to find a way to get better collectively.”

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When viewing the predicament of the 2024 Dolphins, the specter of the 2023 New York Jets should be a warning – maybe with Boyle himself tripping a call to action after three dreadful appearances for the NYJ last season. Remember, those Jets basically hoped they were talented enough to hang on for Aaron Rodgers to make a farfetched return from his Week 1 Achilles tear. In the interim, talented playmakers like WR Garrett Wilson and RB Breece Hall toiled for a hamstrung attack while the defense shouldered an inordinate burden.

You can already see similar issues surfacing for Miami, where WRs Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle and RB De’Von Achane are quickly turning into hood ornaments.

“(W)e have a real good team, and we’ve got some great leaders who are keeping everybody together,” Hill said Sunday.

“We’ll have a captains meeting on what needs to be changed and be back to the drawing board Monday night.”

If only there were a veteran passer with extensive postseason experience who was available, one playing for the veteran’s minimum on an expiring contract – preferably with a career completion rate near 65% who tends to safeguard the ball … and might even be more willing than ever to follow a coach’s playbook to the X and O given his recent experience with coach Sean Payton and increasingly tenuous footing as a perceived starter in this league.

Oh, wait.

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Is Wilson a declining player, especially as it pertains to his mobility? Yes. Is it fair to say he’s probably less accurate and decisive when compared to Tagovailoa? Yep. But, despite Payton’s dissatisfaction in Denver, Wilson did exhibit with the Broncos in 2023 that he can still be a quality NFL starter (26 TD passes, 98.0 QB rating) who knows distributing the ball to playmakers might lead to the best version of himself. And he’s clearly desperate to win amid a quest to add another Lombardi Trophy to his recently tarnished legacy.

Wilson has repeatedly contended his calf is just about ready for action. Naturally, that prompts the question: Should the Steelers just keep him as an insurance policy behind Fields?

As of Sunday night, Pittsburgh was one of four 3-0 teams and was at least two games clear of the field in the AFC North. And this is a franchise that has seen the value of, say, a Charlie Batch, who could capably carry a team for a month when the starting quarterback was down.

Wilson might be Batch-plus, but Fields isn’t Terry Bradshaw or Ben Roethlisberger – not yet, maybe not ever. And, unbeaten or not, this doesn’t quite feel like a squad on the precipice of the city’s long-awaited Stairway to Seven, which would be the most Super Bowls ever won by a franchise.

Divesting Wilson for, say, a mid-round draft pick could mean filling a crucial slot on the depth chart in the future or providing the final piece of currency that consummates a deal in the pursuit of the next quarterback if it winds up not being Fields – especially at a point when it’s obvious the Steelers won’t be organically be drafting in the top five. A trade also eliminates what’s bound to eventually become a distraction for Tomlin.

The Steelers might be standouts in the context of what’s become typical early season NFL mediocrity, albeit a group headed in a decidedly positive direction. The Dolphins might actually have more upside over the course of the 2024 campaign – but maybe only if they pursue a short-term solution like Wilson. Yet Miami might also need him as a suspension bridge if Tagovailoa is out for an indefinite period – particularly given the difficulty the Fins would have trying to reset themselves into the market for a younger quarterback, whether in the draft or in free agency.

And just maybe such a change of address would permit Russ to ride – “Let’s ride!” – into a sunset more to his liking than the current reality of riding the pine in the 11th hour of his distinguished career.

***

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Nate Davis on X, formerly Twitter, @ByNateDavis.

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Miami Dolphins receiver Tyreek Hill, who was detained by police before a NFL game earlier this month, has hired three lawyers, including a former federal prosecutor and a civil rights attorney who worked several high-profile cases including George Floyd’s, to assist in his legal battle against the Miami-Dade Police Department.

“Miami Dolphins’ superstar Tyreek Hill said that he will speak for all people in a broad fight against national police misconduct,” a statement by Hill’s lawyer, Julius B. Collins of Atlanta, released to USA TODAY Sports said Monday.

“Hill is adamant that his legal team will ensure that the voices of people who have long been ignored or silenced on the issue of police reform will finally be heard.”

Hill has hired former federal prosecutor, Jeffrey A. Neiman (based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida), Stephen B. Kelly, Jr. of Jacksonville’s Rolle & Kelly (Jacksonville, Florida) and well-known civil rights attorney Devon M. Jacob (Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania), who has served as counsel in many high-profile civil rights cases nationally, including Floyd, Kodak Black (Bill Kapri), Hunter Brittain, Pamela Turner, Christian Hall, Emantic “EJ”Bradford, and Eboni Pouncy.

