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A teen girl died in a Colorado house fire. As investigators dug into the case, the mystery deepened | CNN

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A teen girl died in a Colorado house fire. As investigators dug into the case, the mystery deepened | CNN




CNN
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Connie Long kept her eyes glued to the door at the high school auditorium. She expected her younger sister to burst in at any moment, frazzled and excited.

As a senior at Platte Canyon High School, Maggie Long was involved in staging the event –- a concert by a local Denver rock band –- and her family knew she’d never miss it.

But as the opening band played and the minutes dragged on, the 17-year-old was nowhere to be found.

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“I had a weird feeling. I knew something was very wrong,” Connie said. “Maggie was responsible, dependable. She had helped organize this concert. There was no reason for her to be late or not show up.”

Her intuition was right. Connie didn’t realize it at the time, but her sister had rushed home after classes that afternoon to collect home-baked cookies for the school event in Bailey, Colorado.

Soon after, a mysterious fire broke out at the Long family’s sprawling, ranch-style house. Firefighters discovered Maggie’s remains that night in the charred ruins.

As investigators dug deeper, they uncovered harrowing details about how a simple cookie errand turned into a fatal encounter.

Authorities later determined that Maggie had walked in on intruders who were robbing her parents’ home. After a physical altercation, the men set the home ablaze — with her inside — and escaped with a green safe, a Beretta handgun, an AK-47-style rifle, jade figurines and 2,000 rounds of ammunition, the FBI said.

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Shortly before the fire, a tenant renting a guest suite in the house had called 911 and reported hearing loud banging noises. The tenant escaped the blaze unharmed and was cleared by police of any involvement in the crime, authorities said.

A coroner later ruled Maggie Long’s death a homicide. The Park County sheriff told reporters that Maggie likely burned to death when the robbers started the fire to destroy evidence.

Her killers haven’t been identified, and the motive behind the horrific attack on December 1, 2017, remains a mystery. On last month’s seventh anniversary of the deadly fire, police implored anyone with information about Maggie’s killers to come forward.

“She told her friends she’ll be right back, and she was never seen again,” Park County Sheriff Tom McGraw said at a news conference. “We believe someone knows something that could help solve this case and bring a measure of justice to Maggie’s family and the Bailey community.”

Investigators have received about 415 tips related to the case so far, the Colorado Bureau of Investigation told CNN this month. The FBI released a sketch of three suspects and implored anyone with information to come forward.

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But as authorities try to unravel what happened that night in the mountain community of 9,000 people, questions and speculation still linger. Was Maggie killed because she saw the robbers? Was it a hate crime against her Chinese family? Or was the home targeted because her parents owned several successful restaurants, and the robbers thought they stored cash in the house?

Connie Long was living on her own in Denver at the time. She’d driven to Bailey to see her sister and support her at the event.

“Maggie was going to set up the VIP room for the concert, and had stayed up all night baking cookies,” she said. “So I went to the high school to meet her. And then I waited and waited.”

Connie tried calling, but the call went straight to voicemail, which she said was not unusual given the spotty cell service in the mountains. She then drove the 30 minutes to their parents’ home, where she encountered a fleet of police cars and firetrucks. Maggie’s silver Cadillac was parked outside.

“I could still smell the smoke – they had just extinguished the fire,” she said. “And I was asking, where’s my sister? What happened?”

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The sisters’ parents, San and Hy Long, had lived in the 6,000-square-foot house for nearly two decades. The property sat on 11 acres of remote forest in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, about an hour southwest of Denver.

The Longs are Chinese immigrants who were forced out of northern Vietnam by war. They moved to Macau and eventually Hong Kong, where they lived as refugees for years before immigrating to Colorado in the late 1980s, Connie said.

“They were in the United States with the hope of building a safe and secure life for their family,” Connie Long said. “They were so resilient and went through all of that to come to America — just to face even more trauma.”

