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  • Chase on Texas border that killed 8 puts high-speed pursuits in spotlight again

    Chase on Texas border that killed 8 puts high-speed pursuits in spotlight again

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The white Honda Civic sped down Highway 57, a rural two-lane corridor that reaches the U.S.-Mexico border, after a Texas sheriff’s deputy tried pulling over the car and gave chase when it didn’t stop.

    High-speed pursuits of migrants and suspected smugglers have become routine in Texas. But Wednesday’s chase came to one of the deadliest endings in recent years: a head-on crash that killed eight people, including Honduran citizens and two residents of Georgia.

    The mangled wreckage at the scene near La Pryor, a small town about 100 miles (160 kilometers) west of San Antonio, laid bare the danger of high-speed pursuits undertaken by an ever-expanding presence of law enforcement at the border. Texas alone has stationed hundreds of additional troopers the past two years in the name of curbing the flow of migrants and drugs.

    The crash has also renewed criticism that the pursuits are too fast and have gone on for too long despite chases that have ended in injuries or death. In January, U.S. Customs and Border Protection issued a new policy for vehicle pursuits with an eye toward increasing safety.

    For some, changes haven’t spread wide enough.

    “They can mitigate getting into these issues and these high-speed chases that end in death,” said David Stout, a county commissioner in El Paso.

    Stout said Texas troopers have engaged in roughly 500 high-speed pursuits in his border county alone this year, more than half of which exceeded speeds of 100 mph (160 kph).

    Authorities had still not released identities of the victims Thursday, including the 21-year-old driver of the Civic and five passengers in the vehicle. The Civic collided with a Chevrolet Equinox, which caught fire with a man and woman inside. Both were killed.

    It is not clear the top speeds the cars reached during the pursuit, which began when a Zavala County sheriff’s deputy tried pulling the Civic over around dawn. The sheriff’s office did not comment Thursday beyond providing a brief report.

    The crash is under investigation by the Texas Department of Public Safety, which oversees Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s sprawling border mission known as Operation Lone Star. The department did not immediately provide figures on high-speed pursuits. But Director Steve McCraw did not dispute that his own troopers have been involved in thousands of chases the past two years.

    A pursuit can be called off, McCraw said, if “it becomes an unreasonable risk to the public or yourself.” He said troopers will also back off if police aircraft arrive to keep an eye on the fleeing vehicle.

    “The problem with that is when we’ve done that, they continue to drive fast,” McCraw said in an interview Thursday. “So once the chase is on, it’s not like they just slow down.”

    Last year, the American Civil Liberties Union and another civil rights group sent a complaint to the U.S. Justice Department over high-speed pursuits along the Texas border. Citing news reports, the groups said they had counted 30 deaths and 71 injuries in chases involving state troopers during the first 16 months of Abbott’s border mission.

    Pedro Rios, a director of the American Friends Service Committee, has studied the policies of federal agents involved in vehicle pursuits and believes the chases should be forbidden altogether.

    “What we’ve called on is for vehicle pursuits to end because the risk to the safety of not only migrants, but also the officers or the agents and other bystanders, such as in this case, could be put in jeopardy,” he said.

    The Texas crash marked the highest death toll in a crash involving migrants since 13 people died in a collision in remote Holtville, California, in March 2021. Another chase by local police last year near the Texas border also ended in the deaths of four migrants.

    McCraw said he has never fired a trooper over their actions during a pursuit.

    “I’m sure that we’ve had some coaching or counseling,” he said. “That just happens by nature because it’s a fine line between how fast you drive. And sometimes it may not be a risk to the public as much as it’s risk to the trooper driving 153 miles an hour down the roadway.”

    In El Paso, Stout said high-speed pursuits this year have resulted in more than 60 accidents. He recalled one chase that ended with a car crashing on a bridge. When two migrants inside the car got out, Stout said, they fell to their deaths.

    “That really sticks out in my mind when I think about these things,” he said.

  • Foreman runs for TD, Bears beat Panthers 16-13 to boost their shot at the top pick in the draft

    Foreman runs for TD, Bears beat Panthers 16-13 to boost their shot at the top pick in the draft

    CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago Bears weren’t too concerned about appearances. All that mattered was that they came out on top.

    D’Onta Foreman ran for a touchdown and the Bears boosted their shot at the top pick in the draft, beating the Carolina Panthers 16-13 on Thursday night.

    “At the end of the day, man, all the hard work we put in, even with it not being pretty it still feels amazing,” Foreman said. “You know what I mean?”

