US military says strikes on 3 boats in the eastern Pacific Ocean kill 8 people

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military said Monday that it attacked three boats accused of smuggling drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean, killing a total of eight people as scrutiny over the boat strikes is intensifying in Congress.

The military said in a statement on social media that the strikes targeted "designated terrorist organizations," killing three people in the first vessel, two in the second boat and three in the third boat. It didn't provide evidence of their alleged drug trafficking but posted a video of a boat moving through water before exploding.

President Donald Trump hasjustified the attacksas a necessary escalation to stem the flow of drugs into the United States and asserted the U.S. is engaged in an"armed conflict" with drug cartels. But the Trump administration is facingincreasing scrutiny from lawmakersover the boat strike campaign, which has killed at least 95 people in25 known strikessince early September, includinga follow-up strike that killed two survivorsclinging to the wreckage of a boat after the first hit.

The latest boat strikes come on the eve of briefings on Capitol Hill for all members of Congress as questions mount over the Trump administration's military campaign.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other top national security officials are expected to provide closed-door briefings for lawmakers in the House and Senate.

The campaign has ramped up pressure on Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, who has beencharged with narcoterrorismin the U.S. In a sharp escalation last week, U.S. forcesseized a sanctioned oil tankerthat the Trump administration hasaccused of smuggling illicit crude. Maduro has insisted the real purpose of the U.S. military operations is to force him from office.

The U.S. military has built up its largest presence in the region in decades and launched a series ofdeadly strikes on alleged drug-smuggling boatsin the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean. Trump saysland attacks are coming soonbut has not offered any details on location.

US military says strikes on 3 boats in the eastern Pacific Ocean kill 8 people

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. military said Monday that it attacked three boats accused of smuggling drugs in the eastern Pa...
Jeffrey Epstein, a man with grey hair wearing a bright blue polo shirt and an orange anorak, smiling broadly as he stands in front of his private plane - a black jet with chrome detailing on the wings and around the engines, with five porthole-style windows visible on the right-hand side.

Almost 90 flights linked to Jeffrey Epstein arrived at and departed from UK airports, some with British women on board who say they were abused by the billionaire, a BBC investigation has found.

We have established that three British women who were allegedly trafficked appear in Epstein's records of flights in and out of the UK and other documents related to the convicted sex offender.

US lawyers representing hundreds of Epstein victims told the BBC it was "shocking" that there has never been a "full-scale UK investigation" into his activities on the other side of the Atlantic.

The UK was one of the "centrepieces" of Epstein's operations, one said.

Testimony from one of these British victims helped convict Epstein's accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell of child sex-trafficking in the US in 2021. But the victim has never been contacted by UK police, her Florida-based lawyer Brad Edwards told the BBC.

The woman, given the name Kate in the trial, was listed as having been on more than 10 flights paid for by Epstein in and out of the UK between 1999 and 2006.

The BBC is not publishing further details about the women in the documents because of the risk this might identify them.

US lawyer Sigrid McCawley said the British authorities have "not taken a closer look at those flights, at where he was at, who he was seeing at those moments, and who was with him on those planes, and conducted a full investigation".

Epstein, a man with grey hair and glasses perched on his head, sitting on a bench outside a log cabin on the Balmoral estate, wearing a pale sweatshirt. His left arm is around Maxwell's shoulder, who rests her hand on his knee. Maxwell has short brown hair and wears and blue checked shirt.

Under the Jeffrey Epstein Transparency Act, the deadline to release all US government files on the sex-offender financier is Friday.

But the flight logs were among thousands of documents from court cases and Epstein's estate which have been already made public over the past year, revealing more about his time in the UK, such as trips to royal residences.

The BBC examined these documents as part of an investigation trying to piece together Epstein's activities in the UK.

It revealed that:

  • The incomplete flight logs and manifests record 87 flights linked to Epstein - dozens more than were previously known - arriving or departing from UK airports between the early 1990s and 2018

  • Unidentified "females" were listed among the passengers travelling into and out of the UK in the logs

  • Fifteen of the UK flights took place after Epstein's 2008 conviction for soliciting sex from a minor, which should have raised questions from immigration officials

Although Epstein died in jail in 2019, before his trial on charges of trafficking minors for sex, legal experts have told the BBC a UK investigation could reveal whether British-based people enabled his crimes.

