Joe Ryan survives early struggles as Twins beat Bucs ace

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What looked like a classic pitchers’ duel before the game took some twists and turns on Friday, with one ace looking rock-solid, but losing, and another ace struggling early, but winning.

When all of the weather-delayed action was over, the Minnesota Twins gave up the field in favor of a postgame Nelly concert and escaped to their clubhouse with a 2-1 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates in the opener of a three-game series.

Minnesota All-Star hurler Joe Ryan (9-4) had to work through the first two innings as his pitch count climbed. He fell behind in the fourth inning, but got bailed out by just enough offense. Pittsburgh right-hander Paul Skenes (4-8) looked untouchable for three innings, only to surrender a Trevor Larnach homer in the fourth which won the game.

Jhoan Duran got the final three outs for his 15th save of the season as the Twins improved to 5-2 on their current homestand. With the potential tying run on second in the ninth, Duran struck out Isiah Kiner-Falefa to end the game.

Ryan escaped the first inning without allowing a run, but only after giving up a walk and a pair of hits, which loaded the bases. The second hit was a hard shot back to the mound by Oneil Cruz that deflected off Ryan’s glove and was credited as an infield single. Trainers gave Ryan a cursory glance, but he stayed in the game. His 34th pitch of the frame got Ke’Byran Hayes to pop out to second, ending the threat.

By contrast, Skenes threw a dozen first inning pitches and struck out the Twins’ side. He needed just 33 pitches to retire the first nine Twins he faced in order.

The Pirates put runners on base in each of the first four innings, and broke through with two outs in the fourth. Isiah Kiner-Falefa’s double to right rolled all the way to the warning track, and the throw beat Spencer Horwitz at the plate, but Twins catcher Christian Vasquez could not field the ball cleanly.

The second time through the order went notably better for the Twins, who got an infield single from Byron Buxton, and they took the lead two batters later when Larnach dropped his 13th home run of the season into the front row of seats in right center.

Skenes was lifted after five innings, having allowed five hits and recording six strikeouts. Ryan, who was named to his first All-Star Game this week, also went five innings, allowing five hits while striking out five.

Minnesota’s Danny Coulombe, Brock Stewart, Louis Varland and Griffin Jax pitched in relief to get the game to Duran.

Twins shortstop Carlos Correa, who singled in the sixth, had to leave the game an inning later with an apparent leg injury.

Tommy Pham, batting for the Pirates with one out, hit a line drive off the top of the wall in right field. DaShawn Keirsey, Jr., played the carom perfectly and fired to second as Pham tried to stretch for a double. Correa applied the tag for the out, but Pham’s helmet hit Correa’s right leg, which was planted on the bag. Correa rolled to the ground in immediate pain, and was helped off the field.

His injury was officially classified as a mild right ankle sprain by the Twins. The crowd of 40,100 was the Twins’ first sellout of the season.

Game 2 of the series is Saturday at 1:10 p.m., with Pittsburgh right-hander Mike Burrows pitching for the visitors. The Twins had not named a starter as of Friday night.

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Judge orders Trump administration to halt indiscriminate immigration stops, arrests in California

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By JAIMIE DING, Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A federal judge on Friday ordered the Trump administration to halt indiscriminate immigration stops and arrests in seven California counties, including Los Angeles.

Immigrant advocacy groups filed the lawsuit last week accusing President Donald Trump’s administration of systematically targeting brown-skinned people in Southern California during its ongoing immigration crackdown. The plaintiffs include three detained immigrants and two U.S. citizens, one who was held despite showing agents his identification.

The filing in U.S. District Court asked a judge to block the administration from using what they call unconstitutional tactics in immigration raids. Immigrant advocates accuse immigration officials of detaining someone based on their race, carrying out warrantless arrests, and denying detainees access to legal counsel at a holding facility in downtown LA.

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Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, said in an email that “any claims that individuals have been ‘targeted’ by law enforcement because of their skin color are disgusting and categorically FALSE.”

McLaughlin said “enforcement operations are highly targeted, and officers do their due diligence” before making arrests.

Judge Maame E. Frimpong also issued a separate order barring the federal government from restricting attorney access at a Los Angeles immigration detention facility.

Frimpong issued the emergency orders, which are a temporary measure while the lawsuit proceeds, the day after a hearing during which advocacy groups argued that the government was violating the Fourth and Fifth amendments of the constitution.

She wrote in the order there was a “mountain of evidence” presented in the case that the federal government was committing the violations they were being accused of.

Immigrants and Latino communities across Southern California have been on edge for weeks since the Trump administration stepped up arrests at car washes, Home Depot parking lots, immigration courts and a range of businesses. Tens of thousands of people have participated in rallies in the region over the raids and the subsequent deployment of the National Guard and Marines.

The order also applies to Ventura County, where busloads of workers were detained Thursday while the court hearing was underway after federal agents descended on a cannabis farm, leading to clashes with protesters and multiple injuries.

