Tag Archives: Atlanta

Atlanta Hawks fire coach Lloyd Pierce

The Atlanta Hawks have fired Lloyd Pierce as their coach.

“We would like to thank Lloyd for his work and commitment to not only the Hawks organization but the city of Atlanta. He and his wife, Melissa, are tremendous people who have made a positive impact throughout the city,” Hawks president of basketball operations/general manager Travis Schlenk said in a statement. “We have high expectations for our team on the court and we believe by making this change now that we can have a strong second half of the season.”

The Hawks are hopeful assistant Nate McMillan will choose to become the interim head coach, sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski. McMillan is meeting with Pierce and the rest of the Hawks’ coaching staff now, sources said. McMillan has been fiercely loyal in his support of Pierce.

Pierce was hired ahead of the 2018-19 season and compiled a 63-120 record in two-plus seasons with the Hawks.

Atlanta is in 11th place in the Eastern Conference with a 14-20 mark and next plays Tuesday night in Miami. The Hawks began the season 10-9, but have lost 11 of their past 15 games.

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Investigating Trump a big early move for Atlanta’s new DA

ATLANTA (AP) — The district attorney investigating whether former President Donald Trump should face charges for attempting to pressure Georgia’s elections chief into changing the results of the presidential race in his favor has a reputation as a tough courtroom veteran, not only as a prosecutor but also as a defense lawyer and judge.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who was sworn in last month after winning a resounding 2020 election victory over her former boss, entered the national spotlight Wednesday when letters to top state officials revealed her office is investigating whether illegal attempts were made to influence the state’s 2020 elections. That includes the Jan. 2 phone call in which Trump was recorded asking Georgia’s secretary of state to overturn his defeat.

Prosecuting Trump would likely prove a career-defining move for Willis — and one fraught with risk, said Atlanta attorney Robert James, a former district attorney in neighboring DeKalb County. Constituents in heavily Democratic Atlanta would demand an aggressive prosecution. The Republican ex-president would likely unleash an army of lawyers to defend him. And news coverage would scrutinize every step, or misstep.

“Nobody should be confused about the fact that you’re going into a whirlwind,” James said. “If this is what she chooses to do based on the facts and the evidence, from what I know about her as a prosecutor, she’s smart enough and tough enough to handle it.”

In her first weeks on the job, Willis has already faced criticism for trying to hand off two high-profile cases against police officers, including a fatal shooting. But fellow lawyers who have faced her in court say she’s a skilled litigator who isn’t afraid of tough cases.

“She is a hard-charging, tough trial lawyer,” Atlanta defense attorney Page Pate said. “I would never question her ethics. I would never question her diligence or her intelligence. She is a bulldog when she thinks she’s on the right side.”

Willis worked 17 years as an assistant district attorney under Paul Howard, who was Georgia’s first Black DA when he took office in 1997. Before challenging Howard for his job in 2020, Willis spent short stints as a criminal defense lawyer and a municipal court judge.

Running an aggressive campaign in which she accused Howard of mismanagement, Willis trounced him in an August runoff election for the Democratic nomination, winning nearly 72% of the vote. With no Republican on the ballot, Willis cruised to victory in November.

In her most high-profile case under Howard, Willis served as the lead prosecutor bringing charges against nearly three dozen Atlanta public school educators accused in a cheating scandal. In April 2015, after an unwieldy trial that spanned months, a jury convicted 11 former educators of racketeering for their role in a scheme to inflate students’ scores on standardized exams.

Pate, who defended one of the accused educators, said Howard bungled the case and should have lost. But Willis and her co-counsel, he said, “pieced that thing together, worked day and night to make it what it was.”

The new district attorney has come under fire for seeking to offload a pair of cases against Atlanta police. One involves officers charged with dragging two Black college students from a car during May protests over racial injustice. The other deals with two officers charged in the July 12 shooting death of Rayshard Brooks, a Black man killed as he tried to flee arrest for drunken driving.

Willis last month asked Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr to reassign the cases to an outside prosecutor, arguing that her predecessor had acted improperly in the cases, including politicizing them during his reelection campaign. Carr declined to transfer the cases.

Though some attorneys said Willis had good reason for seeking to recuse her office, her attempt outraged members of Brooks’ family.

