Maryland
Hunter Biden appeared to beg Maryland criminal to mail drugs to LA hotel: report

Hunter Biden allegedly begged certainly one of Maryland’s “most needed” unhealthy guys to mail him crack cocaine at a luxurious lodge.
The ask was apparently made in a suspicious textual content trade discovered on Hunter Biden’s deserted exhausting drive. The messages present the primary son speaking with somebody over a number of months in 2018, asking for one thing to be mailed to him beneath an assumed title he was utilizing, “Joseph Smith,” as within the founding father of the Mormon church.
Whereas Biden by no means specified within the messages what he was asking for, The Solar reported the individual on the opposite finish of the texts was Voshawn Pattern, a 47-year-old panhandler needed for a September 2021 armed theft and assault at a liquor retailer in Glen Burnie, Md.
Cops say Pattern shot an worker of Champion Liquors earlier than taking $10,000, Fox 5 Baltimore reported. Pattern was described as “armed, harmful and unpredictable” when his case aired on Maryland’s Most Wished final yr.
Pattern is at the moment incarcerated and is anticipated to go on trial in November, in keeping with The Solar.


Hunter texted with the telephone quantity attributed to Pattern from Could to August 2018, information on the laptop computer present. An individual who answered the quantity informed The Publish Saturday it now not belongs to Pattern.
The texts present Hunter Biden appeared to make use of Pattern to attain medication — however that he was additionally usually stood up.
“Man identical factor. I actually can’t consider you probably did that to me 3 occasions. I’m completed man. I believed you have been the final sincere man within the life,” the primary son mentioned in a June 12, 2018 textual content.
“I’m gonna be sincere with you my mom has been on trip and I couldn’t prepare dinner nothing up in my home as a result of my mom has been appearing loopy currently,” Pattern allegedly replied. “While you come dwelling please come to my home and I don’t need you to convey a greenback with you buddy.”
“I nonetheless have that for you I promise. Is you gonna come get what’s yours,” the individual requested Biden.
Hunter responded by saying “FEDEX or in a single day Mail at Publish Workplace to Visitor Joseph Smith (HB). 8221 Sundown Boulevard Los Angeles, California. Chateau Marmont Resort.”
The medication by no means arrived, which left Hunter irritated.
“So that you by no means despatched something such as you mentioned you’ll … why am I speaking to you,” he texted. Later texts present the individual begging Hunter Biden for money to pay authorized charges, with the primary son responding that he would ship $800 bucks.
Reps for Hunter Biden didn’t reply to request for remark from The Publish.

Maryland
Maryland vs. Florida Prediction, Odds, Key Players to Watch for NCAA Tournament Sweet 16

No. 4 seed Maryland gave us the highlight of the first weekend of the 2025 NCAA Tournament as freshman sensation Derik Queen hit a game-winning buzzer-beater to beat No. 12 seed Colorado State in the second round.
The Terrapins are into the second weekend of the tournament, primed to face No. 1 seed Florida, who got a scare in the second round as well against No. 8 seed UConn on Sunday afternoon. Both teams avoided letdowns, and now meet in what should be an entertaining affair on Thursday night.
Who has the edge between these two? Here’s our betting preview.
Spread
Moneyline
Total: 154.5 (Over -115/Under -105)
Odds courtesy of FanDuel Sportsbook
Maryland
Derik Queen: The freshman hit the aforementioned buzzer-beater, which capped an incredible first weekend of the tournament. He combined to score 29 points and grab 21 rebounds with four assists and two blocks in the two victories. He will face a formidable opponent in Florida, who has plenty of size to challenge him, but can he continue to shine?
Florida
Walter Clayton: The Gators needed all of the First Team All-American’s firepower on Sunday, finishing the game with 23 points and five three-point shots to hold off UConn in a barnburner. The guard started slow but finished with a bevy of clutch shots to send the Gators to the Sweet 16.
This game will be among the most entertaining of the Sweet 16, and I’m going to side with the underdog Terrapins to cover the spread.
Maryland doesn’t run a deep bench, but its starting five can go toe-to-toe with the No. 1 seed in the West Region as the group has the size to challenge Florida on the glass and around the rim while also having the shooting to keep up from the perimeter.
The Terps are not as reliant on the three-point shot but are shooting better than the highly touted Gators from deep, hitting 37% of its shots from distance compared to the Gators 35%. Further, the Florida defense doesn’t pressure the ball as much as the Terps’ relentless defense does. The Terps are top 50 in turnover percentage on defense against the Gators, who are below the national average at 192nd.
Can Maryland win the shot volume battle? While Florida is known for its imposing size and rebounding prowess, the team is eighth in rebounding percentage, but Maryland is 74th and makes up for it by turning over opponents at a far higher clip.
I think this game is far closer than the number indicates with Maryland’s ability to match Florida in key categories like shot volume, shot efficiency and overall talent.
Now, Florida will be the best team Maryland has faced this season, but the team hasn’t lost a game by more than six points this season, and I believe the group is talented enough to hang.
Take the Terps to cover.
PICK: Maryland +6.5 (-105, Available at FanDuel Sportsbook)
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Maryland
Maryland big man Derik Queen is ‘the joy guy’ — from giggling to hitting the game-winner

