Mike Vrabel responds to Stefon Diggs, Christian Barmore charges

TwoNew England Patriotsplayers have been charged with assault in the last 36 hours.

Wide receiverStefon Diggsis facingfelony strangulation or suffocation charge as well as misdemeanor assaultas of Dec. 30. Defensive linemanChristian Barmoreis facingassault and battery chargesas of Dec. 31.

Coach Mike Vrabel has the team at 13-3 and fighting for the No. 1 seed in the AFC in his first year in New England.He was asked todayabout the charges against Diggs and Barmore as the team prepares for Week 18.

"We've been aware of these allegations," Vrabel said. "Yesterday and today isn't the first that we've heard about them. [We] try to do everything in accordance with the league policy and making sure that the league, that we're in compliance with the league."

Vrabel shot down any fears that Diggs and Barmore's legal proceedings would be a distraction for the other players.

"I'm 50 years old, going to be 51, I'm not afraid," Vrabel said. "I love coaching this football team."

The team put out a statement about both players and said the franchise is aware of reports regarding both Diggs and Barmore. The statements did not include comments because both are "ongoing legal matters," a stance Vrabel reiterated through much of his news conference today.

"There's ongoing legal matters," he said. "We've made a statement, we take these allegations seriously and what comes of that, then we'll have another discussion. I don't think we have to jump to any sort of conclusions right now and let the process take its toll."

Vrabel said Barmore likely will not be at practice today due to an illness. As of today, he considers both players available to play against theMiami Dolphinsin Week 18.

"I haven't heard anything that would keep either player from the game," Vrabel said. "The NFL hasn't told me anything... I haven't had a call with the NFL."

LIVE: Mike Vrabel Press Conference 12/31https://t.co/bnLd1hZnhZ

— z - New England Patriots (@Patriots)December 31, 2025

Mike Vrabel responds to Stefon Diggs, Christian Barmore charges

TwoNew England Patriotsplayers have been charged with assault in the last 36 hours. Wide receiverStefon Diggsis ...
Packers claim Trevon Diggs one day after Cowboys waived the veteran cornerback

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Trevon Diggs was claimed by the Green Bay Packers on Wednesday, a day after theDallas Cowboys waivedthe 2021 All-Pro cornerback.

This move enables Green Bay to boost its injury-riddled secondary by taking a chance on atwo-time Pro Bowl selectionseeking a career reset.

Diggs had an NFL-leading 11 interceptions and earned All-Pro honors with Dallas in 2021. He earned a second Pro Bowl selection the following year.

But his production dipped from there as he dealt with two major knee surgeries.

Diggs played six games this season beforesustaining a concussionin an accident at home on Oct. 16. Diggs didn't explain the cause of the injury to reporters until two months later, when he said he got hit in the head by a mounting pole while trying to install a TV.

Even after Diggs returned from concussion protocol, he remained off the field and ended up missing eight games. The Cowboys attributed hisdelayed returnto issues regarding his knees.

After Cowboys cornerback DaRon Bland suffered a season-ending foot injury, Diggs returned to action and played against the Los Angeles Chargers and Washington Commanders.

Though Dallas coach Brian Schottenheimer reiterated that Diggs' departure was a culmination of issues and not triggered by one incident, the move came five days after he didn't return from Washington with the team.

The Cowboys played the Commanders on Christmas and had three days off after that Thursday meeting. Schottenheimer said other players asked to make their own travel arrangements going home and were told no. The coach said Diggs didn't ask until the team was in the locker room after the 30-23 victory.

"It was one of many factors. It was not the only factor," said Schottenheimer, who briefly benched Diggs during the six games he played to start the season after the team withheld an offseason workout bonus because Diggs went through rehab on knee surgery with his own training staff away from the facility.

"I'm not the Grinch that stole Christmas, OK? I love Christmas. I love my family. But at the end of the day, we got a protocol we go through, and the process was not followed."

Schottenheimer disagreed with the suggestion that he never connected with Diggs in his first season as a head coach after a quarter-century as an NFL assistant. The son of the late NFL coach Marty Schottenheimer takes pride in his relationships with players.

