Michigan State finalizes deal to hire ex-Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald to replace Jonathan Smith

Michigan State has secured its replacement for Jonathan Smith.

The Spartans finalized a five-year deal to hire Pat Fitzgerald as their next head coach on Monday afternoon, according toYahoo Sports' Ross Dellenger. Themove came just one day after Michigan State fired Smith, though they were reportedly locked in on Fitzgerald for the job almost immediately.

A new era begins in East Lansing!Welcome home, Coach Fitzgerald!pic.twitter.com/Ds77loJOlf

— Michigan State Football (@MSU_Football)December 1, 2025

"I am honored to be named the head football coach at Michigan State University," said Fitzgerald said in a statement. "I'd like to thank President Guskiewicz and athletics director Batt for this opportunity. This is a program with a deep and storied tradition, a passionate fan base, and a commitment to excellence that extends far beyond the football field. What excited me most about this opportunity was the vision for what Michigan State can be for years to come. We will restore tradition, and I'm eager to earn the trust of our players, alumni, and fans while competing at the highest level."

The job will mark Fitzgerald's first since he was fired from Northwestern ahead of the 2023 campaign following a hazing scandal within the program. Fitzgerald spent 17 seasons with the Wildcats, and he had three 10-win seasons there before finishing with a 110-101 record.

Fitzgerald was fired in the summer of 2023, shortly after he was initially put on a two-week suspension after the hazing allegations were first made public. He reached an undisclosed settlement with the university in August afterfiling a wrongful termination lawsuit, and he said in a statement at the time that it was proventhat he did not know about the hazing allegationswhile he was head coach.

Northwestern went just 4-10 over Fitzgerald's final two seasons, and 1-11 in 2022. They've since hired David Braun to replace him, and he's led the Wildcats over the past three seasons.

Fitzgerald will now enter just his second head coaching job in college football and take over for Smith, who struggled during his two seasons with the Spartans. The team went just 4-8 this season, marking its second losing campaign since Smith took over after a six-year run at Oregon State. Smith finished with a 9-15 record in East Lansing.

Though Fitzgerald has been away from the game for a few years, there's no doubt he knows the Big Ten landscape well and is still a very capable coach for Michigan State — especially during an offseason where so many top jobs have been open throughout the Power Four conferences. Now he'll have to try and quickly get the Spartans back to the top of the conference, a place they haven't been consistently in years.

Michigan State finalizes deal to hire ex-Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald to replace Jonathan Smith

Michigan State has secured its replacement for Jonathan Smith. The Spartans finalized a five-year deal to hire P...
Charles Barkley, Dick Vitale to join forces on 2 college basketball broadcasts, including Vitale's first NCAA tournament game

The partnership between TNT Sports and ESPN is bringing a pair of basketball icons together. Charles Barkley and Dick Vitale will pair up to call two college basketball games this season — one in the regular season and one in the NCAA tournament. ESPN announced the news Monday.

Barkley and Vitale will first work together Dec. 13 when No. 18 Kentucky hosts No. 22 Indiana for a broadcast on ESPN. Dave O'Brien will call play-by-play for that game while Barkley and Vitale offer color analysis.

They'll work again together to call a First Four NCAA tournament game in March that will be broadcast on truTV. The play-by-play announcer for that game has not been announced.

Dick Vitale will pair up with Charles Barkley to call two college basketball games this season.

Vitale has been the voice of ESPN's college basketball coverage since the network's inception in 1979. With CBS holding the rights to the NCAA tournament, Vitale's never called a tournament game.

But CBS partnered with TNT Sports to expand its tournament coverage in recent years. And ESPN and Turner Sports have partnered for multiple deals, includingthe high-profile arrangement for ESPN to carry TNT's beloved NBA studio show "Inside the NBA"starting this season.

With that, the door opened for the Barkley-Vitale pairing announced Monday. Barkley has been a mainstay of TNT Sports' NCAA tournament studio coverage alongside his "Inside the NBA" co-hosts Ernie Johnson and Kenny Smith. Now he'll work the game broadcast mic alongside Vitale.

Together at last

Barkley and Vitale have long wanted to work together. They both spoke about their desire to team up on the air fora 2013 interviewwith Sports Illustrated's Richard Deitsch.

"I told these guys one of my goals is to do a game with Dick Vitale," Barkley told Deitsch. "I would love to do a game with Dick Vitale because I think he has been great for college basketball. It'd be good for the game."

Vitale shared similar a similar sentiment with Deitsch.

"Both of us have a love for the game and it would be a lot of fun," Vitale said. "You never know what will come out of his mouth, and I like to think my energy and enthusiasm would jump out with Charles."

Vitale, 86, has stepped away from broadcasting on multiple occasions in recent years across repeated bouts with cancer. After beingdeclared cancer-free in January,Vitale returned to the micon Nov. 4 for a game between Texas and Duke.

Charles Barkley, Dick Vitale to join forces on 2 college basketball broadcasts, including Vitale's first NCAA tournament game

The partnership between TNT Sports and ESPN is bringing a pair of basketball icons together. Charles Barkley and Dick Vit...
USA Gymnastics and Olympic sports watchdog failed to stop coach's sexual abuse, lawsuits allege

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Two gymnasts who say they were sexually abused at an elite academy in Iowa filed lawsuits Monday against the sport's oversight bodies, alleging they failed to stopSean Gardnerfrom preying on girls despite repeated complaints about the coach's behavior.

The lawsuits allege USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Center for SafeSport were told about "inappropriate and abusive behaviors" in December 2017, including that Gardner was hugging and kissing girls and engaging in other grooming behaviors while coaching at a Mississippi gym.

