June 20, 2013

NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial

2d2a46af021a2e1ef7ec9d0fae2caeeb NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial

() – O.J. Simpson, the ex- famously acquitted of murder in 1995, appeared in court on Monday seeking a new trial in a Las Vegas case that sent him to prison as witnesses testified to what they said were by his lawyer.

Simpson, 65, appeared older, grayer and heavier after five years behind bars as he entered a Las Vegas courtroom in blue jail garb, his hands and feet shackled, for a hearing that could last for a week into claims that his then-attorney mishandled the Nevada case.

He was brought to court from a Nevada prison where he is serving up to for the 2007 incident in which he and five other men stormed into a room at the Palace Station Hotel and Casino and took thousands of dollars in memorabilia from a pair of sports collectors at gunpoint.

argued unsuccessfully that Simpson was only trying to retrieve his own stolen memorabilia and was not aware that an accomplice had brought a gun along. He was found guilty on 12 charges, including armed robbery and kidnapping.

Simpson’s current attorneys have asked a judge to throw out his 2008 conviction, saying his , , had a because he knew in advance that Simpson planned to confront the sports dealers at the hotel.

They also argue that Galanter never told Simpson that prosecutors had offered a in which he would have been sentenced to two to five years in prison.

Much of the testimony during the first day of the hearing centered on an of the hotel room that said Galanter should have fought to keep out of the trial as inadmissible evidence.

James Barnett, a of Simpson who let the famous defendant stay at his home during the trial, said he told Galanter he questioned the integrity of the tapes and urged the lawyer to have them analyzed. He said Galanter agreed to do so only if Barnett put up the $250,000 he said it would cost.

“I thought about it and I decided not to. I thought, this is one slick lawyer,” Barnett said, adding that he believed the tapes could have been analyzed for $5,000.

Barnett was followed on the witness stand by attorney Eric Bryson, who represented one of Simpson’s co-defendants in the case. Bryson told the court that the tapes were “untrustworthy” and should have been challenged as evidence.

“Without the tapes, I thought the state’s case was very weak,” he said.

Simpson’s 43-year-old daughter, Arnelle, took the witness stand shortly before the lunch break, testifying that her father had been drinking heavily during the weekend of the incident. That testimony was expected to be used by Simpson’s lawyers to suggest that he was not aware that guns were drawn at the hotel.

A separate appeal by Simpson of his conviction in the case was rejected by the Nevada Supreme Court in 2010.

Simpson, a former star running back turned TV pitchman, was accused of the 1994 stabbing and slashing murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman. He was acquitted in 1995 after a year-long proceeding, dubbed the “Trial of the Century” in the press, that was carried live gavel-to-gavel on U.S. television.

(Writing and additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric Beech)

NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial  NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial  NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial  NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial  NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial

 NFL: O.J. Simpson resurfaces in court to seek new robbery trial

College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami

f529380b4770325a10797089c90a4b03 College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami
(Powered by an explosive 36-5 run, No. 25 Miami (Fla.) stunned No. 1 Duke 90-63 to extend its lead in the ACC. The Hurricanes earned their first win versus a top- in .)

, Fla. (AP) — With a steady din coming from the sea of orange behind the visitors’ basket, No. 1-ranked Duke had a tough time making a shot.

The went more than 8 minutes without a field goal in the first half Wednesday night, and a became a blowout for No. 25 Miami, which delighted a with a 90-63 victory.

The defeat was the third-worst ever for a No. 1 team, and Duke’s worst in nearly five years.

Durand Scott scored a season-high 25 points for the Hurricanes (14-3, 5-0 ), added a season-high 22, and Shane had 18 points, 10 rebounds and five assists.

Miami beat a No. 1 team for the first time, taking control with a stunning 25-1 run midway through the opening half. The Blue Devils (16-2, 3-2) missed 13 despite numerous good looks during the Hurricanes’ run that transformed a 14-13 deficit into a 38-15 lead.

Seth Curry, Tyler Thornton and Quinn Cook went a combined 1 for 29 for the Blue Devils, who shot a season-low 30 percent. Rasheed Sulaimon led them with 16 points.

54, NO. 9 BUTLER 53

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Ramon Galloway went the length of the court for the winning basket with 2. left to send La Salle past Butler.

