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Authorities in Las Vegas are investigating the death of a five-time Olympian from South America who reportedly died from asphyxiation after choking on food at home.

The Clark County Coroner Medical Examiner’s office confirmed to USA TODAY her official cause and manner of death was pending autopsy and toxicology results.

Stephanie Wheatley, a spokesperson for the coroner’s office said Chirinos was officially pronounced dead on Aug. 15.

According to information translated from Spanish news site ABC, the athlete, who worked at a Las Vegas hotel, was reported missing by coworkers when she failed to report to work Aug. 12.

2024 Paris Olympics: Follow USA TODAY’s coverage of the biggest names and stories of the Games.

Although an official cause of death for the athlete is not yet known, according to a Fox Sports report, the Las Vegas Police Department told the outlet her cause of death had been asphyxiation caused by food found in her trachea.

USA TODAY has reached out to police.

Venezuela Olympic Committee: ‘May she rest in peace’

On Aug. 16, the Venezuela Olympic Committee posted a tribute to Chirinos on X.

‘With her outstanding career in track cycling, she achieved representing us with honor in five Olympic Games, accumulated four Olympic medals and triumphs that always filled us with great pride,’ the committee wrote on the social media site.

The photo depicts the Olympian with her eyes closed, holding up a medal with a flag draped around her body,

A caption in a photo in the post reads, ‘May she rest in peace.’

Who is Daniela Larreal Chirinos?

One of Venezuela’s best-known athletes, Chirinos last competed in the Olympics 2012 Summer Games in London.

Chirinos was a critic of the country’s embattled President Nicolás Maduro, and at the time of her death, ABC reported, she was living in exile after criticism of the political leader.

Last month, Venezuelan officials declared Maduro the winner of the country’s presidential election. So far, the Associated Press reported, authorities there have not provided voting tallies to prove Maduro won, spurring questions about the legitimacy of the election.

The country’s socioeconomic crisis and political unrest has stirred protest across the nation. Maduro succeeded former president, Hugo Chávez, who died of cancer in 2013, initiated the ‘Bolivarian revolution’ and dismantled the country’s democratic political system.

Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@usatoday.com and follow her on X @nataliealund.

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The evolution of Caleb Williams as much-hyped generational phenom tabbed as the ‘chosen one’ for a floundering Chicago Bears franchise into a bona fide NFL quarterback continues on ‘Hard Knocks: Training Camp with the Chicago Bears.’

After NFL Films cameras captured Williams going through some early training camp growing pains in the season’s opening episode, Williams seems to be settling in quite nicely in his role as QB1 for one of the NFL’s flagship franchises.

The good vibes from Williams’ impressive preseason debut against the Buffalo Bills continued through the next week as the Bears welcomed the Cincinnati Bengals to town for a joint practice and then an exhibition game on Saturday.

This week’s ‘Hard Knocks’ episode opened with Bears head coach Matt Eberflus going over the tape from the Bills game with Williams. It was Williams’ first real taste of live-action NFL play, and Eberflus wanted to know why Williams thought he had success in his preseason debut. Williams cited three reasons: Preparation, confidence in the preparation, and playing within the game. Eberflus then asked Williams what he learned. Williams responded: ‘Practice is harder than the game.’

Williams’ ease in his new professional role was apparent in the team’s next preseason game against the Bengals. He overcame a slow start – potentially hampered by a communication breakdown as the mic from offensive coordinator Shane Waldron kept going out. Williams was steady in a potentially nerve-racking situation, simply saying after hearing a jumbled play call that he was ‘piecing it together.’ This is a rookie quarterback in his second preseason game … and in very limited playing time, mind you. He’s just out there deciphering play calls that sounded to the ‘Hard Knocks’ viewer like it was coming from a Star Wars gonk droid.

All things Bears: Latest Chicago Bears news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Williams saved the best for last against the Bengals. He connected with rookie receiver Rome Odunze for a spectacular 45-yard completion – ‘That’s what the people wanted to see,’ Williams said to Odunze in the huddle – and then followed that up by escaping the Bengals’ pressure in a collapsed pocket and scrambling for a touchdown on a third-and-goal play. Williams’ Soldier Field debut was over after what was an electric eight-play, 90-yard touchdown drive.

Williams’ progression will only fan the flames of football optimism in Chicago with a little more than two weeks until the Bears play for real in Week 1 against the Tennessee Titans.

