Heat's Bam Adebayo pours in 83, NBA's second-highest total ever

Bam Adebayo produced the second-highest single-game scoring total in NBA history, putting up 83 points as the host Miami Heat beat the Washington Wizards 150-129 on Tuesday night.

Field Level Media

The 28-year-old center scored 31 points in the first quarter en route to passing Kobe Bryant (81 points in 2006) for second place on the single-game list. Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point outing has stood as the record since 1962.

"Man, I wish I could relive it twice," Adebayo said on the postgame broadcast. "I credit my family, my teammates, this crowd. ... And they kept feeding me the ball. ... I couldn't do it (without my teammates). I appreciate coach (Erik Spoelstra) for drawing up plays for me, and I got it going tonight.

"To be able to do it at home makes it even more sweeter."

Adebayo set Heat records for the highest-scoring game and the highest-scoring quarter. The old club mark for a game was 61 points, set in 2014 by LeBron James. Adebayo's previous career best was 41 on Jan. 23, 2021, against the Brooklyn Nets.

In 42 minutes on Tuesday, Adebayo shot 20-for-43 from the floor, 7-for-22 from 3-point range and 36-for-43 at the free-throw line. He also grabbed nine rebounds.

Spoelstra said, "Once he got to 50, then we're thinking, 'All right, maybe he can get to 60.' And when he got to 60, it just kept on going. We might as well go for 70 and then I didn't dare even think about taking him out at that point. It just kept on going.

"I wanted him to have a moment. I didn't know when that would be. It just kept on going. Otherwise I was going to foul him and allow the crowd to really enjoy the moment with him and allow him to enjoy this historic night in front of all the home fans. ... I didn't stop until once he got Kobe's."

Abebayo set NBA single-game records for most free throws made and most free-throw attempts. Chamberlain and Adrian Dantley were the prior record-holders for made foul shots with 28 each. Dwight Howard had the old mark for free-throw attempts of 39, which he reached twice.

The Heat earned their sixth straight win, matching their longest streak of the season. They improved to 22-11 at home.

Adebayo's heroics were needed because Miami was without three of its top four scorers due to injuries: Tyler Herro (quadriceps), Norman Powell (groin) and Andrew Wiggins (toe). The Heat also were without Kel'el Ware (shoulder) and Nikola Jovic (back).

Advertisement

Washington has lost nine straight games, five short of its longest skid of the season. Alex Sarr led the Wizards with 28 points.

Wizards star Trae Young sat out due to injury management pertaining to his right knee.

Adebayo, in his blistering-hot first quarter, shot 10-for-16 on field-goal attempts, 5-for-8 on 3-point tries and 6-of-7 on free-throw attempts.

Miami, which led 40-29 after the first quarter, stretched its advantage to 19 points in the second. However, the Wizards closed relatively well, going into halftime trailing 76-62.

Adebayo had 43 points in the first half, another Heat record. His first half came on 13-of-24 shooting overall, 5-of-11 success from beyond the arc and 12-of-14 accuracy at the free-throw line.

His shooting overshadowed Sarr, who had 23 points at halftime.

Adebayo scored 19 points in the third, giving Miami a 113-97 lead by the end of the quarter. He dunked with 22.2 seconds left in the third, giving him 62 points and breaking James' record.

In the fourth quarter, with the victory assured, Miami kept Adebayo in the game, passing the ball to him on every possession as he hunted for records. His last two points came from the foul line with 1:16 to go as he surpassed Bryant.

"It's Wilt, me, then Kobe, which sounds crazy," Adebayo said.

Spoelstra added, "This was an absolutely surreal night."

--Field Level Media

Heat's Bam Adebayo pours in 83, NBA's second-highest total ever

Bam Adebayo produced the second-highest single-game scoring total in NBA history, putting up 83 points as the host Mia...
Ronda Rousey says her double-comeback bout with Gina Carano is the biggest fight in MMA right now

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Ronda Rousey says her bout with Gina Carano on May 16 is the biggest fight that can be made in mixed martial arts, and they're both thrilled to end their lengthy retirements for thislong-awaited showdown.

