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Vikings invite draft pick Caleb Banks to bring his pythons, Cane Corso and chameleon to Minnesota

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When Minnesota Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell introduced first-round pick Caleb Banks last Friday, he also took the time to introduce his new player’s family and there were a lot of them — his mom Mary, his brothers Trayvon and Jalen and his girlfriend Monique.

“It’s not only just about our players,” O’Connell noted, “but it’s about their support systems and their families feeling a part of the organization that our great ownership lets us get to be a part of every single day.”

Florida defensive lineman Caleb Banks sacks LSU quarterback Garrett Nussmeier during a football game

Florida defensive lineman Caleb Banks sacks LSU quarterback Garrett Nussmeier during the second half of an NCAA college football game in Gainesville, Fla., on Nov. 16, 2024. (John Raoux/AP)

Well, apparently the Vikings are also welcoming of their players’ pets and that is important when it comes to Banks, because at some point he’s moving to the Twin Cities with his two pythons.

And his Cane Corso.

And a chameleon.

And some birds.

And maybe a tarantula he wants to add to the menagerie.

Bring ’em all, the Vikings encouraged Banks when they selected him in the first round last Thursday.

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“You ready to go?” Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores asked Banks on the phone. “Let’s get the dog, let’s get the snakes, let’s get the chameleon. Let’s get everybody packed up. Bring them all.

“I know you’re going to bring your best, too, so … We’re excited to get you here.”

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Banks, who multiple NFL evaluators have referred to as a “beast” because of his physical prowess, shared his affinity for animals when he met with the Vikings at the NFL combine.

That was interesting to them. One must think the fact Banks is 6-foot-6 and 330 pounds, capable of a 32-inch vertical leap coupled with tremendous power on the interior defensive line, was of greater interest to the team.

But the openness to the pets apparently made Banks feel more comfortable with the Vikings.

Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores looking on during a football game at U.S. Bank Stadium

Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator Brian Flores looks on during the fourth quarter of a game against the Green Bay Packers at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minn., on Jan. 4, 2026. (Matt Blewett/Imagn Images)

“… It meant a lot to me because for you to say that on the phone,” Banks said of the Flores conversation, “it shows how deep you care and you actually listen. I was excited. You know, he told me to bring my animals. I’m like, ok, I’m going to bring my animals in.

“Let’s do it. Let’s do it!”

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If you haven’t gotten the drift by now, yes, Banks is a bit different. Just ask him.

“I’m different,” he confirmed. “I got a crazy personality. I’m very goofy. I don’t know if y’all can tell. I can just make a joke out of anything. I’m a great person. I love my animals. I got four of them. I’m probably going to have more.

“I used to skateboard. I do a lot of crazy things you probably wouldn’t think somebody with 330 pounds and 6’6 would do, you know what I mean? So, I’m different, man. I’m a jack of all trades. You never know what you might get out of me.”

So how did that personality translate to having an eclectic taste for exotic animals?

A general view of the draft tent at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh

A general view of the draft tent is seen prior to Round One of the 2026 NFL Draft at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on April 23, 2026. (Jason Miller/Getty Images)

“It’s a long story, man,” Banks said. “When I was younger, somebody said, ‘I like a koala bear.’ Just making jokes. I didn’t know what it was. This girl was like, ‘Koala bears are cute.’ I’m like, ‘Oh, snap, all right, let me look into it.’ Started learning about koala bears a little bit, learning where they were from.

“Then I fell in love with animals, and then when I had to go to college, they said, you got to pick something, like pick a major. I’m like, ‘A major? Like, what’s that?’ So it’s like something you like to do. What do you like to do? And I’m like, ‘I love animals.’

Banks entertained the idea of studying zoology. And then he realized he’d better major in football first.

“I didn’t have the time,” he said. “It was a lot of work going to the zoo and being with animals, and you got football practice, and you got to be there. So that was hard.”

