News
Josh Bell homers again, Nationals hold on to beat Marlins
MIAMI — Josh Bell homered for the fourth time in three games, Mitchell Parker threw 7 2/3 innings of two-run ball and the Washington Nationals beat the Miami Marlins 7-5 on Tuesday night.
Rookie Daylen Lile also went deep while CJ Abrams and James Wood doubled and singled each for the Nationals.
Parker (8-15) retired 14 straight after allowing Joey Wiemer’s solo homer in the second. The left-hander allowed four hits, struck out two and walked two.
After losing five of their first six against the Marlins this season, the Nationals have won five straight against their NL East opponent.
Washington built a 7-1 lead before the Marlins rallied on Agustín Ramírez’s RBI single in the eighth and rookie Victor Mesa Jr.’s two-run double in the ninth that made it 7-4. After Jose A. Ferrer allowed Xavier Edwards’ RBI infield single that scored Mesa, he retired Ramírez on a groundout for his eighth save.
The Nationals struck quickly against Miami starter Adam Mazur on Bell’s three-run homer in the first. Bell drove Mazur’s slider into the upper deck seats in right for his 20th home run.
Bell homered twice in Monday’s 15-7 series opening win and also went deep when Washington beat the Chicago Cubs to close their series Sunday.
Mazur (0-3) gave up six runs and eight hits in 4 1/3 innings.
Key momentAfter Ramírez’s two-out RBI single in the eighth, Washington reliever P.J. Poulin struck out Jakob Marsee with the bases loaded to end Miami’s threat.
Key statBell has seven homers and 18 RBIs in his last 26 games.
Up nextRHP Jake Irvin (8-11, 5.71 ERA) will start for the Nationals on Wednesday while the Marlins will go with Eury Pérez (6-5, 4.66).
South Florida woman accused of submitting fraudulent petitions for marijuana amendment
A South Florida woman was arrested in Coral Springs last month after allegedly submitting nearly 100 fraudulent petitions in support of the marijuana constitutional amendment in 2023, state officials said.
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement first began investigating Jessica Sonia Humphreys, 24, of Miami, in January 2023 after the Escambia County Supervisor of Elections Office reported to agents what it believed were multiple fraudulent petitions submitted by Humphreys in support of the amendment to legalize marijuana, FDLE said in a news release Tuesday night.
Humphreys had worked as a paid petition gatherer for Smart & Safe Florida at the time in several counties in North Florida, an organization advocating for legal personal marijuana use. FDLE agents then contacted the Santa Rosa County Supervisor of Elections about any petitions Humphreys submitted and found more with fake names, according to the news release.
In total, FDLE said Humphreys allegedly submitted 72 petitions with fake names. She is facing a total of 144 charges. Two arrest warrants were issued in November 2023 for the petitions in Escambia and Santa Rosa counties.
Jessica Sonia Humphreys, 24, is facing a total of 144 charges after allegedly submitting fraudulent petitions in support of the marijuana constitutional amendment in two Florida counties in 2023, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement said. (Florida Department of Law Enforcement/Courtesy)The Santa Rosa County Sheriff’s Office arrested Humphreys first in January 2024 on the FDLE warrant for 34 counts of petition fraud and 34 counts of perjury, and she did not appear at her next scheduled court hearing after posting bail, FDLE said.
She was arrested on Aug. 15 in Coral Springs after a traffic stop on the charges from the alleged fake petitions in Escambia County, according to FDLE. She has since been transferred to the Escambia County jail.
This January, the Office of Election Crimes and Security published a 942-page annual report, in part detailing “illegal compensation scheme” related to petitions and “petition circulator fraud,” allegedly in some instances committed through “bulk identity theft,” according to the report.
The OECS was created in 2022, and FDLE has since made at least 17 arrests of people in Florida who worked as paid petition circulators, the report said. Hundreds of criminal investigations were open at the time of the report. At least six paid petition gatherers for Smart & Safe Florida and another organization Sensible Florida were arrested by FDLE for marijuana petitions.
Humphreys’s case is cited in the report, having “explained that she allowed other people to use her circulator number and was paid for the petitions they completed.”
“That same defendant submitted a number of petitions that were completed in the names of individuals who were not registered Florida voters and appeared to be fictious,” the OECS report said.
Authorities believe Humphreys’ “actual number of fraud victims is much higher.” She submitted nearly 4,000 petitions total across Florida, and 2,064 of them were invalid for having non-voters or mismatched signatures, the report said.
“Humphreys said she could not explain how people and addresses that did not exist ended up on the petitions that she admitted to signing,” the FDLE warrant for her arrest said.
In May, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a new bill, HB 1205, that voting rights advocates say makes it much more difficult for people to participate in the ballot initiative process. The new law cites “evidence of fraud.”
Pool deck pinpointed as starting point of 2021 Surfside condo collapse, feds say
What officially caused the 2021 Champlain Towers South collapse that killed 98 people is closer to having an answer, as federal officials on Tuesday announced a tentative end to their investigation and that they’ve honed in on a singular failure in the building’s infrastructure that triggered the tragedy.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology said it plans to finish its technical work by the end of 2025 and begin drafting its reports. In the last four years, investigators initially had 12 hypotheses, which whittled down to three “higher-likelihood” scenarios.
