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2022 NFL trade deadline takeaways: All the biggest deals, a surprising move, more from a record-setting day

It’s not hyperbole to say that the 2022 NFL Trade Deadline was the craziest deadline in league history. There were 12 trades made on Tuesday leading up to the 4 p.m. ET deadline, which was the most ever made on deadline day. Not only were there a large number of deals struck, but there were also a number of blockbuster moves, including Bradley Chubb heading to Miami and T.J. Hockenson staying in the NFC North but being dealt to the Vikings. 

Here’s a quick rundown of some of the more notable deals that occurred: 

Most surprising trade

I don’t think it’s much of a debate to say that Calvin Ridley being shipped to the Jaguars is the most surprising deal of the day. Was anyone even thinking about the now former Falcons receiver lately? After all, Ridley is suspended for the entirety of this season after he was caught betting on NFL games during an absence from football. He can apply for reinstatement in February and this is a pretty complex deal because of his uncertain status. 

If Ridley reportedly is reinstated by a certain date, the Falcons will receive a 2023 fifth round pick. If he is not reinstated by the date, it’s a 2023 sixth-round pick. After that, Atlanta receives a 2024 selection that could escalate all the way to a second rounder if he reaches certain milestones. 

On top of this simply being a fascinating trade from a logisitical standpoint, it also has the potential to be a game-changer for the Jacksonville offense as early as 2023. Ridley was regarded as one of the bright, young pass catchers in the NFL and now has the potential of being Trevor Lawrence’s go-to weapon. 

Big picture storyline

Two of the more notable trades of the day were Bradley Chubb to the Dolphins and Chase Claypool to the Bears. One thing that those two trades have in common is the stamp of approval they give to their respective quarterbacks, Tua Tagovailoa and Justin Fields. 

With Tagovailoa, the Dolphins traded away their 2023 first-round pick (among others) to acquire Chubb. That pick (from the 49ers) was their only first-round pick this coming spring after their own was forfeited as a result of the Tom Brady tampering investigation. Not only is that willingness to give up the first rounder a sign that the front office believes this team can make a push this season, but it also put them out of the quarterback market in this coming draft. That’s as big of a stamp of approval that you’ll see from the front office with Tagovailoa outside of a contract extension. 

On a similar tone, the Bears seem to be rewarding Justin Fields’ strong play as of late by giving him a much-needed pass-catching weapon in Chase Claypool. The fact that they were willing to give up their own second round pick — arguably a lofty price to pay — is a sign that they believe in what the young quarterback is doing. 

So, we have two quarterback who we questioned coming into the year if they were truly going to be “franchise guys” have their teams make moves that directly or indirectly show their long-term support of them. 

To relive everything that went down as it happened, check out our live blog below. Also, check out how CBS Sports graded each trade

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Here Are LA Lakers’ 6 Best Options to Move Russell Westbrook | News, Scores, Highlights, Stats, and Rumors

Here Are LA Lakers’ 6 Best Options to Move Russell Westbrook

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    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    The Los Angeles Lakers have started the season…slowly. They had hoped that new head coach Darvin Ham and a younger, healthier roster would lead to a better performance than last year’s 33 wins. But the results have been concerning. The team is winless in three games, poorly assembled and historically bad from three-point range (21.2 percent).

    The early failings aren’t entirely on Russell Westbrook, but he stands out as the obvious problem given his team-high $47.1 million price tag and how poorly he fits alongside LeBron James and Anthony Davis. The Lakers have tried to get out of his deal since before last season’s trade deadline.

    With offseason deals too costly, the hope heading into the season was to evaluate progress over the first 20 games. But the losses are already mounting. Multiple executives around the league expect Los Angeles to eventually give up its 2027 and 2029 first-round picks to move Westbrook.

    Is there a “Lakers tax”? Some executives believe it to be real—less because of historic rivalries but because of pressure to field a contender around James and L.A.’s recent history of questionable deals.

    Will the Lakers rush into a panic trade? What kind of return would they be looking at for a deal in early to mid-November?

Buddy Hield and Myles Turner for Two Firsts

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    Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images

    The Lakers and Indiana Pacers (1-3) have been in a staring contest for months. Pacers governor Herb Simon has long resisted tanking, but the team isn’t very good. Would he be more open to accepting that path for both Lakers’ firsts?

    Indiana is believed to be interested in a deal. The Lakers would receive Buddy Hield and Myles Turner, potentially with Daniel Theis and/or T.J. McConnell. L.A. hasn’t gotten much out of Damian Jones and Thomas Bryant (out with a thumb injury). Turner would help the Lakers defensively and allow Davis to play more power forward.

    Given his questionable durability, Turner’s value may not be as much as a single first. Many view Hield as more of a negative asset given his production at $39.1 million-plus over this season and next. Still, he’d help address the Lakers’ biggest weakness as a high-volume three-point shooter.

Multiple Players from San Antonio (Jakob Poeltl or a Trade Exception?)

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    Ronald Cortes/Getty Images

    The San Antonio Spurs have enough salary-cap space to make an unbalanced trade. The Lakers and Spurs have communicated for several months about the possibility of working together on a Westbrook trade, but nothing has apparently come close to fruition.