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Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O'Connell clapping on field at U.S. Bank Stadium

Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell claps to the crowd before the game against the Houston Texans at U.S. Bank Stadium. (Brad Rempel/Imagn Images)

Banks says his pets will move with him “in due time.” And he might add to his collection.

“Probably some more snakes, a tarantula,” he said. “I want some frogs. Probably another dog. I don’t know, you never know what might happen. I’m going to surprise myself, honestly. I’m going to bring one to the facility, coach.”

That would truly test how welcoming of Banks’ pets the Vikings truly are.

FOLLOW ARMANDO SALGUERO ON X: @ARMANDOSALGUERO



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Palestinian football body appeals FIFA ruling on Israel at top sports court | Football News

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Meanwhile, visa issues are affecting Palestinian and other delegations to the upcoming FIFA Congress.

The Palestinian Football Association (PFA) has appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport against FIFA’s decision not to sanction Israel over clubs based in occupied West Bank settlements, a senior PFA official ⁠said, as visa issues affecting several delegations added to tensions before the FIFA Congress.

The PFA has long argued that clubs based in Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank – which are illegal under international law – should not compete in leagues run by ⁠the Israel Football Association (IFA).

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FIFA said last month it would take no action against the IFA or Israeli clubs, citing the unresolved legal status of the occupied West Bank under public international law.

“Since we have exhausted every legal venue possible at FIFA, we’ll still go by the rules, go by the book, and we’ll appeal that decision because we think it’s very unjust,” PFA Vice President Susan Shalabi said after the Asian Football Confederation ‌Congress in Vancouver on Tuesday, held two days before the FIFA Congress in the same city.

“The [FIFA] council decided after 15 years of deliberations on this issue not to decide. So the only course of action that we have is to go to CAS and to appeal that. We will go through the whole process until we are able to achieve justice.”

She later told the Reuters news agency that the appeal had been filed on April 20.

CAS has not yet announced the appeal and was not immediately available for comment outside business hours on Tuesday. FIFA was also not immediately available for comment. Reuters also contacted the IFA.

Shalabi said visa problems also prevented ⁠several PFA representatives from entering Canada for the FIFA Congress, which will take place on Thursday.

She said she received an electronic ⁠travel authorisation immediately because she applied on a foreign passport, but other members of the delegation, including the PFA president, general secretary and legal counsel Gonzalo Boye, initially did not receive visas.

She said the visas were issued only after pressure “on the political level, on the social level, on the media level”, as well as action from ⁠community members and activists, adding that the PFA president had not received a visa in time to travel with the rest of the delegation but was expected to arrive later.

She said Boye, however, had ⁠still not received a visa and would not attend.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada told ⁠Reuters it would look into the matter.

Shalabi said the visa problems were not limited to Palestine and that she understood Iran’s football association, whose representatives were not present at the AFC Congress, had also faced issues.

“As you can see, it’s a huge event that’s going to happen. We have a World Cup, and it’s good for Canada to ‌have everyone from everywhere able to come and participate in this,” Shalabi said.

She added that the situation for Palestinian football remained dire, particularly in Gaza, where she said every football structure was either unusable or destroyed.

“We lost so many hundreds of footballers; we lost most of ‌them ‌children,” she said. “So football now in Gaza, there is no football at all.

“It’s very dangerous for our teams to compete,” she added, noting that professional leagues were suspended and that the PFA was trying to keep football alive through grassroots and youth competitions.



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Reference #18.f3680117.1777457710.23c4309

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After no-hitter, Trevor Bauer says media pushed an old ‘bad teammate’ narrative

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Trevor Bauer says even a no-hitter wasn’t enough to stop the media from trying to turn the story negative.

The former Cy Young Award winner joined “Don’t @ Me with Dan Dakich” on Tuesday and ripped what he described as a long-running media effort to paint him as a bad teammate, arguing that the same narrative popped up again even after one of the best outings of his comeback.