The organizations failed to properly investigate, revoke Gardner's coaching credentials, report him to law enforcement or take other actions to protect athletes, the lawsuits allege. They claim the inaction enabled Gardner to get a job at Chow's Gymnastics and Dance Institute in West Des Moines, Iowa, in 2018, where the gymnasts say they and other preteen and teenage girls were abused despite additional complaints about Gardner.

The institute was founded by prominent coach Liang "Chow" Qiao, who is known for producing Olympic champions and was also named as a defendant in the lawsuits.

Lawsuits are first filed since Gardner's arrest

The lawsuits, filed in Polk County, Iowa, are the first civil cases brought in an abuse scandal that came to light in aseriesofreportsby The Associated Press after the FBI arrested Gardner in August. They allege USA Gymnastics and SafeSport, the watchdog created by Congress to investigate misconduct in Olympic sports in the aftermath of the Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal, missed repeated opportunities to stop Gardner.

The center said Monday it had not been served with the lawsuit and typically does not comment on litigation. It noted that its 2022 temporary suspension of Gardner came "upon receiving the first report of sexual misconduct" against him and was published on itsonline database of disciplinary action. That was "the only reason Gardner was barred from coaching young athletes in the years until his arrest," it said.

Gardner's sanction escalated from "temporary suspension" to "ineligible" on Sept. 12 due to his arrest.

Responding to questions in August about the original AP reporting, the center said it had been notified by USA Gymnastics that a gym where Gardner worked had resolved a 2018 case involving the coach that didn't pertain to sexual misconduct. The center said coaches at Chow's were aware of subsequent allegations involving sexual misconduct but failed to report them.

USA Gymnastics spokesperson Jill Geer said Monday the organization appreciates "the seriousness of this case" but declined further comment.

Gardner faces federal child pornography charges for allegedly placing a hidden camera in a bathroom at a gymnastics studio in Purvis, Mississippi, between December 2017 and April 2018 to record his students. Investigators say he created videos showing close-up images of at least 10 minors naked or undressing, which they recovered from his computers last year while investigating reports of sexual abuse.

Gardner has pleaded not guilty and has been jailed pending trial, which is scheduled for next month. His attorney didn't immediately return a message seeking comment.

Plaintiffs in lawsuits are now college students

The lawsuits allege the plaintiffs were 11- and 12-year-old trainees at Chow's who dreamed of one day competing in the Olympics when they began training under Gardner in 2018. They say they were subjected to "physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, harassment and molestation" until they quit the gym years later.

The plaintiffs include Iowa Stategymnast Finley Weldon, who reported claims of abuse by Gardner to police and later went public in an AP interview. The other is 19-year-old University of Iowa student Hailey Gear, who also wants to go public with her allegations, according to her attorney, Elizabeth Pudenz. They seek unspecified damages for their injuries and treatment expenses. Several other former gymnasts have reported abuse, and more lawsuits are expected.

The AP generally does not identify victims of sexual abuse unless they come forward publicly.

In addition to USA Gymnastics and SafeSport, the defendants named in the lawsuit are Qiao, the former Chinese gymnast who opened Chow's in 1998 and coached Olympic gold medalists Shawn Johnson and Gabby Douglas; Qiao's wife, Liwen Zhuan, a coach who helps run the gym; and their family corporations that own the business and the property on which it sits.

Lawsuits detail concerns over Gardner's 'grooming behavior'

The lawsuits allege all the defendants were negligent in how they responded to reports of Gardner's misconduct.

The parents of a gymnast filed reports with USA Gymnastics and SafeSport in December 2017 alleging Gardner required girls to give him long hugs after every training in Mississippi and that he kicked one girl out who refused, the lawsuits claim. He allegedly had an improper closed-door meeting with a girl whom he verbally abused, kissed gymnasts on their foreheads, drank alcohol excessively in front of them, made sexual jokes to girls and inappropriate comments on social media, and stalked one girl who he was instructed to stop contacting, the lawsuits claim.

Gardner's then-boss also reported to USA Gymnastics in January 2018 that Gardner had engaged in "grooming behaviors," but he was allowed to continue coaching.

The lawsuits allege SafeSport received another report from a parent at Chow's "concerning improper behaviors" by Gardner in September 2020 but failed to investigate.

The lawsuits allege Qiao and Zhuan failed to conduct an adequate background check before hiring Gardner and continued to employ him even after receiving complaints that he inappropriately touched girls while spotting them during exercises.

Qiao and Zhuan didn't immediately return a message left at Chow's. The gym has said that Gardner passed a standard background check, and it fired Gardner after he was suspended by SafeSport in July 2022, even though "there had been no finding of misconduct at that time."

Pells reported from Denver.

USA Gymnastics and Olympic sports watchdog failed to stop coach's sexual abuse, lawsuits allege

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Two gymnasts who say they were sexually abused at an elite academy in Iowa filed lawsuits Monday a...
National Guard shooting suspect served in bloody, CIA-led 'zero units'

WASHINGTON –The Afghan manaccused ofshooting two National Guard soldiersblocks from the White House last week served with CIA-backed "zero units" in Afghanistan, paramilitary groups that carried out secret raids against suspected terrorists and U.S. enemies as part of the CIA's counterterrorism program.

Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the 29 year old who allegedly shot the two West Virginia National Guardsmen in front of a Metro station in downtown Washington, served in the elite tactical units, according to Sami Sadat, the former commanding general of the Afghan Army's Special Operations Corps. The group worked with U.S. forces on counterterrorism operations before the Taliban takeover.