    The Lakers would take on Josh Richardson’s expiring $12.2 million contract, along with the $27.5 million owed to Doug McDermott through 2023-24. L.A. might be able to get that done for a single first, but its low-leverage position may preclude reasonable protections.

    If Los Angeles is more generous with its draft currency, perhaps it could get Jakob Poeltl to fill its need at center. Without him, the Lakers would receive a $21.1 million trade exception, large enough to acquire Turner in a separate deal. L.A. would still get an $11.7 million trade exception with Poeltl.

Jordan Clarkson, Malik Beasley from Utah

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    Ned Dishman/NBAE via Getty Images

    The Utah Jazz are among the best teams in the NBA record-wise, but few expect that to last. After dealing Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert in the offseason, the Jazz are supposed to be tanking. If they continue winning, drop them to last on this list.

    But if Utah decides to focus on development, it could offer the Lakers Jordan Clarkson and Malik Beasley. The Lakers would probably have interest in Lauri Markkanen, Jarred Vanderbilt or Kelly Olynyk, but Utah is more likely to offer aging veterans Mike Conley and Rudy Gay.

    If the Lakers can get depth out of the Jazz for a single first, perhaps that’s a viable path. Unless some of Utah’s younger players can be had, the potential haul shouldn’t be worth multiple first-rounders.

Rozier and Hayward from Charlotte

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    Patrick Smith/Getty Images

    Would Charlotte Hornets chairman Michael Jordan favor Westbrook as a Jordan Brand athlete? The Pacers and Spurs would probably try to buy Westbrook out if they traded with the Lakers, but the Hornets could be a rare team that might consider Westbrook’s value as a player.

    That may be a Lakers dream. Closer to reality, the Hornets aren’t tanking. Terry Rozier and Gordon Hayward are their top performers. Others such as Kelly Oubre Jr. and Mason Plumlee might also help the Lakers, but the Hornets aren’t likely to rush into a move that decimates their roster.

    If Charlotte embraces the Victor Wembanyama chase, then perhaps it would move Hayward, whose contract may not appeal to the Lakers. But he’d be a clear talent upgrade, along with Rozier. But that opportunity may not develop until closer to the trade deadline and may cost the Lakers both first-rounders.

Kyrie Irving (Sooner or Later)

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    Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images

    The Lakers were interested in acquiring Kyrie Irving from the Brooklyn Nets and would do so if he became available again. So far, the Nets (1-2) have survived the offseason turmoil of Kevin Durant’s trade demand. But L.A. certainly has an eye or two on that situation.

    If the franchises want to help each other out of disappointing situations, perhaps there’s a deal to be made. But that may not be likely until closer to the deadline. Irving will certainly stand atop the Lakers’ free-agent wish list if a trade isn’t in the cards.

    The Lakers may have $31-35 million in cap space, but that won’t be enough to max out Irving next season. It might, however, be enough if Irving’s market is soft given his mercurial personality. The Irving possibility may lead L.A. to spurn some of the proposals listed above, unless they’re for expiring contracts. That would mean no Hayward, Rozier or Hield if the Lakers identify Irving in free agency as the priority.

    Whether they should is a different story. But that’s the theme for all these potential targets. The Lakers are likely choosing from a list of questionable options.

Would Waiting Be Best?

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    Ron Jenkins/Getty Images

    The Lakers may find a deal that improves their roster from bad to mediocre or even good. But how many realistic trades would make them great? Would any move that doesn’t result in the Lakers joining the elite be worthwhile?

    On the other hand, any team with James and Davis shouldn’t be that far from contention—except for this squad and last year’s. The Lakers may be in a poor position in October and November, but rushing to get a deal done may cause more long-term issues. What would be the point if they sacrificed two first-round picks and didn’t become a significant force in the Western Conference?

    If the Lakers can hold out until December and January, opportunities might increase as recently signed free agents become eligible for trades. Waiting may be best, though the season could be all but over if the Lakers fall too far out of contention.

    Additionally, if the Lakers make a two-, three- or four-for-one trade, others on the roster beyond Westbrook would need to go. The only trade-eligible players on regular contracts include Davis, Patrick Beverley, Austin Reaves, Wenyen Gabriel, Max Christie and Kendrick Nunn. Others can be cut outright to make roster space, such as Matt Ryan, whose salary is non-guaranteed.

    Finally, in any of the deals, the Lakers might want to try to rope in the Phoenix Suns in a multiteam swap to add Jae Crowder, who is away from the team, hoping for a trade.



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Astros silence Yankees bats yet again, win ALCS Game 3 to move within 1 win of sweep, World Series

New game, same story: The Houston Astros took ALCS Game 3 from the New York Yankees by using a robust pitching staff to utterly quash any hopes of offense. This time, they allowed only three hits in a 5-0 win, subduing the Yankee Stadium crowd and taking a commanding 3-0 series lead. The Astros, in their sixth consecutive ALCS, are now one win away from their fourth World Series in six years — and their third postseason triumph over New York.

The Astros are an undefeated 6-0 in the postseason so far.

