Kansas State hires Belmont's Casey Alexander as next men's basketball coach

The first major-conference job to come open on this year's men's college basketball coaching carousel has officially been filled.

USA TODAY Sports

Kansas Statehas hiredBelmont'sCasey Alexanderto be its next head coach, theuniversity announcedMarch 13.

Alexander has signed a five-year contract, which will pay him $3.3 million during the 2026-27 season before he receives a $50,000 base salary increase each remaining year on his deal.

REQUIRED READING:Why Kansas State might've gotten it right with Casey Alexander | Wheeler

After taking over for his former coach, Rick Byrd, Alexander went 166-60 in seven seasons at his alma mater. The Bruins won at least 20 games in each of his seven seasons there and won three conference regular-season championships.

This past season, Belmont went 26-6 and won the Missouri Valley regular-season title before being upset by Drake 100-79 in the quarterfinals of the conference tournament, almost certainly denying it a shot at the NCAA tournament. The Bruins never played in the NCAA tournament under Alexander, though they qualified for the 68-team field in 2020 before the event was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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The 53-year-old Alexander was previously the head coach at Lipscomb and Stetson, where he combined to go 137-120 in eight seasons.

<p style=March 13: Wes Miller, Cincinnati

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 13: Kim English, Providence

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 11: Jeremy Ballad, Florida International

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 11: Adrian Autry, Syracuse

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 9: Mike Jones, UNC Greensboro

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 9: Phil Cunningham, Louisiana Monroe

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 9: Ed Schilling, Pepperdine

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 8: Earl Grant, Boston College

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 8: Stan Heath, Eastern Michigan

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 8: Dwayne Stephens, Western Michigan

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 8: Damon Stoudamire, Georgia Tech

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 7: Rashon Burno, Northern Illinois

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 7: Michael Lewis, Ball State

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 7: Mark Schmidt, St. Bonaventure

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 6: Darrell Walker, Arkansas-Little Rock

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=March 3: John Pelphrey, Tennessee Tech

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=February 27: Billy Gillispie, Tarleton State

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=February 26: Wayne Tinkle, Oregon State

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=February 20: Joe Scott, Air Force

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=February 18: Steve Lavin, San Diego

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=February 17: Jerome Tang, Kansas State

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=January 12: Marvin Menzies, Kansas City

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

NCAA coaches fired during the 2026 college basketball season

March 13: Wes Miller, Cincinnati

Alexander's teams have been known for their up-tempo style and offensive explosiveness. Six of Alexander's seven Belmont squads finished among the top 100 teams in adjusted offensive efficiency,according to KenPom, an impressive feat from a small-conference program. He became known for his excellent player evaluation, which allowed Belmont to sign the likes of Wil Richard, Ja'Kobi Gillespie and Cade Tyson before each player transferred to a power-conference program.

"I'm incredibly excited to join the team at K-State and can't wait to get the journey started," Alexandersaid in a statement. "K-State has such a rich tradition and a wildly passionate fan base and I'm grateful for the opportunity provided by (Kansas State athletic director) Gene Taylor to be a part of it."

The 53-year-old Alexander replaces Jerome Tang,who was fired on Feb. 15after four seasons at the school. The university fired him for cause, which Tang plans to fight in court.

Kansas State made the NCAA tournament nine times over a 12-season stretch from 2008-19, which included two Elite Eight appearances, but it has missed the tournament in five of the past six seasons in which it was held.

The Wildcats went just 28-37 over the past two seasons despite high-priced additions out of the transfer portal like P.J. Haggerty and Coleman Hawkins.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Casey Alexander hired as Kansas State men's basketball coach

Kansas State hires Belmont's Casey Alexander as next men's basketball coach

The first major-conference job to come open on this year's men's college basketball coaching carousel has offici...
Are Kawhi Leonard and the Clippers suddenly a playoff threat again?

It's flown under the radar a bit, drowned out byhigher-wattage,Wilt-abuttingfeats of offensive significance, but the Los Angeles Clippers earned their own bit of NBA history this week — a perhaps ignominious honor, but an honor all the same.