Associated Press

Rousey and Carano made their first public appearance on Tuesday to promote their comeback bout at Intuit Dome, Los Angeles Clippers owner Steve Ballmer's sparkling new arena.

While Carano expressed gratitude and excitement about her first fight in 17 years, the ever-feisty Rousey sees the bout as the opening strike in an attempt to challenge the UFC "monolith" for dominance in the sport.

"This is the biggest fight in MMA right now," Rousey said. "There are no two people in this sport with more international name recognition than me and Gina — except Conor (McGregor), but no one is going to sanction that. This isn't a charity card. This isn't a throwback, nostalgia card. This is the biggest fight in the sport right now, and it needed to happen now. This is fate between us. We have been on a collision course ever since I sat on a couch watching her on TV, just in complete awe what this woman was doing."

Both fighters were pioneers in the nascent days of women's MMA. Carano was the sport's biggest early television star in the 2000s — and Rousey said she became aware of the sport by watching Carano, eventually picking it up and honing the talent that single-handedly persuaded the UFC to create women's divisions in the 2010s.

But the sport accelerated past the MMA icons, who both moved on to entertainment careers after their star power appeared to exceed their cage abilities. Carano, who turns 44 next month, hasn't fought at all since 2009, while the 39-year-old Rousey last competed in 2016 before having two children.

Both fighters say they had never fully given up on MMA, and this bout was too tantalizing to pass up.

"We only get to live once, and this makes me feel so alive," said Carano, who also revealed for the first time that she has married her longtime partner, muay thai fighter Kevin Ross. "It's pretty incredible and surreal to be here today. It's healing. It's exciting. It's everything I could have hoped for. I didn't know I needed this so bad."

Rousey and Carano have finally decided to return for a fight that's been anticipated and predicted for many years, despite their long career detours.

Carano said that while she never formally retired, she was persuaded to return after lengthy conversations with Rousey, who was nine months pregnant when she initially proposed the bout in December 2024. Rousey had no interest in fighting for several years while focused on professional wrestling and her family with former UFC heavyweight Travis Browne, but she got the itch after helping her coach in judo training.

Advertisement

Rousey said she retired a decade ago not because of back-to-back losses to Holly Holm and Amanda Nunes, but because of neurological issues "that I didn't really have any clarity about, and it just hurt to be around (the sport)."

Carano also said she has been through several years of medical problems before feeling good enough recently to entertain a return to fighting.

"We both need to rewrite our own endings together," Rousey said. "So I reached out to her, and it's been such a journey to get here. So many obstacles. So many people tried to get between us. We went from barely knowing each other to being like, 'You know what? We're going to fight each other.'"

As to those obstacles, Rousey sharply criticized the UFC for a financial offer that she says was much smaller than what they'll get fromNetflixand Jake Paul's promotional company.

Rousey initially wanted to make her comeback with MMA's dominant promotion on its final pay-per-view card, but she sees the UFC's offer as part of a corporate sickness in the company for which she made untold millions.

Rousey said she still loves UFC President Dana White, but the promotion's corporate overlords have strangled fighter pay. Rousey even joined the sport-wide criticism of the fights announced for the high-profile UFC show at the White House this summer.

"Now it's become about changing the entire landscape of the sport and challenging the monolith that the UFC has become," Rousey said. "Of course, I just wanted to do something fun. I don't have to change the world, but that's the way that we do it. I'm so happy that we're here, and I'm so grateful that Gina trusted me."

The Netflix show is being promoted by YouTuber-turned-boxer Paul's Most Valuable Promotions, but Rousey made it clear she is heavily involved in the promotional end. Paul hopes to promote many more MMA shows in the future, and Rousey said she hopes to fill MVP's version of White's role in the company.

