North Carolina
Mutliple trees downed as severe storms move through central NC
Several trees were blown down Sunday night in Wake County as severe storms moved through the area.
According to the National Weather Service, several downed trees were reported in Willow Springs, and several viewers told WRAL News they saw multiple downed trees along Interstate 40 between Raleigh and Benson.
The North Carolina Department of Transportation confirmed some trees fell onto the interstate, but crews cleared them from the road and are now focusing on removing the debris.
The National Weather Service issued severe thunderstorm warnings between 6 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. for Wake, Johnston and Wayne counties. Some warnings are still in effect in the eastern part of the state.
WRAL News issued a Weather Alert Day for the risk of strong winds and hail damage from isolated storm cells that could pop up in central North Carolina.
The downed trees are causing several backups on the interstate as drivers try to move around them. If you have any photos of storm damage, please share themhere.
North Carolina
Seedy K’s GameCap: North Carolina
Too little. Too late.
That’s the cliché, right?
Applies here.
Louisville 74, North Carolina 77.
Just thinkin’ out loud.
You gotta play with energy and passion and a hint of fire The Whole Game, not just the last little bit to make it look closer than it really was.
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At the 16:27 mark of the 2d, the Tar Heels drained a triple, which extended their one point halftime advantage to 9 at 49-40.
The Cardinals answered — actually didn’t — with a hurried airball from beyond the arc.
At which point, I wrote these words in my game notes: “GAME OVER!”.
Carolina netted seven more in a row for a 56-40 margin.
(Louisville wouldn’t have been that close — such as it was — but for a couple of triple triple bursts in the opening half. A Conwell>Brown>Wooley parlay. And a Rooths>Brown>Hadley skein.)
So the Cardinals fell behind by 16 before scoring its First Field Goal of the Second six minutes and twenty four seconds after it started.
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That commenced a 9-0 spurt to pull within 7.
Twas a false positive.
The Cardinals, playing, I don’t really know how to describe it — Passionless??? — somehow stayed within a reasonable distance.
Zougris balled with some zest. Hadley is ever steady. Rooths and Wooley brought a smidge of Snickers™ off the bench. Conwell tallied in bunches. Brown was periodically ***** like.
But it was never gonna happen.
Even though the Cards had a prayer with :08 left to send it to extras.
Cards fans need to face it. U of L is a somewhat better than average outfit. That’s about it.
With serious flaws which are really manifesting themselves against stiffer competition. I’ve mentioned them ad nauseam and feel no need to reiterate again.
Just hoping the season doesn’t end with a whimper.
— c d kaplan
North Carolina
Washington, N.C.-based labor contractor charged in federal forced labor case
A Washington-based farm labor contractor and two others have been indicted on federal charges accusing them of trafficking Mexican agricultural workers into forced labor in North Carolina and other states.
A 35-count indictment unsealed Friday charges Martha Zeferino Jose, 42, a permanent U.S. resident and citizen of Mexico, along with her partner, identified as Jose Rodriguez Munoz, and her son, Jeremy Zeferino Jose, 23. The charges stem from alleged conduct tied to Las Princesas Corporation, a farm labor contracting company based in Washington, North Carolina.
Federal prosecutors allege the company recruited workers from Mexico to the United States on temporary H-2A agricultural visas and then exploited them for financial gain.
According to court documents, between August 2021 and July 2022, Martha Zeferino Jose submitted applications to the U.S. Department of Labor and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services certifying that Las Princesas would comply with federal labor laws and visa requirements. Prosecutors allege those certifications were fraudulent and that the defendants never intended to follow through on the promised employment conditions.
Authorities say recruiters working for Las Princesas charged workers significant recruitment fees before they arrived in the United States, placing them in debt. Once in the country, the indictment alleges the defendants confiscated workers’ passports, visas and identification documents to prevent them from leaving.
Workers were allegedly made to perform physically demanding labor at farms and plant nurseries, including in North Carolina, under poor conditions. Prosecutors claim the workers were forced to work long hours without adequate breaks or access to water, housed in overcrowded and unsanitary residences, denied required wages, and in some cases deprived of food and medical care.
The indictment also alleges the defendants imposed strict rules to isolate workers, prohibited them from leaving or speaking to others outside their group, and threatened to report them to immigration authorities if they complained. When some workers’ H-2A visas expired, prosecutors say the defendants told them to remain in the country and harbored them for continued labor.
When the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division began investigating Las Princesas, prosecutors allege Martha Zeferino Jose and Munoz attempted to obstruct the inquiry. According to the indictment, they returned confiscated documents before investigators arrived and instructed workers to tell investigators that nothing was wrong. Munoz is also accused of threatening workers with deportation if they told the truth.
Each defendant is charged with forced labor, conspiracy to commit forced labor, alien harboring for financial gain, conspiracy to commit alien harboring and document servitude offenses. Martha Zeferino Jose is additionally charged with visa fraud, and Munoz faces an obstruction charge.
If convicted, the defendants face up to 20 years in prison on each forced labor count, up to 10 years for each count of alien harboring for financial gain, and up to five years for document servitude. Additional penalties apply to the visa fraud and obstruction charges.
U.S. Attorney Ellis Boyle for the Eastern District of North Carolina said authorities “do not tolerate abuse of the system to hurt unsuspecting victims of human trafficking.”
The case is being investigated by Homeland Security Investigations and the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General. Prosecutors from the Justice Department’s Human Rights and Special Prosecutions Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of North Carolina are handling the case.
Anyone with information about human trafficking is encouraged to contact the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888.
North Carolina
Louisville vs. North Carolina odds, prediction: 2026 Atlantic Coast Conference men’s college basketball picks from proven model – SportsLine.com
The 16th-ranked North Carolina Tar Heels take on the 21st-ranked Louisville Cardinals in a key Atlantic Coast Conference matchup on Monday night. Louisville is coming off an 87-70 win over Georgia Tech on Saturday, while North Carolina topped Syracuse 77-64 that same day. The Cardinals (20-7, 9-5 ACC), who are tied with North Carolina for sixth in the conference, are 3-5 on the road this season. The Tar Heels (21-6, 9-5 ACC), who are 4-1 against ranked opponents, are 15-0 on their home court. Caleb Wilson (wrist) and James Brown (foot) have been ruled out.
Tip-off from the Dean E. Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C., is set for 7 p.m. ET. North Carolina leads the all-time series 20-8, including 11-5 since Louisville joined the ACC. Louisville is a 3.5-point favorite in the latest Louisville vs. North Carolina odds from DraftKings Sportsbook, while the over/under for total points scored is 163.5.
Before making any Louisville vs. North Carolina picks, check out the college basketball predictions from the SportsLine Projection Model.
The SportsLine Projection Model simulates every college basketball game 10,000 times and entered Week 16 on a sizzling 11-1 run on top-ranked over/under picks dating back to last year, and is on an 13-7 run on top-rated CBB side picks. Anyone following could have seen HUGE returns!
The model has simulated Louisville vs. North Carolina 10,000 times and the results are in. The model is leaning Under, and it also says one side of the spread hits over 50% of the time!
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