Two months ago the BBC sent the Metropolitan Police, which has previously examined allegations about Epstein's activities in Britain, publicly available information about the UK flights with suspected trafficking victims on board.

Later, we sent the Met a detailed list of questions about whether it would investigate evidence of possible British victims of Epstein trafficked in and out of the UK.

The Met did not respond to our questions. On Saturday, it released a broader statement saying that it had "not received any additional evidence that would support reopening the investigation" into Epstein and Maxwell's trafficking activities in the UK.

"Should new and relevant information be brought to our attention", including any resulting from the release of material in the US, "we will assess it", the Met said.

Sigrid McCawley, a woman with wavey blond hair and wearing a black dress, pictured in close-up in an office, looking to the left of the camera, with the background out of focus.

US lawyer Brad Edwards, who has been representing Epstein victims since 2008, told us "three or four" of his clients are British women "who were abused on British soil both by Jeffrey Epstein and others".

Other victims were recruited in the UK, trafficked to the United States and abused there, he said.

Mr Edwards said he is also representing women of other nationalities who say they were trafficked to the UK for abuse by Epstein and others.

Our analysis shows Epstein used commercial and chartered flights, as well as his private planes, to travel to the UK and to arrange transport for others, including alleged trafficking victims.

More than 50 of the flights involved his private jets, mostly flying to and from Luton Airport, with several flights at Birmingham International Airport, and one arrival and departure each at RAF Marham in west Norfolk and at Edinburgh Airport.

Limited records of commercial and chartered flights taken by Epstein, or paid for by him, show dozens more journeys, mainly via London Heathrow, but also Stansted and Gatwick.

In a number of the logs of Epstein's private planes, including some detailing trips to the UK, women on the flight are identified only as unnamed "females".

A graphic showing entries in a page of the Epstein flight logs with airport codes in one column, the flight number in another and a column with notes which includes details of the passengers in most cases and the word

"He's absolutely choosing airports where he feels it will be easier for him to get in and out with victims that he's trafficking," said Ms McCawley.

Private aircraft did not have to provide passenger details to UK authorities before departure in the same way as commercial aircraft during the period covered by the documents we examined. The Home Office told us they were "not subject to the same centralised record-keeping".

That loophole was only closed in April last year.

Kate, the British woman who testified against Maxwell, was on some of the commercial flights in the records we examined. She described in court that she had been 17 when Maxwell befriended her and introduced her to Epstein - who then sexually abused her at Maxwell's central London home.

In the 2021 trial, she described how Maxwell gave her a schoolgirl outfit to wear and asked her to find other girls for Epstein. As well as the dozen flights to and from the UK, Kate told the court she had been flown to Epstein's island in the US Virgin Islands, New York and Palm Beach in Florida, where she says the abuse continued into her 30s.

A court sketch of Kate testifying in Ghislaine Maxwell's trial. Kate is shown as wearing a black shirt and having fair hair but her face is blurred in the sketch to protect her identity. She stands in the witness box with a judge wearing a black Covid-era face mask to the left of her. In front of her is the stenographer and one of the attorneys, a woman with a long brown ponytail. Ghislaine Maxwell is pictured in the foreground, frowning under her own black face mask, and looking away from the witness.

Mr Edwards, her lawyer, told BBC News that even after that testimony, Kate has "never been asked" by any UK authorities any questions about her experience - "not even a phone call".

He said that if British police were to launch an investigation into Epstein's activities and his enablers, Kate would be happy to help.

Prof Bridgette Carr, a human-trafficking expert at the University of Michigan Law School, said trafficking cases usually require many people working together.

"It's never just one bad person," she said. "You don't think about the accountant and the lawyer and the banker - or all the bankers - and all these people that had to implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, be OK with what was happening for it to continue."

There are also questions about how Epstein was able to travel freely to the UK after his 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor for sex, which meant he had to register as a sex offender in Florida, New York and the US Virgin Islands.

Epstein was released from prison in 2009 after serving 13 months. Documents suggest Epstein took a Virgin Atlantic flight from the US to London Heathrow in September 2010, just two months after he completed his probation on house arrest.

