A third suspect pleaded guilty Monday to his role in the New York City murder of DJ Jam Master Jay, a founding member of legendary hip-hop group Run DMC.
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In a sprawling office in Hefei, the eastern Chinese electric vehicle hub, hundreds of employees and several robotic arms sat refining software developed jointly by German behemoth Volkswagen and Chinese EV maker XPeng.
A humpback whale that had been struggling to survive after beaching near the German coast was Saturday released into the North Sea off Denmark after being transported in a barge, a member of a rescue mission said.
Timberwolves' Edwards 'questionable' for game one against Spurs
Minnesota star Anthony Edwards has been listed as "questionable" for the Timberwolves' NBA second-round series opener against the San Antonio Spurs on Monday with a left knee injury.
Edwards suffered a bone bruise when he hyperextended his left knee on an awkward landing in game four of the Timberwolves' first-round series against the Denver Nuggets, missing the next two games of Minnesota's triumph.
ESPN reported that Edwards went through a light workout this weekend and traveled with the team to San Antonio, citing unnamed sources in reporting there is "growing optimism" that Edwards could return to the lineup during the second round.
Edwards was already managing a nagging right knee problem that sidelined him late in the regular season.
A return this week would be a huge boost for the Timberwolves in their duel with Victor Wembanyama and the second-seeded Spurs.
Minnesota will be without Donte DiVincenzo for the rest of the playoffs after he suffered a ruptured right Achilles tendon in the same game in which Edwards was hurt.
They also listed guard Ayo Dosunmu -- who scored 43 points in the Timberwolves' game-three win over the Nuggets -- as questionable for Monday with a sore right calf.
Bozeman man convicted of hunting violations after witness records illegal deer kill
BOZEMAN, Mont. — Witness video and photos helped wardens investigate a Bozeman man who was later convicted in a Madison County hunting case, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks (FWP) announced in a release.
Juan Garcia-Gomez pleaded guilty last month in Madison County Justice Court to misdemeanor counts of unlawful possession of a game animal, unlawful hunting from a public highway and failing to validate his general deer license.
According to the press release, the case came from a joint investigation involving FWP and the Madison County Sheriff’s Office stemming from a witness video near Jeffers in November that showed Garcia-Gomez in the roadway, leaning against his vehicle and shooting a mule deer buck on a nearby hillside. The release said he then loaded the animal into his vehicle and left.
The witness also found a spent shell casing in the road, took a photo of it and reported the case to FWP. Wardens then worked with the Madison County Sheriff’s Office to detain Garcia-Gomez and continue the investigation.
The agency said Garcia-Gomez paid $1,100 in fines and received a 24-month suspension of his hunting and fishing privileges. Montana is part of the Interstate Wildlife Violator Compact, which means a loss of privileges in one state applies in all 50 states.
Pistons rout Magic to complete comeback, advance in NBA playoffs
AFP AFP
The Detroit Pistons dominated the Orlando Magic 116-94 on Sunday to complete their NBA playoff series comeback and punch their ticket to the Eastern Conference semi-finals.
Cade Cunningham scored 32 points and handed out 12 assists and Tobias Harris added 30 points with nine rebounds as the Pistons, who trailed 3-1 in the best-of-seven series, wrapped up a 4-3 triumph.
The Pistons, who locked up the top seed in the East with the third-best record in the league, notched their first playoff series victory since 2008.
"It feels good, feels good that we handled our business and did what we set out to do," Cunningham told broadcaster ABC.
They'll next face either the fourth-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers or fifth-seeded Toronto Raptors.
The Cavs hosted game seven of their series later on Sunday.
Detroit had already fended off elimination with victories in games five and six against the Magic -- erasing a 24-point deficit on Friday to force Sunday's decider.
It's the second time the Pistons have rallied from 3-1 down to top the Magic, having accomplished the feat in the first round in 2003.
"They really pushed us to the limit," Cunningham said. "We've grown a lot because of this series, because of that team. So huge credit to them, and we're ready to get to the second round and continue business."
Paolo Banchero scored 38 points with nine rebounds and six assists for Orlando. But he got precious little scoring support and the Pistons took full advantage of 16 Magic turnovers that led to 19 Detroit points.