The Longs settled in Colorado after they learned about job opportunities for service workers there, said Lynna Long, their oldest daughter, who lives in Westminster, Colorado, a Denver suburb.

San Long worked as a chef in a Chinese restaurant in the early 1990s, and the owner sold him the business after he retired, Lynna said. It marked the beginning of her parents owning four restaurants in the Denver area, she said.

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In Bailey they raised a boy and three girls, including Maggie, their third and youngest daughter. Growing up in the mountains, the sisters said, they felt so safe at home that they had no security cameras.

“Not only was it a small community, our house was behind trees and our driveway was like a mile long,” Connie said. “We were nowhere near the main county road. So there wasn’t a lot of concern about anything sketchy happening.”

But that horrific Friday night shattered their lives and sense of security, the sisters said. As the family grieved, they spent several chaotic weeks working with various law enforcement agencies.

To protect the integrity of the investigation, a judge issued a gag order prohibiting anyone involved with the case from releasing information publicly.

By then, the family knew that Maggie’s body had been found in the house, even though that information had not been publicly released. But because of the gag order, they couldn’t share the news or grieve her openly.

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“Police wanted to keep details of the investigation from getting out into the greater community,” Lynna Long said. “And the hope was that in the initial days, if they got information from outside sources, they would be able to validate it more easily if not much was known.”

But it only added to the confusion, she said, as many local residents questioned the lack of search efforts for Maggie at the time.

“The community was very upset when they learned later that she had died earlier,” Lynna said.

The remains of the house were marked a crime scene, and the Longs never lived in it again.

Years later, investigators are still searching for suspects — and a motive

It’s now been more than seven years since Maggie Long’s killing, and there have been no arrests.

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It’s now considered a cold case, the FBI said. A taskforce that comprises the Park County Sheriff’s Office, Colorado Bureau of Investigation, the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) still meets regularly about the case. The ATF is part of the investigation because of the missing firearms.

Authorities built sketches of three suspects based on witness accounts from the tenant who called 911 and others who saw two light-colored vans and an old pickup truck leaving the property, police said.

Authorities have offered a reward of up to $75,000 for information leading to arrests. Investigators also have suggested there may have been a fourth suspect.

Four years after the deadly fire, the FBI classified Maggie’s homicide as a hate crime in 2021. The FBI declined to comment to CNN on why it believes her killing could have been racially motivated. The Park County Sheriff’s Office referred all questions to the CBI. A spokesperson for the CBI referred questions on the hate crime aspect to the FBI.

Growing up in Bailey, the sisters said, they felt unwelcome in some areas. But they don’t remember any instances of overt racism.

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The Longs had owned restaurants in the area for almost 20 years and had numerous employees and neighbors who knew their daily routines and when they’d be home, the sisters said.

“So if our home was targeted for any reason, they would know that no one was home,” Lynna said.

She said she believes the case was classified as a hate crime because of a belief that Chinese immigrants rarely use banks and keep their money at home.

“That is the perspective that investigators were approaching our case (with)” she said. “It’s technically targeting a minority under the assumption that their banking practices are different.”

Not long after their daughter’s killing, the Longs sold one of their restaurants and retired. They moved to the Denver suburb of Broomfield, where they live now with their son.

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“My parents were already in the process of retiring from the restaurant business,” Lynna said. “This just expedited their plans to leave the area. It was difficult for them to be there.”

Years later, the Longs are still struggling with the loss of their youngest daughter. They’ve set up a room in her honor in their home. It contains her personal belongings that weren’t lost in the fire, including a red Jansport backpack, a water bottle with her last drink still in it, a clarinet and a navy blue softball jersey. Several awards, including from speech and debate club, are displayed on a table. Portraits of a beaming Maggie adorn the walls.

Maggie died about two weeks before she turned 18. She was excited about attending college but had not picked a major or decided where to go, her sisters said. She was trying to decide whether to follow her passion — performing arts — or go into health care.

“She was stressed. She was trying to figure it out,” Connie Long said.

