Top Justice Department official plays down chance for charges arising from Epstein files revelations

WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Justice Department official played down the possibility of additional criminal charges arising from theJeffrey Epstein files, saying Sunday that the existence of "horrible photographs" and troubling email correspondence does not "allow us necessarily to prosecute somebody."

Department officials said over the summer that a review of Epstein-related records did not establish a basis for new criminal investigations.

That position remains unchanged, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said, even as a massive document dump since Friday has focused fresh attention on Epstein's links to powerful individuals around the world and revived questions about what, if any, knowledge the wealthy financier's associates had about his crimes.

"There's a lot of correspondence. There's a lot of emails. There's a lot of photographs. There's a lot of horrible photographs that appear to be taken by Mr. Epstein or people around him," Blanche said Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union." "But that doesn't allow us necessarily to prosecute somebody."

He said that victims of Epstein's sex abuse "want to be made whole," but that "doesn't mean we can just create evidence or that we can just kind of come up with a case that isn't there."

President Donald Trump's Justice Department said Friday that it would be releasing more than 3 million pages of documents along with more than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images under a law intended to reveal most of the material it collected during two decades of investigations into Epstein.

The fallout from the release of the files has been swift. A top official in Slovakia left his position after photos and emails revealed he had met with Epstein in the years after Epstein was released from jail. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer suggested that longtime Epstein friendAndrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly known as Prince Andrew, should tell U.S. investigators whether he knows about Epstein's activities.

The revelations continue

The files, posted to the department's website, included documents involving Epstein's friendship with Mountbatten-Windsor, and Epstein's email correspondence with onetime Trump adviser Steve Bannon, New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch and other prominent contacts with people in political, business and philanthropic circles, such as billionairesBill GatesandElon Musk.

The Epstein saga has long fueled public fascination in part because of the financier's past friendships with Trump and former President Bill Clinton. Both men said they had no knowledge Epstein was abusing underage girls.

Among the newly released records was a spreadsheet created last August that summarized calls made to the FBI's National Threat Operation Center or to a hotline set by prosecutors from people claiming to have some knowledge of wrongdoing by Trump. That document included a range of uncorroborated stories involving many different celebrities, and somewhat fantastical scenarios, occasionally with notations indicating what follow-up, if any, was done by agents.

Blanche said Sunday that there were a "ton of people" named in the Epstein files besides Trump and that the FBI had fielded "hundreds of calls" about prominent individuals that were "quickly determined to not be credible."

Some of Epstein's personal email correspondence contained candid discussions with other people about his penchant for paying women for sex, even after he served jail time for soliciting an underage prostitute. Epsteinkilled himself in a New York jailin August 2019, a month after being indicted on federal sex trafficking charges.

In one 2013 email, a person whose name was blacked out wrote to Epstein about his choice "to surround yourself with these young women in a capacity that bleeds — perhaps, somewhat arbitrarily — from the professional into the personal and back."

"Though these women are young, they are not too young to know that they are making a very particular choice in taking on this role with you," the person wrote. "Especially in the aftermath of your trial which, after all, was public and could be — indeed was — interpreted as a powerful man taking advantage of powerless young women, instead of the other way around."

In another email written in 2009, not long after Epstein had finished serving jail time for his Florida sex crime, another woman, whose name was redacted, excoriated him for breaking a promise that they would spend time alone together and try to conceive a baby.

"I find myself having to question every agreement we have made (no prostitutes staying in the house, in our bed, movies, naps, two weeks Alone, baby...)," She wrote. "Your last minute suggestion to spend THIS weekend with prostitutes is just too much for me to handle. I can't live like this anymore."

'This review is over'

Blanche said in a separate appearance on ABC's "This Week" that though there are a "small number of documents" that the Justice Department is waiting for a judge's approval before it can release, when it comes to the department's own scouring of documents, "this review is over."

"We reviewed over six million pieces of paper, thousands of videos, tens of thousands of images," Blanche said.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday that he thinks the Department of Justice is complying with the law requiring public disclosure of the Epstein files.

But Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and co-sponsor of the law requiring the Justice Department to release its Epstein files, said he did not believe the department had fully complied. He said survivors are upset that many of their names accidentally had come out without redactions and they want to make sure the rest of the files come out.

Blanche said each time the department has learned that a victim's name was not properly redacted, it has moved quickly to fix the problem but that those mistakes account for a tiny fraction of the overall materials.

The AP is reviewing the documents released by the Justice Department in collaboration with journalists from Versant, CBS and NBC. Journalists from each newsroom are working together to examine the files and share information about what is in them. Each outlet is responsible for its own independent news coverage of the documents.

Top Justice Department official plays down chance for charges arising from Epstein files revelations

WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Justice Department official played down the possibility of additional criminal charges arising fr...
If Iran declines a nuclear deal, Trump says 'we'll find out' if a U.S. attack sparks a regional war

President Donald Trump said Sunday that if Iran does not make a deal regarding its nuclear program, "we'll find out" whether Iran's supreme leader was correct to predict that a U.S. attack on the country would spark a regional war.

