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Football superstar Lionel Messi is to join David Beckham’s club Inter Miami.

The 35-year-old forward told Spanish media he is heading to America’s Major League Soccer (MLS) after his contract expires with Paris Saint-Germain at the end of this month.

Messi, one of the world’s greatest players, had reportedly been offered €400m (£344m) a year to join Saudi club Al Hilal and was also linked with a move to his former club Barcelona.

Inter Miami offered Messi $54m (£43m) per year for four years, it was reported.

Lionel Messi is pictured playing for Barcelona against David Beckham when he was at PSG in 2013. Pic: AP
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Lionel Messi is pictured playing for Barcelona against David Beckham when he was at PSG in 2013. Pic: AP

The US offer is also thought to include complex sponsorship deals with brands such as Apple and Adidas.

Messi, who led Argentina to World Cup victory last December, had been strongly linked with Al Hilal, to join a Saudi league that already features Cristiano Ronaldo and now Karim Benzema.

However, the Argentina striker confirmed in a joint interview with Spanish publications Mundo Deportivo and Sport that he was set to head to Florida.

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“I made the decision that I am going to go to Miami,” Messi said.

“I still haven’t closed it 100%. I’m missing some things, but we decided to continue on the path.”

Last week, Phil Neville was sacked as manager of Inter Miami, who are co-owned by his former Manchester United and England teammate Beckham.

The Florida side are currently bottom of the 15-team Eastern Conference, with just five wins from 16 matches.

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Handout photo provided by Saudi Tourism Authority of Lionel Messi and his family during a visit to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia 
Pic: Saudi Tourism Authority/PA
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A photo of Messi and his family visiting Riyadh was released in May by the Saudi tourism authority

Ticket prices rocket

Messi’s first game with the US team could be on 21 July when Inter Miami host Mexican side Cruz Azul in their Leagues Cup opener in Fort Lauderdale.

On Tuesday, the lowest price for a ticket for that game was just $29 but on Wednesday the price rocketed to $329 – a 1,034% jump – according to TickPick, an online ticket marketplace.

The company’s brand manager, Kyle Zorn, said: “We saw an almost instantaneous jump in Inter Miami ticket prices when the word got out that Messi was leaning towards joining the club.

“Given his status as arguably the greatest player in the world, every time Inter Miami plays on the road, we’re going to see record-breaking ticket prices.”

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 - Final - Argentina v France - Lusail Stadium, Lusail, Qatar - December 18, 2022 Argentina's Lionel Messi lifts the World Cup trophy alongside teammates as they celebrate after winning the World Cup REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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Messi led Argentina to World Cup victory last December

Messi had been linked with a move back to Barcelona, but confirmed when that was not set to happen, he chose a new challenge in the US.

He had talked to manager and close friend Xavi over a potential return to the Spanish club, but said he “spoke very little, once or twice at most” to president Joan Laporta.

He said: “We never even got to talk about the contract. A proposal was passed over, but never a formal, written, signed proposal… There was the intention, but we couldn’t advance anything, we didn’t even talk about money formally.”

Messi also said: “If the Barcelona thing didn’t work out, I wanted to leave Europe, get out of the spotlight and think more [about] my family.”

He added: “I heard that they [Barcelona] had to sell players or lower players’ salaries and the truth is that I didn’t want to go through that, nor take charge of obtaining something that had to do with all that.”

Apple TV+ announced this week that it secured the rights to a four-part documentary about Messi’s career. The company is also in the first year of a TV rights deal with MLS.

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‘Ketamine Queen’ Jasveen Sangha pleads guilty to supplying fatal dose that killed Friends star Matthew Perry

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'Ketamine Queen' Jasveen Sangha pleads guilty to supplying fatal dose that killed Friends star Matthew Perry

A woman known as the “Ketamine Queen” has officially pleaded guilty to selling Friends star Matthew Perry the drug that killed him.

Jasveen Sangha initially denied the charges but agreed to change her plea in a signed statement in August, just a few weeks before she had been due to stand trial.

The 42-year-old , a dual citizen of the US and the UK, has now appeared in a federal court in Los Angeles to plead guilty to five charges, including supplying the ketamine that led to Perry‘s death.

She faces up to 65 years in prison after admitting one count of maintaining a drug-involved premises, three counts of distribution of ketamine, and one count of distribution of ketamine resulting in death.

Prosecutors agreed to drop three other counts related to the distribution of ketamine, and one count of distribution of methamphetamine that was unrelated to the Perry case.

In a brief statement when the plea deal was announced, her lawyer Mark Geragos said she was “taking responsibility for her actions”.

The judge is not bound to follow any terms of the plea agreement, but prosecutors have said they will ask for less than the maximum possible sentence.

Perry died aged 54 in October 2023. He had struggled with addiction for years, but released a memoir a year before his death during a period of being clean.

