‘Full out sprint’: It’s go time for the Timberwolves in the ultra-competitive West

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It’s go time for the Timberwolves.

Minnesota’s home game Friday against Dallas is the first of just 26 between the All-Star break and the end of the regular season.

“Full out sprint,” Wolves forward Julius Randle said last week.

There’s no reason to reserve energy, not in the ultra-competitive Western Conference. Minnesota went into the All-Star break in sixth place, exactly where it finished a year ago. And while the Wolves proved they can still make a playoff run from such a position, it’s not where they want to be two months from now.

The Timberwolves were only 1 1/2 games clear of Phoenix in the race to avoid the play-in tournament ahead of Thursday’s NBA slate to open the second half, but they also are just 1 1/2 games behind the banged-up Nuggets for the No. 3 seed.

Timberwolves coach Chris Finch noted some games count as “double” the rest of the way as Minnesota competes against neighbors in the standings with potential tiebreakers at stake.

The race is on. And the Wolves have long been closers during the Finch and Anthony Edwards era. They tend to hit their stride when results mean the most.

“I guess you could say that just us knowing, like, where we want to be at the end of the season, holding the trophy, so just having to play the right way and trusting each other and doing the right stuff just to get there,” forward Jaden McDaniels said. “We’re one of them teams.”

Minnesota again flashed its potential prior to the break, blowing out consecutive short-handed opponents. When the Wolves defend at a high level and convert stops into transition opportunities going the other way, they’re tough to beat.

Maintaining that level of play has always been the issue for this group, which has long possessed a high ceiling and a low floor. The former is why Finch noted Minnesota isn’t afraid to go anywhere and play anyone in the postseason. But the Wolves would, ideally, like to set themselves up with the cleanest runway ahead of the playoff takeoff.

That will require consistency, particularly on the defensive end. Finch noted the need for better shell principles and rim protection, particularly when Rudy Gobert is out of the contest. Edwards has to set a consistent example with his defensive ball pressure and awareness.

“It’s kind of all about the details right now,” Finch said. “It’s all about consistency. Nothing else matters right now. No shots, minutes, role acceptance, all that stuff. … You got to settle in, and winning has to be first and foremost all the time, rather than anything else.”

Because the race is officially on.

“Every game is going to mean something, and it’s fun,” Randle said. “This is the part of the year that’s fun because it’s competitive and every game means something. You gotta really be locked in and focused.”

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Rescue group in Las Vegas tries to catch a toucan that escaped its owner before it’s too late

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By JESSICA HILL

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Katherine Eddington was driving in North Las Vegas last week when she thought she saw a big black bird carrying a banana fly across the intersection.

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But after a closer look, she realized it was a toucan — a tropical bird native to rainforests in Central and South America known for their large, colorful bills.

“They’re beautiful birds, so being able to see something like that so close to home was fascinating,” said Eddington, who recognized the bird from social media and contacted animal rescue.

That toucan is named Sam, and he has been living in the area since November, when a resident posted online that he’d escaped from his cage. After surviving the Las Vegas desert for months, Sam has captivated community birding groups, with people posting occasional sightings around town.

A local rescue group has been trying to catch him for months — and the clock is ticking.

“I’m really worried about him,” said Skye Marsh, president and co-founder of SouthWest Exotic Avian Rescue. The Las Vegas-based group has spent hours searching for him, only to find the bird 50 feet (about 15 meters) up in a palm tree, limiting rescue options. They have not been in touch with the owner, she said.

Las Vegas is not a good environment for a toucan to be in the wild with its too-hot summers and cold winters, said Donald Price, a professor and biologist at the University of Nevada in Las Vegas who studies how winged animal species adapt to different environments.

Marsh, who has two toucans of her own, said Sam is starting to show signs of struggle. His eyes are sunken in, and the skin around his beak is starting to get discolored, she said.

Sam likely lived off figs and pomegranates from trees in the Los Prados neighborhood, located about 15 miles from the Las Vegas Strip, when he first escaped in November, Marsh said. Those fruits have since disappeared, and Sam has moved on to citrus, which are harmful to toucans, she said. Their livers cannot process the calcium, and the iron can be deadly.

A toucan named Sam is spotted in Las Vegas, Feb. 13, 2026. (Katherine Eddington via AP)

“This bird is not in good shape,” Marsh said.

Bird experts and enthusiasts alike are surprised the toucan has survived so long in Las Vegas. Exotic birds that escape often have difficulty finding food and avoiding predators, and the changing weather in Las Vegas has also likely taken a toll on the toucan.

Birds can thermal regulate, but only for so long. It takes a lot of energy, so the toucan would need more food, Price said.

“If it’s still alive, it could be in trouble, I can imagine. So hopefully they catch it,” he said.

The toucan has been spotted in one specific location, a sign he’s running out of energy, she said. The rescue group set up a cage with food in it and urged neighbors to stop feeding it. The toucan has scoped out the cage but gets spooked when people are around, Marsh said.

