Latest news with #Palmeiro
Yahoo
15-05-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Arlington County Board votes to prohibit police from contacting ICE
ARLINGTON, Va. (DC News Now) — Arlington County police are no longer allowed to reach out to federal immigration officials proactively. The county board voted Tuesday to take out language from its 'Trust Policy.' One of the big concerns from immigration lawyers and board members is that immigrants have been afraid to report crimes to police for fear of being deported. People opposed to the policy change say the move makes the community less safe. With the recent ICE crackdowns on immigrants living in the U.S. illegally, life for many immigrants comes with fear. 189 arrested in immigration crackdown under 'Make DC Safe and Beautiful' initative 'Generally, people are scared,' said immigration attorney Miguel Palmeiro. On Wednesday afternoon, Palmeiro was helping a single mom with a young son who two people attacked. 'She doesn't have legal status. So her fear, she tells me, she goes, 'I don't want to call the police because I don't want them to have my updated address, because then they're going to get me and they're going to deport me,'' Palmeiro said. It's one of the main reasons Arlington County's board unanimously removed Section 7 of its trust policy, meaning county law enforcement can't proactively contact federal immigration authorities about any issue. 'I want the police to be able to keep the community safe. And they can report the crimes so that… future crimes don't happen,' Palmeiro said. 'I'm worried that if people think that they just target immigrants, that bad things will happen to immigrants.' County Vice Chair Matt De Ferranti says Arlington police shouldn't be focused on federal immigration. 'Those in our detention facility must be entered into a database that ICE has access to. Whether we like that or not, it is the law,' De Ferranti said. Immigrant advocacy organizations offer advice amid reports of increased immigration enforcement in DC There is pushback to the change. Matthew Hurtt is chairman of the Arlington County Republican Committee. 'Arlington Republicans are disappointed at this county board for refusing to work with federal law enforcement, including ICE, to uphold our immigration laws,' Hurtt said. Hurtt believes increased ICE enforcement is a good thing. 'It allows law enforcement to keep our streets safe. Again, Northern Virginia residents are deeply concerned about crime and we're seeing a lot of elements from the illegal alien community, people who are hiding in the shadows, who are committing those crimes,' Hurtt said. As part of her decision, board member Maureen Coffey pointed to the overall immigration actions that have been taking place. 'Sending people to foreign prisons and claiming we have no way to get them back is not normal. Stating that due process isn't required for immigration proceedings is not normal,' Coffey said. 'The rhetoric and actions of this administration have led to tremendous stress and fear in our community, and we want to make sure all residents feel safe in engaging with local government, particularly with local law enforcement, ' said Takis Karantonis, chair of the Arlington County Board. 'The County continues to follow state and federal law, but neither requires us to have Section 7. The County has always held that immigration enforcement is the sole and exclusive responsibility of the federal government, and this decision remains consistent with that understanding.' ICE has not responded to a request for comment. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


New York Times
25-04-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
MLB players who wore No. 25 have a surprising connection
The Windup Newsletter ⚾ | This is The Athletic's MLB newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Windup directly in your inbox. Wanna hear something weird? It's our 425th edition of The Windup, and the date is 4/25! So we decided to lean into it. Here are four mini-stories about players who wore No. 25 on their jerseys. And, uh … I stumbled on a theory. I'm Levi Weaver, here with Ken Rosenthal. Happy Friday! I come not to praise Bonds, but to Barry him. OK no, no, I'm just kidding. I think Barry Bonds is the greatest hitter of all time. But I couldn't pass up that pun. Look, there's just no way around it: Bonds did things that no other human has ever done. And I think it's a real shame that he did them in the steroid era, because even without any (I am legally required to say alleged) external assistance, he was still brilliant. I'm not the first to point this out, but 1998 is the first year Bonds' chemistry is under suspicion. So let's look at his stats from 1986-1997. (He started wearing 25 in 1993.) If he had chosen to simply retire right then, at age 32, he would have been a Hall of Famer. No question. Instead, he went on to put up numbers so absurd that they require a Jon Bois video to truly put them into perspective. Bonds' on-base percentage from 1998-2007 was .496! Take that as a byproduct of the era, or leave it (as Hall of Fame voters have done) as an unfair advantage. But there's no denying that Bonds was one of — if not the — best. More Bonds, sorta: Chris Kirschner has a story today about how Aaron Judge is doing some Bondsian things. I was skeptical before I read it, but he makes some compelling points! Call him the Forgotten No. 25. For a time, Rafael Palmeiro was one of only four members of the 500-homers, 3,000-hit club, along with Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Eddie Murray. Three others later joined the list — Albert Pujols, Miguel Cabrera and Alex Rodriguez. All but Palmeiro and Rodriguez figure to end up in the Hall of Fame. The reason: Palmeiro and Rodriguez were linked to performance-enhancing drugs. Advertisement The lasting image of Palmeiro's career is not of his sweet left-handed swing. No, it's of him pointing his finger during a congressional