A motive in the shooting has not been revealed, but reports that he served in the ultra-secret, violent units that critics compared to "death squads" for their human rights abuses have spurred questions of whether his experiences left him with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Community members prepare a portrait of West Virginia National Guard Specialist Sarah Beckstrom for a vigil in her honor at the town hall on Nov. 28, 2025 in Webster Springs, WV. Beckstrom was one of two West Virginia Guardsmen attacked while guarding Washington, DC. Anna Fletcher, a classmate of West Virginia National Guard Specialist Sarah Beckstrom at the town hall on Nov.28, 2025 in Webster Springs, WV. Community members gather at a vigil for West Virginia National Guard Specialist Sarah Beckstrom at the town hall on Nov. 28, 2025 in Webster Springs, WV. Beckstrom was one of two West Virginia Guardsmen attacked while guarding Washington, DC. Anna Casey, a local in the community, signs a posterboard sign as people attend a vigil for West Virginia National Guard member Sarah Beckstrom, who was killed in a shooting in Washington D.C., at Webster Springs city hall, WV on Nov. 28, 2025. Major Jamie Cox of the West Virginia National Guard, right, comforts Eva Short and Steve Meyokovich at a vigil for Specialist Sarah Beckstrom at the town hall on November 28, 2025 in Webster Springs, West Virginia. Beckstrom was one of two West Virginia Guardsmen attacked while guarding Washington, DC. Community members gather at a vigil for West Virginia National Guard Specialist Sarah Beckstrom at the town hall on Nov. 28, 2025 in Webster Springs, West Virginia. Beckstrom was one of two West Virginia Guardsmen attacked while guarding Washington, DC. Community members prepare a portrait of West Virginia National Guard Specialist Sarah Beckstrom for a vigil in her honor at the town hall on Nov. 28, 2025 in Webster Springs, West Virginia. Beckstrom was one of two West Virginia Guardsmen attacked while guarding Washington, DC.

Vigil held for slain National Guard member Sarah Beckstrom

In the wake of the shooting, the Trump administrationpointed the fingerat Biden-era immigration policies and refugee programs that have brought thousands of Afghans who served with the U.S. military into the country after the 2021 withdrawal from Afghanistan.

Lakanwalentered the country that year through one such program, Operation Allies Welcome, which broughtnearly 200,000 Afghansinto the country.

Lakanwal served with elite, US-backed teams

Sadat said Lakanwal was among thousands of Afghans who served in the elite, tactical units. The unit he served with was called NDS (National Directorate of Security) 03, or the Kandahar Strike Group, according to Sadat.

Sadat now chairs the Afghanistan United Front, a movement opposing the Taliban.

The Kandahar Strike Force operated out of Camp Gecko, a U.S. base in the former compound of Taliban founder Mullah Omar, according toreports.

The CIA confirmed that Lakanwal served under it in Afghanistan, but declined to comment on what role he played orreportsof the units' human rights abuses.

When the Taliban took over after the end of the 20-year U.S. occupation of Afghanistan, the United States welcomed Afghans who had fought alongside Americans as they feared reprisals from the new regime.

"In the wake of the disastrous Biden Withdrawal from Afghanistan, the Biden Administration justified bringing the alleged shooter to the United States in September 2021 due to his prior work with the U.S. Government, including CIA, as a member of a partner force in Kandahar, which ended shortly following the chaotic evacuation," CIA director John Ratcliffe said in a statement.

Sadat and others familiar with the units described them as elite, specialized squads engaged in secret counterterrorism operations that ran parallel to – but compartmentalized from – the U.S. military's main larger mission in Afghanistan.

Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the 29-year-old man accused of shooting two National Guard members near the White House, served with CIA-backed 'zero units' in Afghanistan.

The first zero units were formed months after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. At their height in late 2010 and 2011, an average of 19 raids were carried out nightly in Afghanistan, according to an Open Society Foundation report.

Guided by CIA intelligence and accompanied by U.S. special operations personnel, the zero units conducted tactical "night raids" against suspected terrorists and Taliban militants.

"These units were very highly trained and did some of the most heavy fighting throughout the war," Mick Mulroy, a former CIA Paramilitary Operations officer and former deputy assistant secretary of Defense, told USA TODAY.

"A whole generation of CIA and military officers served alongside them, embedded with them, and many owe their life to members of this unit," Mulroy added. "They were the first to be stood up and the last to leave Afghanistan."

Sadat said the units were among the most effective in combatting the Taliban on the ground. The majority came to the United States after the 2021 withdrawal, since they faced extreme danger of being hunted down and killed by the Taliban, who hold a special hatred for the zero units, Sadat said.

Shawn VanDiver, the president of AfghanEvac, an organization that helps bring Afghan allies to the U.S., said Lakanwal first started serving in a Zero Unit when he was 15 years old. Lakanwal was likely "exposed to all sorts of trauma" in that position, he said.

Afghans who served in zero units have undergone among "the most extensive" checks of any foreigners hoping to enter the U.S., Mulroy said. It includes employment verification with the U.S. government, approval from the U.S. embassy in Afghanistan, eight different database checks, biometric registration and multiple "extensive" in person interviews, he said.

More:Kristi Noem alleges National Guard shooting suspect 'radicalized' in US

The CIA handed the Zero Units intelligence to conduct a raid, usually during the nighttime, Sadat said. Sometimes, the CIA would also lend air support or fly drones to back up their raids, he said. They primarily operated in the countryside, he added.

But the units' disregard for the rules of engagement and pattern of being "heavy handed with civilians" gave them a "blackened" reputation, Sadat said.

