
NFL Draft flop Shedeur Sanders was stopped by cops for speeding two weeks before getting caught driving over 100mph in Cleveland
The revelation that Cleveland Browns quarterback Shedeur Sanders had been caught speeding by police in the city didn't come as a surprise to law enforcement.
Yesterday, it was revealed that Sanders was pulled over in the suburb of Strongsville on Tuesday by authorities who issued a citation.
The rookie quarterback out of Colorado was clocked driving at 101mph, 41 miles over the posted speed limit.
Nearly a day later, it's been revealed that this is the second time this month that Sanders has been stopped for reckless driving.
Back on June 6, Sanders was stopped in another Cleveland suburb - Brunswick Hills - by the Ohio State Patrol.
According to records, Sanders was pulled over for driving 91 mph in a 65 mph zone at 12:24 in the morning.
A spokesperson for the team told Cleveland.com that the team has addressed the citations with the rookie.
"He is taking care of the tickets," team spokesman Peter John-Baptiste told the media outlet.
For the June 6 incident, Sanders faces $269 in fines and court costs for his recklessness.
As for the most recent ticket, he has the choice of either paying the $250 fine or fighting the fourth-degree misdemeanor charge in court on July 3.
Sanders was tipped by many - his own father included - to be a top-five draft pick. But the former Colorado quarterback suffered one the most shocking slides in NFL history.
He was eventually selected by Cleveland in the fifth round with the 144th overall pick - not before the Browns had taken ex-Oregon star Dillon Gabriel.
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Daily Mail
40 minutes ago
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Karen Read juror reveals moment that convinced jury she was innocent in murder trial that captivated America
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However, Read was found guilty of Operating Under the Influence and was sentenced to probation. She had already faced the charges at a trial last year. But after five days of deliberations, Judge Beverly Cannone declared a mistrial as the jurors remained split on whether she intentionally killed her boyfriend. Jason said that during her second trial there was initially some division amongst the 12 jurors as some were convinced she was 'definitely innocent,' while others agreed there was enough reasonable doubt to acquit her on at least the most serious charges. Others remained on the fence and 'a few' thought she was guilty - before being persuaded that there was too much reasonable doubt. But Jason said he doesn't believe Read ever even hit O'Keefe with her SUV, as the prosecutors had claimed. He pointed out that the jury was shown a video that showed Read's taillight was working fine after the alleged collision - despite prosecutors saying they found pieces of broken taillight around O'Keefe's body. Jason said he now remains unsure what happened to O'Keefe on the night of January 22, 2022, but he does not believe Read was responsible. The only thing the prosecution convinced the jury on, he said, was that there was 'enough evidence she was driving under the influence.' Prosecutors had argued Read was drinking with O'Keefe and a group of his friends at the Waterfall Bar and Grill in Canton - about 14 miles south of Boston - when they were invited to an afterparty at his friend Brian Albert's home. Read had even admitted to having several alcoholic drinks beforehand, but said she decided to drop O'Keefe off at the afterparty before she returned to his house. According to Read's version of events, she woke up at 4am to find that O'Keefe never returned home, leading her to frantically drive out to try and find him. After finding O'Keefe's body outside the home - which party attendees claimed he never entered - first responders on the scene alleged that Read repeatedly told them she hit him while in a panicked state. The prosecutors then argued that Read was a scorned lover who chose to leave O'Keefe dying in the snow, after striking him with her SUV. O'Keefe's cause of death was ultimately listed as blunt force trauma and hypothermia after police say he was left outside in a blizzard. The couple had been dating for two years at the time and were said to be having arguments in their relationship. Read's defense team, though, suggested O'Keefe was beaten, bitten by a dog, then left outside a home in the Boston suburb in a conspiracy orchestrated by the police that included planting evidence - the taillights the police had found. 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The case - and the suggestion that there was a police coverup - captivated America, as Read gained a cult following from the widespread social media coverage and hit HBO documentary of the case. The 'Free Karen Read' supporters were such a presence at her trial that the judge ordered they be kept 500 feet away from the courthouse and banned attendees inside the court from wearing pink, a color that they wore to show support for Read. 'Honestly, that made the pressure a lot harder and it did not give me comfort, it made it a lot harder to block everything out,' Jason said of the crowd outside, noting that 'all of the eyes were on us.' But he insisted Read's widespread support played no role in the jury's final decision, and when the verdict was finally read on Wednesday, Read was greeted by a massive crowd of pink-clad fans shouting 'Karen Read is free.' One supporter told she was ecstatic over the news and was ready to help fight for justice for O'Keefe. 'God, this is just. 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Daily Mail
40 minutes ago
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Surprising twist for deputy who shared info about nursing student with ICE after routine traffic stop