A graph showing the number of Epstein-related flights to the UK by year, starting at one flight a year in the early 1990s and sometimes rising, sometimes falling until it reaches a peak of 17 flights in 2006. There is a gap then until after his release from prison in 2009, when there are 15 flights scattered among the years up until 2018.

Home Office rules at the time said foreign nationals who received a prison sentence of 12 months or more should, in most cases, have been refused entry.

But immigration lawyer Miglena Ilieva, managing partner at ILEX Law Group, told us that US citizens did not usually require a UK visa for short stays, so there was no application process where they would be asked about criminal convictions.

"It was very much at the discretion of the individual immigration officer who would receive this person at the border," she said.

The Home Office said it does not hold immigration and visa records beyond 10 years and added "it is longstanding government policy that we do not routinely comment on individual cases".

During the 1980s, Epstein also used a foreign passport - issued in Austria with his picture and a false name - to enter the UK as well as France, Spain and Saudi Arabia, according to US authorities.

Epstein also listed London as his place of residence in 1985, when he applied for a replacement passport, ABC News has previously reported.

Brad Edwards, a man with short brown hair and a determined look on his face, pictured in a close-up portrait with the background blurred. He wears a navy suit, a pale blue shirt and a blue and grey tie.

In its statement on Saturday, the Met said it had contacted "several other potential victims" when it examined 2015 allegations by Virginia Giuffre that she had been trafficked for sexual exploitation by Epstein and Maxwell.

Ms Giuffre also said she was forced to have sex with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor on three occasions, including when she was 17 at Maxwell's home in London, in 2001. The former prince has consistently denied the allegations against him.

The Met said its examination of Ms Giuffre's claims "did not result in any allegation of criminal conduct against any UK-based nationals" and it concluded that "other international authorities were best placed to progress these allegations".

That decision was reviewed in August 2019 and again in 2021 and 2022 with the same result, it said.

But for lawyer Sigrid McCawley, the message the Met is sending to victims is "that if you come to law enforcement and this is a powerful person you're reporting on… it will not get investigated."

Epstein's UK flights had alleged British abuse victims on board - BBC investigation

Almost 90 flights linked to Jeffrey Epstein arrived at and departed from UK airports, some with British women on board who say they were ab...
Zelenskyy says proposals to end the war in Ukraine could be presented to Russia within days

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says proposals beingnegotiated with U.S. officialsfor a deal to end the fighting in Russia'snearly 4-year-old invasionof his country could be finalized within days, after which American envoys will present them to the Kremlin before possible further meetings in the U.S. next weekend.

A draft peace plan discussed with the U.S. during talks in Berlin on Monday is "not perfect" but is "very workable," Zelenskyy told reporters hours after the discussions. He cautioned, however, that some key issues — notably what happens to Ukrainian territory occupied by Russian forces — remain unresolved.

U.S.-ledpeace effortsappear to be picking up momentum. But as the spotlight shifts to Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin may balk at some of the proposals thrashed out by officials from Washington, Kyiv and Western Europe, including postwarsecurity guaranteesfor Ukraine.

Zelenskyy said that after the Berlin talks, "we are very close to (a deal on) strong security guarantees."

The security proposal will be based on Western help in keeping the Ukrainian army strong, an official from a NATO nation said, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.

"Europeans will lead a multinational and multi-domain force to strengthen those troops and to secure Ukraine from the land, sea and air, and the U.S. will lead a ceasefire monitoring and verification mechanism, with international participation," the official said.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov repeated Tuesday that Russia wants a comprehensive peace deal, not a temporary truce.

If Ukraine seeks "momentary, unsustainable solutions, we are unlikely to be ready to participate," he said.

"We want peace — we don't want a truce that would give Ukraine a respite and prepare for the continuation of the war," he told reporters. "We want to stop this war, achieve our goals, secure our interests, and guarantee peace in Europe for the future."

American officials said Monday there's consensus from Ukraine and Europe on about 90% of the U.S.-authored peace plan. U.S. President Donald Trump said: "I think we're closer now than we have been, ever" to a peace settlement.

Plenty of potential pitfalls remain, notably the land issue.

