Clarke Schmidt gets his first real chance to stick in Yankees’ rotation
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
Clarke Schmidt has gotten the short end of the stick during his Yankees tenure.The 2017 first-round pick spent nearly his entire college and minor-league career as a starting pitcher however, despite a few spot starts here and there, he’s yet to have a real opportunity to become a mainstay in the Bombers’ rotation.That will change beginning Saturday afternoon.Schmidt will take the ball for the Yankees — with a tough act to follow after Gerrit Cole’s record-setting Opening Day performance — in their second game of the season against the San Francisco Giants.The right-hander began spring training in competition — after Frankie Montas’s shoulder surgery that will keep him out until at least the second half of the season — with Domingo German to become the clubs’ fifth starter. However, a forearm injury to the newly-signed southpaw Carlos Rodon and a lat injury to Luis Severino has extended that competition through the beginning week...Louis Coleman, convicted of kidnapping Jassy Correia resulting in her death, ordered to pay $60K+ restitution
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
The man convicted of kidnapping and killing Jassy Correia in February 2019 has been ordered to pay more than $61,000 in restitution, with most of that intended for Correia’s young child who was left motherless.A federal jury in Boston convicted Louis Coleman III in June of 2022 of kidnapping resulting in Correia’s death. U.S. Chief District Court Judge Dennis Saylor IV sentenced Coleman to life in prison without the possibility of parole.That judgment was amended Friday to include a total of $61,362.68 in restitution. The bulk of that restitution, $50,000, is listed as payable to “Representative of the Estate of Jassy Correia, for benefit of her Minor Child.” Another $8,800 is earmarked for the Massachusetts Compensation Fund and the remaining $2,562.68 will go toward the Federal Crime Victims Fund.Correia’s daughter was only 2 years old at the time of Jassy’s death.Coleman’s defense attorneys Jane Peachy and David Hoose wrote a terse letter later in the day announcing that they wou...A bit of luck: Padres pride in full bloom at this Del Mar garden
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
SAN DIEGO – The Padres’ season has finally arrived and the fans across the county have rallied behind the team, from wearing the team’s jerseys to new Friar-themed offerings.But, there’s one hidden gem garden in Del Mar that is celebrating the team’s return to Petco Park with an extra special display all about the Padres.Gwen’s Garden, a memorial garden for a beloved animal friend just steps away from Dog Beach, has been decked out in a display all about the Padres in honor of the season opener last night.The garden was created by North County resident, Jimmy Joe Gooding, through the “Adopt a Spot” program through the City of Del Mar, gaining approval for it about five years ago. It was dedicated to his yellow Labrador Retriever named Gwen who passed about two years before. Padres City Connect jerseys draw fans in for second year He planted new flora in the area that was once known for being a sort of “eyesore,” giving it new life with flowers, succulents and other greenery. Durin...Man wanted in suspected hate-motivated incident at Kennedy station
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
Toronto police are searching for a man wanted in a suspected hate-motivated investigation.Police say they were called to Kennedy subway station around 10 a.m. on Friday for reports of a man armed chasing several people around with a sharp object.Investigators say the suspect allegedly yelled racial slurs to the people he was chasing.He fled the scene before police arrived. The suspect is described as six-feet-tall with a medium build, long dark hair in a ponytail and unshaven. He was last seen wearing a maroon long sleeve shirt, black pants and a black backpack. “After consultation with the Service’s specialized Hate Crime Unit, the investigation is being treated as a suspected hate-motivated offence,” police said in a statement. Should the suspect be charged and convicted of the offence, the Judge will take into consideration hate as an aggravating factor when imposing a sentence.Experts say Mexico military holding info on missing students
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
MEXICO CITY (AP) — A group of international experts investigating the 2014 disappearance of 43 students in southern Mexico said Friday that Mexico’s military has failed to hand over key information on the case.The group was created by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights to investigate the abduction and forced disappearance of students from the Ayotzinapa teachers’ college in the state of Guerrero.The panel presented a new report on the case Friday.“There are black holes where the information disappears,” panel member Carlos Beristain said, adding that military personnel had given responses to investigators that appeared to have been “coached.”He was referring to purported “secret operations” that Mexican marines carried out in Guerrero in the month after the students were abducted by police officers. On Sept. 26, 2014, police in the city of Iguala took the students off buses they had commandeered. The motive for the police action remains unclear eight years later, bu...Mexico’s president visits city where fire killed 39 migrants
