Fellow Wisconsin judge ‘shocked’ by Hannah Dugan’s response to immigration officers

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By TODD RICHMOND

MILWAUKEE (AP) — A colleague of the Milwaukee judge accused of helping a Mexican immigrant evade arrest testified Tuesday that she was shocked by her fellow judge’s behavior.

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“Judges shouldn’t help defendants evade arrest,” Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Kristela Cervera testified at Hannah Dugan’s trial.

The testimony on the second day of trial came after officers involved in the arrest told the jury that Dugan’s behavior on April 18 made it more dangerous for them to do their jobs.

Dugan is on trial on charges of obstruction and concealment in connection with the incident. The maximum sentence for obstruction, the more serious charge, is five years in prison, though federal judges have much discretion to go lower.

The highly unusual charges against a sitting judge are an extraordinary consequence of President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown. Dugan’s supporters say Trump is looking to make an example of her to blunt judicial opposition to immigration arrests.

Eduardo Flores-Ruiz was scheduled to appear before Dugan on the morning of April 18 on state battery charges. Prosecutors allege that after Dugan learned that federal officers were in the hallway waiting to arrest him, she cleared a path for him to escape by directing the officers to the chief judge’s office and then leading Eduardo-Flores out of her courtroom through a private door.

Cervera testified that she was irritated that Dugan used her as backup during the incident, making her come out of her courtroom into the hallway while still wearing her robe.

Dugan proceeded to angrily confront two officers waiting to arrest Flores-Ruiz, telling them repeatedly that they needed a judicial warrant before sending them to the chief judge’s chambers, Cervera testified. She escorted the officers to the chambers while Dugan returned to her courtroom, she said.

Dugan approached her three days later and said she was “in the doghouse” with the chief judge, saying something to the effect that the chief was upset with her because she had “tried to help that guy,” Cervera testified.

When she learned that Dugan had led Flores-Ruiz out the private door, “I was shocked,” Cervera testified.

FBI agent Phillip Jackling testified on Tuesday that he was concerned that his team was divided when Dugan directed agents to speak with the chief judge.

Dugan appeared angry when she approached him in the hallway outside her courtroom, he said. Another member of the arrest team, Customs and Border Protection Supervisory Officer Joseph Zuraw, said Dugan jerked her thumb over her shoulder and told him to “get out” before directing him to the chief judge’s chambers.

Four of the arrest team’s six members were in the chief judge’s chambers or a hallway leading to the chambers when Flores-Ruiz left the courtroom, the agents testified. Zuraw said he remembered thinking: “This is a bad spot we’re in right now. It’s a bad spot because we don’t’ have a decent number of officers to safely make an arrest.”

The team followed him outside the courthouse and had to chase him down through traffic when they could have safely arrested him in the building, they testified.

Dugan’s defense team has suggested that agents could have arrested Flores-Ruiz at any point in the hallway and Dugan shouldn’t be blamed for their decision to wait until he was outside.

Defense attorney Steven Biskupic said in opening statements that the judge had no intention of obstructing agents. He said that Dugan was just following a draft courthouse policy that called for court personnel to refer immigration agents looking to make an arrest in the courthouse to supervisors.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced in November that Flores-Ruiz had been deported.

Associated Press writer Scott Bauer contributed to this report from Madison, Wisconsin.

Frederick: Chris Finch making young Wolves earn minutes

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Bones Hyland played 36 minutes in Minnesota’s victory over Sacramento on Sunday night, after not being in the rotation a week prior.

But circumstances change. Wolves coach Chris Finch noted Hyland had done everything that was asked of him and performed well in practice to earn an opportunity a third of the way into the season. Then ailments to Anthony Edwards and Mike Conley left Minnesota needing more out of the guard position.

Minnesota Timberwolves guard Rob Dillingham (4) drives to the basket as New Orleans Pelicans guard Saddiq Bey (41) defends in the first half of an NBA basketball game, in New Orleans, Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Tyler Kaufman)

Hyland was ready for the opportunity and played well enough that Finch trusted him on the floor at the start and finish of the Timberwolves’ victory Sunday. It was a similar situation to Terrence Shannon Jr.’s night Friday in Golden State. Hyland suffered a knee bruise fewer than five minutes into that affair, leaving Minnesota even more short-handed.

The Wolves’ second-year wing played well – tallying nine points, four rebounds, three assists and two steals while serving as a useful cog in Minnesota’s up-tempo, ball-moving system – and saw 30 minutes of action because of it.

“He earned all 30 minutes,” Finch said.

Earned, not given.

That’s the way it is in Minnesota. Because the Wolves are too good of a team to run the style of developmental program that gifts extended minutes to young players simply because … they’re young players.

There’s been consternation over the small slices of the playing time pie to Shannon Jr and, more notably, Rob Dillingham this season. The point guard – who Minnesota traded a future first-round pick to select No. 8 overall in 2024 – has logged more than 12 minutes just six times this season. Shannon Jr. played fewer than 10 minutes in four straight games in early December.