Sometimes, when Connie misses her sister, she goes through her laptop, journal and other personal items.

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The details give her glimpses into Maggie’s final years. “I read in her journal that she borrowed my stuff, like my makeup or clothes,” she said. “I had no idea.”

A year before Maggie was killed, she wrote a tribute in her journal about a close friend and classmate who had died. In a sad irony, her grieving family strives to live by Maggie’s words and channel her spirit.

“I think the only real cure to cope with loss is to continue to be good people. Be kind. Be caring. Be passionate. Be thoughtful,” Maggie wrote in the message, which she also shared on Facebook.

“Share love and consider everyone around you, from strangers to acquaintances to peers to friends,” she added. “Enough people have experienced pain to understand that life is far more measurable in joy and good memories than to be scorched with cruelty and loss.”

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Power shutoffs likely in Colorado as ‘high impact wind event’ expected Wednesday

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Power shutoffs likely in Colorado as ‘high impact wind event’ expected Wednesday


DENVER – Two big weather stories will play out Wednesday in Colorado’s High Country and portions of the plains and I-25 corridor as high winds are expected to batter portions of the state. The wind and low humidity will also create conditions for the rapid spread of any fire along the I-25 corridor including the Denver metro area.

“It will be another unseasonable warm day on Tuesday, which is day 8 of 60 degree plus temps,” said Lisa Hidalgo, Denver7 chief meteorologist. “Unfortunately with the warmer, dry and windy conditions, we’re looking at higher fire danger.”

“Damaging winds will blow down trees and power lines. Widespread power outages are expected. Travel will be difficult, especially for high profile vehicles. Strong winds will likely lead to rapid fire growth of any new fire,” wrote National Weather Service (NWS) forecasters in Boulder.

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A high wind warning starts at 11 a.m Wednesday and will be in effect until midnight.

“Strong downslope winds to impact the mountains, foothills, and I-25 corridor Wednesday afternoon into Wednesday night, with potential for widespread gusts 60-85 mph, strongest near the base of the foothills. Breezy conditions will extend into the plains through Thursday morning.”

Colorado’s mountains and foothills above 9,000 feet could see up to 85 mph wind gusts on Wednesday. Wind gusts between 50 to 70 mph are also possible for the lower foothills and communities on the western side of the I-25 corridor, wrote the NWS, which called the weather system a “high impact wind event.”

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NWS Boulder

A red flag warning will go into effect starting at 11 a.m. Wednesday for the I-25 corridor to include Fort Collins, Boulder, the Denver metro, and Castle Rock through Colorado Springs.

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The NWS said the “primary window of concern” will run through 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday.

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Xcel Energy will likely shut off power Wednesday due to forecasted strong winds

Due to the wind situation, Xcel Energy customers should be advised the utility is planning for a Public Safety Power Shutoff, or PSPS, on Wednesday which means power would be proactively shut off in targeted areas for a period of time when wildfire risk is extremely high.

Before any PSPS would happen, Xcel Energy would first use another tool called Enhanced Powerline Safety Settings or EPSS.

EPSS are extra protections which allow power lines to remain active until an issue is detected such as “a tree branch or other object touching” a line, according to Xcel Energy.

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Once an issue is detected, power to the line is shut off.

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NWS Boulder

While Tuesday will remain mostly dry in Colorado, the weather system triggering Wednesday’s high winds will also bring snow to the higher elevations.

Hidalgo said there is a slight chance a shower could roll across the Denver metro area late Wednesday afternoon into the early evening hours.

Stay with Denver7 for updates and we will publish a live, Colorado weather blog tracking impacts on Wednesday.

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Denver7’s Stephanie Butzer contributed to this report.

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DENVER WEATHER LINKS: Hourly forecast | Radars | Traffic | Weather Page | 24/7 Weather Stream

Click here to watch the Denver7 live weather stream.