    The prime-time matchup between teams among the bottom five in the NFL delivered about as much drama as expected. But Chicago (3-7) made enough plays to come away with the victory.

    The Bears also boosted their chances at the No. 1 pick because they have Carolina’s first-rounder in 2024. They acquired the pick along with Moore last March for the top selection this year. The Panthers (1-8) are tied with Arizona — which plays Atlanta on Sunday — for the worst record in the NFL.

    Foreman gave the Bears a 16-10 lead in the third quarter with a 4-yard run. Chicago was up by three with 1:40 remaining in the game when Carolina’s Eddy Pineiro missed a 59-yard field goal, the ball landing well short of the goal post. The Bears sealed the win when Darnell Mooney caught an 8-yard pass on third-and-seven at the 48.

    Moore caught five passes for 58 yards against his former team.

    Tyson Bagent completed 20 of 33 passes for 162 yards in his fourth straight start with Justin Fields sidelined because of a dislocated right thumb. The Bears are 2-2 with the undrafted rookie from Division II Shepherd University in West Virginia in the lineup.

    Fields hasn’t played since he exited a Week 6 loss to Minnesota. Eberflus has said repeatedly he remains the Bears’ No. 1 quarterback. But he wouldn’t say if he expects Fields to return next week at Detroit.

    “We’ll see where it is,” Eberflus said. “It’s a big week to make that evaluation, so we’ll see where it is. When Justin’s healthy, he’ll be our starter.”

    Cairo Santos kicked three field goals. The Bears got their pass rush going, sacking Bryce Young three times. It was a big improvement for a team with a league-low 10 through the first nine games.

    “They got swagger,” said defensive end Montez Sweat, who had three quarterback hits in his second game since a trade-deadline deal from Washington. “All these guys, I really love kind of like the plug and play. I’m really going along with them trying to figure out the energy that they’re bringing.”

    PANTHERS FALL

    Carolina’s Ihmir Smith-Marsette returned a punt 79 yards for a touchdown in the first quarter. But Young, coming off his worst game as a pro, had another rough outing. The No. 1 draft pick this year, he was 21 of 38 for 185 yards with a 68.4 rating, after throwing three interceptions and having two returned for scores in a loss to Indianapolis.

    Adam Thielen caught six passes for 42 yards, and the Panthers fell to 0-5 on the road.

    “We have to be better,” Young said. “Our defense, great game, start to finish. We have to be better. I have to be better first and foremost. I have to be a lot better.”

    JUMPING AHEAD

    The Bears grabbed a 16-10 lead midway through the third on a 4-yard run by Foreman — who spent last season with Carolina — to cap a 38-yard drive after pinning the Panthers deep in their own territory. Chicago opted not to try a 2-point conversion to go up by seven.

    Carolina got a big opportunity late in the third, taking over at the Chicago 40 after Trenton Gill shanked a punt. The Panthers got pushed back 20 yards to start the drive because of back-to-back penalties, then got to the 20 before Pineiro kicked a field goal to make it a three-point game early in the fourth.

    SLOW START

    The Panthers led 10-9 at halftime even though the Bears outgained them 205 yards to 97. Chicago ran 42 plays, but settled for three field goals by Santos.

    Smith-Marsette, who played part of last season in Chicago, gave the Panthers a 7-0 lead in the first quarter when he returned a punt 79 yards for a touchdown. He broke a tackle by Josh Blackwell, cut through the middle and used a hesitation move to get past punter Trenton Gill for his first career TD return.

    Chicago answered with a 54-yard field goal by Santos. Former Bear Pineiro kicked a 33-yarder early in the second quarter to make it a seven-point game. Santos booted two more field goals, hitting a 36-yarder with just over three minutes left and 39-yarder as time expired, to make it a one-point game.

    INJURIES

    Neither team reported an injury.

    UP NEXT

    Panthers: Host Dallas on Nov. 19.

    Bears: Visit Detroit on Nov. 19. ___

  • The 2024 Grammy Award nominations are about to arrive. Here’s what to know

    The 2024 Grammy Award nominations are about to arrive. Here’s what to know

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Buckle up, music lovers! The nominations for the 2024 Grammy Awards will arrive Friday.

    Nominees will be announced during a video stream live on the Grammy website and the Recording Academy’s YouTube channel at 8 a.m. Pacific/11 a.m. Eastern.

    A host of talent is on deck to announce the nominees, including “Weird Al” Yankovic, Jimmy Jam, Jon Bon Jovi, Kim Petras, Samara Joy and Muni Long.