As Fox News Digital’s Scott Thompson reported, Bauer threw a seven-inning no-hitter for the Atlantic League’s Long Island Ducks in a 13-0 win over the Lancaster Stormers on Sunday at Penn Medicine Park. It was just Bauer’s second start in the United States since 2021, and he walked one and struck out seven in a scheduled seven-inning game, as part of a doubleheader, against the Stormers.

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But Bauer told Dakich the coverage around him rarely stays about baseball for very long.

“It doesn’t matter what I do,” Bauer said. “It is going to be twisted negatively in some way and if they can’t twist it negatively, they’re just not going to talk about it or report it.”

Bauer said that has been true for years, especially when it comes to how his relationships with teammates are discussed.

“I have this rep for being a bad teammate because of a story that came out in 2011 that wasn’t even true,” Bauer said. “And so that’s followed me my entire career.”

Bauer did not specify which 2011 story he was referring to. But the “bad teammate” theme has surfaced in prior coverage, including 2013 reporting that cited criticism from then-Arizona catcher Miguel Montero about working with Bauer during their time in the organization.

Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Trevor Bauer and catcher Miguel Montero on the field at Chase Field

Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Trevor Bauer and catcher Miguel Montero talk during a game against the San Diego Padres on July 3, 2012. (Mark J. Rebilas/USA TODAY Sports)

According to Bauer, that same theme showed up again after his no-hitter on Sunday.

“So much so that when I threw the no-hitter, my infielders celebrated with each other,” Bauer said. “The story that some people are trying to push is that they didn’t even want to celebrate with me, that I’m such a bad teammate that they don’t want to celebrate with me, despite all the evidence.”

Bauer then pointed to what happened next as proof that the full story looked very different.

“My teammates circled around me and dunked me with a Gatorade shower,” Bauer said. “They all went and signed a ball from the no-hitter, which is really cool of them. Everyone on the team signed it.”

ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!

To that point, USA Today posted a story about the no-hitter with the headline, “Trevor Bauer’s Ducks teammates were hilariously unimpressed with no-hitter.”

Yahoo Sports has an article on its website titled, “Trevor Bauer’s extremely fake no-hitter won’t have MLB teams knocking on his door.”

That was part of a broader frustration Bauer expressed with how he believes stories about him are covered in general.

“There’s very few articles that ever get everything right,” Bauer said. “I would say the majority of the time, a lot of it is omission too. They know something to be true and they just omit certain facts.”

Trevor Bauer and catcher acknowledge each other

Long Island Ducks pitcher Trevor Bauer and catcher Gavin Collins high-five after finishing an inning during Bauer’s no-hitter on Sunday April 26, 2026. (Jordan McGregor)

Bauer argued that some of the most important context is regularly left out.

“One of the worst ones is like, ‘Oh, he settled with his accuser out of court,’ and they leave it there,” Bauer said. “Never mentioning that I never paid her a cent and she owes me hundreds of thousands of dollars. Like that puts a different context on settling something out of court.”

He added, “They also never mention that I was never charged or never arrested.”

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From Bauer’s point of view, that is not accidental.

“I think a lot of the articles are intended to be slanted a certain way,” Bauer said. “They’re purposely inflammatory from a headline perspective to try to get clicks and then they don’t really reflect the situation accurately on purpose.”

Trevor Bauer pitching and reacting after striking out Trent Grisham at PETCO Park

Trevor Bauer hasn’t pitched in Major League Baseball since the 2021 season with the Los Angeles Dodgers. (Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

Bauer also acknowledged to Dakich that he has long been a polarizing figure, and he did not pretend that all of that happened by accident.

“I’m just polarizing in some ways,” Bauer said. “A lot of it’s been intentional to try to draw attention to the sport of baseball and to try to market it and get more eyeballs on it.”

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He added that part of generating attention is understanding what kind of personality gets people talking.

