White Chicago cop convicted of murder in shooting of black teen

Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke listens to closing statements during his trial for the shooting death of Laquan McDonald [File: Antonio Perez/AFP]
Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke listens to closing statements during his trial for the shooting death of Laquan McDonald [File: Antonio Perez/AFP]

A Chicago jury convicted a white police officer of second-degree murder in the 2014 shooting of Laquan McDonald, a 17-year-old African American. 

Jason Van Dyke shot McDonald 16 times on the night of October 20, 2014, as the teen, who was carrying a knife, appeared to be walking away from him. 

The shooting was captured on police video, sparking outrage throughout the city. 

The 12-person jury reached a verdict on Friday, just a day after beginning deliberations. He was also convicted of 16 counts of aggravated battery, and acquitted of one count of official misconduct. 

Protesters gathered outside the court as the verdict was read. Video posted on social media, showed activists and others cheering and chanting: “We finally got justice!” 

Van Dyke was originally charged with first degree murder, a charge that requires a finding that the shooting was necessary and unreasonable. The judge told jurors the second-degree charge was also available, requiring them to find Van Dyke believed his life was in danger, but that the belief was unreasonable.Second-degree murder usually carries a sentence of less than 20 years. 

Van Dyke is the first Chicago police officer to be charged with murder for an on-duty shooting in more than 50 years. The case has put the city at the centre of the national conversation about police misconduct and excessive force.

More soon…

SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies

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Celtics Rumors: Kyrie Irving Contacted Anthony Davis About Possible Boston Move

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 18:  Anthony Davis #23, and Kyrie Irving #11 of Team LeBron looks on against Team Stephen during the NBA All-Star Game as a part of 2018 NBA All-Star Weekend at STAPLES Center on February 18, 2018 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2018 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images)

Nathaniel S. Butler/Getty Images

Boston Celtics guard Kyrie Irving has reportedly contacted New Orleans Pelicans power forward Anthony Davis about potentially joining him in Boston, according to Jay King of The Athletic.

Davis has three years remaining on his contract before he is eligible for free agency in 2021.

Although there had previously been speculation about Irving opting out of his contract to enter free agency and sign elsewhere next offseason, Irving said Thursday at a season-ticket holders event that he plans to re-sign with the Celtics, per ESPN.com.

The Celtics have long been rumored to have interest in Davis, and Jared Weiss of USA Today‘s Celtics Wire reported in February that every move Boston makes is with an eye toward staying “in position to strike” on Davis if he becomes available.

While Davis recently changed agents and is now represented by Rich Paul of Klutch Sports, Paul told ESPN’s Brian Windhorst last month that the agent change doesn’t mean Davis wants to change teams as well.

New Orleans’ biggest advantage over the rest of the NBA is the fact that it can offer Davis a supermax contract extension.

If something changes and Davis does decide he wants out of NOLA, however, the Celtics have the makings of an ideal trade partner.

Boston has several young, talented players, and it stands to reason that Jaylen Brown and Terry Rozier would serve as the centerpieces of a potential Davis trade.

If the Celtics can land Davis while still retaining Irving, Gordon Hayward and Jayson Tatum, the Golden State Warriors may finally be faced with an opponent that has a better and deeper starting lineup.

Even if Boston doesn’t land Davis, though, its current roster makes it the favorite in the Eastern Conference to reach the NBA Finals in 2018-19.

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Kavanaugh cloture vote count: Here’s how senators voted

Senators today cast a key procedural vote that allowed the Senate to move forward on Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination. His nomination, which was once seen as an almost sure bet, has become seeped in drama after several women came forward and accused the nominee of sexual misconduct more than 30 years ago. The full floor vote is expected Saturday afternoon.

Two senators broke with party lines. Republican Lisa Murkowski of Alaska voted not to advance the nominee. Democrat Joe Manchin of West Virginia voted in favor.

