Categories
Sports

Isaac Moses back in NRL, ban lifted, reaction, player managers, Gavin Orr, why was Isaac Moses banned?, clients

Controversial rugby league player manager Isaac Moses looks set to return to the NRL after a leaked email revealed he has been given the green light to return to the industry again.

Moses had been deregistered for 18 months after he was found to have breached his obligations as an agent in 2017 while working with then client Tim Mannah.

There was no guarantee Moses would be cleared to return to the game again but now he and another banned agent, Gavin Orr, have been given a reprieve.

Stream every game of every round of the 2022 NRL Telstra Premiership Season Live & Ad-Break Free During Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

“He has been reinstated according to a leaked document,” rugby league reporter Michelle Bishop said on SEN 1170.

“A panel, we haven’t been told who was actually sitting on the panel to make the call on Tuesday night, listened to the managers pleading their case. They’ve decided that they’ve done their time and offered to lift their ban.

“Moses, who has a stable of about 100 players and looks after some coaches as well, he was deregistered in February 2021 for breaching his obligations as an agent. He was looking after Tim Mannah at the time. That ended in tears, I won’t go into finer details, but he’s back after 18 months.

“Gavin Orr had some issues in and around the salary cap with Cheyse Blair when he was at Parramatta. At one stage we were talking about both these player agents facing life bans. It’s been a massive turnaround.”

MORE NRL NEWS

ROSTER TROUBLE: Knights are ‘rudderless’ after huge blunder but can be saved

LOVE TO: Reynolds keen on Dogs reunion, with ‘chats’ to start next week

REPORTS: Bateman linked to Wests Tigers | 01:12

At the time of Moses’ ban in February 2021, the NRL Appeals Committee described his breach as “one of great seriousness”.

Fox League’s James Hooper had reported back in April that Moses was getting closer to being allowed back into the game, not that the ban was stopping him from finding another way to support his clients.

“Technically, Moses has been banned from directly dealing with all 16 NRL clubs since the beginning of last year,” Hooper wrote in April.

“But in reality the deregistered agent’s company Cove Agency is still one of the most influential in the game and has been as busy as ever with a list of more than 100 NRL players on the books.

“Moses simply handed over the reins of the operation to his cousin – Stephen Moses – the brother of Eels halfback Mitchell Moses.”

.

Categories
US

Gas is suddenly cheaper. That could help Biden.

And even as Americans face pressure from elevated grocery bills and rising rents, consumer spending is slowing but still strong — fueling hopes that inflation might ease without leading to a full-blown recession.

“We are turning the corner on inflation,” Moody’s Analytics Chief Economist Mark Zandi said in an interview before the data release.

The new report is a welcome development for a White House that has been celebrating recent legislative victories — including a law aimed at boosting domestic semiconductor manufacturing and the Senate’s passage of a deficit-reducing package with funding for climate and health initiatives — that Democrats say will fight inflation. It could also blunt Republican attacks that the administration — and the Fed — vastly miscalculated the rise in the cost of living.

New survey data published by the New York Fed on Monday found that consumers are softening expectations that runaway prices will continue to eviscerate their paychecks over the next three years. Those expectations play a key role in the central bank’s decisions on how much to raise rates. Americans now expect gas prices to rise 1.5 percent — compared to 5.7 percent just a month ago, and 6.7 percent for food, a decline of 2.5 percentage points.

While those figures represent clear improvements, it will take a lot more for President Joe Biden and the Democrats to turn around the narrative that spiking prices have overshadowed most of the economy’s gains as it emerges from the pandemic.

“Even if it comes down a little bit, it’s still going to be bad,” Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, who is heading the effort to flip the Senate to Republican control, said in an interview ahead of the release. He called for reductions in government spending, arguing that the Senate-passed package won’t cut it.

“When they raise taxes, they never get the tax revenue than they anticipate and they always spend more than they anticipate,” he said.

For now, Americans haven’t curtailed spending, even as prices continue to climb. While consumer confidence metrics are fading, MasterCard reported that year-over-year spending swelled by more than 11 percent last month — a trend the credit card company claimed was driven as much by demand as swelling prices.

