Tag Archives: sidelined

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle ‘will be sidelined’ during coronation, expert claims: ‘Too much bitterness’ – Fox News

  1. Prince Harry, Meghan Markle ‘will be sidelined’ during coronation, expert claims: ‘Too much bitterness’ Fox News
  2. The Royal Family Is Reportedly Concerned That Prince Harry and Meghan Could “Overshadow” King Charles at His Coronation InStyle
  3. Prince Harry & Meghan Still Haven’t Accepted Royal Coronation Invite | Lorraine Lorraine
  4. Prince Harry & Meghan Markle Risk Giving ‘Further Oxygen’ to Family Feud If They Fail to Attend King Charles III’s Coronation Yahoo Life
  5. Prince Harry & Meghan Markle Risk Giving ‘Further Oxygen’ to Family Feud If They Fail to Attend King Charles III’s Coronation SheKnows
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Teacher Sidelined After Donning Size-Z Prosthetic Breasts in Class – The Daily Beast

  1. Teacher Sidelined After Donning Size-Z Prosthetic Breasts in Class The Daily Beast
  2. Kayla Lemieux, Canadian teacher with size-Z prosthetic breasts, placed on paid leave New York Post
  3. Canadian trans teacher with giant prosthetic breasts reportedly put on leave after parents slam school board Fox News
  4. Halton board limited to ‘existing mechanics’ for dress code tied to Oakville high school controversy Global News
  5. Canadian teacher placed on leave after months of debate over size Z prosthetic breasts The Independent
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Yankees’ trade-deadline prize Andrew Benintendi sidelined with wrist fracture

The New York Yankees traded a pair of top-25 prospects to acquire Andrew Benintendi at the trade deadline.

Now the All-Star outfielder needs surgery, and his status for the stretch run of the season and the playoffs is unclear. Manager Aaron Boone told reporters on Sunday that testing revealed that Benintendi sustained a broken hook of the hamate bone in his right hand. He suffered the injury during Friday’s 9-0 loss to the Tampa Bay Rays while swinging during the third inning.

Initial X-rays didn’t reveal the break, but a CT scan over the weekend did. Benintendi needs surgery to repair the break. He’s scheduled to meet with specialists on Monday to further evaluate the injury and treatment plan.

“I’m meeting with some doctors in New York, and we’ll go from there,” Benintendi said, per MLB.com. “We’ll just take it day by day at this point, I guess. I’ll need surgery at some point and get that done as soon as possible.”

Benintendi sustained a previous break of the same bone in college as a freshman at Arkansas. He had a procedure then to remove the broken bone, but apparently it wasn’t completely removed.

“There could have been some left or whatever,” Boone told reporters. “He’ll have to have surgery on that.”

OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA – AUGUST 25: Andrew Benintendi #18 of the New York Yankees looks on before the game against the Oakland Athletics at RingCentral Coliseum on August 25, 2022 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images)

The good news for Benintendi is that his recovery time in college was relatively short, leaving hope that he can return to the lineup before the conclusion of the season. The Yankees have 28 games remaining before the regular season concludes on Oct. 5.

“When I went through this before, it was right around a couple of weeks,” Benintendi said. “We’ll see what happens. Obviously, I want to get back out there in time for the latter part of the season and then, hopefully, the playoffs. It’s all too early to say right now.”

Benintendi, 28, made his first All-Star game this season with the Kansas City Royals. The Yankees traded for him at the deadline in exchange for the franchise’s No. 19 prospect T.J. Sikkema, No. 21 prospect Beck Way and unranked prospect Chandler Champlain, all pitchers. The Yankees acquired him for this season’s playoff run. He’s slated to become a free agent in the offseason.

In 126 games with the Yankees and Royals this season, Benintendi is slashing .304/.373/.399 with five home runs, 51 RBI and eight stolen bases. His average has dropped from .320 with the Royals to .254 in 33 games with the Yankees. The Yankees have struggled to an 11-20 record since Aug. 1 but maintain a five-game lead over the Rays in the AL East with an 80-54 record.