NBC Universal Signing ceremony of the Peace Charter for Gaza in Davos (Harun Ozalp / Anadolu via Getty Images file)

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei'sSundayremarks on a potential war come as Trump has weighed military action against Iran in response to the country's nuclear ambitions and the government's bloody crackdown on protesters.

Asked by a reporter about Khamenei's remarks, Trump said, "Of course he would say that."

"But we have the biggest, most powerful ships in the world over there, very close, couple of days, and hopefully we'll make a deal," he continued. "We don't make a deal, then we'll find out whether or not he was right."

Tensions have been high after the U.S. struck Iranian nuclear facilities in June, and in recent weeks Trump has blasted Iran's crackdown on protesters.

In January, Trump told Politico thathe believedit was "time to look for new leadership in Iran." As protests escalated last month, Trumptold Iranian protestersthat "help is on its way," urging them to continue protesting. Thousands of people have been killed in the protests, according toa rights group.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said last week that there were no planned talks between his country and the U.S., but said he was prepared for talks to resume.

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Also last week, Trump said that "a massive armada" was on its way to Iran.

"Like with Venezuela, it is, ready, willing, and able to rapidly fulfill its mission, with speed and violence, if necessary," he said ina postto Truth Social. "Hopefully Iran will quickly 'Come to the Table' and negotiate a fair and equitable deal — NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS — one that is good for all parties."

Trump said the "armada" was a larger fleet than the one sent to Venezuela, referencing the operation to capture President Nicolás Maduro and bring him and his wife to the U.S. to face charges. Trump also referenced the June strikes in Iran, saying in the post that "the next attack will be far worse!"

NBC News haspreviously reportedthat the U.S. has sent a carrier strike group, as well as aircraft and land-based air defense systems, to the Middle East.

Following Trump's post, Ali Shamkhani, a senior adviser to Iran's supreme leader, warned that any response to a U.S. attack would be widespread.

"Any military action by the United States, from any location and at any level, will be considered the start of a war," Shamkhanisaid,according to Iranian state-run news agency IRNA. "The response will be immediate, comprehensive and unprecedented. The aggressor, the heart of Tel Aviv and all those who support the aggressor will be targeted."

Trump pulled the U.S. fromthe Iran nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, in 2018, during his first presidential term. The deal offered Iran relief from sanctions in exchange for limiting its nuclear program.

If Iran declines a nuclear deal, Trump says 'we'll find out' if a U.S. attack sparks a regional war

President Donald Trump said Sunday that if Iran does not make a deal regarding its nuclear program, "we'll find ...
He died in a jail cell, pleading for help. No one told his father why.

COMPTON, California – The man in the suit arrived in an unmarked car on a spring morning in 2020 with the worst news James Brown had ever heard.

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His 30-year-old son Jamall was dead.

Brown hadn't heard from him in the days since he was detained on a parole violation. The man – a Los Angeles County deputy sent to notify Brown for the Riverside County Sheriff's Department – would only say that Jamall had been found unresponsive in a jail cell.

"It hit me like a hammer," Brown, 77, said recently. "How did he just die?"

James Brown poses for a photo in his living room at his home in Compton, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025.

For five years, asdetainee after detainee died in the custody of Riverside Sheriff Chad Bianco's jails, Brown kept asking that question.

Finally, in 2025, with the help of a reporter from the Desert Sun, a member of the USA TODAY Network, Brown began turning up answers.

First came the official answer, in a report released from Bianco's coroner's office: Jamall had refused treatment for his diabetes for days, the report said. He died from diabetic complications after or during a methamphetamine overdose.

But a trove of unreleased jailhouse video and detailed internal investigative reports that current and former sheriff's employees provided to Brown and the Desert Sun told a different story.

Those reports confirm that Jamall died of diabetic complications. But they indicate it wasn't because he was rejecting medical aid. The records and video say deputies and nurses ignored Jamall and failed to provide insulin to him for nearly two days. The jail's cameras recorded him saying he was afraid he was dying. They recorded him slipping into a coma in a pile of trash on the floor of his two-man cell. They recorded deputies and nurses looking at him while he lay unconscious, but not intervening. The reports said investigators found no drugs or evidence of them in the cell after his death.

A screen capture from Riverside County jail cell footage shows Jamall Brown in his cell a day before his death in custody of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department as he pleads for help to his cellmate 4:00 a.m. Sunday, March 15, 2020.

Investigators had collected evidence of the staff's failures within hours of Jamall Brown's death, the documents indicated. But for five years, no one told Brown.

Sheriff Chad Bianco and the department's media team didn't respond to requests for comment, including detailed questions about the findings reported in this story, including those in a 6-page administrative review that detailed deputies' failings in Jamall Brown's death.

James Brown says the sheriff's department has been hiding the truth about his son's death.

"My son left this life in agony," he said. "Just because you arrested someone doesn't give you the right to watch them die. I'm still shocked that a cover-up like this is possible."

The pain of living without a son

James Brown served as a military policeman in the Marine Corps and as president of the union that represents workers at the Compton Municipal Water Department, where he worked for about 30 years. He's retired now, but said seeking the truth behind his son's death from the Riverside County Sheriff's Office felt like a full-time job.