Federal immigration agents toss tear gas at protesters during a raid in the agriculture area of Camarillo, Calif., Thursday, July 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Michael Owen Baker)

According to the American Civil Liberties Union, the recent wave of immigration enforcement has been driven by an “arbitrary arrest quota” and based on “broad stereotypes based on race or ethnicity.”

When detaining the three day laborers who are plaintiffs in the lawsuit, all immigration agents knew about them is that they were Latino and were dressed in construction work clothes, the filing in the lawsuit said. It goes on to describe raids at swap meets and Home Depots where witnesses say federal agents grabbed anyone who “looked Hispanic.”

ACLU attorney Mohammad Tajsar said Brian Gavidia, one of the U.S. citizens who was detained, was “physically assaulted … for no other reason than he was Latino and working at a tow yard in a predominantly Latin American neighborhood.”

Tajsar asked why immigration agents detained everyone at a car wash except two white workers, according to a declaration by a car wash worker, if race wasn’t involved.

Representing the government, attorney Sean Skedzielewski said there was no evidence that federal immigration agents considered race in their arrests, and that they only considered appearance as part of the “totality of the circumstances” including prior surveillance and interactions with people in the field.

In some cases, they also operated off “targeted, individualized packages,” he said.

“The Department of Homeland Security has policy and training to ensure compliance with the Fourth Amendment,” Skedzielewski said.

Federal agents ride on and armored vehicle at MacArthur Park Monday, July 7, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

Order opens facility to lawyer visits

Lawyers from Immigrant Defenders Law Center and other groups say they also have been denied access to a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in downtown LA known as “B-18” on several occasions since June, according to court documents.

Lawyer Mark Rosenbaum said in one incident on June 7 attorneys “attempted to shout out basic rights” at a bus of people detained by immigration agents in downtown LA when the government drivers honked their horns to drown them out and chemical munitions akin to tear gas were deployed.

Skedzielewski said access was only restricted to “protect the employees and the detainees” during violent protests and it has since been restored.

Rosenbaum said lawyers were denied access even on days without any demonstrations nearby, and that the people detained are also not given sufficient access to phones or informed that lawyers were available to them.

He said the facility lacks adequate food and beds, which he called “coercive” to getting people to sign papers to agree to leave the country before consulting an attorney.

Friday’s order will prevent the government from solely using apparent race or ethnicity, speaking Spanish or English with an accent, presence at a location such as a tow yard or car wash, or someone’s occupation as the basis for reasonable suspicion to stop someone. It will also require officials to open B-18 to visitation by attorneys seven days a week and provide detainees access to confidential phone calls with attorneys.

Attorneys general for 18 Democratic states also filed briefs in support of the orders.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents were already barred from making warrantless arrests in a large swath of eastern California after a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction in April.

Air India Boeing 787 crash preliminary report released

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Paige Cornwell and Lauren Rosenblatt, The Seattle Times

The two engines on the Air India flight shut down within one second of each other before the Boeing 787 Dreamliner crashed last month in Ahmedabad, India, killing at least 260 people, according to a preliminary report released Friday.

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Both engine fuel control switches that, if pulled while in flight, cut power to the engines, transitioned from the “run” to “cutoff” settings as the plane took off, according to the report.

In the recovered cockpit voice recording, one of the pilots is heard asking the other why he cut off fuel to the engine. The other pilot responded that he didn’t, according to the 15-page report.

The preliminary report, released by India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau, comes 30 days after the fatal crash, following guidelines from the International Civil Aviation Organization, a United Nations agency that recommends practices for the industry.

The new information matches media reports this week that, citing anonymous sources, said that investigators were focused on the engine fuel control switches.

On June 12, the Boeing 787 crashed in the northwestern Indian city of Ahmedabad less than a minute after takeoff, killing 241 of the 242 people on board and 19 people on the ground, according to the most recent estimates from local authorities.

The Everett-built plane crashed into a medical hostel roughly 1 mile from the airport. It was the first fatal crash involving a Boeing 787 Dreamliner, the jet maker’s smaller widebody plane.

India’s civil aviation authority is leading the investigation, with support from the U.S. and the U.K., which had several citizens on board the London-bound plane.

The switches moved back to “run” and one engine was regaining thrust when the plane crashed.

The report doesn’t specify which of the two pilots asked the other about the switches. Both pilots had an adequate rest period before the flight, underwent preflight breath analyzer tests and were deemed fit to fly, according to the report. The first officer was flying the plane and the captain was monitoring during takeoff.

The takeoff weight was within the allowable limits, and there were no “dangerous goods” on the plane, according to the report. There was no significant bird activity in the flight path.

Boeing and engine maker General Electric offered to support the investigation and Air India. Both companies have been limited in what they can say as the investigation is ongoing.

The report said at this investigation stage, there are no recommended actions for Boeing Dreamliner or General Electric engine operators and manufacturers.