Cristian Javier, a breakout arm in 2022, made his first postseason start Saturday night after 12 October relief outings. He struck out five Yankees, walked three and allowed only one hit. Houston didn’t exactly hammer Gerrit Cole, but they applied enough pressure to post five runs. First, Chas McCormick cranked a two-run homer after a Harrison Bader and Aaron Judge miscommunication in the outfield extended the inning.

Then, Cole left with the bases loaded in the sixth, only to watch reliever Lou Trivino allow all three runners to score. In total, the Yankees ace was charged with five runs, only three earned.

A stagnant Yankees offense hit the low point of its dismal series. Giancarlo Stanton’s fourth-inning double was their only hit heading into the ninth inning, when the Yankees mounted a brief but futile challenge. Manager Aaron Boone’s second lineup shuffle — moving Anthony Rizzo to the leadoff spot — still found no joy.

Houston trade deadline acquisitions Trey Mancini and Christian Vazquez came up with the key RBIs in that sixth inning to shush Yankee Stadium. Generally relegated to the bench, the pair came through as reports indicate Astros owner Jim Crane may not retain GM James Click — who he hired in the wake of the sign-stealing scandal.

But whatever the longer-term future holds for the Astros, the immediate future involves a chance to sweep the Yankees and head to the World Series. They’ll have Lance McCullers Jr. on the mound trying to do just that on Sunday at 7:07 p.m. ET. He’ll face the Yankees’ Nestor Cortes Jr., hero of ALDS Game 5 against Cleveland.

Need to catch up on the major October storylines? We’ve got you covered.

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Germany concedes move to cap gas prices as EU wrestles with energy crisis

German chancellor Olaf Scholz dropped his opposition to an EU gas price cap after late-night summit talks aimed at quelling the energy crisis hanging over the union’s economy.

EU leaders agreed to endorse further work towards a cap that would “immediately limit episodes of excessive gas prices” — although with heavy caveats aimed at easing Berlin’s fears that market interventions could endanger security of supply.

The compromise is a relief for EU countries including Italy, France, Spain and Belgium, which have long demanded a ceiling on gas prices as the cornerstone of efforts to ease the pain of soaring energy costs following Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Charles Michel, the European Council president, said in the early hours of Friday morning that the bloc’s 27 leaders had reached an agreement that would bring down prices. “I am confident that very soon the effects will be seen,” he told reporters. “Because I think that we sent a clear signal to the markets that we are ready to act together, that we are able to act together.”

Scholz, who had begun Thursday with a speech to the Bundestag outlining his opposition to a price cap, conceded after the summit: “It makes sense.”

“We have discussed the possibility to limit price spikes,” Scholz said. “There is still a lot of concrete work to do there.”

According to summit conclusions hammered out over 11 hours of talks, the leaders are requesting that Brussels “urgently” work on a “temporary dynamic price corridor on natural gas transactions”.

There would also be a mechanism to limit the price of gas used for electricity generation — a method already used in Spain and Portugal to limit energy bills.

The document also said that member states agreed to pursue joint purchasing of gas, the development of a new benchmark for gas prices, and to escalate efforts to cut gas demand.

However, the price caps could only be implemented if certain conditions laid out by the European Commission are met, the text said. These include not endangering security of supply and not increasing consumption of gas as a result of lower prices.

The commission’s proposed emergency price cap mechanism would limit surges in prices on the Dutch Title Transfer Facility, the EU’s main gas price benchmark.

“We’re happy with the process and the decisions we’ve taken,” said Belgian prime minister Alexander De Croo.

Part of the reason for Germany’s earlier reluctance to embrace price caps is a fear that they would risk diverting gas to other countries that offered a higher price, undermining European efforts to shore up supplies as Russia cuts exports to the bloc following the invasion of Ukraine.

However, attending what is likely to be his final summit as Italian prime minister, Mario Draghi called for urgent action to limit the risks of recession and fragmentation in the single market.

Imports from Russia made up 40 per cent of the EU’s gas supply in 2021 but have dropped to around 9 per cent in recent weeks as Moscow has increasingly squeezed supplies to retaliate against sanctions from Europe.

Arriving at the summit, Emmanuel Macron, the French president, said: “I think it is not good — either for Germany or Europe — that [Germany] isolates itself.”

A number of member states have also urged Brussels to propose extra EU-level funding to ease the crisis and accelerate the bloc’s bid for energy independence from Russia, a push that is backed by commission president Ursula von der Leyen.

Germany’s €200bn support package for businesses and households has been criticised for using fiscal firepower that many smaller member states lack and potentially skewing the single market.

Additional reporting by Sam Jones in Berlin, Leila Abboud in Paris and Andy Bounds in Brussels

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Scientists Solve a 50-Year Mystery – How Do Bacteria Move?

Bacteria move themselves forward by coiling long, threadlike appendages into corkscrew forms that function as makeshift propellers.

University of Virginia scientists have solved a decades-old mystery.

Researchers from the University of Virginia School of Medicine and their colleagues have solved a long-standing mystery concerning how E. coli and other bacteria move.

Bacteria move forward by coiling their long, threadlike appendages into corkscrew shapes, which serve as makeshift propellers. However, since the “propellers” are formed of a single protein, experts are puzzled as to how exactly they do this.