In a pile of Father's Day cards he keeps beside his favorite recliner in his Compton home is one Jamall wrote to him in 2018: "Being a father is more than just paying bills and putting food on the table. Once you have the responsibility, you are obliged to help nurture, guide and be a willing participant in every aspect of that child's life and you've been all that plus more for me."

Jamall concluded the greeting card message saying he couldn't imagine life without his father. Two years later, Brown faced the pain of living without his son.

A father's day card written by Jamall Brown to his father, James Brown.

Jamall had been arrested several times while growing up in Compton, a city just south of Los Angeles, and had completed a prison sentence for assault. His father said he was laboring to get his life back on track while living in a tough neighborhood that could easily derail him.

In spring 2020, Jamall travelled about 65 miles east to Moreno Valley, a large suburb in Riverside County, to be near a woman he was dating. His father was not confident Jamall had a steady place to stay and wasn't surprised when he got a call from him. Jamall asked if his dad could send him some money so he could get back to Compton to meet with his parole officer.

Later that evening, Brown heard his wife pick up the phone. Jamall had been arrested and she asked if he wanted to talk to him. Frustrated, Brown declined, assuming his son would be released in a couple of days.

A police report showed that a deputy patrolling a shopping center saw a man pushing a shopping cart with a suitcase in it. The deputy asked him if he was on probation. Parole, Jamall said.

The deputy searched Jamall and his belongings, finding insulin in his luggage and two ecstasy pills in his pocket.

"During my entire interaction with Brown, I did not notice any unusual behavior," the deputy wrote. "I instructed Brown to tell the nurse at the jail he was diabetic and insulin dependent. Brown stated he understood and would tell nursing staff."

Deaths in custody surge

About two years after Jamall Brown died, deaths in custody began to surge in Bianco's department. There were 19 in 2022 alone. An investigation by The Desert Sun and The New York Times of video and internal reports found thatdeputies had ignored detainees leading up to their deaths by suicide. The county's jails also had thehighest rate of homicide in the state. At one facility three people were killed by other detainees in a matter of four months. Evidence gathered by department investigators showed that deputies at that jail had not been properly trained to do mandatory security checks.

Public scrutiny mounted when a former jail captain sued the department, saying Bianco had pressured her not to participate in a civil grand jury investigation of jail conditions and retaliated against jail staff who spoke out about misconduct.

The video and internal reports of Jamall Brown's death, recently leaked to James Brown and The Desert Sun, provide the earliest evidence of the same deputy failures and policy violations amid the recent surge in deaths in the county jails.

Chad Bianco, who is both sheriff and coroner in Riverside County, has defended his department and criticized the state attorney general's investigation into jail deaths.

Internal documents show the jail's medical staff recorded that Jamall Brown was diabetic, insulin-dependent and required blood sugar monitoring. When he was booked, he did not appear under the influence and answered questions coherently, although he mentioned he suspected he might have a mental illness and was noted as a detainee who required extra monitoring.

He spent his first night in custody at the county's central jail in Riverside, where investigators later wrote he was seen eating, sleeping and acting ordinarily.

Transferred to the county's jail in Banning, he was placed in a cell with a camera constantly recording audio and video. A Desert Sun reporter obtained an hour of clips of the video, which recorded Jamall Brown's cell constantly from the evening of March 14, 2020, to the morning of March 16, 2020.  According to the video clips and a deputy's detailed written description of all 40 hours of footage, Brown never received treatment for his diabetes during the time he was at the Banning facility.

Internal records show that soon after Jamall Brown was taken to the hospital in cardiac arrest, the department's investigators began processing about three days of video evidence that captured him losing consciousness as his blood sugar spiked and his heart stopped on the concrete floor.

In jail, Brown died of a medical condition that he had been adequately treating even while unhoused in the days prior to his arrest – a fact department investigators discovered the same day he died.

March 14-15, 2020: First night in jail

On his first night at the Banning jail, video shows that on two occasions a deputy and a nurse opened a pill slot but closed it without speaking with Jamall Brown. Yet they recorded in documents repeatedly during his stay that he had refused medical care.

At 2 a.m., after hours with little food and no medication, the camera captured Brown rubbing his stomach and moaning. He walked unsteadily to the cell's toilet, bumping into the side of the bunk, and drank water before lying down.

A deputy walked by his cell, glancing in through the window before walking away. Minutes later, a deputy is heard on the cell's intercom calling his name and asking: "Do you want your diabetic check?" When Brown didn't answer, the deputy can be heard on video saying, "I'll take your silence as a no."

Exhaustion is a symptom that the body is slipping into diabetic ketoacidosis, as is increased thirst, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A type one diabetic, like Jamall Brown, can begin experiencing this life-threatening condition after as little as 12 hours without insulin.

A screen capture from Riverside County jail cell footage shows Jamall Brown on his top bunk as he pleads for help from his cellmate around 6:00 a.m. Sunday, March 15, 2020.

Jamall Brown didn't stir when the lights turned on the next morning and breakfast was served. Hours later, he woke up confused about what time it was, saying he didn't think the door ever opened.

