Trump posts support for embattled Attorney General Pam BondiNew Foto - Trump posts support for embattled Attorney General Pam Bondi

President Donald Trump has come out in support of embattled Attorney General Pam Bondi following a dispute between her and FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino over the Justice Department's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files. The Justice Department decided not to release any additional Epstein files and has affirmed that there is no list containing Epstein's clients. Bongino, frustrated with the DOJ's decision, had a heated confrontation with Bondi andhas considered resigningfrom his post amid the disagreement, according to a person who has spoken with Bongino and a source familiar with the interactions that Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel have had with Bondi. Epsteindied in 2019 while in custody, and a medical examiner ruled his death a suicide. He was facing sex trafficking and conspiracy charges. The handling of the Epstein files has become a flashpoint of disagreement among MAGA conservatives. Trump sought to unify his party Saturday, as he came out in support of Bondi, taking to social media to say she is doing a "fantastic job" and that his administration should all be "one Team." "What's going on with my 'boys' and, in some cases, 'gals?' They're all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB! We're on one Team, MAGA, and I don't like what's happening. We have a PERFECT Administration, THE TALK OF THE WORLD, and 'selfish people' are trying to hurt it, all over a guy who never dies, Jeffrey Epstein,"Trump wrote. The president went on to name check FBI Director Kash Patel, saying his agency should be focused on a list of other priorities, "instead of spending month after month looking at nothing but the same old, Radical Left inspired Documents on Jeffrey Epstein." The list included calling for an investigation into the 2020 election, which Trump has repeatedly falsely claimed was rigged. "LET PAM BONDI DO HER JOB — SHE'S GREAT!" Trump wrote, adding that people should "not waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about."

Trump posts support for embattled Attorney General Pam Bondi

Trump posts support for embattled Attorney General Pam Bondi President Donald Trump has come out in support of embattled Attorney General Pa...
Veteran U.S. diplomats baffled after mass layoffs at State DepartmentNew Foto - Veteran U.S. diplomats baffled after mass layoffs at State Department