The case has been solved by an international team headed by UVA’s Edward H. Egelman, Ph.D., a pioneer in the high-tech field of cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM). Cryo-EM and powerful computer modeling were utilized by the researchers to reveal what no traditional light microscope could see: the unusual structure of these propellers at the level of individual atoms.

“While models have existed for 50 years for how these filaments might form such regular coiled shapes, we have now determined the structure of these filaments in atomic detail,” said Egelman, of UVA’s Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics. “We can show that these models were wrong, and our new understanding will help pave the way for technologies that could be based upon such miniature propellers.”

Edward H. Egelman, Ph.D., of the University of Virginia School of Medicine, and his collaborators have used cryo-electron microscopy to reveal how bacteria can move — ending a mystery of more than 50 years. Egelman’s prior imaging work saw him inducted into the prestigious National Academy of Sciences, one of the highest honors a scientist can receive. Credit: Dan Addison | University of Virginia Communications

Blueprints for Bacteria’s ‘Supercoils’

Different bacteria have one or many appendages known as a flagellum, or, in the plural, flagella. A flagellum is made up of thousands of subunits, all of which are identical. You’d imagine that such a tail would be straight, or at least somewhat flexible, but it would prevent the bacteria from moving. This is due to the fact that such shapes cannot generate thrust. A rotating, corkscrew-like propeller is required to move a bacterium forward. Scientists call the development of this shape “supercoiling,” and they now know how bacteria do it after more than 50 years of research.

Egelman and his colleagues discovered that the protein that makes up the flagellum may exist in 11 different states using cryo-EM. The corkscrew shape is formed by the exact combination of these states.

It has been known that the propeller in bacteria is quite different than similar propellers used by hearty one-celled organisms called archaea. Archaea are found in some of the most extreme environments on Earth, such as in nearly boiling pools of

“As with birds, bats, and bees, which have all independently evolved wings for flying, the evolution of bacteria and archaea has converged on a similar solution for swimming in both,” said Egelman, whose prior imaging work saw him inducted into the National Academy of Sciences, one of the highest honors a scientist can receive. “Since these biological structures emerged on Earth billions of years ago, the 50 years that it has taken to understand them may not seem that long.”

Reference: “Convergent evolution in the supercoiling of prokaryotic flagellar filaments” by Mark A.B. Kreutzberger, Ravi R. Sonani, Junfeng Liu, Sharanya Chatterjee, Fengbin Wang, Amanda L. Sebastian, Priyanka Biswas, Cheryl Ewing, Weili Zheng, Frédéric Poly, Gad Frankel, B.F. Luisi, Chris R. Calladine, Mart Krupovic, Birgit E. Scharf and Edward H. Egelman, 2 September 2022, Cell.
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2022.08.009

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Navy, and Robert R. Wagner. 



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Nearly 8% of people living in San Francisco and Seattle plan to move to a different city

Residents in San Francisco and Seattle are more likely to move to a different city as they experience high crime rate and homelessness, according to a new survey. 

For the first time ever, the American Housing Survey asked residents in the nation’s 15 major cities if they planned on moving, with many Dem-led cities leading the way in the looming exodus. 

About 7.6 percent of those in San Francisco said they wanted to move to a different city, with Seattle coming in second at 7.2 percent. 

Following them was Washington D.C and Detroit, who both reported that 6.8 percent of residents wished to move away, with Detroit coming in fifth at 6.6 percent. 

New York City appeared to have the most content residents out of the bunch, with only 3.2 percent saying they wished to move to another city. Both Phoenix and Philadelphia followed behind with 3.7 percent. 

More Americans living in San Francisco and Seattle said they wanted to move away than any other major city in the nation

About 7.6 percent of San Francisco residents said they’re thinking of moving away as the city continues to be plagued by crime and homelessness  

The city’s failure to quell crime has further hampered the situation, with city leaders vowing to crack down on increasingly prevalent open-air drug markets

Both San Francisco and Seattle championed the Defund the Police movement in 2020 prior to their crime spikes. Pictured: A Defund the Police protest sign in Seattle 

San Francisco’s problems began to inflate in 2019, with the pandemic only making things worse for the Golden Gate City.  

According to the latest available FBI Unified Crime Report, San Francisco had the highest overall crime rate of the 20 largest cities in the United States, recording 6,917 crimes per 100,000 population in 2019. 

That was more than double the crime rates in New York and Los Angeles, and well above the rates in the next largest US cities: Chicago, Houston, and Phoenix. 

A year later following the Black Lives Matter protests, the call to defund the police grew among Democratic leaders.  

San Francisco Mayor London Breed demanded cities defund the police last year, announcing that the Golden Gate City would be one of the first to do so and promising to slice $120million from the budgets of its police and sheriff’s departments.

The city also greenlit its first open-air drug market in San Francisco’s civic center, which spurred vagrants in homeless encampments across the city to use illegal substances out in broad daylight.  

Breed has since made a screeching U-turn and announced she was asking the city’s Board of Supervisors for more money to be given to the police to stamp out drug dealing, car break-ins, and theft.