"Believe me, I don't make these (decisions) casually," Schottenheimer said. "We didn't sit down and say, 'Hey, Trevon didn't take the plane.' No, it wasn't that. It was a culmination of multiple factors. And hey, this might be great for Trevon. Go find a permanent home. That's my hope for him is that he does that."

Green Bay needed a boost at cornerback after placing Kamal Hadden (ankle) and Nate Hobbs (knee) on injured reserve this week. Both players were knocked out of the Packers'41-24 lossto the Baltimore Ravens on Saturday.

The Packers did sign cornerbacks Shemar Bartholomew and Jaylin Simpson from their practice squad to their active roster on Tuesday.

Heading to Green Bay reunites Diggs withinjuredPackers defensive end Micah Parsons, who wasacquired from Dallasjust before the start of the season. Parsons and Diggs are good friends whoexchanged jerseysafter the Packers'40-all tiewith the Cowboys earlier this season.

Green Bay (9-6-1) carries a three-game skid into its regular-season finale Sunday at Minnesota. The Packers haveclinched a playoff berthas theNFC's No. 7 seed.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

Packers claim Trevon Diggs one day after Cowboys waived the veteran cornerback

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Trevon Diggs was claimed by the Green Bay Packers on Wednesday, a day after theDallas Cowboys waiv...
Trump administration removes three spyware-linked executives from sanctions list

By Raphael Satter

WASHINGTON, Dec 30 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration has lifted sanctions on three executives tied to the spy software consortium Intellexa, according to a notice ​published to the U.S. Treasury's website.

The move partially reverses the imposition of sanctions ‌last year by then-President Joe Biden's administration on seven people tied to Intellexa. The Treasury Department at the time ‌described the consortium, launched by former Israeli intelligence official Tal Dilian, as "a complex international web of decentralized companies that built and commercialized a comprehensive suite of highly invasive spyware products."

A Treasury spokesman declined to comment.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the removal "was done as part of ⁠the normal administrative process in response ‌to a petition request for reconsideration." The official added that each of the individuals had "demonstrated measures to separate themselves from the Intellexa Consortium."

Intellexa representatives ‍did not immediately respond to email messages requesting comment.

The notice said sanctions were lifted on Sara Hamou, whom the U.S. government accused of providing managerial services to Intellexa, Andrea Gambazzi, whose company was alleged by ​the U.S. government to have held the distribution rights to the Predator spyware, and ‌Merom Harpaz, described by U.S. officials as a top executive in the consortium.

Gambazzi, Hamou and Harpaz did not immediately reply to messages sent to them directly or to their representatives. Dilian, who remains on the sanctions list, did not respond to messages seeking comment.

The Intellexa consortium's flagship "Predator" spyware is at the center of a scandal over the alleged surveillance of a journalist, a ⁠prominent opposition figure and dozens of others in Greece, ​while in 2023 a group of investigative news outlets ​reported that the Vietnamese government had tried to hack members of the U.S. Congress using Intellexa's tools.

Dilian has previously denied any involvement or wrongdoing in the ‍Greek case, and has ⁠not commented publicly on the attempted hacking of U.S. lawmakers.

In its initial wave of sanctions issued in March of last year, the U.S. government accused Intellexa of enabling "the ⁠proliferation of commercial spyware and surveillance technologies" to authoritarian regimes and alleged that its software had been used "in an ‌effort to covertly surveil U.S. government officials, journalists, and policy experts."

(Reporting by Raphael ‌Satter; Editing by Edmund Klamann and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Trump administration removes three spyware-linked executives from sanctions list

By Raphael Satter WASHINGTON, Dec 30 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration has lifted sanction...
A distorted female face; a voter at a voting booth; a mother holds her baby. (NBC News; Getty Images)

As the country prepares to ring in the new year, new state laws will take effect around the country on a host of issues, including the use of artificial intelligence in health care and elections, paid family and medical leave and rising medical insurance costs.

