
Bryan Kohberger, Idaho murder suspect, to plead guilty in deal to avoid death penalty
By converting his plea to guilty in an Ada County, Idaho, courthouse, Kohberger would forgo what was anticipated to be a closely watched criminal trial scheduled to last three months. Instead, he will move straight to sentencing, speeding the conclusion of a case that became a fixation for true-crime watchers — sometimes with devastating results for peripheral figures caught up in the obsession.
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Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Jon Gruden wins Nevada Supreme Court arbitration appeal against NFL and Roger Goodell
Jon Gruden won a skirmish Monday in his civil lawsuit against the NFL and commissioner Roger Goodell that has been plodding through a state court for four years. The Nevada Supreme Court determined in a 5-2 ruling that Gruden was not required by the NFL to participate in arbitration overseen by Goodell, who is a defendant in the lawsuit alleging that a 'malicious and orchestrated campaign' was used to destroy Gruden's coaching career by leaking offensive emails he had sent years earlier. The court said that the NFL attempt to force Gruden into arbitration was "unconscionable and does not apply to Gruden as a former employee." Gruden's resignation as coach of the Las Vegas Raiders in October 2021 made him exempt from a provision in the NFL Constitution mandating arbitration, the court ruled. "If the NFL Constitution were to bind former employees, the Commissioner could essentially pick and choose which disputes to arbitrate," the ruling stated. The decision appears to clear the way for Gruden's lawsuit to proceed. The NFL can appeal to the United States Supreme Court but so far has declined to comment. Read more: Jon Gruden emails were part of June court filing by WFT owner Dan Snyder "We're very pleased with the Nevada Supreme Court's decision, not just for Coach Gruden but for all employees facing an employer's unfair arbitration process," Gruden attorney Adam Hosmer-Henner said in a statement. "This victory further validates Coach Gruden's reputation, and it clears the way to swiftly bringing him full justice and holding the NFL accountable." Goodell and the NFL have denied leaking the emails, which were published by the Wall Street Journal and New York Times. 'In contrast to the formalities of the Washington Football Team investigation, Defendants' treatment of Gruden was a Soviet-style character assassination,' the lawsuit alleged. 'There was no warning and no process. Defendants held the emails for months until they were leaked to the national media in the middle of the Raiders' season in order to cause maximum damage to Gruden.' Gruden's email correspondence with former Washington Commanders executive Bruce Allen occurred from 2011 to 2018 when Gruden was a color analyst for ESPN's "Monday Night Football" and included racist, misogynistic and homophobic comments. The emails came to light during a league investigation into the workplace culture of the Washington team and owner Dan Snyder. Read more: Want to attend 2026 World Cup games for free? FIFA needs 65,000 volunteers "It's ridiculous the league thought they could cherry-pick emails from years ago, when I wasn't even a coach and try to end my career," Gruden said in a statement to ESPN two years ago. "At a minimum, I deserved the opportunity to respond and receive some due process." The Nevada Supreme Court agreed, reconsidering the findings of a smaller panel of the court that made a 2-1 decision more than a year ago to dismiss Gruden's lawsuit. That ruling came after a district judge in 2022 rejected the NFL's bid to dismiss the lawsuit outright or to order arbitration overseen by Goodell. Nevada Supreme Court justices Kristina Pickering and Elissa Cadish dissented from the ruling Monday, suggesting that Gruden should have been aware of language in his contract stipulating arbitration. 'As a former Super Bowl champion coach and long-time media personality signing the most lucrative NFL coaching contract in history, while being represented by one of the country's leading sports agents, Gruden was the very definition of a sophisticated party,' Pickering wrote. 'Though Gruden could not negotiate the terms of the NFL Constitution, he had the ability to negotiate the contract as a whole — such as for more pay, a longer contract, added control over team decisions, or its other terms." Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


CBS News
6 minutes ago
- CBS News
Florida boat captain indicted on federal charges in parasailing death of Illinois woman
A federal grand jury in Florida has indicted a boat captain in connection with the death of an Illinois woman killed in a parasailing accident in 2022. Daniel Gavin Couch, 52, has been charged with one count of seaman's manslaughter, accused of "misconduct, negligence, and inattention to his duties" in the Memorial Day 2022 death of Supraja Alaparthi. Alaparthi, 33, was parasailing with her son and her nephew near Pigeon Bay in the Florida Keys on May 30, 2022, when a strong gust of wind "pegged" their parasail - meaning the wind took over control of the parasail from the boat below. A subsequent report said this made for a situation so dangerous that Couch decided to cut the line tethered to the victims. The Alaparthi family's attorney has said 11 relatives – including Alaparthi's 6-year-old daughter, were on the boat that afternoon and witnessed Couch cut the cord. Alparthi and her son and nephew were dropped from an unknown height and dragged through the water by the floating parasail until it finally slammed into Old Seven Mile Bridge, the report said. Alaparthi died instantly. Her 10-year-old son, Sriakshith Alaparthi, and 9-year-old nephew, Vishant Sadda, were injured, but survived. Before his indictment on federal charges, Couch already was facing felony manslaughter charges in state court in Florida, as well as several misdemeanor charges. Monroe County prosecutors have said his decision to cut the cord was reckless, and not only violated commercial parasailing guidelines, but was criminal. Couch faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted of the federal charges. The state manslaughter charges carry a sentence of up to 15 years in prison. The Alaparthi family also has filed a lawsuit against the parasailing company, Couch, and other individuals and companies involved in the accident. That lawsuit is still pending in Monroe County, according to online court records. The family's attorneys are calling for mandatory training in the parasailing industry. The video above is from a previous report.
Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Pentagon is already calling National Guard in other states looking for units that could help in DC
President Donald Trump's decision to activate around 800 National Guard troops in Washington, D.C., to tackle street crime has forced the Pentagon to look to other states for help. Trump announced his decision to federalize D.C.'s police department at a White House press conference on Monday at which he was flanked by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who said that reinforcements could be called up if the Guard encounters resistance from protesters, adding that 'specialized units' might be included in their number. However, a senior Army official has since told The New York Times that the current deployment of D.C. Guard is likely to be sufficient for the task in hand. The Department of Defense has reportedly moved to ensure the Guard's duties in Washington are kept to a safe minimum, with one official telling the Times that 'soldiers with M-16s who have been trained to kill adversaries' will not be placed in policing roles. The mission has nevertheless been criticized, with Dr Carrie A Lee, former chair of the department of national security and strategy at the Army War College, telling the newspaper: 'This is part of a pattern where the administration is using and appropriating military resources for nonmilitary domestic goals. 'Whether it's immigration or going against drug cartels or crime in Washington, it's very clear, to me at least, that this administration sees the military as a one-size-fits-all solution to accomplishing its domestic political priorities.' Trump has previously dispatched the Guard to the U.S. southern border with Mexico and to Los Angeles in June to help quell anti-ICE demonstrations. Guardsmen have since reportedly described that experience as bad for morale, obliterating much of the good will they had earned from helping to extinguish California's wildfires in January and expressed a fear it could harm future enlistment drives. The step also had a negative impact on the president's own approval ratings. At his press conference on Monday, Trump pledged to 'rescue' the city from 'crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor and worse,' despite the city's much-improved crime statistics suggesting there was no need or justification. But the president nevertheless insisted: 'Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people, and we're not going to let it happen anymore.' His opponents, meanwhile, have been quick to accuse him of seeking a distraction from the ongoing pressure he faces to release the government's files on the late billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.