"Tell 'em I'm dyin', cellie," he said to his cellmate. "Please. Tell 'em I'm diabetic."

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A deputy approached the cell, shining a light inside before walking away without interacting with Jamall Brown as he lay on his bunk.

"My stomach hurts bad," he is recorded saying at about 6 a.m. "You want me to die on you?" he said with a groan. "Please, somebody please," he pleaded. No deputy responded through the cell's intercom and his cellmate told him to be quiet.

March 15, 2020: Second day in jail

On his second day in jail without medication, Jamall Brown got off his bunk and attempted to walk around, appearing dizzy.

"Something's wrong," he's recorded on camera saying. Soon after, he can be seen losing his balance, falling against the wall and sliding down.

A screen capture from Riverside County jail cell footage shows Jamall Brown having collapsed from his stool shortly before noon, Sunday, March 15, 2020. From this point, footage did not show Brown standing again before a nurse and deputy found him laying on the ground, not breathing, 19 hours and 56 minutes later.

Over the next several hours, the camera captured Jamall Brown attempting to lift himself up but falling partially into the cell's toilet. He rolled under a table and fell again near a stool. When his cellmate brought in two lunch trays, Brown didn't respond.

Meanwhile, deputies proceeded with the jail's schedule as if nothing was happening. Several deputies walked by, asking if Brown was OK. A few times, Brown's cellmate responded, once saying, "Yeah, he's all right" and another time saying, "He's down and out, fool." Still, deputies left without helping.

March 15-16, 2020: Second night in jail

Jamall Brown spent his entire second night on the floor with labored breathing and minimal movement. At around 2 a.m., on March 16, a deputy used the cell's intercom to ask, remotely: "Brown, do you want to see medical?" He repeated it several times, urging him to respond while Brown didn't appear to move.

"No," his cellmate said.

"All right, thank you," the deputy said. Officials noted that exchange in jail records, saying Jamall Brown refused a diabetic check, though he had not said a word.

For the next seven hours, three more deputies walked past the cell multiple times without looking at or speaking with Jamall Brown, who was now virtually motionless on the floor. Internal reports and video show deputies passing the cell 33 times. Sometimes staff tried to speak to Brown and got no response. Other times they didn't stop at all.

A screen capture from Riverside County jail cell footage shows Jamall Brown laying on the ground in his cell groaning and motionless as a deputy passes by his cell door about an hour before Brown is found to not be breathing, Monday, March 16, 2020. The deputy walked by the doorway and glanced at Brown through the window but did not stop.

"All inmates were breathing and accounted for," one deputy wrote of a 6:30 a.m. security check. At this point Jamall Brown had been on the ground for about 24 hours. He had been without insulin for far longer. An hour later, the same deputy added: "Nothing appeared to be out of the ordinary."

Finally, another hour later, the same deputy and a nurse noticed Brown wasn't breathing.

Aftermath of a jail death

Within three hours of Jamall Brown's death, an internal-affairs sergeant was writing a different version of what had happened.

"Inmate Brown was type-1 diabetic and had refused all medication for several days," wrote John Lenton, a sergeant at the Professional Standards Bureau, which conducts internal affairs investigations. "He was being monitored by jail medical staff in regard to his meds refusal."

In a coroner's report completed months later in September 2020, Assistant Coroner Aimee Roberts repeated that Jamall Brown had refused treatment for his diabetes and added that he had also overdosed on methamphetamine. Though cameras showed Brown collapsing on the floor, Roberts wrote instead that he was "making strange movements" such as doing "head stands" against the wall.

Of hours of video reviewed for this story, the only thing resembling a head stand is when Jamall Brown fell against the wall at an awkward angle.

Dr. Alex Charmoz, the emergency room doctor who handled Jamall Brown's case, reported jail staff told him Brown had been acting "bizarre" and was "shaky or twitchy" before he was  brought to the hospital without a pulse. Charmoz said he was told he'd declined treatment for his diabetes. Charmoz wrote that his blood sugar was at 1,111 — more than 10 times the ordinary level — and that resulting diabetic complications had killed him. Charmoz did not respond to requests for comment for this story.

James Brown looks off into the distance while talking about his son's death while incarcerated in a Riverside County jail at his home in Compton, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025.

In 2025, James Brown received hundreds of pages of sheriff's department reports and video clips capturing his son's final days, materials that were also provided to The Desert Sun.

The reports reveal that, within days of his death, department administrators had collected a highly detailed account of how Jamall Brown was neglected. On March 18, 2020, a deputy completed a 38-page report summarizing the video footage showing him in his cell at the jail, including minute-by-minute descriptions of each of his movements as he lay dying on the cell floor. The department declined to release this report to The Desert Sun but did not dispute its authenticity.

"I want the public to know what really happened to my son," James Brown said. "These reports and video tell a completely different story than what they were trying to sell to me. They had the audacity to let someone die right in front of their eyes."

About a month after Jamall Brown died, Sgt. Marcus Schultz wrote an internal administrative report based on the jail cell video. He found that deputies had failed to perform security checks, monitor the camera as it captured an "inmate who was in medical distress," and inaccurately interpreted the dying man's inability to speak "as a refusal for medical care."