The Miami-Dade Police Department announced officer Danny Torres was placed on administrative duties following the Sept. 8 incident, where police body-camera footage showed Hill was forcibly removed from his vehicle and placed in handcuffs. Torres was suspended six times in 28 years with the department, according to personnel records obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

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“It is already clear that well before this incident, Miami-Dade County should have fired Officer Torres. Instead, the County repeatedly returned Officer Torres to the street permitting him to use his police authority to terrorize people,” Neiman said.

“Had officers not realized that they were interacting with Tyreek Hill – a well-known, beloved, educated, and seemingly wealthy black man – this traffic stop would likely have ended with the driver in jail, in the hospital, or like George Floyd, dead,” Collins added.

“Tyreek intends to continue the national movement for necessary police reform that George Floyd’s death started,” Jacob said. “Tyreek is demanding that Congress finally pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act.’

Hill was traveling at an estimated speed of 60 mph, according to police. He was cited for careless driving and a seatbelt violation, and has an Oct. 11 court date for both traffic tickets. Hill is not required to appear, and will be represented by Miami-based attorney Adam Goodman in the traffic case.

The attorneys for Torres, Ignacio Alvarez and Israel Reyes, called for Torres to be immediately reinstated in a Sept. 11 news release.

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Former USC football star running back and 2005 Heisman Trophy winner Reggie Bush has filed a lawsuit against USC, the Pac-12 and the NCAA, seeking compensation for his name, image and likeness (NIL) from his decorated career with the Trojans from 2003-05.

In a statement, the law firm representing Bush in the matter said the lawsuit “aims to address and rectify ongoing injustices stemming from the exploitation” of his NIL rights.

The statement cites revenue streams like television contracts and merchandise sales that Bush’s on-field excellence helped enhance. His legal team added that the three entities named in the lawsuit continued to profit from Bush’s reputation “without any acknowledgement of his contribution” after he left for the NFL following the 2005 season.

“This case is not just about seeking justice for Reggie Bush; it’s about setting a precedent for the fair treatment of all college athletes,” attorney Evan Selik of the law firm McCathern Law said in a statement. “Our goal is to rectify this injustice and pave the way for a system where athletes are rightfully recognized, compensated and treated fairly for their contributions.”

Bush was as big of a superstar as there has been in modern college football history as the electrifying running back for top-ranked USC teams that embodied the fame and glamour of Los Angeles.

Over his three seasons with the Trojans, he rushed for 3,169 yards and 25 touchdowns while averaging 7.3 yards per carry. He also had 1,301 receiving yards and 13 touchdowns. That production reached a peak as a junior in 2005: He rushed for 1,740 yards, averaged 8.7 yards per carry and ran for 16 touchdowns, adding 478 receiving yards and two touchdown catches.

He won the Heisman Trophy that year, an award that was vacated in 2010 after USC was hit with significant NCAA sanctions for violations that included Bush receiving impermissible benefits. The Heisman Trust reinstated Bush as the winner in April, citing ‘enormous changes in the college football landscape” as a factor in its decision.

Over Bush’s career, USC went 37-2 and won two national championships. Bush went on to play 11 years in the NFL with the New Orleans Saints, Miami Dolphins, Detroit Lions, San Francisco 49ers and Buffalo Bills. He was part of the Saints team that won a Super Bowl in 2010.

Bush becomes the latest and perhaps highest-profile athlete to mount a legal challenge against the NCAA or one of its conferences trying to recoup NIL money it was denied because of NCAA rules at the time of their careers.

Earlier this month, four former Michigan football players, including Denard Robinson and Braylon Edwards, sued the NCAA and the Big Ten Network for more than $50 million from being ‘wrongfully and unlawfully denied’ the opportunity to earn money from their name, image and likeness. In June, 10 members of NC State’s famed 1983 national-title-winning men’s basketball team sued the NCAA and the Collegiate Licensing Company seeking payment for the unauthorized use of their name, image and likeness.

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Former WWE CEO Vince McMahon slammed the upcoming Netflix docuseries ‘Mr. McMahon,’ calling it a ‘misleading’ and ‘deceptive’ depiction of him.

The founder of WWE said in a statement on Monday he didn’t regret participating in the Netflix documentary set to be released this week. The six-part series chronicles McMahon’s rise to power and the controversies that surrounded him. A trailer for the series hints at the lawsuit brought on by a former WWE employee that accuses McMahon of abuse, sexual assault and human trafficking.

