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Red flag warning as winds challenge crews fighting Franklin fire

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Wide swaths of Los Angeles and Ventura counties are under a red flag warning until 6 p.m. Wednesday as Santa Ana winds whip back up, posing a challenge to crews trying to extinguish the Franklin fire in Malibu.

The blaze had scorched more than 4,000 acres and was 78% contained as of Tuesday afternoon, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. Fire crews have prepositioned resources in case the fresh round of Santa Ana winds cause the fire to start moving again.

Southern California Edison warned customers in Malibu to prepare for potential power cuts Tuesday evening to reduce the risk of wildfire ignition. Topanga Canyon Boulevard, a heavily trafficked road connecting Malibu to the San Fernando Valley, was closed to nonresidents Tuesday afternoon because of wildfire danger and will remain so for the duration of the red flag warning, Caltrans announced.

The Franklin fire erupted last Tuesday amid a rare “particularly dangerous situation” warning with critically low humidity levels in the single digits and wind gusts of up to 75 mph. The current red flag warning is for a more moderate Santa Ana wind event, with gusts of 40 to 60 mph and humidity levels in the low 10% to 20% range, according to the National Weather Service.

“A typical red flag warning is still very dangerous, but it’s just not going to be quite as dry and not quite as windy,” weather service meteorologist Carol Smith said. “If we do have a fire, we are still expecting rapid growth and extreme fire behavior.”

The red flag warning was in effect as of 3 p.m. Tuesday and covers most of Ventura County and the western half of Los Angeles County. The highest wind gusts are forecast for the Santa Monica, Santa Susanna and San Gabriel mountains.

At the peak of the Franklin fire, almost 2,000 fire personnel were deployed to combat the blaze. On Tuesday, 819 personnel remained assigned to the fire, which has destroyed 20 structures and damaged 28 more, according to Cal Fire.

Firefighters are focused on strengthening fire control lines in steep, rugged terrain and mopping up any small fires around structures, the agency said.

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L.A. County gives probation chief emergency powers over workforce

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L.A. County agreed to bestow new powers on its beleaguered probation chief, giving him temporary authority to redirect some of the county’s workforce as the agency defies a state order to shut down Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in Downey over lack of staffing.

The supervisors voted 4 to 1 Tuesday to declare a “local emergency” over the looming closure of Los Padrinos, arguing that the extreme step was warranted to prevent being forced to release all young people incarcerated at the facility “onto the streets,” including those accused of violent crimes.

County officials say the emergency proclamation will allow them to throw new resources at a perennial staffing crisis that has gone unsolved for years. The plan, crafted by Supervisors Kathryn Barger and Hilda Solis, will allow Probation Chief Guillermo Viera Rosa to reassign staff from across the county’s massive workforce — all of whom become “disaster service workers” in emergencies — and have them assist the agency.

“Decisive action needs to be taken now,” Barger said at a Tuesday news conference. “The Probation Department has a large group of staff who are simply not showing up for work.”

The emergency declaration comes days after the county flouted a demand by the state to shut down Los Padrinos after inspectors repeatedly found the hall was dangerously short-staffed, with hundreds of workers out on medical leave or calling out due to dangerous conditions.

Vicky Waters, a Probation Department spokesperson, said the emergency order does not mean employees from the L.A. County Library will suddenly find themselves doing the work of a peace officer.

Rather, Viera Rosa will have authority over staff from other county departments that frequently send employees into the halls for non-security purposes, such as teachers from the county’s Department of Education or mental health professionals from the Department of Mental Health.

“We need staff, but it’s not just probation officers,” said Waters.

Viera Rosa estimated an average of 14% of Los Padrinos staffers are calling out per shift, with the numbers higher near the weekend.

“It’s a vicious cycle,” Viera Rosa said. “The less staff you have, the less you’re able to do, the less safe folks feel. … The entire model breaks down.”

The county will also start offering bonuses of up to $24,000 for employees who transfer from other agencies and will form a task force to figure out how to lure employees on leave back to work, according to the motion.

Fesia Davenport, the county’s chief executive officer, said that roughly 700 probation employees are out for medical leave, including some, she suggested, who should not be.

“We are going to be working with our departments to really go through each of those [medical] notes with a fine-toothed comb,” Davenport said.

The plan was met with skepticism among both advocates for incarcerated youths and some on the board, who appeared doubtful the motion would have the intended effect.

“Today’s motion doesn’t unlock new authorities that the chief of probation doesn’t already have — especially over probation staff,” said Supervisor Lindsey Horvath, who cast the only vote against the plan.

“How about everybody show up for work?” Supervisor Holly Mitchell echoed.

Supervisor Janice Hahn, whose district includes the hall in Downey, said she respected the independence of other department heads and was “unsure about what giving our chief probation officer decision-making authority over their departments will mean.”

