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Bolivia's Evo Morales held in contempt after missing court in trafficking trial

BUENOS AIRES, May 11 (Reuters) - A Bolivian judge on Monday held ‌former President Evo Morales in ‌contempt after he failed to appear in ​court for a trial where he faces charges of trafficking a minor, local outlet La Razon reported.

Reuters

Morales served ‌three terms as ⁠Bolivia's first indigenous president from 2006 to 2019. He ⁠resigned following a disputed election that plunged the country into turmoil.

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He ​is accused ​of having a ​relationship with a ‌teenager and having a child with her in 2016 while he was in office. Thousands of supporters have protested the investigation.

Last week, Morales ‌wrote on X that ​he was a victim ​of "legal ​warfare" and that "the government is ‌carrying out against me ​a brutal ​judicial and media persecution with fabricated charges to annihilate me morally ​and ‌physically."

(Reporting by Leila Miller and Sergio ​Limachi; Editing by Sarah Morland ​and Natalia Siniawski)

Bolivia's Evo Morales held in contempt after missing court in trafficking trial

BUENOS AIRES, May 11 (Reuters) - A Bolivian judge on Monday held ‌former President Evo Morales in ‌contempt after he failed to appear i...
Another big prediction for Titans QB Cam Ward in 2026

Wednesday turned out to be another banner day forTennessee Titansquarterback Cam Ward. Not only did the league and Netflix announce that his journey to the NFL was documented for the show "Quarterback," which debuts on July 14, but he also made another list of potential breakout players.

USA TODAY

The latest to buy into Ward and a potential jump in 2026 is Bradley Locker of Pro Football Focus (PFF) who has Ward asthe quarterback on his All-Breakout team.

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Quarterback: Cameron Ward,Tennessee Titans

The 2025 quarterback class wasn’t as star-studded as the one prior, but it’s already produced three starters with upside going into 2026. Picking any of Ward, Tyler Shough or Jaxson Dart to excel in Year 2 would be valid, but Ward feels like the most logical selection.

Ward’s rookie campaign didn’t go quite as expected, finishing with a 56.4 PFF passing grade and more turnover-worthy plays (23) than big-time throws (21). Yet Ward showed real flashes, including compiling three games with at least a 78.7 overall PFF grade in Week 12 or later. Plus, Ward’s receiving corps earned just the 27th-best PFF receiving grade.

The circumstances are now significantly better for the former No. 1 overall pick going into his second season. Ward has two major assets at receiver in No. 4 selection Carnell Tate as well as former Giant Wan’Dale Robinson, who can help attack every area of the field. Add in new offensive coordinator Brian Daboll, and the pieces should be there for Ward’s sky-high talent to consistently materialize.

Ward and the entire Titans’ offense should be in a much better place heading into 2026 with an actual playcalling offensive coordinator running the show. Ward didn’t start to flash until the second half of 2025 after Brian Callahan, and his lack of feel for playcalling, was fired.

Now, with Daboll calling the plays, and what appears to be an improved receiving corps, Ward should be able to take a giant step forward this season.

This article originally appeared on Titans Wire:Tennessee Titans: Cam Ward predicted to be a breakout QB

Another big prediction for Titans QB Cam Ward in 2026

Wednesday turned out to be another banner day forTennessee Titansquarterback Cam Ward. Not only did the league and Netflix announce tha...
NFL's smallest player cut by Denver Broncos before ever playing a game

One of the smallest players in NFL history was brutally cut this week despite only practicing in walkthroughs without pads in the past few days, with his NFL future now in question.

The Mirror Deuce Vaughn has been cut by the Broncos

Deuce Vaughn is entering his fourth year in the NFL, after initially being withthe Dallas Cowboyswhen his father's team drafted him. His father, Chris, is a scout for the Cowboys and was given the responsibility of calling Deuce to let him know they'd drafted him in the sixth round of the 2023 class.

The 5-foot-5 running back spent two years with the Cowboys, behind the likes of Ezekiel Elliott and Tony Pollard, before moving on tothe Broncoslast season, spending time on the practice squad while just missing out on a Super Bowl appearance. It comes asan ESPN show halted for breaking NFL news about the Broncos and the Chiefs.

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Vaughn's size saw him fall to the sixth round, while hoping to make an impact as a running back and receiver in the league.

The offensive player impressed in preseason, but has had limited impact in his regular-season games in the NFL, with the Broncos cutting him this week.

