A Minneapolis woman recounts death of Alex Pretti as lawyers eye a class action lawsuit

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minneapolis woman who confronted federal immigration officers alongsideAlex Prettiin January was among a group of potential litigants who spoke out Thursday about alleged excessive force against people protesting or monitoring the enforcement surge in Minnesota.

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Georgia Savageford, who introduced herself as Wynnie at a news conference, said she was inside an officer's vehicle when she saw federal agents shoot Pretti.

"That day has changed me forever," she said. "The trauma will haunt me for the rest of my life, and I will never be the same."

Savageford said she had been legally observing the actions of federal officers in Minneapolis ever since the shooting death ofRenee Goodby a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer on Jan. 7. She said she was doing so again on the morning of Jan. 24 when an agent pushed her twice and caused her to fall.

"As I was going down, three agents proceeded to tackle me and drag me face-down into the middle of the street. They knelt on my back, twisted my arms and my legs to the ground, and handcuffed me. The cuffs were so tight I lost feeling in my hands, which resulted in temporary nerve damage," she recounted.

Officials with the Department of Homeland Security and ICE did not immediately respond Thursday to emails seeking comment. Minnesota officials sued the Trump administration on Tuesday foraccess to evidencethey say they need to independently investigate the killings.

Savageford said Pretti recorded video of her arrest and yelled at agents to leave her alone.

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She said the officers put her in the back of a vehicle, from which she saw agents shoot and kill Pretti on the other side of the street.

"At that moment, I thought I was going to die too. I pleaded with the agents to understand why another life was taken, and to not take mine," she said.

She added that they told her to shut up and to stop being hysterical. She said they then took her to an ICE holding facility where she was held for 12 hours in a cold cell without ready access to food, water or the bathroom until she was released without being charged.

"I did not know him, but I knew he had my back," she said of Pretti. "I know the kind of heart he had. One that loves and protects without limits."

Savageford shared her story at a news conference wherecivil rights attorney John Burris, of Oakland, California, and other lawyers laid out how they're paving the way for potential class-action lawsuits over alleged excessive force used against protesters and monitors.

Burris, who specializes in police misconduct, helped win an $11 million settlement against the Oakland Police Department in 2003, and helped win a civil jury verdict of $3.8 million for the latemotorist Rodney King, who was beaten by Los Angeles police officers in 1991.

He said he and his colleagues have filed complaints with federal agencies involved in the Minnesota enforcement surge on behalf of 10 people, including Savageford, as the first step in a process that's likely to lead to a larger class-action lawsuit.

"We have many others that are under investigation that have not completed the process. But I thought it was important for us to start this process now. Put the government on notice that we're here," Burris said.

A Minneapolis woman recounts death of Alex Pretti as lawyers eye a class action lawsuit

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minneapolis woman who confronted federal immigration officers alongsideAlex Prettiin January was amo...
UN says 1,700 killed in Syria's Suweida violence, cites possible war crimes

GENEVA, March 27 (Reuters) - More than 1,700 people were killed, nearly 200,000 displaced and multiple actors including Syrian government forces, tribal fighters and Druze armed groups committed acts that may amount to war crimes during a week of ‌violence in southern Syria in July 2025, a U.N. investigation said on Friday.

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The 85-page report by the Independent International ‌Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic found that at least 1,707 people were killed in Suweida Governorate, the majority civilians of the Druze minority sect, alongside ​members of the Bedouin community and at least 225 government personnel.

Up to 155,000 people remain displaced, the report said, describing a humanitarian situation still unresolved months after a fragile ceasefire.

Separately, a Syrian government-appointed inquiry committee into the same events said in March 17 it had documented 1,760 deaths and 2,188 injuries "from all sides." It also concluded there were "many human rights violations" by multiple parties, including local armed groups and individuals linked ‌to ISIS, in addition to members of government ⁠and security forces, many of whom had been arrested.

The government committee, formed shortly after the violence, said its work relied on evidence collection and witness accounts and that its findings were submitted to the Justice ⁠Ministry.

VIOLATIONS MAY CONSTITUTE WAR CRIMES

The UN Commission said violations were committed by all main parties to the conflict. Many of those violations may constitute war crimes, and in some cases could amount to crimes against humanity, it said.