PREVIOUSLY ON ‘HARD KNOCKS’: Caleb Williams not only rookie standout vs. Bills in preseason

HARD KNOCKS: 19 most memorable moments through the years

Here is more of what we learned from the third episode of ‘Hard Knocks: Training Camp with the Chicago Bears’:

Bears kick tires on Matthew Judon trade

Pairing Matthew Judon in a pass-rushing tandem with Pro Bowl defensive end Montez Sweat seemed enticing to Bears general manager Ryan Poles.

Yet, not while mortgaging the Bears’ very promising future.

We now know that Judon was traded by the New England Patriots to the Atlanta Falcons last week in exchange for a third-round draft pick. What was revealed on ‘Hard Knocks’ was how close the Bears came to acquiring the four-time Pro Bowl pass rusher.

Judon and the Falcons did not agree to a contract extension before the team agreed to the trade. That was the sticking point with the Bears.

‘We believe he would help us get better, just his style,’ Poles told team president Kevin Warren in a meeting while discussing the potential trade. ‘We think having the bicep (injury), rather than a lower body injury, he still would play with the same intensity and explosion as he did before. It does come with risk though at 32 (years old).’

Judon is coming off a 2023 season in which he played just four games after suffered a season-ending bicep tear. The Bears wanted a contract extension in place in order for the trade to be consummated – ‘Our language is basically saying if the contract is not signed then he reverts back to New England,’ Poles told Bears special advisor Ted Crews.

The trade fell through for the Bears. Poles was left with some introspection – ‘We try to do a really good job creating parameters that make sense for our club to be successful now, but also down the road’ – while his confidants looked at the situation with a glass half full.

In meeting with team director of football administration Matt Feinstein, Poles continued to validate his position on the Judon situation.

‘I’m tormenting myself, but if you have your own guardrails that we put up to help us stay in the lane … we surely pressed up against them to acquire the player,’ Poles said. ‘But when it comes to losing all flexibility, I don’t think that would be smart, even if he has success. Now, if he has 20 sacks or something, it’ll make me sick.’

The Bears registered just 30 sacks last season, the second-lowest total in the league.

Feinstein looked ahead, with the thought that rookie Austin Booker might one day fill the pass-rushing spot opposite Sweat.

‘It’s Judon for a (third-round pick) and some significant financial needs,’ Feinstein said. ‘We traded a (fourth-round pick) for four years of Austin Booker.’

MATTHEW JUDON TRADE WINNERS, LOSERS: How did Patriots, Falcons fare in deal?

Inside draft war room for Austin Booker pick

‘Hard Knocks’ followed up the inside access of the Bears’ efforts to trade for Judon by showing the team’s war room during the 2024 NFL draft when the team was working the phones hard to trade back into the fifth round to select Kansas defensive end Austin Booker.

The Bears had to get creative to make the selection, given the team was out of picks after taking Iowa punter Tory Taylor in the fourth round. ‘Hard Knocks’ cameras showed the Bears’ war room making calls to try to get a player they thought very highly of. They made calls for pick Nos. 137, 139 and 142 before senior director of player personnel Jeff King gets the Bears in at pick No. 144. The Bears sent a 2024 fourth-round pick to the Buffalo Bills in order to be able to select Booker.

‘I’m a sleeper. Not many people know about me,’ Booker said. ‘I’m going to continue getting better in the shadows, and they’re not going to know what’s coming.’

Matt Eberflus and nicknames

The Bears head coach apparently enjoys giving people nicknames.

There’s ‘Big Dog,’ ‘Governor, ‘Spidey,’ ‘Young Jedi,’ ‘The Canadian Eagle’ and ‘Herbie the Love Bug.’

One player who doesn’t have a nickname yet is rookie punter Tory Taylor, who is from Australia.

‘What do you think of ‘Crocodile Punter’?’ a reporter asks Taylor.

‘I definitely don’t want that one. I don’t want any Australian attachments or anything like that,’ Taylor responded. ‘In fact, if no one knows who I am that usually means I’m doing a pretty good job.’

It will be hard to avoid anonymity when you’re a punter and you’re drafted in the fourth round. That is a lofty draft spot for a punter.

Poles defended the pick.