This month, Viera Rosa, who has been with the county less than a year and a half, told the board in a brief memo that he planned to retire at the end of the year. A week later, he changed his mind and announced his intention to stay. He has irked some on the board by failing to show up to public meetings and private meetings with his bosses, according to multiple sources who requested anonymity to discuss the sensitive situation.

Horvath and Hahn made an amendment to the motion Tuesday that will require Viera Rosa to be on site at Los Padrinos at least once per week and attend the meetings by the Probation Oversight Commission and the Board of Supervisors where his presence was requested.

“We need to be informed,” Hahn said.

She also called for releasing youths with ankle monitors who “do not pose a threat,” such as those facing charges of vandalism or shoplifting.

Waters, the probation spokesperson, said one-third of the youths incarcerated at Los Padrinos — 80 out of about 240 — are facing charges of murder, attempted murder or manslaughter. Los Padrinos houses youths whose cases have not yet been adjudicated.

The union representing deputy probation officers did not directly respond to supervisors’ allegations that some in their ranks were improperly on medical leave, but said they supported the emergency order and believed Los Padrinos needed to be kept open.

Advocates for the closure of Los Padrinos argue that the county is severely downplaying the findings of the state oversight board and fearmongering over the danger of what could happen if the youths inside are released.

After the county repeatedly failed to get a handle on the agency’s staffing crisis, the California Board of State and Community Corrections, which inspects juvenile halls, set a deadline of Dec. 12 for them to vacate Los Padrinos. The county refused, arguing that the staffing was “compliant with state regulations.”

“This motion is factually, legally and intellectually dishonest,” said Brooke Harris, executive director of the Pacific Juvenile Defender Center and a member of the Probation Oversight Commission. “Blaming this on the BSCC — whose job it is to inspect juvenile facilities all over the state — and on the youth in the care of this county is an overt attempt to escape legal responsibilities for these appalling failures.”

Araya Blakely, who works as mentor in Los Padrinos, said the issues extend far beyond the occasional staffing hiccup.

“We see the conditions firsthand,” said Blakely. “This motion is a gross attempt at displacing blame so business can continue as usual — meanwhile, kids are suffering.”

The county said it has appealed the decision with the state oversight board, which in turn said it was the first time it had received an appeal in its 13-year history.

The refusal to vacate has put the county in untested legal waters. Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Miguel Espinoza ordered the Probation Department to appear in court Monday to argue why the hall should not be closed down. The L.A. public defender’s office has said the agency will ask the courts to remove its clients from Los Padrinos in light of the shutdown order.

“What’s happening to our youth is an emergency,” Public Defender Ricardo Garcia said in a statement. “Our youth should not be in unsafe conditions, and they should be placed in suitable, supportive environments immediately.”

Davenport said county officials believed they did not need to vacate the hall while their appeal was pending.

“I take issue with the word ‘illegal’ because it assumes that this is a crime —this is a civil administrative process,” said Davenport. “While we are filing an appeal, it gives us an opportunity to continue to operate Los Padrinos until our appeal has been finally decided.”

The refusal to comply with the state order adds to a mountain of legal liability piling up for the department. The agency is under scrutiny by the California Department of Justice and facing thousands of lawsuits estimated to cost up to $3 billion stemming from sexual assault cases at probation facilities and shelters for children.

On Tuesday, the county agreed to a $30-million settlement for a federal class-action lawsuit filed in 2022 alleging inhumane conditions at the county’s two old halls — Central Juvenile Hall and Barry J. Nidorf — which the county was forced to close last year after similar issues with staffing.

The suit alleges youths were forced to “relieve themselves” in bottles and milk cartons and were stuck in “filthy and unsanitary” conditions, infested with cockroaches. There are also alleged instances of youths being forced to defecate in their cells. Agustin Herrera, the lead plaintiff, had his arm twisted by a staff member, who then tried to bribe him with a hamburger so he wouldn’t file a grievance, according to the suit.

Scott Rapkin, one of the attorneys on the case, said anyone who was in any of the county’s juvenile camps and halls after 2014 — about 9,000 people — is entitled to a chunk of the settlement.

“It’s a good-sized settlement and it’s going to provide some important justice to the thousands of young people that really lived in these horrific conditions and suffered from all kinds of abuse and excessive pepper spray and unnecessary shackling and illegal solitary confinement,” he said. “This is going to make a good difference to a lot of people.”

Rapkin said he had been hopeful that cutting a check in the tens of millions was going to force the county to change its management of the halls — though the recent chaos at Los Padrinos had thrown that into question.

“It’s the same sort of underlying issues,” he said of the problems facing Los Padrinos today. “It’s a shame that the Probation Department can’t get its act together.”

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D.A.: No guarantee that both Menendez brothers would be freed

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Some may think of the fates of the Menendez brothers as inextricably entwined, but Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman says he will not consider the pair a package deal when it comes to making a decision on their possible resentencing.