Now evidence is reinforcing that the building’s pool deck was where the start of Champlain Towers South’s collapse occurred and not in the tower itself.
“The investigation has also identified indications of the building’s distress that were visible in the weeks before the partial collapse of the building in Surfside, Florida,” the institute said.
Go to Herald.com for the full report.
Dolphins Q&A: Could wholesale franchise change come as soon as next week?
Welcome to the 2025 season edition of Miami Dolphins Q&A, where South Florida Sun Sentinel writers David Furones and Chris Perkins answer questions from readers.
Q: Should the Dolphins fire (coach Mike) McDaniel AND (general manager Chris) Grier after the Buffalo loss in 10 days? Grier needs to be gone just as much as Mike. — @dannnymo_610 on X
The hot seat both McDaniel and Grier are on was, without question, the story for this season going in.
I did not imagine the conversation could be ratcheted up to this level this early, but after the unmitigated disaster that was the Dolphins’ season-opening loss to the Indianapolis Colts, this is where we’re at.
I’d honestly say we’ve entered a stage where this is within the realm of possibility. I wouldn’t nearly say it’s likely this is how the next 10 days go, but it’s not entirely out of the question.
Week 1 against a mediocre Colts team was never competitive. Quarterback Tua Tagovailoa turned the ball over three times. That and the accompanying deficit, in turn, never let the run game get going. Defensively, the secondary couldn’t cover and, without much of a pass rush either, quarterback Daniel Jones looked like Peyton Manning at Lucas Oil Stadium. And, oh yeah, there was a critical special teams penalty.
Nothing went right. The Dolphins were uninspired, unprepared and did not execute. These are all indictments on McDaniel.
The key is how it goes in Sunday’s home opener against the New England Patriots. If the Dolphins drop that one, even looking half as awful as Week 1 in Indianapolis against a Patriots team that lost to the lowly Raiders in its opener and has to come into the September 1 p.m. heat and humidity of South Florida, all bets are off. Because these Dolphins are not going into Orchard Park on a short week and beating the Buffalo Bills.
If you’re owner Steve Ross, you can’t make any move merely off a loss to New England. But if the ensuing Thursday night, Sept. 18 at Buffalo, the Dolphins are blown out again to get to 0-3, Ross would be within reason going into the long weekend to blow the whole thing up with Grier and McDaniel.
What else are you waiting for at that point?
It would signify another season going down the drain during a first half where the Dolphins should be stacking wins ahead of a tough second half of the schedule.
In the scenario where something happens this year, some would say Grier might stay while McDaniel goes. I think they go down together. If we find McDaniel’s tenure failed, that’s in large part on Grier, who owns the longest active tenure as GM in the NFL without a playoff win.
The franchise would have to start fresh, with new direction from the GM on down and a new coach.
All this said, I have the Dolphins winning Sunday’s home opener against the Patriots. So you can put all that talk on hold.
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Q: Would you trade (wide receiver Tyreek) Hill knowing how bad we draft? — @FIN5_UP on X
While the team is still hopeful of winning this season, it shouldn’t trade Hill.
If the early portion of the season goes awry and it’s clear the whole thing is getting blown up, that’s when you pull the trigger on Hill and find a trade partner before the trade deadline.
A return to the Chiefs, where quarterback Patrick Mahomes could use help at receiver, and dealing Hill to the Steelers, who have a good working relationship with the Dolphins after the offseason trade involving cornerback Jalen Ramsey, tight end Jonnu Smith and safety Minkah Fitzpatrick, are possible destinations.
The draft pick may not matter as much, as the team would no longer be getting an elite selection back for Hill. It’s just about dumping him and starting brand new at that point. And if the Dolphins are shipping him off, see answer above, as they should have new management making the draft picks anyway.
Dolphins Deep Dive: If Ross does make a move, should everyone go? | VIDEO
Q: How much will it cost to move on from Tua after this season? I have heard conflicting info. Thanks. — @David Litz on X
A Yahoo story Tuesday detailed a path similar to how the Denver Broncos got out from the Russell Wilson contract.
It revealed that it would cost the Dolphins $79.2 million over the next two seasons. The team could allot $62.4 million on the 2026 cap and the remaining $16.8 to 2027.
The Dolphins already have $33.6 million in dead cap space for 2026, with Ramsey and retired left tackle Terron Armstead together combining for more than $31 million of it. To move from Tagovailoa would require a cheap starting quarterback next season, possibly an avenue to find one as a top draft choice if the team is picking high in the draft and rebuilds next year.
Trump having dinner at a restaurant near the White House to promote his Washington crackdown
By WILL WEISSERT
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump is having dinner Tuesday night at a seafood restaurant near the White House, promoting his deployment of the National Guard and federalizing the police force in an effort to crack down on crime in the nation’s capital.
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His motorcade speeding the short distance to Joe’s Seafood, Prime Steak & Stone Crab on 15th Street in the northwestern quadrant of the city follows weeks of the president boasting about mobilizing federal authorities and the military that he says have made Washington “a safe zone.”