Democrat

Republicans

Independents

Democrats

Republican

Independents

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NBA Rumors: Seattle Expansion Not Discussed by Owners, Grizzlies a ‘Wild Card’

Seattle Supersonics fan Colin Baxter demonstrates before Game 4 of the NBA finals basketball series between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Miami Heat, Tuesday, June 19, 2012, in Miami.  The Thunder used to be the Supersonics.(AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Lynne Sladky/Associated Press

While the NBA reportedly has no immediate plans for expansion, the return of an NBA franchise in Seattle could come in the form of relocation by another team. 

According to ESPN’s Brian Windhorst, expansion isn’t on the NBA timeline until 2025 at the earliest, which is when a new television deal can be negotiated.

Aside from expansion, Windhorst noted that the Memphis Grizzlies are considered a “wild card” in terms of possibly relocating to the Emerald City.

Windhorst added that some lawyers who have reviewed the Grizzlies’ lease with FedEx Forum believe there is a window for the team to relocate in 2021.

That would require current owner Robert Pera to sell the team, but Windhorst pointed out that there is no indication he intends to do so.

Seattle has been without an NBA franchise since the SuperSonics became the Oklahoma City Thunder in 2008.

The primary reason for the Sonics’ relocation to Oklahoma City 10 years ago was the fact that it needed a new arena.

KeyArena is set to be renovated in hopes of landing both an NBA and NHL franchise.

Per Cody Benjamin of CBS Sports, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman said the league would vote in December to decide whether to admit Seattle as an expansion franchise.

In March, 33,000 season ticket deposits were put down by those anticipating an NHL team in Seattle.

A similar response would likely occur if Seattle manages to bring the NBA back to the city as well.

On Friday, the Golden State Warriors will face the Sacramento Kings in a preseason game that will be held at KeyArena, marking the first NBA game in Seattle since the SuperSonics departed.

Following the game, KeyArena will shut its doors, and the $750 million renovation project will begin, according to Windhorst.

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Why we know so much about Russia’s GRU operations

On March 16, 2015, I received an email saying that there has been an attempt to break into my Gmail account and that I needed to change my password immediately. The blue “change password” button looked indeed quite tempting on the screen of my phone, but before pressing it, I noticed that the address from which the email was sent was a bit strange: no-reply@accounts.google.com.mail.com

The mobile version of Gmail would normally cut off part of this address and most users would not notice its weird tail. But I did.

In the coming months, I kept receiving such emails which I ended up sending to four cybersecurity organisations. Investigating the emails, they all reached the same conclusion: that the hacker group APT28, also known as Fancy Bear and Pawn Storm, was behind these phishing attempts.

And I was not the only one targeted by APT28. Dozens of other Russian journalists, activists and NGO workers received such emails, and so did state institutions of many Western countries.

A year later, Fancy Bear became known internationally. In July 2016, the whistle-blower website WikiLeaks published the contents of the Democratic National Committee’s mail server, which some believe ended up costing Hillary Clinton the presidency. The hack was attributed to that same cyber group.

Over the past two years, Russian hackers have also been accused of attacking NATO, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), the International Olympic Committee, the World Anti-Doping Agency, various ministries in Denmark, Italy, and Germany, the Joint Investigation Team tasked with investigating the downing of flight MH17 over Ukraine, and various other institutions in the Czech Republic, Poland, Germany, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Ukraine, Norway, etc.

In the fall of 2017, Russian hackers attacked the election campaign of Emmanuel Macron ahead of the French presidential vote and released a number of files and emails. But in doing so, they made one major mistake: they left behind metadata which contained a Russian name – Georgy Petrovich Roshka.

I, along with a number of colleagues, was able to identify this man as a member of the special army unit 26165 of the GRU. A year later, the US Department of Justice published a list of 12 GRU agents, some of whom are members of that same unit, who are accused of being behind the DNC server attack.

Now, more than three years after the first phishing attempt on my email, the tables have turned. The hackers failed to obtain my personal information, but I have succeeded in uncovering theirs. As I’m writing this, I have on my screen a list of 305 potential GRU agents with their names, surnames, passport numbers and even their mobile phones.

