
Report: Grizzlies' Zach Edey cited for driving 101 mph in 55 zone
The violation occurred on May 1 while Edey was driving a Kia Sorento on Indiana 25, according to the report. Edey was cited and released at the scene, with a court hearing scheduled for Monday on a charge of misdemeanor reckless driving.
Edey, 23, averaged 9.2 points with 8.3 rebounds in 66 games (55 starts) this past season when he was named NBA All-Rookie First Team. The 7-foot-4, 305 pounder was the No. 9 overall selection in last year's draft, after he was a two-time national college player of the year and a two-time first-team All-American.
--Field Level Media
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Rival copies Hertz with giant laser tunnel that makes up fake damage costing hundreds of dollars
Damage scanners are taking over more rental car return lots — and customers aren't happy. Since Hertz rolled out AI scanners in April, it has faced backlash for charging almost $1,000 for tiny scuffs. Now Sixt, a premium rival with 100 locations in the US, has in recent weeks begun using a similar tool called Car Gate. Already, it is creating problems. One customer told The Drive he returned a Mazda CX-50 at Atlanta's Hartsfield Airport only to be billed $605.82 for wheel damage. Documents sent to the renter showed that the damage occurred before the rental period. 'They were using the wrong photo,' Badi said. 'After escalating to management, they dropped the claim entirely.' Sixt scans each rental car when the driver picks it up and again when return it — with a powerful computer highlighting even the slightest damage. There are fears Avis will adopt similar tech. Meanwhile, Enterprise — America's biggest rental firm, which owns National and Alamo — is testing it in Europe. Vehicle scanning companies defend the technology, and say it makes cars safer by spotting issues like tire wear and undercarriage damage more reliably than human inspectors. Sixt told Daily Mail: 'Our customers value transparency — and we take that seriously. 'We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience to the customer. This experience does not reflect our high service standards.' The Daily Mail asked the company twice if the fees paid by customers are used to fund vehicle repairs rather than boost profits. Sixt didn't respond. Hertz was the first to roll out damage scanners in April. Since then, six customers have told Daily Mail that they've incurred similar charges for minor dents picked up by scanners, which are built by AI startup UVeye. 'It's a shakedown that is extremely off-putting,' Adam Foley, a driver who received a $285 charge for two small spots, said. Unlike Sixt, which employs humans to review all damage scanner fees, when Foley attempted to dispute the charge, Hertz only offered a chatbot. Every Hertz customer has said the chatbot offered lower damage rates if they paid the fine immediately. The AI scanner picked up two small 'dents' on Foley's Buick rental 'This basically seems like a money-grabbing exercise by Hertz,' Neil Saunders, a retail expert at GlobalData, said. 'If there is no way to discuss with a human, then that is also extremely poor customer service.' Foley is not alone. Other drivers received a $440 damage charge for a small scuff on the wheel, $190 charges for minor dents, and $935 for nearly invisible blemishes. Dr Ramnath Chellappa, a technology scholar who coined the term 'cloud computing,' said the AI-based scanners aren't being used ethically. 'If anything, AI should be reducing the human effort in assessment and walk-through with the vehicle,' he said. 'It should end up offering cost savings.' Since July 2, has asked Hertz representatives six times to clarify whether damage charges fund actual repairs or compensate for diminished vehicle value. Hertz declined to comment on the record and did not directly answer whether fees collected from customers are always used to fund repairs. Meanwhile, other major rental firms are testing AI scanners into their vehicle lots. Avis has previously said that a majority of its damage assessments remain 'human-led,' but hasn't explained what that means. The company did not respond to Daily Mail's request for comment. Meanwhile, Enterprise said it does not use computer-powered inspection tools in the US. 'There are some limited instances, such as the Berlin and Munich airports, where this technology is being implemented airport-wide,' a spokesperson told the Daily Mail. 'But we are not utilizing this technology without an internal review of the image capture.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Trump threatens National Guard to DC after young staffer's attack