Some restaurants have reported drops in reservations since Trump first announced the federal crackdown on Aug. 7, while there have been frequent street protests decrying his actions. Increased military and police presence also has occasionally sparked standoffs between residents and authorities in normally quiet neighborhoods.
Trump has nonetheless said repeatedly that he’s spoken to friends who tell him local restaurants are full and that people have noticed a drop in crime. He says he’s also heard that people appreciate crews working to remove homeless encampments as part of the crackdown.
The president had suggested previously that he might be heading out to dinner for a firsthand look.
“I think it’s something we could consider doing. Love to do it,” Trump told reporters last week in the Oval Office when asked about venturing out to dinner beyond the White House. “I love the White House food, but after a while, I could see going to a nice restaurant. It’s safe.”
Trump rarely dines away from the White House when he’s in Washington. And those outings have gotten even less common since he sold the hotel bearing his name a few blocks away, which was a key meeting point for administration officials and supporters during his first term.
The White House reported Tuesday that there had been nearly 2,200 arrests since Trump first announced the Washington crackdown on Aug. 7.
In addition to Washington, Trump deployed the National Guard to Los Angeles in June and has threatened to send troops to other, largely Democratic cities, including Baltimore, New Orleans and Chicago — where state and local authorities already are bracing for operations to sharply increase immigration enforcement.
On Saturday, Trump posted a parody image from “Apocalypse Now” featuring a ball of flames as helicopters zoom over the lakefront and skyline of Chicago, the nation’s third-largest city.
“‘I love the smell of deportations in the morning,’” Trump wrote on his social media site. “Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of WAR.”
In the post, Trump offered no details beyond the label “Chipocalypse Now,” a play on the title of Francis Ford Coppola’s dystopian 1979 film set in the Vietnam War, in which a character says: “I love the smell of napalm in the morning.”
That post came after last week, when Trump signed an executive order seeking to rename the Defense Department as the Department of War — even after months of campaigning to be considered for the Nobel Peace Prize. The renaming requires congressional approval.
In his own post in response, Democratic Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker called Trump a “wannabe dictator.” He has joined state and city officials — and many Chicago residents — in decrying the idea of a federal crackdown as unnecessary.
Over 350 Greenlandic women and girls forcibly given contraception by Danish officials, report says
COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — More than 350 Greenlandic Indigenous women and girls, including some 12 years old and younger, reported that they were forcibly given contraception by Danish health authorities in cases that date back to the 1960s, according to an independent investigation’s findings released Tuesday.
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The Inuit victims, many of them teenagers at the time, were either fitted with intrauterine contraceptive devices, known as IUDs or coils, or given a hormonal birth control injection. They were not told details about the procedure, or did not give their consent.
The victims described traumatic experiences that left some with feelings of shame as well as physical side effects, ranging from pain and bleeding to serious infections.
The governments of Denmark and Greenland officially apologized in a statement last month for their roles in the historic mistreatment in an apparent attempt to get ahead of the highly anticipated report. An official apology event in Greenland’s capital is set for Sept. 24.
Nearly 150 Inuit women last year sued Denmark and filed compensation claims against its health ministry, saying Danish health authorities violated their human rights. That case remains ongoing.
While Tuesday’s report covers the experiences of more than 350 women who came forward to speak to the investigators, Danish authorities say more than 4,000 women and girls — reportedly half the fertile women in Greenland at the time — received IUDs between the 1960s and mid-1970s.
The alleged purpose was to limit population growth in Greenland by preventing pregnancies. The population on the Arctic island was rapidly increasing at the time because of better living conditions and better health care.
Greenland took over its own health care programs on Jan. 1, 1992.
Centuries of dehumanizing policiesThe investigation’s conclusion comes as Greenland is in the headlines alongside U.S. President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly said he seeks U.S. jurisdiction over Greenland. He has not ruled out a military force to take control of the mineral-rich, strategically located Arctic island.
The leaders of Denmark and Greenland say the island is not for sale. Denmark’s foreign minister recently summoned the top U.S. diplomat in the country for talks after the main national broadcaster reported that at least three people with connections to Trump have been carrying out covert influence operations in Greenland.
Greenland, which remains part of the Danish realm, was a colony under Denmark’s crown until 1953, when it became a province in the Scandinavian country. In 1979, the island was granted home rule, and 30 years later Greenland became a self-governing entity.
The forced contraception of Indigenous women and girls was part of centuries of Danish policies that dehumanized Greenlanders and their families.
The policies included the removal of young Inuit children from their parents to be given to Danish foster families for reeducation and controversial parental competency tests that resulted in the forced separation of Greenlandic families.
The report’s findingsThe investigators received reports from 354 Greenlandic women who were between 48 and 89 years old when they spoke to authorities for the independent investigation, which began June 1, 2023 following a media outcry.
Almost all victims were between 12 and 37 years old at the time. One girl was under 12, but her exact age was not made public in Tuesday’s report due to anonymity concerns. The vast majority of the procedures occurred in Greenland.
An attorney representing some of the victims could not immediately be reached for comment Tuesday.
