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MLB star Wander Franco found guilty in minor sex abuse case: How much prison time is Rays shortstop seeing?

MLB star Wander Franco found guilty in minor sex abuse case: How much prison time is Rays shortstop seeing?

Hindustan Times27-06-2025
Major League Baseball shortstop Wander Franco has been guilty of sexually abusing a minor in his home country of the Dominican Republic. Dominican professional baseball player Wander Franco attends his trial for sexually abusing a minor, in Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic June 26, 2025. REUTERS/Erika Santelices(REUTERS)
A Puerto Plata court passed a unanimous sentence against convicting a 24-year-old on the charge of having an illegal relationship with a 14-year-old girl.
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Despite prosecutors pushing for a five-year prison sentence, the Tampa Bay Rays shortstop was handed a two-year suspended sentence instead.
Three judges of the Puerto Plata Collegiate Court made the ruling, so Franco will not spend time in prison unless and until he breaks certain court-ordered conditions.
'Do not approach minors for sexual purposes. If you don't like people very close to your age, you have to wait your time,' Judge Jakayra Veras García told Franco, according to the Associated Press. Charges against Wander Franco explained
Franco had faced multiple charges, including sexual and commercial exploitation of a minor as well as human trafficking. However, the judges ruled he was not guilty of those more severe allegations. Still, the court found enough evidence to convict him of sexually abusing the underage girl, with whom he reportedly had a months-long relationship when he was 21 years old.
Prosecutors alleged that Franco also paid off the victim's mother to obtain her consent for the relationship. The mother was convicted as well, on charges of sexually trafficking her daughter, and sentenced to 10 years in prison. Authorities have ordered the seizure of all assets she received in connection with Franco's actions, per ESPN's Juan Arturo Recio.
ALSO READ| Rays beat Red Sox 10-8 in 11 innings, spoil top prospect Roman Anthony's MLB debut
'The court has understood that this minor was manipulated,' Judge Veras said, after reviewing the prosecution's evidence.
Speaking earlier this week before the verdict was announced, Franco maintained his innocence, telling the judges, 'We expect justice.'
Franco's lawyer, Irina Ventura, called the outcome unfair and said she plans to appeal the ruling. 'Justice was not done,' she said.
The verdict comes nearly two years after the first allegations against Franco appeared on social media in August 2023. He's been on MLB's restricted list since July 2024 and has not played professional baseball since the charges surfaced.
'Major League Baseball is proud to have a collectively bargained Joint Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Policy that reflects our commitment to these issues,' Major League Baseball said in a statement.
ALSO READ| MLB All-Star Game voting: How does it work and when will final team be announced?
'We are aware of today's verdict in the Wander Franco trial and will conclude our investigation at the appropriate time.'
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White House plans increase in law enforcement as Trump eyes DC takeover
White House plans increase in law enforcement as Trump eyes DC takeover

Business Standard

time36 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

White House plans increase in law enforcement as Trump eyes DC takeover

President Donald Trump on Wednesday said he may use the National Guard to police the streets of Washington, DC, and a White House official said federal law enforcement would increase its presence in the city this week. The threat - and the move to follow through on it - is the latest step by Trump and his administration toward taking over running the city that serves as the seat of the US government. "We have a capital that's very unsafe," Trump told reporters at the White House. "We have to run DC This has to be the best-run place in the country." A White House official told Reuters that operational details about the increased federal presence were still being finalized. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that the city had been "plagued by petty and violent crime for far too long" and Trump was committed to making it safe. Trump, who has threatened a federal takeover of the city multiple times, escalated those threats after a young staffer who was part of Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency was assaulted over the weekend. Musk, the billionaire former adviser to Trump who once spearheaded the DOGE effort, said the man was beaten and received a concussion. "It is time to federalize DC," he wrote. Asked if he was considering taking over the DC police, Trump responded affirmatively. "We just almost lost a young man, beautiful handsome guy that got the hell knocked out of him," Trump said. The president posted a picture of the victim, Edward Coristine, known by the nickname "Big Balls," on social media, with blood on his face, arms, torso and legs. "We're going to beautify the city. We're going to make it beautiful. And what a shame, the rate of crime, the rate of muggings, killings and everything else. We're not going to let it. And that includes bringing in the National Guard, maybe very quickly, too," Trump said. A spokesperson for DC Mayor Muriel Bowser declined to comment. Violent crime in the first seven months of 2025 was down by 26 per cent in DC compared to last year while overall crime was down about 7 per cent, according to records on the police department's website. Overall crime was down 15 per cent in 2024, compared to 2023, the website showed. Trump has long complained about crime in the city. He signed an executive order in March aimed at increasing law enforcement in Washington. The District of Columbia was established in 1790 with land from neighboring Virginia and Maryland. Congress has control of its budget, but resident voters elect a mayor and city council, under a law known as the Home Rule Act. For Trump to take over the city, Congress likely would have to pass a law revoking that act, which Trump would have to sign. The president said on Wednesday that lawyers were already looking at overturning the Home Rule Act. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