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Carolina Panthers rookie QB Matt Corral sidelined with torn ligament in foot

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Carolina Panthers rookie quarterback Matt Corral likely will miss the 2022-23 season with what coach Matt Rhule called a “significant” Lisfranc ligament tear.

“I would assume it would be a while; I would assume it would be a significant amount of time,” Rhule said Saturday. “I’m pretty sure it will be a long-term injury.”

Corral suffered the left foot injury in the Friday night preseason loss at New England.

A 2016 study in the American Journal of Sports Medicine determined NFL players with Lisfranc injuries treated without surgery missed an average of 6.2 months recovering and those who underwent surgery missed an average of 11.6 months. Rhule said Corral, his family, agent and team doctors are exploring the best option.

In terms of the starting quarterback battle between Baker Mayfield and Sam Darnold, Rhule still wasn’t ready to name the winner, although multiple sources have said the job remains Mayfield’s to lose.

Rhule also wasn’t ready to say whether he would make that decision before the preseason finale Friday against Buffalo, but he did say “most, if not all, of the starters” will play against the Bills.

Almost all of the starters, including Mayfield and Darnold, were held out of the 20-10 loss to the Patriots.

Rhule said Corral’s injury won’t influence his decision on who plays against Buffalo. But he said it could influence whether the team keeps three quarterbacks as he said was the plan early in training camp.

Corral likely would have been the third quarterback, behind Mayfield and Darnold. Carolina also has former XFL star PJ Walker, who is 2-0 as a starter for the Panthers the past two years.

Walker struggled with two interceptions and a lost fumble that resulted in a touchdown against New England.

“That position takes a beating,” Rhule said. “We want to have as many good players at that position as possible and make no apologies for it. Matt was coming along.”

Corral’s injury occurred in the fourth quarter when a player stepped awkwardly on his foot. He limped off the field and did not return, leaving Gillette Stadium in a walking boot.

Rhule said deep snapper J.J. Jansen and other veterans gave up their seats in first class to give Corral more room on the flight home.

“I hate it for him,” Rhule said of Corral. “I thought he was playing well, too.”

The Panthers selected Corral in the third round out of Ole Miss. In the Friday matchup he saw his most extensive playing time in practice or preseason games as Mayfield and Darnold have gotten a majority of the snaps.

Corral, who was 1-for-9 in the preseason opener at Washington, was 9-for-15 for 58 yards against New England.

“I thought I saw a lot of really nice signs early in the game,” Rhule said. “But I know Matt’s a battler. This year’s developmental. He’s just going to have to grind, both taking care of his foot and all the things he needs to do as a quarterback.

“Hopefully, someday he’ll look back and say it was a blessing, but I hate it for him right now.”

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Europe sidelined as U.S. tries to stop Russia-Ukraine war

U.S. army soldiers stand in formation during a joint military tactical training exercise Blowback 2016 with Bulgaria’s army at Novo Selo military ground on April 11, 2016.

NIKOLAY DOYCHINOV | AFP | Getty Images

Crisis talks aimed at averting a military confrontation between Russia and Ukraine appear to be faltering, as Western allies prepare for a possible conflict between the neighbors that could be “painful, violent and bloody.”

Western allies are preparing for some kind of military confrontation, with NATO putting more forces on standby and looking to reinforce Eastern Europe with more ships and fighter jets. The U.S. Department of Defense, meanwhile, said Monday that about 8,500 American troops are on heightened alert and awaiting orders to deploy to the region in the event that Russia does invade Ukraine.

The 8,500 troops are based in the U.S. and would be part of the NATO Response Force if that group is activated, the U.S. Department of Defense said on Monday.

The NATO Response Force is a 40,000-strong, multinational force made up of land, air, maritime and Special Operations Forces that NATO can deploy quickly, wherever needed. Its overarching purpose is “to provide a rapid military response to an emerging crisis,” NATO says. It has not yet been activated.

Pentagon Press Secretary John F. Kirby stated on Monday that the American forces being put on standby would be in addition to the significant combat-capable U.S. forces already based in Europe “to deter aggression and enhance the alliance’s ability to defend allies and defeat aggression if necessary.”

