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Thursday, April 30, 2020

U.S. officials crafting retaliatory actions against China over coronavirus as President Trump fumes - The Washington Post

Senior officials across multiple government agencies are expected to meet Thursday to begin mapping out a strategy for seeking retaliatory measures against China, two people with knowledge of the meeting said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to disclose the planning. Officials in American intelligence agencies are also involved in the effort.

President Trump has fumed to aides and others in recent days about China, blaming the country for withholding information about the virus, and has discussed enacting dramatic measures that would probably lead to retaliation by Beijing, these people said.

In private, Trump and aides have discussed stripping China of its “sovereign immunity,” aiming to enable the U.S. government or victims to sue China for damages. George Sorial, who formerly served as a top executive at the Trump Organization and is involved in a class-action lawsuit against China, told The Washington Post he and senior White House officials have discussed limiting China’s sovereign immunity. Legal experts say an attempt to limit China’s sovereign immunity would be extremely difficult to accomplish and may require congressional legislation.

Some administration officials have also discussed having the United States cancel part of its debt obligations to China, two people with knowledge of internal conversations said. It was not known if the president has backed this idea.

Asked about this on Thursday, Trump said “you start playing those games and that’s tough.” He said canceling interest payments to China could undermine the “sanctity of the dollar,” but he added that there were other ways to levy extreme penalties on China, such as raising $1 trillion by imposing tariffs on Chinese imports.

Administration officials strongly cautioned that many of the discussions are preliminary and that little formal work has begun on turning these initial ideas into reality. Other administration officials are warning Trump against the push to punish China, saying the country is sending supplies to help the American response.

“Now is just not the right time,” one senior administration official involved in the talks said. “There will be a time to do it.”

But in recent days, some believe the battle between the administration’s economic advisers’ cautious approach to China and national security team’s push to retaliate against Beijing has begun to tilt toward the national security position.

“Punishing China is definitely where the president’s head is at right now,” one senior adviser said.

Some political advisers have also encouraged Trump to take a more forceful swing at China because they think it will help him politically.

White House officials and multiple congressional lawmakers have become increasingly fixated on China’s response to the outbreak and failure to contain it, asserting Chinese officials concealed key information and refused to cooperate with international health organizations. Chinese officials have repeatedly rejected allegations that they did not act swiftly enough to confront the virus.

U.S. officials spoke on the condition of anonymity for this story to discuss private and internal negotiations.

A spokesman for the White House National Security Council said in an email: “We don’t comment on internal deliberations.”

On Monday, Trump suggested at a White House news conference that the United States will seek hundreds of billions of dollars in damages from China. The president also said he is considering additional measures to punish China, but did not specify what they are. “We can do something much easier than that,” Trump said in response to a question about demanding financial compensation from Beijing. “We have ways of doing things a lot easier than that.”

On Thursday, Geng Shuang, a spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry, told reporters: “The U.S. should know that their enemy is the virus, not China. … They should focus on containment at home and international cooperation, instead of smearing China and shifting the blame onto China.”

He added: “As for punishment or accountability, as I have repeatedly stated, such rhetoric has no legal basis, and there’s no international precedent. … At this time, undermining others’ efforts will end up undermining oneself.”

The White House discussion around retaliatory measures reflects the increasing conviction among some administration officials about China’s alleged culpability in the spread of the virus, as well as political considerations. Recent polling suggests Americans’ opinions of China are at a low, and presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has released an ad that paints Trump as being weak on Beijing.

Critics say the administration’s efforts to punish China amount to little more than political theater that also risks endangering the American economy and American lives, as China is likely to retaliate against measures taken by the United States. The coronavirus has killed more than 60,000 Americans and cost the nation trillions of dollars in economic activity.

“The chances of getting the Chinese to pay reparations is somewhere between zero and none,” said Scott Kennedy, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a foreign policy think tank. “If your goal is to actually understand the origins and spread of the coronavirus, end this pandemic, restore economic growth, and prevent future crises, you have to get governments and different stakeholders to work together."

When the virus first emerged, Trump praised Chinese President Xi Jinping’s handling of the outbreak, saying Xi is doing “a very good job with a very, very tough situation.” More recently, Trump concentrated his attacks on the World Health Organization. “If it was a mistake, a mistake is a mistake,” Trump said earlier this month of China and the coronavirus. “But if they were knowingly responsible, yeah, I mean, then sure there should be consequences.”

Trump has appeared to step up his attacks on China more recently. “We are not happy with China. We are not happy with that whole situation because we believe it could have been stopped at the source,” Trump said at a White House news conference Monday. “It could have been stopped quickly, and it wouldn’t have spread all over the world.”

The potential recourse for U.S. action has been unclear, even as congressional Republicans such as Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (S.C.) have increasingly demanded the United States “make China pay big time” over the damage. One senior Trump adviser said the “sovereign immunity” issue has been a particular focus of the president’s, as it could allow states and the federal government to sue China for damages.

Sens. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) are among members of Congress who have drafted legislation to strip China and other foreign governments of immunity if they took intentional acts to conceal or distort information about the coronavirus that led to damage to other countries. Trump has spoken to Hawley and other Republican senators about punishing China, two people with knowledge of the conversations said.

Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) has also floated waiving interest payments to China for any holdings of U.S. debt, “because they have cost our economy already $6 trillion and we could end up being an additional $5 trillion hit."

Bipartisan proposals have emerged in the Senate to try to move jobs from China to the United States.