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Colorado’s unaffiliated voters, who make up half the electorate, hold dim view of both parties, poll finds

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Colorado’s unaffiliated voters, who make up half the electorate, hold dim view of both parties, poll finds


Pitkin County residents can cast their ballots in person at designated voting locations through Election Day.
Madison Osberger-Low/The Aspen Times

An overwhelming majority of Colorado’s unaffiliated voters say they reject both major parties and want to see Democrats and Republicans become more moderate, according to the findings of a new statewide poll. 

Let Colorado Vote, a nonprofit founded by Kent Thiry, a multimillionaire and the former CEO of the Denver-based dialysis company DaVita, commissioned a survey of 1,210 active voters last month to gauge the sentiments of unaffiliated voters. 

The poll was conducted by Keating Research from Nov. 10-17, and included 600 unaffiliated voters, 300 Democrats, 300 Republicans, and 10 others. The poll had an overall margin of error of 2.8 percentage points, and a 4 percentage point margin of error for unaffiliated voters. It had a 3.2 percentage point margin of error for likely 2026 voters. 



Currently, 49.7% of all active Colorado voters are unaffiliated, a figure that has grown in recent years as political party registration shrinks. By comparison, just 25% of active registered voters are Democrats, and 23% are Republicans. Unaffiliated voters make up the majority of active voters in 21 Colorado counties, including Summit, Grand, Eagle, Garfield, Routt and Pitkin. 

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Thiry has been heavily involved in efforts to reshape Colorado’s political system in ways that give unaffiliated voters more voice. He was at the forefront of a successful 2016 ballot initiative that opened party primary elections to unaffiliated voters, and a 2018 measure that put redistricting in the hands of independent redistricting commissions, rather than state lawmakers. 



Thiry said the results of last month’s poll dispel the theory that the state’s growing unaffiliated electorate is due to the state’s automatic voter registration. The poll found that more than 8 in 10 unaffiliated voters said they chose their status intentionally, rejecting both major parties. Most unaffiliated voters, 54%, also chose to refer to themselves as “independent.” 

“Some partisans like to say, ‘Oh, independents are just too lazy, and they like to default to being an independent,” Thiry said during a virtual briefing last week on the poll results. “Not true. Look at the data — 85% of people chose to be an independent. It was a conscious decision.” 

From left: Former Davita CEO Kent Thiry, former Denver clerk Amber McReynolds, Colorado Democratic Party Chair Shad Murib, Colorado Democrat General Counsel Martha Tierney, Executive Director the Colorado Clerks Association Matt Crane and Boulder County Clerk & Recorder Molly Fitzpatrick discuss open primaries and ranked choice voting during a forum hosted by The Colorado Sun in Denver on Sept. 27, 2024.
Elliott Wenzler/Summit Daily archive

Unaffiliated voters who were surveyed said they want Democrats and Republicans to move away from the extreme flanks of their parties. Sixty-four percent said they want Democrats to become more moderate, compared to 65% who want the Republican Party to become more moderate. 

When asked which party has become the most extreme, a plurality of unaffiliated voters, 45%, said Republicans, while 36% said Democrats and 14% said both. Despite their dim view of the two political parties, unaffiliated voters still tend to vote for a Democratic or Republican candidate during elections, and usually lean toward Democrats. 

Thirty-five percent said they usually or always vote for the Democratic candidate, while 35% said they sometimes vote for a Democrat and sometimes a Republican. Twenty-six percent said they always or usually vote for the Republican.

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Thiry is critical of Colorado’s current primary system, in which candidates from the same party compete to be their party’s nominee in a general election, arguing that it gives unaffiliated voters fewer choices, since they must choose to vote in one party’s primary. 

In heavily partisan districts, the primary is often the election of consequence, with the winning candidate usually cruising to victory in the general election. 

“The current system tends to drive an excessive percentage of candidates who are far-left or far-right, and it is much more difficult for an independent to pick someone who hangs around center-left or center-right,” Thiry said, adding that unaffiliated voters tend to vote for the “person, not the party.”