Former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou also will appear on the card, fighting 40-year-old Philipe Lins. The 39-year-old Ngannou left the Professional Fighters League last week, and he said MVP's initial plan was for him to fight Dutch kickboxer Rico Verhoeven before heavyweight boxing champion Oleksandr Usyk made a deal tofight Verhoeven in Egypt.

AP sports:https://apnews.com/sports

Ronda Rousey says her double-comeback bout with Gina Carano is the biggest fight in MMA right now

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — Ronda Rousey says her bout with Gina Carano on May 16 is the biggest fight that can be made in m...
Why can't Mercyhurst play in NCAA Tournament even if it wins NEC title

TheNortheast Conference Tournamentends Tuesday night, but the conference has already determined who it will send to theNCAA Tournamentbefore tipoff in the final.

USA TODAY Sports

Long Islandwill be inMarch Madness, punching the first official ticket of 2026 after defeatingWagneron Saturday, March 7 in theNEC tournament semifinals. The conference regular-season champion Sharks clinched the spot even though they haven't won the tournament title yet, thanks to who they will face in the championship game.

March Madness automatic bids:Who is in NCAA tournament field of 68?

It will be Long Island vs.Mercyhurstin the NEC title, but Mercyhurst isn't eligible for the NCAA Tournament. Since it made the finalwith a winoverStonehill, it paved the way for the other participant to get the automatic bid.

Mercyhurst Lakers guard Bernie Blunt (4) drives against Syracuse Orange guard Kiyan Anthony (7) during the first half at the JMA Wireless Dome.

Why Mercyhurst isn't eligible for NCAA Tournament?

Mercyhurst isn't able to be in March Madness because it is in the middle of its transition to Division I.

Advertisement

The Lakers officially made the jump from Division II to Division I in July 2024, starting the mandatory four-year process under NCAA rules. It means Mercyhurst isn't eligible for the NCAA Tournament until the 2027-28 season.

Another NEC team is going through a similar process in Le Moyne. The Dolphins made the jump in July 2023 and aren't able to make the NCAA Tournament until the 2026-27 season.

There was a scenario in place where Mercyhurst and Le Moyne made the NEC conference championship game. If both of those teams would have made it, then there would have been a game between the two losing semifinalists to determine who gets the automatic spot.

Long Island will have the chance to leave no doubt in their selection by winning the conference title. The Sharks and Lakers will play on Tuesday, March 10 for the NEC crown.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Why Mercyhurst can't make March Madness if it beats LIU for NEC title

Why can't Mercyhurst play in NCAA Tournament even if it wins NEC title

TheNortheast Conference Tournamentends Tuesday night, but the conference has already determined who it will send to th...
'Nightmarish': Texas man killed girlfriend, son. Now he faces execution

Texas is set to executea death row inmatewho fatally stabbed his girlfriend and her 8-year-old son in a fit of rage before he turned the knife on her 12-year-old son, who miraculously survived the attack.

USA TODAY

Cedric Ricks, 51, is set to be executed by lethal injection on Wednesday, March 11, for the murder of 30-year-old Roxann Sanchez and her 8-year-old Anthony. Ricks stabbed them both repeatedly after he got into an argument with Sanchez on May 1, 2013.

Ricks also attacked Sanchez's 12-year-old Marcus with just as much fury, stabbing him repeatedly in the back of the head. But the boy was able to survive by pretending to make the same gurgling sound he heard his younger brother make just before Ricks stopped stabbing him, according to court records.

It was "a nightmarish episode of brutality," the Texas Attorney General's Officesaid in a recent filingin theU.S. Supreme Court.

Although he survived the merciless attack, Marcus had witnessed his mother's and brother's murder, and had to recount the horror during Ricks' murder trial. A 9-month-old son shared by Ricks and Sanchez was left unharmed.

Here's what to know about Ricks' execution.