After initial calls to defund the police, San Francisco Mayor London Breed (pictured) has made a screeching U-turn and announced she was asking the city’s Board of Supervisors for more money to be given to the police to stamp out crime

San Francisco has the highest overall crime rate of the 20 largest cities in the United States, easily exceeding the crime rates of the five largest cities (seen above)

Overall crime in the Golden Gate City is up 7.4 percent so far this year

Crime remains stubbornly high in the Golden Gate City, with overall crime up 7.4 percent as of August 14 compared to the same time last year. 

Assaults are up nearly 12 percent, and robberies are up 5.1 percent. Thefts have spiked by 15.1 percent compared to last year, and rapes have also increased by 9.7 percent.   

In June, citizens fed up with the state of their city voted to oust woke District Attorney Chesa Boudin, whose anti-incarceration policies have been widely panned as causing the ongoing crisis.

He was originally elected on a platform of criminal justice reform, but his notoriously progressive laws have been widely blamed for rising crime and homelessness in the Bay Area since the start of the pandemic.

Chesa Boudin (left) was ousted from his position as District Attorney in June, after critics accused him of not doing enough to keep residents and business owners safe amid a crime wave.  Brooke Jenkins (right) has since taken over and fired 15 members of Boudin’s team

During that time, San Francisco also lost 25 percent of its late-twenties white population, as the city experienced the biggest drop in household income of any US city. 

The data, compiled by the US Census Bureau, looked at the median income of the nation’s top 25 most populous metropolises from 2019 to 2021.

The Bay Area, long been known as the home of Big Tech – as well as the wealth the industry has created – saw the biggest drop in citizens’ earnings.

Median household income for the area fell from $121,551 in 2019 to $116,005 in 2021, the data shows – a reduction of 4.6 percent.

The statistic illustrates San Francisco in particular’s failure to recover following the spread of the virus, with homeless encampments and open-air drug markets since springing up and becoming commonplace.

The data also serves as fresh evidence of the city’s loss of its hallowed high-income earners – with over 72,000 moving out of Silicon Valley Between January 2020 and September 2021, according to University of California Consumer Credit Panel data.

The data, compiled by the US Census Bureau, looked at the median income of the nation’s top 25 most populous metropolises from 2019 to 2021. The data also serves as fresh evidence of Democratic-run cities’ loss of high-income earners

Meanwhile, the mass exodus of citizens deterred by rising mortgage rates, crime, and warnings of a looming recession has caused property prices along West Coast metropolitan areas to dip, due to a glut of properties on the market,

Contributing to the rapid cooldown is the country’s surging mortgage rates – which rose above a record 6 percent this summer.

Consequently, in addition to the widespread migration, the markedly less people are moving to the city amid its current state.

Since the start of the pandemic, move-ins to San Francisco are down by a marked 24 percent. The Bay Area has also failed to replace its displaced teach workers who left between March and October 2020, city data shows, restoring just 96 tech workers for every 100 tech workers that fled.

In a report by the California Policy Lab that tracks Californians’ credit history, research fellow Natalie Holmes labeled the phenomenon ‘a unique and dramatic exodus.’

Crime in Seattle has remained persistently high, with the city documenting about 3,887 violent crime reports so far this year, slowly encroaching on last year’s total of 5,407. 

Rapes and robberys appear on track to match or exceed last year’s totals, with 191 and 1,244 cases reported so far, respectively. 

The same is true of aggravated assault cases, with the city reporting 2,413 cases in 2022, coming up on the 3,316 cases reported last year. 

There have been 39 homicides in 2022, nearly as much as the 42 total recorded last year. 

The city saw it’s latest murder case in August, when distressing footage showed a disabled 66 year-old being beaten to death with a metal pole in Seattle – allegedly by a serial criminal cops say had been freed by a local judge on a separate felony charge just eight days earlier.  

Aaron Fulk, 48, was caught on surveillance footage as he bludgeoned 66-year-old Rodney Peterman with the makeshift weapon in the city’s notoriously crime-ridden downtown.

It happened close to Seattle’s world-famous Pike Place food market, a popular tourist-hot spot, KOMO reported.  

Prosecutors say Fulk kept on beating Peterman even after the victim fell unconscious during the August 2 attack. 

Aaron Fulk, 48, was caught on camera brutally attacking 66-year-old Rodney Peterman, striking him in the back of the head multiple times with a metal pole

Surveillance footage and cell phone video clearly caught the moment Fulk carried out the brutal beating in downtown Seattle

It’s alleged Fulk was able to strike Peterman over the head at least three times 

It fractured the skull of Peterman – who had mobility issues and used a walker –  who  was struck at least three times in the back of the head and on the temple.

Although bystanders performed CPR on Peterman, he never regained consciousness and died in hospital four days later.

It’s unclear if he knew his victim before the attack, and what his motive was.

But he might not have been out on the streets at all were it not for the actions of Pierce County Superior Court Judge Philip Thornton.

Thornton had come across Pierce days earlier, and decided to release him without bail on felony harassment charges after he allegedly threatened to kill a local city worker.