Fans stormed the court in a wild celebration for the biggest win for La Salle (13-5, 3-2 ) in . There was some confusion after Galloway’s basket and fans were ordered off the court. Butler had attempted a last-second that was way off the mark. Officials huddled with both coaches and they decided the final score stood. It was mayhem again as fans rushed the court for the second time in minutes.

Let them celebrate twice: La Salle hadn’t defeated a top 10 team since 1980.

Butler’s leading scorer Rotnei Clarke missed his third straight game with a severely sprained neck. No decision has yet been made about Saturday’s home game against Temple. Clarke was hurt when he crashed head-first into a padded basket support at Dayton on Jan. 12.

NO. 7 INDIANA 72, PENN STATE 49

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Victor Oladipo scored 19 points, and Yogi Ferrell added a season-high 15 to help Indiana rout Penn State.

The Hoosiers (17-2, 5-1 Big Ten) survived a sluggish shooting first half with strong defense and used a fast second-half start to reassert their dominance in this series.

D.J. Newbill had 18 points and Jermaine Marshall finished with 12 to lead the Nittany Lions (8-11, 0-7), who have lost seven straight overall and 12 straight on the road in league play.

While limiting Penn State to 29.6 percent shooting in the first half, Indiana used runs of 7-0, 8-2 and 12-5 to take a 33-19 lead.

The Hoosiers wasted no time taking control in the second half, going on an 8-0 spurt in the first 65 seconds to extend the lead to 41-19. Penn State couldn’t get closer than 17 points the rest of the way.

NO. 8 FLORIDA 64, GEORGIA 47

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Scottie Wilbekin scored 17 points to help Florida shake off a sluggish first half and romp past another Southeastern Conference opponent.

The Gators (15-2, 5-0) trailed 27-24 at halftime, making just 1 of 9 attempts beyond the 3-point arc. But Florida quickly turned things around after the break. Wilbeken and Mike Rosario hits back-to-back 3s and forced Georgia into three straight turnovers.

The Gators led the rest of way, holding Georgia (7-11, 1-4) to only one field goal in the first 11½ minutes of the second half.

Despite never leading in the first half, Florida added to its run of dominance in conference play. The Gators have won their first five SEC games by an average of nearly 25 points.

NORTHWESTERN 55, NO. 12 MINNESOTA 48

EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) — Jared Swopshire scored 16 points to lead Northwestern past Minnesota.

In a game where baskets were hard to come by at times, the Wildcats (12-8, 3-4 Big Ten) made just enough shots down the stretch to beat a ranked opponent for the second time in three games while sending the Gophers (15-4, 3-3) to their third .

Alex Marcotullio made a 3-pointer midway through the second half to give Northwestern a one-point lead and start the decisive 13-2 run.

Reggie Hearn scored 13 points after averaging 21 in the previous two games. Tre Demps added 10 points, and the Wildcats shook off a loss to Indiana and took out another ranked team to go with their victory over then-No. 23 Illinois last week.

They prevailed despite getting outrebounded 45-31 because they held Minnesota to its lowest point total of the season.

NO. 15 NEW MEXICO 66, COLORADO STATE 61

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Tony Snell scored 23 points and New Mexico held off a late Colorado State rally.

The Lobos (17-2, 4-0 Mountain West) led 54-32 with 12:26 left before the Rams (15-4, 2-2) began a comeback behind Dorian Green. He scored 11 points in a 20-5 run that cut the lead to 59-52.

Colorado State’s Wes Eikmeier hit a 3-pointer with 8.2 seconds left that made it 64-61, but Snell converted two free throws to preserve the victory.

Snell scored six points in a pivotal 10-0 run that turned a 27-25 lead with 4 minutes left in the first half into a 37-25 advantage early in the second half.

Eikmeier led Colorado State with 20 points and Green finished with 14.

NO. 16 OREGON 68, WASHINGTON STATE 61

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — E.J. Singler scored 19 points and Oregon rallied from a 10-point halftime deficit to beat Washington State.

Singler scored 14 points in the second half for the Ducks (17-2, 6-0 Pac-12), who trailed 39-29 at halftime before pulling out their eighth .

Arsalan Kazemi added 16 points for Oregon and Damyean Dotson had 10 points and nine rebounds.