“Secretary [of Defense Lloyd] Austin has placed a range of units in the United States on a heightened preparedness to deploy, which increases our readiness to provide forces if NATO should activate the NRF or if other situations develop,” the press secretary said. 

If it is activated, Austin’s order would enable the U.S. to rapidly deploy additional brigade combat teams, along with units specializing in logistics, aviation, intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, transportation and more, Kirby noted. 

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, meanwhile, warned on Monday that a Russian invasion of Ukraine would be a “painful, violent and bloody, business” and a “disastrous step.”

“The intelligence is very clear that there are 60 Russian battle groups on the border of Ukraine. The plan for a lightning war that could take out Kyiv is one that everybody can see. We need to make it very clear to the Kremlin that that would be a disastrous step,” he told reporters.

Europe in the back seat

But as the U.S. and NATO officials plan for a potential conflict, Europe seems to have been conspicuously absent from many of the proceedings leading up to this point.

Many last-ditch negotiations aimed at preventing tensions between Russia and Ukraine from spilling into conflict have gone ahead without the bloc, leading Eurasia Group’s Emre Peker and Alex Brideau to believe that Europe has been “sidelined on its own turf.”

“The EU has failed to unequivocally rally behind a strategy to counter Russia’s increasingly aggressive posture against Ukraine, and will struggle to do so going forward. That will relegate Brussels to the sidelines as the U.S. and Russia discuss the future of Europe’s security architecture,” they noted on Monday.

Several European officials have complained that the EU has been sidelined during discussions on Ukraine between the U.S. and Russian officials; Ukraine has also complained that it has also been left out of talks in which it is the central focus and concern.

But part of the European Union’s difficulties when it comes to dealing with its bellicose neighbor Russia is that there is division within the bloc over how to deal with Moscow. Some countries take a more dovish stance toward Russia (such as France and Germany), whereas others, such as those in Eastern Europe or those that used to be part of the Soviet Union like the Baltics, are more hawkish.

In addition, the EU has an awkward reliance on Russia for a large chunk (around 40%) of its natural gas supplies, meaning that Russia can use this resource, particularly in winter, to its own advantage. Germany in particular is in a difficult situation because the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, which is yet to be approved, will transport gas directly into Germany and is designed to boost Russian gas supplies to the continent.

Another part of the problem is that there is no consensus in the EU over its future security landscape. Some countries, like France, are pushing for more strategic autonomy from the U.S. and NATO, while others (again those in Eastern Europe and the Baltics where NATO troops are deployed) are more comfortable with remaining under the aegis of the military alliance.

Europe won’t act ‘unless there’s an invasion’

“Barring invasion, Europe can’t and won’t mobilize,’ Eurasia Group’s analysts warned, predicting that the EU “will struggle to bridge internal divides between Russia hawks and doves over Ukraine tensions.”

“These dynamics will put yet another nail in the coffin of EU defense integration, and exacerbate the bloc’s split into pro-U.S. and more-Europe camps on security,” Peker and Brideau noted, effectively meaning that “U.S.-Russia talks will decide the future of Europe’s security architecture, which the EU will follow.”

Crisis talks between Western officials and Russia have been taking place for a number of weeks now, and follow high-profile discussions between U.S. President Joe Biden and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin.

Concerns over Russia’s behavior toward Ukraine grew amid reports that it had deployed around 100,000 troops and military hardware to various positions along its border with Ukraine. There have also been some intelligence reports that it is planning to invade.

Russia has denied these reports repeatedly.

In talks with the U.S. and NATO, Russia sought legal assurances that Ukraine will never be allowed to join NATO, as Putin seeks to stop any eastward expansion of the military organization, and pushes NATO to roll back deployments in Eastern Europe and the Baltics. So far, the U.S. and NATO have refused such demands, among others.

As Ukraine is not a member of NATO, the military alliance is not obliged to defend it, posing the question over just how far the U.S. and EU are willing to go to defend the country — one that aspires to both membership of the EU and NATO. Russia vehemently opposes these aspirations.

While the U.S., Europe and NATO have all talked tough when it comes to Russia, vowing “massive consequences” as U.S. State Secretary Antony Blinken said on Sunday, if Russia does invade, so far it looks like more sanctions on key Russian sectors would be the primary response deployed by the international community.