Thornton released Fulk on his own recognizance, and asked him not to commit any more crime.

The serial criminal’s subsequent behavior has sparked fury over Thornton’s decision to ignore prosecutors’ request for $10,000 bail, and is being viewed as symbolic of Seattle’s apparent unwillingness to crack down on serious crime.

Seattle protesters are seen calling for the police to be defunded are pictured marching in August 2020. The following month the city council adopted their call, and police numbers have been falling ever since

The city of Seattle has been facing an uphill battle when it comes to tackling crime.

In July, the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office said it filed 598 felony cases, adding up to about 30 charges filed every business day.

The majority of the charges are connected to violent or gun crimes with 21% related to domestic violence. Felony charges relating to firearms and repeat offenders were also filed each business day throughout the month.

In the city of 724,000, 16 percent of its police officers are on leave, while others have left permanently.

Between January 2020 and December 2021 at least 339 Seattle police officers retired or resigned, The Wall Street Journal reported, noting that the city has an authorized force of 1,347 but only some 1,000 deployable officers.

During summer 2020, woke ex-mayor Jenny Durkan infamously handed over a large section of the city’s once bustling Capitol Hill zone to a group of anti-police anarchists, turning the area into a hot bed of crime, and bringing businesses to their knees.

In September 2020, Carmen Best, the widely respected then-chief of Seattle police, resigned hours after the city council made good on its promise to approve sweeping proposals that would cut about 100 officers and slash the department’s budget.

The 2021 police budget, approved in September 2020, was reduced by nearly $35.6 million, or nine percent, from 2019.

A year later, the budget was cut again.

Well-paid millennials left New York and California in the THOUSANDS early on in the pandemic, many for lower-tax living in Florida and Texas 

New York and California lost tens of thousands of wealthy millennials in the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, as lower-tax states like Florida and Texas saw an influx of rich young professionals, a study of tax returns reveals.

An analysis of Census Bureau and Harvard University data reveals that 15,788 more wealthy young professionals left New York than relocated there between 2019 and 2020, while California recorded a net outflow of 7,960.

Many appear to have opted for sunnier southern climes like Texas and Florida as the pandemic ravaged dense cities, forcing businesses and offices closed as millions switched to remote working on their laptops.

Texas recorded a net inflow of roughly 3,800 wealthy millennials — those aged under 35 and earning more than $100,000 per year — while Florida saw their numbers rise by 3,400.

Stephanie Horan, a data analyst for fintech firm SmartAsset, said California and New York, destinations for generations of upwardly mobile college-leavers, were ‘struggling the most to keep rich young professionals’. 

Isabelle Novak, 30, a communications manager, and her partner, software executive Reid Gridley, 29, were among the millennial-generation professionals who made a switch during the pandemic, buying their first property in Portland, Oregon

‘Combined, these two states lost more than 57,000 wealthy millennials in 2020, while gaining fewer than 34,000,’ Horan told DailyMail.com.

Texas and Florida, she added, were ‘winning big, ranking as the number one and two states, respectively, where rich young professionals are moving.’   

After New York and California, the areas with the biggest drop in numbers of wealthy young professionals were Illinois, Washington, D.C., Massachusetts, Louisiana, North Dakota, Virginia, Oklahoma and Nebraska.

Relative to its population size, Washington, D.C. saw the largest proportion of rich young professionals moving elsewhere, with a net outflow of nearly 2,100.

The two top destination states — Texas and Florida — are both notable for having no income tax. 

A furniture delivery to Prosper, Texas. The state recorded a net inflow of some 3,800 people aged under 35 and earning more than $100,000 per year in 2020

Other states with significant inflows of moneyed young adults were Washington state, Colorado, New Jersey, North Carolina, Arizona, Connecticut, Tennessee, and Oregon.

The analysis of tax returns echoes other research into migration patterns in the early pandemic, when some took advantage of remote work and ditched big cities for sunnier, more rural climes with lower taxes.

Even so, some researchers say the often-touted ‘Great Migration’ was overblown, and that overall movement patterns were low, as people postponed life-cycle events such as marriages or having babies that often lead to moves.

For many, the mass movement of Americans at the start of the pandemic was exaggerated. Eight-in-ten young adults live less than 100 miles from where they grew up; and only 10 percent had moved more than 500 miles away.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the nation’s mover rate has declined steadily for decades — and the pandemic did not change that. In 2021, 8.4 percent of people had changed addresses in the previous year, compared to 9.3 percent in 2020. 

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Fed’s Mester says there’s been no progress on inflation, so interest rates need to move higher

With little or no progress made on bringing inflation down, the Federal Reserve needs to continue raising interest rates, Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said Tuesday.

“At some point, you know, as inflation comes down, them my risk calculation will shift as well and we will want to either slow the rate increases, hold for some time and assess the cumulative impact on what we’ve done,” Mester told reporters after a speech to the Economic Club of New York.

“But at this point, my concerns lie more on – we haven’t seen progress on inflation , we have seen some moderation- but to my mind it means we still have to go a little bit further,” Mester said.

In her speech, the Cleveland Fed president said the central bank needed to be wary of wishful thinking about inflation that would lead the central bank to pause or reverse course prematurely.