More than 1,300 employeeswere forced out of the State Department on Friday, leaving their offices with small boxes of plants and old coffee mugs and taking with them decades of specialized skills and on-the-job training as part of the United States diplomatic corps. The massive overhaul of the federal agency has been in the works for months, with the Trump administration informing Congress in late May that thousands of State Department employees would lose their jobs as part of the largest reorganization of the department in decades. Still, the details of whose jobs would be cut remained closely held, and many were shocked to find they were a part of the 15% cut to domestic agency staff. Several career employees who unexpectedly found themselves with pink slips told NBC News they were asked to write speeches and prepare talking points for political appointees on critical issues just days before. "It's so hard to work somewhere your entire life and then get treated this way," one veteran civil servant with more than 30 years working at the department told NBC News. "I don't know how you treat people this way. I really don't." As the termination notices hit inboxes throughout the day, employees could be seen crying in the courtyard and huddling in corners in the hallways, as those who had been laid off lined up to hand in their laptops, phones and diplomatic passports. "The manner in which things were done … they were not done with dignity. They were not done respectfully. They were not done transparently," Olga Bashbush, a laid-off foreign service officer with more than 20 years of experience, told NBC News. A senior State Department official briefing reporters on behalf of the agency ahead of the cuts told reporters Thursday that the restructuring was intended to be "individual agnostic." "This is the most complicated personnel reorganization that the federal government has ever undertaken," the official said. "And it was done so in order to be very focused on looking at the functions that we want to eliminate or consolidate, rather than looking at individuals." Michael Duffin, a civil service employee with the department since 2013, spent nine years as a policy adviser with the counterterrorism bureau developing some of the first programs to counter white supremacy and other forms of violent extremism. "No one at the State Department would disagree with the need for reform, but arbitrarily laying off people like me and others, irrespective of their performance, is not the right way to do it," Duffin said as the closing speaker at a rally outside the department late Friday. A general notice was sent to foreign service officers Friday announcing the reduction in force. It said the department is "streamlining domestic operations to focus on diplomatic priorities." "Headcount reductions have been carefully tailored to affect non-core functions, duplicative or redundant offices, and offices where considerable efficiencies may be found from centralization or consolidation of functions and responsibilities," the notice obtained by NBC News said. A State Department website was also set up with a list of links and documents for affected employees with categories like "retirement sources" and "Federal Employee Retirement System," but several fired employees leaving the department Friday expressed confusion and frustration to NBC News about the lack of available information on next steps. "Yes, there was a congressional notification sent out, but the information that employees have received is literally nothing," Bashbush said. Impacted foreign service officers will be placed on administrative leave for 120 days, according to the notice, while most civil servants will have 60 days before being formally terminated from their positions. By late Friday afternoon, hundreds of civil servants and foreign service officers whose numbers had not been called gathered in the front lobby to "clap out" their less fortunate colleagues, in a tradition generally reserved for honoring departing secretaries of state. Diplomats wheeling out boxes stacked on office chairs and cradling grocery bags stuffed with books wiped away tears amid echoing rounds of applause and shouts of support that lasted for nearly two hours. Bashbush said the solidarity and collegiality filled her heart with gratitude and joy, and she thanked her colleagues for the extraordinary act. "They clapped us out," Bashbush said. "Everybody came here in front of the main State Department building and celebrated everybody's service and their pride in their country." The long lines of applause spilled onto the front step outside of the building, where dozens of former career and political diplomats stood among other demonstrators with signs reading, "Thank you America's diplomats." "Our entire office is just ... gone," said a senior civil service officer from the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor standing in front of the department late Friday as fired employees left the building. He spoke anonymously as one of the more than 1,500 State Department employees who have chosen to take deferred retirement. The employee described the devastation felt by his colleagues, including one who is just about to have a baby and another who provides the sole income for their household. "That's just on the personal side. I'm not even talking yet about the way this is going to disrupt foreign policy," he said. Under the new structure of the State Department, the DRL bureau will be greatly reduced and the few remaining offices will be placed under a new deputy assistant secretary for democracy and Western values. One of the more acute changes will be the elimination of the many dedicated human rights positions for different regions of the world. "There are specialties. You had a cadre of people that were experts at good governance and human rights and international labor affairs," the DRL official said. "You can't have a group of people that don't know the region trying to make human rights policy for that specific region, because they won't get it and they won't advocate for it when more important issues come into play." Enrique Roig, a former deputy assistant secretary in the DRL bureau, said he agreed. Roig, who served in the Biden administration, was one of a handful of former democratic political appointees speaking in front of the department as diplomats filed out. "It will allow authoritarians around the globe, both on the left and the right, to continue to abuse civic space, to jail and to lock up journalists and civic activists and increase the number of political prisoners we see around the world that my bureau was helping to release," Roig said. A group of women laid off from the State Department's Office of Science and Technology Cooperation walked out wearing T-shirts over their office clothes with the message, "Science is Diplomacy. Diplomacy is Science." The women cried and hugged each other as they exited the building in front of the gathered crowd. Their office is one of over 300 offices or bureaus being eliminated or merged under the sweeping reorganization. "What's clear is that the Department of State doesn't care about science and research," said one of the women, a foreign service officer who was laid off from the office as part of the cuts. She described the office as having some of the best emerging tech professionals "in whole of government, not just in the Department of State," and called it a travesty that the talent would be lost. "When it comes to supporting research, basic research, the research that helps us have things like iPhones, have pacemakers, we have no expertise in this building right now because of the layoffs of our staff and other offices like ours," she said, adding that they had just found out the officials who they thought would be taking over their important work had also been laid off. "It's shocking, and it's baffling that the government doesn't seem to care about keeping that kind of expertise." "Diplomacy is not a short-term gain. It's a long-term gain," another laid-off official from the office said, summing up the damage caused by the cuts. "The connections we make now in our youth are with those officials who will be world leaders one day. Now those connections will be lost."