Yahoo Sports

You might recall the Clippers were, well,down horrendousearlier this season. What was constructed to bethe oldest NBA roster evergot off to a positively disastrous start, going 3-18 from early November through mid-December amid an unsettling investigation into reports the organizationdeliberately sought to circumvent the salary capto sign Kawhi Leonard in 2019, a raft of injuries to a number of key contributors (including, most notably,Leonard) and thenear-immediate curdling and stunning endof Chris Paul's return to the franchise. A week before Christmas, they sat at 6-21, a half-game out of last place in the West, with the NBA'sthird-worst defenseand the point differential of a 24-win team.

No team in NBA history that had fallen 15 games below .500 had ever clawed its way back to a winning record in that same season … until now. Wednesday's emphatic153-128 drubbingof the Minnesota Timberwolves brought the Clippers to 33-32 on the season — back above .500 for the first timesince Halloween, making them the first team in NBA history to get all the way back into the black after being so deep in the red.

The Clippers have won six of their last seven, moving ahead of theinjury-wracked and sputtering Warriorsinto eighth place in the Western Conference. At 6.5 games back of the sixth-place Wolves with just 17 games left, it's nearly impossible that the Clips will be able to climb out of the play-in tournament; thepublic-facingprojectionmodelsgive them single-digit odds of rising all the way up to sixth over the final month.

If they can advance out of the play-in, though, they'll be the proverbial Team Nobody Wants To Face in Round 1 — a team that boasts the NBA'ssecond-best recordandfifth-best net ratingsince Dec. 20, that has outscored opponentsby 9.4 points per 100 possessionssince drastically overhauling its roster at February's trade deadline, that is undefeatedsince newcomer Darius Garland's debut two weeks ago… and that can enter damn near any matchup with a legitimate reason to believe it has the best player in the series.

After that dominant victory over the Wolves, head coach Tyronn Lue was asked what was working so well in an offensive explosion that tied the Clippers' franchise mark for the most points ever scored in a regulation game. His answer, according toClippers beat reporter Justin Russo, was two words long: "Kawhi Leonard."

The Clippers felt like a relative winner of the2026 NBA trade deadline, if only because their decisionsto tradeJames Harden (a 36-year-old All-Star point guard who can enter unrestricted free agency this summer) for Garland (a26-year-old All-Star point guardunder contract through 2028) and Ivica Zubac (an about-to-turn 29-year-old starting center) for 23-year-old Bennedict Mathurin, 24-year-old Isaiah Jackson andwhat could be a mid-lottery pickin the highly touted 2026 NBA Draft seemed to signal an organizational understanding that the time had come to look to the future. Those moves suggested a dawning awareness that the championship contender the franchise had hoped was on the horizon ever since 2019 just wasn't coming, and that the most prudent course of action would be to start focusing on building the next competitive iteration of Clippers basketball.

"Obviously, you need luck in this league," Leonardtold reporters after the Harden trade. "With shots, with injuries, with everything, so it's just how it played out. I wanted to give it another run, but it didn't happen that way, so now we're here. [...] [That era is] over. Guys are gone."

One thing the Clippersdidn'tdo, though — in spite ofsignificantreportedinterest— was trade Kawhi. And that matters. Because, as it turns out — even after all the load management and letdowns, all the injuries and investigations — "the next competitive iteration of Clippers basketball" might still just be "the one with Kawhi on it."

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Leonard is averaging a career-high 28.3 points per game, tied for seventh in the NBA, to go with 6.4 rebounds and 3.8 assists, shooting 50.3% from the field, 38% from 3-point range and 90.6% from the foul line — good for a true shooting percentage of 63%. He'sshooting 75% at the rim and 51% from midrange, both matching or exceeding career highs; he is scoring more, and more efficiently, than he has in his entire 14-year career, all while beingtied for the league lead in stealsand ranking just outside the top 15 intotal deflections.

Out of 91 players getting at least 55 touches per game, Leonard ranksfirstin points per touch, ahead of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Victor Wembanyama and every other high-volume scorer in the game. He is drawing every team's best perimeter defender every night, demanding in-your-jersey attention toone of the league's highest degrees, and rendering it irrelevant with maddeningly metronomic consistency. (Leonard has scored 20 or more points in 43 consecutive games, whichmight not sound like a lotat this particular moment, but is, I assure you, a lot — thesecond-longest such streak in Clippers franchise history, and the14th-longest since the introduction of the 3-point line in 1979.)