Nepal internet crackdown part of global trend toward suppressing online freedom
By BARBARA ORTUTAY
Nepal’s crackdown on social media companies, which led to protests and police killing at least 19 people, is part of a yearslong decline of internet freedoms around the world as even democracies seek to curtail online speech.
The Himalayan country’s government said last week it was blocking several social media platforms including Facebook, X and YouTube because the companies failed to comply with a requirement that they register with the government. The ban was lifted Tuesday a day after the deadly protests.
What’s happening in Nepal mirrors “this broader pattern of controlling the narrative and controlling of stories emerging from the ground,” said Aditya Vashistha, an assistant professor of information science at Cornell University. “This has happened several times in the neighboring countries India, Pakistan, Bangladesh. So this is nothing new — in fact, I would say this is taken from the playbook, which is now very established, of trying to control social media narratives.”
Not just NepalLike neighboring countries, Nepal’s government have been asking the companies to appoint a liaison in the country. Officials are calling for laws to to monitor social media and ensure both the users and operators are responsible and accountable for what they share. But the move has been criticized as a tool for censorship and punishing opponents who voice their protests online.
“Governments absolutely have a valid interest in seeking to regulate social media platforms. This is such a daily part of our lives and in our business. And it is certainly reasonable for authorities to sit down and say we want to develop rules for the road,” said Kian Vesteinsson, senior research analyst for technology and democracy at the Washington-based nonprofit Freedom House.
“But what we see in Nepal is that wholesale blocks as a means of enforcing a set of rules for social media companies results in wildly disproportionate harms. These measures that were put in place in Nepal (cut) tens of millions of people off from platforms that they used to express themselves, to conduct daily business, to speak with their families, to go to school, to get healthcare information.”
It’s not just Nepal. Freedom House has found that global internet freedom has declined for the 14th consecutive year in 2024, as governments crack down on dissent and people face arrest for expressing political, social or religious views online. While China consistently tops the list as the “world’s worst environment” for internet freedom, last year Myanmar shared this designation as well. The organization did not track Nepal.
India passed a telecommunications law in 2023 that gave its government “broad powers to restrict online communications and intercept communications,” according to Freedom House. Three years earlier, a sweeping internet law put digital platforms like Facebook under direct government oversight. Officials say the rules are needed to quell misinformation and hate speech and to give users more power to flag objectionable content. But critics cautioned it would lead to censorship in a country where digital freedoms have already been shrinking.
In January, meanwhile, Pakistan’s lower house of parliament passed a bill that gives the government sweeping controls on social media, including sending users to prison for spreading disinformation.
Online freedom and democracyCalling internet freedom a “pillar of modern democracy,” Freedom House said a healthy 21st-century democracy cannot function without a trustworthy online environment, where people can access information and express themselves freely.
Increasingly, though, governments are putting up roadblocks.
Often, regulations are in the name of child safety, cyber crime or fraud, Vesteinsson said, “but unfortunately, a lot of this regulation comes hand in hand with restrictive measures.”
In the Nepali law, for instance, “the same provision of this law, directs social media platforms to restrict content relating to child trafficking and human trafficking and labor, a really important issue,” he added. “Two bullet points above that, it orders platforms to restrict people from posting anonymously.”
The Committee to Protect Journalists said Monday that the protests “underscore the widespread concerns over Nepal’s ban on social media and the pressing need for the government to drop its order. Such a sweeping ban not only restricts freedom of expression, it also severely hinders journalists’ work and the public’s right to know.”
Can VPNs help?The crackdown appears to have spurred a surge in use of virtual private networks, or VPNs, according to Proton, which provides encrypted services. Signups for Proton’s VPN service in Nepal have jumped by 8,000% since Sept. 3, according to data the company posted online. A VPN is a service that allows users to mask their location in order to circumvent censorship or geography-based online viewing restrictions.
But experts caution that VPNs are not an end-all solution to government internet blocks. They can be expensive and out of reach for many people, Vashistha noted, and they can be slow and lead to lower-quality experiences when people try to access blocked social platforms.
Google, Meta, X and TikTok (which registered and continues to operate) didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Vesteinsson said companies can take important steps to safeguard privacy of their users — particularly human rights defenders and activists who might be a specific target for government repression in their countries.
“It’s enormously important for social media platforms to be responsible to their users in that way,” he said.
AP Business Writer Kelvin Chan and AP Technology Writer Matt O’Brien contributed to this report.
Grove of giant sequoia trees burns in California’s Sierra National Forest
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — A lightning-sparked wildfire in California’s Sierra National Forest burned Tuesday through a grove of giant sequoias and set some of the ancient towering trees on fire.
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Wildland firefighters with tree-climbing experience were being sent in to put out the fire burning in the canopies of the beloved trees, said Jay Tracy, a spokesperson for the Garnet Fire ablaze in Fresno County.
To protect the majestic trees, some estimated to be 3,000 years old, fire crews laid sprinkler lines to increase ground moisture, wrapped the trunks with fire-resistant foil blankets, raked flammable material away from trees and patrolled the area looking for hotspots, he said.
