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Victor Wembanyama (rib) exits Spurs' win; prognosis unknown

San Antonio star center Victor Wembanyama missed the second half of the Spurs' Monday game against the Philadelphia 76ers after sustaining a left rib contusion during a second-quarter collision with the 76ers' Paul George.

Field Level Media

The status of the two-time All-Star moving forward was uncertain.

Wembanyama went to the Spurs' locker room twice in the second period after the collision but finished the half on the court.

Following San Antonio's 115-102 victory, Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, "At halftime, I was told he wasn't coming back. I haven't heard anything else up to this point. I think it would be a positive that he felt like he could come back, and he played the last four or five minutes of the half. So, that's a positive from my perspective."

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Wembanyama scored 17 points, grabbed five rebounds and blocked three shots in officially 16 minutes of court time, which counts as an official game for the purpose of postseason award consideration.

Wembanyama, 22, is in the mix for Most Valuable Player in his third year in the NBA. He is now averaging 24.8 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists and a league-high 3.1 blocks per game.

Monday was Wembanyama's 64th game of the season, including the NBA Cup final, which otherwise doesn't count toward players' stats. Players must appear in 65 games to qualify for postseason awards. The Spurs have three games remaining after Monday.

--Field Level Media

Victor Wembanyama (rib) exits Spurs' win; prognosis unknown

San Antonio star center Victor Wembanyama missed the second half of the Spurs' Monday game against the Philadelphia 76ers after sus...
How did the Grays Ferry parking garage collapse? What officials say

Oneperson is deadand two are still unaccounted for following aparking garage collapse in Grays Ferryon April 8.

USA TODAY

Officials, including Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle L. Parker, said Wednesday evening that search and rescue operations would proceed after the structure was stabilized, though a timeline was not clear.

The missing had not been found as of early Thursday evening.

Here's what we know about how the structure collapsed.

How did the Grays Ferry parking garage collapse?

According to an incident report summary delivered by Parker Wednesday night, all seven levels of the structure's stair system failed on the 30th Street side stairwell.

Subcontractors were in the process of installing precast concrete floor decking and roof segments, when a precast roof segment failed, falling to the level below and "literally triggering a progressive collapse of connected sections across all seven levels," Parker said.

The precast sections had been manufactured off site and installed by the manufacturer, officials said.

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What is precast concrete?

Precast concrete is concrete that has already been molded and cured before being transported and assembled.

How tall is the Grays Ferry parking garage?

The under-construction garage is seven stories.

Officials confirmed that the project was a non-accessory parking garage with ground floor retail space.

Who owns the Grays Ferry parking garage that collapsed?

The structure is owned by the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and was intended for use by roughly 1,000 hospital employees.

Who was building the Grays Ferry parking garage? Who contracted the Grays Ferry garage?

The project was under the operation of general contracting firm HSC Builders and Construction Managers.

The firm is based out of Exton, Pennsylvania and services areas of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware.

Kaitlyn McCormick is a Philadelphia-based reporter writing all things trending, breaking and city-related for USA TODAY's Philadelphia Metro Connect Team.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How did the Grays Ferry parking garage collapse? What happened

How did the Grays Ferry parking garage collapse? What officials say

Oneperson is deadand two are still unaccounted for following aparking garage collapse in Grays Ferryon April 8. Officials, includ...
Family calls for body camera footage release as officer faces manslaughter charge

The family of Stephenson King, Jr., a 39-year-old Black man who was fatally shot by a Boston police officer, called for the release of body camera footage of the March 11 incident during a press conference on Thursday.

ABC News

King's father Stephenson King, Sr., a retired law enforcement officer, said that his son experienced mental health issues and his death has left him "broken-hearted."

"I am hurt, disappointed in everything that has happened," he said.

"That police officer on the side of that street was the judge, the jury and the executioner," family attorney Ben Crump said, adding that King's family wants the footage released for "the truth to be revealed."

"Transparency is good for all of us. It's good for the family and it's good for the Boston Police Department," Crump said.

King Family via Ben Crump Law - PHOTO: Stephenson King Jr., is pictured in an undated photo.

Former Boston police officer Nicholas O'Malley faces a voluntary manslaughter charge after firing three shots at King during the incident. O'Malley pleaded not guilty during his arraignment on March 19.

According to Suffolk County District Attorney Kevin Hayden, whoannouncedthe charges in a March 19 press conference, King was pursued by police because he was a suspect in an unarmed carjacking incident. After King was approached by officers, Hayden said that he refused to follow their commands to exit his vehicle and attempted to drive away from the scene.