While the U.S. and U.K. have sent military equipment to Ukraine to help it defend itself, the response from EU nations has been more nuanced — Germany has refused to provide Ukraine with direct military support and reportedly blocked Estonia from sending German-made weapons to Ukraine.

NATO has itself been bolstering its military capabilities in Eastern Europe by putting forces on standby and deploying more ships and fighter jets to the area. Some European countries, including Spain, Denmark and the Netherlands, have announced their intention to send military hardware to bolster NATO defense capabilities.

Mariana, 52, a marketing researcher who for the past two years has been a volunteer in a Kyiv Territorial Defence unit, trains on a Saturday in a forest on January 22, 2022 in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Sean Gallup | Getty Images

The Kremlin accused the U.S. and its allies on Monday of escalating East-West tensions by announcing plans to boost NATO forces and the U.S.’ decision to evacuate the families of diplomats from its embassy in Ukraine.

Europe preparing for conflict

The EU said on Monday that it will continue to stand by Ukraine’s side and, despite preparations for conflict, diplomats in Europe continue to push for peace.

A flurry of diplomatic meetings has continued in the region this week, with the EU’s Foreign Affairs Council meeting on Monday and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg holding talks with foreign affairs ministers from Finland and Sweden.

On Monday afternoon, Biden held a video call with a number of European leaders and NATO chief Stoltenberg.

In a statement, the European Commission said the meeting “aimed at coordinating the collective response to the aggressive behaviour of Russia with regards to Ukraine. Leaders shared the assessment on the seriousness of the situation. They wished for diplomacy to succeed but are undertaking preparations for all eventualities.”

It added that it was “working on a wide array of sectoral and individual sanctions in the case of further military aggression by Russia against Ukraine,” as well as working with EU states and allies on preparedness, from energy to cyber-security.

On Monday, the EU announced a new financial aid package for Ukraine of 1.2 billion euros ($1.36 billion) in the form of an emergency financial assistance package and 120 million euros in additional grants. European Commission President Von der Leyen said the aid was aimed at helping Ukraine “address its financing needs due to the conflict,” adding: “Let me be clear once more: Ukraine is a free and sovereign country. It makes its own choices. The EU will continue to stand by its side.”

European leaders are also looking to try their hand at bringing Russia and Ukraine closer together this week, with political advisors from Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany due to hold “Normandy format” talks on eastern Ukraine in Paris on Tuesday or Wednesday.

Such talks have in the past produced the so-called ‘Minsk Agreements’ — peace deals to stop the ongoing lower-level conflict in eastern Ukraine — but the accords did not stop ongoing skirmishes and some fighting in the Donbass region between pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainian troops, and both sides have accused the other of flouting the agreements.

As such, there is not much expectation that the Normandy talks will be fruitful. Timothy Ash, senior emerging markets sovereign strategist at Bluebay Asset Management, said that “Normandy and Minsk processes are dead,” with Moscow showing what he said was “zero interest” in the peace talks continuing.

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Ayo Dosunmu, Stanley Johnson latest Chicago Bulls players sidelined amid team’s COVID-19 outbreak

Two more Bulls players — Ayo Dosunmu and Stanley Johnson — landed in the NBA’s health and safety protocols Saturday, bringing Chicago’s total to seven players sidelined amid a teamwide COVID-19 outbreak.

Johnson just signed a 10-day contract with the Bulls on Thursday after the team was granted a hardship exception to add another roster spot with so many players out. However, he and Dosunmu, who started the past two games, were out for Saturday’s game against the Miami Heat.

“We need a hardship for a hardship right now,” Bulls coach Billy Donovan said prior to the game.

The two players join DeMar DeRozan, Coby White, Javonte Green, Matt Thomas and Derrick Jones Jr. in the league’s protocols.

Since the start of the outbreak, the Bulls have begun testing players and coaches multiple times per day to try to monitor the spread of the virus. Chicago’s G-League affiliate, the Windy City Bulls, postponed their games on Saturday and Sunday because they won’t have eight players available due to positive tests within the team.