“Not only did you hurt me, but you hurt everyone out here who was counting on you to do the right thing,” Tomika Miller, Brooks’ widow, said at a news conference last week. “You say that you don’t run from hard cases. But, baby, you ran from this one.”

Shean Williams, an Atlanta civil rights attorney who represents the family of a man killed in a different police shooting being prosecuted by Willis’ office, said he understands the desire to have such cases prosecuted by the local district attorney. He applauded Willis for investigating Trump’s phone call, saying it makes him hopeful she will hold police officers and others in power accountable.

It’s uncertain whether Willis will seek charges against Trump or anyone else in relation to the election.

Senior Trump adviser Jason Miller has already decried the investigation, saying it’s a continuation of a “witch hunt” by Democrats against the former president.

Though Willis’ letters to state officials don’t name Trump as a target, the prosecutor’s spokesman, Jeff DiSantis, confirmed that, among other things, investigators are looking into the phone call between Trump and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.

Raffensperger, a fellow Republican, can be heard on the call rejecting Trump’s repeated calls for him to change the state’s certified results of the presidential election, which President Joe Biden won by about 12,000 votes.

“In most cases, you would have sort of a he-said, she-said case where one person is contending another party said something,” said Cathy Cox, dean of the law school at Mercer University and a former Georgia secretary of state. “But you have a tape of Trump’s actual words. There is no dispute of what he said.”

Regardless, in cases against celebrities and public officials like Trump, even obtaining a grand jury’s indictment that allows a case to proceed to a trial court can be difficult, said James, the former DeKalb County prosecutor. That’s because citizens empaneled to hear such cases often find it difficult to be impartial about famous defendants, he said.

“Ultimately, as a prosecutor, your job is to prosecute cases without fear, favor or affection,” James said. “You look at the law, you look at the facts, and you compare the two.”

___

Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia. Associated Press writer Sudhin Thanawala contributed from Atlanta.

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Atlanta Hawks’ Trae Young fined $20K for protesting late no-call vs. Dallas Mavericks

Atlanta Hawks guard Trae Young has been fined $20,000 for “directing inappropriate language toward a game official,” the NBA announced Thursday.

The incident occurred on the final possession of the Hawks’ 118-117 loss to the Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday at American Airlines Center.

Young had been knocked to the floor while setting a screen on Dallas center Willie Cauley-Stein before the inbounds pass with 4.7 seconds remaining, preventing him from getting the ball as the play was designed.

After Danilo Gallinari’s difficult buzzer-beater attempt clanked off the rim, Young ripped out his mouthpiece and stomped toward referee Josh Tiven to protest the critical no-call.

Tiven, the crew chief, told a pool reporter after the game that the contact from Cauley-Stein was “deemed incidental,” so he didn’t blow his whistle. Tiven said that the officiating crew came to the same conclusion after reviewing video of the play postgame.

The NBA said Thursday that “the play that Young disputed was correctly ruled a no-call.”

“Under the playing rules, Dallas’ Willie Cauley-Stein was entitled to a normal step on a screen from behind, which he took, and which led to incidental and legal contact between Cauley-Stein and Young,” the league said.

Young had 25 points and 15 assists in the loss.

“I’m not going to run away from the ball with four seconds left and we’re trying to win the game,” he said. “I’m not going to fall just to fall at the end. That’s just the most frustrating part. Not really having an opportunity to make a play at the end is just really frustrating.”

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Late non-call leaves Trae Young, Atlanta Hawks fuming after 1-point loss to Dallas Mavericks

DALLAS — As soon as Danilo Gallinari’s difficult buzzer-beater attempt clanked off the rim, Atlanta Hawks star Trae Young ripped out his mouthpiece and stomped toward referee Josh Tiven to protest a critical non-call on the final possession of a 118-117 loss to the Dallas Mavericks.

Young had been knocked to the floor while setting a screen on Dallas center Willie Cauley-Stein before the inbounds pass with 4.7 seconds remaining, preventing him from getting the ball as the play was designed.

“I’m not going to run away from the ball with four seconds left and we’re trying to win the game,” said Young, who had 25 points and 15 assists in the loss. “I’m not going to fall just to fall at the end. That’s just the most frustrating part. Not really having an opportunity to make a play at the end is just really frustrating.”

