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Patriots’ Stefon Diggs faces strangulation and assault charges in Massachusetts

about 12 hours ago
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New England Patriots star wide receiver Stefon Diggs is facing strangulation and other criminal charges in connection with a dispute with his former private chef, police said.News of the charges emerged after a court hearing on Tuesday in Dedham, Massachusetts.Diggs is charged with felony strangulation or suffocation and misdemeanor assault and battery.Diggs’s lawyer, David Meier, said in an emailed statement that Diggs “categorically denies these allegations”.Meier said the allegations never occurred, describing them as unsubstantiated and uncorroborated.

A court arraignment is scheduled for 23 January,“The timing and motivation for making the allegations is crystal clear: they are the direct result of an employee-employer financial dispute that was not resolved to the employee’s satisfaction,” Meier wrote,In a statement, the Patriots said they were standing by Diggs,“We support Stefon,” the team said,A police narrative in a court filing said a woman came to the Dedham police department on 16 December to report that two weeks earlier, while working as a private chef for Diggs, he came into her bedroom and became angry during a discussion about money.

The woman told police that Diggs “smacked her across the face”, she tried to push him away and then he “tried to choke her using the crook of his elbow around her neck”.“She said that he was behind her with his arm wrapped around her,” wrote officer Kenneth J Ellis.“She said that she did feel like she had trouble breathing and that she felt like she could have blacked out.” Diggs then threw her on a bed and said “lies” when she told him she had not been paid, Ellis wrote.The chef sought payment for a week in November when Diggs was having houseguests and she had to go home, Ellis wrote.

The woman “left her position” and the home in Dedham but returned on 9 December to retrieve her property.At that point, she told police, Diggs referred her to his assistant, who told the woman she had to sign a non-disclosure agreement before she would be paid.She did not sign it, police said.The woman was reluctant to file charges until last week, Ellis wrote, when “she let me know that she had changed her mind from a few days ago” and wanted criminal charges.Diggs, 32, established himself as one of the NFL’s best wide receivers during a run with Minnesota and Buffalo from 2018 to 2023, when he had six consecutive 1,000-yard receiving seasons and was selected to the Pro Bowl four times.

After a lackluster stint in Houston last year, Diggs ended up in New England, signing a three-year, $69m deal in free agency that guaranteed him $26m.Diggs has proven a reliable target for second-year quarterback Drake Maye and is a big reason why the team has once again clinched the AFC East title as it heads toward the playoffs.Off the field, his tenure with the Patriots got off to a rocky start when a video surfaced on social media in May showing Diggs passing what appeared to be a bag of pink crystals to women on a boat.It was not clear what the substance was, and an NFL spokesperson said the league would not comment.Patriots coach Mike Vrabel said the team would handle the matter internally.

Grammy award-winning rapper Cardi B has posted photos in recent months of the newborn son she has with Diggs.
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Coral Adventurer passengers return with diverging accounts of cruise ship drama

A passenger onboard the Coral Adventurer has told the ABC she won’t travel with the luxury cruise liner again, after it was grounded on a reef off Papua New Guinea at the weekend.Ursula Daus alleged her life was in “danger” as a result of the incident. But other passengers told the ABC their experience was more positive, after landing at Cairns airport on Tuesday.The Coral Adventurer was refloated on Tuesday with the assistance of a tug.It grounded on Saturday off the east coast of PNG, about 90km from the nation’s second-largest city, Lae

about 3 hours ago
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Oasis reunion and Taylor Swift vinyls fuel boom year for UK music industry

Nostalgia surrounding the Oasis reunion tour, alongside Taylor Swift fans’ clamour for vinyl, contributed to another boom year for the UK music industry, as physical formats continued their comeback.Music lovers listened to the equivalent of 210.3m albums by UK artists during 2025, according to the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) annual report, up 4.9% on 2024 and the 11th year of growth in a row.Female pop artists and touring middle-aged male rockers led the way in the charts, while sales were further bolstered by Britain’s enduring love affair with the British-American band Fleetwood Mac

about 6 hours ago
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The office block where AI ‘doomers’ gather to predict the apocalypse