Some states are looking for ways to soften the blow of higher health care premiums as Affordable Care Act tax subsidies expire after Congress failed to extend them. And on the verge of the coming year's midterm elections, a slew of more restrictive voting laws are taking effect.

Here are some of the laws that go live in 2026:

Deepfakes in elections, AI misuse in health care

Thirty-eight states passed legislation this year to deal with the explosive growth of artificial intelligence, including on such topics as preventing the misuse of AI in elections and regulating how the technology disperses medical information, according to theNational Conference of State Legislatures.

AI will continue to be a top issue for states despite President Donald Trump'sexecutive orderin December seeking to limit state regulations on AI, said the group's CEO, Tim Storey.

Trump issued his executive order — which aimed to prevent a piecemeal, state-level approach to AI regulation in favor of "minimally burdensome national policy" for the use of the technology — after Congress was unable to pass legislation over the past year. As a result, it lacks the strength that legislation would provide to rein in state-level actions given that Congress has the exclusive power to pre-empt state laws under the Constitution.

"States have taken the lead, as they have in so many issues," Storey said at a recent news briefing. "AI is the big one."

In the absence of federal legislation, several states have taken action, including on the issues of so-called deepfakes in elections and AI as a medical resource.

Californiapassed legislationbarring AI developers and businesses from giving patients the impression that they are interacting with licensed health care professionals when they are really speaking with chatbots. Oregon enactedsimilar legislationpreventing AI programs from using the title "nurse" when they give medical advice.

Elsewhere,MontanaandSouth Dakotapassed laws this year that now require disclosures about using deepfakes in elections — measures that could come into play during next year's midterms.

Deepfakes, which are images, video or audio that are digitally altered to create false representations of people's statements or actions, have been used to cause confusion in state and national elections. During the 2024 presidential election, for example,NBC News reportedthat a political consultant used AI to create a robocall impersonating President Joe Biden, telling New Hampshire Democrats not to vote in the primary.

Congress has yet to pass legislation to prohibit deepfake content that could mislead voters during elections.

Paid family and medical leave

Maine,DelawareandMinnesotawill have paid family and medical leave policies going intoeffect in 2026, joining several other states that already provide such benefits. Maryland, Vermont and Washington also passed legislation expanding or amending existing paid family leave policies, with the latter state's changes taking effect this coming year. Paid family and medical leave allows employees to receive wages when they take leaves of absence for medical reasons, give birth or take care of family members.

Minnesota state Sen. Alice Mann, a physician who is a member of the state's Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, sponsored the state's paid leave bill. She said witnessing her patients having to choose between taking care of themselves or loved ones and missing paychecks pushed her to back the legislation.

"I see people every single day who struggle. People are left with the choice of taking care of themselves, their family members, their new baby and not getting a paycheck anymore," Mann said. "And that's not an option that the rest of the world has to face."

Whilefederal lawprovides up to 12 weeks of unpaid job protection for people in need of medical or caretaking leave, the U.S. is the onlydeveloped economywithout paid parental or medical leave. It's also one of the only countries that don't provide paid sick leave at anational level.

Mann said that while Minnesota's legislation was passed in 2023, time was needed before it was implemented for people to actually know that the bill existed and understand how it works. That involved a $5 million public information campaign to educate "employers and community groups on what this policy is, what it does and how you participate," she said.

Delaware's and Maine's policies, which were passed in 2022 and 2023, respectively, also go into effect this coming year.

"It's a very popular policy, again, because we're all human beings, for crying out loud, and if it wasn't popular, we wouldn't be the only country left without it, right?" Mann said. "It is sustainable. It is something that we all use. And so I hope, I expect, that other states will see this, realize this and move to have their own policies in place."

Lapsing Obamacare subsidies

All 50 states will face rising health care costs starting in January after Congress was unable to pass legislation to extend expiring Obamacare premium subsidies before the end of the year.

In an August special session, Colorado became one of the few states toenact legislationaimed at softening the blow of the rising premiums, dedicating $100 million to offset premium hikes in the state's health care exchange.

