Seattle, WA
NYPD union sues Amazon over pandemic losses

The pension fund for hundreds of New York Metropolis police detectives has sued Amazon in federal courtroom, claiming the e-retail big and its executives misled traders and hid losses spurred by the corporate’s “extreme” enlargement through the coronavirus pandemic.
- After Amazon lastly disclosed its “wrongful acts and omissions,” the worth of its inventory plummeted, “inflicting important losses and damages” to DEA and different traders, the swimsuit states.
The opposite facet: A spokesperson for Amazon stated in an e-mail to Axios on Monday the corporate wasn’t commenting on the lawsuit.
Driving the information: The DEA’s 26-page criticism — filed July 8 in Seattle, the place Amazon is headquartered — names CEO Andy Jassy, CFO Brian Olsavsky and head of investor relations David Fildes as defendants.
- The police pension fund filed the swimsuit as a category motion on behalf of all “individuals and entities that acquired Amazon frequent inventory between July 30, 2021 and April 28, 2022.”
What it says: The DEA’s swimsuit alleges that, amid the pandemic lockdowns that drove customers to buy on-line, Amazon invested $6 billion in increasing its warehouse distribution and information middle house.
- The corporate greater than doubled capability to over 387.1 million sq. ft by the tip of 2021, based on the corporate’s public statements cited by the lawsuit.
Sure, however: Amazon’s pandemic “enlargement was extreme, not supported by precise demand, unsustainable, and had created a major financial burden and yoke round its neck, inflicting billions of {dollars} in losses,” the swimsuit claims.
- By July 2021, the swimsuit contends that Amazon knew it had over-expanded and was compelled to make huge cutbacks.
- Firm officers “hid these important cutbacks from the general public whereas on the identical time assuring traders that the enlargement plan remained on observe and crucial,” the swimsuit claims.
- The $3.8 billion in losses disclosed months later have been Amazon’s first quarterly losses since 2015, the swimsuit says.
Flashback: The swimsuit additionally notes that simply six weeks after disclosing its first quarter losses, Amazon introduced the departure of Dave Clark, the CEO of its worldwide shopper division who “spearheaded the Firm’s huge enlargement.”
In the meantime, a coalition of labor unions additionally filed a criticism with the U.S. Securities Alternate Fee final week, contending Amazon misled traders by publicly sharing “cherry-picked and outdated information” about its warehouse damage charges final spring, per Geekwire.
Of be aware: The swimsuit was filed a couple of days earlier than Amazon Prime Day — the annual sale occasion unique to Prime members, and one in every of Amazon’s most vital gross sales intervals — which kicks off Tuesday.