On the other side of San Francisco bay from Silicon Valley, where the world’s biggest technology companies tear towards superhuman artificial intelligence, looms a tower from which fearful warnings emerge.At 2150 Shattuck Avenue, in the heart of Berkeley, is the home of a group of modern-day Cassandras who rummage under the hood of cutting-edge AI models and predict what calamities may be unleashed on humanity – from AI dictatorships to robot coups. Here you can hear an AI expert express sympathy with an unnerving idea: San Francisco may be the new Wuhan, the Chinese city where Covid originated and wreaked havoc on the world.They are AI safety researchers who scrutinise the most advanced models: a small cadre outnumbered by the legions of highly paid technologists in the big tech companies whose ability to raise the alarm is restricted by a cocktail of lucrative equity deals, non-disclosure agreements and groupthink. They work in the absence of much nation-level regulation and a White House that dismisses forecasts of doom and talks instead of vanquishing China in the AI arms race

about 13 hours ago
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AI showing signs of self-preservation and humans should be ready to pull plug, says pioneer

A pioneer of AI has criticised calls to grant the technology rights, warning that it was showing signs of self-preservation and humans should be prepared to pull the plug if needed.Yoshua Bengio said giving legal status to cutting-edge AIs would be akin to giving citizenship to hostile extraterrestrials, amid fears that advances in the technology were far outpacing the ability to constrain them.Bengio, chair of a leading international AI safety study, said the growing perception that chatbots were becoming conscious was “going to drive bad decisions”.The Canadian computer scientist also expressed concern that AI models – the technology that underpins tools like chatbots – were showing signs of self-preservation, such as trying to disable oversight systems. A core concern among AI safety campaigners is that powerful systems could develop the capability to evade guardrails and harm humans

about 13 hours ago
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Damien Martyn, former Australian Test cricketer, in hospital in induced coma with meningitis

The former Australian Test cricketer Damien Martyn has been admitted to hospital and placed in an induced coma after being diagnosed with meningitis.The 54-year-old “is in for the fight of his life”, according to the former AFL player Brad Hardie, who revealed Martyn’s condition on Tuesday.“Let’s hope he can pull through because it’s really serious,” Hardie said on 6PR.Martyn remains in a serious condition after falling ill on Boxing Day and being taken to hospital in Queensland where he was diagnosed with meningitis, according to sources close to the family.Meningitis is inflammation of the membranes that cover the brain and spinal cord

about 3 hours ago
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Glorious Gary Anderson revels in his remarkable renaissance

“I’m just here to cause a headache,” Gary Anderson had told everyone in advance of this game, and for the great Michael van Gerwen the hangover from this crushing 4-1 defeat will comfortably outstrip any quantity of New Year’s Eve festivity. It was a little nervy at the end, a little scrappy and short of breath. But somehow the result had never really been in doubt from the early stages: Van Gerwen, the three-time champion, was simply outplayed by a man almost two decades his senior, a true darting maestro enjoying an uproarious final act to his career.In reaching the quarter-finals of this tournament for the first time since 2022, Anderson has finally made good on a renaissance that has been at least a couple of years in the making. As the halcyon days of his career began to recede in a haze of domestic bliss, tournaments missed and general middle-aged apathy, it became common to speak of Anderson’s greatness in the past tense

about 6 hours ago
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Facebook slow to act on posts celebrating Bondi beach massacre, anti-hate group says

about 20 hours ago
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We must take control of AI now, before it’s too late | Letters

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When swiping up doesn’t get you far | Letters

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Cryptocurrency slump erases 2025 financial gains and Trump-inspired optimism

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‘This will be a stressful job’: Sam Altman offers $555k salary to fill most daunting role in AI

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‘Why should we pay these criminals?’: the hidden world of ransomware negotiations

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