"The proper performance of fundamental, daily responsibilities could have possibly prevented inmate Brown's death," Schultz wrote.

His report was among the documents leaked to James Brown and The Desert Sun.

None of these findings were reported to the public, mentioned in the coroner report or reflected in the department's report on the death to state regulators.

About a month after Jamall Brown died, Riverside County Sheriff's Department Sgt. Marcus Schultz wrote an internal administrative report based on the jail cell video. Among other failures, he concluded that deputies had failed to properly perform security checks.

Another of Schultz's findings excluded from the public reports directly contradicts the department's death ruling: The emergency room doctor noted that the level of methamphetamine found in Jamall Brown's system was not reliable evidence that he had used the drug in jail or that he'd suffered an overdose.

"Due to limitations of the test, medical staff were unable to determine the amount of methamphetamine in Brown's system and were, therefore, unable to determine when he last used methamphetamine," Schultz wrote. His report does not state that methamphetamine had anything to do with Brown's death. It said there was no medical evidence to indicate he was a chronic drug user.

Department officials did not respond to questions about the discrepancy in these reports.

In the aftermath of Jamall Brown's death, Schultz noted, administrators began working to address insufficient security checks. Medical staff were ordered to make sure all refusals of medical treatment were made directly to them and documented.

"No longer will an attempted intercom communication be acceptable," he wrote.

A total of  10 deputies and three nurses failed to intervene when Jamall Brown was having a medical emergency over about two days in 2020. Employment records from 2023 show that all but two deputies captured by the cameras still worked for the department. The department did not respond to questions about the eight deputies are still employed.

Included in the leaked reports is Jamall Brown's death review presentation, which is supposed to be completed within 30 days of a death. It closely reflects what is captured in the video and in the leaked internal incident reports. The presentation does not state that Jamall Brown used drugs while in jail or that he died of an overdose.

James Brown holds up an old school photo of his son, Jamall Brown, at his home in Compton, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025.

While James Brown long ago accepted he'll never see his son again, learning the details of his mistreatment in the care of Riverside county officials has inflicted on him a new kind of pain. He said he sometimes has trouble sleeping when he imagines what his son experienced in his final moments. As he learned more and more disturbing details, he kept fighting to learn the truth. Not just for Jamall's memory, he said, but for all the other people who've had relatives die in the county's jails in the years since.

He said he'll continue to fight for transparency from the department in light of the video and reports he now has. He said the deputies and nurses that let this happen to Jamall need to be held accountable. And he hopes the department will implement real change that puts an end to similar deaths due to neglect.

"This is all a cover up," James Brown said. "They let my son die. They lied about it. It's hurt me to my heart."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jail documents reveal how a son died on the floor, pleading for help

He died in a jail cell, pleading for help. No one told his father why.

COMPTON, California – The man in the suit arrived in an unmarked car on a spring morning in 2020 with the worst news Jame...
Super Bowl 2026: The top 10 storylines for Patriots vs. Seahawks, from Sam Darnold's redemption to a new Pats dynasty

After months of the most unlikely comebacks and some shocking playoff eliminations, two NFL teams will finally square off for the ultimate prize.Super Bowl LXwill kick off Sunday, and features two teams no one would have predicted would be here back in September.

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After a 10-7 season in 2024, the Seattle Seahawks decided to take a major gamble at the league's most important position. Geno Smith, a former high draft pick who nearly washed out of the league before a late-career resurgence, was shipped out for Sam Darnold, a former high draft pick who ... basically did the same thing.

The change looked to be prophetic, as Smith led the NFL in interceptions and sacks allowed for a Las Vegas Raiders team that finished with the NFL's worst record.Darnold, meanwhile, provedthat last season's resurgence with the Minnesota Vikings wasn't a fluke, leading the Seahawks to the third-most points scored in the NFL.

On the other end, the New England Patriots fired head coach Jerod Mayo after just one year last offseason. Former Patriots linebacker Mike Vrabel was brought in as head coach after being let go by the Tennessee Titans in 2023. At quarterback, Drake Maye showed flashes as a rookie, but also looked raw and in need of further development.

Turns out, Vrabel was the perfect hire. More competent coaching resulted in a massive turnaround, and Maye's development was a major part of that. In his second season in the NFL,Maye put himself in contention for the MVP awardand suddenly looks like the best quarterback to come out of an impressive 2024 class.

All of those figures played a prominent role in their respective teams getting to this point of the season. With everything on the line Sunday, here are the top 10 storylines heading into Super Bowl LX.

Can Sam Darnold's complete his career resurgence?

Prior to 2024, Darnold's NFL career could be summed up with short video clips, neither of them flattering. The first occurred during Darnold's second season in the NFL, when the New York Jets quarterback was caught on a microphone saying he was "seeing ghosts" during a loss aired on ESPN.Darnold received plenty of criticismfor that comment.

The second came later that same season, when Darnold was ruled out of a game due to mononucleosis. A graphic of Darnold was shown on the broadcast and instantly became a meme due to its absurdity.

