Justice Department opens criminal investigation into Fed Governor Lisa Cook: SourcesNew Foto - Justice Department opens criminal investigation into Fed Governor Lisa Cook: Sources

The Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation into Federal Reserve GovernorLisa Cook, sources familiar with the matter said Thursday. Bill Pulte, the Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, sent the Department of Justice two criminal referral letters about Cook last month regarding Cook's properties in Georgia and Michigan. Federal investigators have begun issuing subpoenas and are utilizing grand juries in both states as part of their investigation, the sources said. MORE: Here's a list of the individuals, including Lisa Cook, targeted so far by the Trump administration TheWall Street Journalfirst reported the existence of the criminal investigation. As President Donald Trump seeks to reshape the balance of the Federal Reserve central banking system, Pulte's allegations have become the basis of Trump'seffort to terminate Cook"for cause" -- a controversial and legally fraught move that is actively being challenged in court. In anAug. 15 letterto Attorney General Pam Bondi and Special Attorney for Mortgage Fraud Ed Martin, Pulte alleged that Cook "falsified bank documents and property records to acquire more favorable loan terms, potentially committing mortgage fraud under the criminal statute." Pulte has claimed that the referral was based on publicly available information but has declined to comment about the tip that prompted his investigation. The first referral focused on Cook's properties in Georgia and Michigan. Reached for comment regarding the DOJ probe, attorneys for Cook said in a statement, "Predictably and recognizing the flaws in challenging their illegal firing of Governor Cook, the administration is scrambling to invent new justifications for its overreach." "This Justice Department -- perhaps the most politicized in American history -- will do whatever President Trump demands. He wants cover, and they are providing it," said attorney Abbe Lowell. "The questions over how Governor Cook described her properties from time to time, which we have started to address in the pending case and will continue to do so, are not fraud, but it takes nothing for this DOJ to undertake a new politicized investigation, and they appear to have just done it again." Following the Aug. 15 referral, Martin sent a letter to Federal Reserve Chairman Jermone Powell encouraging him to fire Cook because of the ongoing investigation. "At this time, I encourage you to remove Ms. Cook from your Board. Do it today before it is too late! After all, no American thinks it is appropriate that she serve during this time with a cloud hanging over her," Martin wrote. Days later, Trump attempted to fire Cook based on the allegations that she designated both her homes in Georgia and Michigan as her primary residence. Cook has denied wrongdoing, said she would continue to serve in her role, andsued to challenge Trump's attemptto remove her. "President Trump has no authority to remove Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. His attempt to fire her, based solely on a referral letter, lacks any factual or legal basis. We will be filing a lawsuit challenging this illegal action," said Lowell. MORE: Fed Governor Lisa Cook sues Trump over attempted ouster Later that month, on Aug. 28, Pulte sent asecond referral letterto the Department of Justice, alleging that Cook had made "multiple false representations" while serving as a Federal Reserve governor, including listing an apartment in Massachusetts as both an investment property and a second home. In the following days, Pulte has made multiple comments on social media accusing Cook of crimes and calling for her prosecution, unusual steps during an ongoing investigation before any formal determinations of wrongdoing. "The damage currently being done to the integrity of the Federal Reserve, by Lisa Cook and Jerome Powell, cannot be overstated," he wrote inone post. On Thursday, Pulte originally planned to hold a press conference in front of the Elijah Barrett Prettyman U.S. Courthouse in Washington, D.C. where he said he would share new information about Cook. He later canceled the press conference, writing on social media, "Out of respect for the process, I will be delaying this press conference."

Justice Department opens criminal investigation into Fed Governor Lisa Cook: Sources

Justice Department opens criminal investigation into Fed Governor Lisa Cook: Sources The Department of Justice has opened a criminal investi...
Agency that handles green cards and citizenship to hire armed agents who can make arrestsNew Foto - Agency that handles green cards and citizenship to hire armed agents who can make arrests