The Berman Law Group, a law firm that has launched the first major class-action lawsuit against China over the damage done by the virus, has been consulting with several senior Trump advisers in recent weeks on what they consider the most fruitful way to punish China. The team is both sharing information they learn about China’s actions in the case and stressing the value of a massive global lawsuit to make China pay for failing to warn other countries about a lethal virus.

Sorial, the former Trump Organization lawyer who has partnered with the Berman Law Group, has been the point man in communicating with top administration officials that the most effective way to compensate Americans for their losses is a civil suit and that curbing sovereign immunity could ease their path in court.

Sorial said in an interview that the president and White House are right to examine every method to make America whole for trillions of dollars in losses to businesses small and large and tens of thousands of deaths. Lead attorney Matthew Moore said the lawsuit is probably shielded from dismissal by current case law, which holds that governments that intentionally fail to warn of danger cannot claim immunity from a lawsuit. Moore added that restricting China’s immunity would make the case easier to pursue.

“I commend the president for what he is doing. We are now finally at the point that that kind of action is necessary,” Sorial said. “No matter where you sit on the political spectrum, if you are being generous, the government of China and the CCP [Chinese Communist Party] were grossly negligent.”

Chinese officials have said they did all they could to mitigate the risk and spread of the virus. They have also pointed to the country’s decision to lock down Wuhan earlier this year and other major cities to contain the spread of the virus.

China has attempted to aggressively stave off the prospect of a coordinated push by Western governments to hold it accountable. After Australian officials proposed a joint international investigation into the origins of the virus that would include sending inspectors into Wuhan, the Chinese ambassador to Australia this week threatened Australia with economic retaliation, sharply inflaming tensions.

China’s foreign minister, meanwhile, adopted a softer tack and thanked French President Emmanuel Macron after he expressed reservations about immediately launching the U.S.- and Australia-backed inquiry.

In early February, when American cities in Washington and California were seeing their first confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus infection, U.S. media reported that the virus originated in an exotic market that sold wild animals and described in detail the steps China had taken to lock down Hubei province to prevent it from spread.

As the weeks have passed, evidence has mounted that Chinese government officials sought to silence doctors who raised alarm about the virus’ human-to-human transmission and potential lethality.

Some White House officials and some Republicans also think that new information has emerged to suggest that a low-security Wuhan virology lab that analyzed dangerous coronaviruses — and located near the market — may have been the original source of the virus’s release and that Chinese officials sought to cover up information pointing to that source, according to two government officials.

But so far those theories have not been widely accepted or backed up with any material evidence. Many experts who have studied the outbreak do not think there were ties to the Wuhan lab, but U.S. officials continue to investigate the matter.

Trump weighed in on the controversy on Thursday. He was asked by a reporter whether he had seen intelligence that suggested with a high degree of confidence that the virus originated in the Wuhan lab, and he responded “yes I have.”

But he later said “there’s lots of theories” and that he wasn’t “allowed” to tell reporters why he was confident the virus might have come from a lab.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence issued its own statement on the matter, saying that it “will continue to rigorously examine emerging information and intelligence to determine whether the outbreak began through contact with infected animals or if it was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan.”

Senior Trump administration officials — both in the National Security Council and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — have been furious at the Chinese government’s lack of transparency and failure to follow security protocols amid the virus’s march across the globe. That included China’s resistance in January to letting U.S. officials visit China to investigate the virus’s origins.

In a sign of the general shift toward taking on China, Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, appeared on “Fox & Friends” on Wednesday, emphasizing the president is eyeing options to punish those responsible for the damage the virus has wreaked on the United States.

“He has asked the team to look into very carefully what happened, how this got here, and to make sure he will take whatever actions are necessary to make sure that the people who caused the problems are held accountable for it,” Kushner said.

Gerry Shih reported from Seoul. Michael Birnbaum in Brussels and Ashley Parker in Washington contributed to this report.

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U.S. officials crafting retaliatory actions against China over coronavirus as President Trump fumes - The Washington Post
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Russia's prime minister has coronavirus, he tells Putin - Al Jazeera English

Mikhail Mishustin is temporarily stepping down as prime minister of the Russian Federation while he recovers from coronavirus, he told President Vladimir Putin on Thursday.

The 54-year-old suggested First Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Belousov - an economist and former Putin aide - serve as acting prime minister in his absence.

Putin, who was listening on a televised video conference, sighed when he heard the news, wished Mishustin a speedy recovery and said he agreed with the proposed replacement.

More:

Mishustin, who has been one of the main coordinators of Russia's response to the new coronavirus, is the first high-ranking Russian official to publicly say he or she has the virus. He broke the news hours after the number of confirmed cases of the virus in Russia surged past the 100,000 mark.

"I have found out that the coronavirus tests I had done returned with a positive result," said Mishustin, who was appointed by Putin in January. "I need to self-isolate, and follow doctors' instructions. This is necessary for the safety of my colleagues."

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Mishustin was a relative political unknown - the chief of the country's tax service for 10 years - before his appointment to become Putin's right-hand man. His predecessor as prime minister, Dmitri Medvedev - a long-standing Putin ally - stood down when the president announced a wide-ranging series of proposed constitutional reforms shaking up Russia's power structures.

Mishustin said he would remain in contact with members of the government and Putin by phone and video conference despite his condition.

"What is happening to you can happen to anyone," Putin replied matter-of-factly. "When you get to the hospital, call me. I'll be waiting for your call."

The broadcast of the meeting, which showed the men on split screens, lasted just under four minutes.

Mishustin will spend his self-isolation period at a hospital under the supervision of doctors, his spokesman Boris Belyakov said, without disclosing the exact location where the prime minister would be treated.

