NEW: Florida boy arrested, 'perp-walked' and thrown in jail after bragging about a "k*ll list" and showing off an arsenal of weapons.
Florida doesn't mess around.
"Every time we make an arrest, your kid’s photo is going to be put out there… We’re gonna come and get you. We’re going to put you out for public embarrassment," said Volusia County Sheriff Mike Chitwood.
11-year-old Carlo "Kingston" Dorelli showed his arsenal to classmates and threatened violence.
Dorelli was charged with a felony for the written threat of a mass sh**ting.
The sheriff also published a video of the boy being led into the jailhouse with handcuffs on.
"For the little b*stards out there who think this is funny, ha ha ha, you want to get on social media: You ain’t that smart… You’re getting caught."
The #Steelers are planning to start QB Justin Fields on Sunday once again, coach Mike Tomlin just told reporters.
QB Russell Wilson, who missed Week 1 with calf tightness, is feeling better. And he’ll be monitored. But no revenge game against the #Broncos this weekend.
Breaking: The Steelers are preparing Justin Fields to start vs. the Broncos, coach Mike Tomlin said.
The team will continue to monitor Russell Wilson in practice.
BOND HEARING SCHEDULED
After almost 3 months, Young Thug and Yak Gotti will get their bond reconsidered in a hearing THIS FRIDAY July 21 at 9 AM!
🙏 🙏 🙏
Erik Spoelstra shared one of his personal Kobe memories (via CBSsportsHQ).
"I still remember the first time I met him," Spoelstra said. "I was an assistant coach, and one of my responsibilities was with the young players. Rasual Butler and I walked out for an early workout. The veterans would always have the best time slotted to work out before the game, so we had to get our work in way before everybody. We got in there four and a half hours [before the game}. We thought we would be there way before anyone else would be on the court. Kobe was already on the court.
"The painstaking detail and focus he was putting into that workout was remarkable. Rasual and I just ended up watching about 15 or 20 minutes of it. Then we went back to work. And as Kobe finished up his workout, he came and sat down, and it was a surreal moment as a young assistant coach. I was like: 'Wow, he's going to sit here and watch this workout.' Rasual was from Philly, so they knew each other, and he wound up introducing me to [Kobe].
"And what I found so amazing about that moment, the reason I bring it up, is because there was nobody that was going to be more fierce or more of a savage as a competitor [than Kobe], and yet the next two minutes of what Kobe was doing to encourage a young player [in Rasual] was simply amazing. And that was early mentorship, when [Kobe] was still a young player [himself] in this league. But Rasual wasn't playing at the time, and Kobe could separate the two things and offer a lot of encouragement, basically telling him: 'Hey, you stick with this. That kind of workout, you're going to earn your spot in this league, it's just a matter of time.'
"And then to come out in the game that night and just try to destroy everybody. It was paradoxical almost, those two kinds of personalities. He was very giving. We all saw that later in his career when he was such a mentor. But also one of the fiercest competitors you could ever come across."