More than 7 in 10 unaffiliated voters said Congress is dysfunctional, not representative, and their vote doesn’t really matter. A similar number said they are frustrated with how often only a single candidate runs in primary elections. 

Unaffiliated voters’ negative view of the political establishment extends from federal offices to the state level. Sixty-two percent view President Donald Trump unfavorably compared to 37% in favor, while 57% view the Colorado Republican Party unfavorably compared to 37% in favor. 

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They have a 56% unfavorable-to-39 % favorable view of the Colorado Democratic Party and a 48% unfavorable-to-36 % favorable view of the state legislature, which Democrats control. 

Pitkin County voters prepare their mail ballots at a designated voting area ahead of Election Day.
Madison Osberger-Low/The Aspen Times

Chris Keating, who runs the polling firm that conducted the survey, said the “largest defining characteristic of Colorado’s registered independent voters is that they are younger.” 

Sixty-six percent of voters aged 18-34 are registered as unaffiliated. Keating’s poll found that the median age of an unaffiliated voter is 42, compared to 49 for Democrats and 54 for Republicans. Keating added that Hispanic active voters and men are slightly more likely to be unaffiliated. 

Other findings from the poll include: 

  • The top three issues for unaffiliated voters in Colorado are housing affordability and the cost of living, taxes, spending and budget issues, and political leadership and polarization
  • Fifty-two percent of unaffiliated voters say Colorado is on the wrong track, compared to 41% who say it is heading in the right direction 
  • Unaffiliated voters trust Republicans significantly more than Democrats when it comes to crime, and slightly more on immigration. They trust Democrats significantly more on issues of education, democracy and voting, the environment and conservation, and slightly more when it comes to inflation and the cost of living 
  • Sixty percent of unaffiliated voters favor keeping the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights in place as a way of keeping government spending in check and giving voters the final say on tax increases, compared to 26% who say TABOR should be repealed because it prevents the state from adequately funding schools, roads and health care
  • In a generic matchup of congressional candidates, 44% of unaffiliated voters said they would vote for the Democratic candidate, compared to 38% who said they would vote for the Republican candidate if the election were held today
  • Of 916 likely 2026 voters surveyed, Democrats hold a 14-percentage-point lead in the generic congressional matchup, and Trump’s favorability is minus 27 percentage points

To remedy some voter dissatisfaction and give Coloradans more choice in elections, Thiry advocated for moving to an “open” primary system, in which candidates of all political backgrounds can compete on a single ballot that is open to all voters, regardless of their party affiliation. 

“I get accused all the time of wanting to destroy the two-party system — I think they’re doing a great job of destroying it themselves,” Thiry said. “What we’re proposing is to save that, to get them back to where they’re representing the core Americans who are center-left, center-right and center-center.” 

Thiry pushed for open primaries in 2024 as part of Proposition 131, which sought to abolish party primaries for congressional races and state elections in favor of an open ballot. The measure would also have instituted ranked-choice voting in general elections for those same races. Unite America, a national nonprofit that Thiry co-chairs, has led similar election reform measures in more than a dozen other states. Still, Proposition 131 was ultimately rejected by voters in Colorado last year. 

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Curtis Hubbard, a Colorado political strategist who served as a spokesperson for the Proposition 131 campaign, said a post-election assessment found that most voters supported open primaries but were confused by ranked-choice voting.

“When voters are confused, they default to ‘No,’” Hubbard said. “The open primary is something that voters actually like. They like the idea of being able to support candidates, the best candidates, on the ballot regardless of party.” 

Proposition 131 was defeated by just over 7 percentage points, with 53.5% of Colorado voters against the measure and 46.5% in favor. Thiry signaled there will be future attempts to revive the effort. 

“We got awfully close, despite the complexity of our proposal,” Thiry said. “The reservoir of support was very strong, and going forward, we’re probably going to pay more attention to the fully open primary than ranked choice voting, in the short term.”