Zelenskyy reiterated that Kyiv rules out recognizing Moscow's control over any part of the Donbas, an economically important region in eastern Ukraine made up of Luhansk and Donetsk. Russia's army doesn't fully control either but Trump has previously indicated that Ukraine willhave to cede territory.

"The Americans are trying to find a compromise," Zelenskyy said, before visiting the Netherlands on Tuesday. "They are proposing a 'free economic zone' (in the Donbas). And I want to stress once again: a 'free economic zone' does not mean under the control of the Russian Federation."

Putin wants all theareas in four key regionsthat his forces have seized, as well as the Crimean Peninsula, which Moscow illegally annexed in 2014, to be recognized as Russian territory.

Zelenskyy warned that if Putin rejects diplomatic efforts, Ukraine expects increased Western pressure on Moscow, including tougher sanctions and additional military support for defense, such as enhanced air defense systems and long-range weapons.

Zelenskyy said that what's driving Kyiv officials in the negotiations is for Russia to be "held accountable for what it has done — for this war, for all the killings, for all the suffering."

Ukraine and the U.S. are preparing up to five documents related to the peace framework, several of them focused on security, Zelenskyy said.

He was upbeat about the progress in the Berlin talks.

"Overall, there was a demonstration of unity," Zelenskyy said. "It was truly positive in the sense that it reflected the unity of the U.S., Europe, and Ukraine."

Emma Burrows in London contributed.

Follow AP's coverage of the war in Ukraine athttps://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

Zelenskyy says proposals to end the war in Ukraine could be presented to Russia within days

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says proposals beingnegotiated with U.S. officialsfor a deal...
Jets D-lineman Jowon Briggs is a one-man band, a tenor who can tackle and play 12 instruments

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) — Jowon Briggs was sitting in aNew York Jetsspecial teams meeting earlier this season when Chris Banjo turned to him and made a request.

"I didn't know you could sing," said the special teams coordinator, who heard some buzz about Briggs' vocal talents. "Man, go ahead and sing something."

The spotlight was suddenly on the big defensive tackle. But Briggs is used to shining when it's time to perform — on and off the football field.

So, remaining seated in a room full of teammates and coaches, the 6-foot-1, 313-pound tenor smoothly belted out Tevin Campbell's 1990s R&B hit, "Can We Talk."

"I knew he could sing because he said he could, but then he sang in person — man, he has a beautiful voice," defensive tackle Harrison Phillips said.

"It was crazy, actually," safety Isaiah Oliver recalled. "I didn't know that about him prior to that meeting, so it was kind of shocking. But it was really good."

So much so, Briggs received a standing ovation.

"I think a lot of guys were more surprised with, one, the song I sang, and then how it actually sounded," a smiling Briggs said. "They were like, 'Oh, that can't be coming from Juwon!'"

But an even bigger surprise for some of Briggs' teammates is that he's a one-man band who has learned how to play 12 instruments to varying degrees of competency.

"It's just one of those things," he said. "Like I always say, everybody's got something. I just happen to be a musical guy."

That's putting it lightly.

There's Briggs' exceptional voice, of course. But he also has played the recorder, piano, violin, viola, cello, stand-up bass, bass guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, saxophone, flute and harmonica, and still owns a few of them. Briggs has messed around with drums, too, but doesn't count that as part of his musical repertoire.

"I've never seen anybody who could play as many instruments and be so gifted vocally," defensive tackle Jay Tufele said. "He's a beast on the field and off."

When it comes to football, Briggs has been one of the Jets' bright spots during a mostly dismal season. He has emerged as a pass-rushing, run-stuffing starter since replacing Quinnen Williams, who was traded last month to Dallas.

The 24-year-old D-lineman wasn't even on the team until a few weeks before the regular season, when the seventh-round pick of Cleveland last year out of the University of Cincinnati wasacquired by New York. He has 28 total tackles, six tackles for loss, a forced fumble, three sacks and nine quarterback hits.

"He's a big man, he's strong," coach Aaron Glenn said. "He's able to stop the run. He's been doing a good job of that, but what's been surprising — and I wouldn't say surprising — but what he's had the tick up in is his ability to rush the passer also. So, we want to be able to utilize that.

"I'm not saying that he's Mean Joe Greene or anything like that, but listen, he's been doing a really good job of being disruptive in the pass game."