All of them had registered their cars at the same address in Moscow, Komsomolsky Prospekt 20, the address of unit 26165. The reason we were looking for these registrations in a publicly available traffic police database is that one of the GRU officers the Netherlands is accusing of trying to hack into the OPCW has a car registered to that address.

The man in question, Alexey Morenets, was named as one of four GRU agents caught in April in a parking lot in The Hague while trying to hack into the OPCW. The Dutch authorities also uncovered that the four were looking into hacking a laboratory in Switzerland that had tested samples of the substance used in the poisoning of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, UK, earlier this year. Apart from hacking equipment, Dutch police also uncovered a taxi receipt for a trip from the GRU office directly to an airport in Moscow. It is kind of funny that a GRU agent would keep such an incriminating receipt, probably hoping to expense his taxi ride after coming back from the “business trip”.

Apart from car registration records, another way for us to uncover GRU agents has been their passport number sequencing. A few weeks ago, British authorities released the passport details of the two Russian men, Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, they suspect of being behind the Skripal poisoning. We noticed that their passport numbers were almost completely identical except for one of the last digits. Our investigation showed that there are other GRU agents who have passports with this sequence of numbers.

When I wrote in September about the blunders of the GRU, I did not even think that it would be so easy to uncover the names of hundreds of potential agents. If journalists like me are able to access this information through open source investigations, then imagine what western intelligence services can do.

Over the past few years, the Kremlin has used the GRU for a number of subversive operations abroad including assassinations, cyber attacks and infiltration of border territories. Every time, it has denied responsibility but has also failed to properly cover up its tracks.

Today there is so much evidence uncovered of Russian intelligence operations abroad, that even people in Russia, where Petrov and Boshirov became internet memes, do not believe the Kremlin’s claim to innocence.

If the GRU’s mission was to incite divisions and instability in the West, it seems to have failed. As a result of Russia’s aggressive intelligence activities, the West has formed an increasingly united front against it and even spoilers like Donald Trump and Brexit will not be able to bring it down.

New sanctions on Russia are being prepared, and it seems that hopes for a rapprochement or a restart in relations have been dashed.

While in 2016, Trump was able to challenge speculations of Russian involvement in the DNC hack, today he no longer can. We have plenty of evidence about it and other crimes, and we have the identities of the perpetrators with their names, passport details and even mobile phone numbers.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy. 

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Judge won’t speed Merkley bid for Kavanaugh docs


Jeff Merkley

Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon’s suit argues that the lack of access to Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s documents effectively deprives senators of their advise-and-consent role. | Win McNamee/Getty Images

A federal judge has rejected a Democratic senator’s bid to force disclosure of more details about Brett Kavanaugh’s work before the Senate votes on his nomination to the Supreme Court.

Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon asked a federal court to order disclosure of a log of more than 100,000 pages of Kavanaugh records from President George W. Bush’s White House that were not turned over to the Senate. Merkley also demanded broader access to records a Bush representative gave to the Senate on a “committee confidential” basis.

Story Continued Below

The Oregon senator filed suit over the issue on Sept. 26 and stepped up his effort early Wednesday with a motion asking the court to accelerate a hearing set for Tuesday on a temporary restraining order he requested.

But U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson slapped down that request Friday, saying that the claims of urgency relating to the looming votes were misplaced. She also suggested that Merkley acted too slowly in bringing the matter to her.

“The Court notes that the schedule of events related to the confirmation process described in the motion to expedite is not, as stated in the motion, a change of circumstances or a set of ‘new facts’ that ‘have arisen since the scheduling conference;’ the parties specifically informed the Court during the scheduling conference that the cloture vote was likely to take place on Friday and the vote as early as Saturday,” Jackson wrote in an order released around noon Friday, just after the Senate voted to end debate on Kavanaugh’s nomination.