“I think for something to be interesting, you really need to have like a villain in a lot of ways,” Bauer said. “And I have no problem playing that role.”

Still, Bauer made clear there is a difference between being polarizing and being falsely framed. And after throwing a no-hitter, he clearly believes the attention should have stayed on the performance itself instead of immediately circling back to a narrative he says has followed him for at least 15 years.

Even when the result is undeniable, he says the story around him is already being written.



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Non-profit’s GoDaddy nightmare and the IT chaos that ensued • The Register

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GoDaddy is currently investigating claims that it handed complete control of a valid 27-year-old domain to another customer, without requiring them to pass any authentication processes or upload any supporting documents.

The sensational allegations come from Lee Landis, a partner at Pennsylvania IT shop Flagstream Technologies, who claims one of his client’s domains “vanished” from the company’s GoDaddy account without notice.

This, said Landis, meant the client lost access to its website and email accounts throughout the ordeal. The security implications of this include potentially losing access to account recovery mechanisms, MFA codes, company impersonation, business email compromise (BEC) schemes, and all manner of other possibilities.

The client wanted to remain anonymous, but was described as an American non-profit that operated 20 locations across the country.

According to a writeup penned by Landis’ friend Austin Ginder, who owns Anchor Hosting, it took just four minutes for the domain takeover process to be approved. However, it left Landis’ client with four days of downtime, during which time staff resorted to using personal email addresses and SMS messages to keep stakeholders informed about progress, as numerous fundraising events were scheduled for the following days.

“Lee is one of the most competent IT guys I know,” Ginder wrote. “The GoDaddy account had dual two-factor authentication enabled, requiring both an email code and an authentication app code to log in. The domain itself had ownership protection turned on.”

According to the logs, GoDaddy confirmed to Flagstream via email of an account recovery request being made. Three minutes later, the transfer was initiated, and it completed a minute after that. This all took place at around lunchtime on April 18, a Saturday.

The transfer was initiated only by an “internal user,” the audit logs reportedly revealed, and it did not require any of the authentication methods to be completed. Ginder appeared to imply the transfer was done by an “internal user” inside GoDaddy.

Landis’ calls to GoDaddy began the following day. Support staff proved unhelpful and allegedly lacked what he believed to be the necessary urgency. 

Over the subsequent days, across 32 phone calls which in total lasted more than nine hours, GoDaddy support threw out various email addresses where it said Landis could try to seek a resolution. He claims instructions differed depending on which staffer at the hosting provider answered the phone. 

Email conversations, of which there were 17, were never with a named individual, just generic address names, says Landis, who adds that he was asked multiple times why he thought the case was so urgent. Not once did he receive a callback from any of these email exchanges.

Landis “may have said some hurtful things to GoDaddy’s support personnel,” Ginder wrote.

A mountain of work and a huge stroke of luck

On the following Tuesday, four days after the transfer was completed, GoDaddy allegedly closed the case without action. 

In a statement sent to Flagstream, GoDaddy said: “After investigating the domain name(s) in question, we have determined that the registrant of the domain name(s) provided the necessary documentation to initiate a change of account… GoDaddy now considers this matter closed.”

The issue here is that no documentation was provided, according to both Flagstream and the woman who received ownership of the domain. Ginder refers to her as Susan, but it is not her real name.

GoDaddy denies this was the case.

Before Flagstream had to clean up this mammoth mess, Susan was trying to reclaim an old domain registered to a former employee. 

Again, the specifics were changed because the nonprofit wanted to stay anonymous, but for the sake of storytelling, we’ll use the two domains below as examples:

  • HELPNETWORKINC.ORG (Flagstream’s client)
  • HELPNETWORKLOCAL.ORG (Susan’s domain to be reclaimed)

Another important detail to understand how this transfer was botched is that Susan’s email signature referenced her chapter’s website at a subdomain of HELPNETWORKINC.ORG. Gilder said that GoDaddy staff most likely looked at the signature and mistakenly transferred its parent domain to Susan rather than the intended one.

