Rashee Rice will not face NFL suspension amid assault allegations

Kansas City Chiefswide receiverRashee Ricewill not face discipline under the NFL's personal conduct policy amidan ongoing civil lawsuit accusing him of domestic assault.

USA TODAY Sports

The NFL announced April 3 it had concluded its investigation into the accusations made against Rice by his former girlfriend, asESPN's Adam Schefter reports.

"There was insufficient evidence to support a finding that he violated the personal conduct policy,"NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said in a statement.

Sean Lindsey, an attorney representing Rice, addressed the news with a statement of his own.

"Mr. Rice wants to thank the NFL for their thorough investigation, and looks forward to the start of the 2026-27 NFL season," Lindsey said.

LERNER:The NFL is investigating Rashee Rice − here's what happens next

Rice was named in a civil lawsuit filed by his ex-girlfriend in the Dallas County (Texas) court system on Feb. 16, 2026. The lawsuitalleged Rice assaulted the womanmultiple times over a 19-month period. Police have not filed criminal charges related to the allegations against Rice.

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The complaint alleged that the Chiefs wide receiver had "grabbed, choked, strangled, pushed, thrown, scratched, hit, and headbutted" his ex-girlfriend. She also alleges Rice threw things at her, "destroy[ed] property, punch[ed] walls, [broke] furniture" and locked her out of their shared home "in the middle of the night."

Rice's former girlfriend, who is also the mother of their two children,shared an Instagram post on Jan. 7alleging she had been the victim of domestic violence for several years. She did not mention Rice by name in that post, which featured a picture of her with a bloody lip. The post has since been deleted.

"It's been nothing but hell," she wrote, adding, "I've protected his image too long and I'm done doing that. It's time to protect my peace, protect my children and stand up for myself."

According to the lawsuit, Rice's ex-girlfriend was pregnant during much of the alleged abuse. She is seeking more than $1 million in damages in the civil suit.

The lawsuit remains open, according to Dallas County court records.

USA TODAY Sports' Jack McKessy also contributed to this report.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NFL concludes Rashee Rice investigation, will not discipline Chiefs WR

Rashee Rice will not face NFL suspension amid assault allegations

Kansas City Chiefswide receiverRashee Ricewill not face discipline under the NFL's personal conduct policy amidan on...
Report: NCAA Tournament expansion to 76 will be finalized after Final Four

NCAA's leadership and basketball committees are expected to finalize expansion of the men's and women's NCAA Tournaments to 76 teams shortly after the conclusion of this year's tournament, Yahoo Sports reported on Friday.

Field Level Media

Per the report, the new format would see 52 teams earn berths directly into what is currently the first round of the NCAA Tournament, while the remaining 24 -- 12 lower-seeded automatic qualifiers and the final 12 at-large teams -- would play 12 opening-round games Tuesday and Wednesday. They would be held in the longtime First Four home of Dayton, Ohio, and at an additional site to determine which teams would advance to Thursday and Friday's first round.

However, these details could also reportedly change as the NCAA continues to talk with its men's tournament TV partners in Warner Bros. Discovery and CBS, which have broadcasting rights through the 2031 tournament.

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The report didn't indicate how quickly expansion could be added, but it could theoretically come as soon as the 2027 NCAA Tournaments. But expansion "will happen" barring something unforeseen in the next few days.

It would mark the first expansion of the tournament since the field moved from 65 to 68 teams with the addition of the First Four games in 2011. The field had been 64 or 65 teams since 1985.

The Big 12 and Atlantic Coast Conference were the leading voices behind tournament expansion, according to the report. However, it's also something that NCAA president Charlie Baker has said he's in favor of doing.

--Field Level Media

Report: NCAA Tournament expansion to 76 will be finalized after Final Four

NCAA's leadership and basketball committees are expected to finalize expansion of the men's and women's ...
Nearly a century of wondering: The American UFO saga, in reality and in fiction

UFOs, or the notion of them, have been around a long time. Here's a look at how the various iterations of the subject — from government investigations to sightings to movies and TV — have unfolded since World War II:

Associated Press

1947: First widely reported UFO sighting in US

On June 24, private pilot Kenneth A. Arnoldreports seeingnine objects flying near Mount Rainier in Washington state. His was the first widely reported UFO sighting in this country and set off a wave of other reported sightings. On July 2, A ranch foreman checking on sheep finds strange debris spread over a prairie nearRoswell, New Mexico. Authorities initially say the material is from a flying disc, but later say it is from a weather balloon.

1948: Official government investigation begins

U.S. Air Force launches Project Sign, an investigation into UFOs; renamed Project Blue Book in 1953. More than 12,600 reported sightings were investigated between 1948 and 1969.

1950: Hollywood jumps in

Release of the spy film "The Flying Saucer."

