Miami, FL
Jimmy Butler sidelined vs. Pistons by foot bruise, his 20th missed game of season
DETROIT — The shorthanded Miami Heat became even more shorthanded Sunday, with forward Jimmy Butler listed as out against the Detroit Pistons due to a bruised right foot.
That latest news comes in the wake of the Heat ruling out forward Nikola Jovic on Saturday due to a strained right hamstring.
Those absences come with the Heat starting this four-game trip already without guard Tyler Herro and forward Kevin Love. Herro is dealing with ongoing tendinitis in his right foot, and Love is sidelined by a bruised right heel.
In addition to being without those four for Sunday’s matinee against the Pistons at Little Caesars Arena, the Heat also lost guard Josh Richardson earlier this month to season-ending shoulder surgery.
Sunday’s absence is the 20th of the season for Butler. He missed the third game of the season for rest, another game early in the season for personal reasons, two in November for an ankle sprain, four in December for calf strain, seven in January with a toe sprain, three in February for personal reasons, one in late February for a league suspension, and now the foot issue.
Since joining the Heat in the 2019 offseason, Butler, 34, has yet to play more than 64 regular-season games, his total last season.
For Herro, Sunday was the 11th consecutive game missed, the last eight with the foot issue. He is expected to miss at least one more week, and possibly longer, after taking an injection to the foot last week.
Love has missed the past nine games since Portland Trail Blazers center Deandre Ayton landed on his foot in the Heat’s Feb. 27 road victory.
For Jovic, Sunday is the first game missed this season due to injury.
Lowry reunion
Monday night’s game in Philadelphia on the second night of this back-to-back set will have the Heat facing Kyle Lowry for the first time since the veteran point guard was dealt in January to the Charlotte Hornets for Terry Rozier. Lowry subsequently was bought out by the Hornets and signed by his hometown 76ers.
Lowry’s statistics with the 76ers largely have mirrored his numbers with the Heat this season. He is playing 28.5 minutes per game in his 11 appearances with the 76ers, averaging 7.9 points on .412 shooting from the field and .349 shooting on 3-pointers, with 5.2 assists per game. In his 37 appearances with the Heat, he averaged 8.2 points on .426 shooting from the field and .385 shooting on 3-pointers, with 4.0 assists per game.
Lowry and the 76ers also are scheduled to visit Kaseya Center on April 4 to conclude the four-game season series.
The 76ers continue to play in the injury absence of center Joel Embiid, who underwent knee surgery on Feb. 6, with it uncertain whether he will return this season.
Asked if he believed Embiid would be back before the postseason, 76ers coach Nick Nurse said Saturday, “I’m still hoping so and pretty confident, yes.”
Embiid, who tore the meniscus in his left knee on Jan. 30, missed the teams’ first two meetings, a pair of Heat victories. The 76ers are 8-13 amid Embiid’s current absence.
Little relief
After the back-to-back set against the Pistons, the schedule largely is challenging for the Heat through the April 14 close of the regular season.
Starting Monday, the Heat’s next five games are against the teams with winning records, against the 76ers (37-30), Cleveland Cavaliers (42-25), New Orleans Pelicans (41-26), Cleveland Cavaliers again (42-25) and Golden State Warriors ((35-31).
In addition, the Heat also have games remaining against the New York Knicks (40-27), 76ers again (37-30) and Indiana Pacers (38-30).
Miami, FL
U.S. attorney in Miami targeting Cuban Communist leaders with new initiative, sources say
The top federal prosecutor in Miami is spearheading a new initiative targeting Cuban leaders for prosecution, sources familiar with the plan tell CBS News.
Jason Reding Quiñones, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida, is working with officials from federal and local law enforcement agencies and the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, to establish a new Cuban prosecution working group, the sources said. OFAC is the office responsible for imposing sanctions.
The group plans to focus on prosecutions involving economic crimes, drugs, violent crimes and immigration-related violations, with a focus on targeting those in the Communist Party leadership, the sources added.
A Justice Department spokesperson told CBS News: “Federal prosecutors from across the country work every day to pursue justice, which includes efforts to combat transnational crime.”
A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office could not be immediately reached for comment. The plans for the new working group were reported earlier by the Washington Post.
President Trump has indicated he’s been eyeing Cuba’s leaders, after the U.S. ousted Venezuelan President Nicolàs Maduro and brought him to the United States to face drug charges in January, and recently launched a joint war with Israel against Iran last week that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
The president told CNN in an interview on Friday that Cuba’s communist government was likely to be toppled next.
“Cuba is gonna fall pretty soon,” Mr. Trump said, according to CNN.
Quiñones and First Assistant U.S. Attorney Yara Klukas are the same prosecutors who are separately leading an investigation into former Obama-era intelligence officials, including former CIA Director John Brennan, over an intelligence assessment that determined that Russia had tried to interfere in the 2016 presidential election to help benefit Mr. Trump.
Late last year, Quiñones’ office sent subpoenas to former government officials requesting a broad swath of records, including paper or digital documents, text messages and emails associated with the preparation of the intelligence community’s January 2017 assessment.
In recent weeks, updated subpoenas that expanded the date range for the documents were issued in the matter.