Russia: New measures may not be enough to deal with COVID-19 [2:27]

Belyakov added that all those who had been in contact with Mishustin would go into self-isolation and be tested for the virus.

Russia's nationwide tally of confirmed coronavirus cases hit the 100,000 mark earlier on Thursday after a record daily rise in new infections.

Russia this week overtook China and Iran in the number of confirmed cases arising from the global pandemic, but has so far reported 1,073 coronavirus-related deaths - a figure far lower than many of the hardest-hit countries.

Putin has warned that the peak of the outbreak has yet to come, and the authorities have said there could be a new spike in cases if the population flouts lockdown measures during public holidays in early May.

The world's largest country by territory, Russia has been on lockdown since Putin announced the closure of most public spaces in late March to limit the scope for the virus to spread.

Putin and the cabinet have been holding remote meetings to avoid contact.

SOURCE: Reuters news agency

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Giglio: Smooth search for Steve Forbes a win for Wake Forest and John Currie - WRALSportsFan.com

When in doubt, go with what you know or in this case for Wake Forest athletic director John Currie, who you know.

Currie is set to hire East Tennessee State’s Steve Forbes to be the next men’s basketball coach for the Demon Deacons, according to multiple media reports on Thursday.

Forbes won and he won big in five seasons with the Bucs. He was 130-43 overall and 71-19 in the Southern Conference with a pair of league titles.

The move comes four days after Currie fired coach Danny Manning. Given the unusual timing of Manning's exit, you figured Currie had a plan in place for Manning's replacement.

Currie is familiar with Forbes, who was an assistant coach at Tennessee when Currie was assistant AD there. Forbes worked for five years as an assistant to coach Bruce Pearl with the Vols.

Given Currie’s struggle to find a football coach at Tennessee in Dec. 2017, and how that led to his ouster at the SEC school, it makes sense that he was ready this time in his first major hire with Wake.

The final decision, according to a Wake Forest source, came down to Forbes and UNCG’s Wes Miller. There was some concern that Miller, a former UNC player, would use the job as a stepping stone to eventually replace Roy Williams with the Tar Heels.

Forbes with his connection to Currie was the safer choice and less messy, given the financial ties of Miller's father, Ken, to the Deacon Club. After four seasons of Jeff Bzdelik and six of Manning, safe is a smart alternative for Currie.

East Tennessee is a solid mid-major job but the program went six years without an NCAA tournament appearance before Forbes took his second team there in 2017.

He had his best team this season at 30-4 overall and 16-2 in the SoCon. The Bucs beat LSU during the regular season and handled Wofford in the SoCon title game on March 9.

Forbes, 55, took the long road to his first major job. He worked at two different community colleges and was an assistant at Idaho, Louisiana Tech, Illinois State and Texas A&M before he joined Pearl's staff in 2006.

Forbes will likely come at an affordable price. There is some confusion about how much Wake still owes Manning, who had five years remaining on his contract. Watch Stadium’s Jeff Goodman has reported that Wake Forest owes Manning the full amount of his annual salary ($3 million) for each year left on the contract.

Manning had the worst record in the ACC and had the most players transfer out of the program during his tenure. According to a Wake Forest source, Currie was able to fire Manning “for cause.”

According to a second source, Manning and the school are possibly headed to arbitration over the contract.

Goodman reported on Thursday: “Wake feels it owes Manning less than half of the $15 million.” Even if Currie only delayed the payments to Manning, to more certain financial times after the COVID-19 crisis, he comes out the winner here.

He had efficient search and found a winning coach who is used to going against the grain and working outside the spotlight. Not bad for less than a week's worth of work and under difficult circumstances.

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NASCAR schedule release: Racing to return at Charlotte and Darlington in May without fans due to coronavirus - CBS Sports

On Thursday, NASCAR announced racing will return in May with seven events in 11 days, at Darlington Raceway and Charlotte Motor Speedway, beginning May 17. Cup Series and Xfinity Series races will be run at both locations, and the Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series will return with a race at Charlotte.

NASCAR has been taking steps to create a safe return and was working with health professionals to discuss how to make it happen.

Steve O'Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer, said in the announcement:

"NASCAR and its teams are eager and excited to return to racing, and have great respect for the responsibility that comes with a return to competition. NASCAR will return in an environment that will ensure the safety of our competitors, officials and all those in the local community. We thank local, state and federal officials and medical experts, as well as everyone in the industry, for the unprecedented support in our return to racing, and we look forward to joining our passionate fans in watching cars return to the track."

The announcement also said, "All races will be strictly tailored, in every way, to follow specific guidelines set by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."

Here is the current schedule:

(All times Eastern)

Date

Location

Series

Distance

Start time

Network

May 17

Darlington Raceway

Cup Series

400 miles

3:30 p.m.

FOX

May 19

Darlington Raceway

Xfinity Series

200 miles

8:00 p.m.

FS1

May 20

Darlington Raceway

Cup Series

500 kilometers

7:30 p.m.

FS1

May 24

Charlotte Motor Speedway

Cup Series

600 miles

6:00 p.m.

FOX

May 25

Charlotte Motor Speedway

Xfinity Series

300 miles

7:30 p.m.

FS1

May 26

Charlotte Motor Speedway

Gander Trucks

200 miles

8:00 p.m.

FS1

May 27 Charlotte Motor Speedway
Cup Series 500 kilometers 8:00 p.m. FS1

None of these races will have practice sessions, and qualifying will only be held for the much anticipated Coca-Cola 600, which will go on as scheduled during Memorial Day weekend for the race's 60th anniversary.