The report said tribal fighters who accompanied government forces during the initial ​phase ​of the operation operated under their effective control, making their actions attributable ​to the state, while other fighters were treated as ‌direct participants in hostilities.

The violence unfolded in three waves between July 14 and July 19, 2025, about seven months after rebels toppled the regime of Bashar al-Assad, with each phase marked by attacks on civilians and widespread abuses. In the first phase, government forces and allied fighters carried out killings, arbitrary arrests, torture, sexual violence and looting, primarily targeting the Druze population, the report said.

In the second phase, Druze armed groups retaliated against Bedouin communities, committing killings, torture, forced displacement and attacks on civilian and religious sites, forcing the displacement of ‌nearly all Bedouins from areas under their control.

The third phase saw thousands ​of tribal fighters mobilize and advance into Suweida, where they carried out widespread looting, ​killings and the burning of homes in dozens of ​villages, with nearly every house in 35 villages reported damaged or destroyed.

SPORADIC CLASHES HAVE CONTINUED, SITUATION REMAINS VOLATILE

The ‌commission said extrajudicial killings were widespread, with civilians – including ​women, children, the elderly and disabled – ​targeted during home raids and in public spaces, often accompanied by sectarian insults.

It also documented patterns of torture, abductions, sexual and gender-based violence, attacks on religious sites and systematic destruction of civilian property, often recorded and disseminated by perpetrators on social ​media.

While large-scale fighting subsided after a ceasefire on ‌July 19, sporadic clashes and violations have continued, and the report warned that without accountability and political resolution, the ​situation remains volatile.

The commission said addressing violations, ensuring justice for victims and rebuilding trust between communities would be essential ​to prevent renewed violence.

(Writing by Feras Dalatey; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

UN says 1,700 killed in Syria’s Suweida violence, cites possible war crimes

GENEVA, March 27 (Reuters) - More than 1,700 people were killed, nearly 200,000 displaced and multiple actors including S...
There's a big difference between coaches, players free movement — large buyouts

So now we're supposed to feel sorry for the players. The mean adults, everyone, are taking advantage of the poor, misunderstood kids.

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Or is itthe other way around?

We're so deep into this nonsensicalcollege sports power struggle, it's getting harder by the day to decipher who's winning and who's whining.

The latest dust-up of the unsustainable that will lead to the unrecognizable (daily propaganda from coaches, not me):Will Wade left NC State for LSUafter all of one season as coach in Raleigh.

And the college sports ecosystemlost its collective mind.

It's just another example of coaches living under the "do as I say, not as I do" umbrella of unreasonable protection and deflection. Rules for thee, not for me.

And you know what? They're right.

Because decades of coaches leaving after one season are distinctly different than the still wet paint of players and their annual free movement. No matter what a talking bobblehead screams on television, or your buddy posts on social media.

The day all players begin paying buyouts to contracts — or in their current financial setup, NIL deals — is the day this thing is equal.

Starting over:DJ Lagway felt isolated, depressed at Florida. He's rewriting his story at Baylor | Exclusive

Careful what you wish for:Sonny Dykes rips Josh Hoover but Curt Cignetti may get last laugh

Before we go further, let's not ignore the Hurricane in the room: Darian Mensah had to buy out his NIL deal at Duke this offseason to move, and Miami not only paid it, but gave Mensah a mega one-year mercenary deal before he leaves for the NFL.

Wade paid $4 million to leave NC State, which means LSU transferred those funds to NC State to bring aconvicted NCAA cheater— at LSU! — back to Baton Rouge. And that, if you can believe it, isn't the focus of this story.

If North Carolina wants to hire Todd Golden from Florida, the Tar Heels will have to cover his $16 million buyout. Or $11 million to poach Tommy Lloyd from Arizona.

If you're bleeding cash in a second-tier Power conference, that's a significant lift. Unless you're desperate.

It's here where we reintroduce Mensah and the Miami marriage.

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Miami paid Mensah's buyout because Mensah played it perfectly. Waited until the last day possible to enter the transfer portal, knowing full well that one specific team was desperate for a quarterback.