“While they’re called the ‘Menendez brothers case,’ there’s an Erik Menendez case and Lyle Menendez case,” Hochman told NBC’s Lester Holt. “So we will look at each case separately, which is the way they actually should be handled.”

The famous brothers were sentenced to life in prison without parole in 1996 for murdering their parents in their Beverly Hills mansion. This year, the brothers stepped back into the limelight, following two hit TV shows about their case, and a new effort by prosecutors to downgrade their sentence in light of recently emerged evidence.

Former Dist. Atty. George Gascón previously recommended that a judge give the brothers a new sentence of 50 years to life, which would make them eligible for immediate parole.

But then Hochman defeated Gascón in the November election and announced he would reconsider that decision.

In November, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Jesic decided to bump the date of the brothers’ resentencing hearing from Dec. 11 to Jan. 30 and 31. Jesic said he needed more time to review the complex case and give the new district attorney a chance to do the same.

This week, Hochman told NBC News he was hard at work “reading thousands of pages of confidential prison files,” but he did not indicate which way he was leaning. He said that he would speak to everyone in his office who had “ever touched the Menendez case” before making his decision.

However, Hochman recently removed two deputy district attorneys who had worked with Gascón on the recommendation to downgrade the brothers’ sentence, Variety reported.

The brothers’ defense team kicked off the latest effort to free them last year by filing a habeas corpus petition arguing that new evidence bolstered allegations that the brothers were victims of sexual abuse.

In the initial case, prosecutors argued that the killings were motivated by the boys’ desire to secure their $14-million inheritance, while the defense team argued that they were acting in self-defense following years of sexual abuse by their father, Jose Menendez.

The new evidence includes a letter that attorneys say Erik Menendez wrote about the sexual abuse he endured as a teenager prior to committing the killings as well as new claims brought forward by Roy Rosselló, a former member of the boy band Menudo, who said he too was raped by Jose Menendez.

Gascon had previously said he supported the resentencing because he believes societal views on sexual assault of children have evolved dramatically since the initial trials and could lead a modern-day jury to a different verdict.

The brothers’ attorneys are also seeking clemency from Gov. Gavin Newsom. However, Newsom said in November that he would delay his decision until Hochman had a chance to review the case.

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Record $116 million settlement for woman victimized in ‘rape club’ at California prison

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In a staggering settlement, the federal government will pay $116 million to more than 100 women who said they were sexually abused at the hands of employees at a now-shuttered federal prison in Dublin that was dubbed the “rape club.”

The settlement marks the largest ever paid by the federal government for misconduct in federal prisons. The women will receive an average of about $1.1 million each to settle litigation against the Bureau of Prisons over their mistreatment at the Federal Correctional Institution in the East Bay community of Dublin.

The developments are the latest twist in a years-long scandal surrounding the facility. Since an FBI investigation was launched and resulted in arrests in 2021, eight FCI Dublin employees have been charged with sexually abusing inmates.

Five have pleaded guilty, and juries have convicted two, including former warden Ray Garcia. The Bureau of Prisons last April temporarily closed the prison because it was so plagued by sexual abuse the it became known as the “rape club.” That closure became permanent last month.

“It sends a message that sexual abuse of incarcerated individuals will not be tolerated in this society,” said Jessica Pride, a San Diego-based attorney for many of the women. “There are now $116 million worth of reasons for the Bureau of Prisons to care about those behind bars.”

Pride said that 29 correctional officers who worked at the prison are still on leave. “I would expect there to be further criminal charges. With about 30 officers involved in these incidents, this went on for years,” she said. Pride said the settlement likely covers only about half the potential cases, as many new claims are still being processed.

“Many women still fear coming forward because they saw other women sent to the SHU (special housing unit). I talked to a woman who came forward today,” Pride said.

The financial settlement follows on the heels of a separate class-action suit, which was resolved last week with the Bureau of Prisons agreeing to subject facilities to a court-appointed monitor while publicly acknowledging that sexual abuse was pervasive and retaliation was common. The women housed at FCI Dublin were transferred to other facilities.

In March 2023, U.S. District Court Judge Yvonne Gonzalez referred to the prison’s “culture of sexual abuse” in sentencing Garcia, the former warden.

A federal jury in Oakland found him guilty of three counts of sex with an incarcerated person, four counts of abusive sexual contact and one count of lying to the FBI.

He groped three incarcerated women and made them pose naked for photos. Before his sentencing, one of his victims told Garcia: “You are a predator and a pervert. You are a disgrace to the federal government.”

In a statement, the Bureau of Prisons acknowledged Tuesday’s settlement, saying it “strongly condemns all forms of sexually abusive behavior and takes seriously its duty to protect the individuals in our custody as well as maintain the safety of our employees and community.”

The bureau added that the agency remains “committed to rooting out criminal behavior and holding accountable those who violate their oath of office.”