NASCAR still plans to run a full schedule, including a complete postseason, and says the events on the current schedule are not in place of those originally scheduled. While that is the plan, for now, they said in the announcement that the situation could always change. The governing body is still asking the teams and drivers to practice social distancing and take the necessary health precautions while working with the vehicles. The use of protective equipment and health screenings are also required.

Last week, the North Carolina governor announced race teams are allowed back in shops, a major step in bringing back live racing. 

Since the announcement, the state also announced they would welcome back racing at the Charlotte Motor Speedway, joining other states including South Carolina in doing so. 

Before the stoppage, NASCAR only held four of the 36 scheduled Cup Series races.

The coronavirus pandemic has cause most sports to halt completely to keep all involved safe from the virus, but after over a month without events, many leagues are beginning to create plans for a return.   

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Trump claims he has seen evidence linking coronavirus to Wuhan lab - New York Post

President Trump on Thursday claimed he’d seen evidence linking the coronavirus to a lab in the Chinese city of Wuhan — but didn’t offer up any details.

“Yes, I have,” Trump told White House reporters when asked whether he’s seen proof that would suggest the virus originated in the lab.

When pressed, on what gave him that confidence, he said: “I can’t tell you that. I am not allowed to tell you that.”

Earlier on Thursday, the US intelligence community said it agreed with the scientific consensus that the novel coronavirus was not “manmade or genetically modified.”

But it confirmed that it was looking into “whether the outbreak began through contact with infected animals or if it was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan.”

The statement from the Director of National Intelligence, which oversees national security matters, confirmed earlier reports that government agencies, including the National Institutes of Health, have launched probes into whether the outbreak happened at the Wuhan lab.

No direct evidence has emerged suggesting that the virus escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which has, over the past decade, been conducting research into bat-borne viruses linked to multiple epidemics.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Wednesday accused Chinese officials of being shady about the virus’ origins and said US officials haven’t been allowed to inspect the lab.

“We don’t know precisely where this virus originated from. There are multiple labs that are continuing to conduct work, we think — continue on contagious pathogens inside of China today and we don’t know if they are operating at a level of security to prevent this from happening again,” Pompeo told reporters.

Chinese officials and scientists have denied any connection between the outbreak and the research facility.

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US troop drawdown in Afghanistan running ahead of schedule - CNN

The US has until mid-July to fulfill its pledge to reduce troops to 8,600, from the total 12,000 to 13,000 in the country earlier this year. But it could hit that goal in a few weeks --- months before the deadline -- explained one US official.
The coronavirus pandemic has accelerated the drawdown somewhat, one US defense official said. There has been a pause in a significant amount of military training activity due to the virus, which has made it easier to send some US troops home.
The Pentagon said it wasn't providing updates on current troop levels "due to operational security concerns associated with the draw down," but said in a statement that the drawdown is ongoing.
"US Forces Afghanistan continues to reduce force levels and expects to be at 8,600 US troops within 135 days (mid-July) as stipulated by the US-Taliban agreement," the Pentagon said. US Forces Afghanistan also "remains committed to supporting our Afghan partners throughout the process and maintains the capabilities and authorities necessary to accomplish our train, advise and assist and counterterrorism objectives."
Earlier this year, the US-led international coalition in Afghanistan implemented measures to prevent the spread of the virus, including temporarily pausing the movement of personnel into Afghanistan and delaying the return of some service members.
US splits with allies again as it looks to extend Iran weapons ban
Trump has reiterated his desire in recent weeks to keep moving forward with drawdown, two administration officials said. But there are no current plans or orders to pull all US troops out at a faster rate than the 14-month complete withdrawal that the US committed to earlier this year, they said.
While the troop withdrawal is ahead of schedule, diplomacy is behind schedule.
Intra-Afghan negotiations have not begun and the effort to release as many as 5,000 Taliban prisoners has not been successfully completed. While efforts remain on both fronts, the initial deadlines laid out in the late February US-Taliban agreement have come and gone.
US officials expected the pandemic would potentially speed up the prisoner release, given that their release could drive down the number of infected prisoners in Afghanistan. The pandemic has not appeared to have that impact and the Taliban have increased their deadly attacks on Afghan forces since signing the deal with the US earlier this year.
The UN assistance mission in Afghanistan issued a report this month that found that the number of civilians killed by the Taliban increased in the weeks following their signing of the agreement with the US government.

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Andy Dalton's Bengals teammates react to his release - Sports Illustrated

Andy Dalton was released by the Bengals on Thursday. 

It was a move that seemed inevitable after the team drafted Joe Burrow with the No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft. The Bengals shopped the three-time Pro Bowler to other teams, but couldn't find any takers for his $17.7 million contract. 

Cincinnati released him, which gives them $17.7 million in cap space and Dalton is free to pick his next destination. The Jaguars and the Patriots are among the favorites for his services. Former Bengals offensive coordinator Jay Gruden helped draft Dalton in 2011 and would reportedly be interested in reuniting in Jacksonville. 

That may be one of the only places the 32 year old could compete for a starting job this season. There will be plenty of teams interested if Dalton is willing to accept a backup role.

He exits as the Bengals’ all-time leader in completions (2757), touchdown passes (204), passer rating (87.5) and 300-yard passing games (28). 

Dalton started every game as a rookie and guided the Bengals to five straight playoff appearances from 2011-2015.

He finished 0-4 in the postseason, which will be the biggest blemish in what was a great run in 'The Queen City.'

Dalton exceeded all expectations during his nine years with the Bengals. No one could've predicted the success he ultimately had when they took him with the 35th pick in the 2011 NFL Draft. 

Dalton is one of the NFL's good guys. He won't be unemployed for long. 