His ability to just disregard a defense's best-laid plans and most honorable intentions, repeatedly getting to his spots for those automatic line-drive midrange pull-ups, can be awe-inspiring … even to theotherbest scorers in the world.

"In all honesty, Kawhi might be one of the best players to ever play the game when he's healthy," Minnesota superstar Anthony Edwardstold reportersafter watching Leonard hang 40-plus on his Wolves for thesecond timein just over a month. "I think a lot of his peers feel the same way about him. If he's healthy, 100%, ain't no stopping Kawhi. So I mean, you gotta deal with it. And he dealt it to us tonight. Again."

Yes, it's that time of year again: Winter's turning to spring,Lucy's holding the football, and Leonard — looking fully healthy after dealing with an early-season ailment — is dealing it to … well, everyone.

As ever, Leonard's brand of ball — high-volume, high-efficiency scoring; extremely low-turnover play; additive work as a defensive rebounder and secondary facilitator — makes him one of the highest-impact players in the sport, and an advanced statistical darling. For the season, he ranks second inDARKO daily plus-minus; third inplayer efficiency ratingandregularized adjusted plus-minus; fifth inbox plus-minus,value over replacement player,estimated plus-minusandThe BBall Index's LEBRON; and ninth inwin sharesandwin shares per 48 minutes. The Clippers have outscored opponents by 7 points per 100 non-garbage-time possessionsin his minutes— equivalent to atop-five net ratingover the course of the full season — and havebeenoutscored by 6.5 points-per-100 whenhe's not on the court. That plus-13.5 on/off swing is thethird-largest in the NBAamong players who've logged at least 1,000 minutes, behind only Nikola Jokić and Wembanyama.

That sort of résumé would put him in the company of upper-echelon MVP candidates like Gilgeous-Alexander, Jokić and Wembanyama, though the Clippers' status as a play-in squad would likely prevent him from climbingtoofar up the ballot … if, that is, he even winds up meeting the65-game requirement for year-end awards consideration. Entering Friday's meeting with the Chicago Bulls, Leonard has played in 51 of the Clippers' 65 games, meaning he can miss only three games the rest of the way.

The Clippers have gone 29-22 in those 51 appearances, compared to 4-10 without him — and25-9with Leonard in the lineup, a 60-win pace, since Dec. 20. That includes five wins in five tries since the addition of Garland — a hiccup-quick, high-volume and high-accuracy 3-point shooter who's also an elite pick-and-roll playmaker when healthy.

The Clips have outscored opponents by40 points in 77 minutes with both Leonard and Garland on the floor, scoring a scorching 136.3 points per 100 possessions. (They've alsowon the non-Kawhi minutes when Garland's there to run the show, which is a handy bonus.) They're still getting to know one another and ironing out the kinks, but the early returns have been very promising — and, to hear the new arrival tell it, the learning curve hasn't been nearly as steep as you might think.

"It's pretty easy to play with him," Garlandrecently told reporters. "Because everybody's afraid of him."

Are Kawhi Leonard and the Clippers suddenly a playoff threat again?

It's flown under the radar a bit, drowned out byhigher-wattage,Wilt-abuttingfeats of offensive significance, but the...
Jimmy Kimmel says 'ex-con' Donald Trump is 'gaslighting' Americans about gas prices: 'The stupidest president'

Jimmy Kimmelis calling outDonald Trumpfor gaslighting Americans about, well, gas.

Entertainment Weekly Jimmy Kimmel in May 2025; President Trump on March 11, 2026Credit: Tommaso Boddi/Getty; Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty

The late-night comedian skewered the president overthe rapidly rising cost of fuelamid the United States' war with Iran.

"Gas prices have gone up every day for the past 11 days," Kimmel said on Thursday's episode ofJimmy Kimmel Live. "But our president, 'Ex-con Mobile,' says there is nothing to worry about."

Jimmy Kimmel on 'Jimmy Kimmel Live'Credit: Disney/Randy Holmes

He proceeded to share one of Trump's most recentTruth Social posts, which read in part: "The United States is the largest Oil Producer in the World, by far, so when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money. BUT, of far greater interest and importance to me, as President, is stoping [sic] an evil Empire, Iran, from having Nuclear Weapons, and destroying the Middle East and, indeed, the World. I won't ever let that happen!"