Veteran U.S. diplomats baffled after mass layoffs at State Department

Veteran U.S. diplomats baffled after mass layoffs at State Department More than 1,300 employeeswere forced out of the State Department on Fr...
LIV Golf resubmits application for world rankings pointsNew Foto - LIV Golf resubmits application for world rankings points

Will the PGA and LIV Golf ever reunite? Some news released by the Official World Golf Ranking board of directors on Friday makes that result look a little less likely, at least in the near term. According to Trevor Immelman, chairman of the OWGR, the organization is currently reviewing LIV Golf's application for inclusion in those rankings, the submission dated June 30. "The OWGR Board is committed to a thorough evaluation process of all applications, and LIV's application will be reviewed in accordance with OWGR's criteria to ensure fairness, integrity and consistency," Immelman said. "We appreciate the interest of LIV Golf -- and all Tours -- in contributing to the global landscape of men's professional golf through OWGR. Further updates will be provided as the review progresses." LIV CEO Scott O'Neil released a statement in response, thanking the OWGR for its consideration in moving "the sport of golf forward." "We thank OWGR Chairman Trevor Immelman for his continued leadership and willingness to move the sport of golf forward for the benefit of all players and most importantly, the fans," O'Neil's statement read. "LIV Golf is committed to working together with the Official World Golf Ranking and its board to ensure the very best players are competing in the game's most prestigious events. We are confident our application addresses the outstanding questions that exist to support a more global, all-encompassing, and accurate ranking system. "We are hopeful the review and approval process can progress ahead of the 2026 major season." LIV originally applied for accreditation in July of 2022, shortly after the league launched. That request was denied, and LIV golfers can currently only earn ranking points by competing in major championships and international tour events. That represents a bit of a conundrum for LIV golfers, who only receive invites to major championships after amassing ranking points, which are virtually unobtainable for them without competing in said events. Just two LIV players are in OWGR's Top 50: two-time U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau at No. 15 and 22nd-ranked Tyrrell Hatton. --Field Level Media

LIV Golf resubmits application for world rankings points

LIV Golf resubmits application for world rankings points Will the PGA and LIV Golf ever reunite? Some news released by the Official World Go...
Best year ever? PSG can cap dream season with Club World Cup win vs. ChelseaNew Foto - Best year ever? PSG can cap dream season with Club World Cup win vs. Chelsea

USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ — There's only one more trophy left to be raised by Paris Saint-Germain. They've won the French league, the French Cup, the French Super Cup and the club's first-ever UEFA Champions League title in late May. And they hope to cap off one of the most historic seasons in the sport's history with a victory against English side Chelsea in the FIFA Club World Cup final on Sunday, July 13, at MetLife Stadium. "We really want to make history, and we're hungry for a win," PSG's Brazilian captain Marquinhos said. You ask most players and coaches at the FIFA Club World Cup about PSG, and they seem to all agree: The Parisians are the best soccer team in the world. They're a convincing favorite (-165) to win the final against Chelsea (+400),according to BETMGM, for good reason. Watch Club World Cup on DAZN Watching them work is truly a spectacle for the sport. They thrive off pressuring the opposing team, then attack with quick thinking and decisive passes in harmony. Mind you, this was a club that featured Argentine World Cup championLionel Messi, French World Cup championKylian Mbappéand Brazilian starNeymarjust two years ago. And now, they're somehow playing better without them. "Right now, they're the best team in the world — without a doubt," Messi said after losing 4-0 against his former club with Major League Soccer's Inter Miamiin the round of 16 on June 29. This PSG group has its fair share of unheralded stars who will surely be recognized more after their Champions League win, and if they secure the Club World Cup title. Ousmane Dembélé, who played at Barcelona with Messi, is the favorite to win the Ballon d'Or — the highest individual honor in the sport. Désiré Doué is also rising French star, and Moroccan defender Achraf Hakimi both shined during their Champions League run. Fabián Ruiz, who helped Spain win Euro 2024 last summer, had two goals against Real Madrid in the Club World Cup semifinal. PSG often start matches by just kicking the ball out of bounds like a NFL punter, immediately applying pressure on their opponent. Dembélé leads the charge defensively so he can make an immediate offensive impact. It causes some to fluster, like Real Madrid goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois did, when PSG routed them 4-0 in their July 9 semifinal. "I told [Dembélé] after the game that he was pressing a lot, and he told me that's what he had to do," Courtois told reporters after the semifinal. "On a clearance, I have half a second to think about where I'm going to shoot, because they're pressing you." Added Marquinhos: "We have a very offensive gameplan. We always want to have ball possession. If we do not have ball possession, we will not negotiate." Luis Enrique has been the architect of PSG's season — 10 years after leading Messi and Barcelona to a Champions League title. Enrique has inspired PSG's style, awake even further after they dropped a 1-0 match in the group stage to Brazilian side Botafogo in the tournament. It's the only goal they've conceded at the Club World Cup. His players have simply bought into his philosophy. And the success shows. "A team with 11 stars, that's the goal. We don't want just one — we want 11. That's what we have right now. And I wouldn't say 11, I'd say 13, 14, 15. That's our goal," Enrique said. "I think it's a commitment we made from the sporting director's office, the president and myself, to seek 11 or 15 stars and for the real star to be the team, something our fans have identified with… It's the whole team." Enrique knows PSG could face defeat in the Club World Cup final — or any of the matches that follow them into next season. Still, he wants to cap off this season with another victory and another trophy. "Best season in my career? Maybe," Enrique said. "But we need to win Sunday's game to put icing on the cake." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:PSG could cap historic season in FIFA Club World Cup final vs. Chelsea