‘He had a unique ability and skillset to have a powerful leg and flip the field,’ Poles said. ‘The biggest thing is we want to make our opponent as uncomfortable as possible. He’s so good at pinning the ball inside the 10-yard line. People joked that he’s like (golfer) Scottie Scheffler in terms of his ability to place the ball. And he has different techniques to do it, so he takes (punting) to a whole different level.’

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Trash-talking is a spirited art form, and those who can do it the best are known for their skill and ability to run their mouths and put down opponents or detractors at a moment’s notice.

Enter Minnesota Timberwolves guard and gold-medalist Anthony Edwards, who has become one of the NBA’s stars not only for his play but also for his playful chiding, particularly about Olympic teammate Kevin Durant and analyst Charles Barkley.

When asked how his generation of basketball differed from older generations, the 23-year-old Edwards had more than a few thoughts about the old-school NBA, particularly the 1990s.

‘I didn’t watch it back in the day, so I can’t speak on it,’ Edwards said to the Wall Street Journal.

Edwards then continued to speak on it.

All things T-Wolves: Latest Minnesota Timberwolves news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘They say it was tougher back then than it is now, but I don’t think anybody had skill back then,’ he said. ‘(Michael Jordan) was the only one that really had skill, you know what I mean? So that’s why when they saw Kobe (Bryant), they were like, ‘“’Oh, my God.’”’ But now everybody has skill.’

Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas retorted on social media to Edwards, saying, ‘Propaganda works, so be careful what you choose to believe.’

Edwards also had a few thoughts on championships:

‘I don’t know too many guys who won a championship super young, besides Kobe,’ Edwards said. ‘Other than him, everybody took years and years of losing to get there. I just want to keep taking the next step.’

And on if he is bad at anything:

‘I haven’t found it yet,’ he said.

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Former President Trump said he ‘stopped wars with phone calls’ while commander in chief during his first outdoor rally since surviving an assassination attempt.

Trump held a campaign event in Asheboro, North Carolina, on Wednesday, where he focused his remarks on national security and how ‘the entire world was safer when I sat behind that beautiful, Resolute desk in the Oval Office.’ 

‘The world is on fire. And Kamala and Biden have marched us to the brink of World War III,’ Trump said from a podium surrounded by bulletproof glass.

The former president reflected on the state of national security under his administration, saying that ‘our allies admired us’ and ‘our enemies feared us.’

‘We defeated ISIS. We killed the world’s top terrorists. We secured our borders. We achieved energy independence. We stood up to China. We protected Israel. We made peace in the Middle East with the Abraham Accords and more. We did things like nobody ever heard of it,’ Trump said.

‘I talked this world out of a lot of wars with telephone calls. I don’t have to send in the troops,’ he told the crowd.

Trump pointed to President Biden’s erratic withdrawal from Afghanistan, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the devastating Oct. 7 attack on Israel — suggesting none of these things would have happened under his watch.

‘Since the Afghanistan catastrophe, it’s been open season on America and our allies,’ he said of the withdrawal, which saw 13 U.S. service members killed.

Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, Trump’s running mate, also spoke at the event, saying Trump was ‘the person who prevented nuclear war.’

‘Mean tweets and world peace have a pretty nice ring to it. I think we ought to bring it right back,’ Vance told a cheering crowd. ‘He’s too tough for the tyrants all over the world. He was too strong, even for an assassin’s bullet. Ladies and gentlemen, let’s return to a time when the bravest man led this nation with strength.’

During the speech, Trump addressed the revised job numbers after new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed there were 818,000 fewer jobs created this year than previously reported. 

‘The Harris-Biden administration has been caught fraudulently manipulating job statistics to hide the true extent of the economic ruin that they’ve inflicted on America,’ Trump said.

The Trump-Vance event came ahead of the third day of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.

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President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris’ secretary of Health and Human Services refused to say whether he would back any limits at all on late-term abortions, even with exceptions, instead deferring to Harris. 

HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra was asked by Fox News Digital on Tuesday at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago if he would support any limits on late-term abortion, with exceptions for rape, incest and life of the mother.

‘I think the president – the vice president may answer those questions really well,’ he said. 

He further said he could not answer questions related to Health and Human Services, because,’I’m here not as secretary, so I really can’t answer Health and Human Services questions.’ 