Jones entered the protocol on Friday while he was with the Bulls in Miami, but Donovan confirmed Saturday that Jones had returned to Chicago to begin his isolation period. After landing in health and safety protocols, players must remain in isolation for at least 10 days or until they return two negative PCR tests in a 24-hour period.

“Maybe some of it’s because of the vaccination, we’ve got a lot of guys sitting at home with no symptoms right now,” Donovan said. “That’s obviously a good thing, too, because I think when guys have gone through a real difficulty of getting really, really sick, it’s really made it a lot harder for them coming back.

“We do have some guys that have felt under the weather, we have guys that have very, very mild symptoms, and some guys that just don’t have any.”

The Bulls have not been the only team trying to manage outbreaks. The Charlotte Hornets, who played the Bulls at the United Center about two weeks ago, have five players in the health and safety protocols.

Others who recently landed in the league’s COVID protocols include Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant, Washington Wizards forward Kyle Kuzma, Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle and Toronto Raptors executive Masai Ujiri.

As the NBA navigates another season amid the pandemic, one major difference from last year is that, so far, the league has not needed to postpone any games.

The Bulls still had 11 players available Saturday night in Miami, including two two-way players, another in Alfonzo McKinnie, who signed a 10-day contract Friday, and guard Alex Caruso, who was available after missing the past two games with a hamstring injury.

That gave them well above the eight-player minimum the NBA used as a threshold to postpone games last season.

“I would totally understand if somebody on our team’s like, ‘Listen, I don’t feel comfortable with this. We’re together, we’re practicing and I don’t feel comfortable playing,'” Donovan said. “We haven’t had any of that, but certainly COVID has impacted people in a lot of different ways, and I think people have, at least inside of our team, have had loved ones that have really suffered from it.

“It is a scary time. Our guys have really done a good job of just trying to put their best foot forward to try to really stay locked in on, ‘This is what I have to do,’ or, ‘This is what I can control,’ and try to move forward with it.”

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Nick Chubb among multiple Browns sidelined following Covid-19 outbreak

It appears the Coronavirus pandemic could have a major impact on the New England Patriots’ upcoming game against the Cleveland Browns. According to multiple reports, the Browns are dealing with a Covid-19 outbreak and were forced to send multiple players to the NFL’s special reserve list.

According to NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero, running backs Nick Chubb, Demetric Felton and John Kelly have all tested positive for Covid-19 in the past few days. They are joining practice squad wide receiver Lawrence Cager and cornerback Brian Mills on the Coronavirus reserve list now, leaving their status for Sunday’s game in question.

The biggest name on that list is Nick Chubb. The former second-round draft pick is the Browns’ leader in both scrimmage yards and touchdowns, and a big part of the team’s offensive attack.

Both he and Demetric Felton have been vaccinated, though, which means that there is a chance they could still be reactivated before Sunday’s game in New England. The two would need two negative Coronavirus tests 24 hours apart to be cleared to play. Until those happen, however, they will need to stay quarantined and are barred from participating in any in-facility activities such as practices.

The outbreak is putting considerable pressure on the Browns’ running back group and leaving D’Ernest Johnson as the only available player at the position right now. Cleveland could decide to return Kareem Hunt from injured reserve, but his status is uncertain as well at this point in time.

Cleveland’s Week 10 opponent, meanwhile, is facing some running-back-related questions as well. Patriots runners Damien Harris and Rhamondre Stevenson are both in concussion protocol after exiting last Sunday’s game against the Carolina Panthers in the fourth quarter. The only other backs under contract are veteran Brandon Bolden and second-year man J.J. Taylor.

The high-stakes meeting between New England and Cleveland — both teams are 5-4 and fighting for playoff positioning — will be kicked off at 1:00 p.m. ET at Foxborough’s Gillette Stadium.



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NASA considering software fixes for sidelined Hubble Space Telescope

NASA is considering some software adjustments to the Hubble Space Telescope as the agency continues its effort to bring the sidelined telescope back into service.

The recovery team is now examining hardware that commands the instruments, which forms part of the Science Instrument Command and Data Handling Unit, the agency said in an update Friday (Nov. 5). The iconic space telescope has been unable to perform science observations since its instruments entered a protective “safe mode” in late October.