“While sexual abuse is unfortunately endemic to prison settings across America, this is the largest known combined Bureau of Prisons sexual abuse settlement in history. It’s a crucial step in holding the Bureau of Prisons accountable for its systematic failure to protect women in its custody,” said attorney Adam Slater of the prison that housed 605 inmates. His firm represented 24 of the 103 individuals in the settlement

Allegations of sexual assault at Dublin stretch back to the 1990s. Four employees were previously convicted of sexual abuse of inmates. Those incidents and civil litigation forced the prison to commit to reforms.

But lawyers say those reforms were “ultimately ineffective or abandoned.” By the early 2010s, they note, “a dozen FCI Dublin employees were removed for sexual abuse, including one who videotaped himself having sex with inmates and stored tapes in a prison locker — but none were arrested.”

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Katie Porter gets 5-year restraining order against ex-boyfriend

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An Orange County judge on Tuesday barred a former boyfriend of U.S. Rep. Katie Porter from contacting her or her children for the next five years and said he had committed domestic abuse by sending the congresswoman hundreds of threatening and harassing messages.

Superior Court Judge Elia Naqvi said her restraining order will bar 55-year-old Julian Willis from contacting Porter or her family. The order will also prohibit Willis from discussing Porter with nine of her current and former colleagues, including employees in her congressional office.

Porter, an Irvine Democrat who is leaving Congress next month, obtained a temporary restraining order against Willis last month.

She said in court filings that Willis, her former boyfriend of a decade, began bombarding her and her loved ones with messages that constituted “persistent abuse and harassment” after she asked him to move out of her Irvine home in August.

Porter said Willis sent more than 1,000 text messages and emails, including texting her 82 times in one 24-hour period in September, and 55 times on Nov. 12 before she blocked his number. The messages arrived so frequently that Porter said she feared for her safety and her emotional well-being.

Porter said Willis had been hospitalized twice since late 2022 on involuntary psychiatric holds and had a history of abusing prescription painkillers and other drugs.

On Tuesday, Porter waited in an Orange courtroom for nearly three hours as the judge worked through a docket of more than a dozen domestic violence cases.

When Porter’s case was called, the courtroom was empty except for two reporters. Porter sat next to her attorney with her hands folded in her lap, speaking only when the judge asked her a direct question.

Porter said that she and Willis had dated for a decade and that he had never physically abused her.

Porter also said Willis had repeatedly violated the November restraining order by continuing to email her and her colleagues and staff.

Porter’s attorney, Gerald Singleton, read a portion of an email that he received from Willis that said: “Please inform the court that I violated the terms of your partially approved, out-of-state restraining order.”

Singleton said it was a “great concern” that Willis had told Porter and law enforcement in New Jersey, where he is now living, that the restraining order didn’t apply to him.

Restraining orders can last up to five years in California. Naqvi said a five-year order was justified because the couple had been together for a decade and because it was “very concerning” that Willis had repeatedly violated the court order.

Porter declined to comment after the hearing.

Porter is leaving the House of Representatives in January after losing in California’s U.S. Senate primary in March. She has been discussed as a front-runner in the 2026 governor’s race in California after Gov. Gavin Newsom is forced out by term limits, but has not said whether she will run.

Willis did not appear in court Tuesday and has not submitted a formal response to Porter’s allegations. He did not respond to a request seeking comment Tuesday.

He previously told The Times that he did not have a lawyer and that the “universe will deliver me the right attorney when it’s time.”

Porter’s court filings included 22 pages of emails, text messages and other communications among Porter, family members and colleagues who had received messages from Willis.

The filing also included messages between Porter and Willis’ siblings as they discussed trying to help him during his psychiatric holds and while he was staying in a sober-living facility.

In one email that Willis sent to Singleton in late November, Willis said he had visited Porter’s oldest son at college out of state and told him that he would “bring the hammer down on Katie and smash her and her life into a million pieces.”

He told Porter’s attorney: “That’s what I am doing — and now you are next on my list, you piece of garbage.”

In another email in the filing, Willis told Singleton he would file a complaint with child protective services about Porter, who has a 12-year-old daughter and a 16-year-old son.

Willis previously made the news in 2021, when he was arrested after a fight that broke out during a Porter town hall meeting at a park in Irvine.

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That text from the post office could be a scam. How to avoid ‘smishing’ fraud

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The week before Christmas is crucial if you are sending packages or getting last-minute deliveries through the U.S. Postal Service. But be careful, because scammers are trying to use text messages to take advantage of you.

As of Tuesday, the USPS has delivered more than 7.4 million pieces of mail and packages this holiday season, according to its online tracker.

Consumers anxiously waiting for a package could be fooled by an unsolicited text message posing as a delivery update or request for account information from the post office. This type of text message could contain a web link and/or a phone number requesting a response.

If you haven’t signed up for a USPS tracking request for a specific package, post office officials urge you not to click on the link or reply to the message.

When an unknown phone number sends a deceptive text message that tries to bait you into responding with your personal or financial information, that scam is called “smishing.”

