Los Angeles Chargers LB Denzel Perryman released from jail, weapons charges droppedNew Foto - Los Angeles Chargers LB Denzel Perryman released from jail, weapons charges dropped

Los Angeles ChargerslinebackerDenzel Perrymanwas released from Los Angeles County jail on Monday, Aug. 4 after Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office decided not to file criminal charges followingPerryman's arreston weapons violation charges, online records show. Perryman, 32, was stopped Friday, Aug. 1 by South Los Angeles Station deputies for vehicle code violations, authorities said, and during a search deputies discovered five firearms in Perryman's vehicle, two of which were assault style rifles. "He was arrested and booked on weapons violation charges and was cooperative with deputies," Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said in a statement. Perryman was being held without bail at the South Los Angeles Sheriff's Station and was scheduled to appear at Inglewood Court on Tuesday, Aug. 5. But he was released from jail Monday after the District Attorney's Office decided not to press charges. Perryman is in his second stint with the Chargers, having played for them from 2015, when he was a second-round pick by the team when they were in San Diego, until 2020. Perryman also played for theLas Vegas RaidersandHouston Texansbefore returning to the Chargers for the 2024 season. Perryman started all 11 games he played in last season. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Denzel Perryman out of jail, weapons charges dropped

Los Angeles Chargers LB Denzel Perryman released from jail, weapons charges dropped

Los Angeles Chargers LB Denzel Perryman released from jail, weapons charges dropped Los Angeles ChargerslinebackerDenzel Perrymanwas release...
Former Arsenal player Thomas Partey granted bail on charges of 5 counts of rapeNew Foto - Former Arsenal player Thomas Partey granted bail on charges of 5 counts of rape

LONDON (AP) — Former Arsenal soccer player Thomas Partey was granted conditional bail on Tuesday after appearing in courtcharged with five counts of rape. The 32-year-old midfielder, who has also been charged with one count of sexual assault, appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court, London. The alleged offenses, between 2021-22, relate to three women. The conditions of Partey's bail include that he cannot contact any of the women and must notify police of any permanent changes of address or international travel. Partey is a free agent after his contract at Arsenal expired at the end of June. He is reportedly set to join Spanish team Villarreal. "I understand he's no longer employed in this country and playing in Spain now," chief magistrate Paul Goldspring said. Partey arrived at court wearing a dark zip up sweater and carrying a suit jacket. In court, he stood with his arms behind his back in the dock. His lawyer Jenny Wiltshire previously said he "denies all the charges against him" and that he welcomed "the opportunity to finally clear his name". Police said the investigation was opened in February 2022 when it first received a report of rape. Partey was charged July 4 — days after his Arsenal contract expired. He is due to appear at the Old Bailey Sept. 2. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Former Arsenal player Thomas Partey granted bail on charges of 5 counts of rape

Former Arsenal player Thomas Partey granted bail on charges of 5 counts of rape LONDON (AP) — Former Arsenal soccer player Thomas Partey was...
Company advised by Trump sons said it hoped to benefit from fed money, then took it backNew Foto - Company advised by Trump sons said it hoped to benefit from fed money, then took it back

NEW YORK (AP) — A public document filed by a company that just hired PresidentDonald Trump's two oldest sons as advisers included a sentence early Monday that said it hoped to benefit from grants and other incentives from the federal government, which their father happens to lead. But when The Associated Press asked the Trump family business about the apparent conflict of interest, the document was revised and the line taken out. Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. are getting "founder shares" worth millions of dollars in New America Acquisition 1 Corp., a company with no operating business that hopes to fill that hole by purchasing an American company that can play "a meaningful role in revitalizing domestic manufacturing," according to the filing. The president has geared his trade policy toward boosting manufacturing in the U.S. The original version of the securities filing said the target company should be "well positioned" to tap federal or state government incentives. That reference was taken out of the revised version. The Trump Organization didn't reply to a question about whether New America still planned to benefit from government programs or why the line was cut. But the outside law firm Paul Hastings that helped prepare the document sent an email to AP saying it was "mistake" made by "scriveners," an old term for transcribers of legal papers. Kathleen Clark, an expert in government ethics, said any excuses are too late because the Trumps had already tipped their hand. "They just deleted the language. They haven't committed not to do what they said earlier today they were planning to do," said the Washington University law professor and Trump critic. "It's an attempt to exploit public office for private profit." New America is what's know as a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC. It's a publicly traded company that exists solely to use its funds to acquire another company and take the target public. New America plans to raise money by selling new stock on the New York Stock Exchange at $10 a share. That will hand the two Trump sons a potential total of $50 million in paper wealth the moment the stock begins trading on the first day. The company hopes to sell enough shares to raise $300 million, which it then plans to use buying a yet unidentified manufacturer. A press release issued by New America saying it was focused on "American values and priorities." It made no mention of the aim to get government incentives. The filing to New America's potential new investors to the Securities and Exchange Commission was explicit about what it was looking for in a target company. It said, among other things, it wanted a company that can ride "public policy tailwinds" by benefiting from federal or state "grants, tax credits, government contracts or preferential procurement programs."