Mike Ladd had 19 points and Brock Motum scored 14 for the Cougars (10-9, 1-5).

Singler took over 5 minutes into the second half with the Ducks trailing 44-38. The senior forward scored 10 , tying the score at 46-all with the second of his consecutive 3-pointers. His free throws at the 11:45 mark gave the Ducks their first lead, 48-46.

The Cougars went back up 53-52 on a layup by Royce Woolridge with 7:38 to play, but Kazemi answered with a dunk off a pass from Singler, and Dominic Artis made a 3 as the Ducks took a 57-53 lead. They led the rest of the way.

DRAKE 74, NO. 17 CREIGHTON 69

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Richard Carter scored 20 points and Drake handed Creighton consecutive losses for the first time this season.

Ben Simons added 13 for the Bulldogs (9-10, 3-5 Missouri Valley Conference), who blew a 16-point lead before rallying for their first win over a ranked opponent in five years.

Grant Gibbs brought Creighton within 71-69 with 32 seconds left, and the Bluejays got the ball back on a steal. But Gibbs missed a layup and Simons sealed the win with a steal and two free throws with 0.5 seconds left.

Doug McDermott had 21 points to lead Creighton, which shot just 24 percent from 3-point range. But McDermott had just four points in the second half and didn’t touch the ball on Creighton’s last two possessions.

NO. 20 WICHITA STATE 62, MISSOURI STATE 52

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Cleanthony Early scored 17 points, Carl Hall added 15 and Wichita State rallied past Missouri State.

The Bears, behind freshman Gavin Thurman, used a 19-1 run to take a 33-25 lead with 16:13 remaining in the game.

The Shockers came away empty on their first five possessions of the second half then Early and Hall got more active in the offense, scoring all but two of the points in a 16-2 run that gave Wichita State a 41-35 lead with 10:53 to go.

The Shockers (18-2, 7-1 Missouri Valley Conference), who were playing just days after upsetting then-No. 12 Creighton, remained in first place in the conference.

Thurman had 21 points to lead Missouri State (5-15, 3-5), which lost its fourth straight.

6ce4221b08615911bb5b5f1f6f69216a College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami
(After a back-and-forth first-half battle, third-ranked UConn rallied to serve No. 4 Duke a 79-49 loss on Monday night. Kelly Faris got 18 points and 12 rebounds for the Huskies.)

AMES, Iowa (AP) — Brittney Griner scored 22 points, blocked six shots and dunked for the 11th time in her career in leading top-ranked Baylor past No. 24 Iowa State 66-51 on Wednesday night.

Baylor (17-1, 7-0 Big 12) took control early, running off 17 straight points in the first half while holding Iowa State scoreless for 11½ minutes. The Cyclones (13-4, 4-3) had taken a quick 6-4 lead on a pair of 3-pointers, but didn’t score again until Baylor was up 21-6.

Griner triggered the big run when she picked off a pass intended for Anna Prins, drove unimpeded to the other end and threw down a two-handed dunk. It was just one more slam for the most prolific dunker in women’s college basketball history.

Odyssey Sims added 12 points and Alexis Prince 11 for Baylor, which won its 29th straight regular season conference game.

No. 2 NOTRE DAME 73, PITTSBURGH 47

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Kayla McBride scored 19 points to help Notre Dame beat Pittsburgh for the Irish’s 12th-straight win.

Jewell Loyd added 14 points while Skylar Diggins had 13, all in the first half.

With the game tied at 29, Notre Dame scored the final six points before break. The Irish continued the spurt in the second half, scoring 25 of the first 28 points.

Notre Dame (17-1, 6-0 Big East) led 60-32 with 10 minutes left and coasted from there.

Brianna Kiesel scored eight points to lead Pitt (9-9, 0-5). The Panthers have lost 23 straight Big East games.

It was the first meeting between the two teams since Notre Dame dealt Pittsburgh its worst loss in , a 120-44 defeat on Jan. 17, 2012.

KANSAS STATE 76, No. 12 OKLAHOMA STATE 70, OT

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Brittany Chambers scored 26 points, and Kansas State rode its 3-point shooting to an overtime upset of Oklahoma State.