Sequoias grow naturally only in a 260-mile belt of forest on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada mountains in California. They have massive trunks and can grow over 300 feet tall.
The sequoia is the world’s largest tree by volume and closely related to the redwood, the world’s tallest.
“These trees are near and dear to the forest and to our community and we want to do our best to protect them,” Tracy said.
Show Caption1 of 4The Garnet Fire burns in the McKinley Grove area of the Sierra National Forest, Calif., on Monday, Sept. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Noah Berger) ExpandThe Garnet Fire, which started on Aug. 24, reached the southeast side of the 100-acre McKinley Grove sometime Sunday night or Monday morning, he said.
The giant trees rely on low-intensity fire to help open their cones to disperse seeds, and flames clear undergrowth so seedlings can take root and get sunlight. The Garnet Fire, however, is more intense, Tracy said.
The blaze has scorched 85 square miles of grass, chaparral and timber in a remote area known for camping and hiking about 60 miles east of Fresno. It was about 14% contained as of Tuesday.
Trump tries to soothe Qatar after Israeli strikes but stops short of decrying another ally
By AAMER MADHANI and KONSTANTIN TOROPIN
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump was trying to walk a delicate line following Israel’s attack on Hamas officials in Qatar, distancing himself from the strike Tuesday but stopping short of condemning Israel for carrying out an audacious strike on the soil of another major U.S. ally.
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Trump said the unilateral action directed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “did not advance Israel or America’s goals.” He offered notably muted pushback, however, even suggesting “this unfortunate incident could serve as an opportunity for peace.”
“This was a decision made by Prime Minister Netanyahu, it was not a decision made by me,” Trump said on social media hours after the strikes.
Trump is seeking to soothe concerns of a Gulf ally that has played a key role in mediating between the U.S. and Iran and its proxies, including during talks with Tehran-backed Hamas as the war with Israel in Gaza grinds on. The U.S. also has about 10,000 troops stationed at the Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, an installation that serves as the forward headquarters of U.S. Central Command.
The president said he directed special envoy Steve Witkoff to warn Qatar of the impending attack in the capital, Doha, after learning about it and that Witkoff was quick to call Qatari officials. But the U.S. alert was, “unfortunately, too late to stop the attack,” Trump said.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Majed al-Ansari refuted in a post on X that the Qataris were given any warning from the U.S., saying it came just as “the explosions from the Israeli strikes were being heard.”
Qatar has sought closer ties with TrumpThe Qataris have sought to deepen their relationship with Trump since his return to office. They have even gifted Trump a $400 million Boeing 747 jet that is to be retrofitted into a new Air Force One. Trump has said the plane will be donated to a future presidential library once his term ends and put on display as a museum piece.
“I view Qatar as a strong Ally and friend of the U.S., and feel very badly about the location of the attack,” Trump said on social media.
President Donald Trump speaks to the White House Religious Liberty Commission during an event at the Museum of the Bible, Monday, Sept. 8, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)At the same time, Qatar, a wealthy nation with expansive natural gas and oil reserves, has faced scrutiny for its support of Hamas. Prior to the Israel-Hamas war, Doha for years sent millions of dollars per month to the Gaza Strip to prop up Hamas’ governing structure. Qatar has also hosted leaders of the Taliban and the Muslim Brotherhood.
In a carefully worded statement, Trump also made clear that “eliminating Hamas” was a “worthy goal.”
Trump’s effort to try to assuage Qatar without criticizing Israel comes as he struggles to find an endgame to the nearly two-year-old war in Gaza and win the release of 48 hostages, about 20 who are believed to still be alive.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, speaking at a briefing earlier Tuesday, did not say how long before the Israeli strikes that Qatar was warned.
She, like Trump, also did not address whether there was any concern that the Qataris could, in turn, have forewarned Hamas leaders that the Israeli strike was coming. Hamas says its top leaders survived the Israeli strike and that five lower-ranking members died.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House, Tuesday, Sept. 9, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) Israeli warning to the US described as vagueThe U.S. military was notified about the Israeli strike ahead of time through military channels, but a U.S. official described that notification as very vague.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to freely discuss sensitive matters, said the notification included the fact that the Israeli military was going to attack Hamas but did not include specifics like a location, which made it insufficient to allow for any timely follow-on warnings to countries in the region.
Israel perfunctorily warning the U.S. ahead of operations has been an aggravation for much of the war, according to a former U.S. government official who requested anonymity to discuss the sensitive diplomatic issue. Frequently, the official said, Israeli notification “consisted of them calling someone at the embassy or at the Pentagon when planes were already in the air.”
Yet, with a strike this sensitive, the official said, it was difficult to believe Israel had not at least received tacit approval from the U.S. before moving forward with the operation.
White House and State Department officials did not respond to requests for comment about the timing or substance of Witkoff’s warning to Qatar.
Jonathan Schanzer, a former counterterrorism analyst at the U.S. Treasury Department, said the White House’s public comments may be in part an effort to help Qatar save face and keep its relations steady with the United States.
“It’s damage control,” said Schanzer, who is executive director of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies in Washington. But he added that the strike could affect the Qataris and their relationship with Hamas moving forward.