The Trump administration announced Thursday that the agency that assesseswhether immigrants should be granted green cardsand citizenship will add its own law enforcement agents who can carry firearms and make arrests. The move is a major change forU.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, an agency that has been kept separate from immigration arrests and enforcing deportations. USCIS assesses applications and interviews immigrants seeking to legally remain in the country by getting green cards,becoming naturalized citizensor being approved for humanitarian programs. USCIS said in a statement Thursday that under the new rule, it will be authorized to add "special agents" who "will be empowered to investigate, arrest, and present for prosecution those who violate America's immigration laws." The final rule by the Trump administration will be effective 30 days from its publication, it said. In the rule,Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noemgrants the agency the right to hire agents who can make arrests, carry firearms, execute search and arrest warrants and who will have "other powers standard for federal law enforcement," USCIS said in the statement. N.H. green card holder denied re-entry to U.S. after visiting native Canada L.A. business owner says his wife, detained by ICE, had green card and passed citizenship exam German national with U.S. green card detained at ICE facility, family says "USCIS has always been an enforcement agency. By upholding the integrity of our immigration system, we enforce the laws of this nation," USCIS Director Joseph Edlow said in the statement. "This historic moment will better address immigration crimes, hold those that perpetrate immigration fraud accountable, and act as a force multiplier for DHS and our federal law enforcement partners, including the Joint Terrorism Task Force." The agency said in its statement that "USCIS will be able to more efficiently clear its backlogs of aliens who seek to exploit our immigration system through fraud, prosecute them, and remove them from the country." Edlow toldThe Wall Street Journal, which first reported on the change, that the agency plans to train several hundred federal law special agents who would look for immigration fraud in applications and could arrest immigrants or lawyers found to have engaged in fraud. The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement Thursday that the rule will allow USCIS to "thoroughly fulfill its national security, fraud detection, and public safety missions related to immigration adjudications." Doug Rand, a former USCIS senior official during the Biden administration, said the agency has long been investigating fraud in applications. "They don't carry firearms, and they've been doing fine for decades," he said of its agents. "This move that is calculated at best to scare people and at worst is a really dangerous escalation of law enforcement that's completely unnecessary and uncalled for at USCIS," he said. "USCIS should be fairly adjudicating people's applications for services. It should not be scaring people from applying for services in the first place," he said. Jason Houser, who held senior Department of Homeland Security positions during the Obama and Biden administrations, told NBC News the administration wants "enforcement to be where the benefits used to be. That's the goal." Houser said that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have been arresting people outside USCIS facilities and that the new rule would put those arrests "in house." The rule creates a feeling that "there's no place now for migrants to feel like they have an environment to seek refuge, to seek a legal pathway, without there being potentially immediate consequences for arrest or detention," he said. Advocates are extremely concerned about a "chilling effect on eligible people to come forward" and seek to adjust their immigration statuses, said Nicole Melaku, the executive director of National Partnership for New Americans, a coalition of immigrant and refugee rights organizations. "This shift in allowing armed agents and having a whole new enforcement apparatus connected to USCIS is deeply alarming," she said. The Trump administration is seeking new ways tomassively increase immigration enforcement operationswith the goal of deporting 1 million immigrants a year. Other recent changes at the agency heighten scrutiny for immigrant applicants. In a memorandum last month,USCIS said it would resume "neighborhood investigations,"which could include interviews with applicants' neighbors and co-workers, a practice that was waived in 1991. USCIS also updated guidance in its policy handbook in August to review and consider any "anti-American ideologies or activities," including on social media, in deciding whether to issue immigration benefits to people. "Anti-American activity will be an overwhelmingly negative factor in any discretionary analysis," the guidance said. Melaku said the changes create "more barriers for people's entry points" to remain legally in the United States. "The desire here is to intimidate people away from accessing the process and instilling fear and mistrust in an agency that has been traditionally tasked with being seen as a public good," she said.

Agency that handles green cards and citizenship to hire armed agents who can make arrests

Agency that handles green cards and citizenship to hire armed agents who can make arrests The Trump administration announced Thursday that t...
Report: WR Amari Cooper informs Raiders he's retiringNew Foto - Report: WR Amari Cooper informs Raiders he's retiring

Five-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Amari Cooper informed the Las Vegas Raiders that he has decided to retire after 10 seasons, NFL Network reported on Thursday. The news comes on the heels of Cooper telling reporters, "Trust me, I still have some juice left," last week after signing a one-year contract with the organization that made him the fourth overall pick in the 2015 NFL Draft. Cooper, 31, played for the then-Oakland Raiders from 2015-18 before being traded to the Dallas Cowboys during the 2018 season. He was traded two more times (to the Cleveland Browns and Buffalo Bills) before becoming a free agent following the 2024 season. He had 44 receptions for 547 yards and four touchdowns last season in 14 games with the Browns and Bills. All three categories were a career low for Cooper. Cooper totaled 711 catches for 10,033 yards and 64 touchdowns in 154 career games (143 starts). --Field Level Media

