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Trump Administration Ups The Pressure On Criminal Cartels

Trump Administration Ups The Pressure On Criminal Cartels

Fox Newsa day ago
Mexico has handed over 26 high-ranking cartel members to the United States on Tuesday as part of a deal with the Trump administration to properly address the threat of criminal groups smuggling drugs over the border. Back in February, President Trump signed an executive order that designated six different cartels as a foreign terrorist organizations. Texas Congressman Tony Gonzales (R-TX) joins to discuss the situation at the border and Texas Democrats who've fled the state.
Some college students are already getting settled into their dorm rooms to begin college while prospective students are awaiting their admissions letters. The future of college education may look different, as the growing challenges of getting accepted may stem from an increasingly saturated application environment. Jeff Selingo, author of Who Gets In and Why: A Year Inside College Admissions , joins the podcast to stress the importance of prioritizing the right fit over prestige and what factors prospective students should really consider when it comes to their higher education.
Plus, commentary from the host of 'The Big Ben Show,' Ben Domenech.
Photo Credit: AP
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Gas prices: Slipping oil prices fuel summer savings at Canadian pumps
Gas prices: Slipping oil prices fuel summer savings at Canadian pumps

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

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Gas prices: Slipping oil prices fuel summer savings at Canadian pumps

Canada's gas price average fell 2.7 cents per litre over the past week, according to data from Kalibrate. The move lower is largely thanks to falling crude prices in response to fears of an oversupplied market. The biggest discount this week was in Calgary, where the price of a litre of regular gasoline dropped 10.6 cents between August 7 and August 15. At this time last year, Canada's gas price average was $1.678 per litre, compared to $1.452 as of Thursday. "As it stands today, there is a glut of crude oil on the market that is keeping prices down," En-Pro International chief petroleum analyst Roger McKnight wrote in a blog post on Thursday. Earlier this week, a report from the International Energy Agency found global supply could outpace demand by a record 2.96 million barrels per day in 2026, surpassing the buildup during the pandemic lockdown in 2020. At the same time, data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration released on Wednesday showed American stockpiles are at the highest level in two months. Benchmark oil prices drifted lower on Friday as investors await news from U.S. President Donald Trump's summit in Alaska with Russia's Vladimir Putin. Progress towards a deal to end Russia's war in Ukraine would help de-risk the global oil market and support prices. Trump recently increased U.S. tariffs on Indian goods in response to the country's purchases of Russian oil. So far, he has avoided targeting China over its Russian oil purchases. Follow Yahoo Finance Canada for more weekly gas price updates. Scroll below to find your nearest city. (All figures in CAD cents) Location August 7 August 14 Price Change Canada Average (V) 145.2 142.5 -2.7 WHITEHORSE 161.9 161.9 0 VANCOUVER* 171.1 168 -3.1 VICTORIA 166.3 171.9 5.6 PRINCE GEORGE 145.6 145.6 0 KAMLOOPS 152.3 150 -2.3 KELOWNA 149 146.3 -2.7 FORT ST. JOHN 149.2 143.4 -5.8 ABBOTSFORD 160.9 157.8 -3.1 YELLOWKNIFE 144.7 146.2 1.5 CALGARY* 137.9 127.3 -10.6 RED DEER 131.8 126.7 -5.1 EDMONTON 133.3 127.9 -5.4 LETHBRIDGE 131 130.7 -0.3 LLOYDMINSTER 130 128.9 -1.1 GRANDE PRAIRIE 131.7 129.1 -2.6 REGINA* 138.4 137.3 -1.1 SASKATOON 129.9 126.9 -3 PRINCE ALBERT 136.2 130.2 -6 MOOSE JAW 137.8 139.9 2.1 WINNIPEG * 137 135.2 -1.8 BRANDON 127.6 126.9 -0.7 CITY OF TORONTO* 135 134.5 -0.5 BRAMPTON 134.5 134.2 -0.3 ETOBICOKE 133.7 133.8 0.1 MISSISSAUGA 132.4 133.1 0.7 NORTH YORK 135.1 134.7 -0.4 SCARBOROUGH 134.1 133.9 -0.2 VAUGHAN/MARKHAM 134.1 134.5 0.4 OTTAWA 134.8 133.3 -1.5 KINGSTON 125.3 125.2 -0.1 PETERBOROUGH 126.9 121.2 -5.7 WINDSOR 131.8 132.3 0.5 LONDON 133.6 134.6 1 SUDBURY 134.2 128.6 -5.6 SAULT STE MARIE 127.6 127.6 0 THUNDER BAY 139.4 133.8 -5.6 NORTH BAY 138.3 133.1 -5.2 TIMMINS 138.6 138.1 -0.5 HAMILTON 131.3 132 0.7 ST. CATHARINES 131.4 130.8 -0.6 BARRIE 135.5 133.6 -1.9 BRANTFORD 134.1 131.4 -2.7 GUELPH 134.8 133.1 -1.7 KITCHENER 132.2 133.3 1.1 OSHAWA 130.3 133.4 3.1 SARNIA 131.2 126.9 -4.3 MONTRÉAL* 158.1 155.5 -2.6 QUÉBEC 151.6 152.8 1.2 SHERBROOKE 149.5 151.3 1.8 GASPÉ 157.7 157.7 0 CHICOUTIMI 140.4 138.6 -1.8 RIMOUSKI 151.4 150.1 -1.3 TROIS RIVIÈRES 154.4 154.3 -0.1 DRUMMONDVILLE 147.8 145.2 -2.6 VAL D'OR 156.7 156.6 -0.1 GATINEAU 142.9 139.1 -3.8 SAINT JOHN* 143 143.6 0.6 FREDERICTON 143.5 144.1 0.6 MONCTON 143.2 143.6 0.4 BATHURST 143.4 143.8 0.4 EDMUNDSTON 142.6 143 0.4 MIRAMICHI 144.9 145.8 0.9 CAMPBELLTON 144.9 145.5 0.6 SUSSEX 143.5 143.7 0.2 WOODSTOCK 144.8 145.4 0.6 HALIFAX* 145.7 146.7 1 SYDNEY 147.6 148.6 1 YARMOUTH 146.7 147.7 1 TRURO 146.8 147.8 1 KENTVILLE 146.3 147.3 1 NEW GLASGOW 146.8 147.8 1 CHARLOTTETOWN* 151.3 150.2 -1.1 ST JOHNS* 151.6 152.2 0.6 GANDER 155.3 155.9 0.6 LABRADOR CITY 158.7 159.4 0.7 CORNER BROOK 152.6 153.3 0.7 GRAND FALLS 155.3 156 0.7 SOURCE: KALIBRATE • All figures in CAD cents (*) Denotes markets used in Volume Weighted Canada Average Jeff Lagerquist is a senior reporter at Yahoo Finance Canada. Follow him on X @jefflagerquist. Download the Yahoo Finance app, available for Apple and Android.