“Specifically, the team is analyzing the circuitry of the Control Unit, which generates synchronization messages and passes them onto the instruments,” NASA stated. The agency is considering changing the instrument flight software to allow it to search for  data synchronization messages without falling into a “safe mode.” The loss of these messages appears to have been behind the glitch, the agency noted.

Related: The best Hubble Space Telescope images of all time!

The telescope, which has been operating in space since 1990 and was last repaired by astronauts in 2009, entered safe mode on Oct. 25 following a glitch, and cannot perform observations. All instruments are healthy as the investigation continues, the agency noted in a Tuesday (Nov. 2) update.

The telescope is not intended to be serviced in-person again, as the set of space shuttles that used to fly periodically to the telescope for repairs were retired in 2011 after the program had 30 years of operations. Investigators are thus working to help Hubble at a distance. “Workarounds would first be verified using ground simulators to ensure they work as planned,” NASA added in the update.

The software changes, if they happen at all, will happen once the Hubble team looks at control unit design diagrams, data from the lost messages, and the range of potential instrument software changes that could address the problem.

Parallel to the rescue effort, Hubble team members are trying to collect data from the observatory’s cameras and instruments. During the Oct. 30 weekend, the team turned on parts of the Near Infrared Camera and Multi Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) instrument, “allowing the team to determine how frequently this [data synchronization] problem occurs,” NASA stated. NICMOS was recovered Monday (Nov. 1) and since then, no further data synchronization messages were lost, the update said.

Next, Hubble engineers are working to recover Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) instrument, with an aim to begin gathering science again at the beginning of next week. A final decision will come Sunday (Nov. 7) after the agency analyzes the data. ACS was selected as the best instrument to try first, as it is the least likely to induce stress on the observatory, NASA said.

“If a lost message is seen before then, the decision to activate ACS will also be revisited,” NASA noted, saying the plan to return instruments for full service is still evolving. “The team is proceeding cautiously to ensure the safety of the instruments and avoid additional stresses on the hardware,” the agency added.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook. 



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How Elizabeth Holmes sidelined the real scientists at Theranos

Former Theranos lab director Adam Rosendorff was the second employee who testified in Elizabeth Holmes’ trial who kept his work emails. Forwarding work emails to a personal account can violate a non-disclosure agreement, which Rosendorff signed when he joined the company. But, like Surekha Gangakhedkar before him, he was worried he’d be blamed for the company’s problems.

He was right to worry: he’s one of the people Elizabeth Holmes’ defense is trying to blame.

In opening arguments of US v Elizabeth Holmes, the defense agreed there were problems in Theranos’ lab. But Lance Wade, Homes’ attorney, said that problems in the clinical lab were ultimately the responsibility of the lab director. And besides, that lab director reported to Holmes’ co-defendant, Sunny Balwani, who is being tried separately. They face 10 counts of wire fraud and two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

Today’s testimony was about bad Theranos tests. A lot of new emails were introduced, showing Holmes was aware of the company’s problems, and was even actively trying to manage the situation. Several times in those emails, Rosendorff tried to get Theranos labs to run FDA-approved tests instead of the ones Theranos developed. But maybe even more telling were the emails that Rosendorff was excluded from.

Rosendorff didn’t mince words when he took the witness stand. He quit because of many things, he said. “One was the unwillingness of management to perform proficiency testing as required by law, I felt pressured to vouch for tests I did not have confidence in.” That wasn’t all. He came to believe “the company was more about PR and fundraising than patient care,” he said.

When he first joined Theranos in April 2013, Rosendorff thought Theranos might be the next Apple. But the sheen wore off the company quickly — and he began looking for other jobs by that summer. In August, before Theranos’ launch in patients, the clinical lab was “anxious” about testing real people, he said; the pace around the launch “extremely rushed and hurried.”

On August 31, 2013, Elizabeth Holmes sent a 1AM email asking for an update on how many tests had completed validation. An employee wrote back that none of them had. The launch was scheduled for September 9th, 2013, and the schedule came from Holmes and Balwani, Rosendorff said.