Knowing full well Miami had played the past two successful (but not championship) seasons with transfer quarterbacks — the most high-profile, high-priced transfer quarterbacks (Cam Ward, Carson Beck) — and the current quarterback room in Coral Gables was, shall we say, lacking.

So Mensah's representatives made it clear he was one year into a two-year NIL deal, and owed millions. Miami then sucked it up and paid the buyout, and then signed Mensah to a deal.

Three different Power conference coaches, speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect the unique NIL process, told USA TODAY Sports that Miami paid in excess of $10 million total to complete the deal.

If Brendan Sorsby's buyout from Cincinnati was $10 million instead of $1 million, maybe Texas Techbillionaire booster Cody Campbellwould've double-clutched when pursuing him. If Sam Leavitt had any buyout in his Arizona State deal, maybe LSU and Tennessee would've thought twice about bidding against each other to see who could give Leavitt more foundational money.

OK, maybe not those two deep-pocket programs. But you get the point.

Until all players have buyouts in their NIL deals, until all players have to see that buyout as at least a pregnant pause to leaving, it's not the same thing as coaches and their free movement.

If Golden didn't have a $15 million buyout, how much easier would it be for North Carolina to throw a Belichickian deal at him? And not give Florida, already flush with cash as a big fish in the money-printing SEC machine, a $15 million gift?

Look, if a university or program wants a coach or player badly enough, no realistic buyout money is going to stop them. That's the nature of the current college sports business model.

Until the only guardrails that work are instituted, this is the deal.Until players are made employees(like coaches), and until players then collectively bargain for 48% of the media rights billions, the only answer to limiting player movement is fat buyouts.

Then players must decide between more money up front with a large buyout, or less money in their pocket with no buyout. And if they're at the elite of their profession (it's a professional game now, everyone, don't kid yourselves), they can name their price and deal.

Like Kalen DeBoer did two years ago when he left Washington. He was happy with the Huskies, had just led the program to the national championship game.

But Alabama came along and had no problem giving him an $87 million contract, and covering his $12 million buyout from Washington. It is believed to be the largest buyout in college football history.

For a 20-8 record, and a 35-point loss in the Rose Bowl. To a basketball school.

Now who's winning and who's whining?

Matt Hayesis the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at@MattHayesCFB.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Will Wade leaving NC State is different than players leaving programs

There's a big difference between coaches, players free movement — large buyouts

So now we're supposed to feel sorry for the players. The mean adults, everyone, are taking advantage of the poor, mis...
UConn's Sarah Strong returns to North Carolina roots in Sweet 16 showdown

FORT WORTH, TX―Sarah Strong grew up just down the road from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, close enough to follow the Tar Heels' program as a child. Now, the UConn sophomore is poised to eliminate North Carolina from the NCAA Tournament.

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The 2026 first-team All-American and UConn's leader in points, rebounds, steals and blocks will lead the top-seeded Huskies against No. 4-seed North Carolina in the Sweet 16 on Friday (5 p.m. ET, ESPN).

"They were one of my top schools, I almost went there," Strong said. "I really am a big fan of UNC. I wanted to stay home at one point."

North Carolina head coach Courtney Banghart and her staff pursued the "generational prospect" aggressively during the 2024 recruiting cycle, hoping to keep the state's top player close to home.

"Sarah has been in my house. I spent a lot of time interviewing Sarah Strong," Banghart said. "We played them last year in Greensboro, and my kids, who were young, ran right up to her and hugged her because they clearly missed her."

When decision time came, the opportunity to join one of the sport's most decorated programs proved too compelling for the No. 1 overall recruit.