Amazon likely had a hand as well.

In reports released this week, both BofA Institute and Adobe pointed to Prime Day — the e-commerce giant’s massive company-wide sale — as a contributing factor to July spending. The discounts offered on Amazon during the sale can “really influence where we understand the consumer to be; in a very sort of price-sensitive state,” said Adobe Digital Insights Lead Analyst Vivek Pandya.

Lower online prices, however, provide a respite for consumers hammered by soaring costs.

To be certain, economists in the past have been premature in declaring that inflation has “peaked,” and several other indicators, including an explosive jobs market, rising labor costs and spiking household rents suggest upward pressure on prices could last for some time. That means that even if the Fed avoids causing a deep recession, it may still have to keep rates high for longer than many investors expect.

“We have a lot more heavy lifting in front of us, despite the likely peak in inflation,” said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist for RSM US. “We’re not in a multi-month process. We’re in a multi-year process.”

Meanwhile, several data points offer a muddled picture, at best, of where the economy is headed. The Consumer Price Index’s “headline number” includes food and energy — commodities with prices that are much more volatile driven by trading on exchanges, rather than by businesses. But the Fed also looks at measures excluding those prices to better gauge what it calls core inflation.

Any measure of price arises points to high inflation, so Fed Chair Jerome Powell says that distinction is less important for the moment. In July, core inflation rose 0.3 percent — still notable but below what economists had expected.

Still, Powell has said the central bank is looking for multiple reports showing inflation clearly cooling before it begins to ease off its interest rate hikes.

One of the most troublesome inflation drivers has been rent, which rose by 0.6 percent in July alone. Many expect housing costs to continue climbing sharply even as higher mortgage rates slow the ascent of home prices.

Andrew Patterson, senior international economist at Vanguard, said he expects inflation to persist above 3 percent through the end of 2023 because of housing costs — well above the Fed’s 2 percent target.

“If you get into the second half of next year and rents are persistently high? That’s going to be a point of concern for them,” he said.

Zandi, whose work has frequently been cited by the White House, said he expects rental prices to keep the Fed from hitting its target before 2024.

Strong labor markets will also play a role. The unemployment rate is at 3.5 percent, and while job openings have ticked down, they were still higher last month than at any point in the decade prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Labor Department data. And pay raises have continued to accelerate, which could increase costs for employers even as worker income fails to keep pace with overall price increases.

Bank of America Institute economist Anna Zhou said the strong labor market has helped prop up bank balances across all income levels, which allows households to offset some of the pressure of rising prices — particularly when it comes to rent.

“Around 34 percent of US households are renters,” Zhou said. “Surging rent prices definitely are squeezing their wallets.”

That squeeze will feel even tighter if gas prices start to climb again and food inflation persists.

Administration officials are quick to cite any data point that reinforces their case that lowering inflation has been Biden’s “number one priority,” as one White House official said Tuesday. Lower gas prices, the Inflation Reduction Act — which isn’t likely to have any immediate impact on prices — and the new CHIPS and Sciences law are part of those messaging efforts.

None of that will be enough to assume inflation hawks, including former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, who have warned that the Fed’s slow footing on inflation prior to the recent rate hikes has left the economy ill-suited to prepare for a soft landing.

“There will be disinflation coming from gasoline and other commodity prices,” Summers tweeted late Monday night. “It does not mean inflation is coming under control.”

Categories
Business

AMP to return $1.1b to shareholders

“This first half of the year has seen a challenging economic backdrop. Despite the decline in investment markets, our business is well positioned with a robust balance sheet that will help us to drive forward through a period of continued economic uncertainty,” she said.

“AMP is entering its next era as a significantly simplified group, leading in wealth management and banking, and guided by a clear purpose.”

UBS analysts said their first impressions of AMP’s results were mixed. While operating trends remained weak, they said they thought the market would like the earlier-than-expected capital return.

loading

“While core business results remain disappointing, the capital return announcement is earlier than expected, albeit only $350 million of the $1.1 billion earmarked will be conducted this year (via on-market buyback),” they said in a note.

“Underlying earnings are below our forecast and contain evidence of ongoing revenue margin squeeze and rising cost ratios in both wealth and bank.”