As Democrats have pushed abortion as a top issue going into the 2024 elections, Republicans have tried to hit back at their opponents and highlight a lack of clarity on whether they support any limits on abortion with the popular exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother. 

Democrats have done little to refute claims that they support abortion without any limitations, meaning throughout all nine months, even with exceptions. When confronted with accusations, the party’s lawmakers have suggested the procedure doesn’t take place in the late term, or take place incredibly rarely, insinuating limits may not be necessary. 

The Harris campaign did not answer in time for publication whether she supports any limit on abortion throughout nine months, even with exceptions for rape, incest and life of the mother, when asked by Fox News Digital. 

Prior to Harris’ candidacy, Biden avoided answering a question during his CNN debate against former President Trump on whether he believed in any limit on abortion. 

Trump went on to slam Biden and Democrats for their position. ‘So that means he can take the life of the baby in the ninth month and even after birth?’ he asked. ‘Because some states Democrat-run take it after birth. The former governor of Virginia: ‘put the baby down, then we decide what to do with it.’ So, he’s willing to, as we say, rip the baby out of the womb in the ninth month and kill the baby. Nobody wants that to happen – Democrat or Republican. Nobody wants that to happen.’

But Biden pushed back, saying, ‘You’re lying, that is simply not true.… We are not for late-term abortion, period,’ without providing a specific limit he supported. 

Democrats have largely avoided supporting any specific limits, often redirecting attention to their claim that Republicans would ban abortion entirely. A majority of Republicans have said they believe the abortion issue should be navigated at the state level. 

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As the Democratic National Convention (DNC) unfolds in Chicago this week, the true agenda of the abortion industry is on full display — an agenda that seeks to convince people that pregnancy is a disease and that motherhood is a curse. 

These are lies, plain and simple. Motherhood and family are some of the most meaningful and beautiful experiences anyone can have, bringing joy and fulfillment. But the DNC, backed by the abortion industry, has chosen a different path, one that celebrates the killing of innocent children as some twisted form of empowerment.

Planned Parenthood has set up a mobile abortion facility right outside the convention hall, distributing drugs that destroy children from a van. The Planned Parenthood abortion van is horrifically distributing deadly abortion drugs as freely as a food truck serves tacos. Reportedly, at least 25 babies have been killed by abortion, so far, right outside the DNC. 

Twenty-five helpless lives were sacrificed at the altar of so-called ‘choice.’ All under the guise of a grotesque carnival-like atmosphere. Planned Parenthood, always eager to serve its own interests, even offered these abortions for free—a sickening promotion that reveals the true nature of this death cult. And let’s not mince words—this is a death cult, complete with its own rituals and mockery of life. Outside the DNC, protesters are dressed as abortion pills, chanting in unison, turning their love of death into a macabre spectacle. 

The act of ending a human life has been trivialized to the point of absurdity, packaged as some sort of liberation for women. But there is no freedom in killing your child—only slavery to an anti-life ideology that tells women that motherhood is something to be feared and avoided at all costs.

The act of ending a human life has been trivialized to the point of absurdity, packaged as some sort of liberation for women. But there is no freedom in killing your child—only slavery to an anti-life ideology that tells women that motherhood is something to be feared and avoided at all costs.

This is not the Democratic Party of ‘safe, legal, and rare’ that even Hillary Clinton once touted. We’ve moved far beyond that, to a place where the DNC is now openly celebrating abortion as a positive good. 

The extremes they are willing to go to are shocking. They are exposing themselves for what they truly are—a group more concerned with advancing a radical pro-death agenda than with protecting the most vulnerable among us.

But what about the lives of those 25 children who were aborted at the DNC? What about the babies who will continue to be killed as the convention continues? Do they not deserve to be mourned? Do they not deserve to live? 

These are the questions we must reckon with as we witness this brutal display, because this is not what Americans want. Most Americans desire strong families, meaningful lives, and the opportunity to thrive—not the cold, heartless killing that Planned Parenthood and their friends at the DNC are promoting.

Planned Parenthood denies this reality, but there is a method that can possibly save a child’s life after the first abortion pill has been taken, called Abortion Pill Reversal. The abortion pill (chemical abortion) makes up over 60% of all abortions now, and everyone needs to know about the abortion pill reversal protocol and share it with mothers in need. 