State Rep. Kyle Brown, a Democrat who sponsored the bill, said the $100 million will serve as "a bridge" for 2026, ensuring that Colorado has funds to sustain some subsidizing of its health care exchange and "cushion the blow" from the lapse in federal subsidies.

"Before we passed the bill, people's premiums on average were expected to go up by 175% in Colorado. We passed the bill, and now they're only going up by 100%," Brown said. "Which is still like 'yeah, instead of tripling, they're doubling.' But it could have been worse."

According to KFF, a health policy research group, Affordable Care Act premium payments are likely to more than double because of the expiring subsidies. In Colorado, premiums for about 225,00 people will increase by anaverage of 101%, according to the state Insurance Division.

Brown said that he had hoped Congress would extend the Obamacare subsidies but that he came to the realization that the funds weren't coming through after having watched the U.S. government shut down for six weeks last fall — the longest federal funding lapse in the country's history — as Democratic and Republican lawmakers deadlocked over the issue. Rising health care prices and the high cost of living overall are expected to be top issues in the 2026 midterms.

"It feels like states are on their own. We don't have a willing partner in the federal government anymore, and so we have to do what we can to take care of our folks and make health care as affordable and accessible as possible," Brown said.

Stricter voting laws

This past year, 20 states passed 37 bills to restrict voting access and elections, according to theVoting Rights Lab, a nonprofit organization that tracks voting- and election-related legislation and aims to expand ballot access. That's the most since 2021, it said.

Meanwhile, 23 states passed 51 bills intended to improve voting and elections, the group found, saying that is the fewest such measures since it started tracking state legislation.

Kansas and North Dakotaeliminated grace periodsfor mail-in ballots postmarked by Election Day but arriving afterward, and eight states passed legislation to restrict or eliminate alternatives to photo ID as proof of voter registration, according to the Voting Rights Lab.

Many of the states that passed such bills might have been influenced byTrump's executive orderin March that pushed for broad changes in how the U.S. conducts its elections, said Chris Vasquez, director of legislative tracking at the Voting Rights Lab.

"I think the main thrust of the story of the year is sort of Trump in March issuing this executive order," Vasquez said.

The order aimed to require that people provide proof of citizenship when they register to vote and required mail-in ballots to be sent in before Election Day. While the proof-of-citizenship requirement wasblocked in U.S. District Court in Washington as an executive branch overreach, certain states have passed legislation mirroring other policies in the executive order.

"We did see 27 states introduce some sort of restrictive proof-of-citizenship legislation this year, which is triple what we saw in the previous legislative session," Vasquez said. "That, for the most part, wasn't successful. But then, where you did see some more activity was on the mail ballot deadline side."

In 2026, he said, Vasquez will be keeping an eye onstate redistrictingand a relatedSupreme Court casethat could limit the scope of the Voting Rights Act as harbingers of what could develop at the state level, including efforts to protect against further voting restrictions.

"I think, especially looking at the Supreme Court potentially really curtailing the ability of plaintiffs to bring Voting Rights Act claims in federal court, these state voting rights acts are essentially something to keep an eye on into potential work against potentially voter suppressive laws," he said.

New laws in 2026 target AI and deepfakes, paid leave and rising Obamacare premiums

As the country prepares to ring in the new year, new state laws will take effect around the country on a host of issues, including the use ...
Department of Justice is reviewing more than 5.2 million documents related to Jeffrey Epstein

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Justice has expanded its review of documents related to the convicted sex offenderJeffrey Epsteinto 5.2 million as it also increases the number of attorneys trying to comply with a law mandating release of the files, according to a person briefed on a letter sent to U.S. Attorneys.

The figure is the latest estimate in theexpanding review of case fileson Epstein and his longtime girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell that has run more than a week past a deadline set in law by Congress.

The Justice Department has more than 400 attorneys assigned to the review, but does not expect to release more documents until Jan. 20 or 21, according to the person briefed on the letter who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss it.

The expanding scope of the disclosure and the additional legal firepower committed to it showed how the Epstein file investigation will continue to occupy significant attention in Congress and the White House, almost ensuring that it remains a potent political force as the new year rolls toward midterm elections.