Cedric Ricks is pictured

When is Cedric Ricks' execution?

Cedric Ricks is scheduled to be executed by lethal injection at 6 p.m. CT on Wednesday, March 11, in what's known as the Huntsville Unit at a state prison just outside of Houston.

If Ricks' execution moves forward as expected, he will bethe sixth inmateexecuted in the U.S. this year andthe second in Texas.

What was Cedric Ricks convicted of?

On May 1, 2013, Cedrick Ricks and his girlfriend Roxann Sanchez got into an argument that quickly turned physical, according to court records.

Sanchez's two sons from a previous marriage, 8-year-old Anthony and 12-year-old Marcus, tried to intervene by getting between the couple but Ricks was too powerful. He pushed the boys down and continued punching their mother before he ran to get a knife from the kitchen.

Ricks then began stabbing Sanchez while Marcus ran to call police. Ricks ran the boy down, began stabbing him and then began stabbing Anthony.

After the attack, Ricks put the knife back in the kitchen, showered, packed some clothes, put his 9-month old son Isaiah into his crib and left the apartment. Police later tracked him down to Oklahoma and arrested him.

A jury found Ricks guilty of capital murder following a two-week trial during which Marcus testified against him.

Advertisement

"He held my head down with one hand and stabbed me with the other hand," the boy testified, according to an archived story in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "He stabbed me a bunch of times. He didn't say anything."

Ricks also testified, telling the jurors deciding his fate that he wanted to die.

"I wish I could bring them back," he told the court, according to the Star-Telegram. "But I can't fix this ... I don't want everybody to look at me like I'm a monster. I tried to kill myself two or three times but I can't even do that right."

Who is Cedric Ricks?

A native of Chicago, Ricks moved to Texas three years before the murders after losing his job.

In addition to the son he shared with Roxann Sanchez, he also fathered another son during a previous relationship that also was abusive. His ex-wife, Teshana Singleton, testified that Ricks tried to kill her multiple times before their divorce in 2004, including once when he was beating and choking her before bystanders intervened, the Star-Telegram reported in a 2013 story.

Five months before he murdered Sanchez and her son, the Star-Telegram reported that Ricks had been charged with assault and injury to a child for choking her and getting rough with their baby. Sanchez had gotten an emergency protective order against Ricks but it expired four months before the murder, the newspaper reported.

Ricks' parents testified that their son had always been prone to violence and that they did everything they could think of to get him help, including therapists, commitment to a psychiatric facility and physical punishment. But nothing stuck.

In letters to his sons from death row, Ricks wrote of some of his regrets but offered little explanation for the violence he committed,according to a bookwritten by a friend called "These Dry Bones, Redemption from Death Row."

"Sometimes I wake up kicking and screaming for what I have done to you," he wrote to his sons. "I can't say sorry enough for what I've done ... My prayer is that you can forgive me. My prayer is that you both will carry on the legacy of who I have become in Christ, and not who I use to be."

Ricks' attorneys are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to stop the execution,arguing in a recent filingthat trial prosecutors eliminated jurors based on their race in violation of his constitutional rights. The state is rejecting that argument and saying that it amounts to a delay tactic.

When is the next execution in the U.S.?

The next execution in the U.S. is that ofMichael Kingin Florida on March 17. He was convicted of raping and killingDenise Amber Lee, a 21-year-old mother of two who also was the daughter of a local county sheriff's sergeant.

Amanda Lee Myers is a senior crime reporter who covers cold case investigations, breaking news and the death penalty for USA TODAY. Follow her on X at @amandaleeusat.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Texas to execute inmate for 'nightmarish' murder of girlfriend, son

'Nightmarish': Texas man killed girlfriend, son. Now he faces execution

Texas is set to executea death row inmatewho fatally stabbed his girlfriend and her 8-year-old son in a fit of rage befor...
Trump nominee withdraws after senators press him on remarks about Jews, Israel and 'white culture'

PresidentDonald Trump'spick for a senior role at the State Department said Tuesday that he is withdrawing from consideration after havingfaced bipartisan backlashover his comments about race and religion.

