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Women in motorcycle racing program break ground: “I’m hoping to inspire the next generation”

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Women are breaking ground in the male-dominated world of motorcycle racing, known as motorsport, thanks to the “Build.Train.Race” program, which is MotoAmerica’s all-female class of competitive racing.

Mikayla Moore is one of the rising stars. Coming off an undefeated season last year, the 20-year-old from Maryland is turning a lot of helmets in the motorsport world.

She rode her first motorcycle at 6 years old and entered her first race at 8 years old. Her dreams of going professional were jumpstarted when she was accepted into the Build.Train.Race program, which MotoAmerica added four years ago. It’s essentially a two-year boot camp aimed at bringing women into racing.

“In this sport currently, right now, there is not someone that looks like me, in terms of female that I can look up to,” Moore said. “I’m hoping to inspire the next generation.”

B.T.R. provides about a dozen women per year with a bike they can build themselves, as well as sponsors and resources to run 10 races a year — opening the door for women to thrive in the sport.

“The best thing about the Build.Train.Race program is it’s a full team,” Moore said. “So we have a truck driver, we have the mechanics and also you have the ladies that are under the tent. Everyone’s happy to see each other. Everyone is there for each other. So it just gives women the comfortability to feel comfortable in the space of racing.”

Melissa Paris, who runs the MP13 racing team and has served as a mentor to the B.T.R. program, said she wants to see more women winning races and championships, and this program is a springboard for that.

“When I see a whole tent full of girls, I’m like, ‘Man, if one or two of those girls can figure out how to go quick, we’re gonna start seeing some girls winning races,’ and that’s what we want,” she said. “There’s not many sports where a woman can compete head-to-head with a man and this is one of the few and I love that about it.” 

Motorsport and its U.S. organizer, MotoAmerica, is the second most watched vehicle racing platform, trailing only NASCAR. The audience for its seven classes of racing is 93% men, something B.T.R. is trying to change.

MotoAmerica’s chief operating officer Chuck Aksland said bringing women to the sport is a huge growth opportunity.

“Every event you’ll see a crowd around the Build.Train.Race. It’s a unique type of motorcycle, unique, different type of program and the women have done a great job with it,” he said.

Moore hopes she can be a part of helping to grow the sport.

“When spectators are able to see us women and go out there, I feel as though it inspires them, like they can do this as well,” she said.



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Hurricane Helene pounds Florida, FEMA administrator on recovery

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Hurricane Helene pounds Florida, FEMA administrator on recovery – CBS News


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Hurricane Helene left damage behind in Tallahassee, Florida, and other areas close to the Gulf of Mexico. Tom Hanson reports. Also, FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell joins CBS News with more on federal response for those affected.

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Eric Adams set to be arraigned on federal charges

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Eric Adams set to be arraigned on federal charges – CBS News


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New York City Mayor Eric Adams is set to be arraigned Friday on federal charges that include bribery, conspiracy and campaign finance charges. CBS News’ Anna Schecter reports.

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Former intelligence chief convicted of “aggravated torture” of Colombian journalist sentenced to 12 years in prison

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A Bogota judge has sentenced a former intelligence chief to 12 years in prison for crimes including “aggravated torture” of a journalist, the Colombian public prosecutor’s office said.

Enrique Ariza, former head of Colombia’s defunct DAS intelligence service, was convicted of “persecution, harassment” and other crimes against journalist Claudia Julieta Duque, the prosecutor’s office said Thursday.

Ariza was found guilty of “the crime of aggravated torture,” it said on social media.

With the latest conviction, “eight former officials of this agency have now been sentenced for the persecution to which my family and I were subjected,” Duque said on social media.

On Monday, the former DAS deputy director, Jose Narvaez, was also sentenced to 12 years in prison in the same case. Former intelligence director Giancarlo Auque, also linked to the case, is yet to be tried, Duque said.

The journalist, who had to be protected by bodyguards until she sought refuge in Spain, has accused the DAS of spying on her between 2001 and 2004, and threatening to murder her and rape her daughter when she was 10.

Colombia GPS Tracking
Journalist Claudia Julieta Duque poses for a portrait in Bogota, Colombia, on July 29, 2022. Colombia has for a decade been quietly installing trackers in the armored vehicles of at-risk individuals as well as VIPs, including presidents, government ministers, senators and Duque.

Fernando Vergara / AP


The origin of the harassment was Duque’s investigation of the murder of journalist Jaime Garzon in 1999, in which she denounced DAS involvement in crime.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, two gunmen killed Garzón, host of a daily morning show in Bogota, as he was driving his Jeep Cherokee to the studio. Garzón, who was 38 when he died, was a beloved figure in Colombia whose life story inspired a television mini-series, CJR reported.

In November, another former Colombian state security agent, Ronal Harbey Rivera Rodríguez, was also convicted of aggravated torture against Duque, the Committee to Protect Journalists reported.

 In 2017, the Latin American and the Colombian Federations of Journalists granted Duque with a “special recognition for her bravery in the fight for justice,” according to the International Media Women’s Foundation.

“JUSTICE!!” Duque tweeted on Thursday after Ariza was sentenced to prison.



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