House music

Briggs grew up in Cincinnati with four older sisters, a younger brother and parents who all loved music and sports, making for a seamless duet of life-long passions.

"With music, I'd probably say it started from the womb," Briggs said with a laugh. "I always say I kind of got the trickle-down effect. They've all been singing, dancing, acting and playing sports since before I was even thought of, so I kind of just fell into a musical household."

There were times one sibling would start playing an instrument, another would join, someone would start singing and then another would harmonize.

"We had a very loud house," a smiling Briggs said. "It was kind of like 'Battle of the Bands.' It was a lot of fun. My sisters all sing better than I can, but if you grow up in that kind of competitive household, you find out if you can sing or not fairly quickly. So I was able to figure out that I was decent."

And he was pretty good at making music, too.

Briggs started playing the recorder in kindergarten, followed by piano and then the violin in second grade.

"That's where my love for string instruments started," he said.

The viola came next, followed by the cello. Briggs added singing and acting to the mix when he attended a creative and performing arts school in Cincinnati. That carried over to Walnut Hills High School, where he got the lead role as Coalhouse Walker Jr. in "Ragtime" and performed in other productions. He also found a passion in the bass guitar.

"It's my favorite all the way," he said. "And I just picked up a new one."

He later learned the acoustic guitar, electric guitar, saxophone, flute and harmonica.

Gridiron star

Meanwhile, Briggs was also developing into a standout defensive tackle, drawing attention from major college football programs as one of Ohio's top high school players and winning his conference's defensive player of the year award as a senior.

He found balance with his schoolwork, sports and music — and deftly handled the pressures of all.

"Compared to singing a solo on stage," Briggs said, "being on a football field might as well be like a walk in a loud park."

When he got to the University of Virginia as a physics and music double-major, he joinedthe school's University Singersand its chamber choir, which performed around Charlottesville. Briggs also was part of an a cappella group called The Hullabahoos that went to London in 2020 just before the COVID-19 pandemic and sang at schools, churches, pubs and sometimes right on the streets.

He performed the national anthem before a few Virginia basketball games and did so again when he transferred to Cincinnati after two years.

Briggs' football talents also blossomed and he became a highly regarded NFL prospect in his three years with the Bearcats before getting drafted by the Browns.

"My parents did a good job of instilling good time management in me," he said. "And now it's just pretty much football and kids."

Mixing music and football

The married father of four uses music to decompress, whether that's playing his bass on the couch with his headphones while the kids are asleep or using computer programs to make recordings.

"I probably got a couple albums worth," Briggs said. "It's just a matter of when I feel like releasing them. Maybe one day I'll just be like, 'Might as well let one go and see what happens.'"

Briggs has a broad playlist that ranges from John Coltrane to Alice In Chains to Sarah Vaughan to Prince — and everything in between.

"He also raps," Phillips revealed of his teammate. "His singing voice and his rapping voice are two different buckets. I'm not artistic in any way, so major props to him on that."

Football remains the focus for Briggs, who hopes he can play several more years. But he also knows other talents might help him shine long after his last snap.

"You can always fall back on your voice," he said. "It's one of them things that shouldn't go out on you like your legs."

He'd also love to do some stage work down the line, "even if it's not off-Broadway or even off-off-Broadway," he joked.

As for his instrument-playing prowess, Briggs doesn't go around telling his teammates about that or how he next wants to master playing a five-string bass. But sometimes, someone will catch a peek of the amp tucked in his car's trunk — just in case he feels like plugging in that guitar.

"Then we go down the rabbit hole," Briggs said with a laugh. "But I don't think a lot of guys even know. And they might not ever know.

"I mean, until they see me put out a record 30 years from now."

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

Jets D-lineman Jowon Briggs is a one-man band, a tenor who can tackle and play 12 instruments

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) — Jowon Briggs was sitting in aNew York Jetsspecial teams meeting earlier this season when Chris ...
From grandpa to gridiron: Philip Rivers' inspiring NFL return

The "Gridiron Grandpa" thrilled both young and old alike with his return to the NFL 1,800 days after last throwing a touchdown pass.