The White House did not dispute the figures laid out in the email, and pointed to a statement from Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general, who said the administration's review was an "all-hands-on-deck approach."

Blanche said Wednesday that lawyers from the Justice Department in Washington, the FBI, the Southern District of Florida, and the Southern District of New York are working "around the clock" to review the files. The additional documents and lawyers related to the case were first reported by The New York Times.

"We're asking as many lawyers as possible to commit their time to review the documents that remain," Blanche said. "Required redactions to protect victims take time, but they will not stop these materials from being released."

Still, Attorney GeneralPam Bondiis facing pressure from Congress after the Justice Department's rollout of information has lagged behind the Dec. 19 deadline to release the information.

"Should Attorney General Pam Bondi be impeached?" Rep. Thomas Massie, a Kentucky Republican who helped lead the effort to pass the law mandating the document release, asked on social media this week.

Democrats also are reviewing their legal options as they continue to seize on an issue that has caused cracks in the Republican Party and, at times,flummoxed President Donald Trump's administration.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said on social media that the latest figures from the Department of Justice "shows Bondi, Blanche, and others at the DOJ have been lying to the American people about the Epstein files since day one" and pointed out that the documents released so far represented a fraction of the total.

What's expected next

A late January release of documents would put the Department of Justice more than a month behind the deadline set in law, but some key lawmakers appeared willing to let the process play out before trying to take direct action against the Trump administration.

Rep. Ro Khanna, a California Democrat who also led the effort to pass the law requiring the release, told The Associated Press that the Justice Department's expanding review showed that the law is working.

"We are willing to give DOJ a few extra weeks to comply, provided they release the survivors' statements to the FBI naming the other rich and powerful men who abused them or covered up and the prosecution memos about charges that were dropped against Epstein and co-conspirators," he said. "When all the information comes out, this will shock the conscience of the nation."

Massie has also said that he wants to see the release of statements that victims gave to the FBI. He has claimed that those could disclose the names of influential business figures and political donors who were involved or complicit in Epstein's abuse.

The pair has also argued that the expanding disclosure is evidence that more people were involved besides Epstein and Maxwell.

What could the files mean for the midterms?

The Trump administration has already struggled to move past the Epstein files for the better part of last year. While it's not clear what else will be shown in the files, it will almost certainly give Democrats continued fodder to continue to seize on the issue.

So far, Democrats, even though they are in the minority, have forced Congress to act on an issue that has caused splits in Trump's political base.

Atranche of documentsreleased just before Christmas showed that Trump flew on Epstein's private jet in the 1990s, when they had a friendship before a falling out. But the documents revealed little new information about their relationship. The initial release of documents also showed severalphotos of former President Bill Clintonwith women whose faces were blacked out.

Republicans on the House Oversight Committee have honed in on the connections to Clinton and areseeking to force himand former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to appear for a deposition in January.

Still,Democrats are trying to showthat the Trump administration's handling of the Epstein files shows that it cannot be trusted and is more concerned about the welfare of the rich and famous than working-class voters.

"Unlike the President, we don't care who's in the files," said Rep. Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the oversight panel, on social media. "Anyone that's involved in the abuse of women and girls should be held accountable."

Department of Justice is reviewing more than 5.2 million documents related to Jeffrey Epstein

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Justice has expanded its review of documents related to the convicted sex offenderJef...
Steve Helber/AP Dennis Hamlin, Denny Hamlin

Steve Helber/AP

NEED TO KNOW

  • Denny Hamlin penned a message in tribute to his late father, Dennis Hamlin

  • The NASCAR driver's dad died from injuries sustained in a massive fire at his home on Sunday, Dec. 28

  • His mom was "critically injured" after escaping the blaze at the Hamlin's home in Stanley, N.C.

Denny Hamlin ismourning the death of his father.

On Wednesday, Dec. 31, the NASCAR driverpenned a heartfelt message on Xin tribute to his late father, Dennis Hamlin, who died from injuries sustained in a fire at his North Carolina home on Sunday, Dec. 28. Hamlin's 69-year-old mother, Mary Lou Hamlin, was seriously injured in the blaze.