Increasingly worried, he tried to stall it. He was “raising alarm bells.” In an email a little more than a week before the scheduled launch, Rosendorff wrote to Holmes and Balwani raising concerns about some of the tests. He also thought the lab needed more staff with better training.

He needed “a few more weeks to sort through these medical and logistical issues,” he wrote in the email. That would mean delaying bringing Theranos’ tests to patients. He even met with Holmes about his concerns, because he felt Balwani wasn’t taking him seriously.

During that meeting Rosendorff described Holmes as “very nervous.” “She was not her usual composed self. She was trembling a little bit,” he said.

Despite Rosendorff’s concerns, the launch went ahead as planned.

Some of his testimony corroborated what previous Theranos employees had said. He echoed Erika Cheung’s concerns about removing outliers from Theranos data. As both Cheung and Gangakhedkar testified, the Edison machines frequently failed quality control.

While a quarter of Theranos’ devices routinely failed quality control, failures of commercially-available tech was far less frequent. Theranos devices “failed so frequently it raised doubts in my mind regarding the accuracy of the tests themselves,” Rosendorff said. He emailed Balwani about the failure rates, who wrote back, “Adam. This is not the case.”

Normally lab directors deal with doctors who have concerns about lab results — this was part of Rosendorff’s job at his previous employer, the University of Pittsburgh. But Theranos installed Holmes’ brother, Christian, as a liaison for complaints. Rosendorff said he was pressured to come up with explanations about bad results that didn’t call into question the tests themselves.

But the tests were bad. In the case of a key pregnancy hormone — one that we heard testimony about from a patient who was wrongly told she was miscarrying — Rosendorff sent an all-caps email to his staff in May 2014 telling them that all future tests were to be run on an FDA-approved device.

This didn’t happen.

In fact, there was a June 2014 email chain where Christian Holmes wrote his sister, CCing Balwani, that the test was “causing serious complaints and patient issues.” Additionally, the lab was “a complete mess.”

Holmes wrote back that she’d connect with her brother, then added, “Sunny / this is already handled.”

There are a few notable things about the exchange. First, it demolishes the idea that Holmes could have been misled about the state of the clinical lab and its tests. Second, it shows her clearly taking charge of the situation, even telling Balwani to stand down. But third, it’s remarkable for who’s missing from the chain: Rosendorff, who may not have even been aware that his instruction to use FDA-cleared devices only was ignored.

The first time he saw those emails was in court, he said. It was not the only set of emails about patient complaints we saw where Rosendorff wasn’t included, either.

In February of 2014, Rosendorff also tried to convince the company to stop running its HDL (“good”) cholesterol test on Theranos devices. He sent an email to Balwani and added Holmes, because he thought Balwani wasn’t listening to him. “I got a lot of pushback” for suggesting the lab use approved devices, Rosendorff said.

That pushback came from Holmes, Balwani, and VP Daniel Young, he testified. And though Young didn’t have a medical degree, he often offered suggestions about what was “really” wrong with tests, Rosendorff said. Through his testimony, Rosendorff generally talked about Young in a tone that suggested he loathed the VP.

The problems in the lab were widespread, Rosendorff testified, pointing to tests of bicarbonate, and an email where he pointed out that two-thirds of patients were reading below the normal range. “The test has lost any diagnostic value,” he emailed in September 2014

But Theranos wasn’t honest with physicians or providers about this. Instead, customer service representatives were instructed to say that the results “were not reported due to temporary unavailability.”

Another email from a healthcare provider said it didn’t realize Theranos’ methods weren’t FDA-approved, and complained about testosterone and blood sugar tests. “I am not sure what to do with these lab results????” the email read.

Part of the problem was that all the validation studies had been done on venous blood, Rosendorff testified. See, to get enough fingerprick blood to run all the studies, you’d need to prick every finger on the patient — so as a matter of convenience, venous blood was drawn. But if you draw blood from fingerpricks, you’re far more likely to destroy red blood cells in the process, leading to faulty readings.

Among the bad tests was one for sodium, potassium, and chloride, called ISE. Young, who was a statistician, not a doctor, suggested the faulty results for this test was because of the red blood cells breaking apart, and urged a visual examination of the blood to confirm.