His Bengal teammates made their feelings about Dalton clear with multiple posts on social media. Check out some of them below:

Even Bengals legend Kenny Anderson commented on Dalton's release:

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Andy Dalton and Other Top N.F.L. Free Agents - The New York Times

The Cincinnati Bengals cut quarterback Andy Dalton on Thursday one week after drafting his replacement, Joe Burrow of Louisiana State, with the first overall pick. Dalton spent nine seasons as their starter and will now head into a free agent market that is already crowded with talent and offers very few landing spots for veteran passers.

Although many big-name free agents, like quarterbacks Tom Brady and Teddy Bridgewater, have found new homes, quite a few prominent players remain available.

Here are some big names, quarterbacks and other top talent, still looking for new homes.

Last team: Carolina Panthers

Newton, the Carolina Panthers’ electrifying quarterback for the past nine seasons, who won a Most Valuable Player Award and made the Super Bowl after the 2015 season, was cut after the team signed Bridgewater.

In an aerially oriented league, Newton’s rĂ©sumĂ©, age (he’ll turn 31 on May 11), and arm make his continued free agent status puzzling. Reading every word written about the N.F.L., you might come to the conclusion that the entire league is interested in Newton, as rumors have linked him to the Bears, Bills, Broncos, Jaguars, Rams, Steelers, Titans, Patriots and Redskins, at one point or another.

But Newton missed all but two games last season with a foot injury, has ankle problems that date back to college and has sustained gnarly injuries as a pro, including a fractured rib and a partially torn rotator cuff in his throwing shoulder. His injury history could be a concern for a quarterback who runs as a part of his arsenal and who receives notably few roughing the passer calls. At the very least, Newton would seem to be a valuable mentor on a team with a young quarterback. But if he feels he’s fully rehabilitated after so much downtime, anything besides a starting job might seem like an insult.

Last team: Seattle Seahawks

After five years in Houston, including three as a Pro Bowl edge rusher, Clowney was traded to the Seahawks last September. But it doesn’t look like he is going to stay in Seattle, no matter how much Russell Wilson begs him to on Instagram Live. Although Seattle could still re-sign Clowney, the team just gave his uniform number, 90, back to Jarran Reed, who had given it up when Clowney arrived.

At least a few other teams are said to be interested, notably the Tennessee Titans and the Indianapolis Colts. The price will be high, though: Last year he made $15 million.

Like Newton, Clowney, 27, is a former No. 1 overall draft pick. A third former No. 1 who was a free agent, quarterback Jameis Winston, signed with the New Orleans Saints, staying in the N.F.C. South after five years with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Last team: Denver Broncos

After 11 years with the Ravens and winning a Super Bowl M.V.P. award, Flacco was traded to the Denver Broncos before last season. But the Flacco era in Denver lasted just eight games, over which he was 2-6 as a starter before injuring his neck.

Flacco’s 98-73 career regular season record as a starter speaks to his durability, but at 35 years old he is unlikely to get another starting job, especially with Dalton and Newton also available. Flacco could be a solid veteran backup though, and backups often find themselves as starters once N.F.L. seasons get underway.

Last team: Tennessee Titans

The venerable Walker, 35, has been catching passes — 504 of them — in the league since 2006 with the 49ers and Titans. He is a good run blocker too, and as recently as 2017 he was a Pro Bowler.

But he played in only seven games last season and in one game the season before, which, along with his age, are likely to make many teams wary. There has been at least some talk that the San Francisco 49ers may be interested in bring him back for a last hurrah.

Last team: Minnesota Vikings

After 10 years with the Vikings, 258 solo tackles and 74.5 sacks, Griffen is expected to move on at age 32 (he posted a goodbye message to the Vikings on Instagram).

A Pro Bowler for the fourth time in his career last season, Griffen is also known for his physical fitness and has missed only a handful of games in his career. Might the Dallas Cowboys be interested? Or the Seattle Seahawks, who need a replacement for Clowney?

Last team: Tennessee Titans

A useful cornerback for seven years with the New England Patriots and the Titans, Ryan, 29, is one of the best secondary options still available. Both the Giants and the Jets have been speculated as landing spots.

Last team: Jets and Philadelphia Eagles

After the Jets drafted Mekhi Becton, a left tackle who “moves people like furniture,” it became unlikely they would bring back Beachum, who has anchored their line for the last three seasons. Beachum, who will turn 31 in June, should figure to help someone.

But could a 38-year-old? Maybe if he is Jason Peters, a nine-time Pro Bowler at left tackle who is also now a free agent. He could still return to the Philadelphia Eagles, where he spent the last 11 years.

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Coming off shoulder surgery, K.J. Wright could move to SAM - NBCSports.com

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Seahawks linebacker K.J. Wright is rehabbing after offseason surgery, General Manager John Schneider said on Sports Radio KJR on Thursday.

“He ended up having to have surgery on his shoulder. Not a serious surgery,” Schneider said.

Schneider didn’t directly answer a question about Wright’s job security after the Seahawks drafted Jordyn Brooks with the 27th overall choice.

Wright, 30, has played the weakside since 2013. He could move to the strongside in 2020, Schneider allowed.

“K.J. just had surgery. He’s rehabbing from his surgery,” Schneider said. “I’m not sure of the timeline on when he’s going to be back. Hopefully, he makes it back on time, and we’ll see how it goes. It’s just a weird offseason. I mean for everybody, but especially for guys that have had offseason surgery. K.J., hopefully his name is up on the wall some day. He’s an amazing person and an amazing player. That’s why we did the deal with him last year.”

Wright, 30, has started 124 games in his nine seasons.