Banchero, who struggled offensively in game six, scored the Magic's first 11 points and Orlando emerged from a tight first quarter with a two-point lead.
The back-and-forth action continued early in the second, Detroit finally creating some separation behind a 17-point second-quarter outburst from Harris that helped the Pistons build a 60-49 lead at halftime.
Cunningham's floater, off a feed by Harris, pushed the Pistons' lead to 20 points early in the third quarter and they were in control the rest of the way.
The Magic cut a 25-point fourth-quarter deficit to 14 with 4:22 to play only for Detroit to pull away again.
bb/js
Verstappen laments spin and struggle for pace in Miami
AFP AFP
Max Verstappen said Red Bull had improved a lot but still lack the pace and performance to challenge for wins, after finishing fifth in Sunday's Miami Grand Prix.
The four-time world champion enjoyed driving a heavily upgraded car as he sought success for the first time this year, but was set back by a spin on the opening lap.
"I lost the rear and tried to minimize the time loss," he said of his chaotic first lap, which led to him making an early pit stop.
"Early on, the hard tire didn't work for us and it was tough," he added. "We dropped quite heavily down the pack.
"Maybe I could've been in the place Oscar finished (third) if we did enough, but it's always easy to say that afterwards."
"Unfortunately, we are still lacking a bit, but we'll be better. I don't know how much more pace there is."
The Dutch racer, 28, said that despite the car's improvements, he did not think he could have realistically fought for the win in Miami.
"It was tough," he said. "We've improved a lot this weekend, but still lack a bit and for sure there's more pace to unlock."
Verstappen's Red Bull teammate Isack Hadjar started from the back of the grid after being disqualified from qualifying and then crashed out of the race on lap six.
He hit the barriers in the chicane and the crash triggered a Safety Car interval that helped Verstappen by giving him a cheap pit stop.
"It was a tough one and for me, obviously, breaking the car is pissing me off a lot," said Hadjar. "It was easy points today considering the car I had so I feel I just threw it all away.
"I can't really remember what happened because it went so very quickly. It felt like it was a big hit and I didn't see it coming. The car was broken and I couldn't stop it.
"It just shows how much you need to be focused and I wasn't."
str-amz/js
Ferrari's Leclerc admits he threw away Miami podium finish
AFP AFP
Charles Leclerc admitted he threw away a podium finish for Ferrari with a wild penultimate lap as he dropped from third to finish sixth in Sunday's Miami Grand Prix.
On a day of mixed emotions for Italian motorsport -- with teenage prodigy Kimi Antonelli winning a third consecutive race from pole as the country mourned the death of racing legend Alessandro Zanardi -- Ferrari failed to live up to their hopes.
The team arrived in Florida with an extensive upgrades package that buoyed their ambitions. But after a strong showing in Friday practice they struggled to keep pace with rivals including Antonelli's Mercedes team and McLaren.
"I was third and I pushed very hard in the second-to-last lap. I thought it was a good idea to kind of let Oscar (Piastri) go for me to get the overtake (of him)," said Leclerc.
"I knew it was going to be very difficult to stay in front of him otherwise, and it was a very poor decision.
"In the space of four corners, I put a very strong race in the bin -- so I am very frustrated about that."
Leclerc survived a big spin and smacked the barriers in his efforts as he dropped places and battled to the finish.
He was reported to the stewards for leaving the track too many times and for driving his car in an unsafe condition on the final lap.
"I don't know what will be the decision of the stewards," he said. "I did my best to try and make the corners first of all... But it was probably a lot more difficult for me than it looked to be from the outside."
His Ferrari teammate, seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton, was also disappointed as he came home seventh.
"Obviously, not a good weekend -- P7 in both races," said Hamilton, referring to Saturday's sprint.
"Just stuck in no man's land."
After suffering damage from first-lap contact with Franco Colapinto's Alpine, after four-time champion Max Verstappen spun, "there was nothing I could do," said Hamilton.
"I lost a lot of performance from that."
Hamilton added: "Really unfortunate because the team worked so hard. We come away with a few points, but yeah, we move on."
amz/bb
No.4 Young cruises to PGA title at Doral
AFP AFP
World number four Cameron Young cruised through Sunday's final round despite a penalty to win the Cadillac Championship by six strokes, taking his third career PGA Tour triumph.