SEATTLE —Derik Queen is chewing on his mouthguard, giggling.
It is the middle of an intense second-round NCAA Tournament game against 12th-seeded Colorado State. The fourth-seeded Maryland Terrapins are not playing well, and yet the Big Ten freshman of the year is unfazed. There he goes:
Chomp, chomp, chomp.
Giggle, giggle, giggle.
Queen’s stature implies he’s a full-grown man: 6 feet 10 inches, 246 pounds, projected as a lottery pick in this spring’s NBA Draft. Then he giggles again, and his mouth full of braces offers a reminder that, actually, this is a baby-faced 20-year-old still figuring out how to be an adult.
But with the game on the line, Queen morphs again, this time into a veteran, telling Maryland coach Kevin Willard in the huddle, “Give me the motherf—ing ball.”
OK, then.
The Terps inbound to Queen, who takes two dribbles (and maybe a couple of steps) to the left, rises, fades away and kisses the ball off the glass for the game-winner, an improbable 72-71 victory that sends Maryland to its first Sweet 16 in almost a decade. The Terps face No. 1-seed Florida on Thursday in San Francisco.
DERIK QUEEN FTW 😱
OH MY GOODNESS 🤯#MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/06QRH6eK3R
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 24, 2025
Making the sequence even more remarkable: Queen scored on a go-to set Sunday for the Terps, and they actually ran it earlier in the game, also to Queen. He hadn’t scored, called instead for a travel. But this didn’t shake his confidence, hence his demanding the ball late.
When Willard is interviewed postgame, Queen and his giggle — and the chewing on his mouthguard — are back, he’s massaging Willard’s shoulders, draping himself all over the third-year Maryland coach. His joy is obvious and infectious.
There are a handful of players left in the NCAA Tournament more talented than Queen. But there isn’t anyone having more fun. There might not be anyone as funny, either.
After the Terps’ opening-round win over Grand Canyon, Queen sat in the news conference biting his lip. He said later his teammates were cracking jokes under their breath — not the kind suitable for print — because they knew he had no poker face and wouldn’t be able to keep it together.
Between Maryland’s first and second games in Seattle, Willard joked that no one in his household ever listens to him — not his wife, not his kids. But in that crucial last timeout, the players did listen to him, prompting Queen to explain after the buzzer-beater: “First, he do pay us the money, so we do gotta listen to him.”
Media burst into laughter while Willard’s face — and his bald head — turned bright red.
That was a reference to Willard’s insistence, and eventual satisfaction, that Maryland get its name, image and likeness situation in a place to be competitive for Queen, a Baltimore native and one of the top prospects to come out of the Washington D.C.-Maryland-Virginia area in a decade.
Willard desperately wanted to keep Queen home. Or rather, get him back home, after Queen spent three years at Montverde Academy in Florida, where he was teammates with Duke superstar Cooper Flagg, and grew to be the No. 12 prospect in the 2024 class, a consensus five-star recruit and McDonald’s All-American.
When Queen committed, the second-highest rated recruit to ever sign with the Terps, Willard knew he was getting a great player. But he couldn’t have imagined what a fun kid he was getting, too. Queen’s joy — for the game and life in general — oozes out of him.
“He has an infectious personality,” Willard told The Athletic. “He’s never in a bad mood, always smiling. Every time you walk away from him you’re like, that’s the best kid in the world. You just want to give him a hug.
“It’s very rare nowadays, where these kids have this unbelievable pressure, but he’s just always in a good mood, always a great teammate. He’s a generational talent and a generational kid, and you just don’t see that (combo) very often.”
Other top players insist on steely gazes and no smiles. Queen, who said he likes to think he “brings out the happy” in Willard, doesn’t see the point.
“We only get one life,” he said after hitting the game-winner and trying to scroll through the 1,800-plus unread texts on his phone. “I try to go out there and smile every day, be the funny guy, be the joy guy.”
For as much as Queen’s skill is lauded already, he knows he can be even more complete as a player if he gets in better shape. His braces — which he got last summer — help in that regard because every time they’re tightened, his teeth hurt enough that he’s discouraged from eating.
Even about this he has a playful attitude: On “The Pat McAfee Show” Tuesday, he acknowledged that Maryland’s strength and conditioning coach teasingly calls him “Honey Buns” and “Reese’s Cup,” reminders that Queen is not yet a perfect physical specimen.
It’s important to Queen that he provide another version of Baltimore to the general public. His city has been maligned by outsiders for decades for problems with crime and poverty. He knows it’s a place where joy can be hard to find.
“I just want to put out for Baltimore,” he said. “A lot of people don’t really make it out of Baltimore. I wanted to come here and make a change. And hopefully I did, so coach Willard can keep getting a lot of local kids.”
But also, he credits his city for his toughness and cockiness. Asked after the shot that made him a legend in his hometown where he got the confidence to ask for the ball in such a clutch moment — especially considering he’d never hit a game-winner in his entire life — he told TBS sideline reporter Andy Katz matter-of-factly, “I’m from Baltimore.”
Duh.
Derik Queen’s hometown teams show him some love after his buzzer beater to send @TerrapinHoops to the Sweet 16 💥#B1GMBBall pic.twitter.com/rfE08KXQkS
— Big Ten Network (@BigTenNetwork) March 24, 2025
He said later that after Willard called the play, “I was getting the shivers. I was like, I gotta make this shot. I can’t let the seniors down. I can’t let the coaches down. I can’t let Maryland down.”
Then, of course, he smiled.
His teammates appreciate how easygoing he is.
“I think we need that. I get so locked into the game, I need to relax a little bit,” Maryland guard Rodney Rice said. “Having him in the locker room, I’m not so tense.”
They’re also a fan of what he brings on the floor. Julian Reese, a fifth-year senior, couldn’t believe from the first open gym how steady Queen was, and how “he’s not going to be sped up by anybody. It doesn’t matter how hard you defend him or how physical you are.” Queen is going to go at his own pace.
That applies to his general productivity, too. Reese has studied how Queen lets the game come to him, refusing to force shots. His efficiency is obvious in the stats: Queen takes fewer than 11 shots per game, makes 52.9 percent of his attempts and averages 16.2 points and 9.1 rebounds. His 15 double-doubles are more than any other freshman this season.
Against Colorado State, he scored 10 of Maryland’s first 14 points. And though his season 3-point rate is abysmal (19.4), he went 2-of-3 from long-distance against the Rams.
Nearly everyone acknowledges that Queen is a one-and-done player. But that doesn’t diminish his desire to win right now. And that’s true even if, sometimes, his teammates wonder.
Queen’s happy-go-lucky attitude “can be a gift and a curse,” Reese acknowledged. Queen’s habit of grinning in intense huddles or after a bad practice is both endearing and perplexing. There are times Reese gets fed up with the rookie.
“He lightens the load on all of us,” Reese said, “and the good outweighs the bad for sure. But there are times you’re like, ‘are you serious right now? Do you actually want the ball?’”
Of course he does. He’s from Baltimore.
(Photo: Steph Chambers / Getty Images)
Maryland
Maryland lawmakers push bill to make traffic stops safer