NBC Universal Jeremy Carl (Dominic Gwinn / Middle East Images/AFP via Getty)

Jeremy Carl, a conservative political commentator, said he was backing out of his nomination to be assistant secretary of state for international organization affairs because of a lack of support from Republican senators.

Carl needed unanimous support from all GOP members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to advance to a full Senate confirmation vote. Republicans on the panel hold a 12-10 majority, so any GOP vote against him would stall his nomination at 11-11 since tie votes do not advance to the Senate floor.

"Unfortunately, at this time this unanimous support was not forthcoming," Carlwrote on X.

"I accept that political reality, and do not wish to have the President, Secretary Rubio, or the rest of his team waste valuable time and energy attempting to change that decision," he added.

Members of the Foreign Relations Committee grilled Carl last month during his confirmation hearing, with some focusing on his past comments on race and religion.

Sen. John Curtis, R-Utah, said in a statement after the hearing that he did not believe Carl was the "right person to represent our nation's best interests in international forums," adding that Carl's "anti-Israel views and insensitive remarks about the Jewish people" were "unbecoming."

Advertisement

The post Carl was nominated for involves implementing U.S. policy at the United Nations and other multilateral organizations.

During the hearing, Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., referred to comments by Carl and asked, "How you define white identity and what you think is being erased about white identity?"

Carl responded, in part: "I am concerned with the majority common American culture that we had for some time, that through, particularly, mass immigration I think has become much more balkanized, and I think that weakens us. And again, I'm not running away from that comment."

Murphy later posted a clip of the exchangeon social mediaand called Carl a "legit white nationalist."

Carl pushed back against that post,responding on Xthat he is "not a White nationalist," that "the 'White culture' then that I was referring to was simply the culture of the overwhelming majority of Americans who lived here prior to" 1965 and that "Americans of *every* race or cultural background can ultimately share in and contribute to that culture."

Carl, a senior fellow at the conservative Claremont Institute think tank in Washington, was deputy assistant interior secretary during Trump's first term. He thanked Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio for their continued support and nomination in his post Tuesday.

"The fact that they chose to nominate me and were so supportive of my candidacy was one of many indications that this is an administration that was not satisfied to simply do business as usual nor to simply pick nominees from the same stable of 'business as usual' possibilities," he wrote.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday night.

Trump nominee withdraws after senators press him on remarks about Jews, Israel and 'white culture'

PresidentDonald Trump'spick for a senior role at the State Department said Tuesday that he is withdrawing from consid...
LA County sees drop in homeless deaths, the first in 10 years

The mortality rate among homeless people in Los Angeles County decreased for the first time in more than 10 years, though one public health leader warned the welcome gains are at risk of being lost due to funding reductions.

USA TODAY

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health found that the mortality rate decreased by 10% in 2024, the latest available data. It marks the first decrease reported since 2014, the department's first year of data on homeless mortality, according to areportunveiled on Tuesday, March 10.

In total, 2,208 Los Angeles County people experiencing homelessness died in 2024, which is 300 people fewer compared to 2023.

While the news was welcomed by Los Angeles County supervisors and public health officials, they agreed that the mortality rate was still too high. But the future of continued improvements is less clear amid decreases in funding, as Department of Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer noted in a statement.

"At a time of major reductions in federal and state funding for homeless services and supports, we are at risk of losing precious ground and seeing an increase in the number of vulnerable people losing their lives," Ferrer said.

The drop was in part due to a 21% decrease in drug overdose deaths among homeless people, according to the department. Drug overdose, coronary heart disease, traffic-related injuries, homicide and suicide make up the bulk of causes of death in the county's homeless population, according to the department. Despite the improvements, it is drug and alcohol overdose that remains the leading cause of death among homeless people in 2024, according to the report.