AMP Bank’s residential mortgage book grew by $705 million and credit quality remained strong, but the company said the net interest margin of 1.32 per cent (down from 1.62 in the last financial last year) reflected competitive rates and customer preference towards lower margin fixed rates loans .

The net interest margin improved in the second quarter of the year, and is expected to keep improving given rising interest rates.

George said the AMP Bank plans to launch a new digital mortgage later this year which will enable unconditional mortgage approval in as little as 10 minutes.

In AMP’s wealth management arm, assets under management decreased to $126.3 billion, compared to $142.3 billion in the 2021 financial year. The company attributed this to negative investment market returns.

Categories
Entertainment

Embarrassing school formal photo of Chris Hemsworth shows Hollywood hunk with acne & daggy hair

Thor like you have NEVER seen him before: Embarrassing school formal photo of Chris Hemsworth shows Hollywood hunk with acne and daggy hair

Chris Hemsworth’s long-time personal assistant and childhood friend Aaron Grist shared some awkward throwback photos of the Thor star to mark the Hollywood star’s 39th birthday on Thursday.

Aaron posted some never before seen images to Instagram of a pre-fame Chris, proving even the hunky Marvel action star had an awkward growth phase.

In one photo, a teenage Chris is seen with acne and daggy hair while dolled up in a tuxedo to attend his school formal.

Chris Hemsworth 's long-time personal assistant and childhood friend Aaron Grist shared some awkward throwback photos of the Thor star to mark the Hollywood star's 39th birthday - including this embarrassing school formal photo

Chris Hemsworth ‘s long-time personal assistant and childhood friend Aaron Grist shared some awkward throwback photos of the Thor star to mark the Hollywood star’s 39th birthday – including this embarrassing school formal photo

The actor nevertheless had his trademark intense glare, hinting at the time a superstar was about to be born.

Another embarrassing photo showed Chris proudly displaying his pearly whites seemingly not realizing there was spinach caught between his teeth.

Aaron shared the pictures alongside a cheeky message wishing him the best for his birthday on August 11.

Another embarrassing photo showed Chris proudly displaying his pearly whites seemingly not realizing there was spinach caught between his teeth

Another embarrassing photo showed Chris proudly displaying his pearly whites seemingly not realizing there was spinach caught between his teeth

He wrote: ‘Chris I know when you wake up each time on August 11th you’re not excited to see your family or open presents or even eat a delicious cake.

‘You’re excited to see my bday post for you. Which includes some of your favorite photos and memories. You’re like the rich and famous uncle! always wished for,’ the personal assistant added.

Chris paid his own tribute on Instagram to his wife Elsa Pataky last month for her 46th birthday.

Aaron shared a gallery of snaps of a pre-fame Chris Hemsworth

Aaron shared a gallery of snaps of a pre-fame Chris Hemsworth

He wrote: 'Chris I know when you wake up each time on August 11th you're not excited to see your family or open presents or even eat a delicious cake.  You're excited to see my bday post for you.  Which includes some of your favorite photos and memories'

He wrote: ‘Chris I know when you wake up each time on August 11th you’re not excited to see your family or open presents or even eat a delicious cake. You’re excited to see my bday post for you. Which includes some of your favorite photos and memories’

The Hollywood star shared a precious photo of the pair, which showed a very buff Chris sitting on her petite lap while sharing a laugh on the set of his movie Thor: Love and Thunder.

I thanked Elsa for ‘always being my rock to sit on but way comfier.’

The couple share three children together, daughter India, 10, and twin sons Sasha and Tristan, 8.

Chris paid a sweet tribute to his wife of eleven years, Elsa Pataky, on her 46th birthday on July 18

Chris paid a sweet tribute to his wife of eleven years, Elsa Pataky, on her 46th birthday on July 18

advertisement

.

Categories
Sports

Cut the BS: Josh Kennedy and David Mundy were the perfect servants for West Coast and Fremantle respectively

Two separate but intertwining careers began their journey to an end last week.

I was in primary school when David Mundy played his first game for Fremantle and high school when Josh Kennedy first stepped out on to Subiaco Oval for the West Coast Eagles.

