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Former NBA star Shawn Kemp pleads guilty in shooting, faces jail time

Former NBA star Shawn Kemp pleads guilty in shooting, faces jail time

Washington Post28-05-2025

Former NBA star Shawn Kemp pleaded guilty Tuesday to second-degree assault over a March 2023 shooting outside a shopping mall in Tacoma, Washington.
Prosecutors allege that Kemp, 55, shot at two men who were inside a Toyota 4Runner as he attempted to recover items stolen from his truck, including a cellphone that Kemp used to track the alleged robbers' movement. No one was hit during the shooting, though the 4Runner and another vehicle were damaged.

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Luigi Mangione's alleged diary entries reveal UnitedHealthcare CEO ‘had it coming'
Luigi Mangione's alleged diary entries reveal UnitedHealthcare CEO ‘had it coming'

Fast Company

time29 minutes ago

  • Fast Company

Luigi Mangione's alleged diary entries reveal UnitedHealthcare CEO ‘had it coming'

Six weeks before UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was gunned down outside a Manhattan hotel in December, suspect Luigi Mangione mused about rebelling against 'the deadly, greed fueled health insurance cartel' and said killing the executive 'conveys a greedy bastard that had it coming,' prosecutors revealed Wednesday. The Manhattan district attorney's office quoted extensively from Mangione's handwritten diary — highlighting his desire to kill an insurance honcho and praise for Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber — as they fight to uphold his state murder charges. They also cited a confession they say he penned 'To the feds,' in which he wrote that 'it had to be done.' Mangione's lawyers want the state case thrown out, arguing in court papers that those charges and a parallel federal death penalty case amount to double jeopardy. They also want state terrorism charges dismissed, have asked for the federal case to go first and say prosecutors should be barred from using evidence collected during Mangione's arrest, including a 9mm handgun, statements to police and the diary. Manhattan prosecutors contend that there are no double jeopardy issues because neither case has gone to trial and because the state and federal prosecutions involve different legal theories. His lawyers say that has created a 'legal quagmire' that makes it 'legally and logistically impossible to defend against them simultaneously.' The state charges, which carry a maximum of life in prison, allege that Mangione wanted to 'intimidate or coerce a civilian population,' that is, insurance employees and investors. The federal charges allege that Mangione stalked an individual, Thompson, and do not involve terror allegations. Mangione, 27, has pleaded not guilty in both cases. No trial dates have been set. Mangione's 'intentions were obvious from his acts, but his writings serve to make those intentions explicit,' prosecutors said in Wednesday's filing. The writings, which they sometimes described as a manifesto, 'convey one clear message: that the murder of Brian Thompson was intended to bring about revolutionary change to the healthcare industry.' They quoted excerpts in which Mangione discussed options for the attack, such as bombing UnitedHealthcare's headquarters, before deciding to target the company's investor conference in Manhattan. He wrote about plans to 'wack the CEO at the annual parasitic bean-counter convention' because it was 'targeted, precise and doesn't risk innocents.' UnitedHealthcare, the largest U.S. health insurer, 'literally extracts human life force for money,' Mangione wrote, envisioning the news headline, 'Insurance CEO killed at annual investors conference.' The company has said he was never a client. Mangione is due back in state court June 26, when Judge Gregory Carro is expected to rule on his request for dismissal. His lawyers asked Tuesday for his handcuffs and bulletproof vest to be removed during the hearing. They called him a 'a model prisoner, a model defendant' and said the security measures would suggest to potential jurors that he is dangerous. Carro has not ruled on that. Mangione's next federal court date is Dec. 5, a day after the one-year anniversary of Thompson's death. Surveillance video showed a masked gunman shooting Thompson from behind as he arrived for the conference Dec. 4 at the New York Hilton Midtown. Police say 'delay,' 'deny' and 'depose' were scrawled on the ammunition, mimicking a phrase commonly used to describe how insurers avoid paying claims. Mangione was arrested Dec. 9 at a McDonald's in Altoona, Pennsylvania, 230 miles (about 370 kilometers) to the west, and he is being held in a federal jail in Brooklyn. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has called the ambush 'a killing that was intended to evoke terror.' U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced in April that she was directing federal prosecutors to seek the death penalty for 'an act of political violence' and a 'premeditated, cold-blooded assassination that shocked America.' The killing and ensuing search for Mangione rattled the business community while galvanizing health insurance critics who rallied around him as a stand-in for frustrations over coverage denials and hefty bills. Supporters have flocked to his court appearances and flooded him with mail. Mangione 'demonstrated in his manifesto that he was a revolutionary anarchist who would usher in a better healthcare system by killing the CEO' of one of the biggest U.S. companies, prosecutors wrote. 'This brutal, cowardly murder was the mechanism that defendant chose to bring on that revolution.'