<p style=UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) named Big East Player Of The Year as they celebrate their Big East Championship win over the Villanova Wildcats at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 9, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) defends against Villanova Wildcats guard Kelsey Joens (23) in the first half at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 9, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) and teammates warm up before the start of the game against the Villanova Wildcats at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 9, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) defends against Creighton Bluejays forward Grace Boffeli (42) in the first half at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 8, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) is introduced before the start of the game against the Creighton Bluejays at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 8, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) warms up before the start of the game against the Creighton Bluejays at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 8, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) works for the ball against Georgetown Hoyas forward Brianna Byars (32) in the second half at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 7, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) awarded player of the year and Big East first team player before the start of the game against the Georgetown Hoyas at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 7, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) returns the ball against Georgetown Hoyas forward Brianna Scott (15) in the first half at PeoplesBank Arena on Feb 26, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) and teammates react after a basket against the Providence Friars in the second half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on Feb 22, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) moves the ball against Creighton Bluejays guard Kendall McGee (1) in the first half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on Feb 11, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) drives the ball against Creighton Bluejays center Elizabeth Gentry (35) in the first half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on Feb 11, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) drives to the basket against DePaul Blue Demons guard Kate Novik (33) during the first half at Wintrust Arena on Feb 4, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) drive to the basket against Notre Dame Fighting Irish forward Malaya Cowles (5) in the first half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on Jan. 19, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) and Villanova Wildcats forward Kylee Watson (4) works for the ball in the second half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on Jan. 15, 2026. UConn Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) works for the rebound against Florida State Seminoles forward Avery Treadwell (32) in the first half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on Nov. 9, 2025. Connecticut Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) reacts while interviewed by ESPN reporter Holly Rowe after the national championship of the women's 2025 NCAA tournament against the South Carolina Gamecocks at Amalie Arena on April 6, 2025. Connecticut Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) cuts off a piece of the net after the national championship of the women's 2025 NCAA tournament against the South Carolina Gamecocks at Amalie Arena on April 6, 2025. Connecticut Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) and South Carolina Gamecocks forward Joyce Edwards (8) battle for the ball during the first half of the national championship of the women's 2025 NCAA tournament at Amalie Arena on April 6, 2025. Connecticut Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) and guard Paige Bueckers (5) react on the bench during the fourth quarter in a semifinal of the women's 2025 NCAA tournament against the UCLA Bruins at Amalie Arena on April 4, 2025. Connecticut Huskies forward Sarah Strong (21) talks with ESPN reporter Holly Rowe after defeating the UCLA Bruins during the fourth quarter in a semifinal of the women's 2025 NCAA tournament at Amalie Arena on April 4, 2025. The UConn Huskies bench reacts after forward Sarah Strong (21) makes a three point basket against the Boston University Terriers in the second half at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion on Nov. 7, 2024.

Sarah Strong, UConn look for perfection and another championship

UConn Huskies forwardSarah Strong(21) named Big East Player Of The Year as they celebrate their Big East Championship win over the Villanova Wildcats at Mohegan Sun Arena on Mar 9, 2026.

"I just looked at winning, and I saw coach (Geno) and what he's built here, the great history, and I just really wanted to be part of that," Strong said.

Basketball has surrounded Strong since her childhood. Her mother, Allison Feaster, starred at Harvard ― where the No. 16 seed Crimson defeated No. 1 Stanford in the 1998 NCAA Tournament ― before playing in the WNBA from 1998-2008. Her father, Danny Strong, played collegiately at NC State, and both parents later built professional careers overseas.

Strong spent the first decade of her life in Spain while her parents played, then moved to Durham, North Carolina. Tar Heels sophomore center Blanca Thomas remembers high school matchups against Strong, noting her skills even then.

"It's been really cool to see how she gets better every year, seeing how she has grown since the first year I ever played her as a true post to now, where she's such a versatile player," Thomas said. "She was always good, and after two or three years playing against each other, and seeing the big growth year to year, I knew that she could be something super special."

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Despite the deep basketball pedigree, Strong said her parents did not insist she play.

"They always made sure that I wanted to do it, that I wanted to one day play college basketball and hopefully one day professionally – she always asked me that," Strong said. "So they never pushed me to do anything. I like it, I was always on it."

The result has been one of the most impactful sophomore seasons in the country. Strong was named the USWBA Player of the Year and became the first UConn player since the 2016-17 season to record more than 100 steals in a single season ― all with a WNBA top-five pick in Azzi Fudd on the team.

Strong noted she enjoys the culture she felt upon arriving in Storrs, Connecticut. The relationships inside the Huskies' locker room quickly reinforced her decision.

"I have a bunch of sisters that I've made friends with when I first got here," she said. "All the relationships that I made out of basketball are really important to me."

Now, Strong's path circles back to the school she nearly chose. UConn and North Carolina have met only once before in the NCAA Tournament: a 1994 Tar Heels' victory in a season that ended with their only national championship.