Chambers made six of Kansas State’s 16 3-pointers. Haley Texada added 14 points and Mariah White had 11 for the Wildcats (12-7, 3-4 Big 12), who made just seven shots from inside the arc and shot 35 percent overall.

Toni Young scored 22 points and Brittney Martin chipped in 15 for the Cowgirls (14-3, 3-3), who forced overtime on Tiffany Bias’ jumper with 8 seconds left in regulation. But OSU never led in the extra session and saw its three-game winning streak snapped.

Oklahoma shot a respectable 46 percent from the floor, but the Cowgirls, who entered the game averaging a Big 12-leading 6.8 more turnovers per game than their opponents, committed an uncharacteristic 18 turnovers to the Wildcats’ nine.

College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami  College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami  College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami  College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami  College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami

 College Basketball: Wednsday’s Men’s and Women’s Results / Duke gets routed by Miami

U.S. losing patience with Pakistan: Panetta

f9bf57c0b0139fb32b9e840b84fc3b83 U.S. losing patience with Pakistan: Panetta

(Reuters) – said on Thursday the United States was reaching the limits of its patience with Pakistan because of the safe havens the country offered to insurgents in neighboring Afghanistan.

It was some of the strongest language used by a U.S. official to describe the strained ties between Washington and Islamabad.

Panetta was speaking in the , where he arrived for talks with military leaders amid rising violence in the war against the Taliban and a of deadly incidents, including a NATO air strike said to have killed 18 villagers.

The United States has long pushed Pakistan to do more to help in the war against militancy, but the relationship has received a series of blows, not least by a unilateral U.S. raid into Pakistan to kill Osama bin Laden last year which humiliated Islamabad.

“It is difficult to achieve peace in Afghanistan as long as there is safe haven for terrorists in Pakistan,” Panetta, who arrived in Kabul a day after a deadly insurgent bombing, told reporters.

“It is very important for Pakistan to take steps. It is an increasing concern, the issue of safe haven, and we are reaching the limits of our patience.”

Pakistan’s cooperation is considered critical to U.S. efforts to stabilize Afghanistan before most foreign combat troops leave at the end of 2014. Pakistan has strong traditional links with the and other .

A Pakistani doctor accused of helping the CIA find bin Laden has been jailed for 33 years for treason last month, officials said, deepening strains in ties between Washington and Islamabad.

Pakistan’s parliament has been drawing up recommendations on how to proceed on ties with Washington, including a halt to U.S. strikes in the country that have enraged many .

Afghan said on Thursday he was cutting short an official visit to China following reports of in a NATO air strike in southeast Afghanistan and an insurgent bombing in the south, the presidential palace said.

Karzai said 18 civilians were killed in a pre-dawn air strike in Logar province on Wednesday. The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force said it was investigating.

(Reporting by Hamid Shalizi; Writing by Nick Macfie; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

What happened to the rule of law? US, Pakistan and Doctor Afridi

1e998c3708d43c6af193c160c5884927 What happened to the rule of law? US, Pakistan and Doctor Afridi

( News / Reuters) — According to the Pakistani media, Shakil Afridi, the doctor who worked with the CIA to help track down , has been jailed not for his role in trying to find the al Qaeda leader, but for colluding with the Lashkar-e- and its chief, Mangal Bagh, based in Pakistan’s bordering Afghanistan. Dawn newspaper cited showing that the tribal court which sentenced him to 33 years in jail ”did not entertain evidence relating to Dr Shakil Afridi’s involvement with the CIA, citing lack of as the main reason….” (Afridi was sentenced under the Frontier Crimes Regulation (FCR), a British colonial-era law used to deal with Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA)). Instead, Afridi – arrested on May 23, 2011 shortly after the May 2 raid by U.S. forces who found and killed bin Laden in the town of Abbottabad – was convicted on the basis of “his love for Mangal Bagh”. “The court held that the LI (Lashkar-e-Islam) had sought the support of foreign across the border in Afghanistan to wage war against the state of Pakistan and that Mr Afridi’s association with the militant outfit proved his involvement in activities inimical to the state of Pakistan.”