McMahon said the producers had the chance ‘to tell an objective story about my life and the incredible business I built, which were equally filled with excitement, drama, fun, and a fair amount of controversy and life lessons.’

‘Unfortunately, based on an early partial cut I’ve seen, this doc falls short and takes the predictable path of conflating the ‘Mr. McMahon’ character with my true self, Vince. The title and promos alone make that evident,’ he said. ‘A lot has been misrepresented or left out entirely in an effort to leave viewers intentionally confused. The producers use typical editing tricks with out of context footage and dated soundbites etc. to distort the viewers’ perception and support a deceptive narrative.

‘In an attempt to further their misleading account, the producers use a lawsuit based on an affair I ended as evidence that I am, in fact, ‘Mr. McMahon.’ I hope the viewer will keep an open mind and remember that there are two sides to every story.”

According to Netflix, the series ‘delves into the mogul’s controversial reign’ during WWE, which ended this year when he resigned as executive chairman and board member of TKO Group Holdings, the parent company of WWE. His resignation came just after former WWE employee Janel Grant said she was put through sexual acts by McMahon that were done with ‘extreme cruelty and degradation.’ Grant alleged McMahon made her sign a non-disclosure agreement about their relationship for an agreed amount of $3 million, but she didn’t receive full payment from McMahon and wants to void the agreement with the lawsuit. Currently, the the U.S. Department of Justice is conducting its own investigation into McMahon.

Attorney responds to Vince McMahon statement

Grant was not interviewed for the docuseries, her lawyers said last week. After McMahon released his statement, Ann Callis, an attorney for Grant, told TODAY Sports in a statement that calling ‘his horrific and criminal behavior ‘an affair’ is delusional and nothing more than a sad attempt to save his shredded reputation.’

‘Vince McMahon physically and emotionally abused, sexually assaulted and human trafficked Janel Grant for more than two years,’ Callis said. ‘Although Ms. Grant has not seen the “Mr. McMahon” docuseries, we hope it shines a bright light on his abhorrent and criminal actions by accurately portraying the realities of his abusive and exploitative behavior.

“Ms. Grant will no longer be silenced by McMahon. Her story, though deeply troubling and exceptionally painful, is one that can help other abuse survivors find their voices. We seek to hold McMahon, John Laurinaitis and WWE accountable and to give Ms. Grant her day in court,’ Callis added.

‘Mr. McMahon’ will be available to stream on Wednesday.

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Now that more than a quarter of the college football regular season is in the books, we have a few useful data points to help us evaluate what we’ve witnessed thus far. The picture is far from complete, of course, with quite a few teams yet to embark on the conference portion of their schedules. In short, there’s still plenty of room to overreact.

Our top five overreactions from Week 4 include a reassessment of the playoff viability of a couple of one-loss squads, a little premature crowning of some conference champs, and a peek at the crowded race to represent the group-of-five leagues. Maybe this edition just means less, but since the SEC practically monopolized this space last time out we’ll spotlight other conferences here.

Michigan will repeat as national champion

The dream is more alive than it was a week ago at this time thanks to the Wolverines’ win against Southern California, and the Week 2 loss to Texas is hardly disqualifying on its own. But Michigan’s path to the playoff, either as Big Ten champion or as an at-large invitee, remains murky at best.

The Wolverines were able to break off some big runs against the Trojans, but their offense is almost exclusively one-dimensional. The formula of taking few chances and controlling the line of scrimmage will work against some opponents, but there are some high-scoring clubs still on Michigan’s schedule. The Wolverines are in the mix, but we’ll need to see more before we move them back into the likely column to make the field of 12.

Notre Dame is still an at-large candidate

The Fighting Irish took care of their own business over the weekend, avoiding a second loss to a visitor from the Mid-American Conference. But a number of other results did not work in Notre Dame’s favor.

The notable measure of collateral damage came courtesy of the team that toppled the Irish two weeks ago, as Northern Illinois dropped its MAC opener to Buffalo. Furthermore, Notre Dame’s dominant bounce-back win at Purdue doesn’t appear as though it will count for much, as the Boilermakers were throttled by Oregon State. The aforementioned loss by USC, a Notre Dame future opponent, also didn’t help. At least Texas A&M was able to outlast Bowling Green, but it remains to be seen how well Notre Dame’s win against the Aggies in Week 1 will hold up. At least the next outing for the Irish against Louisville presents another opportunity against a ranked opponent, but a lot of factors that would help the Irish get back into the at-large pool are out of their control. We’ll talk more about Louisville in our next item.