“These scammers often attempt to disguise themselves as a government agency, bank, or other company to lend legitimacy to their claims,” according to the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.

Through this scamming method, fraudsters are looking for personal information, including account usernames and passwords, credit and debit card information, Social Security numbers and personal identification numbers.

“That’s when scammers get to work, manipulating your personal information, which they can sell and/or use in other scams,” according to the Federal Communications Commission.

If you receive a text message from an unfamiliar number, from an agency for which you didn’t sign up for text alerts or that generally looks suspicious, it’s likely a scam, according to FCC officials.

As you wait for packages to arrive during the holiday season, experts share guidance on how to avoid smishing scams and offer several tools to keep tabs on your packages.

How to avoid smishing scams

It starts with remembering that companies and agencies generally do not contact you to ask for your username and password information, said FBI officials.

If you do receive a smishing message, experts say:

  • Don’t respond. When you open the text message do not click on any link, reply to the text or call any number you don’t recognize. Even if the message includes an option to “text STOP” to end messages, don’t respond.
  • If you want to check with the company/agency the text is purportedly from, look for their customer service phone number or email from a receipt or the company’s/agency’s website.
  • Delete all suspicious texts.
  • Protect any sensitive personal information — bank accounts, health records, social media accounts, etc. — by using multifactor authentication to access those sites or accounts.

Also be aware that the Postal Service will never send you an unsolicited text message regarding a package or piece of mail.

A suspicous text from the ‘Postal Service’

There are several tools you can use to track a package through the mail.

When you send a package, you will get a receipt — either physical or via email — that will contain a tracking number that you can enter on the USPS website for delivery updates.

You can also sign up for text tracking by sending a text to the number 28777 and including your tracking number in the body of the message.

USPS replies will include the acronym “USPS,” the tracking number, when your package will be available for pickup, and the sentence, “Reply STOP to cancel.” They won’t ask for a response from you.

To track pieces of mail and packages sent to your home, you can sign up for Daily Digest emails that preview what will arrive that day and when other items are expected to be delivered.

How to report a smishing scam

Report a mail-related smishing scam to the USPS Inspection Service by emailing [email protected]. In the email, include your name and the following information:

  • Copy and paste the suspicious text message into the email.
  • A screenshot of the text message showing the phone number of the sender and the date sent.
  • Include any details such as whether you clicked on the link, if you responded to the message with any personal information and if any personal information or bank information was affected due to the scam.

Once your email is sent, the Inspection Service will contact you if more information is needed.

If you get a smishing text purporting to be from another government agency or retailer, you can report it to the FCC online — or for Spanish, by calling (888) 225-5322 — or to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center.

FCC officials also suggest that you report the scam to your local law enforcement agency.

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The resurgence of Jaden McDaniels is a vital boost for the Wolves

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The stat sheet of a basketball game often feels as much like an impressionist painting as a mathematical calculation in terms of providing a picture of what actually transpired. 

For example, a player can nonchalantly toss the ball over to his teammate with no defender around either player. The teammate then proceeds to dazzle-dribble his way past two opponents and dances a little Euro-step around a third before laying the ball in the basket. If the official scorer is in a charitable mood that night, the player making the nonchalant pass will be credited with an assist. 

By contrast, a player can be so fearsomely skilled that he draws three defenders in his foray toward the hoop, leaving two teammates wide open. He cleverly zips the ball to the first one, who dutifully moves it along to the second one, who scores the basket. There is no assist for the player who magnetized three defenders, just for the middle-man in the three-player transaction. 

If a player dribbles the ball off his foot and it comes to you, it likely will register that you “stole” the ball. But if you and a teammate tenaciously trap a ball-handler in a double-team, and both of you deflect the desperate pass he makes trying to escape it, only one of you will get credit for a “steal”—or maybe neither one of you, if the scorer decides another teammate who catches the deflection somehow deserves credit instead. 

If you snuff a player driving to the rim, is it a “steal” or a “block”? Sometimes it depends where in the shooting motion you snuff the shot (was it below the waist or the shoulder?); or how far it has left his hand; or whether it might be perceived as a pass instead of a shot. Or maybe the shooter was able to fumble up a feeble airball toward the rim that you barely deflected and the scorer determines it is merely a missed shot with no steal nor block registered. 

Which brings us to the phenomenal performance of Minnesota Timberwolves forward Jaden McDaniels in the first quarter of his team’s past two games. Over a total of sixteen minutes and 30 seconds of playing time, McDaniels was credited with eight steals. To give you a sense of how outlandish that is, the NBA player who has stolen the ball most frequently of anyone thus far this season, Dyson Daniels of the Atlanta Hawks, has 74 steals in 849 minutes logged over 25 games—less than three per game and one approximately every 11 and a half minutes. In the first quarters against the Lakers on Friday and the Spurs on Sunday, McDaniels stole the ball approximately every two minutes he was on the court. 