    Only recordings released between Oct. 1, 2022, through Sept. 15, 2023, are eligible, so don’t expect to see album nominations for the Rolling Stones, Bad Bunny, or Drake. (But Drake’s 2022 album with 21 Savage, “Her Loss”? That’s on the table.) And much to the chagrin of fans of Michelle Williams’ reading of Britney Spears’ memoir “The Woman in Me,” the actor will not be eligible in the best audio book, narration and storytelling recording category this cycle.

    The 2024 awards will feature a few changes, including one that inspired a lot of online chatter over the summer: “Only human creators” can win the music industry’s highest honor, a decision aimed at the use of artificial intelligence in popular music.

    Afterward, Recording Academy CEO and President Harvey Mason jr. told The Associated Press: “AI, or music that contains AI-created elements is absolutely eligible for entry and for consideration for Grammy nomination. Period.”

    He continued: “What’s not going to happen is we are not going to give a Grammy or Grammy nomination to the AI portion.”

    There are also three new categories: best pop dance recording, best African music performance and best alternative jazz album.

    Two existing categories have been moved to the general field, which means that all Grammy voters can participate in selecting the winners: producer of the year, non-classical, and songwriter of the year, non-classical, the latter of which was first introduced this past year.

    Previously, the general categories were made up solely of the “Big Four” awards: best new artist, as well as album, record, and song of the year.

    The 2024 Grammy Awards will air Feb. 4 live on CBS and Paramount+ from the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.

  • Murphy’s $2 bills / The new documentary Sam can’t stop singing about / What did Murphy forget in almost 24 years of marriage?

    Murphy does a full house check of all his $2 bills.  You should too.

    The new documentary Sam can’t stop watching or singing about.

    What did Murphy forget for the 1st time in almost 24 years of marriage?!


  • See ya later, sadness.

    6 simple things to do that can keep depression away. 🙏

    Website: https://murphysamandjodi.com/
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  • No. 18 LSU seeks to extend recent dominance in Florida series

    No. 18 LSU seeks to extend recent dominance in Florida series

    Florida (5-4, 3-3 SEC) at No. 18 LSU (6-3, 4-2, No. 19 CFP), 7:30 p.m. EST (SECN).

    Line: LSU by 13 1/2, according to FanDuel Sportsbook.

    Series record: Tied 33-33-3.

    WHAT’S AT STAKE?

    After a loss at Alabama that virtually dropped the Tigers out of contention for an SEC title, LSU needs to win to remain in the AP Top 25 Poll and receive the most attractive possible bowl bid. The Gators need a win to become bowl eligible for the second consecutive year under second-year coach Billy Napier. With a daunting late-season schedule that also includes No. 16 Missouri and fourth-ranked Florida State, Florida will have to upset one of its three remaining opponents to make that happen.

    KEY MATCHUP

    LSU’s star receiver duo of Malik Nabers and Brian Thomas against a Florida pass defense that ranks fifth in the SEC, giving up just 209.2 yards per game.

    PLAYERS TO WATCH

    Florida: WR Ricky Pearsall leads the team with 55 catches for 773 yards and four touchdowns. He also has a scoring run and 126 yards on 11 punt returns. Pearsall was teammates with LSU QB Jayden Daniels at Arizona State for three years (2019-21).

    LSU: Nabers leads the nation in yards receiving with 1,152 on 66 catches, including 10 TDs.

    FACTS & FIGURES

    LSU has won four straight against the Gators and seeks its first five-game winning streak in the series that dates back to 1937. … Florida’s Eugene “Tre” Wilson leads all true freshmen in FBS with 6.4 receptions a game and ranks third in receiving yards, with 416. … Florida has rushed for 100 yards or more in seven consecutive games against LSU and 11 of the past 12 meetings. … The Gators have lost 14 of their last 16 games away from home. … Florida has scored in 445 consecutive games, an NCAA-record streak that began in 1988. … Daniels was cleared to practice this week after leaving last Saturday’s game at Alabama with concussion symptoms. If coaches decide he can play, he’ll look to improve on his 2,792 yards and 27 TDs passing to go with 684 yards and six TDs rushing, numbers which have placed him in the Heisman Trophy discussion. … Thomas leads LSU with 11 TDs receiving and is second in yards receiving with 768. … LSU has rushed for 200 yards in five straight games.

  • No. 1 Georgia faces another tough test against high-scoring No. 10 Ole Miss

    No. 1 Georgia faces another tough test against high-scoring No. 10 Ole Miss

    ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — No. 1 Georgia breezed through the first two months of the season, rarely encountering a serious challenger.

