9 wackiest minor league baseball team names debuting this year
2019 is shaping up to be a unique season with the introduction to nine minor league baseball teams with some pretty wacky names.
The United States is expected to impose sanctions to punish Russia for the poisoning of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny as early as Tuesday, two sources familiar with the matter said. President Joe Biden's decision to impose sanctions for Navalny's poisoning reflects a harder stance than taken by his predecessor, Donald Trump, who let the incident last August pass without punitive U.S. action. The sources said on Monday on condition of anonymity that the United States was expected to act under two executive orders: 13661, which was issued after Russia's invasion of Crimea but provides broad authority to target Russian officials, and 13382, issued in 2005 to combat the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
Mr Cuomo had his brother on the air repeatedly during early days of pandemic
"Not one person in baseball believes Albert Pujols is the age he says he is," former Miami Marlins President David Samson.
Senators Josh Hawley (R., Mo.) and Mike Lee (R., Utah) on Tuesday pressed FBI Director Christopher Wray on the procedures federal law enforcement officials have used to track down those who participated in the January 6 siege on the U.S. Capitol. âIâm anxious to see those who committed unlawful, violent acts on January 6 brought to justice,â Lee said during a Senate Judiciary Hearing on Tuesday. âI also believe that ⊠with this circumstance, like every other circumstance, we have to make sure that the civil liberties of the American people are protected.â The Utah Republican explained that he had âheard a number of accountsâ of people who were in Washington, D.C. on January 6 who never went near the Capitol but were âinexplicablyâ contacted by FBI agents who knew of their presence in the district that day âwith no other explanation, perhaps, other than the use of geolocation data.â âAre you geolocating people, through the FBI, based on where they were on January 6?â Lee asked Wray. âI think there may be some instances in which geolocation has been an investigative tool, but I canât speak to any specific situation,â Wray responded. âBut what are you using to do that?â Lee asked. âWhatâs your basis for authority? Are you using national security letters?â Wray said, âI donât believe in any instance weâre using national security letters for investigation of the Capitolââ Lee interrupted to ask the FBI director if he had gone to the FISA court, to which Wray responded he did not âremotely believe FISA is remotely implicated in our investigation.â The senator continued pressing Wray, asking if the FBI is âusing warrants predicated on probable cause.â âWe certainly have executed a number of warrants in the course of the investigation of January 6,â Wray said. âAll of our investigative work in response to the Capitol [riot] has been under the legal authorities that we have in consultation with the [Department of Justice] and the prosecutors.â Later, Hawley continued Leeâs line of questioning regarding geolocation data, asking Wray if his position is that he doesnât know âwhether the bureau has scooped up geolocation data, metadata cell phone records from cell phone towers.â âDo you not know, or are you saying maybe it has or maybe it hasnât? Tell me what you know about this,â Hawley said. âSo when it comes to geolocation data specificallyâagain, not in a specific instance, but just even the use of geolocation dataâI would not be surprised to learnâbut I do not know for a factâthat we were using geolocation data under any situation with connection with the investigation of [January 6],â Wray said. âBut again, we do use geolocation data under different authorities and specific instances.â The FBI, Department of Justice and local police in Washington, D.C. are investigating the origins and execution of the January rioting at the Capitol, with the probe resulting in hundreds of arrests so far. Republicans have expressed concern that the methods law enforcement has used to track down rioters could infringe upon personal liberty. Last month Bank of America sparked outcry after it said it would hand over banking information to the federal authorities for people suspected of having involvement in the riots. In the days after the riot, Bank of America handed over data to the FBI on thousands of customers who traveled to Washington, D.C. around January 6, Fox News reported.