That’s what the stat sheet says, anyway. In fact, two of the “steals” are outright gifts from the official scorer. On Friday, the Lakers’ Anthony Davis dribbled the ball off his foot and it rolled to McDaniels. On Sunday, his fellow starting forward Julius Randle disrupted a shot attempt by the Spurs’ Jeremy Souchan and Souchan flailing attempt to rescue the play with a kick-out pass went right to McDaniels.

But this time, the favor inflation worked on the side of justice. Eight steals in less than two full quarters was such a gaudy number that I had to investigate further. And the six legitimate plays that remain tell us a lot about the recent quantum leap  McDaniels has made in his play overall.

Against the Lakers, McDaniels blew up pick-and-roll actions without fouling. In the game’s first two minutes, he fought through a Davis screen to stay with his assignment, Austin Reaves, then poke-checked a bounce pass to Reaves to teammate Mike Conley.  

Four minutes later, he fought through another Davis screen to get to Reaves, only to discover that center Rudy Gobert had come out to the perimeter to switch on to Reaves. Shifting gears and direction with adroit athleticism, he scrambled back into the passing lane quickly enough to poke away Reaves’ pass to the cutting Davis. 

The final steal of the quarter was grand theft blotto: McDaniels pounced on a lazy inbounds pass to Davis and needed just one dribble and two steps before ascending for thunderous slam dunk. 

Two nights later against the Spurs, the prevailing theme on the trio of legit steals was length and tenacity. All were executed in the paint, deflecting passes that were over his head to foil drive-and-kicks plays. But his contribution never stopped there. 

On the first one he leapt to deflect a Souchan pass, then chased down the loose ball quickly enough to overtake Souchan in the scramble to the sideline and throw it off him out of bounds to gain the possession. 

On the second one, he and Gobert teamed up to block a pass by San Antonio’s seven-and-a-half foot praying mantis, Victor Wembanyama, but the force of the play knocked him over. He clambered to his feet, received a short pass from Randle and tore downcourt on the dribble, feeding it back to Randle for the layup.  

On the third one, he again jumped high to intercept a Souchan pass from beside the rim headed back out to the perimeter, then, just before falling out of bounds on the endline, quickly fed to Mike Conley, who whisked it to an onrushing Anthony Edwards for another layup. 

Scoring in transition

All season long, the Wolves have betrayed their offense with a lack of initiative trying to score in transition. They have forced the sixth-most turnovers in the 30-team NBA, yet rank 27th in fast-break points. That’s because they don’t get out and run to create official “transition” playtypes. By a wide margin they are dead-last in transition possessions and dead-last in points scored off transition plays. 

Against the Lakers, McDaniels fostered transition on all three of his legitimate first-quarter steals. He ran out for a layup after poke-checking the ball from Reaves, tried to score racing down after intercepting the pass on Davis’ cut, and of course, rapidly flushed the ball through the hoop on his steal of the inbounds pass. 

Against the Spurs, he could merely save the possession and not further the play when he threw the ball off of Souchan. But the other two first-quarter steals saw him get off the deck to work a two-man transition play with Randle for a layup, and then ignite a fast break by saving his deflection to Conley who promptly threw it ahead to Ant. 

Six legitimate steals in two first quarters is fantastic, and the way McDaniels sought (and mostly succeeded) to parlay them into transition points adds luster to the achievement. 

But the real eye-opener was his rebounding. In the 307 games prior to the Lakers contest last Friday, McDaniels has grabbed 11 rebounds once and 10 rebounds once—both back in the 2021 calendar year. He had corralled 9 rebounds five other times. His sixth time happened Friday, and set what at the time was a season high in rebounds for him. Then on Sunday against Wemby and the Spurs, he tied his career-high with 11, four of them offensive rebounds, which also tied his career-high. And obviously the 20 total rebounds over a two-game span was a career-high. 

This is another way McDaniels has emerged from his tepid start to the season. He had never averaged more than 4.2 rebounds per game in any of his first four years in the league, and went below even that-mediocre standard by grabbing 2.8 rebounds per game in four October contests and 60 boards in 15 November games (an average of four apiece). But through six December games, his average is up to 5.7, which would be the highest monthly mark of his career if he sustains it. 

I have been hard on McDaniels thus far this season. His woeful start had me worrying about the future viability of the “second timeline” trio of him, Ant and Naz in a column last month and despite his placement on the All Defensive NBA second team last season, I didn’t include him as a significant factor in the Wovles’ rediscovery of their defensive identity last week. At the bottom line, the Wolves still allow more points per possession when McDaniels is on the court compared to when he sits, even during the defensive renaissance that had propelled them to six wins in their past seven games. 

The fact that McDaniels’ playing time is purposefully meant to be in sync with the opponent’s top wing scorer—his inevitable assignment–on the court is a mitigating factor. But the team’s negative defensive rating when he plays versus when he doesn’t didn’t happen his first three seasons, and much of the latter two of those years was in the wing-stopper role. 