That sowed bitter tension with the Afghan government, which pressed for years, without success, to wrest control of the units from the CIA, he said.

"It was like a blame game. The damage was terrible and it made the Afghan government look like" it was not in charge, he added.

Zero units killed hundreds of civilians, reports say

Human rights organizations and news outlets have collected evidence of hundreds of civilian casualties and possible war crimes linked to the Zero Units. At least 452 civilians were killed in 107 raids, but that number is likely a significant undercount, a 2022 Pro Publica reportfound.

A 2019 Human Rights Watchreportdocumented numerous cases of "summary execution" and "enforced disappearances" carried out by the CIA-backed units. Those killed in the raids included children, elderly women, teachers and construction workers. According to the report, the units often operated from faulty intelligence that came from people with biased motivations or deemed people guilty "by association."

Patricia Gossman, associate Asia director at Human Rights Watch and the report's author, said local communities lived in fear of the seemingly arbitrary raids. She recalled cases of people dragged out of their homes, shot in the eyes and mouth. Bodies were sometimes left in the open to leave a fearful message, she said. In one instance, a unit stormed a medical clinic, shot two medical workers, then dragged out a doctor, who was never seen again, she said.

"You never knew when it might happen. You never knew when they might shoot. It inspired fear in the population," Gossman said.

Gossman said people complained to local officials, but investigations were stonewalled and shut down. People were left with no answers, and the United States never took accountability for the "dangerous culture of impunity that accompanied these operations," she added.

"It's the utter lack of transparency that is most concerning," she said. "There was no sense that there needed to be accountability for those actions."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Afghan man charged in DC shooting served in bloody, CIA-backed units

National Guard shooting suspect served in bloody, CIA-led 'zero units'

WASHINGTON –The Afghan manaccused ofshooting two National Guard soldiersblocks from the White House last week served with...
Wrongfully convicted Michigan dad sues: 'They did me wrong'

Behind prison walls, they called him "Baby Killer."

It was a torturous nickname for Michael Griffin, who was serving a life sentence for the death of his infant daughter — a crime he adamantly denies. He said she fell from a baby swing inside their home in Flint, Michigan, and died the next day from a failed surgery. But the police, he said, were hell-bent on blaming him for her death, accusing him of abusing her, and trying to bully a confession out of him.

"'Tell us what you did or the doctors won't help your daughter,'" Griffin recalled the police telling him during a three-hour-long interrogation as his daughter clung to life. He described it as a futile back-and-forth:

"I'm telling you the truth."

Michael Griffin, 35, of Flint, sits on a couch with his wife, Kalesha Journeay, 33, in the living room of their home in Flint on Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025. When he was 19, Griffin's daughter died after falling from a baby swing, and he was blamed for her death. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, though he would profess his innocence for the next 14 years. He was exonerated after medical evidence showed a botched surgery caused her daughter's death. He is now suing over his wrongful conviction, alleging the police, hospital and forensic officials covered up their mistakes.

"No, you're not."

"She fell out of her swing."

"No, she didn't."

"They kept telling me I was lying," recalled Griffin, who at 19 would get charged, convicted at trial and sent to prison, where the "Baby Killer" taunts would tear his guts out for years, triggering fights with those who dared utter it.

"I had to keep telling myself, 'I didn't do it,' Even if the truth never came out," Griffin said in a recent, exclusive interview with the Free Press.

But the truth did eventually come out, Griffin said. In 2023 he was exonerated with the help of the Michigan Innocence Clinic and attorney Mike Morse. Two years into his freedom, he is now suing to hold those accountable for, as he puts it, framing him for a crime that he never committed, and robbing him of 14 years of his life.

'I kept telling myself — I know they did me wrong'

In a wrongful prosecution lawsuit unfolding in U.S. District Court, Griffin alleges that his daughter's death was caused by a failed surgical procedure, and that police, doctors and forensic officials conspired to transform a "tragic household accident into a fabricated homicide." Specifically, the suit alleges, investigators and medical personnel built a false narrative of child abuse, coerced a confession through fear and deceit, then falsified police and medical reports and altered autopsy findings to match their story.

"When I was locked up, I kept telling myself, 'I know they did me wrong,' " Griffin said. "But I didn't think it could be proven."

Griffin's lawsuit is against the city of Flint, Genesee County, two Flint police officers, three doctors, three officials with the medical examiner's office and the Hurley Medical Center where his daughter was taken for treatment. Through multiple lawyers and agency officials, all declined comment for this article.

Among the lawsuit's allegations:

  • There was no physical evidence of blunt force trauma, yet the police and doctors pushed this theory, and a medical examiner listed it as cause of death on the autopsy report, which also noted the existence of a prior head injury, a bruise on the baby's face and the occurrence of an unsuccessful craniotomy. Yet, "without any evidence" that the injuries were caused by the dad as opposed to the failed craniotomy, the medical examiner determined that cause of death was "Blunt Force Injury of the Head" and the manner of death was "homicide."

  • In the middle of Griffin's trial, the autopsy report was changed after a doctor testified that no evidence existed to support a finding of "Blunt Force Trauma." A medical examiner then sent the prosecution an "updated" autopsy report, changing the cause of death to "Abusive Head Injury." A doctor testified that this phrase is used when there is no way to determine how injuries occur, and "admitted" that it was used "to reflect that the doctors did not know what happened to Naviah."

  • A doctor had discovered a prior head injury in the baby, yet the jury was never informed about how the baby's fall could have reinjured that previous injury. As it turned out, a CT scan showed a new brain bleed had developed, which triggered the need for the surgery that ultimately failed.