The 28-year-old American called a penalty on himself in the second fairway when he saw the ball move then salvaged par on his way to firing a four-under par 68.
He finished 72 holes on 19-under 269 for the $3.6 million top prize at Trump National Doral.
Young became only the third wire-to-wire winner at Doral, the first since Andy Bean in 1977.
"When the golf course is difficult, when the playing conditions are difficult, that tends to make it easier for me mentally," Young said.
"That's a big part of keeping yourself in it out here... thankfully I was able to stay where my feet were and hit a bunch of good shots."
Young, who turns 29 on Thursday, won his first PGA title last August at Greensboro, captured the Players Championship in March and shared third last month at the Masters.
His six-stroke victory margin matched the largest ever in a PGA event at Doral, a feat last managed by Hubert Green in 1976.
"The self-belief just continues to build," Young said. "I put myself in plenty of good places over the course of the last four or five years and recently have started to come out on the better side of it so excited for the next few weeks."
More than an inch of rain fell overnight, delaying the final round of the $20 million signature event after softening the Blue Monster course.
US President Donald Trump watched Young sink his final putt from a suite at the 18th hole.
Top-ranked Scottie Scheffler birdied three of the last four holes to shoot 68 and finish second on 275, one stroke ahead of fellow American Ben Griffin.
It was the third consecutive runner-up finish for Scheffler after placing second at the Masters and Heritage tournaments last month. Not since 2014 had one player managed three PGA runner-up efforts in a row.
The result came in Scheffler's final tuneup before defending his PGA Championship title in two weeks at Aronimink.
Australian Adam Scott fired a 64 to share fourth on 277 with Austrian Sepp Straka, who shot 66, and South Korean Kim Si-woo, who closed with a 70.
- Handled it pretty well -
After calling the penalty on himself at the second Young hit his approach to 13 feet and sank the clutch par putt to regain momentum.
"Your heart sinks when you see (the ball) move, but it moved and that's part of what golf is about," Young said. "There's no one that was going to give me a penalty there but myself.
"I've had about four of those on the PGA Tour now, so I need to start setting the club down a little softer, but it's just one of those times. How was I going to look the other way and say it didn't move when it rolled over and went an inch forward?
"Just unfortunate but I handled it pretty well."
He followed with birdie putts from just inside 12 feet at the third and just beyond 12 feet at the fifth.
Young reached the green in two at the par-five eighth and sank a four-foot birdie putt, leading by seven at the turn.
After sandwiching a birdie at the par-five 12th between bogeys at 11 and 13, Young closed with a 12-foot birdie putt at the par-three 15th and drove the green at the par-four 16th to set up a tap-in birdie.
js/bb
Inter Milan win Italian title for third time in six seasons
AFP AFP
Inter Milan won their third Serie A title in six seasons on Sunday thanks to a comfortable 2-0 win over Parma at a jubilant San Siro.
Marcus Thuram's side-footed finish just before half-time set Inter on their way before Henrikh Mkhitaryan's second-half goal put the Scudetto beyond doubt.
With three matches left, Inter have a 12-point lead over reigning champions Napoli and 15 more points than third-placed AC Milan.
It was a 21st Italian title for Inter, who have successfully overcome the traumatic end to last season under the guidance of coach Cristian Chivu, who was almost a novice at this level when he took over last summer.
Less than a year after losing the 2025 title race by a point and collapsing to a 5-0 humiliation by Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League final, Inter are back at the top.
Inter owe this success Chivu, the club's former player and a surprise appointment in June to replace Simone Inzaghi, who won six trophies and reached two Champions League finals in four seasons but left for the riches of Saudi Arabia.
With small steps, Chivu has breathed new life into the side.
Inter can still complete the third league and cup double in their history if they beat Lazio in the Coppa Italia final on May 13 at the Olympic Stadium in Rome.
jr/gj/pb
Miami champ Antonelli shrugs off success, vows 'back to work'
AFP AFP
Kimi Antonelli smiled, thanked his team and his family and pledged to "get back to work" as soon as he could after making a slice of Formula One history by winning Sunday's Miami Grand Prix.
The Italian teenager -- already the youngest driver, at 19, to lead an F1 title race -- had just become the first to win his first three races from consecutive pole positions, an unprecedented feat that delighted Italy's legion of motor racing fans.