Report: WR Amari Cooper informs Raiders he's retiring

Report: WR Amari Cooper informs Raiders he's retiring Five-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Amari Cooper informed the Las Vegas Raiders that ...
NFL Thursday night preview: Eagles celebrate a title while the Cowboys regroupNew Foto - NFL Thursday night preview: Eagles celebrate a title while the Cowboys regroup

The vibes for the two teams in the NFL's annual kickoff game couldn't be much different. The Philadelphia Eagles have a new championship to celebrate. The Dallas Cowboys seem further away from breaking their title drought after trading superstar Micah Parsons last week. The first game of the NFL season doesn't lack storylines, at least. The Eagles return plenty of talent from a team that won 16 of its last 17 games last season, including a Super Bowl LIX blowout of the Kansas City Chiefs. The Eagles are so focused on a repeat and not letting complacency set in that coach Nick Sirianni said theteam will not be on the sideline to watch the championship banner be unveiled. There's business to attend to. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] The visiting team in the kickoff game often feels like the sideshow, but the Cowboys always are in the spotlight. That's especially true after the Parsons trade, which drew an opinion from everyone with a passing interest in the NFL. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said a big part of the trade was Dallas attempting to improve its run defense by adding defensive lineman Kenny Clark in the deal. That will be tested right away by Saquon Barkley, who is coming off a 2,000-yard season for Philadelphia. The NFL season starts Thursday night. There will be drama right away. Nobody wants to lose after seeing the banner get unveiled, but win or lose the Eagles will probably be fine. The Cowboys could use a good start to the season, with a new coach in Brian Schottenheimer and the Micah Parsons drama finally behind them. If the Cowboys lose and the defense gets torched by an Eagles offense that is fully capable of putting up 40 points on anyone, there will be another round of criticism over the Parsons trade. It's never calm around the Cowboys, but a win would quiet some of the noise. Diggs, who underwent knee surgery last December, is expected to play on Thursday night though he could be on a pitch count,via NFL Media. The Cowboys need him for however many snaps he can offer, because the Eagles have one of the best 1-2 receiver duos in the NFL. A.J. Brown and DeVonta Smith are both capable of taking over a game, and the Eagles are likely to test Diggs early to see if he's moving well. How Diggs fares, in however many snaps he plays, will be huge for the Cowboys defense. It's good to have the NFL back, and Eagles fans — and bettors — seem to feel that way, too. This line has moved significantly from an opener of Eagles -7, pushing up to -8 after the Cowboys dealt Micah Parsons to the Green Bay Packers last week, and currently sitting as high as Eagles -8.5 at some books.At BetMGM, 65% of wagers and 71% of the total dollars wagered are on Philadelphia to cover, and one Vegas oddsmaker told me that it's been "one-way action" on the Eagles so far, and Philadelphia is in many a bettor's money-line parlay or teaser to start the Week 1 action. Check out more of Ben's work atthe Yahoo Sports betting hub The NFL opens with a fun matchup on Thursday night. Philadelphia is the defending Super Bowl champs (ending last year on a ballistic 16-1 run), while Dallas is coming off a 7-10 season (after three straight playoff trips). Last year's meetings were not competitive, with Philly taking them both by a combined 75-13 count. Here's what I'll be looking at for fantasy purposes: Does Dallas junk the running game?Javonte Williams, Miles Sanders, rookie Jaydon Blue — the Dallas RB room is an unimpressive group on paper. The Dallas defense also looks like a mess — I thought it had collapse risk even before the Micah Parsons trade. Dak Prescott was a volume monster two years ago, and he might need to be again. And he has the targets to push the ball downfield. Will Philly need to open things up?Jalen Hurts lived a charmed life last year, only throwing 144 passes (and six touchdown passes)in the second halves of games. That's life when you've almost always ahead. But that sort of outlier game flow often corrects, year over year. Is Saquon Barkley welcome at the goal line?Barkley didn't have a single 1-yard touchdown plunge last year, while Hurts pushed in 11 times from that distance. Barkley also averageda ridiculous 29.4 yards for his 15 touchdowns, and he handled a league-high 378 touches. No one expects Barkley to match last year's 5.8 YPC, but some goal-line opportunities would help pay the fantasy bills. Check out more of Scott's work at theYahoo Sports fantasy hub