Philip Rivers nearly helped the injury-riddled Colts (8-6) pull off the upset at Seattle, completing 18 of 27 passes for 120 yards and a touchdown with one sack and an interception in an18-16 lossto the 11-win Seahawks.

"I was just thankful — grateful — that I was out there," said Rivers, whose pick came on his final pass as he tried to force the ball down the field in the closing seconds. "And it was a blast — it was a blast — but obviously the emotions now are disappointment. This isn't about me. We have a team scrapping like crazy to try and stay alive and get into the postseason."

For much of the NFL, it was all about Rivers, who admitted he wasn't even sure how he'd play coming out of retirement as aPro Football Hall of Fame semifinalist.

"There is doubt, and it's real," Rivers said. "The guaranteed safe bet is to go home or to not go for it, and the other one is, 'Shoot, let's see what happens.' I hope in that sense that can be a positive to some young boys, or young people."

The high school team that Rivers coaches in his native Alabama, the St. Michael Catholic Cardinals, who finished 13-1 this season, gathered at a local restaurant in Fairhope for a watch party andwent wildwhenRivers threw a touchdown passto Josh Downs that put Indianapolis ahead 13-3.

And you can bet plenty of gray-haired football fans were just as thrilled as those teen-agers to see "Old Man Rivers" slinging it again and joining other sports greats who returned from retirement with less hair or more gray, including the likes of Michael Jordan, George Foreman, Mario Lemieux and Magic Johnson.

Rivers definitely has a dad bod, and last week he couldn't even tell reporters what his weight was, only that it was certainly higher than when he walked away after the 2020 season.

For nearly five years, Rivers' seemingly final touchdown toss was caught by tight end Jack Doyle in Indy's 27-24 loss to the Buffalo Bills in an AFC wild-card game on Jan. 9, 2021.

The one he threw to Downs on Sunday was Rivers'438th career touchdown toss, counting the playoffs, and few could have been more thrilling.

Rivers was the butt of plenty of old-man jokes and the subject of innumerable social media memes after the Colts called him out of retirement to try to salvage a once-promising season that's been sabotaged by injuries, including the one to starting quarterback Daniel Jones, whose stirring comeback season ended with a torn Achilles.

Rivers did nothing to embarrass himself Sunday, not even when he slipped down without contact on one drop-back before scrambling to his feet and darting up the middle.

Rivers insisted he enjoyed the few hard hits he took from the Seahawks' stout defense, saying, "I never minded that part of it. My wife always tells me I'm crazy because there's been times in the last three or four years I said, 'I wish I could just throw one and get hit — hard.'"

Tim Hasselbeck, the 47-year-old ex-NFL QB turned ESPN analyst who recently became head football coach at The Ensworth High School in Nashville, was thoroughly impressed by the way Rivers handled himself after just one short week of practice with the Colts.

"That's something that people need to understand, too," Hasselbeck said on the "Scott Van Pelt Show," stressing that Rivers risked not just his health but his reputation by returning to the gridiron.

"He's been out of the game for nearly five years. The risk associated with (returning to the NFL): getting hurt, tearing your knee up, blowing out an Achilles — and then more honestly — humiliating yourself by playing," Hasselbeck said. "There were risks associated with what he's doing."

"I work with colleagues that were just flat wrong," Van Pelt concurred, "that acted like it was embarrassing that this guy was going to go do this. No, it wasn't. They lost by two points to one of the best teams in football."

Colts coach Shane Steichen on Monday confirmed that Rivers will be the Colts' starter against the San Francisco 49ers (10-4) next Monday night.

If he stays upright and keeps the starting job, it won't get any easier for Rivers, who would have to face the AFC South-leading Jacksonville Jaguars (10-4) on a short Christmas week before a trip to Houston (9-5) to close out the regular season.

Yet, if Rivers can lead them to a couple of wins, the topsy-turvy AFC playoff picture that's missingPatrick Mahomesand Joe Burrow might very well feature the 44-year-old gridiron grandpa who last won a playoff game in 2018 with the then-San Diego Chargers.

Behind the Call analyzes the biggest decisions in the NFL during the season.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

From grandpa to gridiron: Philip Rivers' inspiring NFL return

The "Gridiron Grandpa" thrilled both young and old alike with his return to the NFL 1,800 days after last throw...

 

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