Tiven, the crew chief, told a pool reporter that the contact from Cauley-Stein was “deemed incidental,” so he didn’t blow his whistle. Tiven said that the officiating crew came to the same conclusion after reviewing video of the play postgame.

Hawks coach Lloyd Pierce vehemently disagreed, arguing a foul should have been called, which would have resulted in a free throw for Young and the Hawks getting the ball out of bounds since the contact occurred before the ball was inbounded.

“Really unfortunate that it ended that way,” Pierce said, adding that Tiven told him that Young could have been called for an illegal screen.

“It was a perfect screen,” Pierce said. “Willie Cauley-Stein ran Trae over, and that’s a foul. It’s a foul. It’s why Trae was on the floor. It blows up our play. It’s unfortunate. I thought our guys really competed. Trae was fouled. He falls on the floor. He gets hit in the nose. He set a great screen. I give him credit; he set a great screen. We tried to execute, and he did.”

Dallas star Luka Doncic, who will always be linked to Young after they were involved in a 2018 draft-night trade, recorded his league-leading seventh triple-double with 28 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists as the Mavs pulled off their biggest comeback win of the season, rallying from a 13-point deficit.

Mavs reserves Tim Hardaway Jr. and Jalen Brunson combined for 24 points in the fourth quarter as Dallas outscored Atlanta by 10 in the period. Brunson, who had 11 of his 21 points in the fourth, repeatedly targeted Young as a defender down the stretch.

“Brunson was terrific,” Mavs coach Rick Carlisle said. “A great player like Young is a guy you’ve got to put pressure on defensively just to try to wear him down a little bit, and Jalen did a great job attacking him.”

Cauley-Stein also played a critical role in the win after not sitting out the previous two games because of coach’s decisions. He had 14 points and six rebounds off the bench, and Dallas outscored Atlanta by 19 in his 23 minutes.

Cauley-Stein, who was defending John Collins when Young set a back screen on the final play, wasn’t surprised that the referees opted not to blow their whistles.

“I ain’t even see Trae,” Cauley-Stein. “He’s a smart kid. He was trying to get a quick, little foul to shoot free throws and ice the game. No way they was going to give him that call for the game. Good try, though. That was smooth. It was sneaky.”

As far as Young is concerned, Cauley-Stein’s explanation was evidence that a foul should have been called.

“Obviously, with him saying he didn’t see me [and] running me over, that’s a good screen,” Young said. “I set a good screen. Like he said, he didn’t see me. He turned around and ran right into me. If Dorian [Finney-Smith] wasn’t there, I would have fallen straight back, but he was there and kind of like was using his hands a little bit, so I kind of fell sideways. That’s kind of what happened.

“He just turned around and didn’t see me, and I was there and he ran into me. As I was on the ground, the ref was looking right at me. Didn’t say nothing and didn’t call anything.”

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Historic Krispy Kreme in Atlanta, owned by Shaquille O’Neal, catches fire

ATLANTA — A historic Krispy Kreme Doughnuts store owned by Shaquille O’Neal was engulfed in flames early Wednesday, heavily damaging the structure.

Atlanta fire crews responded to the iconic restaurant on Ponce De Leon Avenue shortly after midnight, news outlets reported. Video posted on social media showed raging flames.

Battalion Chief Douglas Hatcher said firefighters saved most of the building after the fire started in the back. No injuries were reported. Hatcher said the cause of the fire was under investigation.

The Midtown Krispy Kreme opened in 1965. It was one of the first locations established outside the company’s main base of operations in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and Nashville, Tennessee.

After Martin Luther King Jr.’s funeral in April 1968, the Krispy Kreme fed mourners by donating 150 dozen doughnuts to Atlanta churches. O’Neal bought the store in 2016.

“I hope no one was hurt and we will bounce back better than ever,” the Basketball Hall of Famer told WXIA-TV.

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LeBron James responds to altercation with fans ejected from Lakers-Hawks game in Atlanta

LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers are rolling through the league this season. They entered Monday’s game against the Atlanta Hawks with a 15-6 record, including a 4-2 mark on their current seven-game road trip. They’ve become especially adept at disappointing road fans. Through 13 road games, the Lakers have an 11-2 record. 