NFL Thursday night preview: Eagles celebrate a title while the Cowboys regroup

NFL Thursday night preview: Eagles celebrate a title while the Cowboys regroup The vibes for the two teams in the NFL's annual kickoff g...
Marjorie Taylor Greene says Trump administration pushed back on Epstein discharge petitionNew Foto - Marjorie Taylor Greene says Trump administration pushed back on Epstein discharge petition

U.S. Rep.Marjorie Taylor Greenesaid she got "a lot of pushback" fromPresident Donald Trump'sadministration over signing a petition tied to a bill pushing for the release of files onconvicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Kentucky, spearheaded theSept. 2 discharge petition, which aims to push forwarda bill about files on the late financier. If 218 House members sign the petition – a majority – that would force a vote on a bill known as theEpstein Files Transparency Act. The legislation from Massie and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-California, calls for the release of "all investigations, prosecutions or custodial matters" about Epstein andhis associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, who isserving a 20-year prison termfor sex trafficking. If released, the information could include flight logs, names associated with criminal activities, civil settlements, immunity or plea agreements. Greene, a Republican from Georgia, signed the discharge petition on Sept. 2, making her just one of four GOP members to do so. In addition to Massie, Reps. Nancy Mace and Lauren Boebert also signed. In a Sept. 3interviewwith former Fox News host Eric Bolling on his Real America's Voice show "Bolling!", Greene said members of the Trump administration "didn't want me to sign the discharge petition." USA TODAY has reached out to the White House for comment. In the Sept. 3interview, which came a day after Greene met privately with some of Epstein's victims, Bolling asked, "Do you expect you're gonna get a little pushback from the administration for getting involved in this?" "Oh, I got a lot of pushback. I got phone call after phone call last night," Greene said. "They didn't want me to sign the discharge petition. They want to focus on the oversight investigation." She also said that she doesn't blame Trump himself "whatsoever," but some of his staff members. "Any president is insulated and in a cone of information based on the people that work directly with him, and I don't think they've informed him on what a big deal this really is," Greene said. Greene added that she wants Trump "to be the hero and champion of this issue." A group of Epstein's victims met privately Sept. 2 with members of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, including Greene. The meeting left Mace, the congresswoman from South Carolina,having a "full blown panic attack"while listening to survivors' stories. Macesaid on social mediaafterwards that she exited the meeting after having "a very difficult time listening to their stories." Greene was one of several lawmakers who spoke at apress conferenceafter the meeting. "The truth needs to come out," she said. "And the government holds the truth." The Georgia congresswoman's words didn't sit right with some, however.Laura Loomer, a far-right activist and social media influencer, called Greene a "fraud" who is "trying to pretend like Trump is a pedophile" in aposton X. A longtime Trump ally, Greene has beenvocal in pushing for the releaseofEpstein's supposed client list. Trump and Attorney GeneralPam Bondiboth previouslyvowedto release thesupposed list, but the Department of Justice and FBIsaid on July 7 such files never existed. SomeRepublicans, including Greene, have pushed for more transparencyaround the case in the months since. Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Sept. 3 that the push to release the files had become partisan. "It's really a Democrat hoax," the president said. "Because they're trying to get people to talk about something that's totally irrelevant to the success that we've had as a nation since I've been president." Contributing: Bart Jansen and Zac Anderson, USA TODAY Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. She can be reached atmelina.khan@usatoday.com. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:White House opposed Epstein petition, Marjorie Taylor Greene says

Marjorie Taylor Greene says Trump administration pushed back on Epstein discharge petition

Marjorie Taylor Greene says Trump administration pushed back on Epstein discharge petition U.S. Rep.Marjorie Taylor Greenesaid she got ...
What the FBI took during search of John Bolton's houseNew Foto - What the FBI took during search of John Bolton's house