Company advised by Trump sons said it hoped to benefit from fed money, then took it back

Company advised by Trump sons said it hoped to benefit from fed money, then took it back NEW YORK (AP) — A public document filed by a compan...
Republican lawmakers slow Trump Treasury picks over wind, solar creditsNew Foto - Republican lawmakers slow Trump Treasury picks over wind, solar credits

(Reuters) -Two Republican senators have put holds on three of U.S. President Donald Trump's Treasury Department nominees over a White House effort to make it harder for companies to claim tax credits for wind and solar energy projects, according to a government document and a source familiar with the matter. The senators, Chuck Grassley of Iowa and John Curtis of Utah, hail from states with large renewable energy industries and support federal tax credits that bring down the cost of wind farms and solar arrays. Grassley published his announcement in the Congressional Record on Friday. A source familiar with the situation confirmed Curtis' hold to Reuters on Monday. In his announcement, Grassley said he was putting a hold on the Treasury nominees - Brian Morrissey, who was nominated to serve as Treasury's general counsel, Francis Brooke, nominated to be assistant secretary, and Jonathan McKernan - until he was certain the tax credit rules adhered to the law. The senators had tried to negotiate a longer timeline for wind and solar tax credits ahead of the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, but ultimately joined Republicans in backing a final draft that phases out clean energy subsidies years earlier than planned as part of their budget megabill. The new law requires projects to begin construction within a year or enter service by the end of 2027 to qualify for the credits. Under longstanding Treasury Department rules, a project is considered to have begun construction after spending just 5% of project costs. But days after signing the legislation into law, Trump last month directed Treasury to limit that "safe harbor" provision unless a substantial portion of a facility has been built, reportedly a promise he made to conservative Republicans. The agency has until August 18 to write new rules. "What it means for a project to 'begin construction' has been well established by Treasury guidance for more than a decade. Moreover, Congress specifically references current Treasury guidance to set that term's meaning in law," Grassley wrote. "This is a case where both the law and congressional intent are clear." Under Senate rules, a single senator can hold up a nominee even if the other 99 want to move forward. (Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Republican lawmakers slow Trump Treasury picks over wind, solar credits

Republican lawmakers slow Trump Treasury picks over wind, solar credits (Reuters) -Two Republican senators have put holds on three of U.S. P...
Texas leads preseason college football poll. How Steve Sarkisian got Longhorns backNew Foto - Texas leads preseason college football poll. How Steve Sarkisian got Longhorns back