Kimmel, of course, had a lot to say about the politician and former reality star's claims.

"That's right, he's 'stoping' the evil empire," Kimmel said. "He really is the stupidest president of all time. He says when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money. Maybe you and your buddies do, but we don't make a lot of money! We just pay more for gas when oil prices go up!"

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The host continued, "He must think we're as dumb as he is. The man who campaigned on the promise he would get gas prices under $2 a gallon is now trying to convince us that higher prices are better. You know, you hear the term gaslighting a lot, but rarely when it comes to actual gas."

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Kimmel noted that rising prices at the pump "couldn't have come at a worse time" for Americans.

"According to a new survey, a third of Americans saythey are skipping meals or cutting back on utilities like heat to pay the rising cost of their health-carepremiums," Kimmel said. "Which makes me wonder what happened to that health-care plan Trump announced two months ago. Remember that great health-care plan he announced? That disappeared right along with our invasion of Greenland. They just went away."

Watch Kimmel address rising gas prices in the clip above.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Jimmy Kimmel says 'ex-con' Donald Trump is 'gaslighting' Americans about gas prices: 'The stupidest president'

Jimmy Kimmelis calling outDonald Trumpfor gaslighting Americans about, well, gas. The late-night comedian sk...
UFC to issue 85K free tickets for White House card

The UFC plans to give away 85,000 tickets for an outdoor viewing experience of its live event at the White House on June 14, promotion CEO Dana White announced.

Field Level Media

Freedom Fights 250 is believed to be the first pro sporting event ever held at the White House.

"The way that the White House is laid out, you've got the White House, you've got the South Lawn, and then there's a road and then the Ellipse as a park that's right there," White told UFC's YouTube Channel. "We're going to be ticketing 85,000 people in the Ellipse. And the tickets are free, and we'll announce how we're going to be giving them away soon. But you should plan on going to Washington, D.C., for this event.

"There's going to be all kinds of activations in the Ellipse. There's going to be music, bands are going to be playing, and you can actually sit in the park and watch the fight on the screens, but you'll actually see the whole setup. It's right there. It will be a very unique, cool experience for fight fans."

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White announced Freedom Fights 250 last August after meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House. It is one of many events planned as part of the United States' 250th anniversary celebration this year, with Freedom Fights 250 falling on Trump's 80th birthday.

The fight card will be co-headlined by Alex Pereira and Ciryl Gane competing for the interim heavyweight title. With a win, Pereira would become the first three-division champion in UFC history.

Undisputed champion Ilia Topuria and interim champion Justin Gaethje also will fight for the lightweight title.

--Field Level Media

UFC to issue 85K free tickets for White House card

The UFC plans to give away 85,000 tickets for an outdoor viewing experience of its live event at the White House on ...
Tim Busfield was indicted on child sex abuse. Now four women say he abused them.

At least four women have told police that the Emmy-award winning actor and director Timothy Busfield groped their breasts and genitals, and forced himself on them, dating from 1993 to 2000. One was a 16-year-old community theater intern when she said Busfield pushed his hand into her pants and his tongue into her mouth.

USA TODAY

The women came forward after Busfield was arrested onsuspicion of child sex abuseon January 13. The women shared their stories with an Albuquerque police detective in January according to six video interviews with the women that USA TODAY obtained from the Second Judicial District Court in New Mexico under a public records request.

Agrand jury indictedBusfield on four counts of criminal sexual contact of a child on February 6. A trial date has been set for May 2027 in New Mexico.

Busfield, 68, is best known for his roles in "The West Wing" and "Thirtysomething." He has denied the charges.

Larry Stein, a civil attorney representing Busfield, told USA TODAY that these allegations aren't relevant to the boys' case. "I will not waste my time nor the public's commenting on 30-year-old unproven allegations with adult women," he said. "I don't want to focus everyone's attention on on the irrelevant facts of these women. And I don't want to say anything negative about them. They are unproven allegations. They aren't relevant to this case."

Instead, Stein says the case is about two boys who denied abuse and a year and a half later, after prodding from their father, said they were abused.