You can measure the impact of a footballer in the wake of their leave, in the flowing tributes and flowery obituaries for their playing careers.

Your local paper, whenever you want it.

In Kennedy and Mundy, both West Coast and Fremantle fans are losing people who represented their teams with grace and brilliance, but also perfectly reflected the ethos supporters clung to.

The Eagles have prided themselves on their big name players and they have not had many bigger than the generational key forward with an iconic beard, who ended his career as a member of the 700-goal club.

Kennedy arrived as the consolation prize in the Chris Judd trade but as it turned out, the three-time All-Australian helped West Coast win an unwinnable trade.

West Coast Eagles v Adelaide Crows.  Optus Stadium, Perth.  Josh Kennedy's final game.
Camera IconWest Coast’s Josh Kennedy waves goodbye after his final game. Credit: simon santi/The West Australian

It is rare a club trades away a generational midfielder and winds up happier in the long-run but Kennedy, who kicked 429 goals between 2011 and 2017 and kicked three crucial majors in their 2018 grand final, became the Eagles’ greatest forward of all time .

Kennedy may not have actively sought out the limelight, but like so many bullet passes inside 50, fame found him as he became one of the AFL’s star forwards.

If West Coast are kings of the big game, Kennedy was football royalty and even among a plethora of fellow stars — Nic Naitanui, Luke Shuey, Jeremy McGovern — he stood and head and shoulders above them.

Throughout his spell at West Coast, the club have been driven by a pursuit of excellence and sustained success and no Eagle has personified those traits more than Kennedy.

His final bow was a fitting finale, an eight-goal avalanche showcasing his prodigious talents one final time to drag West Coast kicking and screaming into a close contest, his star shining brightest among the on-field mire that has plagued the side this season.

If Kennedy was the perfect West Coast servant — a loyal clubman with a star profile and elite ability in spades — the reliable and understated Munday was an equally excellent representative of Fremantle.

When Mundy had the ball, the sense of relief among Fremantle fans was palpable; the level of comfort was akin to settling on to the coach with a bucket of popcorn to watch your favorite film.

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 06: David Mundy of the Dockers thanks fans as he leads the Dockers from the ground after winning the round 21 AFL match between the Western Bulldogs and the Fremantle Dockers at Marvel Stadium on August 06, 2022 in Melbourne, Australia.  (Photo by Daniel Pockett/Getty Images)
Camera IconDavid Mundy following Fremantle’s win over the Western Bulldogs. Daniel Pockett/Getty Images Credit: Daniel Pockett/Getty Images

You could count on your hand the amount of times Mundy, the epitome of the savvy veteran, made the wrong decision and even when he did turn the ball over, the intent was right.

Part of the allure of Mundy for Fremantle fans was not just his dependability, but also how underrated he was around AFL circles.

Mundy won his lone All-Australian jersey in 2015 as a 30 year-old, but Fremantle fans had known how good and consistent Mundy was long before then.

He was understated around the league, never getting the headlines his more famous teammates Nat Fyfe and Matthew Pavlich earned, even though he was almost as deserving.

In many ways, Mundy reflected the Purple Haze, and Fremantle fans saw so many of the traits they revere and have bought into Mundy.

He has always been a hard-working, passionate battler who has gone about his work to the nth degree, despite perhaps not always getting the wider plaudits he has served.

The Dockers’ history book devotes many a page to their identity as an industrious outfit who may not always have been the star attraction in a footy-mad town, but will always be honest in their performance and Mundy fits the bill to a T.

For all of Pavlich’s goals and Fyfe’s game-breaking ability, Mundy’s steady hand and unerring consistency made him the Docker’s Docker, a player best equipped to embody the anchor.

In Kennedy and Mundy’s retirement, Perth has lost two icons who served their club to perfection not just on the field, but off it too.

.

Categories
US

Trump says he took the Fifth in questioning in New York Attorney General Letitia James’ fraud investigation

Former President Donald Trump said he refused to answer questions from investigators with the New York Attorney General’s office on Wednesday, citing his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination related to the years-long civil fraud probe into his businesses.