This is uncharted territory for the TexasLonghorns. Twenty years after the program's last national championship, the Longhorns will begin the 2025 college football seasonranked No. 1 in the US LBM Coaches Poll, earning 28 of 67 first-place votes thanks in large part to a potentially unmatched collection of talent paced by third-year sophomore quarterback Arch Manning. This is a first: Texas had never been ranked No. 1 in the preseason in the history of the Coaches Poll, which debuted in the 1950 season. "This is a new year, new faces, new team, and obviously expectations are high for our program," coach Steve Sarkisian said at SEC media days. "I'm not naive to that. I don't put my head in the sand, and expectations are very high." The preseason ranking can be seen as the latest source of validation for the program constructed by Sarkisian, now entering his fifth season. Helped by an NIL-driven landscape of personnel management that has been a boon for many deep-pocketed programs, Texas looks on paper to be nearly flawless. Given their ability even in the deep SEC to simply out-talent most teams on the upcoming schedule, the Longhorns' quest to go wire-to-wire atop the Coaches Poll could come down to how they manage intense hype that has coalesced around one all-or-nothing goal: to deliver a national championship. "I do think we have a very hungry football team, one that is talented," Sarkisian said. "I think this is a championship roster. Now we've got to play like a championship team, but I do think it's a championship roster." Before climbing to the top of the preseason poll, Texas had to experience the lowest point in modern program history. The team Sarkisian inherited for the 2021 season was fresh off four bowl wins in as many years, a program first since winning five in a row from 2004-08. But the Longhorns had struggled in former coach Tom Herman's final two years, failing to build on a 10-win 2018 season capped by a Sugar Bowl defeat of Georgia. Texas opened the Sarkisian era with a non-conference win against Louisiana-Lafayette and then won two in a row to start Big 12 play, rising to No. 23 nationally heading into the Red River Rivalry against Oklahoma. That 55-48 loss was the first of six in a row, the program's longest such streak since 1956, and included a miserable 57-56 overtime defeat to Kansas – the Jayhawks' lone conference win and one of just two wins overall on the season. Steady progress ensued beginning in 2022, an eight-win finish highlighted by a 49-0 rout of the Sooners and five losses by a combined 25 points. The 2023 Longhorns won the Big 12 in the program's final year of membership before losing 37-31 to Washington in the College Football Playoff national semifinals at the Sugar Bowl. Last year's team nearly took the SEC by storm, losing only twice to Georgia – the second in overtime of the conference championship game – and then beating Clemson and Arizona State in the expanded 12-team playoff before losing a close game to eventual national champion Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl. "I mean, it was a tough loss, but that was the last season," said junior linebacker Anthony Hill. "We have a whole new team. We want to go out there and be 1-0 next year. That's all we'll focus on is just being 1-0, and we'll handle everything else when the time comes." The program has undergone a clear shift in mentality, embracing the "all gas, no brakes" mindset instilled by Sarkisian and his staff. But the primary factor behind this recent resurgence is simpler: Texas has procured an eye-popping talent level through traditional recruiting and the transfer portal, buoyed by a willingness to spend millions to compile the best roster money can buy. Though it's impossible to pinpoint the exact total spent on talent acquisition, the 2025 Texas roster is expected to cost between $35 and $40 million, the Houston Chronicle reported in the spring. The crown jewel of this roster is Manning, who enters his first year as the starter after throwing for 939 yards and accounting for a combined 13 touchdowns in the backup role to Quinn Ewers as a redshirt freshman. Manning is part of four consecutive signing classes ranked among the top five nationally by the major recruiting services. The No. 1-ranked class inked in this winter included four five-star and 14 four-star recruits, with eight signees ranked among 247Sports' top 85 prospects overall. Another 11 players joined the program through the transfer portal, with as many as five projected to start. "We have a bunch of good players and follow his lead," Manning said of Sarkisian. "This is a big-time conference. It's tough each week. But I think we've done a pretty good job. I'm hoping to carry that forward." To some degree, every program in the Power Four is trying to lean on NIL and the portal to build a deeper roster that layers traditional recruiting and player development with more established players acquired as transfers. The Longhorns' NIL offerings have joined the program's inherent advantages - members of an elite conference, one of the nation's strongest brands, competitive in the championship race - to turn Texas back into a trendy destination for the top prospects out of high school or the portal. "We're trying to build a roster that is one that can withstand the test of time," said Sarkisian. "We never wanted to come here and be a one-year-wonder team and then the next year be not very good. So we're trying to be sustainable for a long period of time. I think that that's what good programs do." No player embodies the program's enviable collection of NFL-ready talent more than Manning, who chose Texas because of his close relationship with Sarkisian and the chance to carve out his own reputation away from the shadows cast by his family's quarterback legacy. Like few before him - maybe his uncle, Peyton, and former Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbacks such as Tim Tebow - Manning will be watched, monitored and scrutinized at a level unmatched by any other active player in the Bowl Subdivision, his every performance held against the obscenely high standard set by his name, location and obvious physical gifts. "I take football pretty seriously," Manning said. "Other than that, just a regular guy." A steady stream of factors have combined to make this the most highly anticipated season of Texas football in decades - a statement in itself given the annual hype around the program - and raised the boom-or-bust stakes to the point where anything less than an SEC crown and multiple playoff wins could be seen as a disappointment. One is the Longhorns' back-to-back playoff berths, with both years ending with the offense having opportunities in the red zone and in range of delivering an appearance in the championship game. (Fixing ongoing red-zone issues is a "huge emphasis of ours" this offseason, Sarkisian said.) The second is the wealth of depth and experience on the roster. While not necessarily represented in previous starting experience at Texas, which brings back only nine starters from last season, the run of top-ranked signing and portal classes in a row have created a conveyer-belt type of depth-chart substitution where rising stars such as sophomore edge rusher Colin Simmons (nine sacks in 2024) are poised to transition from key reserve roles into the starting lineup. And the third is Manning. If he plays well and the Longhorns win the SEC, Manning will be fodder for talk-show debate centered on the possibility that he enters the NFL draft after one season as the starter; if Texas struggles, the redshirt sophomore could easily become the scapegoat. There's no question the Longhorns are deserving of the hype. But what will decide this season is how Texas manages these intense expectations against a schedule that opens with a rematch at No. 2 Ohio State, features road trips to Florida and Georgia, includes the annual neutral-site matchup with Oklahoma and ends with the first matchup against Texas A&M at DKR-Texas Memorial Stadium since 2010. "But I also say we're the University of Texas, and the standard is the standard here, and that's competing for championships year in and year out," said Sarkisian. "It didn't matter when we were in the previous conference. It didn't matter now that we're in the SEC. It is what it is." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Texas, Arch Manning are No. 1. How Steve Sarkisian rebuild Longhorns