While Benghart recognizes the challenges Strong and the Huskies possess, she knows at least one Tar Heel fan will be happy to see her.

"When we saw we would draw UConn if we kept winning, my daughter said, 'Oh, I get to see Sarah Strong,'" she said.

Andy Mathis is a student in the University of Georgia 's Carmical Sports Media Institute

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:North Carolina native Sarah Strong will lead UConn against UNC in the Sweet 16

UConn's Sarah Strong returns to North Carolina roots in Sweet 16 showdown

FORT WORTH, TX―Sarah Strong grew up just down the road from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, close enough to follow the Tar H...
Ireland's Szmodics gives positive update after being knocked out during World Cup playoff

PRAGUE (AP) — Ireland forward Sammie Szmodics says he is "on the mend" after losing consciousness following a heavy collision with an opponent during the World Cup qualification playoff against the Czech Republic.

Associated Press Medics carry Ireland's Sammie Szmodics during a World Cup playoff semifinal soccer match between the Czech Republic and Ireland in Prague, Czech Republic, Thursday, March 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Vit Tcherny) Medics help Ireland's JSammie Szmodics during a World Cup playoff semifinal soccer match between the Czech Republic and Ireland in Prague, Czech Republic, Thursday, March 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Vit Tcherny)

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Szmodics collided with Czech player Stepan Chaloupek as they moved toward a high ball during extra time of Thursday's game in Prague, where the Czechs won on a penalty shootout. Szmodics collapsed to the ground immediately and seemed to display involuntary arm movement.

Medical staff treated Szmodics on the ground for several minutes before he was moved onto a stretcher with support for his head and neck and reportedly taken to a hospital.

In an update that he posted on Friday on Instagram, Szmodics thanked the medical staff "who acted so quickly to help me."

"On the mend — we go again," he wrote.

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Ireland coach Heimir Hallgrímsson said after the match that Szmodics, who plays for Derby County in England's second-tier Championship, would be staying in Prague overnight.

Szmodics had been on the field for less than two minutes when the incident happened. He came off the bench late in extra time and had to be substituted himself.

The score was 2-2 after extra time and the Czechs won the shootout 4-3.

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Ireland's Szmodics gives positive update after being knocked out during World Cup playoff

PRAGUE (AP) — Ireland forward Sammie Szmodics says he is "on the mend" after losing consciousness following a h...
Ex-rapper Shah sworn in as Nepal prime minister after sweeping election win

By Gopal Sharma

Reuters Nepal's President Ram Chandra Paudel, administers the oath of office to newly appointed Prime Minister Balendra Shah, popularly known as Newly appointed Prime Minister Balendra Shah, popularly known as Newly appointed Prime Minister Balendra Shah, popularly known as Newly appointed Prime Minister Balendra Shah, popularly known as Buddhist monks along with Hindu priests chant prayers during the oathtaking ceremony newly appointed Prime Minister Balendra Shah, popularly known as

Rapper-turned-politician Balendra Shah takes the oath of office as Prime Minister of Nepal, in Kathmandu

KATHMANDU, March 27 (Reuters) - Rapper-turned-politician Balendra Shah was sworn in as prime minister of Nepal on Friday, tasked with restoring political stability and creating jobs in the poor Himalayan nation long troubled by fragile governments and weak growth ‌prospects.

Shah, who wore skin-tight trousers, a matching jacket, his signature black Nepali cloth cap and sunglasses at the ceremony, is Nepal's ‌youngest prime minister in decades and the first Madhesi – people of the southern plains bordering India – to lead the Himalayan nation that is wedged between Asian giants India ​and China.

A former mayor of the capital, Kathmandu, Shah, 35, became prime minister after his three-year-old Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) won 182 seats in the 275-member parliament in the March 5 election, the first vote after the anti-corruption Gen Z protests in which 76 people were killed in September last year.

In a new music video posted on his Facebook page on the eve of his swearing-in ceremony, Shah stressed patriotism and optimism for a bright future for Nepal.

"Nepal ‌is not scared this time, the heart is ⁠full of red blood ... laughter and happiness will reach every household this time," Shah sang in the video featuring visuals of large crowds cheering him during his election campaign.