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s president on Friday visited the border city where 39 migrants died in a fire at a detention center, expressing pain over the disaster but probably not bringing any changes in tough immigration policies. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said he was personally devastated by Monday’s tragedy in Ciudad Juarez, which is across from El Paso, Texas. “I confess it hurt me a lot, it damaged me,” López Obrador said before starting out on his trip to Juarez. “It ripped my soul apart.” The president said the fire was the second most painful moment of his administration, exceeded only by a 2019 pipeline fire in the central Mexico town of Tlahuelilpan that killed about 135 people.However, it hasn’t cost him much politically. Many residents of Mexican border cities mourned the death of the migrants in the smoky mattress fire, which was set by some migrants to protest perceived moves to deport them. But in Ciudad Juarez, many peope were fed up with migrants la...To conserve, Nevada may try to buy back groundwater rights
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) — Marty Plaskett upgraded his farming equipment and spent $60,000 on new sprinklers to conserve water, even before the rural Nevada valley where he farms alfalfa began more strictly managing groundwater.Now, Plaskett is weighing another adjustment: selling off part of his legal right to use water that lies under his land to the state. Even after a wet winter, Nevada and much of the West are still dealing with the effects of a prolonged drought that depleted groundwater supplies. Lawmakers in Nevada are considering a bill to allow the state to buy groundwater rights in diminished basins so nobody could use them again.In the area where Plaskett farms, the state severely overestimated decades ago just how much water was available from wells sunk deep into fractured rock and gravel. The Legislature hasn’t determined how much farmers would be paid to give up some rights to groundwater.“It would mainly come down to, number one, the price,” said Plaskett, 57.St...Vancouver asks artist, vigil keepers to end Indigenous children’s shoe memorial
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
VANCOUVER — Officials in Vancouver said they plan to meet with the artist and volunteers who are keeping vigil on a children’s shoe memorial on the steps of the city’s art gallery in an effort to end the tribute to children who didn’t return from residential schools. The city said in a statement it notified the artist in November that the growing memorial needed to come down ahead of the two-year anniversary of the announcement of the Kamloops discovery this May. It said the decision is supported by the local Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh nations. “The City acknowledges there is still a need for healing and mourning spaces,” the statement said. “While the temporary memorial cannot remain on the steps of the Vancouver Art Gallery, the City will continue to work with (Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh) Nations and Urban Indigenous communities to create a more permanent and culturally appropriate memorial.”In the meantime, the city ...Chinese businessman seeks bail in $1 billion fraud case
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — Lawyers for a wealthy self-exiled Chinese businessman who developed ties to Trump administration figures including Steve Bannon are seeking bail for him two weeks after his arrest, saying other defendants accused of massive frauds like Bernard Madoff and Sam Bankman-Fried were freed on bail.The lawyers submitted papers in Manhattan federal court, saying Guo Wengui is entitled to bail just as other wealthy defendants have been given the chance to post bail in the past. They also challenged claims by prosecutors that he is a risk to flee, saying he would not leave his wife of 38 years and his daughter as all three seek asylum.Madoff was free for several months in late 2008 and early 2009 before he was jailed after he pleaded guilty in a multibillion-dollar fraud. He was later sentenced to 150 years in prison and died behind bars.Bankman-Fried, 31, was arrested in the Bahamas in December in what a prosecutor called one of biggest frauds in American history. He agreed to...UN food chief: Billions needed to avert unrest, starvation
Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 19:39:14 GMT
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Without billions of dollars more to feed millions of hungry people, the world will see mass migration, destabilized countries, and starving children and adults in the next 12 to 18 months, the head of the Nobel prize-winning U.N. World Food Program warned Friday.David Beasley praised increased funding from the United States and Germany last year, and urged China, Gulf nations, billionaires and other countries “to step up big time.”In an interview before he hands the reins of the world’s largest humanitarian organization to U.S. ambassador Cindy McCain next week, the former South Carolina governor said he’s “extremely worried” that WFP won’t raise about $23 billion it needs this year to help an estimated 350 million people in 49 countries who desperately need food, “Right at this stage, I’ll be surprised if we get 40% of it, quite frankly,” he said.WFP was in a similar crisis last year, he said, but fortunately he was able to convince the United States to increa...Latest news
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