  • The police report stated that Griffin's interrogation was videotaped. The prosecutor also said the same at trial, yet the videotape has never been produced. Griffin's lawyers filed a Freedom of Information Act request for it, but the city of Flint said the video doesn't exist.

  • Griffin was arrested without a warrant.

  • A medical examiner testified that she performed an autopsy on the child at 9 a.m., but the baby was still in surgery at that time, and was not pronounced dead until 1:10 p.m.

  • An investigator with the medical examiner's office lied in his written report — and later to jurors — when he claimed that the mom told him that she believed her daughter had been abused by the father. The mom testified that this never happened.

"There were desperate measures taken here to ensure that Michael would be blamed for the death of his daughter," said attorney Adam Akeel, who is representing Griffin in the lawsuit. He noted the prosecution "showed a shaken-baby video to the jury" when there was no evidence supporting this theory.

"It's them pushing this false narrative to pin it on the dad," Akeel said, "when they all admit that they had no facts to support that it was caused by him."

How Griffin went from grieving parent to murder suspect in 24 hours

According to court records, trial testimony, interviews with lawyers and Griffin, these are the events that unfolded in the fall of 2009, when Griffin's daughter wound up in the Emergency Room at Hurley Medical Center in Flint with a bruise under her eye:

On Sept. 30, 2009, Griffin was home with his daughter while the baby's mom walked to a corner market to buy snacks at about 5 p.m. Both parents were just 19, living in a two-story apartment in Flint with baby Naviah, whose dad had placed her in a motorized infant swing upstairs while her mom went out. He secured her with the attached tray that latched across her lap. He did not use the seat belt. He then went downstairs and played video games, when eventually, he heard a loud thump. He said he thought it might be the neighbors.

But when he went upstairs, he said he found the baby face down on the hardwood floor.

Michael Griffin, center, 33, of Flint, has his hands massaged by his then-fiancée, Kalesha Journeay, 31, while sitting on the front porch of his mother's house on Flint's west side on Friday, May 5, 2023, shortly after Griffin was released from prison on bond. When he was 19, Griffin's daughter died after falling from a baby swing, and he was blamed for her death. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, though he would profess his innocence for the next 14 years. He was exonerated after medical evidence showed a botched surgery caused her daughter's death. He is now suing over his wrongful conviction, alleging the police, hospital and forensic officials covered up their mistakes.

"I panicked and picked her up," Griffin recalled. "I remember this clear as day — as soon as I picked her up, her head went limp on my shoulder. She wasn't crying."

Griffin said he set her on the bed when he heard a knock at the door. It was Naviah's mom. He ran downstairs with the baby and opened the door. Before he could say what had happened, the mom grabbed the baby, who had stopped breathing, ran out the front door and yelled for help. An apartment security guard performed CPR on the baby and resuscitated her before the ambulance arrived and transported her to Hurley Medical Center.

When she got to the hospital, she had a bruise under her right eye and no other external injuries. But the parents would learn overnight that her brain had swollen, and that she would need surgery. A CT scan had revealed a "tiny" and "thin" bleed on the left side of Naviah's brain, and a cystic hygroma — or benign tumor — was discovered on the right side of her brain. This meant that a prior injury had occurred and healed, but was "dangerously susceptible to reinjury," the lawsuit states.

After discovering the existence of the cystic hygroma, hospital officials contacted Child Protective Services and the Flint police, who would interrogate both parents at the police station. Mom went first, telling police that she and Griffin had a good relationship, that he treats her and the baby well and had never abused either of them; and that she had no reason to believe that he would harm their child.

Mom also informed the officers that Naviah had a tendency to kick up the latched tray and pull herself up and out of her swing, and that she had previously done so on multiple occasions.

The police, though, allegedly criticized the mom for trusting the dad, telling her the doctors did not believe Griffin's story about the swing fall, and neither did they.

Fifteen years later, Naviah's mom — who said she initially "didn't want to believe" that Griffin could have hurt their child — says after years of researching the case and rethinking the details, the medical testimony and Griffin's story, she doesn't believe Griffin is telling the truth. And though she testified for the prosecution at his trial — at times providing favorable testimony for the dad — she said she believes Griffin did something that caused her child's death, and is hiding something.

Mom: 'Something happened at that house … that he's not taking accountability for'

For 36-year-old Alecia Patton, Naviah's mother, the pain, sadness and trauma of losing a child has never gone away. Though grateful for the experience to become a mom again — she now has a 10-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter — she still grieves Naviah everyday, she said. And the memory of what happened that tragic day still haunts her, in part, because she believes Griffin is hiding something.

"Something happened at the house that caused her to go to the hospital that he's not taking accountability for," Patton said in a recent interview with the Free Press.

That hospital visit was especially traumatic for Patton, who also lost her father that day. He had come to the hospital to be with her after learning about Naviah, when he died suddenly of a health issue inside his car in the parking lot, just 10 minutes after Naviah died.

"He didn't want her to be alone — that's what I tell myself to keep going," Patton said.

With back-to-back tragedies to contend with, Patton would get hit with another major event in just a matter of days. Her baby's father would be charged with murder.

"I didn't want to believe it," said Patton, who recalled going through a mix of emotions: Anger. Confusion. Sadness. But as time passed, she said, and she had a chance to research the case and process the medical information, she came to a conclusion:

"I was faced with reality — that he's the reason behind her being deceased," said Patton, who cut off all ties with Griffin shortly after her daughter's death.

Patton said she didn't believe Griffin's "she fell out of the swing" explanation: "It just didn't make sense. It never did make sense."