Susan told Flagstream that she received a link to upload supporting documents but the link expired before she could use it, which if true would mean GoDaddy was not being accurate in its statement to Flagstream which said the submitted documentation informed the decision to approve the ownership transfer.

While all of this was taking place, Landis and the wider Flagstream team were working at pace to transfer the client over to a new domain and new email addresses, an arduous, brand-harming task, but a necessary one to get the non-profit back in business.

“It was a huge stress,” Landis told The Register. “We had several guys working on this constantly, even at night. Plus, the company that hosted the website had a lot of work to do too, apart from us when we decided to set them up with a new domain.”

Fortune was on Flagstream’s side, however, as Susan was all too helpful after noticing she was in possession of the wrong domain. 

Susan initially called the non-profit’s CFO, saying she did not know what she was looking at, but knew she had to tell someone. From there, Susan worked with Flagstream to initiate an account-to-account transfer of the domain’s ownership, a process Ginder said took less than five minutes, all without GoDaddy’s support or oversight.

“Susan is really the hero of this entire story,” Ginder wrote. “Without her, Flagstream would still have no idea what happened to this domain. Lawyers would have gotten involved, but it would probably be months until anything was resolved.”

While migrating the non-profit onto a new domain, and then reverting it back after regaining access, the wider Flagstream team were contacting lawyers to discuss their options for recovering the domain through the courts.

Landis told The Register he was confident this route would have worked, but it could have taken months, and that length of downtime was simply unacceptable for any organization.

Flagstream is still in conversation with lawyers so the team can prepare itself should they ever have to face a similar situation in the future.

Security nightmare

Not only was it a stroke of good luck that Susan was helpful in reversing GoDaddy’s error, but she was not someone with malign intent who with her newfound access could have carried out a range of attacks. Phishing and BEC are two of the more impactful possibilities, not to mention the opportunity for 27 years’ worth of data theft.

Landis told us that throughout the episode, the primary concern was that the client’s domain was in control of someone who could weaponize the situation.

“Our huge concern was that a bad actor had this domain because that would be a huge security risk. Since we no longer had control of the domain, there was nothing that we could do to stop this individual if they were a bad actor.”

While managing GoDaddy’s support, Flagstream worked with its client on ways to mitigate the attacks they anticipated following the transfer, including disconnecting company email addresses from all accounts, from banking and payroll to Amazon and Dropbox.

Landis told us that at the time of writing, GoDaddy had still not contacted him nor Flagstream to address the matter. And when they tried to report the issues to GoDaddy’s security team via email, the email bounced.

Asked whether Flagstream will continue with GoDaddy, Landis said the IT shop is evaluating its options.

“Most likely we will probably leave because we can’t afford the risk of having other domains disappear. It will be a hassle to transfer our hundreds of domains, but it will be less of a hassle than what happened this last week.”

Fear is all that lingers

The Register spoke to the nonprofit affected by GoDaddy’s domain transfer on condition of anonymity.

The CEO told us that technically, operations are entirely business-as-usual, though some staff remain fearful of clicking the wrong button and triggering a repeat of April’s IT calamity.

“A number of our staff – we have a lot of social workers, and some of them are just not, maybe as tech-savvy as our administrative team – they were becoming fearful about touching anything,” the CEO told The Register.

“I mean, even this morning I’m having issues, as everything gets back, and people are needing to log back into their OneDrive, and all these little kind of details, but there’s a relief that even though this is taking extra time from my day, at least we know we have recovered the domain.”

The Register contacted GoDaddy for a response. It acknowledged the request, and told us it was investigating.

It did not deny the story, but disagreed with the assertion that it had authorized the transfer without the necessary documentation and approval.

“While we cannot comment on specific customer accounts, we have reviewed our protocols, and confirmed that we received proper documentation and authorization, and our standard operating procedures were followed,” a GoDaddy spokesperson said.

