Phillies add Gold Glove OF Harrison Bader from Twins for two prospects

<p>-

  • Phillies add Gold Glove OF Harrison Bader from Twins for two prospects</p>

<p>DAN GELSTON July 31, 2025 at 8:02 PM</p>

<p>Minnesota Twins center fielder Harrison Bader runs into the dugout during the ninth inning of baseball game against the Boston Red Sox, Wednesday, July 30, 2025, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Matt Krohn) ()</p>

<p>PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The Philadelphia Phillies acquired outfielder Harrison Bader for two minor leaguers Thursday, their second deal with the Minnesota Twins in two days after landing closer Jhoan Duran.</p>

<p>The 31-year-old Bader, a 2021 Gold Glove winner, remains a strong defender at all three outfield spots and has 12 home runs, 38 RBIs and a .778 OPS in 96 games. Bader adds another bat to an outfield that has struggled to put up big offensive numbers. He also has postseason experience, playing in five postseason series with the Cardinals, Yankees and Mets with a .809 OPS and five career homers.</p>

<p>The right-handed hitting Bader could fall into a platoon with left-handers Brandon Marsh in center or Max Kepler in left.</p>

<p>The Phillies are sending minor league outfielder Hendry Mendez and right-hander Geremy Villoria to the Twins for Bader. ESPN was first to report on the deal.</p>

<p>The Phillies acquired Duran to round out the bullpen a day earlier. He has 16 saves and a 2.01 ERA in 49 appearances this season, striking out 53 in 49 1/3 innings. That deal cost the win-now Phillies a stronger pair of prospects in catcher Eduardo Tait and right-hander Mick Abel.</p>

<p>Philadelphia is battling the New York Mets for the NL East title. The Phillies won the division last year before they were eliminated by the Mets in their NL Division Series.</p>

<p>Right-hander Brett de Geus was designated for assignment by Philadelphia to make room for Bader on the 40-man roster.</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB</p>

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Phillies add Gold Glove OF Harrison Bader from Twins for two prospects

<p>- Phillies add Gold Glove OF Harrison Bader from Twins for two prospects</p> <p>DAN GELSTON July 31...

US and Ecuador sign agreement to combat transnational crime

<p>-

  • US and Ecuador sign agreement to combat transnational crime</p>

<p>July 31, 2025 at 8:33 PM</p>

<p>U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, left, shakes hands with Ecuador's Minister of Interior John Reinberg following a press briefing at the Ecuadorian Presidential Palace, Thursday, July 31, 2025, in Quito, Ecuador. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)</p>

<p>QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — The United States and Ecuador on Thursday signed a bilateral agreement aimed at strengthening their collaboration against transnational criminal networks.</p>

<p>The agreement, signed during a visit of U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to the South American country, facilitates the exchange of information on suspected criminal offenders and risk assessments of cargo and travelers. Noem told reporters the efforts are "crucial steps to improve security and ensure that migration is carried out within the framework of the law."</p>

<p>The deal with Ecuador comes as the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump seeks to bolster regional cooperation in its clampdown against immigration and transnational criminal groups, including Tren de Aragua, the Venezuelan gang designated as a foreign terrorist organization by the White House earlier this year.</p>

<p>On Wednesday, Noem signed a similar agreement with Chile, which she visited as part of her latest tour of Latin America. That agreement allows Chilean officials to identify potentially dangerous migrants entering or exiting the country and share their fingerprints, iris scans and other biometric data with Homeland Security to prevent such individuals from traveling to the U.S.</p>

<p>____</p>

<p>Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america</p>

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US and Ecuador sign agreement to combat transnational crime

<p>- US and Ecuador sign agreement to combat transnational crime</p> <p>July 31, 2025 at 8:33 PM</p...

Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention

<p>-

  • Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention</p>

<p>Jan CrawfordJuly 31, 2025 at 10:31 PM</p>

<p>/ Getty Images</p>

<p>Justice Brett Kavanaugh defended how the Supreme Court is handling an unprecedented number of emergency appeals from the Trump administration, saying that as presidents push the limits of their power, courts will have to respond.</p>

<p>Speaking before a group of lawyers and judges Thursday in Kansas City, Missouri, Kavanaugh said presidents in both parties, stymied by inaction in Congress, have relied more on executive orders "to get things done." That's led to more legal challenges, Kavanaugh said, which inevitably draw in the Supreme Court to determine whether the new regulation can take effect, at least temporarily, while the legal challenges play out.</p>

<p>So far, the court has been inclined to say yes, agreeing to allow a number of President Trump's high-profile executive orders to take effect while the lower courts review the merits, such as orders to fire members of independent federal agencies, freeze certain federal grants and plan layoffs at nearly every federal agency.</p>

<p>Asked about criticism that the court isn't doing enough to explain its reasoning in some of those emergency cases, Kavanaugh said the court has written more than it has in the past. He said the court also had made some internal changes in the past five or six years "to try to get the right answer," including scheduling emergency oral arguments, as in the recent case challenging nationwide injunctions.</p>

<p>He said he was a "fan of more process" and mentioned two recent cases, including the president's removal power in independent agencies, where he unsuccessfully urged the court to step in and decide the underlying issue before it went through the lower courts.</p>