More than 200 Hindu priests and Buddhist lamas ⁠chanted hymns and peace prayers alongside the blowing of conch shells during the ceremony at the President House, attended by diplomats and senior government officials.

After being sworn in, Shah picked 14 members to his cabinet, keeping his campaign promise of having a small team to cut state expenses. He named Swarnim Wagle, ​a ​Harvard-educated economist, as finance minister.

PUNISHING THOSE BLAMED FOR 2025 VIOLENCE POSES A CHALLENGE

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"The ​first test of the new government lies in transparent ‌and prompt delivery of services to people, who expect early signs of good governance from Sunday itself," political analyst Puranjan Acharya said. Sunday is a working day in Nepal.

Acharya said Shah's early challenge is to implement the report of a panel that investigated the violence during the anti-corruption protests, a key demand of the families of the victims. The report recommended the prosecution of those responsible for the crackdown, including then Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli.

India and China congratulated Shah.

"I look forward to working closely with you to take India-Nepal friendship and cooperation to ‌even greater heights for the mutual benefit of our two peoples," Indian Prime Minister ​Narendra Modi wrote on X.

The Chinese foreign ministry said that Beijing would support its Himalayan ​neighbour in safeguarding its independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity.

The youth-led ​protests were fuelled by a lack of jobs and endemic corruption in the country of 30 million people, ‌where a fifth of the population lives in poverty and ​an estimated 1,500 people leave the ​country daily for work abroad.

Political instability has been a bane, with 32 governments taking office since 1990 and none of them completing a five-year-term.

The Nepali Congress party, the country's oldest party, became a distant second group in parliament with just 38 seats. The ​Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist) of Oli, who ‌was forced to resign after the Gen Z unrest, controls 25 members.

Former Chief Justice Sushila Karki led the nation through ​the interim period through to the parliamentary election.

(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Additional reporting by Sakshi Dayal in New Delhi ​and Beijing Newsroom; Editing by YP Rajesh, Lincoln Feast and Saad Sayeed)

Ex-rapper Shah sworn in as Nepal prime minister after sweeping election win

By Gopal Sharma Rapper-turned-politician Balendra Shah takes the oath of office as Prime Minister of Nepal,...
Will the Live Nation DOJ settlement reshape ticket sales? | The Excerpt

On the Friday, March 27, 2026, episode of The Excerpt podcast:High fees, limited options, and frustrating presales define concert ticketing today. Will a DOJ settlement with Live Nation and Ticketmaster change the checkout experience, or leave the system largely intact? Former Acting Assistant Attorney General for the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division Doha Mekki joins USA TODAY's The Excerpt for a look at what comes next in the multi-state antitrust case.

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Hit play on the player below to hear the podcast and follow along with the transcript beneath it.This transcript was automatically generated, and then edited for clarity in its current form. There may be some differences between the audio and the text.

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Dana Taylor:

Buying concert tickets already means high fees and limited choices, and you can add to that the headache of frustrating pre-sales. So how much does a proposed Department of Justice settlement with Live Nation and Ticketmaster loosen their grip on the market? Will the current system remain largely unchanged, or will fans actually notice a difference when they check out?

Hello, and welcome to USA TODAY's The Excerpt. I'm Dana Taylor. Today is Friday, March 27th, 2026. Joining me to discuss the split over the settlement of the antitrust case brought by the Biden DOJ, which ultimately included over 40 states, is former acting assistant attorney general for the US Department of Justice Antitrust Division, Doha Mekki. It's nice to have you here, Doha.

Doha Mekki:

Thank you so much for having me.

Dana Taylor:

Before we dive into the terms of the recent settlement, can you walk me through how we got here? Anyone who's bought tickets for a live show is likely familiar with Ticketmaster, but lay out for me how Live Nation and Ticketmaster operate.

Doha Mekki:

So going way back to 2024, the Justice Department, alongside 40 state attorneys general, filed a sweeping monopolization lawsuit that alleged a number of things. But really the core of it was that Live Nation had a stranglehold over the live music ecosystem, and the center of the live music ecosystem was that Live Nation really had four or five parts of its business that it used to really have a lot of bottlenecks, and choke points over the music experience that fans and artists and everyone in between had in this industry.