“However, we are taking this opportunity to reinforce processes that help identify miscommunications between customers and representatives early, before they create downstream issues.” ®



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Afghan women’s refugee team allowed to play in FIFA tournaments | Football News

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Afghan Women United can now represent Afghanistan at international football competitions, including the LA Olympics.

An Afghanistan women’s refugee team have been granted eligibility for international competitions, nearly five years after the players fled their country’s Taliban rule.

The FIFA Council, meeting in Vancouver, Canada, agreed on Tuesday to amend its regulations to recognise the refugee team, who play under the name Afghan Women United.

While it is too late for the refugee team to qualify for the 2027 Women’s World Cup in Brazil, they could participate in qualification for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

“We are proud of the beautiful journey initiated by Afghan Women United, and with this initiative we aim to enable them, as well as other FIFA member associations that may not be able to register a national or representative team for a FIFA competition, to make the next step, in coordination with the relevant confederation,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said in a statement.

The first move towards recognition came last October, when the Afghan refugees played in a tournament that included Chad, Libya and Tunisia in Morocco. That event followed years of lobbying on the team’s behalf by players, former captain and activist Khalida Popal and human rights groups.

“For five years, we were told the Afghanistan women’s national team could never compete again because the men who took our country would not allow it,” Popal said in a statement.

“I am extremely proud of this decision by FIFA and glad that our collective advocacy has not only changed the future for Afghan women but also ensured that no other national team has to sacrifice what our players did.”

There are more than 80 Afghan refugee players scattered across Australia, the United States and Europe. Two camps were recently held for the women, one in England and another in Australia.

The team, coached by Pauline Hamill, are expected to play a pair of exhibition matches during the upcoming June international window against opponents to be determined.

“For the last few years, we have played under many names – as refugees, as Afghan Women United, and as guests of other clubs – but in our hearts, we were always the national team,” Australia-based player Nazia Ali said.

“To hopefully be able to wear our flag again officially is a feeling I cannot describe.”

The Afghan women’s team played their last competitive match in 2018. The Taliban shut down all women’s sports when they returned to power in 2021. The players fled Afghanistan, fearing persecution.

Prior to the Taliban’s takeover, Afghanistan had 25 women players under contract, most of whom now live in Australia.

Even before the demise of the team, the Afghanistan Football Federation was under investigation for misconduct involving the women’s programme, including allegations of rape and physical abuse. Keramuddin Keram, the federation president, was banned for life by FIFA.

Discrimination is not allowed under FIFA regulations, but the Afghan federation has not been suspended from international football, despite failing to acknowledge the women’s team.

“FIFA has finally done the right thing by closing the loophole that allowed the Taliban’s discriminatory policies to be enforced on the global stage,” said Minky Worden, director of global initiatives for Human Rights Watch.

“FIFA’s action should serve as a model for how international sports bodies should respond when athletes are systemically excluded because of their gender, ethnicity or beliefs.”



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Pennsylvania Democrats accused of hiding transgender sports bill vote

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A Pennsylvania hearing on transgender sports legislation erupted in chaos Monday, as Republicans accused Democrats of trying to sidestep votes on two related bills.

Pennsylvania became a focal point of the transgender sports debate in 2022, as UPenn swimmer Lia Thomas competed against female athletes including the University of Kentucky’s Riley Gaines. Since then, conservatives have sought to codify the separation of biological sexes in scholastic sports and public restrooms nationwide.

The top Republican on the Pennsylvania House Judiciary Committee told Fox News Digital that the scene captured on official video showed the Democratic chairman trying to “re-refer” two bills to the House Health Committee without fully explaining which bills he was citing.

Ranking member Rep. Rob Kauffman, R-Chambersburg, said that Republicans ultimately determined the two bills focused on separating scholastic athletes by biological sex and that Democrats resisted any debate before sending them to another committee to restart the process.