“While the complaint raises many questions related to the schedule established by [Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley] and the motion for a TRO questions the existence of any urgency requiring a vote while the processing of other Senators’ Freedom of Information Act requests for potentially relevant records is ongoing, the motion does not seek any relief, if any could be granted by the Court, related to the schedule of events in the Senate,” added Jackson, an appointee of President Barack Obama.

Jackson not only turned down Merkley’s request to accelerate the hearing set for Tuesday; she canceled it altogether, although she left open the possibility he may eventually get the order he is seeking.

Merkley’s suit argues that the lack of access to Kavanaugh’s documents effectively deprives senators of their advise-and-consent role.

Senate Republicans have argued that there is ample evidence about Kavanaugh’s time as an attorney in the White House counsel’s office under Bush and that the volume of records provided to the Senate exceeds that of any prior Supreme Court nominee.

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Ex-Rice Player Stuart Mouchantaf Accused of Giving Deadly Pill to Teammate

A Rice Owls helmet sits on the sideline during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Army, Saturday, Oct. 24, 2015, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith)

Eric Christian Smith/Associated Press

Former Rice University defensive lineman Stuart Mouchantaf was charged in the March death of former Rice teammate Blain Padgett on Friday.

According to KTRK’s Chauncy Glover, Mouchantaf has been charged with delivery of a controlled substance causing death, which is a second-degree felony that carries a penalty of anywhere from five years to life in prison.

Padgett allegedly believed Mouchantaf had given him Hydrocodone, but the pills were laced with carfentanil, causing Padgett to die in his sleep.

Carfentanil is an opioid often used to subdue large animals, per Ottawa Public Health.

Glover noted that carfentanil is 10,000 times more potent than morphine.

Mouchantaf is a 25-year-old Katy, Texas, native who played for the Owls from 2013-2015.

As a senior in 2015, Mouchantaf appeared in five games, registering six tackles and one tackle for loss. During his three-year playing career at Rice, Mouchantaf had one sack.

Padgett spent one season as Mouchantaf’s teammate in 2015.

He quickly developed into a key member of the Rice defense on the defensive line, racking up 41 tackles and two sacks as a sophomore in 2016.

Padgett was limited to three games in 2017 due to a shoulder injury.

Per Glover, Mouchantaf is being held on $250,000 bond because he is considered a flight risk after buying a one-way ticket to Lebanon. 

His passport will be seized and he will be required to wear an ankle monitor.

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Murkowski: Kavanaugh ‘not the right man for the court’


Lisa Murkowski

Sen. Lisa Murkowski was the lone Republican to oppose advancing Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination on Friday morning. | M. Scott Mahaskey/POLITICO

Kavanaugh Confirmation

The Alaska Republican calls her decision to oppose him ‘the most difficult’ of her Senate career.

Alaska GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski said she arrived at her decision to vote against Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court at the last possible moment Friday before opposing him on the Senate floor.

“I did not come to a decision on this until walking into the vote this morning,” Murkowski said.

Story Continued Below

Speaking to reporters at the Capitol, Murkowski described a wrenching decision based on issues that are “bigger than a nominee.” Murkowski had been publicly agonizing over her vote for days, meeting with victims of sexual assault and even revealing her own “#MeToo moment” to a local reporter as she wrestled with the allegations of misconduct against Kavanaugh. The nominee fiercely denied the accusations and most Republican senators dismissed them as uncorroborated.

“The truth is that none of this has been fair,” Murkowski said, including to Kavanaugh. Murkowski called Kavanaugh “a good man” but added that he’s “not the right man for the court.”

Murkowski was the lone Republican to oppose advancing Kavanaugh’s nomination on Friday morning. She described a long attempt to grapple with “what is fair and what is right.” And she said that she had weighed the “credibility of our institutions” as part of her thought process. She also called it “the most difficult” decision she’d had to make as a senator.

“And I’ve had some interesting ones,” she said.

Conservatives immediately raged against Murkowski’s vote after she cast it, with pundit Laura Ingraham musing on Twitter that “maybe it’s time to run for Senate” and slamming the Alaskan for having“abandoned all principles of due process and fairness.”