    Things got a whole lot tougher when the calendar flipped to November.

    For the second week in a row, the Bulldogs (9-0, 6-0 Southeastern Conference, No. 2 College Football Playoff) will find a ranked team standing across the line.

    No. 10 Ole Miss (8-1, 5-1, No. 9 CFP) visits Sanford Stadium for a Saturday night game that will surely have a major impact on Georgia’s bid for a third straight national title.

    “We’ve got a hell of a challenge,” said Bulldogs coach Kirby Smart, whose team beat No. 16 Missouri last week and faces a trip to Rocky Top next week to meet No. 14 Tennessee. “We need it to be as great an atmosphere in Sanford Stadium as it’s ever been to help take care of our home-field advantage.”

    Georgia can clinch a spot in the SEC championship with a victory, though that little item would be checked off before they even take the field if Missouri knocks off Tennessee.

    Of course, the Bulldogs have their sights on bigger goals. No team has won three straight national championships in the poll era.

    “To be close to a three-peat is really phenomenal at any time, let alone nowadays with scholarship limitations and the portal and everything,” Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin marveled.

    Kiffin’s high-scoring Rebels, led by quarterback Jaxson Dart and a host of offensive playmakers, haven’t given up on winning the SEC West. But a lot of things have to go their way.

    Alabama would have to lose its last two conference games, including Saturday’s contest at Kentucky, while Ole Miss would have to win out — a daunting task, indeed, with Georgia next up on the schedule.

    “This is a very challenging combination now of having elite, phenomenal players and elite, phenomenal coaches combined. And on the road,” Kiffin said. “So there’s a trifecta of what’s the hardest thing to pull off, and this would be it.”

    Then there’s the College Football Playoff.

    Ole Miss is on the outside, for now, but could push into the mix with an 11-1 record that includes a road victory over the two-time national champions — even if the Rebels don’t play for the conference title.

    “I think people are really, really starting to believe that we have a shot to go to the College Football Playoff,” tight end Caden Prieskorn said. “That was our main goal coming into the season. You can see it in people’s eyes, that we can go do this thing.”

    STREAKS GALORE

    The Bulldogs are putting all sorts of streaks on the line.

    Georgia has won 26 consecutive games — a school record — since its last loss to Alabama in the 2021 SEC title game. The Bulldogs haven’t lost a regular-season game since 2020, ripping off 36 wins in a row. Finally, Georgia has a 24-game winning streak at Sanford Stadium, tying the school mark set from 1980-83 during the Herschel Walker era.

    For good measure, Georgia has been ranked No. 1 by The Associated Press for 21 consecutive weeks, tied with Miami for the second-longest streak in the poll’s history. Southern California holds the record at 33 weeks in a row.

    Kiffin was on Pete Carroll’s staff at Southern Cal when the Trojans won 34 consecutive games from 2003-2005 and spent all those weeks at No. 1. Kiffin was Nick Saban’s offensive coordinator when Alabama won 26 straight from 2015-16.

    “The only way that happens is to have a phenomenal head coach like Pete Carroll and Nick Saban and now Kirby Smart,” Kiffin said. “Things aren’t going to go well. It’s football. And to overcome those poor games, to me, is what being a super elite program, being a super elite head coach is about.”

    QUARTERBACK DUEL

    Two of the nation’s best quarterbacks will be facing off between the hedges on Georgia’s field.

    Georgia hasn’t missed a beat with Carson Beck, who took over from Stetson Bennett and has kept the Bulldogs right on winning.

    Beck has completed more than 72% of his passes for 2,716 yards and 16 touchdowns, with just four interceptions.

    Dart has been throwing darts for Ole Miss, completing nearly 66% for 2,467 yards and matching Beck with 16 TDs and only four picks. The Rebels quarterback is also a weapon with his legs, rushing for 334 yards and seven TDs.

    FACING NO. 1

    Ole Miss has never beaten a team ranked No. 1 in The Associated Press poll.

    Kiffin noted that Ole Miss is a 10 1/2-point underdog in this one, according to FanDuel Sportsbook.

    “It’s kind of like playing with the house’s money,” Kiffin said. “No one’s expecting us to win, or probably even play them close, so we’ll just go in there and see what happens.”

    AVOIDING A LETDOWN

    Ole Miss started last season 8-1 as well, only to lose its last four games.