With few official updates from accident investigators, the aviation industry and flying public have been searching for answers about what went wrong.

Aviation experts who spoke with The Seattle Times over the last month shared a long list of possibilities and were reluctant to rule anything out, noting that the circumstances of the crash were unusual.

©2025 The Seattle Times. Visit seattletimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

‘Today we get justice,’ sister of chef fatally shot at St. Paul funeral reception says in court

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Larry Earl Jiles Jr. cooked in the Twin Cities for over a decade. He owned a gourmet takeout business in Centerville called Chef Hot Hands, which was also his nickname.

But the business was not just about meals, Jiles’ sister said Friday at the sentencing of his killer, John Lee Edmundson, who received a mandatory minimum 40-year prison term.

“It was about love, connections and his energy that made everyone feel good,” Chanel Jiles said.

Larry Jiles Jr., left, and Troy Kennedy (Courtesy of the family)

Jiles, 34, and Edmondson’s cousin, Troy Robert Kennedy, 37, were fatally shot outside a senior-living apartment building in St. Paul on Feb. 25, 2023, following a repast for an 80-year-old woman. Jiles and Kennedy were relatives of the woman, and Jiles made most of the food for the gathering.

A jury in April convicted Edmondson, 54, of second-degree intentional murder in Jiles’ killing and acquitted him of killing Kennedy, who was struck by ensuing gunfire. Jurors also acquitted Edmondson of first-degree murder charges in connection with Jiles’ killing.

No one else has been charged in Kennedy’s killing.

Witnesses testified at Edmundson’s trial that it was peaceful until it ended, when an argument broke out in the community room and spilled outside.

Three others were wounded in the gun battle, and police recovered 39 shell casings that were fired from five guns. Edmondson fired the first shot, and nine more.

“In a matter of minutes, something so healthy and pure turned into something so vicious and corrupt,” Ramsey County District Judge Leonardo Castro said in handing down the sentence. “It is inexplicable to me, and frankly, it honestly breaks my heart.”

Edmundson’s mandatory minimum sentence fell under the state’s “heinous crimes” law because he was convicted in 1994 of aiding and abetting second-degree murder and 15 years had not elapsed since he was discharged from the imposed prison sentence in that case.

Departure denied

Officers were sent to the shooting behind Frogtown Square Apartments at University Avenue and Dale Street about 5:15 p.m. Jiles was shot twice in the neck. An autopsy showed Kennedy had two “distant gunshot wounds” from a bullet or bullets that exited his body.

Jiles was born in St. Paul and raised in Hugo, where he lived at the time of his death. Kennedy was a St. Paul resident.

John Lee Edmondson (Courtesy of the Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office)

Edmondson, of St. Louis Park, claimed defense of others in Jiles’ killing. He testified at his trial that he was driving his mother and niece in the parking lot when his mother spotted Jiles with a gun standing by a group.

Edmondson’s attorney, Ryan Pacyga, told jurors that Edmondson walked over to the group and said he tried to push down the gun as Jiles was raising it. He then shot Jiles.

On Friday, in arguing for a durational departure from sentencing guidelines, Pacyga said “there was at least some aggression on Larry Jiles’ conduct that day to pull a gun out in a crowd.” He said Edmondson responded to the “alarming and emergency situation.”

Assistant Ramsey County Attorney Hassan Tahir said that nobody testified that Jiles pointed the gun at anyone or made threats toward anyone.

Edmondson admitted on the witness stand “multiple times he had no idea what was even going on,” Tahir said. “So for the court to treat that as an imperfect defense of some kind would essentially mean whenever you see somebody with a gun out and you have no idea why they have that gun out, or what they’re planning on doing with it, you get to go and shoot them.”

In denying the departure motion, Castro said at no time was Edmondson under threat.

“The jury determined that the defendant was not acting in defense of others,” the judge said. “The victim may have possessed a gun, but that alone is not enough to justify the departure.”

‘Today we get justice’

Larry Jiles Jr., known as “Chef Hot Hands,” was one of two men fatally shot in St. Paul on Feb. 25, 2023. (Courtesy of GoFundMe)

Jasmine Nixon, Jiles’ sister, told the court that Edmondson took away a father from his kids and “today we get justice.”

“His life was stolen at 34,” she said. “My brother, Larry Earl Jiles Jr., forever will be 34.”

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Jiles’ mother, Gretchen Bauman, said what Edmondson did was “extremely evil.”

“Nobody believes outside of your family that you shot Larry in protection,” she said.

Edmondson apologized to Jiles’ family, then repeated his claim he was protecting his family.

“I didn’t know what was going on, Mr. Tahir,” he said. “But I knew my family was in danger.”

Edmondson said Kennedy and his family “deserve justice, too. Who shot him?”

Judge Castro kept his words to Edmondson brief.

“Only you know why you did what you did,” he said, “when there were so many more options for you to make.”