NCAA set to announce the results of its sign-stealing investigation into Michigan's program
NCAA set to announce the results of its sign-stealing investigation into Michigan's program

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

NCAA set to announce the results of its sign-stealing investigation into Michigan's program

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — The NCAA is expected to announce the results of its sign-stealing investigation into Michigan's college football program on Friday. In a notice sent to the school last year, the NCAA alleged that Michigan football coach Sherrone Moore violated rules as an assistant under former coach Jim Harbaugh. Harbaugh, who left the Wolverines after they won the 2023 national championship and now coaches the Los Angeles Chargers, served a three-game suspension in exchange for the Big Ten dropping its investigation into the allegations after the two ended up in court. Moore also was accused of deleting text messages with sign-stealer Connor Stalions before they were recovered and provided to the NCAA. The NCAA investigation surfaced early in the 2023 season amid allegations that Michigan used a robust in-person scouting and sign-stealing operation conducted by Stalions, a former a low-level staffer. He was suspended by the school and later resigned. Stalions, who did not participate in the NCAA investigation, recently said he knew almost every signal opponents used in seven games over two seasons. Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti sent a letter to the NCAA Committee on Infractions last month, suggesting that Michigan's football program should not face more sanctions related to the sign-stealing saga. The Wolverines open the season on Aug. 30 at home against New Mexico State and then play at Oklahoma, where Moore was an offensive lineman, on Sept. 6. The NCAA does not have rules against stealing signs, but does prohibit schools from sending scouts to the games of future opponents and using electronic equipment to record another team's signals. ___ AP college football: and

Michigan sign-stealing punishment: NCAA hammers Wolverines with massive fine, additional suspension for Sherrone Moore
Michigan sign-stealing punishment: NCAA hammers Wolverines with massive fine, additional suspension for Sherrone Moore