The sheriff's deputy who shared details of a routine traffic stop with federal agents, prompting ICE to arrest a nursing student, has been placed on leave pending an investigation. Caroline Dias Goncalves, 19, was detained by federal agents just moments after officer Alexander Zwinck let her off with a warning for driving too close to a semi-truck on a Colorado Interstate on June 5. Zwinck put details of the traffic stop into a group chat with federal agents which was only meant to be used to collaborate on drug offenses. Now, he's been stood down pending a full investigation into his messages in the Signal chat to ensure that proper protocol and state law was abided by. In Colorado, local law enforcement officials are prohibited from working with federal agents on immigration enforcement matters. 'This includes, but is not limited to, working to understand if and when Mesa County Sheriff's Office employees were made aware that the information shared for drug interdiction efforts was being utilized for immigration enforcement,' the sheriff's office said in a statement. Zwinck will remain on leave 'pending the outcome of the administrative investigation. 'Any repercussions will be determined by the outcome of the full administrative investigation.' The revelation comes after a Colorado judge granted Goncalves bond on Wednesday, setting the stage for her to be released from ICE custody. She has been held in the Denver Detentino Facility since her initial arrest earlier this month. During the traffic stop, the University of Utah nursing student complied with Zwinck by handing over all of her documentation and paperwork. In bodyworn camera footage seen by Zwinck told Goncalves he would let her off with just a warning, asking: 'Where are you from? You have a bit of an accent.' Goncalves answered: 'I'm from Utah.' Zwinck asked how long she'd been living in Utah and whether she was 'born and raised there', to which she cautiously answered: 'No. I was born in, um, gosh I always forget the town.. down in Brazil.' 'My parents moved here,' she added. It is understood her family arrived in the US on a tourist visa, which they overstayed. Her father then applied for asylum, and that case is pending. She is one of 2.5 million Dreamers in the United States, referring to undocumented migrants who were brought to the US as young children. Goncalves earned a coveted national scholarship, which allows undocumented youth to help finance college. While her asylum claim was pending, she had been granted temporary rights to work. Jon Hyman, who is legally representing Goncalves, said: 'We are relieved that Caroline was granted bond today and will be released from detention and returned to her family and community in the coming days.' He went on to describe the 'traumatic past few weeks' for both Goncalves and her family. 'Caroline's arrest and detention should not have happened in the first place,' he said. 'She has no criminal record, was not shown a warrant, and as the Mesa County Sheriff's office has since revealed, her arrest was only attributable to improper coordination between local law enforcement and ICE. 'Investigations should continue to ensure that other young immigrants in Colorado do not have to go through the same harrowing experiences.' Minutes after Zwinck had sent Goncalves on her way with a warning, she was pulled over again by ICE agents as she exited the freeway, and taken into custody. The Mesa County Sheriff's Office later revealed that Zwinck was part of a group chat with local, state, and federal law enforcement partners which was used to improve multi-agency cooperation to stem the drug trafficking trade. 'We were unaware that the communication group was used for anything other than drug interdiction efforts, including immigration,' the statement read. 'We have since removed all Mesa County Sheriff's Office members from the communication group.' The Sheriff's Office has since learned that federal agents within the group chat have been using the information gathered and shared there for the purposes of ICE enforcement. 'This use of information is contradictory to Colorado law and was initially intended for the purpose of reducing illegal drug trafficking in Colorado,' the statement read. 'Unfortunately, it resulted in the later contact between ICE and Miss Dias Goncalves.' A GoFundMe set up by a friend to help Goncalves' family cover legal costs associated with her detention raised $28,000 before they stopped accepting payments. 'Caroline has always followed the law, passionately pursued her education, and dreamed of a future full of opportunity,' the fundraising page reads. 'Yet she now finds herself unlawfully detained, frightened, and far from the safety and support she deserves.' Goncalves' detention became yet another flashpoint in the fight against President Trump's mass deportation agenda. He has put pressure on ICE agents to conduct sweeping arrests and last week directed federal immigration officials to prioritize deportations from Democratic-run cities. Trump added that to reach the goal officials 'must expand efforts to detain and deport Illegal Aliens in America's largest Cities, such as Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York, where Millions upon Millions of Illegal Aliens reside.' Trump's declaration comes after weeks of increased enforcement, and after Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff and main architect of Trump's immigration policies, said ICE officers would target at least 3,000 arrests a day, up from about 650 a day during the first five months of Trump's second term. At the same time, the Trump administration has reportedly directed immigration officers to pause arrests at farms, restaurants and hotels amid concern about the impact aggressive enforcement is having on those industries.