And so for example, it promotes tours. We allege that it controls about 60% of concert promotions at major concert venues. It owns or controls a number of venues, hundreds in fact, across North America. It owns amphitheaters. More than 60 of the top 100 amphitheaters in the United States. It owns a number of arenas, and even makes money advertising inside the venues that it owns and operates. It manages artists directly, more than 400 artists, we alleged in the complaint. And most famously, the place where fans tend to interact with Live Nation's subsidiary Ticketmaster most directly, has a stranglehold over the ticketing market. It controls up to 80% of primary ticketing at major concert venues across the United States.

And so, what's the upshot of all of this? This is what monopolization, and really the cornerstone of antitrust cases, are all about. It has leverage across multiple layers of the business. And so you really have a whack-a-mole problem. If you try to fix any one of these things, it can really leverage its power and control and ability to dominate any other part of the stack. And so, over more than a hundred pages, the United States and more than 40 state attorneys general sought to break up Ticketmaster, and went to a federal judge, and sought a jury demand to do just that in the Southern District of New York.

Dana Taylor:

Can you speak to the timing of this deal? So the timing is extraordinary.

Doha Mekki:

As I mentioned, the lawsuit was filed in May 2024. And typically, antitrust cases take a very long time, but this one went to trial fairly quickly. So it started in March of 2026, so earlier this month. But leading up to the trial, there were leaks and reporting in the press that there might be a settlement. But the trial started, and witnesses were examined. And by all accounts, during that first week, the trial was going very well for the government. Witnesses were being examined, and told a story that really spoke to the story that the government was laying out in the complaint.

But then out of nowhere, during what should have been the second week of testimony, the lead lawyer for the Justice Department stood up and told the court that the DOJ had reached a settlement, and the states largely had just been told of this settlement. And the picture that was painted from the reporting in the court was that this was really a surprise, and certainly it sounded like the judge had been surprised by the settlement. And there were a number of ramifications from these very unusual proceedings, from what should have been week two of a blockbuster, rather historic antitrust trial.

Dana Taylor:

With the DOJ's settlement, what's next for the state attorneys general, who for now are still pushing forward?

Doha Mekki:

Well, to appreciate where we are, you have to understand what is and what is not in the DOJ settlement. The DOJ's settlement should be many, many pages long. It should be very detailed. But instead, what the public saw was a term sheet that specifies at a very high level, a very weak settlement that really cements Live Nation's dominance, that will cement Live Nation's technology as the preferred ticketing infrastructure. That divests ownership or control of a number of, I think, 13 secondary venues. But really doesn't specify a lot of detail about exactly how the settlement works. And so, it really does not do much to satisfy the very serious competition concerns that were laid out in the complaint.

And so what you have is a small handful of states that are going to go along with this very odd deal that the Justice Department seems content to take, and that frankly is a big victory for Live Nation and its monopoly. But you have a number of other states that are vowing to fight on. And despite these very unfortunate circumstances, they have hired a very formidable outside lawyer named Jeff Kessler to lead the charge, and the state attorneys general themselves, including AG Tish James, Jeff Jackson of North Carolina, Phil Weiser in Colorado, and a number of other attorneys general, Jonathan Skrmetti in Tennessee, are continuing to litigate. These are not ideal circumstances by any means, after being sandbagged by the Justice Department, but trial continues. And witnesses are continuing to be examined, and a jury continues to hear evidence.

Dana Taylor:

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Doha, let's talk about ticket prices. Do the terms favor consumers? And is there wiggle room here for Ticketmaster to offset any losses tied to capped fees?

Doha Mekki:

As I look at this term sheet, I have more questions than answers. I've been practicing antitrust law for a very long time, and what I see is a set of conditions that really favors Live Nation, and really cements dominance, and really protects its ability to continue to charge extraordinarily high prices. And really does nothing to bring about market forces to compete away high prices. It does curious things like cap fees, in some places. But as we talked about earlier, when you have dominance in five different parts of the stack, what does it mean to cap fees in one of them? When you can really recoup those high fees in another part of the stack. You're really part of a shell game. And so it's very unfortunate that the Justice Department has signaled that it's willing to participate in that kind of scheme.