President Trump vowed to 'federalize' Washington and send in the National Guard on Wednesday to crush violent crime in the nation's capital, citing the brutal assault of a young pro-Trump staffer known by the nickname 'Big Balls' as a breaking point. During a press conference Trump confirmed he is actively considering seizing control of DC law enforcement - a drastic step that would override local government authority and place the capital's policing under federal command. 'We're considering it because the crime is ridiculous,' Trump told reporters. 'We have a capital that's very unsafe. You know, we just almost lost a young man, beautiful, handsome guy that got the hell knocked out of him the night before last. I'm going to call him now.' The young man Trump referenced is Edward Coristine (pictured), a 19-year-old government worker affectionately dubbed 'Big Balls' by his colleagues. Coristine was violently beaten during an attempted carjacking near Dupont Circle around 3am Sunday, while defending his girlfriend from a group of teenage assailants. Two 15-year-olds have since been arrested in connection with the attack, which left Coristine hospitalized with a concussion and facial injuries. The case has quickly become the focus for Trump's broader campaign to dismantle what he calls 'Democrat chaos' in the capital. 'There's too much of it,' Trump said. 'We're going to do something about it… and that includes bringing in the National Guard - maybe very quickly.' Trump, who returned to the White House for a second term pledging to 'crush the deep state' and restore 'law and order,' has repeatedly portrayed Washington, DC, as a lawless zone of crime and dysfunction. 'We want to have a great, safe capital - and we're going to have it,' he said. 'That includes cleanliness, it includes other things… graffiti, roads that are in bad shape, medians that are falling down. We're going to beautify the city.' The remarks come just days after Trump posted an image of Coristine with blood running down his face, writing on Truth Social that D.C. crime was 'out of control' and that teenage criminals were 'randomly attacking, mugging, maiming, and shooting innocent citizens.' 'They are not afraid of law enforcement because they know nothing ever happens to them, but it's going to happen now!' Trump warned. Coristine, who became known as 'Big Balls' for his outspoken fearlessness during late-night brainstorming sessions with Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), has become an unexpected symbol of the administration's push to remake the capital. 'My friend Big Balls is a hero,' wrote close friend Marko Elez on X, sharing a photo of Coristine after the assault. 'He protected a young woman from an attempted carjacking by 8 thugs near Dupont Circle. 'Violence like this in the heart of DC is completely unacceptable,' Elez added. Even Elon Musk, under whom Coristine once worked as part of DOGE's original design team weighed in online. 'A Doge team member saw what was happening, ran to defend her and was severely beaten to the point of concussion, but he saved her,' Musk wrote. 'It is time to federalize DC.' Coristine, whose boyish face and Ivy League pedigree belied his MAGA bulldog persona, previously appeared in a Fox News segment highlighting his work to cut federal waste. But now his injuries, sustained in what police say was an attempted robbery by a group of teenagers, have made him the face of Trump's federal crime crackdown. While the Metropolitan Police Department confirmed it arrested two teens from Maryland in connection with the attack, but DC officials have been tight-lipped about further details. A spokesperson for the US Attorney's Office declined to confirm additional charges, citing an active investigation. Attorney General Brian Schwalb (pictured) addressed the outrage in a statement to The Daily Mail. 'No one who lives in, works in, or visits DC should experience this. It is horrific and disturbing… When MPD brings us cases with sufficient evidence of juveniles who have broken the law and hurt people, we will prosecute them and ensure they face consequences.' But that's not good enough for Trump, or Jeanine Pirro (pictured right), his newly appointed U.S. Attorney for the District. 'Our job is to get guns off the street, drugs off the street, and take care of those individuals that are threatening and carjacking other people,' Pirro said in a video message from the White House. 'And that's just what we're going to do. If you don't buy into it, you're going to have to deal with us.' The episode has reignited long-simmering Republican calls to strip Washington, D.C., of its autonomy, or at least curtail it dramatically. Trump allies in Congress have already proposed legislation to repeal home rule and bring the capital under full federal control. That effort is certain to face resistance from D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, who h as not commented publicly on Coristine's assault but has in the past fiercely defended the city's right to govern itself. While violent crime in the capital is reportedly down more than 25% from this time last year, carjackings and juvenile involvement in violent incidents remain stubbornly high. Just last year, a 14-year-old was charged with the killing of a Lyft driver in another high-profile carjacking. 'The rate of crime, the rate of muggings, killings, and everything else - we're not going to let it continue,' Trump asserted. 'You're going to be safe walking down streets. You're not going to get mugged.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
JD Vance denies CNN report of Jeffrey Epstein-related meeting