"This is just the beginning," he said, shrugging off the mounting excitement and expectation in his homeland.
"The road is still long. We are working super-hard and the team is doing an incredible job and without them, I wouldn't be here."
He added: "I'm going to enjoy this one and then get straight back to work because Canada is in two weeks' time."
Antonelli's win was aided by an undercut pit stop that enabled him to pass world champion Lando Norris midway through the race. Antonelli drove with determined aplomb to resist the McLaren driver in the closing stages.
He will travel to Montreal for the Canadian Grand Prix later this month with a 20-point lead over teammate George Russell, the pre-season favorite, and praised by his peers and rivals for his precocious talent.
"I hope all of Italy doesn't go mad now," said team chief Toto Wolff.
"I know it is the World Cup and they will not be there so... We have to keep our feet on the ground and if the whole country is behind us it is important and going to be difficult to keep our feet on the ground."
Norris mischievously eavesdropped on Antonelli's post-race interviews and slapped his back in congratulations after.
"He's doing a great job and hats off to him. He's under pressure to beat his team-mate who has been here a long time," said Norris.
"He is proving everyone wrong, and he's a nice guy too -- and it is so annoying because I want to beat him."
With Norris expressing disappointment over his team's pit-stop strategy, Antonelli agreed that coming in at "just the right moment" had been "the key" to his win.
"When I came out, I had no traffic and I pushed," he said.
"Now I am feeling stronger and stronger all the time and I have more control."
"I know I can be calmer and I got stressed today in the car with the downshifts and some issues, but overall it was a great race and I am so happy that I won."
His team-mate Russell, who finished fourth behind McLaren's Oscar Piastri, admitted it had been a difficult weekend for him.
He also showered praise on his "fantastic" young teammate Antonelli.
"He has great talent and speed, but it is only four races down and there is a long way to go."
amz/bb
Ruston's Ahmad Hudson commits to LSU
RUSTON, La. -- Five-star TE Ahmad Hudson has committed to play football at LSU.
The No. 1 ranked tight end in the Class of 2027 had offers from several schools like Nebraska, Ole Miss and Ohio State.
The Ruston Bearcats star heads into his senior season listed at 6'6" and 245 pounds on On3/Rivals.
No.1 Korda cruises to LPGA Mexico crown
AFP AFP
Top-ranked Nelly Korda cruised through Sunday's final round to win the Riviera Maya Open, capturing her 18th career LPGA triumph and second in as many weeks.
Korda matched the sensational 2001 start of Swedish legend Annika Sorenstam with her sixth top-two finish in as many events this season, taking her third victory of the year.
Coming off her third major title last week, the 27-year-old American fired a three-under par 69 to finish 72 holes on 17-under 271 for a four-stroke victory at El Camaleon in Playa del Carmen, Mexico.
Korda shattered the old 72-hole event record of 12-under.
"I'm just enjoying myself and I love the competition," Korda said when asked if she was playing the best golf of her life. "I love traveling to places like Mexico, all over the world, and I'm just having fun.
"We always put in the same exact amount of work and you just never know. It's golf."
Thailand's Arpichaya Yubol fired a closing 70 to finish second on 275 with China's Liu Yu third on 276, American Brianna Do fourth on 278 and Colombian amateur Maria Jose Marin fifth on 280.
Korda made only two bogeys all week and one came on the final hole, when she lost her tee shot and found a bunker but scrambled to make a long bogey putt to complete the triumph.
"On the last hole I was humbled by golf," Korda said. "I had a pretty smooth day and on the last hole it just kind of humbles you a little bit."
It has still been an amazing start to the year for Korda, who captured last week's Chevron Championship and also won the season-opening LPGA Tournament of Champions.
She finished second at the LPGA Founders Cup and Ford Championship in March and last month's Aramco Championship.
"You put in the work and sometimes it works out," Korda said. "I'm just grateful I have an amazing team that no matter through the ups and downs we've all stayed the same. We all are super motivated and just happy to be out here."
Korda eagled the par-five fifth hole and followed with birdies at the sixth and par-five seventh to reach 18-under par, stretching her lead to six strokes.
At the par-five 18th, Korda suffered a lost ball off the tee, then found a bunker before closing with a bogey.
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