"Thank you to everyone who has reached out with condolences on my father's passing," Hamlin, 45, wrote. "My mother continues to improve, and our family truly appreciates the outpouring of support and the respect for our privacy during this time."

Lucia-Riverbend Fire Department/Facebook; James Gilbert/Getty Denny Hamlin.

Lucia-Riverbend Fire Department/Facebook; James Gilbert/Getty

Denny's note comes two days after officials confirmed that Dennis, 75, died from his injuries, according toWCNCandNASCAR, citing the Gaston County Office of Emergency Management and Fire Services.

Both Dennis and Mary Lou were able to escape the home, authorities confirmed on Monday, Dec. 29. Dennis was transported to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Mary Lou is hospitalized in Winston-Salem, N.C.

The nature of Mary Lou's injuries were not disclosed, and the cause of the fire is still unknown.

Lucia-Riverbend Fire Department/Facebook Dennis Hamlin's home in a blaze.

Lucia-Riverbend Fire Department/Facebook

PEOPLE reached out to the Gaston County Office of Emergency Management and Fire Services for more information.

The flames broke out shortly after 6:19 p.m. local time on Sunday at the home, which Chief David Toomey of the Lucia Riverbend Fire Department confirmed belongs to Hamlin's parents, NBC affiliateWCNCreported.

First responders discovered 40-45% of the house full involved in the blaze when they arrived to the scene, Toomey said. The home was a total loss, he added

Lucia-Riverbend Fire Department/Facebook Fire at the home of Dennis Hamlin.

Lucia-Riverbend Fire Department/Facebook

The outlet reported that 10 to 15 fire departments responded to the home due to its 3,700 square-foot size, as well as its location in a remote and wooded area without fire hydrants.

It took over two hours for firefighters to extinguish the fire due to a local water shortage, according to WRAL.

In October, Hamlintold the Associated Pressthat his 75-year-old father was battling a serious illness while talking about the sacrifices his parents made for his NASCAR success. Hamlin said his father "always tells me I'm the best, no matter if I win or not, he always says I'm the best."

Hamilin described his dad a "a big hype guy." He also recalled spending time together "in his garage" over the years.

"He's got all my old memorabilia and it's just good to reminisce," he said of his father. "He's a reminiscent guy and right now I am just cherishing those hours that I have with them each week."

Read the original article onPeople

NASCAR Star Denny Hamlin Breaks Silence After Death of His Father in House Fire

Steve Helber/AP NEED TO KNOW Denny Hamlin penned a message in tribute to his late father, Dennis Hamlin The NASCAR driver's dad died ...
Reports: Kylian Mbappe (knee) expected to miss Supercopa

Kylian Mbappe's status for next week's Spanish Supercopa is in serious doubt after the Real Madrid star suffered a sprained left knee in training.

The France international star will miss Madrid's first match of 2026 at home on Sunday against Betis, and French publication L'Equipe reported that Mbappe is expected to be sidelined for at least three weeks.

"Following tests carried out today by Real Madrid Medical Services on our player Kylian Mbappe, he has been diagnosed with a sprain in his left knee," the team said in a statement Wednesday. "His progress will be monitored."

Madrid will travel to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, for the Supercopa, with a semifinal match against Atletico Madrid on Jan. 8 ahead of a potential final against Barcelona or Athletic Club on Jan. 11. Marca also reported that Mbappe may not travel with the team to Saudi Arabia.

Whether he will be able to return for a Copa del Rey Round of 16 match the following week is also in doubt.

Mbappe, who leads LaLiga with 18 goals, has started all 18 of Madrid's games so far this season. He missed their Champions League game against Manchester City on Dec. 19, but returned to play 90 minutes over three games leading up to Christmas.

Earlier this month, Mbappe tied Cristiano Ronaldo's club record with his 59th goal in the calendar year.

--Field Level Media

Reports: Kylian Mbappe (knee) expected to miss Supercopa

Kylian Mbappe's status for next week's Spanish Supercopa is in serious doubt after the Real Madrid star suffer...

 

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