This was bad for several reasons. First of all, the FDA-approved machines detected this immediately, not after a weird reading. Second, evidence of broken red blood cells wasn’t always obvious to the eye, Rosendorff testified.

This bad assay had been used on patients since September 2013. In June 2014, there were still problems with the tests, and Young’s suggested fixes, including a “bias-correction” method, still weren’t working. So Theranos voided tests that fell above and below accepted values.

That was a problem, too. We saw an email from a doctor dated October 27th, 2014, addressed to a customer service rep. The patient had low sodium levels — which was why the test had been ordered. A customer service rep emailed Rosendorff saying, “Is it possible that that was the value? If she comes in again, and the value is still critical low, will it be voided again?”

Rosendorff forwarded this email to Balwani and Holmes, writing, “I’m not sure of a clinical value of a sodium assay in which the only time we can report it is when it is not critical and the very situations that require accurate measurement and reporting of abnormal sodium results are voided.”

Calcium testing, too, was bad. “Are there any findings we can relay about high trends in calcium reporting?” Christian Holmes wrote to Young and Balwani. “Seems to be by far the majority of questions we get about accuracy now.”

He then forwarded this to his sister. “It’s pretty obvious we have issues with calcium, potassium, and sodium, specifically,” he wrote. “Obviously I can’t tell them we are wrong, but they continue to send patients to Quest [another blood-testing company] after we report high, and the results continue to come back normal.”

Rosendorff wasn’t included on this chain, and took issue with “specifically.” There were lots of problems with other tests, he said.

“I didn’t believe at this point that Theranos could solve these problems,” Rosendorff testified. He began avoiding speaking to doctors, and told one or two physicians that he didn’t trust the results.

All of this is bad for Holmes — not only is she aware of the problems, she’s calling the shots. But her defense hinted at what the cross-examination of Rosendorff may bring. One of his subsequent employers was also investigated by the federal authorities, as well as another company that was subject to a justice department probe. (We found this out before the jury was allowed in the courtroom.)

It’s not clear that Rosendorff’s post-Theranos employment will be deemed relevant to the current case — the jury may hear nothing about this. But the defense will certainly have some work to do. Though Rosendorff’s testimony was much more technical than that of board member James Mattis yesterday, it was possibly even worse for Holmes. If she’s trying to convince the jury that any fraud was mostly Balwani’s fault, she’s going to have to explain the ample evidence she was giving marching orders.

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With Giannis Antetokounmpo sidelined, Phoenix Suns installed as NBA Finals favorites over Milwaukee Bucks

Sportsbooks have installed the Phoenix Suns as favorites over the Milwaukee Bucks in the NBA Finals.

The Suns opened at -175 at Caesars Sportsbook by William Hill, with the Bucks listed as +150 underdogs. Phoenix is a 5.5-point favorite over Milwaukee in Game 1 on Tuesday.

The Game 1 line and series price reflect oddsmakers’ belief that Milwaukee star Giannis Antetokounmpo will likely miss at least part of the best-of-seven series. Antetokounmpo missed the final two games of the Eastern Conference finals against the Atlanta Hawks after suffering a hyperextended left knee late in Game 4. His status for the Finals against the Suns is unclear.

Last week, prior to Antetokounmpo’s injury and with the Bucks and Suns leading their series, the SuperBook at Westgate Las Vegas posted an early series price on a potential Milwaukee-Phoenix matchup in the finals. The SuperBook opened the Bucks as a -150 favorite over the Suns.

A week later, with Antetokounmpo injured, the odds have flipped, with Phoenix now the favorite.

The early action was on the Suns at the SuperBook, which opened with Phoenix at -150.

Jeff Sherman, who oversees NBA odds for the SuperBook, said they took multiple limit bets on the Suns to win the series Saturday night, prompting him to move the price to -170.

Sherman is expecting Antetokounmpo to miss at least the start of the NBA Finals and believes how soon he returns will be dictated by the outcome of the early games.

“The Bucks would’ve been a favorite if there was no injury at all to Giannis,” Sherman told ESPN.

The Suns won both meetings against Milwaukee during the regular season, in a pair of tight one-point victories.

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