He had been using ketamine through his regular doctor as a legal, but off-label, treatment for depression, but in the weeks before his death had also started to seek more of the drug illegally.

Perry bought large amounts of ketamine from Sangha, including 25 vials for $6,000 (£4,458) in cash four days before his death, prosecutors said.

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What Perry’s death says about Hollywood

Sangha, described by prosecutors as the “Ketamine Queen of North Hollywood”, is now the fifth and final person to plead guilty to charges connected to the supply of drugs to the Friends star.

The actor’s live-in assistant Kenneth Iwamasa, an acquaintance Erik Fleming, and a physician, Mark Chavez, all agreed to plead guilty when the charges were announced in August 2024.

Another doctor, Salvador Plasencia, initially pleaded not guilty and had been due to face trial alongside Sangha, but changed his plea in July.

Sangha and Plasencia had been the primary targets of the investigation.

The three other defendants: Chavez, Iwamasa and Fleming pleaded guilty in exchange for their co-operation, which included statements implicating Sangha and Plasencia.

Perry had bought ketamine from Sangha after he was led to her by Fleming, prosecutors said.

On the day of Perry’s death, Sangha told Fleming they should delete all the messages they had sent each other, according to Sangha’s indictment.

Sangha is due to be sentenced on 10 December.

The other four defendants are also still awaiting sentencing.

Perry was one of the biggest stars of his generation as Chandler Bing in Friends – which ran on NBC between 1994 and 2004.

He starred alongside Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc and David Schwimmer for all 10 seasons of the show.

The Friends stars were among around 20 mourners who attended his funeral in November 2023, according to TMZ.

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Trump suffers setback in bid to act as national police chief after chaos on streets of LA

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Trump suffers setback in bid to act as national police chief after chaos on streets of LA

The deployment of National Guard soldiers on to the streets of LA by Donald Trump was always deeply controversial – and now it has been deemed illegal, too, by a federal judge.

In late spring in Los Angeles, I observed as peaceful protests against immigration raids turned confrontational.

I watched as Waymos – self-driving cars – were set alight and people waving flags shut down one of the city’s busiest freeways. I saw government buildings spray-painted with anti-government sentiment and expletives. Some people even threw bottles at police officers in riot gear.

In exchange, I saw law enforcement deploy “flash bang” crowd control devices and fire rubber bullets into crowds, indiscriminately, on occasion.

Mounted Los Angeles police officers disperse protesters earlier this summer. Pic: San Francisco Chronicle/AP
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Mounted Los Angeles police officers disperse protesters earlier this summer. Pic: San Francisco Chronicle/AP

A person reacts to non-lethal munitions shot in Los Angeles.
Pic: Reuters
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A person reacts to non-lethal munitions shot in Los Angeles.
Pic: Reuters

It was chaotic at times, violent, even, in a corner of the downtown area of the city. But I didn’t witness anything that suggested police were on the brink of being overcome by rioters. I didn’t see anything that I believe justified the deployment of 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 marines to the heart of America’s second-biggest city.

But Trump sent them in anyway, against the wishes of the local government. LA mayor Karen Bass condemned the deployment as an act of political theatre and said it risked stoking tensions.

The language Trump used was, arguably, inflammatory, too. He described LA as an “invaded” and “occupied city”. He spoke of “a full-blown assault on peace”, carried out by “rioters bearing foreign flags with the aim of continuing a foreign invasion of our country”.

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Trump: ‘We will liberate Los Angeles’

It didn’t reflect reality. The size of the protests were modest, several thousand people marching through a handful of streets in downtown LA, a city which spans 500 square miles and has a population of almost four million.

The majority of the soldiers simply stood guard outside government buildings, often looking bored. Some of them are still here, with nothing to do. Now a judge has ruled that the operation was illegal.

US District Judge Charles Breyer said the Trump administration “used armed soldiers (whose identity was often obscured by protective armour) and military vehicles to set up protective perimeters and traffic blockades, engage in crowd control, and otherwise demonstrate a military presence in and around Los Angeles”.

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Marines head to Los Angeles

In a scathing judgement, he effectively accused the White House of turning National Guard soldiers and marines into a “national police force.”

That breaches a law from 1878, barring the use of soldiers for civilian law enforcement activities.

It is a blow to what some view as the president’s ambition to federalise Democrat-run cities and deploy the National Guard in other states around the country. He had threatened to send troops to Chicago as part of an initiative he says is cracking down on crime, widening the use of National Guard troops, as seen on the streets of Washington DC.

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The fightback against immigration raids in LA

But since this judge ruled that the deployment of National Guard and marines to LA in June was unlawful in the way it unfolded, Trump may have to be inventive with his rationale for sending soldiers into other US cities in the future.

This legal judgement, though, is being appealed and may well be overturned. Either way, it is unlikely to stem the president’s ambition to act as national police chief.

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Partial release of Epstein files feeds view the whole truth is being covered up

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“Don’t let this fool you.”  

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