A toucan named Sam is spotted in Las Vegas, Feb. 13, 2026. (Katherine Eddington via AP)

The rescue group will rush him to the vet as soon as he’s caught, Marsh said. He’ll need fluids, and his system will need to be flushed to remove the iron he’s eaten.

Marsh urged neighbors to not get close to the toucan or try to trap Sam themselves.

“The more people that are out there, the worse it’s going to be because he doesn’t like people,” she said. “So just let us do our thing, and we’ll get him.”

Federal judge orders release of man who crashed in St. Paul during ICE pursuit

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A federal judge ruled that a man can no longer be detained after he crashed in St. Paul while federal agents were pursuing him.

Immigrations and Customs Enforcement officers were attempting “a targeted vehicle stop” of the 21-year-old man, who is from Honduras and who the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said is in the U.S. illegally.

Officers responded to a report of a crash at 9:40 a.m. Feb. 11 at Western and Selby avenues in the Cathedral Hill neighborhood. The man crashed into two vehicles before hitting a snowbank. He was taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries, and people in the other vehicles didn’t report injuries, according to police.

The Trump administration said the goal of Operation Metro Surge was to “target the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens in the Minneapolis area.” DHS, which usually highlights a person’s criminal record if they have one, did not mention a record for the man in the crash. Court records indicate he has not been convicted of crimes in Minnesota.

DHS said in its statement last week that the man “tried to evade law enforcement and began driving recklessly and ran red lights, endangering public safety and law enforcement.” He had not been federally charged as of Thursday afternoon and it wasn’t known what will happen next with his immigration case.

Police reports document crash

A parent outside Capitol Hill Magnet School, about half a mile from the crash site, reported seeing a Toyota Prius in front of an unmarked vehicle with emergency lights flashing and no sirens on. She said they were “traveling well in excess of the 25 mph speed limit” and estimated them to be going 45-55 mph, according to a St. Paul police report made public Thursday.

A witness at the scene estimated the Prius was traveling 80 to 100 mph and said it went through the intersection without stopping, according to another police report. People saw a man run from the vehicle before federal officers took him into custody.

Federal agents told police that the man had crashed his Prius into their vehicle “but it seemed to be in relation to their pursuit” and not during the crash involving the vehicles at the intersection, a report said.

The man had a revoked driver’s license, according to a police report. No one was cited at the scene.

On Monday in Georgia, a driver fleeing a stop by federal immigration officers crashed into another vehicle, killing a teacher who was headed to work.

Judge orders man’s release

Lauren M. Rossitto of Erickson, Zierke, Kuderer & Madsen, who took on the case as a volunteer attorney for the Minnesota Habeas Project, filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus for the man on Sunday. Such petitions challenge the legal authority of the government to detain someone.

The man contended his detention was “unlawful due to denial of a bond hearing,” Senior U.S. District Judge John M. Gerrard summarized in his order filed Wednesday. “… The government responds that detention is mandatory, not discretionary, and the petitioner is not eligible to be released.”

Attorneys for the U.S. Attorney’s Office and Homeland Security asserted the case was different because the man “was encountered upon entering the country in 2022 and released on recognizance until he was redetained in 2026,” Gerrard summarized.

But Gerrard wrote that the man’s previous detention and release “makes the government’s argument worse, not better. As the court has explained, if the petitioner was at some point an ‘arriving alien,’ but the government decided to release him anyway, that places the petitioner even more firmly into the discretionary detention framework.”

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Furthermore, Gerrard said government attorneys “provided neither evidence nor argument that officials have conducted any of the proceedings necessary to revoke a release. … In this case the government hasn’t even produced as much as an administrative warrant.”

Gerrard ordered that if the man had been moved from Minnesota, he should immediately be returned and released from custody. Rossitto had not been able to confirm as of mid-afternoon Thursday if he’d been released. Federal attorneys have until Friday to file a status report showing they complied with the judge’s order.

Many volunteer attorneys, along with the courts, are “working around the clock” on habeas petitions, Rossitto said. “There’s such a volume that we need more help,” she said.

New Mexico reopens investigation into alleged illegal activity at Epstein’s former Zorro Ranch

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By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — New Mexico’s attorney general has reopened an investigation into allegations of illegal activity at Jeffrey Epstein’s former Zorro Ranch.

Attorney General Raúl Torrez’s office made the announcement Thursday, saying the decision was made after reviewing information recently released by the U.S. Department of Justice.

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Although New Mexico’s initial case was closed in 2019 at the request of federal prosecutors in New York, state prosecutors say now that “revelations outlined in the previously sealed FBI files warrant further examination.”

The New Mexico Department of Justice said special agents and prosecutors at the agency will be seeking immediate access to the complete, unredacted federal case file and intend to work with other law enforcement partners as well as a new truth commission established by state lawmakers to look into activities at the ranch.

“As with any potential criminal matter, we will follow the facts wherever they lead, carefully evaluate jurisdictional considerations, and take appropriate investigative action, including the collection and preservation of any relevant evidence that remains available,” the New Mexico Department of Justice said in a statement.