It is the worst human rights crisis of our time that over 2,800 children are killed every single day by abortion in our nation alone. Our leaders should be working to protect kids, not making it ever easier to end their lives. 

When someone shows you who they are, believe them. The DNC has shown us its true colors, and it is up to us to reject this culture of death and protect every human life.

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The moderate Democrat who defeated ‘Squad’ member Rep. Jamaal Bowman suggests the party’s voter base is largely pro-Israel.

Westchester County Executive George Latimer’s victory in late June was a decisive rebuke of the Democrats’ left-most flank, ending what was the most expensive primary election in U.S. history.

The fight was part of a wider fracture within the Democratic Party created by Israel’s war in Gaza. 

When I won the election in my area, they elected very strongly in favor of my position on a host of issues, Israel being one of them. And I do believe that reflects the broad base of the Democratic Party,’ Latimer told Fox News Digital.

‘There are different voices in the party. And I think support for a democracy is the bedrock of our support for Israel. Can we negotiate a peaceful settlement over there? Yes. But, by and large, it’s not going to come by more violence, and the violence that Hamas did on Oct. 7 is the single biggest impediment to peace in the Middle East.’

Bowman, a far-left progressive, was one of Israel’s most vocal opponents in the House. He’s part of a growing faction of Democrats critical of the U.S. government’s longstanding ties with Israel, a fight that has been exacerbated since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, terror attack and Israel’s ensuing response.

Latimer, by contrast, was propped up by pro-Israel groups like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), whose associated entities poured millions into the race. He also got the backing of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and even one of Bowman’s own colleagues in the House, Rep. Josh Gottheimer, who is Jewish.

Latimer was one of the hundreds of Democrats to descend on Chicago this week to see Vice President Kamala Harris accept the party’s 2024 nomination at the Democratic National Convention.

Asked if he was concerned for his safety and the safety of other elected officials with thousands of anti-Israel protesters demonstrating in Chicago this week, Latimer said, ‘Well, I’m not concerned for mine, but I am concerned for those who are in higher office. … But I think, so far, Chicago has done a good job of protecting us.’

He also argued that the protests showed the Democratic Party was largely pro-Israel.

‘But protests don’t change policy. That policy will change when the [Israeli hostages held by Hamas] are released,’ Latimer said.

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Michelle Obama wore a nearly $3,000 pantsuit to the Democratic National Convention (DNC) in Chicago while touting to attendees that her parents were ‘suspicious’ of the wealthy. 

The former first lady began her DNC speech on Tuesday by saying the last time she was in her hometown of Chicago was to memorialize her mother, the woman ‘who showed me the meaning of hard work and humility and decency’ and ‘who set my moral compass high and showed me the power of my own voice.’  

‘She and my father didn’t aspire to be wealthy. In fact, they were suspicious of folks who took more than they needed,’ Obama said. ‘They understood that it wasn’t enough for their kids to thrive if everyone else around us was drowning. So my mother volunteered at the local school.’ 

All the while, she was wearing a black pantsuit jacket that is available for pre-order online by the New York fashion designer Monse for $1,690. 

The online description invites customers to ‘pre-order our Resort 2025 Criss Cross Jacket as seen on Michelle Obama at the DNC.’ 

Obama paired the jacket with matching trousers listed for $890. 

‘Pre-order our Resort 2025 Tuxedo Cuff Trousers as seen on Michelle Obama at the DNC,’ Monse wrote. The estimated ship date isn’t until Nov. 8, three days after the election. 

The New York Times described Obama’s outfit, a sleeveless recreation of the traditional pantsuit, as thematically ‘forward,’ in line with the former first lady’s message at the DNC. 

The Times’ Critics Notebook described Monse as a ‘small, independent label founded by Fernando Garcia, a Dominican-raised New York designer, and Laura Kim, an Asian American (and one of the founders of the Slaysians, a group of fashion insiders formed to combat anti-Asian hate).’ 

Garcia and Kim are also the designers of Oscar de la Renta, ‘the brand that has dressed first ladies for decades and which Mrs. Obama wore when she was living on Pennsylvania Avenue and still does,’ the Times said. 

The newspaper gushed over the former first lady, and her stylist, Meredith Koop, for choosing Monse. 

The Times said selecting ‘the smaller fashion house over the establishment name was fully in line with Mrs. Obama’s practice, developed as first lady, of using her platform to highlight lesser known businesses (especially fashion businesses) and designers who represent the stories she is telling: about entrepreneurship, the melting pot, the American dream. The election.’ 