Best year ever? PSG can cap dream season with Club World Cup win vs. Chelsea

Best year ever? PSG can cap dream season with Club World Cup win vs. Chelsea USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this arti...
Trump says he wants to deport 'the worst of the worst.' Government data tells another storyNew Foto - Trump says he wants to deport 'the worst of the worst.' Government data tells another story

President Donald Trumphas pledgedto deport "the worst of the worst."He frequentlyspeaks atpublic appearancesabout the countless "dangerous criminals" — among them murderers, rapists and child predators — from around the world he says entered the U.S. illegally under the Biden administration. He promises to expel millions of migrants in thelargest deportation programin American history to protect law-abiding citizens from the violent threats he says they pose. But government data around ongoing detentions tells a different story. There has been anincrease of arrestsby U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement since Trump began his second term, withreports of raidsacross the country. Yet the majority of people currently detained by ICE have no criminal convictions. Of those who do, relatively few have been convicted of high-level crimes — a stark contrast to the chilling nightmare Trump describes to support his border security agenda. "There's a deep disconnect between the rhetoric and the reality," said Ahilan Arulanantham, co-faculty director of the UCLA Law School's Center for Immigration Law and Policy. "This administration, and also in the prior Trump administration, they consistently claim to be going after the worst of the worst and just talk about immigration enforcement as though it is all about going after violent, dangerous people with extensive criminal histories. And yet overwhelmingly, it's people they're targeting for arrest who have no criminal history of any kind." A look at the numbers The latestICE statisticsshow that as of June 29, there were 57,861 people detained by ICE, 41,495 — 71.7% — of whom had no criminal convictions. That includes 14,318 people with pending criminal charges and 27,177 who aresubject to immigration enforcement, but have no known criminal convictions or pending criminal charges. Each detainee is assigned a threat level by ICE on a scale of 1 to 3, with one being the highest. Those without a criminal record are classified as having "no ICE threat level." As of June 23, the latest data available, 84% of people detained at 201 facilities nationwide were not given a threat level. Another 7% had been graded as a level 1 threat, 4% were level 2 and 5% were level 3. "President Trump has justified thisimmigrationagenda in part by making false claims that migrants are driving violent crime in the United States, and that's just simply not true," said Lauren-Brooke Eisen, senior director of the justice program at the Brennan Center for Justice. "There's no research and evidence that supports his claims." Tricia McLaughlin, an assistant secretary at the Department of Homeland Security, called the assessment that ICE isn't targeting immigrants with a criminal record "false" and said that DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has directed ICE "to target the worst of the worst—including gang members, murderers, and rapists." She counted detainees with convictions, as well as those with pending charges, as "criminal illegal aliens." Nonpublic dataobtained by the Cato Instituteshows that as of June 14, 65% of the more than 204,000 people processed into the system by ICE since the start of fiscal year 2025, which began Oct. 1, 2024, had no criminal convictions. Of those with convictions, only 6.9% had committed a violent crime, while 53% had committed nonviolent crimes that fell into three main categories — immigration, traffic, or vice crimes. Total ICE arrestsshot up at the end of May after White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Millergave the agency a quotaof 3,000 arrests a day, up from 650 a day in the first five months of Trump's second term. ICE arrested nearly 30% more people in May than in April, according to theTransactional Records Clearinghouse, or TRAC. That number rose again in June, by another 28%. The Cato Institute found that between Feb. 8 and May 17, the daily average of "noncriminals" processed into the system ranged from 421 to 454. In the following two weeks at the end of May, that number rose to 678 and then rose to 927 in the period from June 1 through 14. "What you're seeing is this huge increase in funding to detain people, remove people, enforce immigration laws," Eisen said. "And what we're seeing is that a lot of these people back to sort of the original question you asked, these are not people who are dangerous." Administration says focus is on dangerous criminals Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson, said the administration is intensely focused on rooting out unvetted criminals who are in the country illegally. "Just this week, the Administration conducted a successful operation rescuing children from labor exploitation at a marijuana facility in California, and continued arresting the worst of the worst – including murderers, pedophiles, gang members, and rapists," she wrote in an email. "Any suggestion that the Administration is not laser focused on these dangerous criminals is flat out wrong." While most ICE detainees are not convicted criminals, there are detainees who have committed serious crimes. On Friday, the administrationreleased informationon five high-level offenders who had been arrested. During his campaign, Trump highlighted several cases where immigrants in the country illegally were arrested for horrific crimes. Among them: The killing of 22-year-old Laken Riley, a Georgia nursing student who was slain last year by a Venezuelan man in the U.S. illegally. Jose Ibarra was found guilty of murder and other crimes in Riley's February 2024 killing and sentenced him to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Ibarra isseeking a new trial. Trump in Januarysigned into lawthe Laken Riley Act,which requiresthe detention of unauthorized immigrants accused of theft and violent crimes. Immigrants are not driving violent crime in US, studies find Research has consistently found, however, that immigrants are not driving violent crime in the U.S. and that they actually commit fewer crimes than native-born Americans. A 2023 working paper from theNational Bureau of Economic Research, for example, reported that immigrants for 150 years have had lower incarceration rates than those born in the U.S. In fact, the rates have declined since 1960 — according to the paper, immigrants were 60% less likely to be incarcerated. Experts say the false rhetoric coming out of the Trump administration creates real harm. "It makes people in immigrant communities feel targeted and marginalized," Arulanantham said. "It creates more political and social space for hate in all its forms, including hate crime against immigrant communities." Eisen noted that the impact extends to other communities as well. "All Americans should want safe and thriving communities and this idea that the president of the United States is making misleading statements about the truth and distorting reality is not the way to deliver public safety," she said. ___ Find AP Fact Checks here:https://apnews.com/APFactCheck.