Seattle, WA
A dream trade-up target for Seattle Seahawks in NFL Draft

To be clear, this is not a likely scenario.
But crazy things can happen in the NFL Draft. And in the countdown to next Thursday’s first round, this is a time for football fans to dream.
Latest Seahawks Mock Draft Roundup: Who will Seattle take at No. 18?
With that as the backdrop, NFL Network’s Daniel Jeremiah‘s weekly appearance Wednesday on Seattle Sports’ Brock and Salk included a conversation about the top edge rushers in year’s draft class. And during that conversation, co-host Mike Salk posed a question: Is there any chance the Seattle Seahawks could trade up to get star Georgia edge rusher Jalon Walker?
Most mock drafts predict Walker to be selected by the Carolina Panthers with the No. 8 overall pick, so he’ll likely be off the board long before Seattle’s first-round pick at No. 18. But with 10 overall picks and five in the first three rounds, is there any way the Seahawks could use their extra draft capital to move up and snag Walker if he slips outside the the top 10?
“I wouldn’t totally punt on the Jalon thing,” Jeremiah said. “Put it this way: I’ve talked to teams in the 20s that say, ‘Do you think he gets to us?’ Like, so that tells me that there are teams out there that don’t view him (as a surefire top-10 pick).
“I mean, I do not envision it’s likely (that’s he’s available at 18). But he could be one of those deals where you’ve got some extra ammunition, so if he starts to drift in range, that would be a fun piece to add to the mix.”
In that scenario, Jeremiah said a trade up would be worth it – especially given the relatively tame cost of doing so.
“To move up a couple spots, you can dump a fourth-round pick,” Jeremiah said. “In this draft, you’re not gonna be a missing a ton there.”
The scoop on Walker
With explosive athleticism and a 6-foot-1, 243-pound frame, Walker played both on the edge and at linebacker for Georgia. He racked up 6.5 sacks and 10.5 tackles for loss this past season – including three sacks and three tackles for loss in a spectacular performance against Texas – en route to winning the Butkus Award as the nation’s top linebacker.
Could @JalonWlaker be the next great defender out of @GeorgiaFootball? 🐶 @MoveTheSticks
📺: 2025 #NFLDraft – April 24-26 on NFLN/ESPN/ABC
📱: Stream on @NFLPlus pic.twitter.com/Ex66uhSdCd— NFL (@NFL) March 30, 2025
Walker is widely considered the second-best edge rusher in this year’s draft behind likely top-three pick Abdul Carter from Penn State. But with his linebacking experience, he also brings plenty of versatility for modern defensive schemes that emphasize positional flexibility.
“He’s an undersized guy who plays off the ball and on the ball, so they move him around,” Jeremiah said. “He wins from a lot of different entry points with how they blitz him and rush him. But off the edge, he is ultra-explosive. … He’s a big-time fastball off the edge who jolts guys. He dominated the Texas game. He just took the game over.
“You can play him off the ball and spy him and he just sucks people up on the perimeter. (Texas quarterback) Arch Manning in that game tried to escape – Arch can really run – (and Walker) sucked him up, easy. … I think he is a really, really fun chess piece in a league that’s kind of trending toward some position-less, amoeba-type stuff to keep people guessing. This guy’s a chess piece.”
The Seahawks currently have a solid core of edge rushers in Uchenna Nwosu, Boye Mafe, Derick Hall and free-agent signee DeMarcus Lawrence. But with Nwosu and Lawrence both coming off injury-plagued seasons, Seattle certainly could look to add more firepower to the group.
And if somehow, some way, the Seahawks turned that dream into a reality? Jeremiah, a former NFL scout, summed it up succintly.
“He’s different,” Jeremiah said. “He’s a different cat.”
Listen to the full conversation with NFL Network’s Daniel Jeremiah at this link or in the audio player near the top of this story. Tune in to Brock and Salk weekdays from 6 to 10 a.m. or find the podcast on the Seattle Sports app.
Seattle Seahawks NFL Draft coverage
• Brock on Seahawks Draft: A Seattle native with big O-line upside
• ESPN insider’s potential draft cheat code for Seattle Seahawks’ O-line
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• Brock’s Seattle Seahawks Draft Profile: ‘Destructive’ DT from Michigan
• Seatle Seahawks Draft Profile: Alabama’s ‘Swiss Army knife’ LB
Seattle, WA
The Mariners’ win-loss record falls back to the Red as Cincinnati ends Seattle’s streak