<p>Kavanaugh's hour-long remarks came in a conversation with U.S. District Judge Sarah Pitlyk, one of his former law clerks, at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit's judicial conference. It's one of several judicial conferences this summer that will feature different justices.</p>

<p>Last week, Justice Elena Kagan spoke to the California-based 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, where she urged the court to be more cautious with its handling of the so-called emergency docket. She also said that while she finds some of the court's recent decisions "frustrating" and "sometimes even maddening," prompting fierce dissents, she believed her colleagues were "all operating in good faith."</p>

<p>Kavanaugh shared a similar sentiment about the other justices, saying even in disagreement, "they're thoughtfully engaging in difficult issues," and he believed it was "a sign of strength when there are different views expressed."</p>

<p>"The collegiality of the Supreme Court is very strong, strong to this day," he said. "We all look out for each other. We think the other eight are patriots and are good people."</p>

<p>His wide-ranging conversation with Pitlyk was at times personal and humorous, touching on everything from lessons he's taken from sports to some of his favorite opinions in recent terms. He said he's aware of criticism of the court, but that "criticism is part of the job."</p>

<p>Like the referees for high school sports, Kavanaugh said, as a justice, "you have to recognize and know thick skin and criticism comes with the territory."</p>

<p>"Did you ever walk out of a game and say, 'our team lost, but the refs were great?'" Kavanaugh said, to laughter from the audience. "That informs my judging, too."</p>

<p>Watch: Hawaii Gov. Josh Green gives update on tsunami warning</p>

<p>Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi gives tsunami warning update</p>

<p>Tsunami warning issued for Hawaii after 8.7 earthquake near Russia</p>

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Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention

<p>- Kavanaugh defends emergency orders as Supreme Court faces more bids for intervention</p> <p>Jan C...

Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism

<p>-

  • Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism</p>

<p>NICHOLAS RICCARDI July 31, 2025 at 9:26 PM</p>

<p>FILE - News media is set up in front of the home of U.S. District Judge Esther Salas, July 20, 2020, in North Brunswick, N.J. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)</p>

<p>In 2020, a disgruntled litigant posing as a deliveryman opened fire at the New Jersey home of District Judge Esther Salas, killing her 20-year-old son Daniel Anderl. Five years later, as President Donald Trump steps up hiscriticism of federal judges who have blocked some of his agenda, dozens of judges have had unsolicited pizzas delivered to their homes, often in Daniel Anderl's name.</p>

<p>District Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. of Rhode Island, who stalled Trump's initial round of across-the-board spending cuts, is among those who received pizzas in Anderl's name. His courtroom also has been flooded by threatening calls, including one profanity-laced one that called for his assassination.</p>

<p>McConnell, Jr. played a recording of the call during an unusual discussion Thursday where multiple federal judges discussed threats they have received — a notable conversation because judges usually only speak publicly from the bench and through their rulings, and rarely if ever, about personal threats and attacks. Salas and others said the number of attacks has escalated in recent months.</p>

<p>Without using his name, Salas called on Trump and his allies to tone down the rhetoric and stop demonizing the judiciary, for fear of what more could happen.</p>

<p>"We're used to being appealed. But keep it on the merits, stop demonizing us," Salas said. "They're inviting people to do us harm."</p>

<p>Thursday's event was sponsored by Speak up for Justice, a nonpartisan group supporting an independent judiciary. District Judge John C. Coughenour of Washington recalled having a police SWAT team called to his home to respond to a false report of an attack after Coughenour in January halted Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship for children of people in the country illegally.</p>

<p>District Judge Robert S. Lasnik of Washington also had pizzas delivered in Anderl's name to both his home and those of his two adult children, each in different cities, after an article in which he was quoted as being critical of attacks on judges was picked up by a television station in the Pacific Northwest, where he hears cases.</p>

<p>"The message to me was 'we know where you live, we know where your kids live, and they could end up dead like Daniel Anderl did,'" Lasnik said in an interview.</p>

<p>Salas says U.S. Marshals have told her of more than 100 cases of so-called "pizza doxings," unwanted deliveries to the homes of federal judges and their families, since 2024, with most occurring this year. Salas added that she's heard of additional cases targeting state judges in states ranging from Colorado to Florida, incidents that wouldn't be tracked by Marshals, who protect federal judges.</p>

<p>"This is not some random, silly act, this is a targeted, concentrated, coordinated attack on judges," Salas said in an interview, "and yet we don't hear any condemnation from Washington."</p>

<p>Salas, nominated by Democratic President Barack Obama, in 2022 was critical of protests at the homes of Republican-nominated Supreme Court justices who revoked women's right to have an abortion, which were followed by the arrest of a man at the home of Justice Brett Kavanaugh who said he was there to assassinate the justice. Salas said both sides of the political aisle have used worrying rhetoric about judges, but it's reached a new peak since Trump took office.</p>

<p>"I've often referred to it as a bonfire that I believe the current administration is throwing accelerants on," Salas said.</p>

