Today in History: May 29, Hillary and Norgay first to summit Mount Everest

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Today is Thursday, May 29, the 149th day of 2025. There are 216 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On May 29, 1953, Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal became the first climbers to reach the summit of Mount Everest.

Also on this date:

In 1790, Rhode Island became the 13th and final original colony to ratify the United States Constitution.

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In 1914, the Canadian ocean liner RMS Empress of Ireland sank in the St. Lawrence River in eastern Quebec after colliding with the Norwegian cargo ship SS Storstad; of the 1,477 people on board the Empress of Ireland, 1,012 died.

In 1977, Janet Guthrie became the first woman to race in the Indianapolis 500, finishing in 29th place (A.J. Foyt won the race for his record fourth Indy 500 victory).

In 1985, 39 people were killed at the European Cup Final in Brussels, Belgium, when rioting broke out and a wall separating British and Italian soccer fans collapsed.

In 1988, President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev began their fourth summit meeting, in Moscow.

In 2004, the World War II Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., was dedicated by President George W. Bush.

In 2009, a judge in Los Angeles sentenced music producer Phil Spector to 19 years to life in prison for the murder of actor Lana Clarkson. (Spector remained in prison until his death in January 2021.)

In 2020, fired Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was arrested and charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of George Floyd. (Chauvin was convicted in April 2021 on those charges as well as unintentional second-degree murder.)

Today’s Birthdays:

Basketball Hall of Famer Richie Guerin is 93.
Actor Anthony Geary is 78.
Singer Rebbie Jackson is 75.
Musician-composer Danny Elfman is 72.
Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kansas, is 71.
Singer La Toya Jackson is 69.
Actor Ted Levine is 68.
Actor Annette Bening is 67.
Actor Rupert Everett is 66.
Musician Melissa Etheridge is 64.
Musician Noel Gallagher is 58.
Actor Laverne Cox is 53.
Singer Melanie Brown (Spice Girls) is 50.
Basketball Hall of Famer Carmelo Anthony is 41.
Actor Riley Keough is 36.

Loons scrap to a scoreless draw with first-place Vancouver

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Minnesota United goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair on Tuesday shared primary goal for this Vancouver match: Don’t loose to a team twice in a season.

Coming off a 3-1 loss to the Whitecaps on April 27, the Loons achieved the aim with a 0-0 draw with Vancouver on Wednesday at BC Place.

But MNUFC (7-3-5, 26 points) fell short of St. Clair’s next aim, moving ahead of first-place Vancouver (9-1-5, 32 points) by the end of the week. That would have taken a win over the ‘Caps and Seattle on Sunday.

Last month, Vancouver had a Concacaf semifinal against Miami three days after playing Minnesota and rotated its lineup. But as more regulars subbed into the second half, the Whitecaps rolled to a victory.

Vancouver put out less than its best lineup with the Concacaf final vs. Cruz Azul coming Sunday and were still extend its unbeaten run in MLS to 10 straight games.

Minnesota’s attack was disjointed in the first half and Eric Ramsay brought on forward Tani Oluwaseyi for midfielder Robin Lod and exchanged wingbacks Julian Gressel for Bongi Hlongwane.

MNUFC’s offense didn’t generate much more in the second half. Vancouver outshot Minnesota 21-4 overall and 3-1 on target.

Three tidbits

Owen Gene was named to the Guadeloupe preliminary roster for the Concacaf Gold Cup in June, but the 22-year-old says he wants to stay with MNUFC to help solidify a spot in the first team. … Darius Randell received his fourth loan from MNUFC2 to MNUFC for Wednesday’s match. … Joseph Rosales and Emmanuel Sabbi did not have an incident in this match. Last month, Sabbi accused Rolales of  saying a discriminatory comment toward him. It led to Rosales — who denied the allegation — being suspended three games by MLS.

Timberwolves blasted in Game 5 to end another season in West Finals

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OKLAHOMA CITY — ESPN NBA insider Brian Windhorst publicly stated in February what was being privately said around the league up to that point.

Teams weren’t scared of the Thunder.

Never mind Oklahoma City’s incredible record, dominant defense and MVP guard in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Other teams were confident that, when the time came, they could go toe to toe with the West’s best.

Minnesota was included in that camp.

It now knows otherwise.

If the Timberwolves weren’t scared of Oklahoma City at the outset of the Western Conference finals, they sure looked frightened Wednesday evening, falling 124-94 in Game 5 to end their season via a 4-1 series defeat.