“There’s a lot of taking stock right now by all parties,” he said.
Trump talks with both sidesTrump spoke with Netanyahu and Qatar’s ruling emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, and other Qatari officials following the strikes.
“I assured them that such a thing will not happen again on their soil,” Trump said of his conversation with Qatari officials.
Leavitt demurred when asked if there would be any consequences for the Israelis or Netanyahu for the strike that she suggested was unexpected by U.S. officials.
Trump posted on social media Sunday a cryptic warning to Hamas hinting at a new American proposal to exchange all the remaining hostages for Palestinian prisoners and end the war in Gaza.
“I have warned Hamas about the consequences of not accepting,” Trump said. “This is my last warning, there will not be another one!”
Asked if Trump had been hinting at the Doha strike, Leavitt replied, “No, he was not.”
Access Home Inspection Services Inc. Wins 2025 Consumer Choice Award for Home Inspection in Edmonton - Bluefield Daily Telegraph
Today in History: September 9, Attica prison uprising begins
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 9, the 252nd day of 2025. There are 113 days left in the year.
Today in history:On Sept. 9, 1971, prisoners seized control of the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility near Buffalo, New York, taking 42 staff members hostage and demanding improvements to inmate treatment and living conditions.
Also on this date:In 1776, the second Continental Congress formally adopted the name “United States of America,” replacing the “United Colonies of North America.”
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In 1850, California was admitted as the 31st U.S. state.
In 1919, about 1,100 members of Boston’s 1,500-member police force went on strike. The strike was broken by Massachusetts Gov. Calvin Coolidge with replacement officers.
In 1948, the People’s Democratic Republic of Korea (North Korea) was declared.
In 1957, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the first civil rights bill to pass Congress since Reconstruction, a measure primarily concerned with protecting voting rights. It also established a Civil Rights Division in the U.S. Department of Justice.
In 2022, King Charles III gave his first speech to Britain as its new monarch, vowing to carry on the “lifelong service” of his mother Queen Elizabeth II, who died a day earlier.
Today’s Birthdays:- Singer Dee Dee Sharp is 80.
- Former NFL quarterback Joe Theismann is 76.
- Actor Angela Cartwright is 73.
- Musician-producer Dave Stewart (Eurythmics) is 73.
- Actor Hugh Grant is 65.
- Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., is 62.
- Actor Constance Marie is 60.
- Actor Adam Sandler is 59.
- Actor Julia Sawalha (suh-WAHL’-hah) is 57.
- Model Rachel Hunter is 56.
- Actor Eric Stonestreet is 54.
- Actor Henry Thomas is 54.
- Actor Goran Visnjic (VEEZ’-nihch) is 53.
- Pop-jazz singer Michael Bublé (boo-BLAY’) is 50.
- Actor Michelle Williams is 45.
- Actor Zoe Kazan is 42.
- Soccer player Luka Modrić is 40.
- Country singer-songwriter Hunter Hayes is 34.
Bell homers from both sides, has six RBIs in Nationals’ romp over Marlins
MIAMI — Josh Bell became the second Washington player to homer from both sides of the plate in the same game, finishing with four hits and six RBIs to lead the Nationals over the Miami Marlins 15-7 on Monday night.
Dylan Crews and Luis García Jr also homered as the Nationals matched their season high for runs and hits (19).
Miami drew just 7,992, its 12th crowd this season under 8,000.
Bell’s RBI single in the fifth put Washington ahead 3-1 and, batting right-handed, he hit a two-run drive off Josh Simpson for a 10-2 lead in the sixth.
Hitting left-handed, Bell added a two-run homer in the sixth against Simpson, a 413-foot, 110 mph drive four rows into the nearly empty right-field upper deck for his 19th long ball this season. Bell added an RBI single in the ninth, matching his career high for hits.
Washington’s Danny Espinosa homered from both sides of the plate twice in the same series against Cincinnati, on June 30 and July 3, 2016, a four-game series in which he had five homers and 15 RBIs.
Crews also had four RBIs for the Nats, who won for the sixth time in seven games.
Cade Cavalli (3-1) gave up two runs and six hits in five innings.
García homered in the second off Janson Junk (6-2), who was activated from the injured list after recovering from tight ulnar nerve irritation and allowed six runs and eight hits in 4 1/3 innings.
Heriberto Hernández had a tying single in the second and Crews had a go-ahead single in the fourth,
Victor Mesa Jr. homered, doubled and drove in three runs for the Marlins and Jakob Marsee hit a solo shot.
Key momentCrews hit a two-out homer for an 8-2 lead, capping a six-run fifth.
Key statWashington tying season high for runs and hits.
Up nextWashington LHP Mitchell Parker (7-15, 5.87 ERA) takes the hill opposite RHP Adam Mazur (0-2, 5.74) in Tuesday’s second game of a four-game series.
How much heat is on UF’s Napier among burning questions heading to LSU
GAINESVILLE — That didn’t take long.
Billy Napier is back on the hot seat as Florida (1-1) opens SEC play at No. 3 LSU after the Gators’ staggering loss to unranked USF Saturday night in the Swamp.