Officials didn't give definitive reasons for what led to the decrease in drug overdoses during a press conference on March 10. However, they did provide some general insight about what might be responsible for that decrease.

"I think that there's a continuum of services that we've focused on across prevention, harm reduction, treatment, as well as recovery services and recovery housing that, from a service perspective, we think has driven down overdose deaths," said Gary Tsai, Substance Abuse Prevention and Control Bureau director with the department.

He said that it could also be due to fentanyl's potency being reduced, though he didn't have data specifically about the topic.

Advertisement

<p style=Johnika Jamison, 38, holding her daughter Everly, 1. Her family has been homeless for more than a year after she and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. Jamison is struggling to lead her family out of homelessness while tending to their everyday care and needs. Jamison along with her husband and three daughters have been staying in a small hotel room for weeks as they embark on year two of homelessness. Jamison dreams of better days, but tending to her family's care needs takes up so much of her time she barely has a moment to look for work.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, 38, packing and helping her daughter Eastin, 9, get ready for school, center, as she holds her sister Everly, 1, in the hotel room her family calls home at the moment on Dec. 12, 2025. Jamison and her family have been homeless for more than a year after she and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. Jamison is struggling to lead her family out of homelessness while tending to their everyday care and needs. The hotel has a laundry room, Jamison says, but it's $5 per load. She doesn't use it much.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, 38, left, with her daughters Eden Jamison, 15, right, holding her sister Everly, 1, and Eastin Jamison, 9, as they wake and prepare for school in their hotel room. "We're running behind, as usual," Jamison says. It's Friday, and Eden needs to be at her bus stop by 6:30 a.m. Eastin's bus driver starts the route outside of their hotel each morning, idling for about 15 minutes. Eastin likes getting there early to read from the empty bus, basking in a kind of quiet that doesn't exist in the hotel room.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, 38, and her family have been homeless for more than a year after she and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. "I care for everybody else. I'm the one who manages all the medical appointments and the symptoms on the daily, and doing the research and advocating for each of my family members to their doctors," Jamison says. "And making sure that everybody takes their medicine on the daily."

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, 38, and her husband Tristian Harris, 25, right, and their family have been homeless for more than a year after they both experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. Jamison is struggling to lead her family out of homelessness while tending to their everyday care and needs. "It's not that easy to get back on your feet when you're literally trying to survive," Jamison says.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, left, and her family have been homeless for more than a year after she and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. Every day, Jamison and Harris have to come up with $100 to stay in the hotel. She has paid for it in the past by returning items she's bought for her family, like Everly's high chair and toys. 

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, 38, and her husband Tristian Harris, 25, getting a start to the day preparing the kids for school on Dec. 12, 2025. Jamison and her family were locked out of their apartment on Sept. 19, 2024. Jamison was seven months pregnant. After they were evicted, Jamison and her daughters went to Jamison's parents' house in Gaffney, South Carolina. But after she had Everly in October, Jamison, Harris and the baby stayed with Harris's dad while Eden and Eastin stayed with Jamison's parents. "It was a lot of hotel hopping and moving back and forth, and we weren't all together," Jamison says.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Eastin Jamison, 9, falls asleep in the evening in the family's hotel room. Johnika Jamison, 38, and her family have been homeless for more than a year after she and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. Jamison is struggling to lead her family out of homelessness while tending to their everyday care and needs. <p style=Johnika Jamison, 38, in the hotel room the family calls home while watching her daughter Everly, 1, sleep during the day while her other children are at school and her husband is at work. Jamison and her family stayed in an Airbnb in Charlotte in September and October 2025, when she was hired at a charter school in Charlotte. "For the first time in a year, all five of us were together," Jamison says. But she was let go three weeks into the job, and soon they couldn't afford the Airbnb anymore. They've been in the hotel room since Nov. 8.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Eden Jamison, 15, helps care and feed her sister, Everly, 1, in the hotel room where the family resides. "We don't like to put her on the floors," their mom, Johnika Jamison, says of the baby. Everly wants to start walking, but they keep her on the beds or in her playpen. "We don't trust 'em," Everly's dad Tristian Harris says. 