“Given current economic conditions and the outlook, in my view, at the point the larger risks come from tightening too little and allowing very high inflation to persist and become embedded in the economy,” Mester said.

She said she thinks inflation will be more persistent than some of her colleagues.

As a result, her preferred path for the Fed’s benchmark rate is slightly higher than the median forecast of the Fed’s “dot-plot,” which points to rates getting to a range of 4.5%-4.75% by next year.

Mester, who is a voting member of the Fed’s interest-rate committee this year, repeated she doesn’t expect any cuts in the Fed’s benchmark rate next year. She stressed that this forecast is based  on her current reading of the economy and she will adjust her views based on the economic and financial information for the outlook and the risks around the outlook.

Opinion: Fed is missing signals from leading inflation indicators

Mester said she doesn’t rely solely on government data on inflation because some of it was backward looking. She said supplements her research with talks with business contacts about their price-setting plans and uses some economic models.

The Fed is also helped by some real-time data, she added.

“I don’t see the signs I’d like to see on the inflation,” she added,

Mester said she didn’t see any “big, pending risks” in terms of financial stability concerns.

“There is no evidence that there is disorderly market functioning going on at present,” she said.

U.S. stocks were mixed on Tuesday afternoon with the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.12%
up a bit but the S&P 500 in negative territory. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.936%
inched up to 3.9%

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Wall St rallies as data, RBA move lifts hope of Fed easing

  • Twitter jumps on news Musk to resume buyout at $54.20/share
  • Rivian gains on reaffirming FY deliveries view; lifts peers
  • U.S. job openings post biggest drop in 2.5 years in August
  • Indexes up: Dow 2.35%, S&P 2.61%, Nasdaq 2.93%

Oct 4 (Reuters) – Wall Street rallied for a second straight day on Tuesday after softer U.S. economic data led Treasury yields lower and Australia’s central bank raised interest rates less than expected, providing hope that the Federal Reserve would soon temper its aggressive rate hikes.

While labor demand remains fairly strong, U.S. job openings fell by the most in nearly 2-1/2 years in August in another sign the Fed might ease on its mission to tame inflation by tightening policy. read more

Earlier, the Reserve Bank of Australia surprised markets with a smaller-than-expected interest rate hike of 25 basis points. Its cash rate rose to a nine-year peak after six rate hikes in as many months, following similar moves by other central banks. read more

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The RBA is the first major central bank to recognize that now is the time to slow down after aggressively raising rates this year, said Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial in Troy, Michigan.

“There’s hope that the Federal Reserve at some point in the fourth quarter will say the same thing. Not stop raising interest rates, but just slow the pace,” he said. “That’s what the markets kind of rallying on below the surface.”

Still, Fed Gov. Philip Jefferson said inflation is the most serious problem facing the U.S. central bank and it “may take some time” to address. San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said the central bank needs to deliver more rate hikes. read more read more

Rate-sensitive tech stocks rose as yields on the benchmark 10-year Treasury fell for a second day after the jobs data and RBA’s surprise move. Valuations on tech and other growth stocks are related to the cost of capital.

If gains hold, the Nasdaq Composite index (.IXIC) is set to notch its best single-day performance since July 27, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) and S&P 500 (.SPX) were poised to score their biggest two-day rally since April 2020.

Billionaire Elon Musk proposed going ahead with his original offer of $54.20 to take Twitter Inc (TWTR.N) private, two sources familiar with the matter said on Tuesday, sending the social media firm’s shares surging 12.67%. Tesla shares had been up about 6% before the news and immediately cut gains, up about 2.25% on the day. read more

The megacap titans led the rally, with Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) climbing 4.36% and Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) advancing 2.90%. Apple Inc (AAPL.O) rose 1.90% while Google parent Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O) 2.62%.

At 2:30 p.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose 667.54 points, or 2.26%, to 30,158.43, the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained 92.64 points, or 2.52%, to 3,771.07 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) added 306.59 points, or 2.83%, to 11,122.03.

Banks such as Citigroup , Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs climbed nearly 5%, boosting the banks index (.SPXBK) by 4%.

The rally was widespread, with less than a dozen of the S&P 500 index trading in negative territory.

The rebound in stocks on Monday followed the S&P 500’s (.SPX) lowest close in nearly two years last week that capped its worst monthly performance in September since March 2020.

Rivian Automotive Inc (RIVN.O) jumped 13.4% after the electric-vehicle maker said it produced 7,363 units in the third quarter, 67% more than the preceding quarter, and maintained its full-year target of 25,000. read more

The S&P 500 posted one new 52-week high and one new low; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 45 new highs and 56 new lows.

(This story has been corrected to say the Australian central bank raised, not cut interest rates, in the first paragraph.)

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Reporting by Medha Singh, Ankika Biswas and Bansari Mayur Kamdar in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D’Silva, Arun Koyyur, Sriraj Kalluvila and Richard Chang

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Hurricane Ian prompts NASA to move Artemis moon rocket back to its hangar – Spaceflight Now

NASA’s crawler transporter moves into position near pad 39B on Saturday to prepare for the rollback of the Artemis 1 moon rocket to the Vehicle Assembly Building. Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky

Faced with threatening weather from Hurricane Ian, NASA managers decided Monday to haul the $4.1 billion Artemis 1 rocket off its launch pad and back to the protection of the agency’s Vehicle Assembly Building, likely ending any chance of launching the unpiloted moonshot before November.

