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Aubrey Plaza tore her ACL before attending the WNBA All-Star game
An unexpected knee injury didn’t keep actor Aubrey Plaza from her front-row seat to the WNBA All-Star game on Saturday, which the “White Lotus” star attended while icing her leg and using crutches. Plaza, 40, suffered a torn ACL — a notoriously painful medical situation that can sometimes require surgery to fix — while playing “knockout” at the Phoenix Mercury’s practice facility earlier in the weekend, according to sports commentator Ryan Ruocco.
“I feel for Aubrey Plaza,” Ruocco said over the loudspeakers inside the Phoenix stadium where this year’s All-Star game occurred. “She came this weekend with a healthy knee. She’s leaving with a torn ACL, thanks to a hardy game of knockout at the Mercury practice facility.”
Ruocco can be heard commenting on Plaza’s injury in a video clip from the game that the Seattle Storm shared on social media, where the actor is seen sitting courtside with at least one crutch and trying to readjust an ice pack on her knee. She received some help with that from soccer legend Megan Rapinoe and retired WNBA star Sue Bird, who sat beside her in the stands.
“The GOAT lending a helping hand to Aubrey Plaza,” the Seattle Storm captioned their social media post.
Plaza also shared several pictures and video from All-Star weekend on Instagram, including images of herself sitting on the court with Rapinoe and Bird, posing with WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert, and shaking hands with the Indiana Fever’s Caitlin Clark, who played on the WNBA All-Star team alongside fellow fan-favorite rookie and former college rival Angel Reese. Plaza posted one photo in which she appeared to be lying down with her leg elevated, and another where she held a WNBA All-Star edition basketball in her lap while seemingly being pushed in a wheelchair.
The Emmy nominee didn’t explicitly speak about the nature of her knee injury, but she appeared to signal that everything was OK with a thumbs-up gesture to the Team WNBA coach Cheryl Miller in the fourth quarter of the game Saturday night, AZ Central reported.
Plaza has torn her ACL before, and that injury was also related to basketball. She was filming the 2016 documentary “The Pistol Shrimps,” about a women’s recreational basketball league in Los Angeles when it happened, Plaza said in subsequent interviews.
Saturday’s game was highly anticipated, mainly because it marked Clark and Reese’s All-Star debuts. It ended in a win for the WNBA team against Team USA, with Clark setting the All-Star Game rookie assist record, CBS Sports reported.
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“Fat Leonard” sentenced to 15 years for massive Navy bribery, fraud scheme
Leonard Glenn Francis, a former defense contractor convicted for masterminding an unprecedented bribery and fraud scheme targeting the U.S. Navy, was sentenced Tuesday in federal court to 15 years in prison. He was ordered to pay $20 million in restitution and a $150,000 fine, the Department of Justice announced.
Francis, known as “Fat Leonard,” pled guilty in 2015 to the bribery and fraud charges, but fled the U.S. in 2022 leaving his GPS ankle monitoring bracelet in a water cooler just days before he was to be sentenced. The U.S. Marshals Service told CBS News Francis was detained on an Interpol red notice at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Venezuela while boarding a flight to Cuba.
He was returned to the U.S. last year as part of a large prisoner swap deal with Venezuela. Ten American detainees were released in the 2023 deal in exchange for the Biden administration freeing Alex Saab, a Colombian-born businessman and close ally of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro who was facing money laundering charges.
In a 2015 plea agreement, Francis, the Malaysian owner of a ship servicing company in Southeast Asia, identified seven Navy officials who had accepted bribes and acknowledged paying off officials with hundreds of thousands in cash, as well as luxury goods worth millions.
He supplied them with prostitutes and Cuban cigars, luxury travel, Spanish suckling pigs and Kobe beef. Officials received spa treatments, top-shelf alcohol, designer handbags, leather goods, designer furniture, watches, fountain pens, ornamental swords and handmade ship models, according to court documents.
In exchange, officers gave him classified information and even redirected military vessels to lucrative ports for his Singapore-based ship servicing company. Francis, according to prosecutors, overcharged the U.S. military by $35 million for his company’s services.
Over 30 Navy officers and contractors have either been convicted or pleaded guilty to charges related to Francis’ services.
On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Janis L. Sammartino sentenced Francis to a 164-month sentence for bribery and fraud and 16 months for failing to appear, to be served consecutively.
“Leonard Francis lined his pockets with taxpayer dollars while undermining the integrity of U.S. Naval forces,” said U.S. Attorney Tara McGrath in a statement. “The impact of his deceit and manipulation will be long felt, but justice has been served today.”
Francis, 60, was initially arrested in San Diego on September 16, 2013, and remained in pretrial custody until December 18, 2017, when the court granted his request for release pending sentencing due to a medical condition, the Department of Justice said. Francis served four years and three months in custody before he was released on bond and ordered into house arrest. He remained on bond under the supervision of U.S. Pretrial Services for almost five years, from December 17, 2017, until he escaped.
“Mr. Francis’ sentencing brings closure to an expansive fraud scheme that he perpetrated against the U.S. Navy with assistance from various Navy officials. This fraud conspiracy ultimately cost the American taxpayer millions of dollars and weakened the public’s trust in some of our Navy’s senior leaders,” Kelly P. Mayo, the director of the U.S. Department of Defense Office of Inspector General said in a news release on Tuesday.