Broward Sheriffâs OfficeThe FBI arrested a notorious white supremacist livestreamer in an early morning raid in Florida on Tuesday.FBI agents, working with Fort Lauderdale police and the FBIâs Joint Terrorism Task Force, arrested Paul N. Miller, 32, on one charge of being a âconvicted felon in possession of a firearm.â The FBI said in a press release that Miller was arrested without incident.Millerâs neighbors in Fort Lauderdaleâs Riverside neighborhood reported hearing flashbangs during the raid, which took place around 5 a.m. ET, local TV station NBC 6 reported. One neighbor described seeing law enforcement officers carrying out a box that appeared to have âa shotgun on the front or an AK.âBiden Taps a War on Terror Veteran to Stop White SupremacistsMiller, who goes by the name âGypsy Crusaderâ online, has amassed more than 40,000 followers on Telegram, a messaging app and social media network popular with far-right extremists. Many of Millerâs videos feature him dressing up as characters like the Joker or Nintendoâs Mario, then hurling racial abuse at strangers, including children, through the randomized chat app Omegle. Miller can be seen holding a gun in some of his videos.A grand jury indicted Miller on the firearms charge on Feb. 25, according to court records unsealed Tuesday. Miller is charged with illegally possessing a gun on Jan. 17, 2018. The indictment doesnât describe the 2018 incident in which Miller allegedly had the firearm.Millerâs Tuesday arrest sent shockwaves through internet extremist circles. Miller had recently sold patches promoting his channel to his supporters, with his arrest raising fears among other extremists that the FBI could access his customer files and find out their own names and addresses.In messages captured by extremism researcher Hilary Sargent, Millerâs supporters worried about the possibility that they could soon become FBI targets themselves. If convicted, Miller faces up to 10 years in prison on the gun charge.Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more.
Twenty-seven people were said to have been travelling in an SUV when it collided with a trailer truck.
Texas is experiencing an uptick in reported COVID-19 cases after the winter storm, and it has more hot-spot counties than any other state.
New polling from Morning Consult shows Ted Cruz's job approval fell more after traveling to Mexico than when he objected to the election results.
An SUV packed with 25 people pulled in front of an oncoming tractor-trailer on a two-lane highway cutting through farmland near the Mexican border early Tuesday, killing 13 and leaving bodies strewn across the roadway. When police arrived some of the passengers were trying to crawl out of the crumpled 1997 Ford Expedition, the front end of the rig still pushing into its left side and two empty trailers jackknifed behind it. Twelve people were found dead when first responders reached the highway, which winds through fields in the agricultural southeastern corner of California about 125 miles (201 kilometers) east of San Diego.
An Insider reporter struggled to book an appointment and had to wait in line for hours to get the first dose of the Moderna vaccine.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Tuesday addressed the multiple allegations of sexual harassment made against New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, saying the Biden administration supports an investigation of him and believes the three women making the accusations should be heard.
An Oklahoma woman was literally caught red-handed on first-degree burglary complaint charges thanks to Cheetos snack dust. Sharon Carr was arrested on Feb. 26 after police reported an attempted home burglary. While she did not take anything, officers claim she left behind a Cheetos bag.
By late summer last year, Operation Warp Speed accounts were running dry, so the Trump administration appears to have used a financial maneuver allowing Department of Health and Human Services officials to divert $10 billion from a fund meant to help hospitals and health care providers affected by the coronavirus pandemic, Stat News reports. Congress granted the HHS permission to move pandemic-related money between accounts, though the agreement stipulated the agency had to give lawmakers a heads up. In this case, it appears the HHS siphoned the funds quietly, albeit with permission from its top lawyer. Other attorneys told Stat that the agency likely did have the wiggle room to carry out the action. Former Office of Management and Director Russ Vought defended the decision and said "we would do it again," telling Stat that not only did the administration have the authority, it was also "the right thing to do in order to move as quickly as possible because lives were on the line." Other Trump officials seemed to agree, per Stat, arguing that successful vaccines would reduce hospitalizations, making Warp Speed the more consequential outlet. It's still unclear whether the decision has resulted in less money for health care providers, as the Biden administration remains mum on the subject, Stat reports. Read more at Stat News. More stories from theweek.comWill COVID-19 wind up saving lives?John Boehner rips Ted Cruz as a 'reckless a--hole' on book's back coverArizona GOP lawyer tells Supreme Court the party needs certain voting restrictions to compete with Democrats
If Democrats are to hold the moral high ground on issues of gender equity, they cannot apply standards just to those on the opposite side of the aisle.
"I looked back and he took off leaving the child there, so I flipped a U-turn in the grass to get to the baby,â Louisiana man Luke Dufrene said.
The president returned to some of his favourite debunked theories about the election, and much more
The TV host said he "obviously" can't cover his brother's scandals because it presents a conflict of interest.
CrossFit has publicly disavowed Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene over the Republican's previous support for QAnon and other conspiracy theories.
See the mother-daughter duo serve up a sweet message in their first shared fashion campaign.
Royal Caribbean's new ship, Odyssey of the Seas, is set to debut with departures from Israel with all passengers and crew over age 16 vaccinated.