But back in Murkowski’s home state, she faced no shortage of political pressure to vote against President Donald Trump’s nominee. The Alaska Federation of Natives, a large group of native peoples in the Last Frontier, came out against Kavanaugh before Christine Blasey Ford’s sexual misconduct claim came to light, citing the judge’s past rulings on their issues.

Alaska Gov. Bill Walker, running for reelection this fall as an independent, joined with his No. 2 to oppose Kavanaugh, citing concerns about both tribal issues and health care.

Trump’s nominee ultimately may get confirmed on Saturday regardless of Murkowski’s no vote, given that Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) said Friday he plans to vote yes. That announcement brings Kavanaugh within one committed yes vote of confirmation.

Elana Schor contributed to this report.

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Charli XCX And Troye Sivan Go Back To ‘1999’ On Nostalgia-Trip New Song



Getty Images

The first thing you need to know about “1999,” the new collaboration between Charli XCX and Troye Sivan, is that it’s not a Prince cover. The second you need to know is that it’s a positively nostalgic bop.

While the Purple One was concerned with the future, Charli’s caffeinated-as-always vocals are a touch wistful for the past. She sings, “Wishing we could go back in time / Maybe we could do it tonight, tonight, tonight” and pinpoints the final year of the 20th century as the preferred destination.

This all begs the question, what exactly would one do if she found herself dropped back near the end of the first Clinton term? (Charli grew up in Essex, and Troye in Perth, so the Clinton reference point isn’t as fitting, but whatever.) The song’s escapist lyrics mention some specific cultural hallmarks of the time — blasting Slim Shady and Britney Spears — but also simply indulging in what being young has to offer, like “playin’ air guitar on the roof.”

“I know those days are over but a boy can fantasize / About JTT on MTV and when I close my eyes,” Sivan sings on the bridge, shouting out ’90s teen heartthrob Jonathan Taylor Thomas. The single’s cover art also finds Troye and Charli decked out in shiny Matrix leather like Trinity and Neo, a look that never quite went away or maybe did but is now back, for good?

“1999” marks the second prominent time-machine pop song this year, after Anne-Marie’s early-aughts patchwork “2002.” Both songs shout out “…Baby One More Time” specifically, too, though “2002” expands its scope and uses songs from many other years as reference points. The madcap “1999” is absolutely classic Charli, a celebration of pop that fuses elements of the era she’s shouting out while also somehow sounding like a roadmap to pop’s effervescent future.

I can only hope we’ll soon get a video that’s as incredibly studied in its approach to the late ’90s as that cover art. I mean, look at that font! Not since Beerbongs & Bentleys has an album cover evoked such particular late-’90s shopping-mall music shop feels.

Until we get a proper visual though, you can listen to the whole thing above. And dance.

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Who Would Scouts Take No. 1 If 2019 NBA Draft Were Today?

PORTLAND, OR - APRIL 13: R.J. Barrett #5 of Team World plays defense against Team USA during the Nike Hoop Summit on April 13, 2018 at the MODA Center Arena in Portland, Oregon. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2018 NBAE (Photo by Sam Forencich/NBAE via Getty Images)

Sam Forencich/Getty Images

NBA scouts all seem to have the same prospect atop their board in October.

Bleacher Report polled evaluators across the league for predictions of who’ll go first in the 2019 NBA draft. The results were nearly unanimous. Duke freshman RJ Barrett is the consensus early favorite ahead of teammate Zion Williamson, while others like North Carolina’s Nassir Little and France’s Sekou Doumbouya were merely mentioned in passing.