The graphic served as not only a reminder that the Jets were cursed, but that Darnold seemed well on his way to becoming a bust after the team took him with theNo. 3 overall pick in the 2018 NFL Draft.

For a long time, that looked to be the case. From 2020 to 2023, Darnold combined for 27 touchdowns and 28 interceptions over 40 appearances. After serving as a backup with the San Francisco 49ers in 2023, his NFL career appeared to be on life support.

But everything changed with the Vikings. Darnold turned in his finest season as a pro, tossing 35 touchdowns and 12 interceptions, making the Pro Bowl for the first time. He led the team to a 14-3 record, but couldn't overcome the Los Angeles Rams in the wild-card game.

After vanquishing the Rams this season, Darnold is looking to complete his career resurgence against the Patriots in the Super Bowl. A win would absolutely erase Darnold's previous demons, especially considering his "seeing ghosts" game came against ... you guessed it ... the Patriots.

Is Drake Maye the Patriots' true successor to Tom Brady?

Much to thechagrin of NFL fans outside the New England area,the Patriots are back on top in the NFL and it's all due to their talented, young quarterback. Maye became a legitimate MVP candidate in just his second season in the league, something Tom Brady didn't accomplish until Year 4 of his career.

But Brady showed his greatness before that season, leading the Patriots to a Super Bowl win in his second year as a pro. If Maye can do the same, the comparisons will be inevitable.

Putting that comparison on any player is absurd, though it's worth noting Maye has already produced much better numbers in his first two seasons compared to Brady. There are some very obvious reasons for that, as Maye was a first-round pick who played almost immediately and Brady was a sixth-round pick who wasn't viewed as a starter until an injury to Drew Bledsoe pushed Brady into action.

Of course, what Brady did moving forward is what established him as the GOAT. Brady kept winning, bringing home seven Lombardi Trophies in all, which is more than any single NFL franchise. He only got better with age, winning all three of his MVP awards between the ages of 30 and 40. And he somehow beat Father Time, putting up excellent numbers through his age-45 season.

Expecting any of that from Maye would be silly, but the fact that the Patriots seemingly have another championship-caliber quarterback this soon — one who has better stats than Brady at the same age — is going to invite that comparison, especially if Maye wins Sunday.

Can the Seahawks put the Malcolm Butler game in the past?

The Super Bowl LX matchup should sound familiar, because it hasn't been that long since the Patriots and Seahawks have squared off in the big game. The two teams met back in Super Bowl XLIX after the 2014 season, and that one had a pretty famous ending.

With the Patriots leading by four points and just 27 seconds left on the clock, the team's defense found itself in a bad spot. The Seahawks had driven down to the 1-yard line, and had three more chances to score the game-winning touchdown. Seattle also had one timeout left and bruising running back Marshawn Lynch lined up in the backfield. Their victory looked certain.

And then Malcolm Butler happened.

The Seahawks shockingly opted to throw for the touchdown on second down. Quarterback Russell Wilson quickly set himself after taking the shotgun snap and tried to fire a slant to Ricardo Lockette. Butler jumped the route, coming up with the game-sealing interception with just seconds left to play.

It was an improbable play that led to one of the biggest "what-if" moments in NFL history. What if the Seahawks had trusted their tackle-breaking running back and tried to slam the ball into the end zone? Would fans be talking about a Seahawks dynasty instead?

With a win Sunday, Seattle can finally put that game — and Butler's interception — in the past.

Can Stefon Diggs get redemption for previous playoff failures?

Prior to 2025, Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs had made the playoffs seven times, but a Super Bowl appearance remained elusive. It wasn't for lack of trying. Diggs has put up some impressive postseason stat lines, with four games over 100 receiving yards. One of those contests was the"Minneapolis Miracle,"in which Diggs caught a game-winning 61-yard touchdown pass in the divisional round as time expired.

But as his teams continued to fall short, Diggs' disappointment grew. Following a loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the 2020 season AFC championship game, Diggs, then a member of the Buffalo Bills, was spotted in full uniform watching the Chiefs celebrate from a distance.

Stefon Diggs has had his share of playoff disappointments, like the 2020 season AFC title game loss to the Chiefs. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

The image gained traction on social media, as it captured Diggs' disappointment following the loss.

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Years later, Diggs has an opportunity to live out finally become a champion. A win Sunday would not only give Diggs the Super Bowl championship he's been seeking, but put a new spin on his AFC championship photo. Instead of it being an image of failure, it will serve as an example of staying motivated and continuing to fight, even at your lowest moment.

Can Mike Vrabel become one of the best coaches in the NFL?

Prior to 2025, Mike Vrabel was viewed as a solid coach who did an admirable job with the Tennessee Titans despite the team lacking star power at some key positions. And while Vrabel was regarded well following his 2023 firing, he wasn't necessarily considered a slam dunk for the next team in need of a head coach.

But Vrabel exceeded all expectations with the Patriots. While some improvement should have been expected under Vrabel, going from 4-13 to 14-3 and immediately reaching the Super Bowl has done a lot to improve Vrabel's standing among the current crop of head coaches.