"Every single witnesses denies that it happened or could have happened. There is nobody that says they observed him doing anything inappropriate. Every single witness who was there has said he did absolutely nothing wrong and he couldn't have done anything wrong," Stein said. "He's worked with 100s of children over his career. And none of them have ever said he did anything."

Director and actor Timothy Busfield looks on before a hearing in the Second District Judicial Court at the Bernalillo County Courthouse on Jan. 20, 2026 in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

At least two of the women told police that when they refused Busfield's advances, he told them their future in the film industry was limited. One, then a 20-year-old apprentice at a Sacramento theater, said Busfield would often whisper in her ear, "You don't belong in this business. You have no talent."

One told police that Busfield and his wife, the actressMelissa Gilbert, encouraged her to do drugs with them.

Busfield is accused of abusing twin boys on the set of "The Cleaning Lady" when they were seven and eight years old. The crime thriller, mostly shot in an Albuquerque studio, followed a surgeon in the Philippines who comes to the U.S. for her son's medical treatment and winds up working as a cleaner for the mob.

The boys' attorney said that their refusal of Busfield's advances got them fired from the show, according to a court document filed by Busfield's defense team.

Busfield's attorney said in a court hearing on January 20 that the boys' parents were angry that their children were dropped from the TV series after three seasons. The parents, Busfield's attorneys say, were so dependent on their boys' salaries – about $2 million over three seasons – that they manufactured the abuse and manipulated their children to tell the lie.

The women say they contacted police to share their stories because they say what Busfield is accused of with the boys feels familiar.

He was charismatic. He was well liked.

He abused them on set, in a trailer or while working, they told police.

Some were afraid to tell anyone. Others say they did, but nothing was done.

"I've been telling this story my whole life because it's affected me and I wanted people to know about it. I just haven't gotten to tell it to police officers because I was too old at the point where I thought that anyone would take me seriously," one of the women told Albuquerque Police Detective Marvin Brown in a recorded interview on January 15.

USA TODAY is not naming the women who alleged the abuse.

Brown, who has worked on child sex abuse cases since 1989, has talked with more than two dozen cast and crew members, and reviewed therapy and medical reports for this case.

USA TODAY reviewed the recordings with six women Brown interviewed in January. Four alleged sexual abuse. One told him that he touched her inappropriately and when she refused his advances and later quit that Busfield told her she would never work in the film industry. Another woman said Busfield told her about his sexual fantasies and followed her car to a gas station when she tried to avoid him.

"It was just a creepy moment with the guy who obviously was ill," the woman told Brown in a January 23 interview. When she saw Busfield's arrest, she thought: "I thought these are not isolated cases. And your time is not the one and only time it's ever happened. This time it was a kid."

Brown told one of the six women he interviewed that some of the details could be used to show Busfield's character such as "how aggressive he is."

Here are their stories:

The intern

She was a16-year-old internworking at B Street Theatre in Sacramento in 1996. Busfield and his brother owned the theater.

She says Busfield asked her to clean his office one day when the other interns went to a warehouse.

"He grabbed me in between the legs and pulled me down from the ladder and turned me around and stuck his tongue down my throat and touched me all over aggressively," she told police. "And I pushed him off of me."

He had grabbed her breasts and pushed his hand into her pants.

"I was freaked out because at first I was just in shock that it was happening, but then he was so big and just gnarly," she told Brown in a recorded interview on January 15. "I was scared."

She pushed Busfield off.

She said she immediately told a friend and a woman who worked in the box office. She then left work and took a few days off. Busfield's brother, she says, told her if she didn't return, she would be fired.

Afterward, she said the interns no longer rehearsed with Busfield. "And so, everybody was mad at me, so that's why I thought it was my fault, because (the boys) were like, 'We don't get to work with Tim anymore?' "

Her father and her stepfather met with Busfield.

"Tim admitted doing this. He started crying with all of his Emmy award winning acting and I fell for it. I felt badly for him," her father said in a January 13 call with police. "So, I told him if he went to therapy for a year or two, that I would not report this to the police."

The father, a therapist, said he now worries he had been too empathetic to Busfield, at the expense of his daughter who is now 42.