Obama ‘wore a dark navy sleeveless jacket belted over cropped trousers. The lapels of the top were de- and reconstructed to cross over the throat in an almost militaristic way, and the shoulders jutted out to frame the biceps. It was both understated and edgy, kind of armorial,’ the Times said. ‘This was going to be a fight, her tunic and her speech suggested, and everyone should gear themselves up to get out the vote.’ 

The Trump campaign and others criticized Obama for omitting that she and her husband, former President Obama, have an estimated net worth of $70 million, as well as luxury real estate holdings in Chicago, Hawaii, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C., when telling the DNC that her parents ‘were suspicious of folks who took more than they needed.’ 

‘Getting really tired of multi-millionaires preaching about the evils of money and greed,’ one X user wrote. 

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Pairing Matthew Judon in a pass-rushing tandem with Pro Bowl defensive end Montez Sweat seemed enticing to Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Poles.

Yet, not while mortgaging the Bears’ very promising future.

We now know that Judon was traded by the New England Patriots to the Atlanta Falcons last week in exchange for a third-round draft pick. What was revealed on Tuesday night’s episode of ‘Hard Knocks: Training Camp with the Chicago Bears’ was how close the Bears came to acquiring the four-time Pro Bowl pass rusher.

Judon and the Falcons did not agree to a contract extension before the team agreed to the trade. That was the sticking point with the Bears.

‘We believe he would help us get better, just his style,’ Poles told team president Kevin Warren in a meeting while discussing the potential trade. ‘We think having the bicep (injury), rather than a lower body injury, he still would play with the same intensity and explosion as he did before. It does come with risk though at 32 (years old).’

All things Bears: Latest Chicago Bears news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Judon is coming off a 2023 season in which he played just four games after suffered a season-ending bicep tear. The Bears wanted a contract extension in place in order for the trade to be consummated – ‘Our language is basically saying if the contract is not signed then he reverts back to New England,’ Poles told Bears special advisor Ted Crews.

The trade fell through for the Bears. Poles was left with some introspection – ‘We try to do a really good job creating parameters that make sense for our club to be successful now, but also down the road’ – while his confidants looked at the situation with a glass half full.

In meeting with team director of football administration Matt Feinstein, Poles continued to validate his position on the Judon situation.

‘I’m tormenting myself, but if you have your own guardrails that we put up to help us stay in the lane … we surely pressed up against them to acquire the player,’ Poles said. ‘But when it comes to losing all flexibility, I don’t think that would be smart, even if he has success. Now, if he has 20 sacks or something, it’ll make me sick.’

The Bears registered just 30 sacks last season, the second-lowest total in the league.

Feinstein looked ahead, with the thought that rookie Austin Booker might one day fill the pass-rushing spot opposite Sweat.

‘It’s Judon for a (third-round pick) and some significant financial needs,’ Feinstein said. ‘We traded a (fourth-round pick) for four years of Austin Booker.’

The Bears thought so highly of Booker in the draft process that they traded back into the fifth round to pick the Kansas defensive end. The Bears sent a 2024 fourth-round pick to the Buffalo Bills in order to be able to select Booker.

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Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to address the nation about his path forward in the presidential race this Friday.

Kennedy’s press secretary, Stefanie Spear, posted the announcement about ‘the present historic moment and his path forward’ on social media on Wednesday afternoon.

The announcement comes after Kennedy’s running mate, Nicole Shanahan, blasted Democrats on Tuesday, saying she ‘fully supports’ a role for Kennedy in a future Trump administration. Shanahan also hinted that they could end their campaign and back former President Trump.

 

Shortly before the announcement, Amaryllis Kennedy, Kennedy’s daughter-in-law and campaign manager, emailed campaign staff.

‘For the last 19 months (22 months for the original core), this team – this family – has worked seven days a week, ten plus hours a day, in blizzards and blazing heat, sacrificing family time, personal commitments, and any hope of sleep, in service to our shared vision for this country,’ she wrote. ‘Never, in all these months, has Robert F. Kennedy Jr. sidestepped his movement to communicate his heart through back-channel leaks. Nor would he ever, especially in this most consequential moment for us all. So please, hold tight until you hear directly from him.’

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