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What I’m Hearing: Colorado keeps retooling, another Liga MX bid and more around MLS

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What I’m Hearing: Colorado keeps retooling, another Liga MX bid and more around MLS


The offseason in MLS is in full swing and The Athletic has you covered on all the latest breaking news.

Here’s the latest I’m hearing around the league…

Colorado Rapids to acquire Sealy

The Rapids are finalizing a deal to acquire Trinidad and Tobago international winger Dante Sealy from CF Montréal, sources briefed on the situation tell The Athletic. Montréal will receive around $2 million GAM from the Rapids, sources add.

Sealy, 22, was a highly rated graduate of FC Dallas’ academy and moved to Montréal ahead of the 2025 season, enjoying a breakout campaign with nine goals and two assists.

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Colorado is among the most aggressive teams in the trade market, seeking young, domestic-based talent, and Sealy is the latest example. He previously spent two seasons with PSV’s second team as well, where he made 54 appearances.

It’s a busy winter of change for the Rapids, who will name Tottenham assistant Matt Wells their next head coach, The Athletic reported last week. He has been involved in player acquisition decisions.

CF Monterrey bid for Orellano

Liga MX’s Monterrey has submitted a bid to sign Luca Orellano from FC Cincinnati, sources briefed on the situation tell The Athletic. Orellano was the subject of bids from Cruz Azul last winter, but ultimately signed a new contract to stay.

Orellano, 25, is a natural winger who has excelled in a wingback role for Cincy. He had a strong debut season with 10 goals and seven assists in 2024 but didn’t match that output this past year as he struggled with injury. He had two goals and six assists in just under 2,000 minutes.

Monterrey is one of the highest-spending Liga MX clubs and has acquired talent from MLS clubs before – including from Cincinnati, when Los Rayados signed forward Brandon Vazquez in 2024.

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Orlando City to sign Coronel

Orlando City is finalizing a deal to sign Paraguay international goalkeeper Carlos Coronel, sources briefed on the deal tell The Athletic.

Coronel is a free agent after departing the Red Bulls this winter. He was one of the best players in this free agency class.

Orlando was looking to sign a new starting goalkeeper after longtime backstop Pedro Gallese departed this winter when his contract expired.

Coronel, 28, made 180 appearances for the Red Bulls, an anchor for their playoff run to reach MLS Cup in 2024, where they fell to the LA Galaxy. He made 31 MLS appearances in 2025.

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Coronel has nine caps for Paraguay, starting the first six matches in World Cup qualifying. Paraguay, which will open the 2026 World Cup as the co-host U.S.’s first opponent, secured qualification in September.

Orlando has been busy to kick off its offseason, with The Athletic previously reporting the club is finalizing deals for a pair of highly-rated young Brazilian talents via the U-22 initiative: Tiago from Bahia and Luis Otávio from Internacional.

Red Bulls sign Che

The Red Bulls have signed American defender Justin Che from Brøndby, sources briefed on the deal tell The Athletic.

Che, 22, is a graduate of Dallas’ academy and a former U.S. youth international. He has bounced around in recent years, including stints in Germany with the youth setups at Bayern Munich and Hoffenheim.

The versatile defender, who can play right back or right centerback, gives the Red Bulls – and new manager Michael Bradley – options in defense.

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Che made 15 MLS appearances for Dallas before heading to Europe. He made 24 appearances for Hoffenheim’s second team.

It’s a busy winter for the Red Bulls, with The Athletic previously reporting the club is finalizing deals to send Peter Stroud to Minnesota United and Lewis Morgan to San Diego FC.

Bartlett asks D.C. to speak about future

D.C. United center back Lucas Bartlett is attracting interest on the trade market and has asked the club to discuss his future, sources briefed on the situation tell The Athletic.

Teams around MLS have called D.C. about a potential deal, as well as a club in Europe, sources say. Bartlett, 28, joined D.C. United ahead of the 2024 season and has been a key starter the last two years, making 67 appearances.

The aerially dominant center back spent time with FC Dallas and St. Louis City in his career as well.

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