Patton, who is now a certified nursing assistant, said she also doesn't believe that her daughter died from a failed surgery, maintaining that it was Griffin who caused her daughter to be in the hospital in the first place.

"If, whatever happened at the house hadn't happened, then the doctors would not have had to try to get the fluid off her brain," Patton said. "I asked them to do what they could do to try to save her, and they did the best they could do."

'I want to know the truth ... She didn't deserve what happened to her'

It's been more than 10 years since Patton has spoken to Griffin. Their last conversation was a prison phone call.

"I asked him to tell me the truth of what happened," recalled Patton, who said Griffin told her that if she came in person to see him in prison, "he would tell me what happened."

But that prison visit never occurred. Patton said her application to visit him was denied, and she didn't pursue the matter further.

Still, she said, she has never stopped wondering what happened.

"I want to know the truth," she said. "Something happened. … I'm the mother. And I don't know what happened to my first-born child. It's not fair. She didn't deserve what happened to her."

When Griffin was exonerated, Patton said she was blindsided.

"I went into a dark hole. … I wasn't expecting it," Patton said, later adding: "Everybody is saying he deserves a second chance. I feel like, 'leave well enough alone.' "

As for second chances, Patton said: "I'm not God. I can't say what nobody deserves. … But I would be more comfortable if he were in prison. Justice was served before he got out."

As for Griffin's lawsuit, she said: "He's going for money, and all I want is the truth."

Dad says police bullied him with threats to get a false confession

Griffin maintains he has been truthful from the start, and that he was railroaded by police when they first took him in for questioning while his daughter fought for her life. According to Griffin, trial transcripts, and court records, here's what happened:

At the start of the interrogation, the officers closed the door, according to official reports. Then they reportedly told Griffin that both they and the doctors believed he had intentionally abused his daughter and caused her injuries, either with blunt force or shaking her. Griffin protested, but the officers wouldn't let up, allegedly telling him that unless he confessed to harming her, the doctors wouldn't be able to treat her, that they would terminate his parental rights, and that she could die.

Griffin told the officers that a couple of weeks earlier, Naviah had fallen on the metal post of the swing and there was a bruise and suggested that this could have happened again, records show. But the officers would not relent. They wanted more, telling him his daughter will die "because he wasn't man enough to tell the truth," and that they suspected he lost his temper with the mom and took it out on the baby.

Griffin continued to deny hurting his child, but the intense questioning continued, according to reports, with police telling him "they were starting to believe he was a monster," that doctors will remove his daughter's brain should she die and determine she could have been saved had her dad been truthful about hurting her.

After accusing Griffin of not wanting to help his daughter, reports show, they told him he could leave — but threatened that he would likely not be able to see Navia again for at least 18 months, and that parental termination proceedings were imminent.

Desperate and afraid, Griffin caved.

"Given the coercive pressure being placed on (Griffin) ... and in a desperate attempt to satisfy the officers' relentless demands, (Griffin) stated that he sometimes taps Naviah on the back of the head, but he never does it hard and he plays with her that way," the lawsuit states, adding the dad also told the officers that he "sometimes throws her up and down, but also just to play with her and that he has never and would never hurt her."

At 1:10 p.m., on Oct. 1, seven hours after his interrogation, his daughter was pronounced dead following an unsuccessful craniotomy.

Five days later, Griffin was arrested and charged with felony murder and first-degree child abuse. At trial, he took the stand in his own defense and broke down crying when they showed him a photo of his deceased daughter. But he was unable to convince a jury that he was innocent.

Mom testifies at trial

During trial, jurors also heard from Patton, whose testimony largely focused on her relationship with Griffin, his parenting skills, and the events that transpired after she came home and found her daughter limp in Griffin's arms. She was never asked at trial whether she believed Griffin's explanation for how their daughter got hurt.

During her testimony, Patton said that she never had any concerns about Griffin appropriately caring for their daughter, that she never saw him lose his patience with her, that he was her primary caretaker while she attended a work program, and that the two did not have disagreements about how he cared for her.

She also pushed back on the prosecution's claims that she nodded her head yes when a medical examiner investigator asked her whether she believed Griffin had abused their daughter. She testified that she did not remember that.

"Did he love her?" the defense asked her on cross-examination.

"Yes," she answered.

Patton also testified that the baby once rolled off the sofa while in the dad's care. She took the baby to the hospital out of caution, she said, but there were no injuries. She also testified that he once broke a window in their home after arguing, but that the dispute was not about the baby.

According to Patton's testimony, here is what happened on the tragic day in question, when she returned home from a walk to a corner store and found her daughter limp in her father's arms:

"I grabbed her from him," she told the jury. "I thought she was gone."

She then ran out of the house, yelled for help. An apartment security guard resuscitated her daughter then grabbed a phone from the dad and called 911. An ambulance arrived and drove the mom and baby to the hospital. Dad was in a car behind them, with his mom.

At the hospital, the mom testified, Griffin would tell her the baby fell from the swing, and that he found her on the floor when he went upstairs to change her diaper. She said they waited for about two hours in the hospital waiting room, but got no answers about the condition of their child. At that point, she said, two police officers showed up and took her to the police station for questioning.

Michael Griffin, 33, of Flint, and his then-fiancée, Kalesha Journeay, 31, take a walk through a neighborhood on Flint's west side with his nephew Jacquees Griffin on Wednesday, May 10, 2023, after Michael Griffin was released from prison on bond. When he was 19, Griffin's daughter died after falling from a baby swing, and he was blamed for her death. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, though he would profess his innocence for the next 14 years. He was exonerated after medical evidence showed a botched surgery caused her daughter's death. He is now suing over his wrongful conviction, alleging the police, hospital and forensic officials covered up their mistakes.