"Officer O'Malley fired through the driver's side of the car, striking Mr. King three times and killing him just as he drove away," Hayden said. "The evidence demonstrates that officer O'Malley fired at a moving vehicle, an action prohibited except in limited circumstances not present here, in violation of Massachusetts law and clear BPD procedures."

Hartford police officer fired amid probe into fatal shooting of Steven Jones, mayor says

He said King didn't drive at the officers and neither officer was in the vehicle's path when O'Malley opened fire.

The Peace Officer Standards and Training Commission suspended O'Malley's law enforcement certification on March 19, records show.

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ABC News reached out to O'Malley's attorney Kenneth Anderson but a request for comment was not answered.

The New England Police Benevolent Association, the union representing members of the Boston Police Department, expressed "solidarity" with O'Malley in astatementon March 21.

"‍Police officers are often required to make split-second decisions in dangerous and rapidly evolving situations. These decisions are made in real time, under intense pressure, and with the responsibility of protecting the public, their fellow officers, and themselves," the union said. "The reality of modern policing is that officers are frequently placed into circumstances where hesitation can cost lives."

The incident is being investigated by the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office and the Boston Police Department. Hayden said that the case is being presented to a grand jury and, according to court records, a probable cause hearing has been scheduled on May 21.

"People are arrested and charged in district court prior to the matter going to the grand jury all the time. This case was not treated any differently," he said when asked by a reporter why O'Malley was charged before the case went to a grand jury.

Hayden said that, at this point, investigators do not plan on releasing the body camera footage to the public.

"Neither my office nor the Boston Police Department will be releasing any further evidence, including any body worn camera footage, to the public," he said. "To do so, we clearly compromise and imperil the ongoing investigation and the future prosecution of this most serious matter."

The DA's office reiterated this sentiment in a statement to ABC News on Thursday, saying that "investigators have viewed the body cam video," but "there are no plans to release the video at this point."

ABC News reached out to the Boston Police Department but a request for comment was not returned.

According to ABC's affiliate in Boston,WCVB, Boston Police Commissioner Michael Cox said in a statement following O'Malley's arrest that BPD is "committed to building trust" in the community.

"Today is a difficult day for the Department and our City. We remain committed to our mission of building trust while reducing crime and fear of crime with those we serve. As this case is now in the criminal justice system, we will not comment on the facts at this time," Cox wrote. "We rely on the integrity of the criminal justice system in what we do every day, and this case will be no different. On behalf of the Boston Police Department, we want to extend our sympathies to all of those impacted."

Family calls for body camera footage release as officer faces manslaughter charge

The family of Stephenson King, Jr., a 39-year-old Black man who was fatally shot by a Boston police officer, called for the release of ...
As U.S. and Iran agree to a ceasefire, what's actually in the deal — and will it last?

President Donald Trump pulled back from histhreats to destroy the Iranian civilization, Tehran celebrated what it framed as a victory andmarkets soared on news that the Strait of Hormuz could reopen.

NBC Universal

But the exact terms of theIran war ceasefiredeal remained unclear even as it took effect Wednesday, with a growing list of questions hanging over the next two weeks and the road ahead.

New attacks were reported in Iran and across the Gulf on Wednesday, and Israel said it would keep striking Lebanon and continued to carry out heavy bombardment there.

Here's what we know — and what we don't — about the ceasefire between Iran, the United States and Israel.

Iranians gather in Enqelab Square in Tehran early Wednesday after news of the ceasefire. (Reuters; Getty Images)

What's been agreed to?

No official ceasefire agreement has been released, but Trump announced an eleventh-hour deal in a Truth Social post ahead of the Tuesday night deadline he had imposed on Iran.

"I agree to suspend the bombing and attack of Iran for a period of two weeks. This will be a double sided CEASEFIRE!" he said.

Iran's 10-point proposal for a fuller peace deal would be a "workable basis on which to negotiate," Trump said.

Iran’s Supreme National Security Council announced the country had agreed to the ceasefire and would allocate two weeks to finalize a peace deal. Iran said it would cease its “defensive operations” so long as U.S. and Israeli strikes were halted.

The 10-point plan outlined by Iranian state media includes a number of demands that appear to conflict with America’s own 15-point proposal, with Iran seeking continued control over transit through the Strait of Hormuz and the complete withdrawal of U.S. combat forces from its bases across the region.