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"His internship program was nothing more than a pool of young people that would do anything to get ahead in their acting career and looked at Tim Busfield as a God," he told Brown. "And he took advantage of them many times over many years."

<p style=Actor and director Timothy Busfield is be eligible for release from a New Mexico jail as he faces charges of child sex abuse, a judge ruled on Tuesday, Jan. 20, during a pretrial hearing in New Mexico.

The ruling was made during Busfield's first in-person appearance in a New Mexico courtroom. A tearful Melissa Gilbert, who was seated behind her husband in the gallery, quietly celebrated the judge's decision.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=During the Tuesday, Jan. 20, pretrial detention hearing, Judge David A. Murphy ruled there was no probable cause to show that "The West Wing" alum must remain behind bars due to a public safety risk. Murphy denied state prosecutors' motion and allowed the 68-year-old to be released of his own recognizance after spending a week in jail.

Busfield's wife attended and sat in the courtroom.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Timothy Busfield greets defense attorney Christopher Allen Dodd, right, before his hearing.

Busfield was charged with two counts of criminal sexual contact of a minor and one count of child abuse on Jan. 9, according to a criminal complaint obtained by USA TODAY. A warrant for his arrest was issued that day.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Busfield walked into the courtroom wearing an orange prison uniform and socks with open-toed slippers.

He put on brown-rimmed glasses to read over documents with his lawyers in the minutes leading up to the judge's arrival.

Busfield was charged with two counts of criminal sexual contact of a minor and one count of child abuse on Jan. 9, according to a criminal complaint obtained by USA TODAY. A warrant for his arrest was issued that day.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Gilbert previously submitted a letter in support of her actor husband and in it, called him "my love, my rock, my partner in business and life."

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Busfield takes notes during the hearing.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Busfield and his defense attorney Christopher Allen Dodd.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Busfield reviews documents with his defense attorneys Amber Fayerberg and Christopher Allen Dodd.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Defense attorney Amber Fayerberg talks with the director.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Busfield looks on before his Tuesday hearing.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Busfield's wife attends his hearing.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Defense attorney Amber Fayerberg, Timothy Busfield and defense attorney Christopher Allen Dodd listen as Bernalillo Country Deputy District Attorney Savannah Brandenburg-Koch, left, presents arguments.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Alan Caudillo, director of photography for the television show "The Cleaning Lady," was called to the witness stand by defense attorney Christopher Allen Dodd (not pictured) during the Timothy Busfield hearing in the Second District Judicial Court at the Bernalillo County Courthouse on Jan. 20, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Defense attorney Christopher Allen Dodd presents during the Timothy Busfield hearing.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=An attendee wipes away tears after director and actor Timothy Busfield arrived for a hearing in the Second District Judicial Court at the Bernalillo County Courthouse on Jan. 20, 2026.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=An exterior view shows the Bernalillo County Courthouse ahead of director and actor Timothy Busfield's pre-trial detention hearing on Jan. 20, 2026, in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

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

Melissa Gilbert supports Timothy Busfield in court amid child sex abuse charges

Actor and directorTimothy Busfieldis be eligible for release from a New Mexico jail ashe faces charges of child sex abuse, a judge ruled on Tuesday, Jan. 20, during a pretrial hearing in New Mexico.The ruling was made during Busfield's first in-person appearance in a New Mexico courtroom. A tearfulMelissa Gilbert, who was seated behind her husband in the gallery, quietly celebrated the judge's decision.

The apprentice

At 20, she left her boyfriend and job in San Francisco to take an apprenticeship at B Street Theater in Sacramento in 2000.

Two months into her new role, she told police, she stood in a lighting booth alone against a ladder when Busfield started kissing her and groping her. He touched her breasts, her butt, her genitals over her clothes.

"It felt like sexual assault," she told Brown. "He almost dove on me. I was in shock because I didn't see it coming."

"I said no. I'm not interested. And he was heaving. His body was heaving and he was upset and he was really angry that I did that to him," she said in an interview on January 23. "It just really, really shocked me and it really, really scared me. I mean, he's the owner of the theater and here I am an apprentice."

She said Busfield stormed out.

Then the harassment began and lasted the year-long apprenticeship, she told Brown.