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USA Gymnastics suspends coach Maggie Haney for 8 years - CNN

USAG, the sport's governing body in the United States, confirmed the suspension to CNN after the Orange County Register first reported it Wednesday.
USAG said a "hearing related to Maggie Haney" had concluded in a statement to CNN, adding that an independent panel "found that Ms. Haney violated the USA Gymnastics Code of Ethical Conduct, Safe Sport Policy, and other policies. As a result, the hearing panel determined that Ms. Haney is suspended from membership, and any coaching of USA Gymnastics athletes or in member clubs, for a period of eight years..."
The organization has not released details about the allegations that led to the suspension. But the Register, citing interviews and documents, reported several athletes alleged in hearings that began in February that Haney bullied and harassed them, including by cajoling them to compete or train while injured.
The Register reported that one athlete who testified against Haney was Hernandez, who left Haney's tutelage after the 2016 Olympics, at which she won a team gold and an individual silver on the balance beam.
CNN's attempts to reach Haney's attorney Russell Prince, as well as Hernandez, for comment weren't immediately successful. Prince told The New York Times he and his client disagreed with the hearing panel's findings.
"We don't think that it in any way, shape or form evaluated all of the facts of the circumstances," Prince said. "The process is completely heavy-handed. I would anticipate an arbitration."
The suspension means Haney, who had coached at MG Elite in New Jersey, cannot coach any member athletes, or at member clubs, for eight years. She can apply for reinstatement afterward, the organization said.
After the 2016 Olympics, Hernandez took a break from gymnastics and won ABC's 23rd season of "Dancing with the Stars" in late 2016. She later left her home state of New Jersey to train with a different gymnastics coach in California.
In an Instagram post Thursday, Hernandez said it was difficult to share her story with the hearing panel but felt doing so could help others. She doesn't name her coach in the post.
"This kind of behavior and treatment is never okay," she wrote. "There are some things from my experience that will unfortunately stick with me forever, and I'll always be working to heal from it -- but sharing my story gives me a chance to close the chapter, take a breath, and start something new."
Haney's suspension comes as USA Gymnastics tries to recover from the sexual abuse scandal involving former national team physician Larry Nassar.
Nassar, once a celebrated sports physician for the USAG national team and Michigan State University, was sentenced to decades in prison in 2017 and 2018 after a series of guilty pleas to child pornography and sexual misconduct charges in federal and state courtrooms.
Those charges came after more than 150 women and girls said he sexually abused them over the past two decades.
USAG filed for bankruptcy in late 2018 as it struggled to recover from the scandal. As part of a plan to emerge from bankruptcy, the organization has proposed a $215 million settlement for survivors of Nassar's abuse, but some athletes have criticized the proposal.

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Andy Dalton and Other Top N.F.L. Free Agents - Jimmys Post


The Cincinnati Bengals cut quarterback Andy Dalton on Thursday one week after drafting his replacement, Joe Burrow of Louisiana State, with the first overall pick. Dalton spent nine seasons as their starter and will now head into a free agent market that is already crowded with talent and offers very few landing spots for veteran passers.

Although many big-name free agents, like quarterbacks Tom Brady and Teddy Bridgewater, have found new homes, quite a few prominent players remain available.

Here are some big names, quarterbacks and other top talent, still looking for new homes.

Last team: Carolina Panthers

In an aerially oriented league, Newton’s rĂ©sumĂ©, age (he’ll turn 31 on May 11), and arm make his continued free agent status puzzling. Reading every word written about the N.F.L., you might come to the conclusion that the entire league is interested in Newton, as rumors have linked him to the Bears, Bills, Broncos, Jaguars, Rams, Steelers, Titans, Patriots and Redskins, at one point or another.

But Newton missed all but two games last season with a foot injury, has ankle problems that date back to college and has sustained gnarly injuries as a pro, including a fractured rib and a partially torn rotator cuff in his throwing shoulder. His injury history could be a concern for a quarterback who runs as a part of his arsenal and who receives notably few roughing the passer calls. At the very least, Newton would seem to be a valuable mentor on a team with a young quarterback. But if he feels he’s fully rehabilitated after so much downtime, anything besides a starting job might seem like an insult.

Last team: Seattle Seahawks

After five years in Houston, including three as a Pro Bowl edge rusher, Clowney was traded to the Seahawks last September. But it doesn’t look like he is going to stay in Seattle, no matter how much Russell Wilson begs him to on Instagram Live. Although Seattle could still re-sign Clowney, the team just gave his uniform number, 90, back to Jarran Reed, who had given it up when Clowney arrived.

At least a few other teams are said to be interested, notably the Tennessee Titans and the Indianapolis Colts. The price will be high, though: Last year he made $15 million.

Like Newton, Clowney, 27, is a former No. 1 overall draft pick. A third former No. 1 who was a free agent, quarterback Jameis Winston, signed with the New Orleans Saints, staying in the N.F.C. South after five years with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Last team: Denver Broncos

After 11 years with the Ravens and winning a Super Bowl M.V.P. award, Flacco was traded to the Denver Broncos before last season. But the Flacco era in Denver lasted just eight games, over which he was 2-6 as a starter before injuring his neck.

Flacco’s 98-73 career regular season record as a starter speaks to his durability, but at 35 years old he is unlikely to get another starting job, especially with Dalton and Newton also available. Flacco could be a solid veteran backup though, and backups often find themselves as starters once N.F.L. seasons get underway.

Last team: Tennessee Titans

The venerable Walker, 35, has been catching passes — 504 of them — in the league since 2006 with the 49ers and Titans. He is a good run blocker too, and as recently as 2017 he was a Pro Bowler.