Multiple Iranian media outlets also reported that the 10 points include “acceptance of enrichment" for Tehran’s nuclear program, which conflicts with the Trump administration's stance.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio previously said the 15-point U.S. plan makes clear Iran "can never have nuclear weapons," and Trump reiterated "there will be no enrichment of Uranium" in a Truth Social post Wednesday.

Trump added that "many of the 15 points" have already been agreed to, without detailing what they were.

He later appeared to distance himself from reports about both plans, writing on Truth Social: "There is only one group of meaningful “POINTS” that are acceptable to the United States, and we will be discussing them behind closed doors during these Negotiations. These are the POINTS that are the basis on which we agreed to a CEASEFIRE."

The absence of a definitive text and competing public statements leaves “a very ambiguous ceasefire agreement that is extremely shaky and brittle,” said Andreas Krieg, a senior lecturer at King’s College London’s School of Security Studies.

"The Iranians have put forward a fairly maximalist position," he said, noting their demands are unlikely to be "easily implementable."

Vice President JD Vance described it as a "fragile truce" Wednesday, pointing to divisions within the Iranian regime as complicating negotiations.

LEBANON-ISRAEL-IRAN-US-WAR (Kawnat Haju / AFP via Getty Images)

Is Hormuz open?

Trump's ultimatum centered on the strait, a key trade route through which 20% of the world’s oil passes. The waterway's effective closure sent global energy prices surging.

Trump said the ceasefire was "subject to the Islamic Republic of Iran agreeing to the COMPLETE, IMMEDIATE, and SAFE OPENING of the Strait of Hormuz."

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said safe passage would be allowed through the strait for the duration of the two-week ceasefire “via coordination with Iran’s Armed Forces and with due consideration of technical limitations.” He did not expand on which technical limitations he was referring to in his post on X.

The Fars news agency reported that two oil tankers were allowed to pass through the strait on Wednesday “after obtaining permission from Iran,” but the passage of further tankers “was halted” because of Israel’s fresh strikes on Lebanon.

Image: TOPSHOT-IRAN-ISRAEL-US-WAR (AFP via Getty Images)

It was also not clear whether Iran will seek to charge fees or limit traffic moving through the strait during the ceasefire, or impose limits on which ships can transit. It has been charging fees during the war to allow a small number of ships to pass through the critical oil chokepoint.

Trump said the U.S. would be "helping with the traffic buildup" in the waterway, while French President Emmanuel Macron said Wednesday that more than 15 nations from Europe, Asia and the Middle East were also working with Iran to help reopen the strait.

Has Israel agreed to the truce?

The Israeli military, which launched the war against Iran alongside U.S. forces Feb. 28, announced Wednesday that it had “ceased” fire on Iran in accordance with the truce, but remained on “high defensive alert” and “ready to respond to any violation.”

It said the ceasefire would not include Lebanon, however, directly contradicting Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the ceasefire plan outlined by Iranian state media.

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Hours later, the Israeli military said it had undertaken the largest wave of strikes across Lebanon since the start of its invasion, with heavy bombardment reported in the capital, Beirut.

First responders stand amid rubble at the site of an Israeli airstrike in Beirut's Corniche al-Mazraa neighborhood on April 8, 2026.  (AFP - Getty Images)

“We will continue striking the Hezbollah terror organization and will utilize every operational opportunity,” the IDF said in posts on X, saying its strikes targeted "Hezbollah headquarters, military arrays, & command-and-control centers" across Beirut and southern Lebanon.

Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said Israel was disregarding "all regional and international efforts to end the war," including by targeting "densely populated residential areas."

Israel had "violated the principles of international law and international humanitarian law" with its onslaught, he said.

Iran's Revolutionary Guards threatened a "regret-inducing response" if Israeli strikes on Lebanon do not immediately end. Trump backed up Israel, however,

Israel invaded Lebanon after the Iran-backed Hezbollah launched rockets at northern Israel in retaliation for the Iran war. Israeli forces have vowed to establish a “security zone” across southern Lebanon, destroying homes throughout the area, as well as bridges across the Litani River, which link the south to the rest of Lebanon.

More than 1,500 people have been killed in the Israeli assault, according to Lebanese government figures, while more than a million people have been displaced from their homes by bombardment and Israeli military evacuation orders. Israel has warned that those displaced from the south will not be able to return until the safety of Israelis in northern Israel can be guaranteed.

Iranian officials have not released a recent death toll, but the U.S.-based rights group HRANA put the total killed at almost 3,400, including more than 1,600 civilians. More than 1,500 people have been killed in Lebanon, and 23 have died in Israel. Thirteen U.S. service members have been killed, and two more died of noncombat causes.