1952: Unexplained objects above Washington

Radar operators, pilots and others pick up or see up to a dozen unexplained objects in the sky above Washington, D.C. in July.

1955: Area 51 construction starts

Construction begins for what would become the Area 51 site northwest of Las Vegas as an Air Force facility.Area 51becomes a hotspot for UFO conspiracy theories. In 2013, the CIA acknowledged the existence of the site.

1957: Widespread Texas sightings

In November, dozens of people in Levelland, Texas, west of Lubbock, report strange lights in the sky that interfered with their vehicles and lights.

1966: The final frontier

In September, "Star Trek" premieres on NBC, launching the most enduring space drama in history.

1969: Air Force says no ETs found

Dec. 17: Air Force says it found no evidence of any UFO that was extraterrestrial in nature or that threatened national security; terminates Project Blue Book.

1977: Spielberg gets in on it

Steven Spielberg's "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" released.

1980: Unexplained lights seen above London

U.S. Air Force personnel stationed in Great Britain report seeing strange lights above Rendlesham Forest, northeast of London, in December. Officers reportedly see a metallic object in the forest after investigating the lights.

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1982: The iconic Gen-X alien emerges on film

Spielberg's "E.T. the Extraterrestrial" is released.

1996: The epic cinematic 'alien invasion'

Roland Emmerich's "Independence Day" is released.

1997: UFO reported in Arizona

Residents report seeing lights from a large flying object in the sky over or near Phoenix in March.

2015: 'Unidentified blob'

U.S. aviators track an unidentified blobwhich was dubbed "Gofast." In another video from that year, labeled "Gimbal," an unexplained object is tracked as it soars high along the clouds, traveling against the wind. "There's a whole fleet of them," one naval aviator tells another, though only one indistinct object is shown. "It's rotating." The videos are leaked and later released by the Pentagon.

2019: Declassified footage deemed unidentified

Navy acknowledges the three clips of declassified military footage as unidentified aerial phenomena.

2020: UAP team assembled

Pentagon announces aUAP (unidentified aerial phenomena) Task Force.

2021: Big review of cases produces no definitive ET links

Investigators say in a U.S. governmentreportthat they did not find extraterrestrial links in reviewing 144 sightings of aircraft or other devices apparently flying at mysterious speeds or trajectories. They highlighted the need for better data collection.

2022: Governmental action on multiple fronts

Congress holds first hearingin 50 years on UFOs following reports of unexplained aerial phenomena by the military. Lawmakers from both parties say UFOs are a national security concern.NASA announcesthat it is launching a study of UFOs as part of a new push toward high-risk, high-impact science. The space agency says it's setting up an independent team to see how much information is publicly available on the matter and how much more is needed. The agencyreleases its findings in 2023, saying the study of UFOs will require new scientific techniques, including advanced satellites as well as a shift in how unidentified flying objects are perceived. The All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) set up in the Pentagon to track reports of unidentified objects in the sky, under water and in space.

2023: Concealment alleged by former Air Force officer

Former Air Force intelligence officer David Gruschtestifies before a House Oversight subcommitteein July that the U.S. is concealing a longstanding program that retrieves and reverse-engineers unidentified flying objects. The Pentagon denies it's concealing any such program.

2024: No evidence indicated

New Pentagon study that examined reported sightings of UFOs over nearly the last centuryfinds no evidenceof aliens or extraterrestrial intelligence. The study from the Defense Department's All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office analyzed U.S. government investigations since 1945 of reported sightings of unidentified anomalous phenomena. It found no evidence that any of those claims were actually signs of alien life, or that the U.S. government and private companies had reverse-engineered extraterrestrial technology and were hiding it.

2026: A flurry of government developments

—Feb. 14: Former U.S. President Barack Obama, answering a question about "are aliens real" on a podcast, says, "They're real. But I haven't seen them. And, they're not being kept in Area 51." Obama later released thisstatement on social media: "Statistically, the universe is so vast that the odds are good there's life out there. But the distances between solar systems are so great that the chances we've been visited by aliens is low, and I saw no evidence during my presidency that extraterrestrials have made contact with us. Really!"

—Feb. 19: President Donald Trumpannounces on social mediathat he's directing the Pentagon and other government agencies to identify and release files related to extraterrestrials and UFOs because of "tremendous interest." Trump accuses Obama of disclosing "classified information" and tells reporters that he doesn't know if UFOs are "real or not."

—March 31: U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna requestsin a letterto Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth that the government release about four dozen videos related to UAP sightings to an oversight committee task force. "The presence of UAPs in and around the sensitive airspaces of U.S. military installations poses a threat to the security of the armed forces and their readiness," Luna writes.

Nearly a century of wondering: The American UFO saga, in reality and in fiction

UFOs, or the notion of them, have been around a long time. Here's a look at how the various iterations of the subjec...

 

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