But he played in only seven games last season and in one game the season before, which, along with his age, are likely to make many teams wary. There has been at least some talk that the San Francisco 49ers may be interested in bring him back for a last hurrah.

Last team: Minnesota Vikings

After 10 years with the Vikings, 258 solo tackles and 74.5 sacks, Griffen is expected to move on at age 32 (he posted a goodbye message to the Vikings on Instagram).

Last team: Tennessee Titans

A useful cornerback for seven years with the New England Patriots and the Titans, Ryan, 29, is one of the best secondary options still available. Both the Giants and the Jets have been speculated as landing spots.

Last team: Jets and Philadelphia Eagles

After the Jets drafted Mekhi Becton, a left tackle who “moves people like furniture,” it became unlikely they would bring back Beachum, who has anchored their line for the last three seasons. Beachum, who will turn 31 in June, should figure to help someone.

But could a 38-year-old? Maybe if he is Jason Peters, a nine-time Pro Bowler at left tackle who is also now a free agent. He could still return to the Philadelphia Eagles, where he spent the last 11 years.

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Andy Dalton's wife says farewell to the Bengals through fans - New York Post

Jordan Dalton is forever grateful to Bengals faithful.

After news broke Thursday of husband Andy Dalton’s release from the team, Jordan posted a collection of fan tributes to her Instagram story, as they thanked the 32-year-old quarterback for nine seasons of service in Cincinnati.

“This day came like a ton of bricks. I knew it was inevitable but still doesn’t make it better. Thank you for representing this franchise with dignity and faith,” one fan posted. “Wishing the Daltons nothing but the best.”

Another penned, “Andy & Jordan Dalton did great things for the city of Cincinnati. They went beyond football to help the people that needed it most. Thank you.”

The Daltons are behind the Andy & JJ Dalton Foundation, which aims to “providing support, resources and experiences to seriously ill and physically challenged children and their families,” per the organization’s website.

In 2011, Dalton was drafted by the Bengals with the 35th overall pick in the second round. He has thrown 31,594 yards in his career, with 204 touchdowns and 118 interceptions.

Last week, the Bengals selected their quarterback of the future in LSU’s Joe Burrow with the first-overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft. And while Dalton has been linked to the Patriots, he remains a free agent.

Dalton and wife Jordan have been married since July 2011 and share three children, two sons, and a daughter. In December, she paid tribute to the three-time Pro Bowler with a touching post.

“No words can express how proud I am of @andydalton14! It’s been amazing to see how God has grown him as a man, leader and husband… he is the most selfless hard working person you’ll meet!! Love him with my whole heart!! Thank you @andydalton14 for not wavering on who you are and what you stand for!! Who knows what the next season brings but what we do know is God is good and he is faithful and we are excited for whatever is next!!” Jordan wrote.

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Ken Burns Slams Michael Jordan Doc ‘Last Dance:’ ‘Not the Way You Do Good Journalism’ - Variety

ESPN’s Michael Jordan docuseries “The Last Dance” has captured the attention of just about every basketball fan around the globe, except for documentarian Ken Burns.

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Burns reveals that he hasn’t watched “The Last Dance” and he fundamentally disagrees with how it was made.

Michael Jordan’s production company, Jump 23, is listed as a partner on the series, meaning that he could have had some say in how it portrayed him. Burns said that he would “never, never, never, never” agree to a partnership like that on a documentary.

“If you are there influencing the very fact of it getting made, it means that certain aspects that you don’t necessarily want in aren’t going to be in, period,” he said. “And that’s not the way you do good journalism…and it’s certainly not the way you do good history, my business.”

He added that it is “the opposite direction of where we need to be going” in the filmmaking world.

Burns won an Emmy for his own sports miniseries “Baseball” in 1994, and three more for “The National Parks: America’s Best Idea” and “The Civil War.” He’s also been nominated for two Oscars throughout his nearly 40-year career in filmmaking.

“The Last Dance” has been a huge hit for ESPN while most of the network’s sports programming has been shuttered during the coronavirus pandemic. An average of 6.1 million viewers tuned into the first two episodes, making them the most watched original broadcasts on the channel since 2004.

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Canadian helicopter missing off Greece - BBC News

A Canadian helicopter has gone missing over the Ionian Sea off Greece, officials say.

Contact was lost after the CH-148 Cyclone took off from the frigate HMCS Fredericton during a Nato exercise on Wednesday.

Canadian officials gave no further details. Greek media say there were between three and six people on board.

They say rescue teams are searching international waters off Greece's Kefalonia island.

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Trump contradicts US intel community by claiming he's seen evidence coronavirus originated in Chinese lab - CNN

The comments undercut a public statement from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence issued just hours earlier which stated no such assessment has been made and continues to "rigorously examine" whether the outbreak "began through contact with infected animals or if it was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan."
"Yes, I have," Trump said when asked whether he's seen evidence that would suggest the virus originated in the lab. Later, asked why he was confident in that assessment, Trump demurred.
"I can't tell you that. I'm not allowed to tell you that," he said.
Trump administration draws up plans to punish China over coronavirus outbreak
Trump officials have been pushing the US intelligence community to determine the exact origins of the coronavirus outbreak in pursuit of an unproven theory that the pandemic started because of a laboratory accident in China, multiple sources told CNN.
In acknowledgment of that effort, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence issued an unprecedented public statement Thursday prior to Trump's comments making clear the intelligence community is currently exploring two possibilities but cannot yet assess if the outbreak "was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan" or began "through contact with infected animals."
It is unusual for the intelligence community to comment publicly on its work before a formal assessment is made. Thursday's statement appears to have come in response to growing questions over the origins of the virus as Trump administration officials have spent weeks repeatedly floating the theory that the virus originated inside a Chinese lab.
Trump said Thursday there were "a lot of theories" that he would assess but seemed to hold out hope that Beijing would eventually be forthcoming with what it knows about the virus' origin.
"China may tell us," he said.