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, left, with her three daughters Eden, 15 Eastin , 9 and Everly, 1, and her husband Tristian Harris, back right, in the small hotel room they call home. Jamison married Harris, Everly's father, in December 2024. The family has been homeless for more than a year after Jamison and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. "I don't have time to be under the weather," Jamison says. "I've got to take care of everybody else and every thing." She gets meals from food pantries sometimes, but they often provide unusable items. One time Jamison was gifted a box of dry pasta and a jar of sauce. But her family lives in a hotel room. "How the heck am I supposed to cook that?"

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, left, with her three daughters Eden, 15 Eastin, 9 and Everly, 1, and her husband Tristian Harris, back right, in the small hotel room they call home. Jamison was a school guidance counselor for a decade before her family's medical needs and her high-risk pregnancy took her out of the workforce. "I get so much happiness from helping kids and their families," she says. As a school counselor, Jamison worked with students experiencing homelessness before she was homeless. "You don't understand until you're in it yourself," she says.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Eden Jamison, 15, arrives back from school to the hotel room the family calls home on Dec. 12, 2025. Johnika Jamison, 38, and her family have been homeless for more than a year after she and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. Eden tries to help out around the house and acts like "a little adult" sometimes. "But she can't," Johnika Jamison says. "She's 15." 

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Tristian Harris, 25, after being sent home following a shortened work day and trouble with a paycheck on Dec. 12, 2025. He and his wife Johnika Jamison, 38, are currently living in a small hotel room. They have been homeless for more than a year after Jamison and Harris experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. The car Jamison and Harris share, a 2005 Nissan Ultima, has over 200,000 miles on it and needs an oil change, Jamison says. 

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Johnika Jamison, 38, and her family have been living in a small hotel room since Nov. 8, 2025. It costs $100 per night. "Some days it takes all your attention and energy just to find the money for the next night," Jamison says. Luckily, the hotel manager has been kind to them and doesn't demand the $100 by noon. "I think she's just a really good person." 

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Eden Jamison, 15, right, packs to catch a school bus early in the morning on Dec. 12, 2025, while her sisters Eastin Jamison, 9, and Everly Jamison, 1, continue to sleep in the hotel room bed that the family now calls home. Johnika Jamison, 38, and her family have been homeless for more than a year after she and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. Jamison is struggling to lead her family out of homelessness while tending to their everyday care and needs.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

After medical setbacks, a family works to escape homelessness

Johnika Jamison, 38, holding her daughter Everly, 1. Her family has been homeless for more than a year after she and her husband experienced medical troubles that put them out of work. Jamison is struggling to lead her family out of homelessness while tending to their everyday care and needs. Jamison along with her husband and three daughters have been staying in a small hotel room for weeks as they embark on year two of homelessness. Jamison dreams of better days, but tending to her family's care needs takes up so much of her time she barely has a moment to look for work.

So, how does the county improve on mortality rate among its homeless population? Among the department's recommendations are:

  • Build on interim and permanent housing options for homeless people

  • Maintain and expand enrollment in Medi-Cal, the state's Medicaid program, among homeless people

  • Sustain and grow mental health services for county residents experiencing homelessness

The recommendations come as California braces for significant federal health care funding cuts. PresidentDonald Trump's "One Big, Beautiful Bill Act," which was signed into law in July 2025, will impact Medi-Cal. More specifically, the changing work requirements, paired with "administrative burden," could leave up to 2 million people without Medi-Cal, according to the nonpartisanLegislative Analyst's Office. By 2028, up to 3 million people could lose Medi-Cal, both due to the OBBA and changes made in California's budget, Miranda Dietz, director of the Health Care Program at UC Berkley Labor Center, told California lawmakers in February.