The Tigers (2-0) are a tough out at home, where the Gators have won just twice in 10 tries since 2003.
The questions entering Saturday night’s visit to storied Tiger Stadium begin with the obvious.
How much heat is on Napier?Plenty, yet a lot of football also remains. But so do the same problems that have plagued Napier in the past.
Napier’s play-calling was at times predictable and execution too often spotty against USF. Tempo and rhythm were MIA.
Of UF’s 71 plays, 24 gained a yard or fewer.
Meanwhile, the leadership, discipline and accountability touted throughout the offseason were absent during a mistake-filled performance featuring 11 penalties for 103 yards — two negating touchdowns and two more committed on the Bulls’ game-winning drive.
Veteran long-snapper Rocco Underwood sailed one, leading to a safety for USF. A couple of critical dropped passes cost the Gators a touchdown and a critical third-down conversion late in the game.
Sloppy, undisciplined football in Year 4 is hard to justify. So is a clunky, unimaginative offense as Napier insists on calling plays.
UF athletic director Scott Stricklin gave Napier a vote of confidence in November, and UF responded with a season-ending four-game winning streak. This time, Napier might have to save himself.
UF athletic director Scott Stricklin (left) and football coach Billy Napier are in their fourth season together at UF. (James Gilbert/Getty) Is this the toughest three-game stretch in school history?Not quite, but close.
The meat of a schedule considered perhaps the toughest in the nation has lived up to its billing.
Based on the current AP Top 25, the Gators are set to face a gauntlet almost unlike any other. A night game in Tiger Stadium followed by a visit to No. 5 Miami precede a Sept. 27 bye. Next is an Oct. 4 home date with No. 7 Texas.
Only once has UF faced three consecutive opponents with a lower combined ranking (15). In 1996, UF twice played No. 1 Florida State, including in the Gators’ Sugar Bowl win to earn the national championship, and No. 11 Alabama in the SEC title game — a 45-30 win.
Just three other times have three consecutive Florida foes featured a combined ranking of 20 or lower — in 1959, 1994 and 1999.
Those times it wasn’t so pretty; UF amassed a winning percentage of just 11%.
Bob Woodruff’s ’59 squad faced No. 1 LSU, No. 8 Auburn and No. 11 Georgia, going 0-3 by a combined score of 36-10. Steve Spurrier’s ’99 team also was winless against No. 1 Florida State, No. 7 Alabama and No. 9 Michigan State, a 37-34 loss in the Citrus Bowl.
Spurrier’s ’94 Gators were a respectable 1-1-1 against No. 7 Florida State, No. 3 Alabama and No. 7 FSU in the Sugar Bowl, with the win a 24-23 decision in the SEC title game against Bama. But the tie was in the infamous 31-31 Choke at Doak, where UF allowed 28 unanswered fourth-quarter points.
Based on history alone, Napier faces long odds during the next three games. And don’t forget a trip to No. 16 Texas A&M follows this demanding trifecta.
Can lightning strike twice?Florida been here before under Napier, who has never started 2-0 in four seasons. Twice, slow starts ended in losing 2022 and 2023 seasons. In 2024, things got worse before better, with changes made during a Week 5 bye week spurring a surprising turnaround culminating with a four-game winning streak for an 8-5 finish.
If nothing else, UF has a template.
“‘Do we take the lessons that we learned?’” Napier said. “I’m anxious to see this group and how we are going to respond. It’s not just me. It’s the leadership.
“So far, so good, but you don’t know until you play again.”
The Gators veterans will lean into last season’s experience and push younger players to dig the Gators out of another unexpected early-season hole.
“There’s definitely a calling among older guys,” fifth-year senior Jake Slaughter said.
USF quarterback Byrum Brown (17) is sacked by UF defender Tyreak Sapp (bottom) during the USF at UF college football game at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville on Saturday, September 6, 2025. USF won the game 18-16. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel)UF’s All-American center recalled fifth-year senior Tyreak Sapp’s fiery postgame locker room speech, “inspiring guys who are just as competitive and passionate as he is.”
Whether Slaughter, Sapp and shared history will get the Gators on track will depend on whether the two veterans can elevate their own play and their units can perform to the levels expected entering the season.
Every position on the offensive line picked up a penalty against USF, and the Gators struggled to contain dual-threat quarterback Byrum Brown (66 rushing yards) and could not get him on the ground (one sack).
“Any time you go out there, that’s the easiest way to lose is to beat yourself,” Slaughter said. “Very frustrating.”
Where’s the Gators’ edge?Sapp, George Gumbs Jr. and Co. were supposed to chase down quarterbacks and set the tone for an improved defense as the Gators’ edge rushers did to end last season. Instead, Florida has two sacks in two games, tied for fewest in the SEC.
“You’ve got to create opportunities,” Napier said. “You’ve got to try to play well on first and second down and try to create advantageous [down and distance] on second-and-long, third-and-long.”
Napier noted Week 1 foe Long Island University played a triple option. Additionally, USF’s Brown is as mobile as any quarterback UF might face until A&M’s Marcel Reed.