Who negotiated the deal?

Pakistan and Egypt played key roles in facilitating the negotiations between the U.S. and Iran, with Araghchi expressing "gratitude and appreciation" for Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir, the army chief of Pakistan, "for their tireless efforts to end the war in the region."

Trump told theAgence France-Pressenews agency that he believed China also played a pivotal part in persuading Iran to negotiate.

“I hear yes,” Trump said after being asked if Beijing was involved in getting its ally Tehran to the negotiating table. Trump is expected to travel to China in mid-May to meet with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, after postponing the trip because of the Iran war.

Sharif also credited China, as well as Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt and Qatar, with extending “invaluable” support in the effort to achieve a temporary ceasefire, in a post on X on Wednesday.

President Donald Trump and China's President Xi Jinping (Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP via Getty Images file)

Beijing is a close ally of Tehran, as well as the primary buyer of Iranian oil, but it has condemned Iran's attacks against Gulf countries, with which it also has important economic ties.

What’s next?

The days ahead will be crucial in determining whether the ceasefire holds and whether a more lasting agreement can be negotiated to end the war that has consumed the region and threatened global economic pain.

Pakistan and Iran have both said talks toward a lasting peace deal would begin Friday in Islamabad. The U.S. has yet to confirm this.

In the meantime, both the U.S. and Iran have claimed victory.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was asked at a press conference Wednesday if a future U.S. deal with Iran would involve its government handing over all of its enriched uranium.

He said that the material is currently “buried” and that the U.S. is “watching it.”

“We know exactly what they have, and they know that, and they will either give it to us, which the president has laid out — they’ll give it to us voluntarily, we’ll get it, we’ll take it, we’ll take it out — or if we have to do something else ourselves, like we did Midnight Hammer or something like that, we reserve that opportunity,” Hegseth said, referring to the U.S. targeting Iran’s nuclear facilities last June.

One of Iran’s demands in order to end the war is the removal of all U.S. military forces from “all bases and positions in the region.” That demand would almost certainly be a nonstarter for the U.S.

Hegseth said Wednesday that U.S. forces would be “hanging around” in the region in the midst of the ceasefire to ensure compliance.

“We’re not going anywhere,” he said.

Trump celebrated the deal in a post on Truth Social as a “big day for World Peace,” just hours after threatening to wipe out the population of Iran.

“This could be the Golden Age of the Middle East,” he said.

TOPSHOT-IRAN-US-ISRAEL-WAR (AFP via Getty Images)

As U.S. and Iran agree to a ceasefire, what's actually in the deal — and will it last?

President Donald Trump pulled back from histhreats to destroy the Iranian civilization, Tehran celebrated what it framed as a victory a...
Greek PM says tolls for ships to cross Hormuz would be unacceptable, a risk to freedom of navigation

ATHENS, April 8 (Reuters) - Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said on Wednesday it would be unacceptable for ships to have ‌to pay a fee to cross the Strait of Hormuz ‌as Iran has suggested, and such a move would set a dangerous precedent for freedom ​of navigation.

Reuters

The Iran war has threatened Gulf ports and disrupted global trade through the strait, a waterway through which a fifth of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas normally passes.

Greece controls one of the largest ‌merchant fleets globally in ⁠terms of cargo-carrying capacity.

Amid ceasefire talks with the U.S. and Israel, Tehran, which controls the chokepoint, has proposed fees ⁠or tolls on vessels to safely pass through the strait. U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday suggested the U.S. and Iran could collect tolls ​in a ​joint venture, while the White House ​said the priority was reopening ‌the strait without limitations.

Mitsotakis said the strait always had freedom of navigation and that needs to continue.

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"I don't think that the international community would be ready to accept Iran setting up a toll booth for every ship that crosses the strait," Mitsotakis told CNN. "That seems to ‌me to be completely unacceptable."

The centre-right leader ​added that a separate international agreement regarding ​the strait may be necessary.

"But ​this agreement cannot, I repeat, cannot include a sort ‌of a fee that ships will ​have to pay ​every time they cross the strait. This was not the case before the war started and it cannot be the case ​after the war finishes," ‌he said.

"We would be setting a very, very dangerous precedent, ​if that were to happen, for the freedom of navigation."

(Reporting ​by Renee MaltezouEditing by Rod Nickel)

Greek PM says tolls for ships to cross Hormuz would be unacceptable, a risk to freedom of navigation

ATHENS, April 8 (Reuters) - Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said on Wednesday it would be unacceptable for ships to have ‌to p...

 

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