Losing eligibility does jeopardize people's access to substance use services, Tsai said when asked about how the federal health care cuts could impact the department's strategies to reduce the homeless mortality rate.

However, the "substance use population" is exempt from the work requirements, he said. According to theCenter for Health Care Strategies, people in a qualifying "substance use disorder treatment program" are exempt, as well as those who are considered "medically frail," which include people with a substance use disorder.

"We are doing work to make sure that leading up to the January 2027 implementation of the work requirements and other issues, that the substance use community is aware that they are exempt," Tsai said.

In February, county supervisors approvedan $843 million spending planfor the Los Angeles County Department of Homeless Services and Housing, with more than $500 million earmarked for interim and permanent housing across the county, according to HSH.

Los Angeles County has proposed atemporary sales tax increase— which will be up to voters to approve — that could generate approximately $1 billion annually to help mitigate local health care impacts due to the funding cuts.

The next report about the county's homeless mortality rates will be released in early 2027 to reflect 2025 data.

Paris Barraza is a reporter covering Los Angeles and Southern California for the USA TODAY Network. Reach her atpbarraza@usatodayco.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:LA County's homeless mortality rate drops, the first in 10 years

LA County sees drop in homeless deaths, the first in 10 years

The mortality rate among homeless people in Los Angeles County decreased for the first time in more than 10 years, though...
Texas fishing cheating scandal, explained: Why a man could face 10 years in prison for allegedly tampering with bass

A fishing tournament in Texas was shrouded in controversy Monday due to a possible cheating scandal. The Texas Game Wardens were contacted after a fisherman was accused of tampering with a bass ahead of a weigh-in.

Yahoo Sports

After performing a necropsy on the fish, Texas Game Wardens found three weights in the fish's stomach, they explained in a Facebook post.

The weights did not show signs of erosion, suggesting they had been placed in the fish recently. Additionally, Texas Game Wardens reportedly found similar weights of the same style and size in the angler's boat.

That angler, Curtis Lee Daniels, was arrested and charged with "fraud in fishing tournaments." That particular crime is considered a felony since, in this instance, Daniels is alleged to have violated the law during a tournament in which the prizes exceed $10,000.

According to the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department code, altering the weight of a fish "for the purpose of representing that the fish as entered in the tournament was that length or weight when caught" is a violation of the law.

Advertisement

While there are some instances in which that violation can result in a misdemeanor, the nature of Daniels' alleged crime constitutes a third-degree felony charge, per Texas Parks & Wildlife Department code.

An offense under this section is a Class A misdemeanor, except that if the offense occurred during a tournament in which any prize or combination of prizes to be awarded for any one category for which an award is given, whether the prize or prizes are to an individual or a team, is worth $10,000 or more in money or goods, the offense is a felony of the third degree.

This particular tournament, the Lake Fork Lure Co. Tournament, features over $10,000 in prizes, making Daniels' alleged violation a felony.

In the Lake Fork Lure Co. Tournament rulebook, organizers explicitly mention that any person who attempts to artificially alter a fish's weight "will be subject to prosecution under federal laws."

As part of the tournament, contestants also agree to submit to a random polygraph examination. It's unclear whether Daniels took part in that exam or if it played a role in the scandal.

If found guilty, Daniels could face two to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000 under Texas law.

It's far from the first time a fishing tournament has been rocked by aweight-related cheating scandal. Thesame thing happened in Ohioin 2022, where two fishermen were charged with felonies. They were eventually sentenced to "10 days local incarceration," had their fishing license suspended and were forced togive up the boat used in the tournament.

Texas fishing cheating scandal, explained: Why a man could face 10 years in prison for allegedly tampering with bass

A fishing tournament in Texas was shrouded in controversy Monday due to a possible cheating scandal. The Texas Game Warde...

 

GEAR MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com