So it remains to be seen what actually happens here, but I think there's a reason that the lion's share of state attorneys general are not satisfied with the settlement, and that they are continuing to litigate. The original plaintiffs were crystal clear that a breakup would be required to restore competition to this market, and to help prices come down in this space.

Dana Taylor:

Beyond higher ticket prices, when we look at who gets booked, does Live Nation's hold on the market limit the artists we get to see and the venues they're allowed to play in?

Doha Mekki:

I'm so glad you asked about the artists and the venues. So much of the attention in this case focuses on ticket prices. And for good reason, right? That's how so many of us as consumers first get to know Live Nation's monopoly. But just as important in this story is the artists, the working artists. Not the famous ones that are able to sell out the largest amphitheaters in the world, but the touring folks who are less known, the working artists. And the folks for whom Live Nation is able to really coerce a lot of their economic opportunities, the venues that are afraid to get sideways with Live Nation. And that's a theme that pervades this entire case. And if you listen to some of the testimony that's already taken place, the jury has now heard hours of evidence from people, one by one, including a recorded conversation with a executive affiliated with the Barclays Center and executives from StubHub, about how there are subtle threats, if you don't work with this company.

And that's what's at stake when you are litigating these monopolization cases. It is fear, right? It's the arbitrary coercion of a powerful corporation that can threaten your economic opportunities if you do not play ball. And that is inconsistent with what we should be standing for as a country, and what we have stood for, apparently until recently when we have given way to the whims of a tyrannical monopoly.

Dana Taylor:

We saw the chaos with Taylor Swift's Eras tour ticketing. More than three decades ago, Pearl Jam tried to fight this battle with Ticketmaster, they lost. There have also been previous settlements with Ticketmaster. Despite those things, why do you believe the system has remained largely unchanged?

Doha Mekki:

There is a long, now bipartisan tradition, of failed settlements in the live music and ticketing industry. And I can't get into why, at particular moments, those particular settlements have failed. But you can look at the particular conditions that have been imposed on this monopoly, and see that behavioral restrictions have not worked. They have not brought about the kinds of competitive market conditions that really restore competition to the market. And to me, doubling down on behavioral restrictions, price caps, and many of the same kinds of unsuccessful terms and conditions that we've seen in the past, is asking for the same kinds of failures that we've seen in the past. And so that's why it's particularly concerning to see the administration revisit similar failed strategies.

Dana Taylor:

Finally, Doha, what's the bottom line for ticket buyers here, and what will you be watching out for next with this case?

Doha Mekki:

I will be watching some of the reporting around settlement discussions with the remaining states, and I will be curious to see the final paper on the announced settlement with the Justice Department. Any final agreement with the United States has to be subject to something called the Tunney Act, which is a very important Nixon era statute that is essentially a sunlight law, that requires a federal judge to say that the settlement is actually in the public interest. And it's an unfortunate fact right now that some recent settlements involving the Justice Department have raised fairly serious questions around undue influence, and lobbying. And unfortunately, the Live Nation case similarly has triggered questions around the conditions that precipitated this particular settlement. And so we will see how this shakes out. And in fact, I believe there was an order in the Live Nation case, alerting the parties that, of course, there would be a Tunney Act review of the settlement.

Dana Taylor:

Life Nation CEO Michael Rapino said in his statement that they've never relied on exclusivity to drive their ticketing business. He says they succeed by having the best products, services, and people in the industry.

Doha, thank you so much for taking the time to join me on The Excerpt.

Doha Mekki:

Thank you for having me.

Dana Taylor:

Thanks to our senior producer, Kaely Monahan for her production assistance. Our executive producer is Laura Beatty. Let us know what you think of this episode by sending a note to podcasts@usatoday.com. Thanks for listening, I'm Dana Taylor. I'll be back Monday morning with another episode of USA TODAY's The Excerpt.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:What does Live Nation DOJ settlement mean for ticket sales? | The Excerpt

Will the Live Nation DOJ settlement reshape ticket sales? | The Excerpt

On the Friday, March 27, 2026, episode of The Excerpt podcast:High fees, limited options, and frustrating presales define...

 

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