With the Titans, Vrabel put together a 54-45 record, making the playoffs three times, but going 2-3 in those appearances. After one year with the Patriots, Vrabel now has a 68-48 career record as a head coach and a 5-3 record in the postseason.

A win in the Super Bowl would go a long way toward establishing Vrabel as one of the league's best coaches, potentially putting him on par with names like Andy Reid, Sean Payton and Sean McVay. Maybe that's premature, but the Vrabel-Patriots pairing certainly has a lot of similarities to those coaches and the NFL franchises where they became household names.

Is John Schneider the next Hall of Fame executive?

Seahawks general manager John Schneider made history when the franchise punched its ticket to Super Bowl LX. With the win,Schneider became the first NFL general manager toreach multiple Super Bowls with the same franchise, but with a different head coach and no players from the previous Super Bowl team.

The accomplishment speaks to Schneider's team-building ability and the Seahawks' decision to keep him around despite some major team changes since the team's first Super Bowl appearance under Schneider in the 2013 season.

Over that time, the Seahawks traded away Russell Wilson, watched Pete Carroll leave and completely reconstructed a defense on par with the "Legion of Boom." While Carroll had final say on personnel moves while he was in Seattle, Schneider deserves credit for playing a key role in them, and then for making more big moves that propelled Seattle back to the Super Bowl. Swapping Smith for Darnold was a massive upgrade, as was drafting safety Nick Emmanwori in the second round of the 2025 NFL Draft. Signing DeMarcus Lawrence also proved to be a shrewd offseason acquisition by Schneider.

Whether Schneider reaches the level of Hall of Fame executive probably depends on how the team responds in the immediate future (and, apparently,how the voting rules shake out after this year's Bill Belichick fiasco). The Seahawks have experienced plenty of success in Schneider's 16 seasons with the team. If that continues while he's fully responsible for personnel moves, he'll deserve a good look at Canton.

JSN vs. Christian Gonzalez: Who wins battle of 2023 first-round picks?

The Patriots hit on a future star when the team selected cornerback Christian Gonzalez with the No. 17 overall pick in the 2023 NFL Draft. Three picks later, the Seahawks found a star on the offensive side of the ball, taking wideout Jaxon Smith-Njigba.

Both Gonzalez and Smith-Njigba played crucial roles in their teams reaching the Super Bowl this season. Gonzalez picked up his first-ever Pro Bowl appearance, forcing 11 pass breakups in 14 games. Smith-Njigba established himself as one of the game's best receivers, leading the NFL in receiving yards and being named first-team All-Pro.

Both players will presumably see a lot of each other on Super Sunday. While Gonzalez may not shadow Smith-Njigba the entire game, that's probably the matchup the Patriots will prefer. Whichever player wins that battle could determine which team wins the game. If Gonzalez can find a way to shut down Smith-Njigba, that could completely throw off Darnold and the entire Seahawks' offense. But if Smith-Njigba is allowed to run free in the secondary, that could spell major trouble for New England.

One game is unlikely to define the rest of their careers, but it will be one heck of a matchup, especially with both players entering the NFL as part of the same draft class.

Are we in for another Patriots dynasty?

Sorry, America: We might be in for another decade-plus of the Patriots contending for Super Bowl titles. (Photo by JEFF HAYNES/AFP via Getty Images)

If the Patriots win Sunday, comparisons to the team's rise in the early 2000s will be inevitable. New England is led by a talented, young quarterback and a defensive-minded coach ... that sure sounds similar to the duo that eventually led the Patriots to six Super Bowl championships.

Any talk comparing Maye and Vrabel to Brady and Belichick will be premature, but it's easy to see why some fans would assume another Patriots dynasty is on the way. For one, there will likely be more belief in Maye than there was in Brady following his first Super Bowl win. At the time, Brady was a first-year starter who put up modest numbers. The team seemed to rely less on Brady in the playoffs, as he tossed just one touchdown in three postseason games that season — though he was injured for a portion of one of those games. Still, it could be argued that the Patriots won the 2001 season Super Bowl with Brady in more of a game manager role. He had his moments, obviously, but there was no indication he would turn into the Hall of Famer he eventually became.

Expectations are much higher for Maye, who was the third overall pick and put himself in contention for the MVP award in his second season in the NFL. Given his draft pedigree, there's a possibility Maye can get even better moving forward. Plus, the roster around him is just a year removed from picking in the top five of the draft, so a strong rookie class or two to complement last spring's solid free agent signings will only bulk out the roster.

That's a scary thought for the rest of the NFL — and for the non-Patriots fans who thought the team's reign of terror was over the instant Brady left.

How will preseason odds shape the NFL offseason?

At some point Sunday, a player on the winning team will deliver some version of the line, "Nobody believed in us." And for the first time in sports history, that tired cliche will actually be accurate.

Both teams entered the 2025 NFL season with long-shot odds to win the Super Bowl. The Seahawks were listed at 60-1. The Patriots came in at 80-1. That makes Super Bowl LX themost unlikely Super Bowl matchup in at least 50 years.