    Much of the current team is comprised of transfers who weren’t around for that collapse, but defensive end Jared Ivey thinks this team is physically in much better shape.

    “I feel like as a whole we’re a lot more fresh than we were last year,” said Ivey, a transfer from Georgia Tech. “I feel like we were really beat up physically last year.”

  • After The Show PODCAST: No Reservations.

    The Food Dude has a scam warning about making reservations at your favorite restaurant.


  • Israel agrees to 4-hour daily pauses in Gaza fighting to allow civilians to flee, White House says

    Israel agrees to 4-hour daily pauses in Gaza fighting to allow civilians to flee, White House says

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House said Israel has agreed to put in place four-hour daily humanitarian pauses in its assault on Hamas in northern Gaza starting on Thursday, as the Biden administration said it has secured a second pathway for civilians to flee fighting.

    President Joe Biden had asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to institute the daily pauses during a Monday call. U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said that the first humanitarian pause would be announced Thursday and that the Israelis had committed to announcing each four-hour window at least three hours in advance. Israel, he said, also was opening a second corridor for civilians to flee the areas that are the current focus of its military campaign against Hamas, with a coastal road joining the territory’s main north-south highway.

    Biden also told reporters that he had asked the Israelis for a “pause longer than three days” during negotiations over the release of some hostages held by Hamas, though he said there was “no possibility” of a general cease-fire. Asked if he was frustrated by Netanyahu over the delays instituting humanitarian pauses, Biden said, “It’s taken a little longer than I hoped.”

    Kirby told reporters Thursday that pauses could be useful to “getting all 239 hostages back with their families to include the less than 10 Americans that we know are being held. So if we can get all the hostages out, that’s a nice finite goal.”

    “Humanitarian pauses can be useful in the transfer process,” he added.

    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken had warned Israel last week that it risked destroying an eventual possibility for peace unless it acted swiftly to improve humanitarian conditions in Gaza for Palestinian civilians as it intensifies its war against Hamas.

    In a blunt call for Israel to pause military operations in the territory to allow for the immediate and increased delivery of assistance, Blinken said the situation would drive Palestinians toward further radicalism and effectively end prospects for any eventual resumption of peace talks to end the conflict.

    French President Emmanuel Macron had opened a Gaza aid conference on Thursday with an appeal for Israel to protect civilians, saying that “all lives have equal worth” and that fighting terrorism “can never be carried out without rules.”

  • New island emerges after undersea volcano erupts off Japan, but experts say it may not last long

    New island emerges after undersea volcano erupts off Japan, but experts say it may not last long

    TOKYO (AP) — An undersea volcano erupted off Japan three weeks ago, providing a rare view of the birth of a tiny new island, but experts say it may not last very long.

    The unnamed undersea volcano, located about 1 kilometer (half a mile) off the southern coast of Iwo Jima, which Japan calls Ioto, started its latest series of eruptions on Oct. 21.

    Within 10 days, volcanic ash and rocks piled up on the shallow seabed, its tip rising above the sea surface. By early November, it became a new island about 100 meters (328 feet) in diameter and as high as 20 meters (66 feet) above the sea, according to Yuji Usui, an analyst in the Japan Meteorological Agency’s volcanic division.

    Volcanic activity has increased near Iwo Jima and similar undersea eruptions have occurred in recent years, but the formation of a new island is a significant development, Usui said.

    Volcanic activity at the site has since subsided, and the newly formed island has somewhat shrunk because its “crumbly” formation is easily washed away by waves, Usui said.

    He said experts are still analyzing the development, including details of the deposits. The new island could survive longer if it is made of lava or something more durable than volcanic rocks such as pumice.

    “We just have to see the development,” he said. “But the island may not last very long.”

    Undersea volcanos and seismic activities have formed new islands in the past.

    In 2013, an eruption at Nishinoshima in the Pacific Ocean south of Tokyo led to the formation of a new island, which kept growing during a decade-long eruption of the volcano.

    Also in 2013, a small island surfaced from the seabed after a massive 7.7-magnitude earthquake in Pakistan. In 2015, a new island was formed as a result of a month-long eruption of a submarine volcano off the coast of Tonga.

    Of about 1,500 active volcanos in the world, 111 are in Japan, which sits on the so-called Pacific “ring of fire,” according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.

    Iwo Jima was the site of some of the fiercest fighting of World War II, and the photograph taken by AP photographer Joe Rosenthal of the flag-raising atop the island’s Mount Suribachi on Feb. 23, 1945, came to symbolize the Pacific War and the valor of the United States Marines.