GOP LAWMAKERS, RILEY GAINES SLAM DEMOCRATS FOR VOTING AGAINST PROTECTION OF WOMEN AND GIRLS IN SPORTS ACT

Protesters holding signs outside the Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C.

Protesters gather outside the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 13, 2026, to oppose transgender athletes competing in women’s sports as the court reviews related bans in a landmark case. (Heather Diehl/Getty Images)

“It’s fascinating. But the key is, in the legislative process, whether it be on the House floor or in any committee meeting, they’ll say the number of the bill and then they’ll give a title or brief description of the bill before anyone votes on it. You don’t just call up a bill by number,” Kauffman told Fox News Digital in a Tuesday interview.

House Judiciary Committee chairman Timothy Briggs was doing just that in a Monday hearing, Kauffman said.

Briggs, D-King of Prussia, sought to move two bills out of the committee quickly, announcing that all Democrats would vote to re-refer them while identifying the measures only by bill number.

Republicans said they were unaware of the bills’ contents because their titles were not read as Briggs tried to re-refer them to the House Health Committee.

Briggs asked the clerk to call the roll for the “sole purpose of referring [them] to the Health Committee” and added that “all Democrats will be voting ‘Yes’.”

“Could we kinda know what the bills are?” interjected Kauffman, before someone in the gallery called out that they were related to transgender athletes in children’s sports.

HB 158 is the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act from Rep. Barb Gleim, R-Mechanicsburg, and HB 1849 is the related Dads Defending Daughters Act by Rep. Clint Owlett, R-Tioga.

Briggs sighed and began to speak before Kauffman continued.

“We can’t vote on a re-referral when we don’t even know what the title of the bill is. Obviously, you don’t want us to know what the title of the bill is,” he said, chuckling as Briggs cut in that the committee is “running out of time.”

Kauffman quipped that if he ever pulled such a move as chairman, Briggs’ caucus would have “lost your mind.”

DEMOCRATS HAVE LOST THEIR WAY ON WOMEN’S SPORTS – AND HERE’S THE POLITICAL PRICE THEY’LL PAY

After another pointed exchange between Briggs and Kauffman, the Democrat ordered the clerk to call the roll on the bills and then claimed aloud that some Republicans were refusing to vote.

One of those named, Rep. Stephanie Borowicz of Lock Haven, objected after learning the bills’ true identities:

“Now you’re deciding how we’re voting?” said Borowicz, who co-sponsored Gleim’s bill.

“We might as well be better off in the Russian Duma at this point,” Kauffman added as Briggs plowed through their objections and tried to move past the two bills.

The blow-up showed that Democrats are “petrified of this issue [so much] that they broke legislative protocol, parliamentary norms and everything I’ve learned in this legislature in 20 years,” Kauffman told Fox News Digital.

He said that if the bills were moved to another committee without first being voted out of his own, the parliamentary “clock” would restart and Democrats could continue moving the measures through committee without taking a direct vote on the underlying transgender sports issue.

Kauffman said the kerfuffle was indicative of the national debate over transgender sports, calling it an “80-90%” issue in favor of separating youth athletes by sex.

ILLINOIS SCHOOL BOARD MEETING MADNESS CONTINUES AS TENSIONS ESCALATE OVER TRANS ATHLETES IN GIRLS’ SPORTS

Kauffman added that Democrats will eventually have to confront the issue because the state Senate is advancing its own transgender sports bill, which will be taken up by the House.

“It’s a mom and dad issue. It’s a biological fact issue. So we’re going to keep at it,” he said, adding that critics are “cater[ing] to the far-progressive fringe” of their party and “generally don’t care what the people want.”

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Fox News Digital reached out to Briggs for a response to the situation.

A representative for the King of Prussia Democrat said he was “regrettably unavailable” for comment.

The clash came just weeks after a Republican lawmaker’s attempt to define “woman” in a Women’s Month resolution led Democrats to pull the commemoration.