Ex-Arsenal player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas sentenced to four years for involvement in drug smuggling plot
Ex-Arsenal player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas sentenced to four years for involvement in drug smuggling plot

New York Times

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Ex-Arsenal player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas sentenced to four years for involvement in drug smuggling plot

The former Arsenal player Jay Emmanuel-Thomas has been sentenced to four years in prison for his involvement in an attempt to smuggle 60 kilograms of cannabis into the United Kingdom. The 34-year-old will serve one year and seven months, having already served nine months on remand, before being released on license. The maximum sentence for cannabis importation in the UK is 14 years in prison. Advertisement At Thursday's sentencing at Chelmsford Crown Court, Emmanuel-Thomas sat behind a glass-panelled dock in a grey suit jacket, flanked by two security officials. Prosecutor David Josse KC told the court that Emmanuel-Thomas was expecting a payment of £5,000 ($6,800) for his part in getting the cannabis into the country. 'It is clear this was about money despite you being in a position where you had the privilege of playing football as a living,' the judge, Alexander Mills, told Emmanuel-Thomas. 'It is through your own actions that you will no longer be known for being a professional footballer. You will be known as a criminal, a professional footballer who threw it all away, and put others at risk of imprisonment, in pursuit of money.' Appearing via videolink from HMP Chelmsford on May 21, Emmanuel-Thomas pleaded guilty to the charge of fraudulent evasion of the prohibition on the importation of cannabis, between July 1 2024 and September 2, 2024, at Chelmsford Crown Court. The former England youth international had been detained by the National Crime Agency (NCA) in September 2024 after the cannabis was detected in suitcases which had arrived on a flight from Bangkok, Thailand to London's Stansted Airport on September 2. The suitcases belonged to Rosie Rowland, 29, and Yasmin Piotrowska, 33, the latter being Emmanuel-Thomas' partner. Having been arrested at Stansted, charges against the women, who denied their involvement at an earlier hearing, were dropped by the prosecution. In May, Josse told the court that the investigation into their involvement was discontinued after analysis of Emmanuel-Thomas's mobile phone. 'They thought they were importing gold, not cannabis,' Josse said. Emmanuel-Thomas initially denied his involvement in importing class B drugs at a hearing at Carlisle Magistrates' Court in September but changed his plea to guilty at Chelmsford Crown Court in May. Advertisement He had been playing at Scottish Championship club Greenock Morton, who terminated his contract after he was charged. After making one Premier League appearance for Arsenal, Emmanuel-Thomas left the north London side in 2011. He then played for clubs including Ipswich Town, Bristol City and Queens Park Rangers, as well as teams in India and Thailand, before joining Morton in July 2024. (Top photo of Jay Emmanuel-Thomas playing for Aberdeen:)

What would a 2025 Belmont Stakes win mean for Journalism's legacy?
What would a 2025 Belmont Stakes win mean for Journalism's legacy?

New York Times

time35 minutes ago

  • New York Times

What would a 2025 Belmont Stakes win mean for Journalism's legacy?