Three times in the last four weeks, deadly crashes in Prince George’s County have involved drivers fleeing traffic stops.
In each case, investigators say the drivers initially pulled over before taking off.
On Feb. 28 in Hyattsville, Esmeralda Montoya-Perez was killed while she waited for a bus on East West Highway in Chillum.
Seven days later on Addison Road South in Capitol Heights, three-year-old Zoey Harrison was killed while riding in the car with her mother.
And then last Friday on Martin Luther King Jr. Highway in Landover, Patrica Riddick was killed in a horrific crash while traveling through an intersection with her daughter.
So far, no one has been charged in any of the fatal crashes. State’s attorney Aisha Braveboy spoke about the crashes with reporters Monday.
“We know that these individuals did not intend to kill anyone, but when you are fleeing, when you are traveling at high rates of speed, it’s unpredictable. What happens is unpredictable.”
Braveboy said her office will make a decision on charges after the police investigations are completed.
“The police get behind you, put those things that spin red and blue, says they are taking an action to stop you, you can stop,” said Prince George’s County Police Chief Malik Aziz.
If Sen. Charles Sydnor of Baltimore County is successful with Senate Bill 292, officers would be precluded from making traffic stops for some minor infractions.
He spoke about the bill during a January hearing in Annapolis.
“They include the obstruction of vehicle registration license plates in any manner, driving without functioning headlights, brake lights or tail lights, driving without a mirror, with obstructed or damaged mirrors,” Sydnor said.
Sydnor said the bill, if passed, would reduce the racial disparity in traffic stops as well as making it safer for officers.
However, the bill was immediately lampooned by the sheriff in Harford County, who made fun of it in a video posted to social media.
So far, according to the Maryland General Assembly’s website, the bill has been referred to committee.
The Maryland Attorney General’s office will investigate the pursuits that led to those three deadly crashes to make sure the officers involved followed department policies.
The state’s attorney will determine whether the drivers face any additional charges.
It is not yet known if any of the pursuits were started based on any of the “minor infractions” listed in Sydnor’s bill.
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