For the purposes of argument let’s take this account at – and at this point nothing about the Afridi case should be considered “true” in any meaningful sense. (Under the FCR he has had no opportunity to speak in public and give his side of the story and if he were under trial in a fair court of law, he would have to be assumed innocent until proven guilty.) If he was sentenced for links to Mangal Bagh, the question of whether he was a hero or a in working with the CIA is irrelevant. So too are the ethics of running a fake scheme to try to find bin Laden – for which Afridi stands accused not as a traitor but a bad doctor.

The only factor which is directly relevant to his 33-year sentencing is his alleged links with Mangal Bagh.

To make sense of this, go back to a story published by Declan Walsh at The New York Times on May 2, 2012. “Dr. Afridi had a reputation for hustling as well as healing, and he faced multiple allegations of corruption and professional malpractice, according to officials, colleagues and government papers seen by The New York Times. At his private practice, several patients claimed he performed improper operations to make extra money, prompting a local warlord named Mangal Bagh to detain him for a week in 2008 until he paid a fine of $11,100.”

The Pakistani journalist Asad Munir had a similar story in the Express Tribune. “In 2008, on complaints from locals, reportedly Mangal Bagh summoned him and fined him one million rupees. After the fine was not paid initially, Dr Afridi was kidnapped by Mangal Bagh’s men and released only after it was paid.”

In other words, a man who paid off his kidnappers has been sentenced to 33 years in jail under a Raj-era regulation which gives him no right to a fair trial for alleged links to those same men.

There is very little you can say that is right about this – the fake vaccination scheme and indeed the illegality of working for a foreign intelligence service being not directly relevant to the case. (And even working for the Americans is mitigated by the fact that Pakistani newspapers published rewards offered by the CIA for information leading to the capture of bin Laden and other al Qaeda leaders.)

The doctor would not be the only one to pay off his kidnappers – it happens far more often than is reported. Nor, as someone pointed out on Twitter, would he be the only one to pay off militants – so do all the truckers taking NATO supplies into Afghanistan – if, and when, the routes are reopened by Pakistan. And for good measure, if the Pakistan Army – operating under a parliamentary resolution to “give peace a chance” – wants to make deals with militants in the tribal areas, they will have to buy off some while targetting the others, as they have done in the past. Are all those involved – or at least those who like the doctor are originally from FATA – to be tried under the FCR and jailed?

Again, at risk of repetition, we do not actually know the truth. But what if we wake up tomorrow morning to read yet another version of the Afridi story? He was sentenced under what is widely recognised to be an unfair system. The Frontier Crimes Regulation was created by the British to impose control on the tribal areas and keep its inhabitants outside of the rule of law introduced under the Raj , not to give the people living there rights as citizens. A conviction under an unfair law remains unfair regardless of the extraneous circumstances.

Now consider what might happen next. Because the FCR gives authorities pretty much the power to do as they like, Pakistan has also retained greater flexibility to do as it chooses with Afridi than if he had been tried in the regular legal system. He can be included as a bargaining chip in negotiations with America over the reopening of NATO supply routes – closed after Pakistani soldiers were killed in a cross-border attack last year.

Indeed, former Inter-Services Intelligence chief Asad Durrani has suggested that Afridi could be swapped for Aafia Siddiqui, the Pakistani neuroscientist jailed in the United States for activities related to terrorism. To be clear – a man sentenced under an unfair system could be swapped for a woman the United States believes – and Pakistan disputes this – was tried and sentenced after a fair trial? Durrani even suggested that she might be awarded the highest military decoration given by Pakistan. “…we may also start owning up our heroes and swap them with theirs. It would be nice to award a Nishan-e-Haider to someone still alive, and a female at that!”

Does it look ugly? Unethical? Illegal?

But there is a mirror here. The United States also stands accused of bending the law in order to describe drone attacks in Pakistan’s tribal areas as legal. The use of drones can be – arguably -justified for other reasons. They cause fewer civilian casualties than other military operations including non-drone airstrikes or artillery shelling. They cause fewer deaths than the militants whom they are used to eliminate. And there is a frustrating hypocrisy among those who condemn drones while not also condemning military operations, Pakistani Taliban violence, or indeed the FCR itself, whose abolition would go a long way to resolving the problems in the tribal areas. But the US insistence on setting itself up as judge and jury on the legality of its drone programme, without any real transparency, is deeply corrosive. It leaves little moral authority for insisting that the rule of law be upheld in Pakistan. And that is one of the greatest casualties of the long war since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. When the last vestiges of respect for the rule of law are lost, the war is lost.