Patton did not testify about the interrogation, but said she went back to the hospital after questioning, and eventually learned that her daughter would need surgery. Five hours later, the doctors would give her the gut-wrenching news: her daughter didn't make it.

Meanwhile, the police would begin building a case against Griffin, using the "illegally elicited" statements he made during his interrogation against him, his lawsuit states. Those same statements would later be used to persuade a jury to convict him. The prosecution also used the statements to convince the court of appeals to uphold his conviction.

It wasn't until the Michigan Innocence Clinic and prominent plaintiff attorney Mike Morse intervened that he was exonerated.

'His court-appointed attorney was a disaster'

In securing Griffin's freedom, the Michigan Innocence Clinic and Morse argued that Griffin had an ineffective lawyer, noting the prosecution brought in seven doctors to testify against Griffin, while his public defender brought in none.

"There are lots of causes of wrongful convictions, but most of these cases have one thing in common: Bad or overworked lawyers, or public defenders. And this is one of the main reasons Mr. Griffin was wrongfully convicted," Morse said during a 2023 news conference when Griffin was released. "His court-appointed attorney was a disaster. He called no expert witnesses, despite the fact that the state called seven."

According to Griffin, it was Morse who ultimately secured his release by finding and bringing in doctors who explained to the court how the baby's death likely occurred. Morse, who had never before handled a criminal case and took this one pro bono, also argued that the scientific consensus around short fall and other head injuries had evolved since 2010, evidence that was not readily available when Griffin was convicted.

Using these arguments, Morse convinced Genesee County Circuit Court Judge Elizabeth Kelly to vacate Griffin's convictions in March 2023, release him on bond, and order a new trial.

But there was no retrial. After reevaluating the case, the Genesee County Prosecutor's Office opted not to retry it, dropped all charges and dismissed the case on Sept. 13, 2023.

When asked to explain this decision, Assistant Prosecutor John Pothbury declined comment, citing pending litigation.

On its website, the Mike Morse Law Firm commended the prosecutor's office, stating: "Throughout this entire process, the Genesee County Prosecutor's Office has been extremely professional and respectful to Mr. Griffin and his legal counsel. It is abundantly clear that Genesee County Prosecutor Mr. David Leyton and his staff care about doing their job the right way and only prosecuting cases when they have a good faith basis for believing the available evidence will support a conviction. "

A fresh start, a wife, and a new baby

Since his release, Griffin, who now runs a cleaning business, has embraced his freedom with new hope and purpose. He is a father again, and a husband. He married a woman he met years ago while he was in prison. The two now have a 1-year-old boy named Nash.

"He looks just like his sister," said Griffin, noting his son makes him smile again.

Michael Griffin, center, 33, of Flint, is hugged by family members as they come to visit him outside of his mother's house on Flint's west side on Wednesday, May 10, 2023, shortly after Griffin was released from prison on bond. When he was 19, Griffin's daughter died after falling from a baby swing, and he was blamed for her death. He was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison, though he would profess his innocence for the next 14 years. He was exonerated after medical evidence showed a botched surgery caused her daughter's death. He is now suing over his wrongful conviction, alleging the police, hospital and forensic officials covered up their mistakes.

And a lot of the anger is gone.

"I ended up letting it go," Griffin said. " I had to let go of all the emotions."

Following his exoneration, Griffin received $435,000 from the state for the years he spent in prison. The payout was supposed to be $696,000, or $50,000 for every year he was in prison. But he said he didn't get the entire amount because authorities said his daughter had been hurt before, and so they decided against giving him the full amount.

It didn't make sense to Griffin, who has long maintained he never harmed his daughter. But he said he's moving on from that, too, shifting his focus to his lawsuit, and working to hold all those accountable for the nightmare he was put through.

Losing a child was hard enough, he said. But then being blamed for her death was another matter.

"I wish nobody would ever go through this," said Griffin, noting he couldn't watch baby commercials for a long time. "I dealt with a lot of pain."

And now he wants the civil justice system to hold the police, doctors, medical examiners and others responsible for it.

"The whole time I was locked up I knew something crazy had happened," Griffin said. "I just kept saying, 'I didn't do it.' I believed the hospitals did something, the cops covered stuff up."

It took more than a year for Griffin to pursue a lawsuit. He said he "had an epiphany."

"I woke up my wife ... I said, 'If I'm sitting here, who is responsible for killing my daughter?' " Griffin recalled, noting he has never received an apology for his ordeal. "Nothing was ever said. Not an 'I'm sorry.' They locked me up for it and said 'I've done it.' "

"But now that I'm out," he added, he's intent on answering this question: "Who did it?"

Contact Tresa Baldas: tbaldas@freepress.com

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press:Flint dad Michael Griffin exonerated in daughter's death sues

Wrongfully convicted Michigan dad sues: 'They did me wrong'

Behind prison walls, they called him "Baby Killer." It was a torturous nickname for Michael Griffin, w...
National Guard shooting suspect spent weeks in isolation, 2024 emails say

The suspect accused of shootingtwo West Virginia National Guard membersin Washington, D.C., had been struggling with his mental health — often isolating himself in a dark room — in the years after heleft Afghanistan and entered the U.S., according to emails sent by a case worker who was helping his family access services after they resettled in Bellingham, Washington.

Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, entered the U.S. in 2021 as part of the Biden-era Operation Allies Welcome after the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, officials said.