NASA said in a blog post the decision was made “after additional data gathered overnight did not show improving expected conditions for the Kennedy Space Center area. The decision allows time for employees to address the needs of their families and protect the integrated rocket and spacecraft system.”

After two launch scrubs August 29 and September 3 due to hydrogen leaks and other issues, NASA carried out on-pad repairs and targeted a third attempt for Tuesday. But then-Tropical Storm Ian forced NASA to pass that up in favor of a backup opportunity October 2.

Over the weekend, NASA managers monitored the strengthening storm while engineers began rollback preparations, but a final decision was put off until Monday in hopes the forecast would improve enough to preserve the backup launch opportunity. Early Monday, those hopes were dashed, with forecasters predicting torrential rain, lightning and high winds in Brevard County later this week.

The decision was the latest in a series of setbacks for the 330-foot-tall rocket, the most powerful ever built for NASA and the linchpin in the agency’s Artemis moon program.

The goal of the initial test flight is to send an unpiloted Orion crew capsule on a long flight around the moon and then to test its heat shield during a hellish high-speed plunge back into the atmosphere at the end of the mission.

Because of the ever-changing positions of Earth and moon, the rocket can only be launched during specific periods when lighting and a variety of other factors are favorable. The current launch period, No. 26, closes October 4. Launch period 27 runs from October 17 through the 31st.

But because of the time needed to roll back to the VAB, service batteries in the rocket’s self-destruct system and then to haul it back out to the pad, re-connect propellant, power, data lines and other systems, NASA almost certainly will be forced to target launch period 28, which runs from November 12 to 27, for the next launch attempt.



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In letter, Pac-12’s George Kliavkoff cites ‘significant’ financial, mental health concerns on UCLA move to Big Ten

In a letter provided to the University of California Board of Regents ahead of a closed-door session Thursday to discuss UCLA’s proposed move to the Big Ten conference, Pac-12 commissioner George Kliavkoff detailed “significant concerns” he had with the move, including student-athlete mental health, increased travel and operational costs, and negative impacts on both Cal’s revenue and the UC system’s climate goals.

Klivakoff’s letter was provided in response to a request from the regents for the conference’s perspective on UCLA’s move, according to a source.

“Despite all the explanations made after the fact, UCLA’s decision to join the Big Ten was clearly financially motivated after the UCLA athletic department managed to accumulate more than $100 million in debt over the past three fiscal years,” Kliavkoff wrote.

From there, he made the case the increased revenue UCLA will receive would be completely offset by the increased costs coming from increased travel, the need for competitive salaries within the Big Ten and game guarantee expenses.

“UCLA currently spends approximately 8.1 million per year on travel for its teams to compete in the Pac-12 conference,” Kliavkoff said. “UCLA will incur a 100% increase in its team travel costs if it flies commercial in the Big Ten (8.1 million increase per year), a 160% increase if it charters half the time ($13.1 million per year), and a 290% percent increase if it charters every flight ($23 million increase per year).”

Kliavkoff did not cite how those figures were calculated or indicate if there was genuine belief that UCLA would consider charter travel for teams other than football and basketball.

According to a source familiar with UCLA’s internal estimates about increased travel cost, the school is working with the expectation that it will spend approximately $6-10 million more per year on travel in the Big Ten vs. the Pac-12.

A move to the Big Ten, Kliavkoff speculated, would also lead to UCLA spending more on salaries to fall in line with conference norms. He estimated UCLA would need to increase its athletic department salaries by approximately $15 million for UCLA to reach the average in the Big Ten.

“Any financial gains UCLA will achieve by joining the Big Ten will end up going to airline and charter companies, administrators and coaches’ salaries, and other recipients rather than providing any additional resources for student-athletes,” Kliavkoff said.

A spokesperson for UCLA declined comment.

In an interview with the New York Times, U.C. President Michael V. Drake, who was previously the president at Ohio State, said, “No decisions. I think everybody is collecting information. It’s an evolving situation.”

Beyond the financial impact for UCLA, which is widely understood to be the primary driving factor in UCLA’s move to the Big Ten, Kliavkoff said it will also hurt Cal, which, like UCLA, is also overseen by the UC system. With media rights negotiations ongoing, Kliavkoff said it was difficult to disclose the exact impact without disclosing confidential information, but confirmed the conference is soliciting bids with and without UCLA in the fold.

Beyond the financial component of the added travel, Kliavkoff said “published media research by the National Institutes of Health, studies conducted by the NCAA, and discussions with our own student-athlete leaders,” will have a negative impact on student-athletes mental health and take away from their academic pursuits. He added that it would also be a burden for family and alumni to face cross-country trips to see UCLA’s teams play.

Finally, Kliavkoff said added travel runs contrary to the UC system’s climate goals and works against UCLA’s commitment to “climate neutrality” by 2025.

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