A federal magistrate judge revealedthat the FBI removed computers, other electronics and documentsduring a searchofJohn Bolton's house and that PresidentDonald Trump's former national security adviser is under investigation for possible violations of the Espionage Act. However, U.S. Magistrate Judge Timothy Sullivan kept confidential a court document that details what investigators were hoping to find when they searched his house Aug. 22. Bolton, who served duringTrump's first term and has since become a vocal critic of the administration, has not been charged in connection with the matter. More:Exclusive: John Bolton says Trump's White House was 'like living inside a pinball machine' The belongings seized as Bolton's Maryland home included two iPhones, typed documents in folders labeled Trump I to IV, white binders labeled reflections on "allied strikes," a Dell 3620 computer, a Dell 2330 computer, a Dell laptop and a couple of USB drives, according to a filing by Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Sullivan that was posted on the public docket Sept. 4. The prosecutor said that greater disclosure could jeopardize the integrity of the investigation. Bolton is under investigation for possible violations of two federal laws: for gathering defense information and for unauthorized retention of classified documents, according to Sullivan's filing. The first statute, which is part of the Espionage Act, involves what Trump was charged with in 2023 after leaving the White House and keeping classified documents at Mar-a-Lago. Afederal judge dismissed the document chargesagainst Trump. Prosecutors dropped their appeal after Trump was elected president a second time, under alongstanding Justice Department policyagainst prosecuting a sitting president. Bolton resumed criticizing Trumpin an op-ed on Aug. 25 in theWashington Examinerthat mentioned the investigation. "Donald Trump's Ukraine policy today is no more coherent than it was last Friday when his administration executed search warrants against my home and office,"Bolton wrote, repeating thesame line in a post on X. "Collapsing in confusion and haste, Trump's negotiations may be in their last throes, along with his Nobel Peace Prize campaign." Trump told reporters Bolton was "a lowlife" but that he didn't know about the search beforehand.Vice President JD Vance told USA TODAYthat Bolton was under investigation for classified documents rather than politics. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Here's what FBI removed in search of John Bolton's house

What the FBI took during search of John Bolton's house

What the FBI took during search of John Bolton's house A federal magistrate judge revealedthat the FBI removed computers, other electron...
NFL draft retention rates reveal the best and worst teams at keeping picksNew Foto - NFL draft retention rates reveal the best and worst teams at keeping picks