New Team India's Test tour of England: The things done right and the lessons that should be learnt
New Team India's Test tour of England: The things done right and the lessons that should be learnt

First Post

timean hour ago

  • First Post

New Team India's Test tour of England: The things done right and the lessons that should be learnt

India's tour of England will be remembered as a success, but beneath the celebrations lies the awareness of a missed chance, a golden opportunity to win an away series in England for the first time since 2007. For this new-look Indian team, it's both a moment of pride and a prompt for introspection and growth. read more It was a memorable series for a new-look Team India, but they return with the feeling of what more it could have been. Images: Reuters/AP On Day five of the fourth Test match at Old Trafford, when Ben Stokes wanted to shake Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar's hands to declare the Test a draw officially, the two Indian batters refused, because they, very rightly, wanted to complete their individual centuries. That was a bold call. But then, Jadeja was seen throwing his hands up in the air and also heard on the stump mic saying to Stokes – 'I can't do anything.' And then, while pointing at the Indian dressing room, it looked like he said something that sounded along the lines of – 'the captain and coach will decide.' If that is indeed what he said, then that was not bold, assertive, or a mark of confidence. We know for a fact that Shubman Gill and the team management had left the decision to either walk off or bat on entirely to the two batters out in the middle. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD And that potential dichotomy that we witnessed, in the space of a few minutes, that strange mix, of being bold and also otherwise, sums up India's 5-Test tour of England this time. A tour on which they were really bold at times and almost had the series in the bag by the time the third Test finished, but also a tour on which they could have been somewhat bolder – with their execution of certain plans and their selection calls in particular. It was a tour after all on which they couldn't get their playing combination just right, one in which dropped catches played a big role, but definitely also one where certain playing XI slots were cemented and one in which India's never-say attitude on foreign shores – a priceless quality that has been associated with the team from around 2018 or so and thanks largely to their fast bowling prowess - once again came to the fore. At the end of it all, the series might have been drawn 2-2, but the way it finished, with India drawing the 'undrawable' Test at Old Trafford and then clinching their smallest ever margin of victory by runs in a Test match at the Oval (6 runs, beating the previous record of 13 runs vs Australia at the Wankhede in 2004), it sure felt like a series triumph. India could have and realistically should have won the series, but they also didn't lose it. And winning the last Test by the skin of their teeth will give them the confidence and momentum that this new Team India needs. Also Read | Test cricket touches hearts in ways white-ball formats can't, but are administrators watching? Some pieces did fall in place perfectly and have established templates that will definitely be followed in the future. KL Rahul as confirmed opener is one of them. A proponent of the classic languid style of Test batsmanship, Rahul might have gone into the series as the most experienced Indian batter, but how he would cope with opening the innings on a regular basis in English conditions was something even the most seasoned experts were not entirely sure of. Rahul is a highly intelligent cricketer. His stoic façade and often reserved approach to things might give those who tend to judge books by their covers the impression that he is not cut out to be assertive. His decision to politely decline captaincy of his new IPL team – the Delhi Capitals – might have added to that myth, but that's exactly what it is – a myth. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD KL Rahul made 532 runs in five Tests vs England. Image: Reuters Rahul is not an in-your-face kind of cricketer. He will not charge down the track in a Test match to deposit a fast bowler's delivery over the ropes only to prove a point, but what he will give you is solidity and maturity. And that's what you need at the top of the order. The way he tackled different match scenarios in the series this time, with the bat, spoke volumes about the analytical cricket brain that he possesses. Becoming the first Indian opener in 46 years to accumulate over 500 runs in an away Test series is a statistic that sums up his contribution and also the fact that India have their two new fixed Test openers. Rahul's opening partner, meanwhile, showed us that he has grown tougher mentally. Despite having a rather see-saw series, with the bat and dropping catches which had a big role to play in India losing the Leeds Test, Yashasvi Jaiswal knew the one thing he had to focus on the most was opening the innings for India. He began and ended the series with centuries (101 & 118 – was dropped thrice in his second innings at the Oval) and finished with an average of over 41. He also had scores of 87 and 58, but also two ducks and other scores of 4, 28, 13 and 2. Former India captain Rohit Sharma asked Jaiswal to – 'hang in there and bat long' and though he did manage to do that on a few occasions, the southpaw will be striving for more consistency, especially now that he has the perfect partner at the other end, in Rahul. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD But don't let what was a topsy-turvy kind of series for the youngster take anything away from your appraisal of his gumption, something that has seen him already notch up 6 centuries and 12 fifties in 24 Tests. Yashasvi had already managed to cement his place as a confirmed Test opener well before this series began, but on this tour of England, he showed us once again the temperament that sets him apart and one that belies his very young age (23). Before this series began, I was convinced that it would be baptism by fire for new Test captain, Shubman Gill. And that's exactly what it was. The good news for him and for Indian cricket overall is that he has shown signs of settling into what is probably the most high-pressure job in international cricket. The best thing that Gill did in this series (something he has managed to do earlier as well, especially in the IPL with the Gujarat Titans) was to separate his two roles of skipper and batter. While analysing a series that had a very, very long list of talking points, let us not forget that Shubman, while captaining the India team in what was his first Test captaincy assignment, finished as the highest run-getter of the series, with 754 runs in 10 innings. That's an average of almost 76, with four centuries. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD In a series in which the legendary Joe Root climbed up to number two on the list of batters with most Test runs, behind only Sachin Tendulkar, Shubman out-scored the former England captain by 217 runs, albeit having played one inning more (Root played 9 innings). While there were several questions asked about his captaincy, especially his tactical acumen, the fact of the matter is that he has managed to deliver a 2-2 series scoreline. Yes, technically India should have had the series in the bag, maybe as early as the Lord's Test itself, but Shubman the captain has more ticks against his name than crosses at the moment, thanks to the final series scoreline. Shubman Gill's outburst against Zak Crawley at Lord's was a rare sighting. Image: PTI It's not easy being a 25-year-old Test captain and Shubman has shown that he is open to ideas on the field, especially when he realises that certain plans are not working. Like we saw on a few occasions in this series, the likes of Rahul and vice-captain Pant will have to play big supporting roles as Shubman finds his feet as Test captain. The main lesson he needs to learn, though, is not to change himself and his temperament radically so as to try and meet other people's standards of a good captain and appease the critics. Some are born to lead, some figure it out, while others fizzle out. Shubman will know that it's the second category that he would want to belong to. As the skipper himself said after the Oval Test – 'I have more clarity where personally I need to work on as a captain.' STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Though the India Player of the Series Award was given to Shubman, I felt Mohammed Siraj should have (also) been considered, maybe as a joint-recipient (unless the rules state that the opposition coach can name only one player as Player of the Series). The fact that Siraj finished as the highest wicket-taker, with 23 wickets, and bowled almost 186 overs (185.3 - the most in the series) with almost the same intensity behind every delivery and consistently hit good lengths and troubled the best of the English batters and helped India snatch victory from the jaws of defeat in the final Test to ensure the visitors didn't lose the series should have been enough perhaps for him to be picked by Brendon McCullum. In Pictures | Bumrah vs Siraj: Explore the journey of India's top two pacers after 41 Tests Bumrah played only three Tests and the supporting cast of fast bowlers wasn't consistent with their performances, and yet India managed to draw the series. A huge advertisement again of Siraj's growth as a Test match strike bowler and also a lot to think about for the management in terms of giving him and Bumrah the support they need in the fast-bowling department. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD It's an open secret that Washington Sundar is being groomed as the long-term replacement for Ravindra Jadeja. And, in that context, it was good to see the master and the apprentice bat together and bat well. This was also in many ways a rebirth series for Jadeja. It was wonderful to see a player who has been the Number 1 Test all-rounder for three years plus straight, put such a high price on his wicket in tough batting conditions. The fact that he is now the first Indian batter to score 500+ runs in a Test series, batting at Number 6 or lower (going past VVS Laxman's 474 vs WI in 2002) and that he remained unbeaten in four of his ten innings, with an average of 86, shows how successful a series he had with the willow and just why he is India's number 1 all-rounder pick. But the one question that will continue to be asked is – could the team