<p>Trump himself has led the charge against judges, often going after them by name on social media. He's said judges who've ruled against his administration are "sick," "very dangerous" and "lunatic." Trump's allies have amplified his rhetoric and called for impeaching judges who rule against the president or simply disobeying their rulings. Earlier this year, several judges at the panel noted, Rep. Andy Ogles of Tennessee had a "wanted" poster of judges who'd crossed the president hanging outside his congressional office.</p>

<p>Lasnik said many judges appointed by presidents of both parties have told him of concerns but are nervous about discussing the issue openly.</p>

<p>"A lot of them don't know how to speak up and are afraid of crossing a line somewhere where they would get a judicial complaint like judge Boasberg did," Lasnik said, referring to District Judge James E. Boasberg of D.C., who infuriated the Trump administration by finding they likely committed criminal contempt by disobeying his order to turn around a deportation flight to El Salvador.</p>

<p>Though Chief Justice John Roberts has come to Boasberg's defense, Trump's Department of Justice this week filed a complaint against Boasberg over comments he made at a judicial conference that other judges worry the Trump administration won't obey their orders. Last month, Trump's Justice Department took the extraordinary step of suing every federal judge in Maryland over rules governing how they handle immigration cases.</p>

<p>More than five dozen judges who've ruled against Trump are receiving enhanced online protection, including scrubbing their identifying information from websites, according to two Trump-appointed judges who wrote Congress urging more funding for judicial security. In 2022, Congress passed a law named after Daniel Anderl allowing judges to sue internet sites to take down identifying information.</p>

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Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism

<p>- Federal judges detail rise in threats, 'pizza doxings,' as Trump ramps up criticism</p> <p...

Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention

<p>-

  • Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention</p>

<p>Nicole AcevedoJuly 31, 2025 at 9:23 PM</p>

<p>Caroline Dias-Goncalves. (via GoFundMe)</p>

<p>Five sheriff's deputies from Colorado are being disciplined after a college student spent two weeks in a federal immigration detention center last month after a routine traffic stop.</p>

<p>An administrative review concluded that Sheriff's Deputy Alexander Zwinck shared information on a Signal group chat that included federal immigration agents after he had pulled over Caroline Dias-Goncalves, 19, a student at the University of Utah, Mesa County Sheriff Todd Rowell said in a statement Wednesday.</p>

<p>The agents then used that information to track Dias-Goncalves down and arrest her. She was taken to a detention facility in Aurora, where she was held for 15 days before being released on bond.</p>

<p>"The Mesa County Sheriff's Office should not have had any role in the chain of events leading to Miss Dias-Goncalves's detention," Rowell said.</p>

<p>Colorado law restricts coordination between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities. It prohibits state and local law enforcement from providing information about a person's immigration status to federal officials or disclosing personal identifying information to immigration authorities.</p>

<p>"I regret that this occurred. I apologize to Miss Dias-Goncalves," Rowell said.</p>

<p>Zwinck pulled Dias-Goncalves over while she was driving on Interstate 70 outside Loma on June 5. Zwinck claimed Dias-Goncalves was driving too close to a semi-truck.</p>

<p>The traffic stop lasted about 20 minutes and Zwinck released Dias-Goncalves with a warning. Shortly after she exited the highway, federal immigration agents stopped her, arrested her and took her to the Aurora detention facility, where she was held until June 20.</p>

<p>Born in Brazil and raised in Utah since she was 7, Dias-Goncalves is one of nearly 2.5 million people living in the United States known as "Dreamers," young immigrants who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children. Dias-Goncalves arrived on a visa that expired over a decade ago and has a pending asylum case.</p>

<p>In interviews conducted as part of the review, Zwinck claimed he did not know he was violating any laws or policies when he shared Dias-Goncalves' information and location with federal authorities in a group chat meant to discuss drug crackdown efforts.</p>

<p>According to the review's findings, Zwinck was involved in at least four other incidents last month in which the information he shared on the group chat following his traffic stops led to federal immigration enforcement actions.</p>

<p>Zwinck also told investigators that he had received and read two department-wide emails from the sheriff's office last year and in January, both outlining how deputies should interact with immigration authorities.</p>

<p>The review concluded there was "a preponderance of evidence" showing that Zwinck as well as Sheriff's Deputy Erik Olson, who was on the group chat, and their supervisor, Sgt. Joe LeMoine, "acted outside of agency policy."</p>

<p>Zwinck was placed on unpaid administrative leave for three weeks and Olson for two. Both will be reassigned to patrol. LeMoine was suspended without pay for two days.</p>

<p>Lt. David Holdren, LeMoine's supervisor, received a letter of reprimand and Holdren's supervisor, Capt. Curtis Brammer, was provided documented counseling.</p>

<p>Earlier this month, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser filed a lawsuit against Zwinck, alleging that he had violated Colorado laws limiting cooperation between local and federal immigration authorities.</p>

<p>Rowell said the lawsuit "sends a demoralizing message to law enforcement officers across Colorado" and urged Weiser to "apply the law equally to all law enforcement and government officials instead of making Deputy Zwinck an example."</p>

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Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention

<p>- Sheriff's deputies are disciplined in traffic stop that led to student's ICE detention</p> <...

 

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