"He would whisper in my ear that I was untalented," she said. "He would tell me that I was in the wrong business. He would say, 'You should get out now. You don't belong in this business. You have no talent.' "

"I remember being at some party, like a gala and he would make a point to find me and do that. He'd whisper these awful things in my ear, and he did it several times," she said.

She didn't tell anyone.

"I was also promised an equity card that they never gave me. I felt like it was a punishment for my refusal of him and that really upset me," she said. "He just made it known over and over and over again to me that he didn't like me, that he didn't want me there as an apprentice, that he thought I was an untalented piece of (profanity) who should get out of the business."

The extra

She was a 17-year-old extra on a Minnesota set for "Little Big League" in 1993 when Busfield invited her and a friend to his trailer. Busfield gave her beer. "They were trying to get us drunk," she told police.

When she tried to leave, she told police that he pinned her against a refrigerator and pushed his bare foot into her genitals.

She ran out of the trailer and told him she went to talk to Minneapolis police.

"They basically told me, 'Look, he's filming a show here. He'll be back in California in three weeks. The most that'll happen is he'll get a slap on the wrist," she told Brown in an interview recorded on January 15. "So, they really told me it wasn't worth their time for pursuing."

She went to therapy. In 1994, she sued Busfield in Los Angeles Superior Court, claiming Busfield assaulted her.

Busfield sued her attorneys for extortion. They settled privately, and later a judge dismissed the defamation suit and ordered Busfield to pay her law firm $150,000 it had cost to defend itself.

"Thank you for believing these children," she told Brown before ending the call.

The actress

In 1991, she was a 26-year-old actress filming "Strays" with Busfield.

An assistant director told her that Busfield wanted to practice a scene with her in his trailer, she told police.

"It happened so fast. He probably grabbed me around the chest area and threw me against the wall. And I mean, it was enough to shock and scare me, and I'm a pretty tough cookie," she told police in a January 19 interview. "He was trying to push me against the wall and basically dry hump me. I remember the erection and the tongue and the hands and throwing me up against a wall, like pinning me against the wall."

She said she ran to the assistant director and told him to keep Busfield away from her. She kept her distance for the rest of the shoot.

The assistant

She took a class from Busfield during her spring semester of her senior year at Michigan State University.

When she graduated with a film degree in May 2017, Busfield and his wife hired her as a personal assistant.

She managed schedules, took care of their dogs and picked up laundry. She was on call 24-7, she told police.

"The comments that Tim made towards me were pretty uncomfy," she told Brown in a January 15 interview. "I remember feeling very early on that I didn't necessarily feel safe alone with him. He would push my shoulders and kind of just give unwanted touch."

She said during a trip to Traverse City for a film festival, he hit on her, and wanted her to stay late and drink with him.

She declined his advances.

He drove them home from the trip. She told police she was in the passenger seat when he put his hand on her knee and said, "'You better be careful or I might start developing a crush for you or I might have a crush on you.' And then yeah, it got very serious very quickly after that and I did not say I was very silent and I remember crying and it was noticeably that I was crying."

She was 22.

She continued working for Busfield and Gilbert, following them to New York City. She worked on the movie "Guest Artist" with him.

"I came in Monday and he proceeded to yell at me for three hours saying that I've been so unprofessional. I will never make it in this industry. I'll never be able to learn from anybody but him," she told police. "Just very manipulative language being thrown at me."

While she said Busfield never attacked her, she wanted to share her experience. "He is very predatory. He's very manipulative. He's very charismatic. He's very charming when he needs to be."

Laura Trujillo is a national columnist focusing on health and wellness. She is the author of "Stepping Back from the Ledge: A Daughter's Search for Truth and Renewal," and can be reached at ltrujillo@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Exclusive – Tim Busfield accused of sexual abuse by four women

Tim Busfield was indicted on child sex abuse. Now four women say he abused them.

At least four women have told police that the Emmy-award winning actor and director Timothy Busfield groped their breast...
Jaylen Brown criticizes foul baiting after Celtics' close loss to Thunder: 'I just don't think it's basketball'

Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown expressed frustration during his first comments since Tuesday's ejection while playing the San Antonio Spurs. Following a tight loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday, Brown bemoaned players who try and "foul bait" to try and manipulate officials and get to the free-throw line.