management not have tried out a specialist bowler in place of Sundar, at least in the Oval Test, where the conditions clearly favoured the fast bowlers more? STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The one question that simmered in me throughout this series was – why was the team management so intent on having batters till Number 8? I can, of course, understand having a certain batting cushion when playing abroad, but at the end of the day, if you don't take 20 wickets, you won't win a Test match. And with your premier strike bowler being able to play only three of the five scheduled Tests, giving someone like Mohammed Siraj, who once again bowled his heart out for almost 186 overs in the series, the support that he really needed at the other end has to be a big priority. Also Read | Opinion: Bumrah is rarest of rare, but it's time to discuss whether he can pick and choose Test matches True that the management might have thought that three fast bowlers would be enough, but that plan works only when you have three tried and tested match winners. With Mohammed Shami not in the picture currently, India doesn't have a third Test pacer of the quality of Bumrah and Siraj. A fourth specialist fast bowling option, therefore, would have increased the odds of taking opposition wickets. The biggest factor behind Siraj's improvement by leaps and bounds as a Test bowler is consistent selection in the playing XI. Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj are currently India's two main pacers, especially on overseas tours. AFP The captain explained the decision of not playing a fourth fast bowler at the Oval and instead recalling Karun Nair as a tactical call, but with someone like Arshdeep Singh on the bench, who can produce different angles, perhaps the management could have given him a go? Prasidh Krishna did manage to redeem himself and he needs to work more on his consistency. With Mohammed Shami's return still up in the air, Bumrah and Siraj deserve consistent fast bowling partners such that the pressure on them is not unnatural. India haven't had a quality, Test wicket-taking left-arm seam option since the likes of Zaheer Khan and Irfan Pathan. So, when you have someone like Arshdeep in your squad, who has established himself as a wicket-taker in limited-overs cricket, shouldn't you unleash him on the opposition as quickly as possible? Instead, the management chose to play all-rounder Shardul Thakur in the Leeds Test, as the fourth seaming option, because he gave them a batting cushion. He contributed a total of 5 runs and 2 wickets. When the conditions are right, Shardul can produce innings that can shape the result of a match, absolutely, but in these conditions, wouldn't another out-and-out fast bowler, capable of generating more consistent speed and that too someone who can create different angles as compared to the other three, have been a more attacking option? Also, if the selectors are picking Abhimanyu Easwaran in a Test squad, he must be played and tried out. Otherwise, it's just plain unfair treatment to someone who has scored tons of runs in domestic cricket (over 7800 First Class runs with 27 centuries) and has consistently shown that he is worthy of a Test call-up. And then there's the Kuldeep Yadav mystery. A left-arm wrist spinner bowler, who is an attacking, wicket-taking option, is not someone you keep on the bench through the series. Not only does it deflate the player's confidence, but it also boosts the opposition's belief in the theory that you are not prepared to try anything out of the box. Washington Sundar, the batter, delivered above and beyond what was expected of him, averaging almost 48 in the series, but he also bowled only 74.1 overs in 4 matches and took 7 wickets. Neither Arshdeep Singh nor Kuldeep Yadav was given a chance in England. Image: Reuters It felt like the team management was convinced that playing as many all-rounders as possible for more batting cushion was the way to go, regardless of the conditions on offer. Sundar did have an impact on the series, especially in the 'miracle at Manchester', but what about the likes of Shardul Thakur and Nitish Kumar Reddy, both of whom played two Tests each? Should Kuldeep have been tried out in place of either of them? Also, think about the message that Kuldeep's non-selection would have sent out. What the world saw was a team that, no matter what, wanted a batter at number 8. And that too didn't help at times, like in the Lord's Test where India failed to chase down a target of 193 and lost by 22 runs. As former India captain Anjum Chopra recently told me, 'Why are we counting Washington Sundar and Nitish Kumar Reddy as all-rounders only? They are all-rounders, yes, but they are (also) proper batters. With nine (8) batters, if you couldn't close down the game, that is your inability, not the opposition's brilliance.' So, lots to celebrate and also to think about for this new Team India. The best news is that this tour will be chalked down as an overall successful one, and rightly so. But somewhere within them, the Indian players and the coaches will know that it was also a lost opportunity to win a coveted away series in England for the first time since 2007 and, therefore, hopefully, an opportunity to put on their analyst caps and learn some very valuable lessons for the future.