Trump says he wants to deport 'the worst of the worst.' Government data tells another story

Trump says he wants to deport 'the worst of the worst.' Government data tells another story President Donald Trumphas pledgedto depo...
Lawmakers visit 'Alligator Alcatraz' after being blockedNew Foto - Lawmakers visit 'Alligator Alcatraz' after being blocked

OCHOPEE, Fla. (AP) — Democratic lawmakers condemned Florida's new Evergladesimmigration detention centerafter visiting Saturday, describing it as crowded, unsanitary and bug-infested. Republicans on the same tour said they saw nothing of the sort at the remote facility that officials have dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz." The state-arranged tour came after some Democratswere blocked earlier from viewingthe 3,000-bed detention center that the staterapidly builton an isolated airstrip surrounded by swampland. So many state legislators and members of Congress turned up Saturday that they were split into multiple groups. "There are really disturbing, vile conditions and this place needs to be shut the hell down," Rep. U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Democrat, told reporters after visiting the agglomeration of tents, trailers and temporary buildings. "This place is a stunt, and they're abusing human beings here." Cage-style units of 32 men share three combination toilet-sink devices, the visitors measured the temperature at 83 degrees (28 degrees Celsius) in a housing area entranceway and 85 (29 Celsius) in a medical intake area, and grasshoppers and other insects abound, she and her fellow Florida Democrats said. Although the visitors said they weren't able to speak with the detainees, Rep. Maxwell Alejandro Frost, a Democrat, said one called out "I'm an American citizen!" and others chanted "Libertad!," a Spanish word for "freedom." State Sen. Blaise Ingoglia, a Republican from Florida, countered that he had seen a well-run, safe facility where the living quarters were clean and the air conditioning worked well. "The rhetoric coming out of the Democrats does not match the reality," said Ingoglia, who said he toured in the same group as Wasserman Schultz. Ingoglia recalled that a handful of detainees became "a little raucous" when the visitors appeared but said he didn't make out what they were saying. State Sen. Jay Collins said he was in another group and also found the detention center clean and well functioning: "No squalor." Collins, a Republican, said he noticed backup generators, a tracking system for dietary restrictions and military-style bunks with good mattresses. The sanitation devices struck him as appropriate, if basic. "Would I want that toilet-and-sink combination at my bathroom at the house? Probably not, but this is a transitional holding facility," Collins said by phone. Journalists weren't allowed on the tour, and lawmakers were instructed not to bring phones or cameras inside. Messages seeking comment were sent to the state Division of Emergency Management, which built the facility, and to representatives for Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican. DeSantis spokesperson Molly Best highlighted one of Ingoglia's upbeat readouts on social media. Across the state in Tampa, federal Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said that "any issues that were there have been addressed" at the Everglades detention center. She added that she had been talking with five other Republican governors, whom she didn't identify, about modeling other facilities on it. DeSantis and fellow Republicans have touted the makeshift detention center, constructed in a matter of days, as an efficient and get-tough response toPresident Donald Trump's call