In a lengthy piece about the children of militants, Australian al Qaeda expert Leah Farrall calls for them to be treated humanely and extends her argument out into a discussion of how our failure to do so shows how far our approach to counter-terrorism has gone astray since 9/11. Quoting Australia’s National Counter Terrorism White Paper, she notes that it says, “to be effective Australia must pursue a principled and proportionate response that promotes and upholds the values we seek to protect. The Government does not support the use of torture or other unlawful methods in response to terrorism. Terrorism is a crime and the Government will pursue terrorists within proper legal frameworks and in accordance with the rule of law.” (my italics). She then adds, “I can’t tell you how many times in dialogues I’ve ended up with nothing else left to say in trying to explain the ‘war on terror’ except for ‘but we’re not like that…””

In the case of Doctor Afridi, two wrongs do not make a right. There is nothing worse than the moral equivocation – and I have seen this cropping up in Twitter debates amongst others – that cites Guantanamo to justify the treatment of Doctor Afridi. By extension, if someone is unfairly jailed by one country, am I supposed to believe it is fine to be unfairly imprisoned in my own? Under the rule of law, each individual is entitled to a fair trial regardless of what happens to anyone else. What has happened in the last 11 years that has led to this? Have we reached the stage that rather than calling for a fair trial, Afridi could instead be included in the haggling over the price the United States and NATO pay per truckload of supplies going through Pakistan into Afghanistan?

Or as Leah Farrall said more succintly on Twitter, “Anyone who claims the war on terror is being won is a great big fat liar.

NBA Roundup: Jeremy Lin stikes again, Knicks beat Raptors 90-87

1fc0c3aeb789436215e26f148bc1f82c NBA Roundup: Jeremy Lin stikes again, Knicks beat Raptors 90 87

TORONTO (AP) — Jeremy Lin made a tiebreaking 3-pointer with less than a second to play to cap his finishing flurry of six , and the New York Knicks rallied to beat the 90-87 Tuesday night, extending their winning streak to .

The ’s first American-Taiwanese player, Lin had 27 points and a career-high 11 assists in his since being named Eastern Conference player of the week.

The season- of 20,092 roared as Lin drained a pull-up jumper from the top with half a second to play, giving the Knicks their first lead since the opening quarter.

Toronto’s Rasual Butler airballed his attempt at the buzzer as the Knicks swarmed their newest hero at center court.

returned from a four-game absence with 21 points and had 13 for New York.

scored 25 points, Linas Kleiza had 15 points and 11 rebounds, and DeMar DeRozan scored 14 for the Raptors.

HEAT 105, 90

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — scored 23 points and nearly produced his first triple-double in 11 months, had 16 points, and Miami became the first team in 33 years to win three straight on the road in three days.

Miami is also the first club in 42 years to win each of the three by . Phoenix was the last to win three in a row on the road in , from Dec. 21-23, 1979. Milwaukee was the last team to win all three by at least 10 from Nov. 20-22, 1970.

Rookie Norris Cole matched his season high with 20 points and James had nine points and six assists in the first 14 minutes. Wade made his first five shots and needed a little more than eight minutes to reach 10. Defensively, Miami was just as tough limiting Indiana to just 6 of 23 from the field in the first quarter and not much better until the closing minutes.

David West led the with 14 points and Paul George had 12, not nearly enough to avoid a fourth . Even worse, the Pacers (17-11) lost leading scorer Danny Granger with a sprained left ankle late in the first quarter and he did not return. Granger finished with three points.

THUNDER 111, JAZZ 85

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — James Harden scored 22 points, Kevin Durant added 21 and Oklahoma City beat Utah for the second time in five days.

In between, NBA-leading Oklahoma City got three days off. Utah embarked on its only back-to-back-to-back set of the season and finished it with two straight losses.

The well-rested Thunder never trailed and led by at least 12 throughout the second half on their way to an eighth straight win at the Chesapeake Energy Arena, extending the team’s longest home winning streak since moving from Seattle in 2008.

Russell Westbrook chipped in 16 points for Oklahoma City, and Serge Ibaka also scored 16 to go with 10 rebounds and six blocks.