Trump appeared for a deposition in New York on Wednesday morning. In a statement posted to his social network after he arrived for questioning, Trump called New York Attorney General Letitia James’ investigation “a vindictive and self-serving fishing expedition” that he claims is politically motivated.

“Accordingly, under the advice of my counsel and for all of the above reasons, I declined to answer the questions under the rights and privileges afforded to every citizen under the United States Constitution,” he said.

Trump’s lawyers have long hinted that he might invoke the Fifth Amendment and decline to answer questions. In arguing to quash the subpoena that led to Trump’s deposition, they said that the attorney general could give the deposition to other law enforcement agencies. They said Trump would have to choose between answering questions that could be used in parallel criminal investigations and taking the Fifth, a move that could lead prosecutors or grand jurors to “draw an adverse inference.”

Trump attorney Ron Fischetti claimed in a January interview with CBS News that James’ office “wants him to testify under oath, without immunity. So she can turn his testimony over to the district attorney and say, ‘Here, we have it. You can use it and you don’t have to give him immunity,'” alluding to the New York practice of giving immunity to those who testify before grand juries.

Judges in three separate New York courts have sided with the James and ruled she is free to do with the deposition what she wants, including turning it over to other law enforcement agencies.

James has sought the deposition for more than half a year as Trump and two of his children, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump, fought subpoenas through a trio of New York courts. They were eventually ordered to sit for depositionsand earlier this month Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump were questioned.

Trump-Legal-Troubles
Former President Donald Trump departs Trump Tower on Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2022, in New York, on his way to the New York attorney general’s office for a deposition in a civil investigation.

Julia Nikhinson/AP


The subpoenas sought “testimony and documents in connection with an investigation into the valuation of properties owned or controlled by Donald J. Trump or the Trump Organization, or any matter which the Attorney General deems pertinent.”

Attorneys for James’ office have said in court that their investigation has collected evidence that Trump and his company have used “fraudulent and misleading financial statements,” inflating the valuations of assets while seeking loans and insurance coverage and deflating their value to reduce tax liability.

Trump and his company have repeatedly denied all allegations of wrongdoing.

Attorneys for James’ office have indicated during multiple court hearings this spring and summer that the investigation is nearing its conclusion.

The former president’s deposition Wednesday comes amid a time of heightened legal peril. The FBI on Monday entered his home in Florida, Mar-a-Lago, taking away boxes of documents as part of an investigation into Trump’s handling of classified material. A federal grand jury investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot is looking into communications between some of Trump’s closest allies of him, and a judge in Georgia on Tuesday ordered Trump’s former personal attorney, Rudy Giulianito appear before a special grand jury there.

Trump has denied wrongdoing in each of those matters.

Categories
Business

Disney+ Sets AVOD Launch & New Prices

Disney Plus Orders A Karl Lagerfeld Series

Disney has announced the combined total of all its SVOD services has come in at 221.1 million for the company’s fiscal third quarter ended in June. The company added 14.4 million subscribers in the quarter, beating expectations.

This marks the first time anyone has passed Netflix (220.67 million) in total streaming subscriptions. Disney’s numbers include Disney+ (152M), ESPN+ (22.8M) and Hulu total, including Live TV (46.2M).

It may not hold the record for long as Disney+ is expected to shed some of its massive subscriber base in India, where it lost a bidding war for streaming cricket rights.

Disney also announced December 8th launch date for its ad-supported streaming plans, along with announcing new tiers and pricing, which will kick off on that date.

The most notable change is the current Disney+ ad-free service will be renamed Disney+ Premium and will cost $10.99 a month, while the new Disney+ with ads tier, called Disney+ Basic, will cost $7.99 a month.

Hulu will see a $1 raise per month to $7.99 for its ads plan and a $2 raise per month to $14.99 for its ad-free plan. As previously announced, ESPN+ is rising by $3 per month to $9.99. Disney’s top bundle (Disney+ ad-free, Hulu ad-free, ESPN+) will remain at $19.99 per month.

Source: Disney

Categories
Entertainment

Chris Rock touches down in Melbourne after his Australian tour sells out

Chris Rock touches down in Melbourne after his Australian tour sells out following THAT slap from Will Smith

Chris Rock has landed in Australia ahead of his sold out comedy shows.