Oklahoma City is back in the NBA Finals for the first time since 2012. The Thunder will meet the Indiana Pacers or New York Knicks in the title round starting June 5 in Oklahoma.

Minnesota was about as ill-composed as a basketball team could be en route to getting run off the floor in the fifth game of the NBA semifinals for the second consecutive season.

This was somehow more embarrassing for Minnesota than last year’s debacle against Dallas. The Mavericks put the Wolves down early in that affair thanks to some incredible shot making from Luka Doncic.

This was different. On this night, the Timberwolves were physically punked from the opening tip. Minnesota looked like a team that had forgotten how to shoot, dribble or pass.

Open shots were missed early, then they stopped being generated altogether. Timberwolves coach Chris Finch cited the importance of a strong start prior to the game. Minnesota was trailing 11-3 before you could blink.

It only got worse from there.

Minnesota’s execution fell off a cliff. The Wolves looked frazzled, unable to complete simple passes or layups. They were entirely swallowed up by the Thunder’s historically tenacious defense and Oklahoma City’s raucous home crowd.

“That obviously got the crowd into it, got them going, and then we struggled to find a rhythm,” Finch said. “We lost our connectivity.”

The moment felt too bad. It has at this facility all series. Not only did Minnesota lose thrice in Oklahoma City in this series, it was embarrassed on each occasion.

A mistake-prone team was forced into far too many of them by a harassing defense known for doing just that. Naz Reid and Julius Randle struggled to hold onto the ball for much of Wednesday’s contest.

The Wolves had nine points at the end of the opening frame. They trailed by 33 at the half. Minnesota had more turnovers (14) than made shots (12) through two quarters.

No one other than Anthony Edwards could put any real pressure on the Thunder defense. Minnesota was one of the final four teams playing for the second consecutive season, so it’s not as though it’s flush with flaws. But those that exist were all exacerbated by Oklahoma City — again, and again and again.

So yeah, Minnesota should be afraid of the Thunder. Very, very afraid. As should everyone else in the Association.

“They certainly deserved this. They played outstanding. We came up short in a lot of ways,” Finch said. “Obviously, an outstanding team, well built super deep. They’ve got an identity and a style of play that suits them. … It looks very, very promising.”

Not only is Oklahoma City wildly talented and tenacious, it’s also young. As in, younger than the Wolves and possessing the assets to continue to replenish its talent pool.

It has the MVP in Gilgeous-Alexander, who lit Minnesota up all series, rendering the Wolves’ trough of perimeter defenders obsolete. A year ago, the Wolves possessed the best defense in the NBA that struck fear and frustration into the hearts and minds of opponents.

It didn’t look as enjoyable being on the other side of the coin.

No longer is Minnesota the big, bad wolves. That title belongs to the Thunder. It looks as though it will for years to come.

The Timberwolves, who’ve fancied themselves a title contender for two years now, have an offseason to determine what it is they plan to do about it.

Pair sentenced in human smuggling case that left Indian family dead on Minnesota border

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More than three years after a family of four from India froze to death while trying to enter the U.S. along a remote stretch of the Canadian border in a blizzard, the convicted ringleader of an international human smuggling plot was sentenced in Minnesota on Wednesday to 10 years in prison.

Federal prosecutors had recommended nearly 20 years for Harshkumar Ramanlal Patel, and nearly 11 years for the driver who was supposed to pick them up, Steve Anthony Shand, who got 6½ years Wednesday with two years’ supervised release.

“The crime in many respects is extraordinary because it did result in the unimaginable death of four individuals, including two children,” U.S. District Judge John Tunheim said. “These were deaths that were clearly avoidable.”

This combination image shows left to right; undated photo released by the Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office shows Harshkumar Patel in Elk River, Minn., and undated photo released by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement shows Steve Shand. (AP Photo)

Patel’s attorney, Thomas Leinenweber, told the court before sentencing that Patel maintains his innocence and argued he was no more than a “low man on the totem pole.” He asked for time served, 18 months.

But the acting U.S. attorney for Minnesota, Lisa Kirkpatrick, said Patel exploited the migrants’ hopes for a better life in America, out of his own greed.

“We should make no mistake, it was the defendant’s greed that set in motion the facts that bring us here today,” she said.

Patel, in an orange uniform and handcuffed, declined to address the court. He showed no visible emotion as the sentence was issued. The judge noted that he is likely to be deported to his native India after completing his sentence. He cooperated as marshals handcuffed him and led him from the courtroom.