The Broncos instead signed tryout players Michael Woods (wide receiver) and Paul Manning (cornerback), releasing Vaughn and Will Wright (cornerback) in the process.

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This came after Denver signed him to a futures contract after the 2025 season, indicating that it wanted to keep him around in the offense.

Vaughn will now hope to latch on with another team to keep his NFL dreams alive.

Deuce Vaughn is one of the smallest players in NFL history

He is believed to be the second-shortest player in NFL history, behind Jack Shapiro, who played in the league in 1929 at just 5-foot-1.

Vaughn was compared to Darren Sproles when he came into the league, a running back and wide receiver for the San Diego Chargers, New Orleans Saints, and Philadelphia Eagles, who spent 14 years in the league.

Both Sproles and Vaughn had played for the Kansas State Wildcats.

The Broncos have made some big moves this offseason to bolster their roster, which came just a few plays away from making it to the Super Bowl — headlined by trading their first-round pick to acquire Jaylen Waddle from the Miami Dolphins.

They'll hope to see quarterback Bo Nix take a step up after a somewhat disappointing second season, after impressing as a rookie.

They'll also hope to see their defensive unit continue to dominate.

Elsewhere,Jaxson Dart has issued a violent promise to New York Giants fans.

NFL's smallest player cut by Denver Broncos before ever playing a game

One of the smallest players in NFL history was brutally cut this week despite only practicing in walkthroughs without pads in the past ...
UConn, South Carolina, coaches slated for rematch in November

Coaches Geno Auriemma of UConn and Dawn Staley of South Carolina will be on opposing benches just seven months after their fiery exchange at the end of their Final Four game in April.

Field Level Media

The Huskies and Gamecocks will play as part of a doubleheader at the annual Basketball Hall of Fame Women's Showcase on Nov. 24 at Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Conn.

UCLA, which defeated South Carolina 79-51 for the program's first NCAA national championship last month, will face St. John's in the other game as the 13th annual event was altered from two days to one.

The Gamecocks had defeated the Huskies 62-48 on April 3 in Phoenix, earning a spot in the national final against UCLA and ending UConn's perfect season and 54-game win streak.

As the final seconds ticked down, the two head coaches walked toward each other as though they were about to shake hands.

However, Auriemma didn't put forward his hand, instead making a comment to Staley, who reacted angrily, and the two had to be separated. Auriemma was led away, but he soon came back past Staley, who continued to shout at him.

In his postgame interview, Auriemma complained about the Gamecocks' physical play, adding, "Their coach rants and raves on the sideline and calls the referees some names you don't wanna hear."

His initial apology the next day didn't mention Staley by name. Several days later, Auriemma apologized again, singling out Staley and saying he spoke with her about the incident. Staley issued a statement, saying she had moved on from the dispute.

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"With the college women's basketball season behind us, it's time to move forward and close the chapter on how our semifinal game with UConn ended," Staley wrote in her statement. "I spoke with Geno and I want to be clear -- I have a great deal of respect for him and what he's meant to the game. One moment doesn't define a career and it doesn't change the impact he's had on growing women's basketball."

Earlier this month, Auriemma said of his actions following the loss, "When I walked into the locker room afterward with the coaches, you are just shaking your head, thinking five more seconds, you couldn't keep it in for five more seconds. ... We are all human, and we all do dumb (stuff)."

South Carolina and UConn will meet in the regular season for the first time since Feb. 16, 2025, when the Huskies' ended the Gamecocks' 71-game home winning streak with an 87-58 rout. South Carolina was the defending national champion, and UConn went on to win the title that season in a rematch 82-59.

The Huskies lead the all-time series 11-6.

"It's always great to be back at an event tied to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame because we know it will be a great experience for teams and fans from start to finish," Staley said in the event's news release on Tuesday. "The organizers do a great job of creating elite matchups and an amazing environment at Mohegan Sun."

UConn won last year's Hall of Fame Showcase, beating Michigan 72-69 and Utah 93-41 over two days.

"The Basketball Hall of Fame Women's Showcase is an event we're excited to participate in each season," Auriemma said in the release. "It featured some of the top nonconference games and has become a great stage for women's basketball. Fans will once again get to see some great basketball at Mohegan Sun."

UCLA is 3-0 against St. John's, with the last meeting in November 2021. The Bruins graduated their top six players, and all were selected in the WNBA draft.