The famous comedian was spotted touching down in Melbourne via private jet on Wednesday.

The 57-year-old appeared in good spirits as he disembarked the aircraft after playing a sold out show on the Gold Coast on Tuesday.

Chris Rock (pictured) touched down in Melbourne on Wednesday after playing a sold out show on the Gold Coast

Chris Rock (pictured) touched down in Melbourne on Wednesday after playing a sold out show on the Gold Coast

Chris’ highly anticipated world tour will be the acclaimed comedian’s first in five years, and will see the comedian play sold out shows across Australia.

Chris cut a casual figure in a white hoodie which he wore underneath a navy blue puffer jacket and cargo pants.

He accessorized his look wearing a Ray’s Liquor trucker hat, black framed reading glasses and headphones around his neck.

The 57-year-old appeared in good spirits as he disembarked the aircraft after playing a sold out show on the Gold Coast on Tuesday

The 57-year-old appeared in good spirits as he disembarked the aircraft after playing a sold out show on the Gold Coast on Tuesday

Chris' highly anticipated world tour will be the acclaimed comedian's first in five years, and will see the comedian play sold out shows across Australia

Chris’ highly anticipated world tour will be the acclaimed comedian’s first in five years, and will see the comedian play sold out shows across Australia

Earlier this month it was revealed that the Grown Ups star has ‘no plans’ to reach out to Will Smith after the actor issued a formal apology for slapping him at the Academy Awards.

The Fresh Prince of Bel Air actor, 53, said via Instagram that he had taken the last four months to ‘work’ on himself after hitting Chris at the Oscars in March.

A source has since reported the comedian isn’t currently ready to rekindle a friendship and said that Will’s apology was simply a bid to repair his public image.

Chris cut a casual figure in a white hoodie which he wore underneath a navy blue puffer jacket and cargo pants

Chris cut a casual figure in a white hoodie which he wore underneath a navy blue puffer jacket and cargo pants

An insider told ET Online: ‘Chris has no plans to reach out to Will’, before adding, ‘He [Will] needs the public’s forgiveness, not Chris’.’

Taking to Instagram, the King Richard actor said in his apology: ‘I’ve reached out to Chris and the message that came back is that he’s not ready to talk when he is, he will reach out.

‘So I will say to you, Chris, I apologize to you. My behavior was unacceptable and I’m here whenever you’re ready to talk.’

He also apologized to Chris’ mother and his entire family.

Slap: The Fresh Prince of Bel Air star, 53, said via Instagram earlier this month that he had taken the last four months to 'work' on himself after hitting Chris at the Oscars in March

Slap: The Fresh Prince of Bel Air star, 53, said via Instagram earlier this month that he had taken the last four months to ‘work’ on himself after hitting Chris at the Oscars in March

advertisement

.

Categories
Sports

Josh Reynolds responds to reports about potential Belmore reunion

Former Canterbury cult hero Josh Reynolds has played down claims he’ll finish his career at the Bulldogs after reports this week linked him with a return to the club.

The 33-year-old is coming off two seasons playing in the Super League for Hull, after finishing his NRL career with Wests Tigers in 2020. He made his NRL debut with the Bulldogs in 2011 and played in two grand finals across seven seasons at the club.

The former Origin player is currently holidaying in Cyprus and was in the gym when his phone “started going off” after news of his potential meeting with the Bulldogs surfaced.

READMORE: Kyrgios’ touching note after beating world No.1 Medvedev

READMORE: Embarrassing blunder leaves baseball star ‘mortified’

READMORE: Aussie takeover revealed as part of rebel LIV Golf’s $300 million deal

He said he’d love to join the club for one last season but has not been offered a deal.

“I was actually in the gym and my phone just started going off. Notifications from my Twitter and stuff and I thought what the hell is going on,” Reynolds said on Sky Sports Radio’s The Big Sports Breakfast.

“There were articles galore and people congratulating me and I’m getting free coffees again at Belmore – and I’m gonna take them – but it was just mental to be honest.”