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Michigan sign-stealing punishment: NCAA hammers Wolverines with massive fine, additional suspension for Sherrone Moore

At long last, nearly two years after its initial discovery, the Michigan sign-stealing decision is in. In a document sent to the school on Friday, the NCAA's Committee on Infractions sanctioned the Wolverines with the following penalties, according to sources: • Four years probation• $50,000 fine, plus 10% of the budget for the football program• A fine equivalent to the anticipated loss of all postseason competition revenue sharing associated with the 2025 and 2026 football season.• A fine equivalent to the cost of 10% of the scholarships awarded in Michigan's football program for the 2025-26 academic year• A 25% reduction in football official visits during the 2025-26 season.• 14-week prohibition on recruiting communications in the football program during the probation period. The committee also slapped current head coach Sherrone Moore with an additional game suspension (on top of the two already imposed by Michigan). The committee hammered former coach Jim Harbaugh with a 10-year show-cause penalty and hit Connor Stalions, the purported ringleader of the sign-stealing scheme, with a 8-year show-case. A show-cause effectively prevents a person from coaching in college for the duration of the penalties are expected to become public with the full release of the penalties to come at noon ET, with an NCAA press conference at 1 p.m. ET. The Big Ten, alerted by the NCAA of its active investigation in the midst of the 2023 season, suspended Harbaugh for the final three games of that regular season. Michigan announced this spring a two-game suspension for Moore. It is suspending him for the third and fourth games of the season against Central Michigan and at Nebraska. The third additional game suspension, handed down by the NCAA on Friday, will be served in 2026. Moore and the Wolverines begin the season ranked No. 14 in the Associated Press preseason poll. They kick off the season against New Mexico before traveling to Oklahoma for a Big Ten-SEC showdown on Sept. 9. Meanwhile, Harbaugh is beginning his second season as head coach for the Los Angeles Chargers. Stalions has spent time coaching on the high school level. Stalions appeared at Michigan's hearing before the NCAA Committee on Infractions in June. He provided witness testimony during the two-day ordeal, even growing emotional to the point of tears while speaking about the impact of the investigation on his potential coaching career. Those present at the hearing spoke to Yahoo Sports under condition of anonymity. According to the NCAA's investigation, Stalions, a lifelong Michigan fan and graduate of Navy, operated an elaborate, multiyear system in which he bought tickets to games involving future Michigan opponents and then had associates — as many as 65 — attend games to video a team's play-call signals. Last summer, after a 10-month investigation, the NCAA formally charged Michigan with 11 allegations, six of those deemed Level I. Most notably, Moore deleted 52 texts from Stalions the same day that Yahoo Sports first unearthed news of the scandal. In a response to the NCAA in January, obtained by Yahoo Sports, the school vigorously defended its coach, describing the texts as 'innocuous and not material to the investigation.' In fact, in that 137-page response, the university refuted many of the alleged rules violations and accused the NCAA of 'grossly overreaching' and 'wildly overcharging' the program without credible evidence that other staff members knew of Stalions' illegal in-person scouting system — the central question in a case that gripped all of the college sports world as it unfolded in 2023. All sign stealing is not against NCAA rules. For instance, staff members can steal an opponent's signals during games and from television or replay video. However, in a longtime NCAA cost-containment rule, schools are not permitted to scout opponents in advance. The NCAA accused Stalions of engaging in in-person scouting of 52 games over the 2021, 2022 and 2023 seasons, many of them involving scheduled opponents of Michigan. He used Michigan staff members, family and friends to record sideline signals, according to the NCAA's investigation, which features video and photograph evidence of people videoing from seats that Stalions or accomplices purchased. Over the three-year stretch, UM went 40-3 with three consecutive conference championships and the 2023 national title. However, in its response, the school purports that the sign-stealing system offered 'minimal relevance to competition,' was not credibly proven by NCAA investigators and should be treated as a minor violation. The university and several of its coaches were considered repeat offenders. Two years ago, a separate investigation found both Harbaugh and Moore guilty of COVID-era recruiting violations. In that case, Michigan was placed on three years probation, and Harbaugh received a four-year show-cause order. Most interesting, perhaps, in Michigan's response to the NCAA was a note about the tipster. The person who originally provided information to the NCAA about the Stalions' scheme derived from its own campus. The unnamed source, which the NCAA has not disclosed, appears to have worked at Michigan, at least at one point, according to the response. This story will be updated as it develops.

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