Texas leads preseason college football poll. How Steve Sarkisian got Longhorns back

Texas leads preseason college football poll. How Steve Sarkisian got Longhorns back This is uncharted territory for the TexasLonghorns. Twen...
Preseason US LBM Coaches Poll overlooks quarterback inexperience at top of rankingsNew Foto - Preseason US LBM Coaches Poll overlooks quarterback inexperience at top of rankings

They say it over and over. The game is all about the quarterback. Those who have experience at the most important position on the field, college football coaches insist, win big games. Unless, apparently, you're ablue blood program. So while you stare atthe first US LBM Coaches Pollof the 2025 college football season, don't ignore the glaring reality staring back. Five of the top eight teams have first-time starters at the most important position on the field. "The quarterback is critical to everything you do," Texas coach Steve Sarkisian said. "There's no getting around it." It is here where we introduced Texas, Ohio State, Georgia, Notre Dame, and Alabama. All among the top 10 in the Coaches Poll, and all preseason favorites to reach the College Football Playoff — and possibly much more. All with first-time, full-time starters. If you think the CFP selection committee has problems ranking teams, the 67 coaches shouldn't get pass on criticism, either. There's a whole lot of funky in the first Coaches Poll, beginning at the top with teams ranked on reputation. Not their critical quarterback component. The quarterbacks at those five blue bloods – teams with a combined 119-23 record over the last two seasons – have combined to throw 262 career passes. Arch Manning of Texas has never started an SEC road game, and his only SEC start came last season against tomato can Mississippi State. Gunner Stockton of Georgia has never started an SEC game. CJ Carr of Notre Dame, Julian Sayin of Ohio State and Ty Simpson of Alabama have never started a game. Think about this: college football coaches have essentially told you they believe in a group of quarterbacks who, on average, have 50 career throws each. Maybe this isn't the layup everyone thinks it is. Maybe we're on the verge of a wild ride through the 2025 season, where the unknown unfolds into the unthinkable. Especially considering there's much more to this quarterback story than just first-time, full-time starters. Texas is preseason No.1 for the first time in school history, more hype baggage (and expectations) for Manning to carry before the first snap of the season. After back-to-back national titles in 2021-22, Georgia missed the CFP in 2023 and last year sustained an ugly loss in the quarterfinals — and suddenly looks vulnerable. Ohio State is completely rebuilt on both sides of the ball (only nine starters return), and all Sayin has to do is defend a national title. And beat Michigan for the first time since 2019. Simpson begins his fourth season at Alabama, a program that owned the four-team CFP under former coach Nick Saban — but couldn't make the first 12-team field in 2024. Simpson is merely carrying that weight, OK? ARCH MADNESS:Manning rumor madness with Nick Saban and Cleveland Browns GOOD FIGHT:Deion Sanders is stepping up in biggest battle of career Then there's Carr, a talented redshirt freshman who was given the keys to a championship-level team after Irish coach Marcus Freeman declined to add an experienced quarterback from the transfer portal — and go all-in with the unknown. "I feel like the experience from last year is invaluable," Stockton said. That "experience" consisted of the second half of the SEC championship game victory over Texas, and the CFP quarterfinal loss to Notre Dame. Manning's experience is a home game against the worst team in the SEC, and a home game against lightweight Louisiana-Monroe. Simpson's most extended time on the field was two years ago in a tight win over South Florida, when he replaced starter Tyler Buchner and was essentially the best of two bad options. Carr and Sayin will take their first legitimate college football snaps in the season opener, both in monster non-conference games. Notre Dame plays at Miami, and Ohio State plays host to Texas. "You want command of the offense," said Ohio State coach Ryan Day, who insists Sayin is still competing with junior Lincoln Kienholz – who has also never started a game – for the starting job. "When you stand in there as a quarterback, you want everyone to believe in you. You want them to follow your command." That's all it takes? This will be a cakewalk. Matt Hayesis the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at@MattHayesCFB. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:College football preseason poll full of quarterback ineperience