And though the Atlanta Hawks made things interesting during Monday’s game, the Lakers controlled their battle throughout. That apparently didn’t sit well with an Atlanta fan sitting courtside, who got into an altercation with LeBron James and was ejected from the game by security. Lakers broadcaster Bill Macdonald even jokingly compared the moment to the meme of a Desperate Housewives cast member pointing at an indifferent cat. 

As James revealed after the game, the argument was between him and the woman’s husband, and he did not think they should be ejected from the game. 

“At the end of the day, I’m happy fans are back in the building,” James told reporters. “I missed that interaction, I need that interaction, we as players need that interaction. I don’t feel like it was warranted to be kicked out. There was a back-and-forth between two grown men. We said our piece, he said his piece, I said my piece, and then someone else jumped into it and said their piece. I didn’t think they should’ve been kicked out, but they might’ve had a couple of drinks, maybe, and they could’ve probably kept it going and the game wouldn’t have been about the game anymore, so the referees did what they had to do.”

This is not the first incident James has had with a spectator during this road trip. In a victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers last week, James missed a shot at the end of the third quarter and was unhappy with how a Cleveland executive reacted. He responded by scoring 26 points in the fourth quarter. 

“I felt like he was just a little bit too excited about seeing me miss,” James told reporters then. “He was really excited about me missing that shot. A little bit more extra than I would have liked. But he’s got to root for his team, obviously. And he was, he showcased that. So I knew I had another quarter, and the fourth quarter’s my favorite.”

The Lakers ultimately escaped with a victory, giving them 12 road wins on the year and sending them home for 10 of their next 15 games. Hopefully, it’ll be a little while before LeBron gets into it with another road fan with such a long stint in Los Angeles ahead. 

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Fans ejected after verbal spat with Los Angeles Lakers’ LeBron James in Atlanta

Four courtside fans — at least one of whom was not covering her face with a mask — were ejected from Monday’s game between the Los Angeles Lakers and Atlanta Hawks following a verbal spat with Lakers star LeBron James, the Hawks confirmed to ESPN.

Juliana Carlos, who later posted on social media, and her husband, Chris Carlos, exchanged words with James in the fourth quarter of the visiting Lakers’ 107-99 win, prompting the ejection.

Juliana Carlos posted a video on her Instagram account showing the scene shortly after State Farm Arena security personnel and one of the referees, Mitchell Ervin, intervened.

She can be heard saying, “Shut the f— up. Don’t talk to my husband like that,” while standing on the sideline with her mask pulled down below her chin. Someone off camera can be heard asking her to put her mask on, which is required of all fans attending NBA games this season. She wrote “f—ing loser” in a text box to accompany the video, with her camera pointed at James.

After the ejection, Carlos posted a selfie-style video, offering her account of what happened.

“So, I’m minding my own business, and Chris has been a Hawks fan forever. He’s been watching the games for 10 years. Whatever, he has this issue with LeBron. I don’t have an issue with LeBron. I don’t give a f— about LeBron,” she says in the video. “Anyway, I’m minding my own business, drinking my [beverage], having fun. All of the sudden, LeBron says something to my husband, and I see this and I stand up. And I go, ‘Don’t f—ing talk to my husband.’ And he looks at me and he goes, ‘Sit the f— down, bitch.’ And I go, ‘Don’t f—ing call me a bitch. You sit the f— down. Get the f— out of here. Don’t f—ing talk to my husband like that.'”

James was not asked postgame about Carlos’ name-calling allegation, but he was not fazed by the incident and said he felt like an ejection was unnecessary.

“At the end of the day, I’m happy fans are back in the building,” he said after putting up 21 points, nine assists and seven rebounds to help L.A. to the road win. “I miss that interaction. I need that interaction; we as players need that interaction. I don’t feel like it was warranted to be kicked out.”

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LeBron James acknowledges he misses the interaction with fans and isn’t sure the spectators should have been removed from the game.

He did say that alcohol could have been a factor, however.

“They might have had a couple drinks, maybe,” he said. “And they could have probably kept it going during the game, and the game wouldn’t have been about the game no more, so I think the referees did what they had to do.”