“Much has been said about the 10 minute roles that these guys have, but with the way that we’re constructed … we have a deep six, seven guys who can all play upwards of the high 20s and low 30s or mid 30s,” Finch said. “Sometimes it just doesn’t leave like this 20-minute role for these guys.”

Finch frequently deployed a 10-minute rotation when the Wolves were at full health. The minutes of Dillingham, Shannon Jr. and Clark fluctuate within that rotation. The young guys haven’t earned the same grace as the established veterans – who’ve proven they can and will contribute to winning.

Generally, whether any of those young guys get a second-half shift depends on how they performed in their first run.

“What if the role is only 10 minutes?” Finch asked. “Shouldn’t you go out and crush those 10 minutes and then be ready to go back if we need you more? Or maybe we run with you a little bit longer?”

Finch has shown the propensity to do that with Hyland and Shannon Jr.’s performances over Minnesota’s last two games. If you play well, you’ll probably pay more.

“The reality is that’s the role right now, and they got to nail it,” Finch said.

The problem for Minnesota’s younger players is they haven’t consistently performed this season. That’s to be expected, Finch noted.

“We expect that there’s going to be good days and bad days, because (Dillingham and Shannon Jr. are) second year players, and that’s what second-year players do. They have inconsistencies,” he said. “If you play three games, you hope that you get one good, one not so good, and one maybe stinker. And you got to turn that into two positives and maybe one negative. Once we get there, then things start to go.”

Until then, the roles will shrink and grow on a nightly basis. Which way the pendulum swings will be determined by health and performance. That’s the works for top-tier teams in the NBA. The idea you can’t or won’t develop while playing inconsistent minutes flies in the face of many successful developmental stories of guys who’ve risen the ranks via hours in the practice facility. Sometimes, that’s what’s required. It was Hyland’s path back into the current rotation.

Those who don’t like it can go watch the Wizards.

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Josh Groban to play Grand Casino Arena in June with Jennifer Hudson

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Crossover star Josh Groban will return to St. Paul’s Grand Casino Arena on June 28 with support from EGOT winner Jennifer Hudson. It’ll be his first performance in the metro in nearly eight years.

Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday through Ticketmaster. Citi cardholders and Verizon customers have access to a presale that runs through 10 p.m. Thursday.

Los Angeles native Groban has sold more than 25 million albums and is a favorite on daytime talk shows (he sat in with Oprah six times and announced his upcoming tour on Hudson’s show) thanks to his easy-going demeanor and even easier-going songs. His light-rock radio hits include “To Where You Are,” “Believe,” “Awake,” “Brave,” “Celebrate Me Home” and the now-ubiquitous “You Raise Me Up.”

In 2023, Groban returned to Broadway for his second time in the title role in a revival of Stephen Sondheim’s musical “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street.” In May, he performed a residency at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas.

Jennifer Hudson

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Hudson emerged in 2004 as a finalist in the third season of “American Idol.” While she only placed seventh, she became one of the most successful graduates of the show.

She earned EGOT status by winning an Emmy in 2021 for her role as a producer on the interactive fairy tale story “Baba Yaga,” a Grammy for her 2008 self-titled debut album, an Oscar for her film debut playing Effie White in the 2006 film adaptation of “Dreamgirls” and a Tony as a producer of 2022’s “A Strange Loop.” With the latter, she became the youngest woman and the third Black recipient of all four awards.

Hudson has hosted the syndicated daytime talk show “The Jennifer Hudson Show” since 2022.

Former NIH scientist sues Trump administration, claims illegal firing over research cuts

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By LAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — A former leading scientist at the National Institutes of Health sued the Trump administration Tuesday, saying she was illegally fired for warning that abrupt research cuts were endangering patients and public health.

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The NIH has cut billions of dollars in research projects since President Donald Trump took office in January, bypassing the usual scientific funding process. The cuts included clinical trials testing treatments for cancer, brain diseases and other health problems that a recent report said impacted over 74,000 people enrolled in the experiments.

Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo is a well-known HIV expert who led NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Last spring, Marrazzo was put on administrative leave after she challenged NIH officials about the cuts. Among her objections were that some cuts would endanger clinical trial participants while others curtailing infectious disease and vaccine research would harm public health, according to Tuesday’s lawsuit.

In September, Marrazzo filed a complaint alleging whistleblower retaliation with the U.S. Office of Special Counsel, and publicly shared her concerns. Weeks later she was fired by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., according to the lawsuit filed in federal court in Maryland that claims violations of whistleblower protections.

In a statement issued by her lawyers, Marrazzo said the lawsuit “is about protecting not just my right to expose abuse and fraud by our government but those rights for all federal employees, so we can safeguard essential public health priorities and the integrity of scientific research.”

A spokesman for Kennedy’s Department of Health and Human Services declined to comment.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.