No, the encouraging thing about Jaden’s recent upgrade in performance is how broad-based and organic it has been. He is becoming more versatile and less of a defensive specialist, even as some aspects of his defense are likewise on the rise. 

Avoiding foul trouble 

From the beginning, he has been prone to getting into foul trouble, which makes him less reliable and exerts a domino effect on defensive roles when the whistles force him to the sidelines. But after averaging 3.25 fouls per game in October and 3.5 in November, he has committed a mere 9 fouls in six December games, stabilizing the rotation. 

At the same time he has found his shooting stroke. His shooting splits (field goal percentage/three-point percentage/true shooting percentage) have gone from 45.5/18.2/50.2 in October to 43.7/30.8/52.4 in November to 47.2/47.4/57.1 thus far in December.

Everything about McDaniels is pointing upward: His defense, his shooting, his rebounding and his avoidance of fouling. The way he has stuffed the stat sheet in the past two games is notable because neither the Lakers nor the Spurs played the sort of potent wing scorer that would otherwise occupy so much of his energy and attention. 

It opens the door to the possibility of more flexible roles in the Wolves rotation. Against the Spurs he helped clog the paint to deter Wemby and the drive-and-kick playmakers, plus helped Conley and Nickeil Alexander-Walker hold future Hall-of-Fame point guard Chris Paul without a field goal in more than 30 minutes of play. And against the Lakers, he was able to switch and react with more fluidity knowing that his usual assignment, Lebron James, wasn’t playing. 

In other words, there can be circumstances where NAW can become the wing stopper and let McDaniels help Gobert regulate the paint. There can be smallball lineups where Randle is the de facto center and McDaniels the power forward. Such a small frontcourt would require rigorous fly-around defensive schemes elsewhere on the second unit (maybe adding Josh Minott or Rob Dillingham). But it would enable more playing time for the Wolves best five-player lineup (Conley-Gobert-Naz-NAW-DiVincenzo) and if McDaniels catch-and-shoot three-point accuracy continues, he becomes a natural partner when Randle is drawing defenders and kicking out for open treys for his teammates. Over the past seven games, the Wolves net rating (points scored versus points allowed is +18.6 points per 100 possessions when those two share the court. 

On a personal level, McDaniels has earned every bit of his improvement. The wing-stopper role is exhausting and thankless and he has successfully inhabited it by becoming almost tunnel-visioned with respect to the task and extremely hard on himself when things don’t go his way. 

Too often in the past, his temper would willfully overwhelm his judgment and he’d commit silly fouls or let ire cloud his focus. That hasn’t been the case lately. Nowadays, whether you regard the stat sheet as impressionistic or mathematical, the numbers are impressive. Meanwhile, the eye-test has been sublime.

Britt Robson

Britt Robson has covered the Timberwolves since 1990 for City Pages, The Rake, SportsIllustrated.com and The Athletic. He also has written about all forms and styles of music for over 30 years.

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Angie Craig elected top Democrat on House ag panel

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WASHINGTON — Rep. Angie Craig won her quest to become the highest-ranking member of the House Agriculture Committee as the nation’s farmers anxiously awaited negotiations in Congress concerning a massive farm bill.

Craig ran against the current ranking Democrat on the agriculture panel, Rep. David Scott of Georgia, and another challenger, Rep. Jim Costa of California.

Scott, who is 79 and in ill health, dropped out of the race Monday night after the Democratic Steering and Policy Committee voted to recommend Craig for the position.

That vote was followed by another Tuesday morning of the entire Democratic caucus, which voted 121-92 in favor of Craig over Costa, who had the support of former Speaker Nancy Pelosi and California Democrats.

With Sen. Amy Klobuchar expected to be the top Democrat on the Senate Agriculture Committee in the next Congress, when the GOP takes control of the chamber, Minnesota should have an outsized influence on farm policy.

Congress has failed to approve a new five-year farm bill and instead extended the one approved in 2018 for a year. But that extension, which allowed the U.S. Department of Agriculture to continue to fund all of its programs, is about to expire.

So, Congress is trying to forge an agreement on a short-term funding bill that would extend the farm bill for another year. Details of the agreement have not been released, but it will include an additional $10 billion for the nation’s farmers and ranchers who say they are hurt by Congress’ inability to approve a new farm bill.

The high-stakes negotiations over a short-term budget bill that would contain new money for farmers and ranchers — called a continuing resolution or CR — are aimed at preventing a federal government shutdown this weekend, when the current legislation funding the federal agencies expires.

Craig’s campaign to be the top Democrat on the House Agriculture Committee was aided by her relationship with members of the Democratic Steering and Policy Committee, a panel she belongs to that includes House Democratic leaders and committee chairmen. The steering committee helps determine committee assignments and advises party leaders on policy.