Reynolds added that he was taken off guard by the way the reports were framed, because it appeared he himself had leaked the information to the media.

“I was actually a bit disappointed because it actually looks like I’ve said something but it clearly hasn’t come from me,” Reynolds said.

“But look I’ll put it out there – I would 100 per cent love to go there. I’ve always said that I’d love to finish (my career) there.

“I love the club but at the same time I’m not sure if Gus (general manager Phil Gould) has those plans. But if that doesn’t work itself out, I’d still love to be at the club in some capacity .

“I’m coming back in the next week or so and I’m going to start having all those chats but last week was a bit of a whirlwind and it was nice to get some nice messages from people saying they’d love me back there so we’ll see how we go.”

Gould addressed the reports surrounding Reynolds’ future, revealing he’d spoken to the five-eighth about a potential off-field role at the club.

“Josh Reynolds sent me a message from the UK two months ago saying he was returning to Australia and that he’d like to assist in junior league and or community programs,” Gould tweeted.

“I told him to come see me when he gets home.”

For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!

Categories
US

Man Charged in Albuquerque Muslim Killings Had Been Accused of Beating Relatives

ALBUQUERQUE — The Afghan man accused of killing two Muslim men in Albuquerque had been charged in a series of assaults in recent years, accused of beating his wife and son and attacking a man whom his daughter was dating, according to police records released on Wednesday.

Each time, prosecutors dismissed the charges against the man, Muhammad Syed, 51, who is now the leading suspect in the shooting deaths of four Muslim men — three of them over a recent 10-day stretch — that have shaken the tight-knit Muslim community in Albuquerque.

Mr. Syed, who is also Muslim, was arrested on Monday by police officers who stopped his car about 100 miles from the Texas state line. In a criminal complaint, a police officer wrote that Mr. Syed had said he was driving to Houston to find a new place for his family to live because things were “bad” in Albuquerque, and he referred to the recent shootings.

The police said they found a handgun in the car and a spent bullet casing between the windshield and the dashboard. Tests on the handgun, the spent casing and casings that were found at the scene of a killing on Aug. 1 were all a presumptive match, the police wrote in the complaint.

The arrest of Mr. Syed was quickly followed on Wednesday by the arrest of one of his sons, Shaheen Syed, whom federal prosecutors charged with lying about where he lived when he purchased two rifles last year.

Police records obtained by The New York Times indicate that the elder Mr. Syed had a series of arguments with family members in recent years that had sometimes turned physical.

In one instance, in 2017, he refused to let his daughter leave the house to attend a college class without being accompanied by one of her brothers, according to an officer’s report, which said the daughter appeared to have swelling around her eye but had asked the police did not arrest her father.

Mr. Syed was arrested less than a year later when his wife told the police that he had grabbed her by the hair while she was driving and had later thrown her to the ground in the waiting room of a human services office. Then, in December 2018, the police arrived at Mr. Syed’s home to find his son with a cut on the back of his head. The son said his father had struck both him and his mother with a spoon during an argument.

At least two other fights involved a man who was dating Mr. Syed’s daughter, Lubna Syed, now 25, according to police records.

In December 2017, several months after the altercation with his daughter, the police arrested Mr. Syed when Ms. Syed’s boyfriend reported that Mr. Syed, his wife and one of their sons had pulled him out of Ms. Syed’s car and beat him until he was bloody and bruised. The boyfriend told the police that Mr. Syed and his family had attacked him because they did not approve of the relationship.

The police found Mr. Syed several hours later in a hospital emergency room with a cut on his chest. He told the police that his daughter’s boyfriend had slashed him with a knife after he and his wife had confronted him about the relationship, according to a police report.

Two months later, the same man reported to the police that Mr. Syed had threatened to kill him during an argument over the relationship, but the man declined to press charges, according to a police report from that incident. Deed records indicate that the man and Lubna Syed purchased a home together in Albuquerque in November 2021.

In all three cases in which Mr. Syed was charged, prosecutors eventually dismissed the cases because the victims — his son, his wife and his daughter’s boyfriend — did not want to pursue the charges, according to a spokeswoman for the Bernalillo County district attorney’s office .