While Barrett has yet to play a college game, scouts have seen plenty dating back to 2015 at the U16 Americas Championship. Since then, his resume of accomplishments during scout-credentialed events includes:

  • 18.4 points per game at 2016 U17 World Cup
  • MVP of 2016 Jordan Classic International Game
  • MVP and gold medalist at 2017 U19 World Cup (38 points against USA)
  • 26 points at 2018 McDonald’s All-American Game
  • 20 points, nine rebounds and six assists at 2018 Nike Hoop Summit

Barrett recently did what he was supposed to this summer during Duke’s preseason tour in Canada by averaging 31.0 points through three games against inferior opponents.

A smooth athlete, instinctual scorer and consistently the best player on the floor, Barrett comes off as the safe, easy answer when projecting No. 1.

But it’s also worth noting that scouts aren’t thrilled with the field of names they’re looking at for 2019. “This draft is really weak,” one executive told Bleacher Report. “McDonald’s Game and practices were the worst I’ve seen in 10 years or more.”

Still, there will always be high demand for a two-way scoring wing like Barrett. Based on his history and role with Duke in Canada, he’ll inevitably have the production to back up the potential NBA franchises will assess and covet.

It’s also tough to imagine any red flags will pop up as they did for previous No. 1 picks.

There won’t be questions about his alpha-dog mentality like there were with Andrew Wiggins, who appeared passive at times in college. Barrett isn’t shy. He won’t stop shooting after consecutive misses or hesitate to take the game into his hands.

Duke could be a Final Four contender, meaning in all likelihood he’ll also avoid the criticism that Ben Simmons and Markelle Fultz had to face for not leading their teams to impressive wins and records.

Unlike Deandre Ayton, Barrett also won’t have the pressure to block shots or anchor a defense—areas where Ayton wasn’t convincing at Arizona. Quick and long at 6’7″, Barrett figures to fare fine defensively and even earn praise for his knack to compete and ability to guard positions 2 through 4.

SPRINGFIELD, MA - JANUARY 15:  R.J. Barrett #5 of Montverde Academy dribbles in a game against Mater Dei High School during the 2018 Spalding Hoophall Classic at Blake Arena at Springfield College on January 15, 2018 in Springfield, Massachusetts. (Photo

Adam Glanzman/Getty Images

His jumper will likely take the most heat under the NBA’s scouting lens. The team that wins the lottery will want Barrett to become an elite scoring weapon, further emphasizing the importance of outside shooting for a wing.

In 24 games documented by RealGM.com dating back to 2015, he’s shot 33.3 percent on 66 three-point attempts and 65.5 percent on 168 free throws. Barrett shot 31.2 percent from three and 58.2 percent at the line during 2017 EYBL action, and he finished up Duke’s Canada tour a combined 6-of-21 from behind the arc.

At this stage, Barrett still demonstrates too much shot-making skill from each level for scouts to express concern that would jeopardize his standing as the nation’s top prospect. He’s going to knock down enough jumpers—off the catch, the dribble and screens—that evaluators can overlook so-so shooting percentages.

He’ll be a constant in the scoring column, mostly with his automatic transition game, slashing and unteachable improvisation in the lane with various runners, floaters and adaptable finishing ability.

He remains the safe, early prediction to go first. The question is whether he’ll generate enough excitement to hold off challengers and finish as a strong No. 1 overall option since there are other prospects with superior size, bounce and versatility.

Specifically, his teammate Williamson possesses an unheard-of mix of power and explosiveness. If it’s effective in college and paired with developing skills that appear translatable, it’s easy to see why a team could view Williamson as the more enticing, higher-upside prospect. He averaged 30.0 points of his own during Duke’s three exhibition games, proving to be more than a leaper by demonstrating off-the-dribble maneuvering and outside touch that some may not have anticipated.

As of now, it’s not clear what position Williamson is or how he fits on an NBA floor as a 6’7″, 285-pound forward. Barrett’s fit is clear, and the potential for his game and success to translate is more believable.

With so many opportunities to scout him throughout high school, it’s reasonable to assume we know what we’re about to get and see. He isn’t a sure thing to go No. 1, but it’s going to take a surprising, persuasive year from someone else to change minds and the top of draft boards. To start the season, scouts view Barrett as 2019’s prize.

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