James also said that Chris Carlos went “out of bounds” with whatever he directed at him. “I guess [Carlos] said something that rubbed the big dawg the wrong way,” added Lakers center Montrezl Harrell.

While James said he was not close enough to the fans to be potentially compromised by Juliana Carlos removing her mask, other members of the Lakers found it unacceptable.

“It certainly exposed something with regard to having fans in the pandemic,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. “You obviously can’t have fans taking their masks down and shouting at our players with the virus out there during these times.”

“With COVID going on, we obviously can’t have that,” L.A. big man Anthony Davis echoed. “We want to make sure we all can be safe.”

James later tweeted about Carlos, bestowing her with a derisive nickname commonly used to mock entitled white women.

The Hawks are one of nine NBA teams currently allowing fans to attend their home games. Atlanta’s State Farm Arena currently allows up to 8% of its capacity for Hawks games, according to a team official. Monday’s announced attendance was 1,341.

Despite the episode, several Lakers still supported fans coming to their games.

“We love having fans at the game. Whether we’re home or away, it just brings back the game that we love, that joy from the fans and the support,” Davis said. “Whether it’s 500 people or 1,000, 1,500, whatever it is, it’s always enjoyable to play in front of a crowd.”

“I love our fans,” James reiterated. “Laker Nation and everybody else that’s against Laker Nation. It just feels better. Fans in the stands is just — it’s just better. It’s better for everybody — especially on the last game of a 14-day road trip.”

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Washington Post: DOJ watchdog investigating Atlanta US attorney’s resignation

The paper, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that the probe by Inspector General Michael Horowitz appears nascent, noting that investigators had not spoken to Pak and the bounds of the investigation remain unclear.

A spokesperson for the inspector general’s office declined to comment when reached by CNN. Pak declined to comment to the Post.

Pak, a Trump appointee who had served in the office since 2017, left his job abruptly on January 4 as the US attorney for the Northern District of Georgia, which includes Atlanta and Fulton County, citing “unforeseen circumstances” in a memo to staff. Pak’s departure followed fallout over a phone call the previous weekend in which Trump had pressured Republican Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” votes to overturn the election in the state, which he lost to President Joe Biden.
In audio of the phone call obtained by CNN and first reported by the Post, Trump is also heard making baseless claims about the state’s election and at one point, when questioning the audit of ballots, he tells Raffensperger, “You have your never-Trumper US attorney there,” without mentioning a name. The comment appears to reference Pak.

Trump, in turn, ordered a US attorney from southern Georgia to take over the Atlanta office, in an unusual move. The Justice Department said the Southern District of Georgia’s US attorney, Bobby Christine, who is also a Trump appointee and has been in the job since 2017, would take over as acting head in Atlanta, handling both roles. The Atlanta office’s top assistant US attorney, Kurt Erskine, normally would have taken on the acting US attorney role but was passed over.

Two people familiar with the matter told the Post in Thursday’s story that a call from a senior Justice Department official in Washington had indicated to Pak that he should resign. Trump was angry at what he viewed as the department’s insufficient pursuit of his baseless allegations about Georgia’s election and the nation overall, people familiar with the matter told the paper at the time.

As CNN has previously reported, there have been no credible allegations of any issues with voting that would have impacted the election, as affirmed by dozens of judges, governors, election officials, the Electoral College, the Justice Department, the Department of Homeland Security and the US Supreme Court.

The law firm Alston & Bird announced Thursday that Pak was returning to the firm in February as a partner in its Litigation & Trial Practice Group in Atlanta. Pak was formerly a litigation associate at Alston & Bird and began his private practice career there in 2000, according to a news release from the firm.
In the statement from the Justice Department announcing his resignation early this month, Pak said he was grateful to Trump for the opportunity to serve and thanked former Attorneys General William Barr and Jeff Sessions.

“It has been the greatest honor of my professional career to have been able to serve my fellow citizens as the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia,” he said. “I have done my best to be thoughtful and consistent, and to provide justice for my fellow citizens in a fair, effective and efficient manner.”

CNN’s Katelyn Polantz, Evan Perez, Chandelis Duster and Kelly Mena contributed to this report.

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