The case worker, a volunteer who supported many Afghan families with business and finance-related issues, told CBS News that when they first met in 2022, Lakanwal did not speak good English, so they spoke thorough an interpreter. The worker described him as a very gracious host, chatty and charismatic. However, the case worker said, a severe turn in his personality was noticeable in 2024.

In an email sent on Jan. 11, 2024, to the nonprofit group U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, the concerned case worker said Lakanwal had not worked in a year and his family had been served an eviction notice for nonpayment of rent. Details of the emails werefirst publishedby The Associated Press.

"World Relief volunteers are trying to patch things for that family — but I think the father has mental health issues that are not addressed, and he won't talk to anyone," the email, sent the year before Lakanwal's asylum claim was approved, read in part.

World Relief is one of the refugee resettlement agencies that assisted in therelocation of Afghan evacuees. Washington state took in nearly 3,000 Afghan nationals, including Lakanwal, his wife and their five sons.

The family had been living in Bellingham, and Lakanwal drove across the country to Washington, D.C., before the attack, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said during a news conference last week. One of the victims,Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, 20, died Thursday, while the other, Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, was critically injured and remains hospitalized.

In another email sent Jan. 31, 2024, the case worker said Lakanwal had "not been functional as a person, father and provider since March of last year, 03/2023."

"He spends most of his time for weeks on end in his darkened bedroom, not speaking to anyone, not even his wife and older kids," the email said.

The email also describes "manic episodes for one or two weeks at a time where he will take off in the family car," but also "interim" periods where he "tries to make amends." The case worker, who is not a mental health professional, later said in the email that they believed Lakanwal is suffering "…PTSD from his work with the US military in Afghanistan."

According to a former Afghan commandowho spoke with CBS News, Lakanwal led a unit ofAfghan special forcesin the south of the country and worked closely with the international troops before the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. The former commando also said that Lakanwal was left deeply troubled by the death of a close friend and fellow Afghan commander in 2024, whom the former commando said had unsuccessfully sought asylum in the U.S.

Lakanwal applied for asylum in December 2024, which is a lawful immigration process overseen by the Department of Homeland Security. As part of that process, he would have gone through extensive vetting — including background checks, social media reviews, and in-person interviews. He had multiple, in-person asylum meetings at a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services office in 2024, the case worker said.

He passed his reviews and was eventually granted asylum in April 2025.

The case worker told CBS News that neither DHS nor USCIS ever reached out about the emails, and said they don't believe the government ever saw the emails or considered them in his asylum process.

"Rahmanulla was a man who was extremely proud and capable in the world he came from, who felt defeated in the world he came to," the case worker said.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noemsaid Sunday that Lakanwal, who is facing murder charges, was "radicalized since he's been here in this country."

"We do believe it was through connections in his home community and state, and we're going to continue to talk to those who interacted with him," Noem said Sunday onNBC's "Meet the Press."She provided no further details.

"This violent act does not reflect the Afghan community, which continues to contribute across the United States and undergoes some of the most extensive vetting of any immigrant population," said Shawn VanDiver, president of AfghanEvac, a nonprofit that advocates for the resettlement of Afghans who worked with the U.S. military.

Lakanwal was shot by another National Guard member during his attack and is also hospitalized. He has been sedated and placed on a ventilator since the shooting, multiple U.S. officials told CBS News. The treatment has complicated investigators' efforts to interview him.

As part of the investigation, U.S. intelligence analysts are combing Lakanwal's communications and online footprint for signs of international coordination or ideological radicalization, multiple U.S. officials said. An early review of his social media and messaging channels has not revealed links to foreign handlers or extremist groups.

Trump reacts to report alleging Hegseth gave verbal order on no survivors in Venezuela boat strike

Metallica's gift of giving

For blind climber Jesse Dufton, there is little that's out of reach

National Guard shooting suspect spent weeks in isolation, 2024 emails say

The suspect accused of shootingtwo West Virginia National Guard membersin Washington, D.C., had been struggling with his ...
Colts cornerback Sauce Gardner avoids Achilles tendon injury, but will miss time with sore calf

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indianapolis Colts coach Shane Steichen said Monday that starting cornerback Sauce Gardner is expected to miss "some time"after injuring his left calfduring Sunday's 20-16 loss to the Houston Texans but that Gardner avoided hurting his Achilles tendon.

Steichen didn't provide details on how much time the two-time All-Pro might miss but said he believed Gardner would return this season and that he's not expected to go on injured reserve.

Gardner did not speak with reporters Monday but said after the game he didn't think he hurt the Achilles tendon because the pain he felt was higher in his leg.

Gardner was hurt on the Texans second offensive play of the game while in coverage, but he did not appear to get hit when he went down. He stayed on the field for several minutes before he was helped off the field and taken to the locker room. Gardner later returned to the sideline and watched the rest of the game in street clothes and a walking boot.

The Colts (8-4) envisioned pairing Gardner with two other Pro Bowl cornerbacks, Charvarius Ward and Kenny Moore II, to create one of the league's top secondaries whenthey acquired him in a trade deadline dealthat included sending two first-round picks to the New York Jets.

So far, though, those plans haven't worked out.

Gardner, Moore and Ward have only played one full game together — the previous week's loss at Kansas City after Ward was activated off injured reserve and cleared the concussion protocol. Ward was injured in a bizarre pregame collision with tight end Drew Ogletree in October.

Moore has dealt with multiple injuries this season, missing three games in September and October.

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

Colts cornerback Sauce Gardner avoids Achilles tendon injury, but will miss time with sore calf

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indianapolis Colts coach Shane Steichen said Monday that starting cornerback Sauce Gardner is expecte...

 

PYN MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com