If the Patriots and Seahawks could overcome massive odds, what's to stop teams like the Arizona Cardinals or Miami Dolphins from pulling off the same trick next season?

That's the way most NFL teams should be thinking in the offseason. A year can make a massive difference in the sport, with teams routinely going from last place in their division to winning that same division a year later. The right coaching change or a willingness to take a shot on a talented player who hasn't had the opportunity to blossom can drastically alter a team's fortunes.

Of course, expecting every single team to hit on an elite head coach and an excellent quarterback is foolish. But if the Patriots and Seahawks taught the league any lesson, it's that taking risks on talented players can pay off in a big way. Darnold and Diggs were far from sure things when they signed in the offseason, but both players proved to be enormous acquisitions.

The Seahawks and Patriots are evidence that teams in similar spots — maybe the Tennessee Titans or the New York Jets — should try hard to make upgrades across the roster and take risks on high-upside players instead of writing off a year and praying a multiyear rebuild works out.

Are the Seahawks the NFL's next big coaching tree?

It's only been two years, but the Seahawks' hiring of Mike Macdonald looks like a masterstroke. The former Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator has a 26-10 record, including playoffs, in his first two years on the job, and already appears to be cultivating a coaching staff bound for bigger things.

Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiakis already a popular head-coaching candidate around the league. The team's success has made it harder for Kubiak to take on interviews thus far, but if he doesn't fill one of the head-coaching vacancies this cycle, he could be among the most desirable names on the market next season.

The same can be said about defensive coordinator Aden Durde, who interviewed with both the Atlanta Falcons and Cleveland Browns in recent months. Like Kubiak, Durde might be better off waiting for next year's coaching cycle. But if he can keep the Seahawks' defense playing at a high level for another season, he'll almost certainly be a hot name on the coaching market next offseason.

TheSean McVay and Kyle Shanahan coaching treeshave dominated the NFL in recent seasons, but a Seahawks win could see a changing of the guard across the league.

Super Bowl 2026: The top 10 storylines for Patriots vs. Seahawks, from Sam Darnold's redemption to a new Pats dynasty

After months of the most unlikely comebacks and some shocking playoff eliminations, two NFL teams will finally square off...
Kansas City hiring Mark Turgeon as next men's basketball coach

Kansas City men's basketballis hiring former Maryland coach Mark Turgeon for its coaching vacancy,the school announced Sunday, Feb. 1.

USA TODAY Sports

Turgeon, who last coached in 2021, is the first majorcoaching hire of the 2026 cycle.The former Wichita State and Texas A&M coach is a Kansas native and was a team captain at Kansas, appearing in four consecutive NCAA tournaments from 1984-87.

REQUIRED READING:Mid-major basketball coaches who could be next in line for big-time jobs

The Roos announced earlier this season the 2025-26 campaign would be coach Marvin Menzie's last with the program. Kansas City is off to a 4-18 start this season.

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<p style=Magic Johnson
college dominance: Led Michigan State to the 1979 NCAA Championship, defeating Larry Bird's Indiana State.
NBA: 5× NBA champion in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987 and 1988 with the Los Angeles Lakers. 3× NBA Finals MVP in 1980, 1982 and 1987. 3× NBA Most Valuable Player in 1987, 1989 and 1990. 12× NBA All-Star: 1980, 1982-1992. 2× NBA All-Star Game MVP in 1990 and 1992. Inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Carmelo Anthony college dominance: In his lone season (2003), led Syracuse to a national championship and earned Final Four Most Outstanding Player honors. Averaged 22.2 points and 10 rebounds per game as a freshman.
NBA: 10× NBA All-Star. 2012–13 NBA scoring champion, averaging 28.7 points per game.

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Before NBA glory: How Jordan, Bird, Magic and Curry ruled in college

Magic Johnsoncollege dominance:Led Michigan State to the 1979 NCAA Championship, defeating Larry Bird's Indiana State.NBA:5× NBA champion in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987 and 1988 with the Los Angeles Lakers. 3× NBA Finals MVP in 1980, 1982 and 1987. 3× NBA Most Valuable Player in 1987, 1989 and 1990. 12× NBA All-Star: 1980, 1982-1992. 2× NBA All-Star Game MVP in 1990 and 1992. Inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002.

Turgeon has been to 10 NCAA Tournaments at three schools, leading the Aggies to four consecutive appearances from 2008-11 before leaving for Maryland. He led the Terrapins to a Sweet 16 berth in 2015-16 but eventually agreed to part ways with the school midway through the 2021-22 season after a 5-3 start.

It's a surprising move for a well-known coach to return to the sport to lead a Summit League program without much historical success. Kansas City, formerly known as UMKC, has never made the NCAA Tournament in over 40 years as a Division I program.

Then-Maryland head coach Mark Turgeon reacts during a game against George Mason at Xfinity Center in 2021.

Turgeon, 60, has a 471-272 all-time record and will have his work cut out for him at the mid-major level.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Mark Turgeon to be Kansas City's next men's basketball coach

Kansas City hiring Mark Turgeon as next men's basketball coach

Kansas City men's basketballis hiring former Maryland coach Mark Turgeon for its coaching vacancy,the school announce...

 

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