Ten years ago this Friday, 90,000 people rose to their feet and exhaled in catharsis. Even in the shadows of a city that knows how to celebrate big moments, the roar that rose from Long Island on June 6, 2015, rivaled anything a sports fan could conjure. As American Pharoah came around the final turn and bore down on the Belmont Stakes finish line, disbelief gave way to stupor. And when 37 years of Triple Crown futility finally and officially evaporated, the cheers for Pharoah somehow grew louder, the stupor turning into awe for the colt's incredible triumph. Advertisement When, just three years later, Justify matched American Pharoah's efforts to win his own Triple Crown, it felt like horse racing was entering a golden age. Instead, not only has the Triple Crown entered yet another dry spell, but no horse has won even two legs of the famed horse-racing gauntlet. Even more, of the 109 horses who have entered the Kentucky Derby since 2019, only two — War of Will in 2019 and Mystik Dan, last year's Derby winner — went on to race in both the Preakness and the Belmont. Which leads us to the present day, and a horse named Journalism. The bay colt's commitment to all three legs of the Triple Crown defies convention, and as he preps to load into the starting gate for the Belmont on Saturday, he's chasing his own little slice of history. Despite a messy start at the Derby and a harrowing ride down the stretch in the Preakness, Journalism finished second in Louisville and won in Baltimore. Were he to win on Saturday at the Belmont, he would be the first horse aside from Pharoah and Justify in 20 years (Afleet Alex did it in 2005) to win two and come close to winning all three Triple Crown contests. He'd also be the first to capture two wins and a place since the beloved Smarty Jones in 2004. (Smarty did it in reverse order, winning the Derby and Preakness before finishing second by a heartbreaking length at the Belmont). Only one horse since has even come close. In the mashed-up COVID season, Authentic won the Derby (run in September) and took second in the Preakness (run in October), but he did not run in the June Belmont. 'If [Journalism] were to win, it would confirm the suspicions that this is truly a special horse,' says David Grening, the New York correspondent for the Daily Racing Form. 'To run in all three is hard enough; to run well is truly rare.' Advertisement Special, however, lives a hair off the edge of great, and in any sport, greatness is the goal. In horse racing, greatness is defined by a three-race stretch run over a five-week period. So what, then, would be Journalism's legacy were he to go two for three in the Big Three? The answer, like a lot of things in horse racing, is complicated. The way he has run to date certainly shows a fierceness that is nothing shy of extraordinary. At the Derby, Bob Baffert's front-running Citizen Bull took a hard right to get clear of the rail from the one hole. That caused what could be best described as a horse bottleneck at the start of the race, forcing Journalism to come from much farther back than his trainer, Michael McCarthy, would have liked. 'Because of that, he was 10th and out of position, and in horse racing, position is everything,' says longtime horse racing writer Dick Jerardi. 'With that kind of field, the rider has to go sooner than he wants, and out of the final turn, he was only a length ahead of Sovereignty, and that brought the best closer into the race.' True to form, Sovereignty closed with gusto to beat Journalism by 1 1/2 lengths. Then at the Preakness, Umberto Rispoli kept Journalism on the rail to save some ground, but that also put the horse behind a wall of other horses. At the top of the stretch, the jockey somehow squeezed a 1,000-pound animal through the eye of a needle. Journalism bullied his way between Clever Again and Goal Oriented to find daylight and win. Clever Again's trainer, Steve Asmussen, less than thrilled with the contact, said Rispoli rode the Preakness favorite 'like a rented mule.' 'The bravery he showed going through that hole, whether you want to credit the jockey or the horse — that colt is tough,' says Ken McPeek, who trained Mystik Dan through three Triple Crown races. 'No question he is some kind of tough. And he's fearless, which is obviously a great thing.' In so many ways, Journalism is (or at least could be) just getting started. He is just 3 years old, and the Belmont will be his eighth start. To date, his worst finish came in his debut; he crossed third. Despite the opinions of the general public, whose interest peters out post-Belmont, his legacy may not be finalized at Saratoga, where the Belmont Stakes will be run this weekend while its namesake track completes renovations. Advertisement There is recent precedent for a great horse earning his stripes post-Triple Crown. In 2007, Curlin finished third in the Derby, won the Preakness and lost by a head to the filly Rags to Riches in the Belmont. Impressive but not great by Triple Crown standards. Yet Curlin then went on to place third in the Haskell that August, win the Jockey Club Gold Cup and win the Breeders' Cup Classic, two races that included older horses. At the end of the year, he was named Horse of the Year. He repeated the feat in 2008, winning Horse of the Year again before retiring as the highest North American money-winner at the time, with $10.5 million to show for his efforts. But Journalism, a son of Curlin, would be an odds-defier were he to keep racing and keep winning. Smarty Jones and Afleet Alex never raced after the Triple Crown season, both done in by injuries. Justify retired immediately after the Belmont, his entire racing career lasting a whopping 118 days. American Pharoah went on to win the Haskell, take second at the Travers and win the Breeders' Cup Classic, cementing his legacy before retiring for a lucrative breeding fee. 'Going 2-1-1 would make him special, but what he could do afterwards really elevates where he could measure up,' says Grening. 'To me, what can really determine this horse's legacy is what he does after the Triple Crown.' Though they are well aware of the rare company Journalism could join, those associated with the horse, of course, are not terribly interested in talking legacy or what's next. 'Needless to say, it would be an enormous honor,' says Aron Wellman, one of the majority owners. 'That said, we're not taking anything for granted or allowing ourselves to get too far out in front of ourselves.'' With good reason. While only an eight-horse field, the Belmont includes some legit contenders, top among them Derby-winner Sovereignty. McPeek, for one, is a Sovereignty fan and has been since Louisville. 'I thought he was one of the easiest selections or wagers for the Derby that I've ever seen in my life,' McPeek says. He likes Bill Mott's horse even more now, what with the extra rest he's received by not running in the Preakness, and he's running at the same Derby distance at which he's already won. Another contender horse people are keeping an eye on is Baeza, who finished third in the Derby. Advertisement For now at least, the line says that Journalism will go off as the favorite. Just as he did in the Derby. Just as he did in the Preakness. Whether a win will be good enough to cement his greatness is up for debate. 'But it would be great for the game,' Jerardi says. 'You don't have to sit out the Preakness. You can still do it. The really good ones, they can do it. That's really what it comes down to. If you have a good enough horse, it's doable. He's good enough.'' (Photo by Rob Carr / Getty Images)

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