Fox News Digital’s Kiera McDonald contributed to this report.



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Indian billionaire’s son offers to house Pablo Escobar’s hippos at his private zoo | Colombia

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It remains one of the strangest conundrums in modern zoological history – what to do with the descendants of Pablo Escobar’s hippos?

The animals – herbivores native to sub-Saharan Africa – were originally imported into Colombia by the drug kingpin for his own entertainment. But the beasts and their offspring were left to roam free after his death in 1993.

Now, the expanding population of feral hippopotamuses have become such an environmental blight, they are facing a mass extermination by the authorities.

Yet they may have found an unlikely stay of execution, after they were offered shelter in India by the son of a billionaire.

Anant Ambani, the son of Indian tycoon Mukesh Ambani, has revived an earlier offer to bring the 80 hippos to his Vantara animal sanctuary, in the state of Gujarat, to save them from death.

Ambani said that as the hippos were “living, sentient beings … if we have the ability to save them through a safe and humane solution, we have a responsibility to try”.

But Vantara is shrouded in controversy. Home to more than 150,000 animals, including many endangered species, it has faced allegations of illegal and unethical sourcing of its inhabitants. The international watchdog Cites (convention on international trade in endangered species) has flagged alleged noncompliance with wildlife trade rules.

Some critics have accused the sanctuary of indirect complicity in wildlife trafficking, while others have condemned Vantara as an Ambani family “vanity zoo” – the public do not have access. The project is also seen to have weighty political backing, and it was relaunched by the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, himself.

The Ambani family and Vantara deny the allegations and an investigation last year by the supreme court of India found no evidence of wrongdoing.

A similar plan to bring 60 of the Colombian hippos to the sanctuary, when it was formerly known as Green’s rescue and rehabilitation, was first proposed in 2023.

However, the logistical problems of capturing and moving the hippos, which live in the wild and weigh roughly two tonnes each, as well as matters concerning permits and the inter-governmental organisation involved, appear to have prevented the animals from making the journey to India.

This time, a statement by Ambani said he had directly appealed to the Colombian government to allow the “safe, scientifically led translocation that would bring the 80 animals to a permanent home”.

“These 80 hippos did not choose where they were born, nor did they create the circumstances they now face,” he added.

It would be no small feat to ship the hippos to India and would probably come with a hefty price tag, possibly more than $4m (£3m).

Should they make it to Gujarat, it would add another twist in the adventures of Escobar’s hippos.

It was back in the 1980s that Colombia’s most famous drug lord brought four hippos from sub-Saharan Africa to join the zoo on his Hacienda Nápoles, which also included elephants and giraffes.

A hippo in a lake near the Hacienda Nápoles theme park in Doradal, Colombia. Photograph: Raúl Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images

After Escobar died in a special forces raid in 1993, the authorities left the hippos – which are dangerous and difficult to control – to run wild. Over the years, they made their home on the Magdalena River basin, where their population exploded due to a lack of predators and abundant food.

According to recent estimates, there are more than 200 hippos roaming free, the largest population outside Africa and one of Colombia’s greatest environmental menaces. They have destroyed vegetation and terrorised and killed local animals and livestock. So far, efforts to sterilise them have not worked fast enough.

As experts warned their population could reach more than 1,000 in coming decades, Colombian authorities announced this month that the hippos would begin to be formally hunted and culled to bring their numbers under control – an announcement that sparked outrage from animal rights campaigners.

Questions remain over the suitability of Vantara for the boisterous, mud-loving animals.

Hippos are not native to India and, while the sanctuary hosts bears, crocodiles, elephants, leopards and tigers, they do not publicly have any record of homing a hippo – let alone 80 of them.

However, Ambani insisted that his sanctuary would give the Escobar hippos the safe home they needed. “Vantara has the expertise, infrastructure and resolve to support this effort, entirely on Colombia’s terms,” his statement added.



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