Rep. Betty McCollum, D-4th District, who is also a member of the steering committee, campaigned on Craig’s behalf.

“Minnesotans and our nation will benefit from Congresswoman Craig’s leadership in this new role, and I’m grateful for the vote of confidence that our colleagues placed in her,” McCollum said in a statement released after Tuesday’s vote.

Craig, 52, was also helped by the desire of many Democrats for a new generation of party leaders. In addition, her pitch as a Midwesterner and centrist Democrat who can speak to rural voters resonated with her colleagues.

The Minnesota Farm Bureau Federation and the Minnesota Farmers Union both endorsed Craig’s bid.

“Representative Craig has a proven track record of bringing people together around bipartisan solutions,” the farmers union said in a statement. “We’re glad that she will be joining Senator Klobuchar as a leading voice in farm bill discussions.”

Craig, who represents the “purple” 2nd District composed of Twin Cities suburbs and rural areas, said she was honored to be selected the top Democrat on a House panel that will try again to craft a new farm bill.

“I just won my D+1 district by nearly 14 points because my farmers and rural constituents know that I’ll meet them where they’re at, I’ll listen to their concerns and I’ll work with whoever I can to improve their lives,” she said in a statement.

Ana Radelat

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Hannah Kobayashi speaks out after returning to U.S. from Mexico

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Hannah Kobayashi, the Hawaii woman whose disappearance at LAX prompted a weeks-long search in the city, has spoken out for the first time since returning to the U.S. from Mexico, according to a statement issued by her family.

“At daybreak on December 15th, I crossed the border back into the United States,” Kobayashi said in a statement provided by her aunt, Larie Pidgeon.

“My focus now is on my healing, my peace and my creativity. I am deeply grateful to my family and everyone who has shown me kindness and compassion during this time.”

In the statement, Kobayashi said that she didn’t learn of the media coverage around her family reporting her missing until she returned.

“I was unaware of everything that was happening in the media while I was away, and I am still processing it all. I kindly ask for respect for myself, my family, and my loved ones as I navigate through this challenging time. Thank you for your understanding,” she wrote.

Kobayashi disappeared after missing her Nov. 8 connecting flight to New York at LAX, her family said. She was reported missing after her family said she sent them cryptic text messages suggesting that her identity and money had been stolen.

The investigation culminated with the Los Angeles Police Department classifying her as a “voluntary missing person,” saying there was no evidence of criminal activity and video showed her crossing the border into Mexico. LAPD also said they didn’t believe Kobayashi was a victim of trafficking or foul play.

Police officials said they got notification from Customs Border Protection that Kobayashi reentered the U.S. from Mexico on Sunday and “appeared in good health,” according to a department news release. The case was closed, and Kobayashi has been removed from the missing and unidentified persons system.

Kobayashi’s family pushed back on the official police narrative that their loved one had gone off on her own, insisting that she was still missing.

Officials said that on Nov. 12, the 30-year-old used cash and her passport to get a bus ticket to Union Station in order to reach the San Ysidro border crossing, where she crossed into Mexico through a tunnel.

Kobayashi’s father, Ryan, traveled from Hawaii to Los Angeles to help look for his daughter. His body was found Nov. 24 near LAX; authorities deemed his death a suicide.

Kobayashi’s disappearance was the second case in which a woman was reported missing by their families to the LAPD and their statements conflicted with official police narrative.

“Gossip Girl” actress Chanel Banks was reported missing by her family in November before police revealed she was found safe in Texas.

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Health insurance company claim denials on the rise

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Peter Whoriskey at the Washington Post dives into the confusing and divisive world of health insurance companies and their practices. Elisabeth Benjamin, a vice president at the Community Service Society in New York: “People are mad because it’s all a big secret. It’s unfair for us as a society, on something that’s so visceral, to trust giant corporations that make money when they deny care. This is why people are so, so very angry.”

Dana Ferguson at MPR News is following the trial on the race between Democratic state Rep. Brad Tabke and Republican challenger Aaron Paul, with updates on voter testimonies.

Liz Fedor at Twin Cities Business is reporting Andersen Corp. announced Monday that it is rewarding its workforce with $50.8 million in profit sharing. With more than 13,000 employees, Andersen said that it’s paying up to $3,923 to each eligible employee.

Riley Moser at WCCO News reports a holiday display at the Minnesota State Capitol from the Minnesota Satanists is getting some folks riled up.

Raya Quttaineh at KARE 11 has the story of a Trimont resident who suffered third-degree burns from rechargeable heated insoles purchased from Amazon. [Warning: gross foot photos]

Estelle Timar-Wilcox at MPR News reports the bald eagle could soon become the national bird of the United States after a bill backed by Minnesota legislators passed the U.S. House on Monday. The bill earlier passed the Senate, and now awaits the signature of President Joe Biden.

Rep. Dean Phillips shares his farewell speech to the U.S. House of Representatives:



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