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers from Week 4 in college football

MISERY INDEX: North Carolina lead way after loss to James Madison

The Clemson-Miami ACC title game is inevitable

The Tigers have found their groove after being shut down by Georgia in Week 1, and the Hurricanes are blowing through everyone in their path. They would appear to be on a collision course given the struggles of most other expected contenders in the ACC. The Tigers and Miami will not meet in the regular season, and the Tigers’ remaining league schedule in particular would seem to have few impediments.

There is, however, one other conference member that could still have something to say about the race. No, not Florida State. The Seminoles do play both the ‘Canes and the Tigers but have shown no indication of being able to challenge either.

As you’ve undoubtedly surmised, we’re talking about Louisville. The Cardinals, remember, played for the ACC title last season. They will host Miami on Oct. 19 and visit Death Valley two weeks later, likely needing at least a split of those to make a return trip to the title game. We think the Clemson-Miami showdown is the most likely championship game scenario, but nothing in this sport is etched in stone.

Just send the Big 12 trophy to Utah

With the win at Oklahoma State in the bank and the Sunflower State contenders fading, the Utes are clearly in the driver’s seat in their new conference at this early juncture. The remainder of their schedule looks quite manageable with only a couple of potential obstacles.

Most fans in the Beehive State probably have Nov. 9 circled on the calendar already, when the Utes will renew acquaintances with old rival Brigham Young. The Cougars, off to a 4-0 start themselves coming off a surprisingly one-sided victory against Kansas State, have just added another level of intrigue to the coming reunion. Utah will then have to tangle with a resurgent Iowa State a couple weeks later. Other X-factors could emerge, but Utah is the clear favorite. How the Utes handle wearing the big target will be a major storyline to follow the rest of the way.

James Madison will make the College Football Playoff

The Dukes’ 70-point outburst at North Carolina certainly got the college football world’s attention. Could JMU’s rapid rise from FCS power to instant Sun Belt contender result in a shot at the title this quickly? It’s not out of the question, but there are a slew of other teams in that mix.

Remember, only the highest ranked conference champion from among the Group of Five leagues will earn a spot in the current playoff format. Should the Dukes win the Sun Belt, and that’s still a big if with a number of good teams in that league, they’d need to finish ahead of the champs from the other four non-power conferences. The losses by Northern Illinois and Memphis over the weekend didn’t hurt, but there are still plenty of candidates from the American Athletic and the Mountain West in the equation. Bottom line, there’s a lot to watch with conference play about to begin in earnest across the country. Enjoy.

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CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — North Carolina football coach Mack Brown apologized on Monday, saying he was “disappointed” in how he handled the loss to James Madison. 

In the aftermath of the stunning 70-50 loss to the Dukes, Brown said reports and locker room comments about him quitting were misinterpreted. Still, he regrets how he handled the situation with his players.

“What I said is, ‘If you all don’t feel like I’m the leader you need, then I’ll go do something else,’” Brown said Monday during his weekly press conference.

“(The players) said, ‘Nah, we’re in. Let’s go.’ I wish I hadn’t put them in that spot. … If I was going to quit, I would have come in here and done it.” 

Brown, 73, has no plans to step down as the Tar Heels prepare to face rival Duke (4-0) on Saturday at Wallace Wade Stadium in the annual battle for the Victory Bell. 

“Excited about the future. Love my job, love these kids,” Brown said. “I love this place, that’s why I hate losing so much. Moving forward and looking forward to playing Duke this weekend.”

HIGHS AND LOWS: Winners and losers from Week 4 in college football

MISERY INDEX: North Carolina lead way after loss to James Madison

Following the loss to James Madison, which was the first opponent to score 70 points against North Carolina at Kenan Stadium, Brown said he apologized to chancellor Lee Roberts and athletics director Bubba Cunningham. He received words of encouragement and support from both leaders. 

“All I can do is apologize and move forward; that’s it,” Brown said. “Did I handle it right? No. Do I admit I handled it wrong? Yes, 100%. Do I wish I hadn’t done it? Yeah, but I did it. I learn from it and I won’t do it again.” 

Brown is in his sixth season in his second stint at North Carolina, which is coming off back-to-back seasons with at least eight wins. He is 285-150-1 all time and became the winningest active coach in college football when Nick Saban retired. 

When Brown returned to Chapel Hill, he promised his wife, Sally, that he would be better at dealing with defeat.

Brown said he goes to a ‘dark place’ after losses, acknowledging the James Madison loss is the maddest he’s ever been after a game. Moving forward, he hopes to have a better handle on those situations.

“Even at 73,” Brown said, “you have to learn from some hard lessons.”

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