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Brown, 29, said he doesn't engage in the practice, which he believes isat odds with the way the game should be played, per ESPN.

"So it's like, we commend players for playing the game the right way, but we give the benefit to those who necessarily are trying to manipulate the game into their advantage. I just don't think it's basketball. Let's just play basketball. All the foul baiting, I think it's whatever for me."

Brown's comments came after he was ejected from Tuesday's game for arguing with officials over a no-call. During the contest, Brown believed he should have received a foul callafter being knocked out of boundswith under four minutes to go in the second quarter. He received two technical fouls for arguing and was ejected from the contest. Brown wasn't pleased about that, hopping on social media at halftime to express his displeasure with the way the game was called.

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Brown's displeasure also came moments after theCeltics' narrow 104-102 lossto the Thunder on Thursday. The contest featured a record-setting performance by Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who passed Wilt Chamberlain for themost consecutive NBA games with at least 20 points scored.

Gilgeous-Alexander happens to be one of the names at the center of the "foul baiting" debate, with some arguing he searches for and exaggerates contact in order to get to the free-throw line. Gilgeous-Alexander ranks third in free-throw attempts per game with 9.2.

Brown did not specifically mention Gilgeous-Alexander following the Celtics' loss.

That was probably a good thing. In this particular contest, Brown managed to get to the free-throw line more. He attempted 14 free throws during the game, making 13 of them. Gilgeous-Alexander got to the line eight times, making seven free throws.

While Brown said he might have to consider flopping more after Thursday's game, he's done pretty well for himself without employing the tactic this season. Through 59 games, Brown is averaging a career-high 28.4 points and 7.1 rebounds. He finds himself firmly in the discussion for league MVP … even without trying to get more foul calls to go his way.

Jaylen Brown criticizes foul baiting after Celtics' close loss to Thunder: 'I just don't think it's basketball'

Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown expressed frustration during his first comments since Tuesday's ejection while pla...
Meghan Markle to Get $1 Million for Australian Retreat Appearance — Source

Meghan Markleis reportedly preparing for a high-profile trip to Australia that could also turn into a major payday. According to a source, the Duchess of Sussex has secured a lucrative appearance fee for her luxury retreat in Sydney.

The three-day event is expected to bring together hundreds of guests for conversations about personal growth, wellness, and community. While details about Markle's participation are still emerging, insiders claim the appearance is part of her expanding post-royal business ventures.

Meghan Markle 'is being paid extremely well' for retreat appearance in Australia, per source

According to an insider who spoke toNaughty But Nice, Meghan Markle is reportedly receiving a sizable fee to headline the upcoming retreat. The source claimed the duchess "is being paid extremely well," alleging that her appearance fee is around $1 million. The insider also said that nearly every aspect of the trip, from travel to accommodations, is being fully covered by the event organizers.

"Her fee is around a million dollars, and the trip itself is completely taken care of," the source claimed. The insider added that the visit is being organized as a "full VIP operation." They suggested that Markle is expected to travel alongside a small team that could include her assistant, security, and glam squad.

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The event is scheduled to take place at the InterContinental Sydney Coogee Beach, a luxury oceanfront hotel. The three-day gathering will host roughly 300 women who will attend a mix of wellness activities and discussions focused on personal growth and connection.

Ticket prices vary depending on the level of access guests choose. Standard packages for the weekend reportedly cost around $1,800, while premium tiers reportedly cost significantly more. Organizers claim those who purchase the highest-tier tickets will receive perks such as preferred seating at the gala dinner and a group photo opportunity with Markle.

The event comes as Markle continues to explore new professional opportunities in the lifestyle and wellness space. "Events like this are incredibly profitable," the source alleged, adding that Markle "can command huge speaking fees."

Prince Harry is also reportedly expected to join Markle during the visit to Australia. However, sources claim their children will remain in California. For Markle, the source suggested, the retreat is more than just a speaking engagement. "For Meghan, this trip is equal parts business and branding," the insider alleged.

The postMeghan Markle to Get $1 Million for Australian Retreat Appearance — Sourceappeared first onReality Tea.

Meghan Markle to Get $1 Million for Australian Retreat Appearance — Source

Meghan Markleis reportedly preparing for a high-profile trip to Australia that could also turn into a major payday. According to a source,...

 

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