A season ago, UF’s pass rush was so-so until it came alive against LSU, with 7 sacks of Garrett Nussmeier — more than the Tigers had given up all season. UF would record 19 sacks during an ensuing four-game winning streak.
“It’s a two-game sample size, so don’t panic on the edge room just yet,” Napier said.
Edgar Thompson can be reached at egthompson@orlandosentinel.com
Up next …
UF (1-1) at No. 3 LSU (2-0)
When: 7:30 p.m., Saturday
Where: Tiger Stadium, Baton Rouge
TV: ABC
Favorite: LSU by 9.5 points
Brendan Bett on spitting penalty in Gators’ loss: ‘I made a terrible mistake’
GAINESVILLE — Florida defensive lineman Brendan Bett said he “made a terrible mistake” for spitting on USF offensive lineman Cole Skinner, leading to a penalty that contributed to the Gators’ shocking 18-16 home loss on Saturday night.
Bett issued a statement on his social media accounts Monday night, two days after the incident that led to his ejection during the Bulls’ game-winning drive in the Swamp.
A Baylor transfer in his first year at UF, Bett apologized to teammates, coaches, fans and Skinner during a four-paragraph mea culpa.
“I want to sincerely apologize for my actions in the game this past Saturday,” he wrote. “I let down my teammates, coaches, family and all of Gator Nation. Our coaches always instill in us the value of sportsmanship and I crossed the line. I also want to apologize to South Florida.
“That’s not the person or player I strive to be. I made a terrible mistake and it won’t happen again.
“To Cole Skinner #56. There is no excuse for my actions. I’m truly sorry to both you and your family.
“To my family and friends … l know that my actions didn’t reflect the way I was raised and I regret the disappointment I caused. I take full responsibility. I pray that we can all move forward. Thanks for believing in me and I won’t let you down again.”
Whether Bett’s actions lead to a suspension before Saturday night’s game at No. 3 LSU remains undecided.
“We haven’t made that decision yet,” Gators coach Billy Napier told reporters Monday.
Napier said Bett will face some “internal discipline.”
Florida defensive lineman Brendan Bett (90) celebrates a tackle against LIU Brooklyn during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025, in Gainesville, Fla. (AP Photo/Alan Youngblood)Early in USF’s game-winning drive, officials flagged Bett for a 15-yard unsportsmanlike-conduct penalty and ejected him after he spit in the facemask of Skinner.
“He made a mistake and he compromised the team,” Napier said Monday. “He made a selfish decision. He misrepresented our fans, our alumni, the university.”
After Saturday night’s stunner in the Swamp, senior cornerback Devin Moore said he was disappointed in Bett.
“There’s no place for that as an individual and certainly representing the University of Florida,” Moore said. “There’s no place for that here. This is a prestigious program, and that will be addressed for sure.”
Bett did Monday night.
Before the penalty, the 6-foot-4, 308-pound Baylor transfer recorded five tackles against the Bulls, and has eight in 2025 while earning playing time amid star tackle Caleb Banks’ absence with a foot injury.
But Bett lost his cool and potentially cost the Gators the game against USF.
Starting from their 11-yard line, the Bulls went 87 yards in eight plays to set up a 20-yard field goal by Nico Gramatica as time expired.
Two penalties proved pivotal. A second-down pass-interference call on cornerback Dijon Johnson first cost UF 13 yards. On the next play, Bett committed his infraction.
Edgar Thompson can be reached at egthompson@orlandosentinel.com
South Florida attorney sentenced for sneaking cocaine to inmates through laced papers
A South Florida criminal defense attorney has been sentenced to a year in jail after a jury found him guilty of sneaking cocaine to inmates at the Palm Beach County jail.
David Casals, who practices in Broward and Palm Beach County, was charged in 2022 with trafficking cocaine, delivery of cocaine and introducing contraband into a county detention facility after he was caught trying to bring “suspicious papers” in to an inmate, a probable cause affidavit said.
On Oct. 24 2021, Casals was checking in as a visitor at the West Detention Center in Belle Glade, and a deputy inspected a manila folder that contained 37 pieces of paper “with Bible quotes and pictures of an unknown woman” on them, the affidavit said. As the deputy looked at the “swollen” pages, she noticed stains from a see-through substance that resembled water marks.
Deputies had a briefing about “paper dope” attempting to be smuggled into the jail just a few days earlier, prosecutors wrote in a court motion filed in 2023.
Testing of all 37 pages showed a positive result of cocaine with a weight of over 136 grams. The papers did not have trace amounts but were rather “saturated with cocaine,” the affidavit said.
Casals pleaded not guilty to all charges.
A jury returned its verdict on Friday, finding Casals guilty of a lesser charge of possession of cocaine and two counts of introducing contraband into a county detention facility, court records show.
He was sentenced to a year in prison with credit time for one day, followed by three years of probation. Casals must also complete 300 hours of community service and a substance abuse evaluation and any recommended treatment.
The Florida Bar website shows Casals does not have any discipline listed under his 10-year history.
He graduated from Nova Southeastern University’s Shepard Broad College of Law in 1999 and runs a Fort-Lauderdale-based private practice, the Law Offices of David Casals, according to the profile.