Miami, FL
Firefight at NW Miami-Dade warehouse enters 2nd day: ‘It burned it all up’
Video shows bright orange flames still burning at a warehouse in Northwest Miami-Dade on Friday, almost 24 hours after crews first responded.
The flames broke out before 11 a.m. Thursday, sending towers of thick black smoke into the sky, and crews have been attempting to put the fire out since.
Officials said the structure located just east of Red Road and south of Florida’s Turnpike Extension is more than twice the size of a Costco warehouse and contains hazardous materials inside.
More than 200 firefighters from both Broward and Miami-Dade counties have been fighting the blaze, which officials say could burn for days.
The cause of the fire is still under investigation.
Lives spared, livelihoods lost
Miami-Dade Deputy Fire Chief Danny Cardeso said no injuries were reported.
The driver of an 18-wheeler told NBC6 he was at the warehouse, which stores inventory for shipments, when the fire alarm went off.
He said everyone immediately evacuated, no one was hurt, and everyone inside was accounted for. Still, some workers and business owners fear they lost their livelihoods.
Benny Monción, who owns DBenny Sazón, one of the food trucks parked at the facility, was in tears when she spoke to NBC6 at the scene.
She said a friend of hers who also owns a food truck called to tell her how he fared.
“He called me just now, we were watching the news, and my truck was still intact, but his, the fire got it,” she said, her voice breaking as she put her head in her hand. “It burned it all up.”
She said she wasn’t sure what had happened to her truck, which normally operates on 50 North University Drive in Pembroke Pines, as the fire raged.
“I ask God that mine at least can be OK, but I feel so bad [that his didn’t make it], because these are hardworking people, looking to earn their daily living that in this country is too hard,” Monción said. “It’s so many things.”
Air quality concerns
A public safety alert was issued at one point Thursday due to the heavy smoke. The alert recommended those with respiratory problems and medical conditions to shelter in place if possible.
Dr. Donny Perez, a medical director at Memorial Regional Hospital South, said fires like this can send fine particles into the air that can irritate the lungs and cause coughing, shortness of breath, wheezing, chest tightness, sore throat, chest pain and palpitations.
“Even their eyes can get irritated, the sore throat. So the best thing is to stay indoors with the windows closed, avoid outdoor exercise. Wear an N-95 mask if you must go outside. Use your rescue inhalers as prescribed if you do have lung disease,” he said.
Resident Gloria Downey said the smoke was concerning, especially with the uncertainty about what materials could be burning.
“I mean I don’t know what’s in that building, but I have lived here since before that building was built off and on, and God knows what’s in there,” she said. “We have the house completely sealed. We have air filters running in both rooms. The air condition is off. It’s a little hot in Miami, but we’ll be all right.”
Drought and wind may hinder firefight
Winds on Friday are blowing consistently at 10-20 mph toward the northwest, pushing the smoke over a nearby landfill and out over the Everglades.
“Just a couple of spotty little showers here, not enough to really help with the fire,” NBC6’s meteorologist Adam Berg said. “But the winds certainly don’t help.”
Traffic impacts
Officials asked people to avoid the area while they worked to put out the fire. Northwest 47th Avenue is closed between Honey Hill Drive (Northwest 199th Street) to Northwest 207th Drive.
Take Northwest 57th Avenue as an alternate route.
Miami, FL
Miami Gardens mother gets probation after her 2-year-old shot himself
A mother in Miami Gardens has been sentenced to five years of probation after her 2-year-old son accidentally shot himself with a gun he found in her purse.
According to police, the incident happened last summer at an apartment complex in Miami Gardens. Authorities say the toddler grabbed his mother’s firearm from her purse and accidentally pulled the trigger, shooting himself in the leg.
Video captured at the scene showed the child being rushed to the hospital on a stretcher. The boy survived and has since fully recovered.
The child’s mother, 35-year-old Christina Monique Doyle, was arrested and charged with child neglect and culpable negligence for allowing easy access to the weapon. Prosecutors said those charges carried a possible sentence of up to 20 years in prison.
During a court hearing, the presiding judge, Alberto Milian, emphasized the responsibility that comes with gun ownership.
“I am a very pro-gun person, but along with the right and the privilege of having a gun comes responsibilities,” Milian said.
Doyle ultimately accepted a plea deal where she pleaded no contest, allowing her to avoid jail time. Instead, she was sentenced to five years of probation.
Her attorney, Dustin Tischler, said Doyle has no prior criminal record and described the incident as a mistake.
“She’s 35 years old, never been in trouble whatsoever in her life,” Tischler said. “She’s a very good mother, a very caring mother to several children. This has been a nightmare, and she’s happy to get it behind her.”
Tischler also said the case should serve as a warning to gun owners about keeping firearms secure around children.
“Even though she had it in her purse and thought it was secure, the child was able to get to it when she was distracted,” he said. “If you have a firearm, it’s important to keep it locked away.”
Tischler said Doyle has completed a parenting program through the Florida Department of Children and Families and how she is allowed to have contact with her children, including her son who is now doing well after recovering from the injury.
NBC6 reached out to DCF about the case but we haven’t heard back yet.
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