Vice President JD Vance denied Wednesday that he would host a meeting to discuss the administration's response to the Jeffrey Epstein files, ridiculing a CNN report that reported details of the planned event as 'fake news.' The vice president was specifically asked to address the report by President Donald Trump during an event in the Oval Office. 'I saw the report today, and it's completely fake news, we are not meeting to talk about the Epstein situation,' Vance replied. 'I think the reporter who reported it needs to get better sources.' Trump described the whole Epstein controversy as a 'hoax' that was 'put out by the Democrats ' to distract from his administration's success. 'That's just a way of trying to divert attention to something that's total bull[expletive],' the president added. CNN reported that Vance was hosting a meeting Wednesday evening to discuss the Epstein files that would include White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, Attorney General Pam Bondi, FBI Director Kash Patel (pictured) and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. The report was bylined by five different CNN reporters citing 'three sources familiar' with details of the event. The vice president's office denied the scheduled meeting after the CNN report was published Wednesday morning. 'The CNN story is pure fiction,' William Martin, Communications Director to the Vice President told the Daily Mail. 'There was never a supposed meeting scheduled at the Vice President's residence to discuss Epstein Strategy.' The White House did not respond to a Daily Mail request for comment. The vice president has been working behind the scenes to get Bondi and Patel on the same page, but is not specifically leading the administration's response to Epstein. A second source close to the FBI told the Daily Mail that Vance likely sees the Epstein files as a possible liability for his all-but-certain run for president in 2028, 'so trying to distance himself from the mishaps but also be part of the solution' is important to him. Blanche recently spent nine-hours meeting with Ghislaine Maxwell to discuss the case. Maxwell, Epstein's ex-girlfriend and business associate was was convicted of trafficking and sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2022. During the meeting, Maxwell told Blanche that Trump never did anything harmful in her presence according to sources speaking to ABC News. Administration officials are weighing whether to release transcripts of the interviews, but have not made a decision. Maxwell was transported from a federal prison in Tallahassee, Florida after her meeting with Blanche to a more relaxed security prison in Texas. Maxwell's attorney said after the meeting that she 'didn't hold anything back' in the interview, and spoke about 'one hundred' different people in the case. President Trump said he was unaware of Maxwell's transfer but described it as routine. 'I didn't know about it at all. I read about it just like you did,' he told reporters on Tuesday. 'It's not a very uncommon thing.' Trump has not ruled out a pardon for Maxwell. The family of Virginia Roberts Giuffre, a survivor of Epstein's abuse, issued a statement calling for the adminstration to meet with 'any survivor of the vicious crimes of convicted perjurer and trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein.' 'Their voices must be heard, above all. We also call upon the House subcommittee to invite survivors to testify,' Sky and Amanda Roberts said in a joint statement with Danny and Lanette Wilson. Giuffre died in April 2025, as the cause of death was ruled a [self-murder]. 'Any information that may be released by the government should take into account the survivors who wish to remain anonymous, for their safety and well-being. They should be consulted first,' the family members concluded. Democrats were quick to target Vance's role in the controversy, given that he once was a vocal proponent of releasing all the documents related to the deceased pedophile. 'The Epstein files coverup is happening before our eyes and the entire Trump White House is complicit including JD Vance who at one point tried to distance himself from it all,' said Tommy Vietor, the former Obama national security official and current podcast host. The Trump administration continues to weigh their response to the controversy that began a month ago after the Department of Justice released a memo that said Epstein did not have a 'client list' that could be released and that there was no evidence of foul play in Epstein's death in prison, after it was ruled a suicide. Vance last addressed the administration's handling of the files, denying that the they were 'shielding' Epstein and his clients. 'We're not shielding anything,' the vice president told a reporter who asked him about protestors in Ohio. 'The president has directed the attorney general to release all credible information and frankly to go and find additional credible information related to the Jeffrey Epstein case.' Vance has defended Bondi for her handling of the case, even as prominent Trump allies have blamed her for the tone-deaf handling of the case. 'I know, because I talk to her all the time, the attorney general is hard at work on that now,' Vance said. Vance insisted that Trump had 'nothing to hide' in the Epstein files and predicted more details about the Epstein case in the coming days. 'He's going to keep on being an advocate for full transparency,' Vance promised.