Building a team through the draft is a consistent mantra from almost every NFL team because getting cost-controlled young players in a salary-capped league is crucial to success. Pulling that off isn't as easy with the draft often looking like a crapshoot, with some widely heralded prospects taken in the first round flaming out each year and the league filled with later-round gems who were overlooked coming out of college. That can be because of bad evaluation, poor development, injuries or bad fortune but the teams that do the best to avoid it are often the ones playing deep into January. Evaluating drafts in the immediate aftermath each spring is often foolhardy as it often takes a year or even more to see if picks worked out. Leaguewide, 55% of all players drafted from 2021-24 were still on the active roster or an injured list of the team that picked them, according to data compiled by Sportradar after rosters were reduced to 53 players last week. That ranged from 85% of players picked in the first round, 68.8% picked in the second and third rounds on day two of the draft, and 42.6% in the final four rounds on day three. In all, eight teams have less than half of their 2021-24 draft picks still on the active roster or injured lists but that's doesn't necessarily translate to a lack of on-field success. Minnesota has the lowest retention rate at 32.4% and made the playoffs with 14 wins last season, while Washington is fourth lowest at 41.2% and made it to last season's NFC title game. Eight other teams have retained more than 63% of their 2021-24 draft picks, with five of those teams making the playoffs last season, two others finishing with winning records and only the New York Giants lacking success with just nine wins the past two seasons under general manager Joe Schoen and coach Brian Daboll. Seven of those eight teams had the same coach and general manager since at least 2022 as the stability in leadership and scheme typically leads to fewer roster overhauls. The only two teams near the bottom who had not changed their coach since the start of the 2022 season are the Vikings and San Francisco 49ers, who made up for several notable draft whiffs made by general manager John Lynch and coach Kyle Shanahan by finding a franchise quarterback in Brock Purdy with the final pick of the 2022 draft. Here's a look at the three best and worst teams when it comes to retaining picks. Cincinnati Bengals, 73.5% The Bengals faced a tough decision in the 2021 draft when they had to choose whether to pick Penei Sewell to protect Joe Burrow orJa'Marr Chaseto give him a playmaker. While both choices would have been good, picking Chase has worked out as good as they could have hoped with four Pro Bowl seasons and a receiving Triple Crown in 2024. The next three first-rounders — Dax Hill, Myles Murphy and Amarius Mims — haven't been nearly as impactful but are still in place. That's been a bit of a theme for the Bengals as the stability in the front office and coaching has kept draft picks in place but few have been difference-makers in recent years. Cincinnati has retained the highest percentage of day three picks during this period at 66.7%, with the biggest hit being 2025 fifth-round pick Chase Brown. Kansas City Chiefs, 73.3% Kansas City has kept 11 of its 12 picks in the first three rounds on the roster with several being key contributors to the team's back-to-back Super Bowl titles in the 2022-23 seasons. The Chiefs got two players who have earned All-Pro honors in center Creed Humphrey in the second round in 2021 and cornerback Trent McDuffie in the first round in 2022. Among the other early-round hits have been linebacker Nick Bolton, receiver Skyy Moore and edge rusher George Karlaftis, and additional starters in linebacker Leo Chenal and safety Bryan Cook. There have also been some big day three wins like guard Trey Smith in the sixth round in 2021, tight end Noah Gray in the fifth round in 2021, and running back Isiah Pacheco and cornerback Jaylen Watson in the seventh round in 2022. Detroit Lions, 72.4% GM Brad Holmes and coach Dan Campbell have engineered one of the best turnarounds in recent memory in the NFL, turning one of the worst franchises into a perennial contender thanks to some sharp draft picks. Helped by two extra first-rounders gained when Detroit traded Matthew Stafford to the Rams for Jared Goff, the Lions added several difference-makers in the first round led by Sewell, Aidan Hutchinson and Jahymr Gibbs. The Lions also got their No. 1 receiver on day three of the 2021 draft in Amon-Ra St. Brown and several key contributors with day two picks, like All-Pro safety Kerby Joseph in the third round in 2022, and versatile defensive back Brian Branch and productive tight end Sam LaPorta in the second round in 2023. Minnesota Vikings, 32.4% Perhaps no team has overcome poor drafts as well as the Vikings in recent years under GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and coach Kevin O'Connell. Outside of star left tackle Christian Darrisaw and depth receiver Jalen Nailor, Minnesota has almost nothing left from the 2021 and '22 draft classes after whiffing on high picks in 2022 on first-round safety Lewis Cine, second-round cornerback Andrew Booth and third-round guard Ed Ingram. The verdict on the 2024 draft remains unknown after first-rounder J.J. McCarthy missed his rookie season with a knee injury and fellow first-rounder Dallas Turner made little impact as a rookie. The team has hit on several undrafted free agents, led by linebacker Ivan Pace Jr. New England Patriots, 36.8% Poor picks at the end of the Bill Belichick regime followed by a one-year run with Jerod Mayo as coach have contributed to the Patriots moving on from most of their picks from 2021-24 as they enter their first year under coach Mike Vrabel. The 2022 draft class might have been the worst as only third-round slot cornerback Marcus Jones remains after the team cut first-round guard Cole Strange last week. Second-round receiver Tyquan Thornton had 39 catches in three seasons before being cut last season. New England had two hits from 2021 in second-round defensive tackle Christian Barmore and fourth-round running back Rhamondre Stevenson after first-round QB Mac Jones lasted only three seasons with the team. Drake Maye is the only projected starter this season from last year's draft class. New England did well at the top of the 2023 draft with cornerback Christian Gonzalez and defensive Keion White. The Pats have only 6 of 26 (23.1%) of day-three picks over those four years still on the roster. Tennessee Titans, 40% The Titans have gone through three GMs since the start of the 2022 season as a roster that was good enough to earn the top seed in the AFC in 2021 fell so much that the Titans ended up with the No. 1 pick in this year's draft. Cornerback Caleb Farley started just two games in two seasons after being picked in the first round in 2021 and receiver Treylon Burks — picked to replace A.J. Brown in 2022 — will finish his rookie contract with 53 catches and one TD after going on season-ending IR. Tennessee has just four day two picks and five day three picks from 2021-24 left on the roster after missing on picks like Dillon Radunz, Elijah Molden, Nicholas Petit-Frere and Malik Willis. The Titans used a second-round pick in 2023 on quarterback Will Levis, who went 5-16 in his first two seasons and is on IR this year. ___ AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

NFL draft retention rates reveal the best and worst teams at keeping picks

NFL draft retention rates reveal the best and worst teams at keeping picks Building a team through the draft is a consistent mantra from alm...

 

MARIO VOUX © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com