for mass deportations. The first detaineesarrived July 3, after Trumptouredand praised the facility. Described as temporary, the detention center is meant to help the Republican president's administration reach its goal of boosting the United States' migrant detention capacity from 41,000 people to at least 100,000. The Florida facility's remote location and its name — a nod to thenotorious Alcatraz prisonthat once housed federal inmates in California — are meant to underscore a message of deterring illegalimmigration. Ahead of the facility's opening, state officials said detainees would have access to medical care, consistent air conditioning, a recreation yard, attorneys and clergy members. But detainees and their relatives and advocates havetold The Associated Pressthat conditions are awful, with worm-infested food, toilets overflowing onto floors, mosquitoes buzzing around the fenced bunks, and air conditioners that sometimes shut off in the oppressive South Florida summer heat. One man told his wife that detainees go days without getting showers. Florida Division of Emergency Management spokesperson Stephanie Hartman called those descriptions "completely false," saying detainees always get three meals a day, unlimited drinking water, showers and other necessities. "The facility meets all required standards and is in good working order," she said. Five Democratic state lawmakers tried to visit the site on July 3 but said they were denied access. The state subsequently arranged Saturday's tour. The lawmakers have sued over the denial, saying that DeSantis' administration is impeding lawmakers' oversight authority. A DeSantis spokesperson has called the lawsuit "dumb." ____ Peltz reported from New York, and Rodriguez reported from Ochopee.

Lawmakers visit 'Alligator Alcatraz' after being blocked

Lawmakers visit 'Alligator Alcatraz' after being blocked OCHOPEE, Fla. (AP) — Democratic lawmakers condemned Florida's new Everg...
LPGA player misses major cut after slow play penaltyNew Foto - LPGA player misses major cut after slow play penalty

China's Yan Liu was hovering around the cut line when she was assessed a two-stroke penalty for slow play during the second round of the Evian Championship on Friday. Liu, who started her round on the back nine at the Evian Resort Golf Club, was playing the seventh hole when she was assessed the penalty, according to Golf Digest. She went on to double bogey the par-5 and followed it up with another bogey. Liu rebounded to birdie her final hole but missed the cut at the fourth major of the year by three shots. The penalty is part of the LPGA's attempt to improve pace-of-play issues that have been heavily criticized by several of the tour's marquee players. The LPGA updated its pace-of-play policy in February, implementing a fine for a player who is 1-5 seconds over the allotted time limit, a one-stroke penalty for being 6-15 seconds over and a two-stroke penalty for a player taking more than 16 seconds over the time limit. Liu is the second player to be assessed a two-shot penalty, joining Chisato Iwai, who during the Black Desert Championship in May was the first player to be handed a two-stroke penalty. In all, there have been four slow-play penalties since the new policy was issued, according to Golf Digest. Liu entered the Evian Championship in France ranked 107th in the Rolex Women's World Rankings. However, she has now missed five of her past six cuts. --Field Level Media

LPGA player misses major cut after slow play penalty

LPGA player misses major cut after slow play penalty China's Yan Liu was hovering around the cut line when she was assessed a two-stroke...

 

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