--Field Level Media

UConn, South Carolina, coaches slated for rematch in November

Coaches Geno Auriemma of UConn and Dawn Staley of South Carolina will be on opposing benches just seven months after their fiery exchan...
Tiger Woods’ lawyer and prosecutors are set to argue over prescription records in Florida DUI case

STUART, Fla. (AP) —Tiger Woods' attorney and prosecutors are set to argue Tuesday about whether the golfer's prescription drug records should be handed over to the state following hisMarch arrest in Floridaon suspicion of driving under the influence.

Associated Press

A hearing is scheduled for Tuesday morning in Martin County circuit court, just north of Palm Beach County. Prosecutors haveissued a subpoenaseeking copies of all prescription medication records for the legendary golfer at a Palm Beach pharmacy from the start of the year through the end of March. Defense attorney Doug Duncan said in a court filing last month that Woods has a constitutional right to privacy when it comes to his prescription medications.

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If the judge determines the drug records are necessary, Duncan has also asked for a protective order limiting their release only to prosecutors, law enforcement officers, state experts and Woods' defense team.

Woods has pleaded not guilty todriving under the influence. A sheriff’s office report said deputies found two pain pills in his pocket, and he showed signs of impairment after his SUV clipped a truck's trailer and rolled onto its side.

Woods was traveling at high speeds on a beachside, residential road on Jupiter Island with a 30 mph (nearly 50 kph) speed limit when his Land Rover caused $5,000 in damage to the truck, according to an incident report. Woods agreed to a Breathalyzer test that showed no signs of alcohol, but refused a urine test, authorities said.

Tiger Woods’ lawyer and prosecutors are set to argue over prescription records in Florida DUI case

STUART, Fla. (AP) —Tiger Woods' attorney and prosecutors are set to argue Tuesday about whether the golfer's prescription drug ...
Trump promised to hold 30,000 migrants at Guantanamo. It's mostly empty.

Just eight days after returning to the White House last year, President Trumpannouncedplans to turn the U.S. military base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, into a massive detention center to hold 30,000 detainees facing deportation as part of his aggressive crackdown on illegal immigration.

CBS News

But a CBS News review of internal government documents and information provided to Congress shows the detention facilities at Guantanamo Bay are sitting mostly empty over a year later, even though the highly publicized operation is projected to cost the American military over $70 million.

On May 11, the U.S. government was holding just six immigration detainees at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, all of them nationals of Haiti, according to federal documents obtained by CBS News. Over the past year, the documents show, 832 immigration detainees have been transferred to the base on more than 100flights.

In fact, there are significantly more government employees assigned to the immigration detention operation at Guantanamo than detainees, according to the documents. This week, government employees outnumbered detainees roughly 100 to 1.

Figures provided to Congress indicate the Department of Defense has 522 personnel to assist with immigration detention at Guantanamo. The internal federal documents show there are around 60 U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and non-military staff assigned to the mission, too.

Information provided by the Department of Defense to Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren in April also shows the Guantanamo immigration detention effort is expected to cost $73 million, just for the U.S. military. That is an increase from the previously publicly reported estimate of $40 million.

Mr. Trump said in January 2025 that officials would set up 30,000 detention beds at Guantanamo. But the internal federal documents indicate the base's capacity to hold immigration detainees is limited to roughly 400 beds. On May 11, fewer than 2% of the beds were occupied.

Together with the numbers provided to Congress, the documents shed light on the status of the controversial and largely secretive effort to hold civil immigration detainees at Guantanamo, where the indefinite detention of post-9/11 terrorism suspects gained infamy over allegations of abuse, due process violations and torture.

In a statement to CBS News, Warren, who received the projected cost for the Guantanamo operation, accused President Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth of "wasting billions in taxpayer funds on a cruel immigration agenda."

CBS News has reached out to the Pentagon and the Department of Homeland Security for comment, including on whether the Trump administration plans to continue the operation to hold immigrant detainees at the naval base.

"Political theater"

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In this photo reviewed by U.S. military officials, a U.S. soldier stands between two cells, one used as a library and the other a gym, inside the Camp VI detention facility at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. naval base in Cuba on June 6, 2018.  / Credit: AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa, File

Publicly, the Trump administration has released scant details about its operation to hold those awaiting deportation at the Guantanamo base, which sits on Cuban land that the U.S. has long argued is being leased. The Cuban government alleges the arrangement is illegal.

Before the second Trump administration, the U.S. government, under Republican and Democratic presidents, used Guantanamo to house some migrants intercepted at sea, including tens of thousands of Haitians during the Clinton administration.