Does Putin now hold American battle tank secrets? US Army nabs soldier for attempting to share national defense information with Russia
Does Putin now hold American battle tank secrets? US Army nabs soldier for attempting to share national defense information with Russia

Economic Times

time2 hours ago

  • Economic Times

Does Putin now hold American battle tank secrets? US Army nabs soldier for attempting to share national defense information with Russia

Synopsis A US Army soldier faces charges for allegedly sharing sensitive data with Russia. Lee, stationed at Fort Bliss, is accused of attempting to transmit national defense information. He reportedly shared data about the M1A2 Abrams tank. The FBI and Army Counterintelligence Command are investigating the matter. Speaking about the arrest, Brigadier General Sean F. Stinchon, the commanding general of Army Counterintelligence Command, said, "This arrest is an alarming reminder of the serious threat facing our U.S. Army." Reuters FILE PHOTO: Members of the U.S Army sit atop an M1A2 Abrams tank near the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 13, 2025. REUTERS/Nathan Howard/File Photo A soldier of the US Army was arrested on Wednesday for allegedly handing over sensitive information pertaining to American battle tanks to the Russian government, according to the US Justice Department. The soldier, identified as Taylor Adam Lee, 22, who holds a top-secret security clearance, is facing two federal charges accusing him of attempting to transmit national defense information and export-controlled technical data without a license, according to court documents, news agency Reuters reported. Lee is an active-duty soldier stationed at Fort Bliss in Texas. Speaking about the arrest, Brigadier General Sean F. Stinchon, the commanding general of Army Counterintelligence Command, said, "This arrest is an alarming reminder of the serious threat facing our U.S. Army,' as quoted by FOX News.'Today's arrest is a message to anyone thinking about betraying the U.S.—especially service members who have sworn to protect our homeland. The FBI and our partners will do everything in our power to protect Americans and safeguard classified information,' Assistant Director Roman Rozhavsky of the FBI's Counterintelligence Division was quoted by Reuters as saying in a has not yet entered a plea on the charges, which were filed in the US District Court for the Western District of Texas. Attorney information for Lee was not immediately available. Prosecutors accused Lee of attempting to share information on the operation and vulnerabilities of the M1A2 Abrams, the main U.S. battle tank, with the Russian government in exchange for Russian citizenship. In July 2025, Lee shared an SD card that contained documents and information about the tank and other U.S. military operations with someone he believed to be a Russian intelligence officer. The documents contained technical data Lee was not authorized to provide, and some were marked 'Controlled Unclassified Information,' according to prosecutors.'Soldiers who violate their oath and become insider threats will absolutely be caught and brought to justice, and we will continue to protect Army personnel and safeguard equipment,' said Brigadier General Sean Stinchon, the commanding general of Army Counterintelligence Command.

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