Mr. Syed’s home is tucked away in a patch of one-story houses near Albuquerque’s airport. Three women wearing head scarves answered the door at his house from him, revealing a living room wall covered with an Afghan flag. One of the women, who appeared to be in her 20s, said the family was not ready to speak about the charges.

In the complaint released on Wednesday, the police cited ballistic evidence as part of what led them to arrest Mr. Syed on suspicion of carrying out the Aug. 1 killing of Muhammad Afzaal Hussain, a 27-year-old urban planner, and the July 26 killing of Aftab Hussein, 41, who worked at a cafe. The police also have said they consider Mr. Syed to be the “most likely” suspect in the November 2021 killing of Mohammad Ahmadi, 62, and that of 25-year-old Naeem Hussain last Friday.

Mr. Syed appeared before a judge through a video feed on Wednesday afternoon, with his hands cuffed and chained to his ankles. He was wearing orange sandals and a red jumpsuit with the words “High Risk” on the back.

Through a Pashto interpreter, Mr. Syed asked for permission “to talk for myself.” But his lawyer de ella asked the court not to take any statement from her client, and the judge encouraged Mr. Syed to take his lawyer’s advice de ella and not speak.

“Whatever you guys think is the right thing, sounds good,” Mr. Syed replied.

Judge Renée Torres said she was transferring the case to a district court, where a determination would be made about whether to set bail.

Mr. Syed arrived in the United States about six years ago and had known the most recent victim, Naeem Hussain, since 2016, according to the law enforcement complaint, which did not describe the men’s relationship further.

Mr. Hussain, who had family roots in Afghanistan and Pakistan, had worked as a caseworker for Lutheran Family Services, which has helped resettle many Afghan families in Albuquerque, before starting his own trucking company.

Mr. Hussain was shot in the parking lot of the resettlement agency, hours after he attended a funeral for the two victims that Mr. Syed has been charged with killing. Farid Sharifi, the program director at the agency, declined to say whether the group had helped resettle Mr. Syed’s family.

New Mexico is home to about 1,500 Afghans, a community that has grown substantially since the US withdrawal from Afghanistan last year. About 500 of them are evacuees brought to the United States after the fall of Kabul to the Taliban in August 2021.

Mr. Syed told the police he had fought against the Taliban in Afghanistan with that country’s special forces, according to the complaint.

Mr. Sharifi, the resettlement agency’s program director, said that the community “has been really shaken” by the recent killings and that his agency had been inundated with calls from worried evacuees.

“The refugees have been through horrendous events and have been here trying to put their lives back together,” said Mr. Sharifi, 40, who immigrated to the United States from Afghanistan as a child.

After detaining Mr. Syed, the police searched his home early on Tuesday morning and found two guns, one in Mr. Syed’s room and one in the room of Shaheen Syed, the son who was later charged with lying to purchase the rifles. The son said he purchased a pistol with his father in July, when his father also purchased a rifle, according to the complaint. The police said the elder Mr. Syed bought a scope for his rifle on Aug. 1.

The police said that both of the victims whom Muhammad Syed has been accused of killing were shot more than once. A detective wrote in the complaint that the gunman who killed Aftab Hussein appeared to have waited in the bushes near where Mr. Hussein parked his car and then shot Mr. Hussein when he stepped outside. Several bullet casings were found at the scene.

Six days later, the police said, Muhammad Afzaal Hussain was on a video call with a friend at about 8:35 pm when he told the friend that he had to go to take another call. Mr. Hussain was shot about 40 minutes later and was found on a sidewalk about a block away from a nearby park. The police said they found seven 9-millimeter bullet casings at the scene that were later identified as a likely match to the handgun in Mr. Syed’s car, and seven casings of another type that matched the ones found at the scene of Mr. Hussein’s killing .

Muhammad Afzaal Hussain’s older brother, Muhammad Imtiaz Hussain, said in an interview that he had decided against sending his brother’s body to family members in Pakistan to be buried because his brother had been shot so many times that he was unrecognizable. He said the killer appeared to have “wanted to finish him — the whole nine yards.”

Neelam Bohr contributed reporting. kitty bennett contributed research.