Preseason US LBM Coaches Poll overlooks quarterback inexperience at top of rankings

Preseason US LBM Coaches Poll overlooks quarterback inexperience at top of rankings They say it over and over. The game is all about the qua...
NATO to coordinate regular and large-scale arm deliveries to Ukraine. Most will be bought from USNew Foto - NATO to coordinate regular and large-scale arm deliveries to Ukraine. Most will be bought from US

BRUSSELS (AP) — NATO started coordinating regular deliveries of large weapons packages toUkraineafter the Netherlands said it would provide air defense equipment, ammunition and other military aid worth 500 million euros ($578 million), most bought from the U.S. Two deliveries are expected this month. The equipment that will be provided is based on Ukraine's priority needs on the battlefield. NATO allies then locate the weapons and ammunition and send them on. "Packages will be prepared rapidly and issued on a regular basis," NATO said late Monday Air defense systems are in greatest need. The United Nations has said that Russia's relentless pounding of urban areas behind the front line has killed more than 12,000 Ukrainian civilians. Russia's bigger army is also making slow but costly progress along the 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line. Currently, it is wagingan operationto take the eastern city of Pokrovsk, a logistical hub whose fall could allow it to drive deeper into Ukraine. European allies and Canada arebuyingmost of the equipment they plan to send from the United States, which has greater stocks of ready military materiel, as well as more effective weapons. The Trump administration is not giving any arms to Ukraine. The new deliveries will come on top of other pledges of military equipment. The Kiel Institute, which tracks support to Ukraine, estimates that as of June, European countries had provided 72 billion euros ($83 billion) worth of military aid since the start of Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022, compared to $65 billion in U.S. aid. Dutch Defense Minister Ruben Brekelmans said that "American air defense systems and munitions, in particular, are crucial for Ukraine to defend itself." Announcing the deliveries Monday, he said Russia's attacks are "pure terror, intended to break Ukraine." Germany said Friday that it will deliver two more Patriot air defense systems to Ukraine in the coming days. It agreed to the move after securing assurances that the U.S. will prioritize the delivery of new Patriots to Germany to backfill its stocks. These weapon systems are only made in the U.S.

NATO to coordinate regular and large-scale arm deliveries to Ukraine. Most will be bought from US

NATO to coordinate regular and large-scale arm deliveries to Ukraine. Most will be bought from US BRUSSELS (AP) — NATO started coordinating ...

 

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