Coming off the back of two series wins at home against division rivals, and on a four game win streak, the Seattle Mariners came into Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati to play the Reds with the hopes the momentum would continue with a win that would have put them above .500 for the first time since their Opening Day win. A series win taking the next two games would see them reach that mark and is still in the cards, but today that status eludes them with a 6-4 loss that gives them an 8-9 season record.
Immediately in the game the good vibes for Seattle fans continued, thanks to Dylan Moore. To opposing pitcher Nick Lodolo, it was a different experience as I imagine he had a chill settle into his bones, not just the air in Cinci but also the foreshadowing. A wave of Dylan Moore would flow over him this game, starting with his second pitch that DMo sent 106.7 mph off of the bat into the center field stands, a home run in 30/30 ballparks.
Lodolo would escape the first with no more damage, but Julio Rodríguez would work a walk to follow up DMo’s homer before batters 3-4-5 fell 1-2-3. Seattle would pin another run on the board in the second inning, and it started with debuting prospect Ben Williamson, making the start for Seattle batting eighth and fielding third base. With two outs and after starting down 0-2, Williamson found a 1-2 middle changeup he hit on a hard line drive to left field for his first major league hit in his very first at bat. The only thing that could make a moment like that sweeter is if the player’s family and friends are able to be there to see it happen, and for Ben that was the case and all fourteen of them can be seen cheering at the end of his first hit highlight video.
When Crawford came up next and singled, Williamson moved first-to-third. Bane of lefties and Lodolos Dylan Moore also singled next, scoring Williamson. With an early 2-0 lead, the Seattle bats felt comfortable enough to take a nap and slumbered for the next few innings, Lodolo facing the minimum in the third and fourth inning. J.P. Crawford led off the start of the fifth inning with a 3-2 hit by pitch allowing him to reach first, and Dylan Moore continued his anti-Lodolo crusade, destroying a first pitch meatball, this time a home run to left field that would have been out in every park.
As far as the Mariners offense, that was it. All four runs were driven in by Dylan Moore, the only batter with a multi-hit night in a game that saw Seattle reach double digit strikeouts with twelve, and only walk five times. Julio was hit-less with two strikeouts, but two of those walks belonged to him.
In a lot of games four runs could be enough to secure a win, but that can be a tall ask in a hitter friendly park behind a starter far from his sharpest in command. Luis Castillo had an incredibly strong first inning against his former club, needing only seven pitches and facing the minimum.
Baseball Savant
The rest of his outing was almost all trouble, with Castillo giving up two runs in the bottom of the third to leave it tied. Jose Trevino led off with a double into left field just past the glove of Randy Arozarena, Matt McLain worked a walk, and Gavin Lux and Austin Hays teamed up with a pair of singles to send Trevino and McLain home. Castillo had a nearly clean fourth that only saw Jake Fraley reach when Castillo was slow to cover first on an infield grounder, but the fifth inning would get messy enough to end his night. Matt McLain and Elly De La Cruz worked 3-1 counts into walks to get things going, and I think every M’s fan alive was wondering if Dan Wilson would get going and pull his starter that clearly did not have it. Wilson opted to trust his veteran arm with the lead against the heart of the Reds lineup, on the third time around. Gavin Lux shoots it into left field for an RBI single, and the throw home is wide enough the runners were able to advance an extra base.
The Mariners still had the lead. Dan Wilson still had a chance to get his starter out of this jam. Warming in the bullpen was Carlos Vargas. Again Wilson decided to let Castillo work out of it, and again that gamble did not pay off. Austin Hays went deep to center field for a three run home run, and gave the Reds a lead they would never give back. Luis Castillo would finish the night with a line of 4.1 innings pitched, six earned runs on seven hits, four walks and three strikeouts.
Before closing the door in the top of the ninth, Cincinnati tacked on another couple runs in the bottom of the eighth. Gregory Santos came in to the game to work that inning, and getting first batter Christian Encarnacion-Strand to fly out to start the inning would provide no padding for his following mistakes. Jake Fraley ate a middle fastball for a ground-rule double, and Jose Trevino and TJ Friedl took advantage of Santos’ wild arm and worked walks. And with the bases loaded and one out, Matt McLain made three, working a walk to bring in a run. Eduard Bazardo provided relief to the reliever situation, allowing one inherited runner to score on a fielder’s choice grounder and striking out Blake Dunn to get out of the inning.
Hitting heroics from DMo and a Williamson debut hit were not enough to overshadow the shaky pitching performances that gave up the game, but there were still some seeds of satisfaction to be reaped from the rest of the bullpen appearances. Collin Snider went 1.2 innings, taking over for Castillo, and gave up no hits and no walks, striking out one. Casey Legumina, who made his MLB debut on Jackie Robinson Day with the Reds in ‘23 and was making his Mariners debut on Jackie Robinson Day today, also had a solid outing. Giving up one hit, a single to Gavin Lux, Legumina also secured revenge against Austin Hays on behalf of Castillo, striking out Hays.
Williamson and Moore stepping up today, Julio’s patience at the plate, and Legumina climbing to the top of the pile and declaring himself here all answer vital questions that have remained residual from the off-season. Other elements such as Wilson’s game calling and the unreliability of Santos in high leverage situations perhaps only leave us with more queries, and no clear paths to answers. Whether they will have those answers or not, tomorrow the Mariners will attempt to rebound from today’s loss, and keep from sinking further into the Reds.
Seattle, WA
Michigan’s Jordan Hobbs picked by Seattle Storm in third round of WNBA draft

University of Michigan senior Jordan Hobbs was selected on Monday as the 34th overall pick by the Seattle Storm in the 2025 WNBA draft.
Hobbs, who started every game of her last season with the Wolverines, finished her collegiate career with an average of 13.6 points, 4.8 rebounds and 2.6 assists in 31.4 minutes per game in the 2024-2025 season. On March 21, she recorded a career-high of 28 points against Iowa State in the NCAA Tournament.
The 6-foot-3 forward earned the All-Big Ten Honorable Mention and the Academic All-Big Ten honors.
Hobbs joins Kansas State’s Serena Sundell and TCU’s Madison Connor, who were selected No. 26 and 29, respectively, by Seattle.
The Wolverines made it through the first round of the tournament with their win against Iowa State but fell short in the second round, losing to Notre Dame.
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