But in February 2025, officials begansending groupsofdetaineesarrested by ICE in the U.S. to Guantanamo, so they could be held there pending their deportation. Initially, Mr. Trump and his top aides vowed to send the "worst" detainees and "high-priority criminal aliens" to Guantanamo. But subsequent reporting found that was not entirely accurate.

Soon after the effort started, CBS NewsrevealedGuantanamo was being used to hold both migrants with alleged gang or criminal histories, and detainees categorized as "low-risk" because they lacked serious criminal records — or any at all. Then, in April 2025, CBS News disclosed that theinternal government memogoverning the operation gave officials wide-ranging discretion to decide who to send to Guantanamo, including the ability to transfer non-criminal detainees there.

Officials have been housing the detainees considered to be "low-risk" at the Migration Operations Center, a barrack-like facility that had previously held asylum-seekers intercepted at sea. Meanwhile, those deemed to be "high-risk" immigration detainees have been detained at Camp VI, a section of the post-9/11 prison complex that still holds some terrorism suspects.

The legality of detaining civil immigration detainees at Guantanamo is still being litigated. In December, a federal judge in Washington, D.C., found ina preliminary rulingthat the immigration detention effort at Guantanamo was "impermissibly punitive" and likely unlawful, but stopped short of blocking the operation.

Lee Gelernt, the American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who filed the lawsuit, said "the use of Guantanamo is nothing more than political theater like so many other administration policies."

"Not only is the Trump administration's use of Guantanamo unprecedented and illegal, but it serves no legitimate policy goal given the financial and logistical burdens of using this notorious military base for immigration purposes," Gelernt said.

Theresa Cardinal Brown, a former DHS immigration official under presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, said the Trump administration set up Guantanamo and other controversial facilities, such as "Alligator Alcatraz" in Florida, to push people in the U.S. illegallyto self-deportand deter others from entering the country unlawfully.

Cardinal Brown said Guantanamo's deterrence effect is difficult to measure, beyond the low levels of illegal crossings at the U.S.-Mexico border. But she said it's clear the operation has been costly.

"Everything has to be shipped in there, right? It's not like we're importing things from Cuba," Cardinal Brown said. "Everything has to come from a U.S. source to that military installation. It's going to be much, much more expensive."

Trump promised to hold 30,000 migrants at Guantanamo. It's mostly empty.

Just eight days after returning to the White House last year, President Trumpannouncedplans to turn the U.S. military base in Guantanam...
Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

This week, Chiefs Wire's Ed Easton Jr. spoke with Team USA Weightlifter Aaron Williams.

USA TODAY

In his interview with Easton Jr., Williams discusses his recent offseason workout withKansas City Chiefslinebacker Jack Cochrane at USA Weightlifting's National Team Camp at the Olympic and Paralympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. He also reflected on meeting the Chiefs' head strength and conditioning coach/director of sports science, Ryan Reynolds, and his favorite NFL team.

"Ryan (Reynolds) was awesome. He was there, of course, and he had a blast. He was willing to let us give him some pointers here and there. " He's also very receptive," said Williams. "It shows that whenever you have a successful program, everyone tends to take in information rather than block it out and go with what they know." So it was really cool to see, also at the very high level of the NFL, that even your strength coaches are willing to take in information and then maybe even use it later on down the road for other athletes as well."

Reynolds watched Cochrane during his weightlifting workout, and is entering his 11th NFL season with the Chiefs. Williams opened up about his love for football growing up, including his favorite NFL team.

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"It's going to sound a little cheesy, but I grew up in Germany, and the only reason that I actually wanted to play football is because my dad played football, so he would be the reason that I really wanted to play football, and then he's a Dallas Cowboys fan," said Williams, "I was a Pittsburgh Steelers fan, so I don't know where we went wrong. He thought he was raising a Cowboys fan, but that was my favorite team to watch whenever I was playing football."

The USA Weightlifting Athlete Identification & Recruitment Initiative is not grassroots development and is not intended for mass participation. Its purpose is to support the high-performance pipeline by identifying outlier athletes—often nearing the end of high school or collegiate eligibility—who may be capable of transitioning into weightlifting and becoming difference-makers at the highest level of the sport.

For more information, visit the USA WeightliftingAthlete Identification & Recruitment Initiativeand learn more about Williams on hisWeightlifting profile.

This article originally appeared on Chiefs Wire:Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

This week, Chiefs Wire's Ed Easton Jr. spoke with Team USA Weightlifter Aaron Williams. In his interview with Easton Jr., Wil...

 

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