Shand, who had been free pending sentencing, showed no visible reaction to his own sentence, either. The judge ordered him to report to prison July 1 and agreed to recommend that he serve his sentence at the Federal Prison Camp in Pensacola, Fla., where he can be near his family.

The judge handed down the sentences at the federal courthouse in the northwestern Minnesota city of Fergus Falls, where the two men were tried and convicted on four counts apiece last November.

The smuggling operation

Prosecutors said during the trial that Patel, an Indian national who they say went by the alias “Dirty Harry,” and Shand, a U.S. citizen, were part of a sophisticated illegal operation that brought dozens of people from India to Canada on student visas and then smuggled them across the U.S. border.

They said the victims, Jagdish Patel, 39; his wife, Vaishaliben, who was in her mid-30s; their 11-year-old daughter, Vihangi; and 3-year-old son, Dharmik, froze to death. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police found their bodies just north of the border between Manitoba and Minnesota on Jan. 19, 2022.

The family was from Dingucha, a village in the western Indian state of Gujarat, as was Harshkumar Patel. Patel is a common Indian surname, and the victims were not related to the defendant. The couple were schoolteachers, local news reports said. So many villagers have gone overseas in hopes of better lives — legally and otherwise — that many homes there stand vacant.

Harsh blizzard conditions

The father died while trying to shield Dharmik’s face from a “blistering wind” with a frozen glove, prosecutor Michael McBride wrote. Vihangi was wearing “ill-fitting boots and gloves.” Their mother “died slumped against a chain-link fence she must have thought salvation lay behind,” McBride wrote.

Undated courtesy photo of the Patel family, who were found frozen to death Jan. 19, 2022 as they attempted to illegally cross the border into the United States from Canada. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police found the bodies of Jagdishkumar Patel, 39; his wife, Vaishaliben Patel, 37; their daughter Vihangi Patel, 11; and son Dharmik Patel, 3, about six miles east of Emerson, Manitoba. The RCMP later determined the family members had died of exposure. Steven Shand, 47, of Deltona, Fla., was indicted on two counts of human trafficking after he was found transporting other people nearby who illegally crossed into the U.S. from Canada, in northwestern Minnesota on Jan. 19, 2022. (Courtesy of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police)

A nearby weather station recorded the wind chill that morning at 36 degrees below zero.

Seven other members of their group survived the foot crossing, but only two made it to Shand’s van, which was stuck in the snow on the Minnesota side. One woman who survived had to be flown to a hospital with severe frostbite and hypothermia. Another survivor testified he had never seen snow before arriving in Canada.

What prosecutors say

Kirkpatrick told reporters after Wednesday’s hearing that as a lifelong Minnesotan, she would not have gone out in that weather. “But the defendants sent into that weather 11 migrants — Indian nationals who were not dressed appropriately, were ill-prepared for the weather they faced that night,” she said.

Kirkpatrick pointed out that the family who died had walked for hours trying to find Shand, who had been sent by Patel.

“These defendants knew it was cold. In fact, they knew it was life-threatening cold,” she said. “They didn’t care. What they cared about was money, and their callous indifference to the value of human life cost a family of four their lives.”

What defense attorneys say

Patel’s attorney, Leinenweber, said his client will appeal but declined to speculate on what grounds.

“He had kind of resigned himself to the fact that the sentence would be longer than he had hoped,” the attorney said. “And he’s not happy with it. But he does wish to appeal and take advantage of his rights.”

Shand’s attorney, federal defender Aaron Morrison, did not talk to reporters afterward.

Morrison acknowledged in a presentencing filing that Shand has “a level of culpability” but argued that his role was limited — that he was just a taxi driver who needed money to support his wife and six children.

“Mr. Shand was on the outside of the conspiracy, he did not plan the smuggling operation, he did not have decision making authority, and he did not reap the huge financial benefits as the real conspirators did,” Morrison wrote.

Human smuggling at the northern border

A top regional U.S. Customs and Border Protection official told reporters Wednesday that human smuggling along the border in the area has been holding “fairly steady,” with no sharp increases or decreases.

“We hope that this is a strong message, and especially during the inclement months,” said Michael Hanson, the acting chief patrol agent for the Grand Forks, N.D., sector, which covers North Dakota and Minnesota. “You know, there very well could have been 11 deaths associated with this event.”

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