Pressure from Trump officials

Despite warnings from scientists and intelligence professionals that the US may never know the precise origin of the virus, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has continued to push the intelligence community for precise details about the origin of the virus, CNN has learned.
As a result, intelligence officials are facing enormous pressure to determine whether the virus came from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, two sources familiar with their frustrations told CNN. While the intelligence community has been wary to share details about the demands coming from the Trump administration, officials have told allies that the situation on the inside is alarming.
New York Times: Top administration officials have pushed intelligence agencies to link coronavirus to Chinese labs
The New York Times was the first to report Thursday that a number of top officials in the Trump administration have pushed US intelligence agencies looking into the origin of the novel coronavirus to "hunt for evidence" linking the virus to a Chinese laboratory.
While the White House and State Department have urged intelligence officials to find evidence that backs up the theory that the outbreak can be traced back to a Chinese lab, the intelligence community made clear Thursday that they have not reached a definitive conclusion beyond ruling out theories that the virus was man-made or genetically modified.
"The IC will continue to rigorously examine emerging information and intelligence to determine whether the outbreak began through contact with infected animals or if it was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan," the statement issued by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on behalf of the entire community said.
US explores possibility that coronavirus spread started in Chinese lab, not a market
While the statement suggests the intelligence community has not yet developed a clear assessment as to how the outbreak started, it does say that officials have ruled out the possibility that the virus was "man-made or genetically modified," agreeing with a near consensus among scientists and refuting conspiracy theories.
Trump was asked about the statement for the first time shortly after it was released but responded by defending his handling of the situation and pushing back on reports that warnings about an emerging outbreak were included in his daily briefs dating back to January and February.
"Well I haven't seen the report yet, but I will tell you, if you speak to the head of intelligence right now, you speak to the head, they did say that I was given a briefing when I said I was given it, not before and they also said that it wasn't specific and it was not a panicked briefing," Trump said, appearing to refer to acting DNI Richard Grenell despite the fact he wasn't tapped for the job until February.
Trump's more direct comments about the outbreak's origins came when he was asked about the issue for a second time Thursday.

'He doesn't like information'

Trump's tenuous relationship with the intelligence community dates back to the earliest days of his presidency as he has routinely questioned their assessments, particularly their conclusion that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election.
The pressure on the intelligence agencies to provide evidence related to the pandemic's origins stems, in part, from Trump's handling of intelligence more broadly, the former senior administration official said.
Trump does not spend much time pouring through the daily briefs. Instead, the President prefers intelligence officials to present him with policy ideas, rather than raw information, which is a practice that runs contrary to the tradition of the intelligence community, a former official said.
"He doesn't like information," the official said. "He likes decision points."
Normally, the IC presents information so the administration can make a policy decision, they added.
Earlier this week, the White House defended its focus on the Chinese labs saying the intelligence community had been tasked with determining whether the virus originated in a Chinese lab, a spokesperson for the National Security Council referred to a statement from White House spokesperson Hogan Gidley.
Earlier this week, the White House defended its focus on the Chinese lab.
"As the president has said, the United States is thoroughly investigating this matter," White House spokesperson Hogan Gidley said. "Understanding the origins of the virus is important to help the world respond to this pandemic but also to inform rapid-response efforts to future infectious disease outbreaks."
US intelligence agencies started tracking coronavirus outbreak in China as early as November
But the lack of evidence to back up claims that the outbreak began in a Chinese lab has not stopped top administration officials, including Pompeo, and some Republican allies of the President from raising the possibility in public comments.
"We still haven't gained access, the world hasn't gained access to the WIV (Wuhan Institute of Virology) there. We don't know precisely where this virus originated from," Pompeo said Wednesday.
And it appears that messaging campaign is a coordinated effort between the administration and like-minded lawmakers who have been in consistent contact with the White House in recent weeks, according to multiple sources.
Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas is among those who have spoken regularly with White House officials throughout the lockdown about the origins of the virus, including personal calls with NSC and member briefings, according to a senior staff member who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss sensitive matters.
The administration came to the conclusion long ago that it is plausible, if not likely, the virus escaped from the lab and spread through the marketplace, not the other way around, the Cruz staffer said.
Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas, the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, has also called for an investigation into the virus' origins and China's handling of the outbreak.
Like Cruz, McCaul believes it is plausible that the virus escaped from a Chinese lab accidentally but has requested additional information from the White House on the matter, according to aides.
Meanwhile, the uncertainty over the virus' origins extends to the closest intelligence partners of the US. The US evidence shared with the allied intelligence-sharing group known as Five Eyes doesn't rule one theory in or out, according to a foreign official in regular contact with the Trump administration.
Trump administration draws up plans to punish China over coronavirus outbreak
"No one's able to stay one way or the other," the official said, highlighting -- as American officials have -- the lack of an independent team on the ground. "We just don't know enough," the official added.
Vice President Mike Pence said Thursday that Trump has directed a full investigation into the nature and origination of coronavirus in China as well as China's conduct once the US gets through the ongoing epidemic.
"I fully expect that the President will consider a range of options to ensure that those who were not forthcoming with the American people, be that in China or in the World Health Organization, are held to account."
However, Trump has praised China on numerous occasions, as recently as this month.

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