hearing about PEDs in March 2005, saying, 'Let me start by telling you this: I have never used steroids, period. I don't know how to say it any more clearly than that. Never.' Less than five months later, Palmeiro's reputation shattered. Two weeks after he recorded his 3,000th hit, Major League Baseball suspended Palmeiro 10 days for testing positive for stanozolol, a powerful anabolic steroid. It was later reported that Palmeiro, in challenging the test before an arbitrator, said his positive test possibly resulted from a tainted vitamin B12 sample he received from Miguel Tejada, a Baltimore Orioles teammate. Tejada, the Orioles and baseball's Health Policy Advisory Committee, comprised of union and management representatives, disputed Palmeiro's assertion. Palmeiro struggled after returning from his suspension. With a month remaining in the season, the Orioles sent him home. Palmeiro, now 60, has barely been heard from since. Barry Bonds and Mark McGwire, two other players linked to PEDs, returned to the sport as major-league coaches. Rodriguez, who received a 162-game suspension for PED violations and sued MLB, was honored with a farewell ceremony by the New York Yankees and became an analyst with Fox Sports. Palmeiro attempted a comeback in 2018 at age 53, joining his son, Patrick, with the Cleburne Railroaders, an independent team. In a story I wrote for The Athletic about that quest, his wife, Lynne, told me, 'I just feel there is such a hypocrisy about baseball players who have tested positive and the way they are viewed. I feel Rafael is held under a completely different microscope than just about anybody else. And I don't understand it.' Advertisement Palmeiro said he blamed no one but himself for his disappearance from the sport. He fell off the writers' ballot for the Hall of Fame after receiving less than 5 percent of the vote in his fourth year of eligibility. In 2022, he was denied again, this time by the Contemporary Baseball Era Committee. Eight of 12 votes were necessary for election. Palmeiro received fewer than four. He is the Forgotten No. 25. Fun fact: Nobody has worn the number 25 for more seasons than Tommy John, who wore it for 24 years. Of course, that's not what most people think of when they hear his name. You might know him by what sounds like a hyphenated last name: 'Tommy John-Surgery' — a reconstruction of the ulnar collateral ligament. A year-plus of rehab. (It is also, perplexingly, underwear. No idea.) 'I didn't name it Tommy John surgery,' John said in an interview with Dan Patrick last fall. 'Dr. Jobe did. He's the one who stuck me with that.' But what about his on-field accomplishments? I think the association with bad news has overshadowed a very good career. He finished 12 wins short of 300, and … well, check out this chart: Fun fact: Nobody has worn the number 25 for more seasons than Tommy John, who wore it for 24 years. Of course, that's not what most people think of when they hear his name. You might know him by what sounds like a hyphenated last name: 'Tommy John-Surgery' — a reconstruction of the ulnar collateral ligament. A year-plus of rehab. (It is also, perplexingly, underwear. No idea.) 'I didn't name it Tommy John surgery,' John said in an interview with Dan Patrick last fall. 'Dr. Jobe did. He's the one who stuck me with that.' But what about his on-field accomplishments? I think the association with bad news has overshadowed a very good career. He finished 12 wins short of 300, and … well, check out this chart: Take a look at this list of notable No. 25s. Norm Cash, José Cruz, Don Baylor, Bobby Bonds: all on the outside looking in. You know who is in the Hall of Fame? Harmon Killebrew, George Brett, Al Kaline and Mike Piazza, each of whom debuted wearing No. 25 before getting out of it as fast as possible — Killebrew mostly wore 3, Brett 5, Kaline 6 and Piazza 31. Advertisement (Also theory-buster Jim Thome, who wore No. 25 for 21 seasons — second only to John. But he is the only Hall of Famer who wore primarily No. 25.) We've already outlined why some of those guys aren't in (allegedly, and all). But with apologies to Ken, I think there's a more-forgotten No. 25: Buddy Bell, who I sincerely believe should be in the Hall of Fame. The short argument is: Third basemen are underrepresented in the Hall. I don't think we have taken into account how challenging the position is, defensively. And speaking of defense … Bell won six straight Gold Gloves, from 1979-84. There's a lot more to it than that, though. I made a much longer argument back in 2020 when we had nothing else to write about, so we aired our grievances for fun. I can admit: HOFer Buddy Bell is not a popular opinion. But I stand by it! Anyway, parents: Teach your kids to throw left-handed, and don't let them wear No. 25. You had to know it was coming. That Diamondbacks-Cubs game was just begging for the Jayson Stark Weird & Wild treatment. Here ya go! Tyler Kepner's 'Sliders' column this week is written by — not making this up — a character from an upcoming Simpsons episode. Jim Bowden has reasons to be optimistic and/or pessimistic about all 30 teams. More like Sophomore Success for Pete Crow-Armstrong. The Cubs are creating an atmosphere to let the 23-year-old outfielder thrive. Jeff McNeil and Francisco Alvarez have come off the IL for the Mets, bumping Brett Baty to the minors. Plus: So far, so good for Clay Holmes as a starter in Queens. Can he keep this up? 'Throw strikes' isn't a new philosophy. But it's the one propelling Cincinnati's Hunter Greene to ace status. It's not as if the Phillies didn't address their bullpen at all this offseason. But Jordan Romano hasn't been great, and the rest of the pen hasn't been much better. Advertisement Carlos Correa isn't dealing with any injury. In his words, he is 'dealing with my swing sucks right now.' Most-clicked in our last newsletter: Zack Meisel's story on how Steven Kwan gained a 'mental edge.' 📫 Love The Windup? Check out The Athletic's other newsletters.