Al Jefferson led the Jazz with 15 points and rookie Derrick Favors scored 13.

SPURS 99, PISTONS 95

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) — Tim Duncan had 18 points and 13 rebounds, and San Antonio overcame a spirited Detroit rally to beat the Pistons for its eighth consecutive victory.

Detroit trailed by 15 in the fourth quarter but came back to take the lead behind Ben Wallace, the veteran big man who set a record by appearing in his 1,055th career game — the most for an undrafted player since the NBA-ABA merger.

The Spurs finally took the lead for good on Tony Parker’s driving layup with 1:13 remaining.

Parker also made a floater with 27.2 seconds to play to give San Antonio a 95-92 lead, and Ben Gordon couldn’t convert from the left corner for the Pistons.

NUGGETS 109, SUNS 92

DENVER (AP) — Arron Afflalo scored 20 points, Ty Lawson had 17 and Denver broke open a close game in the third quarter to beat short-handed Phoenix.

Chris Andersen had 16 points and seven rebounds and rookie Kenneth Faried had 13 points and nine rebounds for the Nuggets, who snapped a five-game home losing streak.

Markieff Morris had 21 points, Michael Redd had 20 points and Marcin Gortat had 10 points and 14 rebounds for the Suns, who played without starters Steve Nash and Grant Hill.

Nash and Hill sat out to rest and avoid risking injury, Phoenix coach Alvin Gentry said before the game.

BULLS 121, KINGS 115

CHICAGO (AP) — Luol Deng came through with 23 points and a career-high 11 assists, and Chicago beat Sacramento after watching a 19-point, fourth-quarter lead dwindle to two.

Joakim Noah added 22 points and 11 rebounds. Kyle Korver scored 18, hitting four free throws in the final 17.6 seconds. Carlos Boozer scored 16, Taj Gibson added 15 points, and the Bulls came away with the win — barely — even though Derrick Rose missed his third straight game with lower back spasms.

The victory clinched the Eastern Conference coaching spot at the All-Star game for the Bulls’ Tom Thibodeau.

DeMarcus Cousins led Sacramento with 28 points and 17 rebounds. Tyreke Evans scored 27, and Marcus Thornton added 23 points for the Kings, who made things extremely interesting down the stretch.

GRIZZLIES 93, ROCKETS 83

MEMPHIS, TENN. (AP) — Mike Conley scored 21 points, and Rudy Gay added 20 points and eight rebounds to lead Memphis over Houston.

Conley scored seven points in the final 2:26 after the Rockets had trimmed what had been a 15-point lead in the third quarter to 84-79 on Kyle Lowry’s steal and layup with three minutes left.

Conley answered with a 3-pointer following a scramble for a loose ball under the Grizzlies basket for an 87-79 advantage.

Lowry led the Rockets with 24 points and Courtney Lee scored 13.

LAKERS 86, HAWKS 78

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Pau Gasol scored seven of his 20 points in the final 5:20 and grabbed 13 rebounds, and Los Angeles beat Atlanta.

Andrew Bynum had 15 points and 15 rebounds for the Lakers, who returned from a 3-3 road trip and improved to 12-2 at home — compared to 5-10 away. Kobe Bryant, whose jumper in the final 5 seconds beat Toronto on Sunday, finished this one with only 10 points in 34 minutes on 5 for 18 shooting.

The Hawks shot just 34.4 percent in the opener of a five-game trip. Jeff Teague led them with 18 points, and All-Star Joe Johnson was held to 15 in 37 minutes on 7 for 17 shooting. Josh Smith, still smarting from his All-Star sub, also scored 15.

WIZARDS 124, TRAIL BLAZERS 109

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Nick Young scored a season-high 35 points, John Wall added 29 points and nine assists, and Washington beat Portland for its third straight road win.

Jordan Crawford added 21 points for Washington, which put together its best game of the season, shooting 60 percent from the field and 52 percent on 3-pointers. Young was 7 of 8 from behind the arc.

Nicolas Batum tied a career high with 33 points for the Blazers (15-14), who lost All-Star LaMarcus Aldridge to an ankle injury early in the game. Gerald Wallace had 25 points and eight assists, and Marcus Camby added 13 points and 12 rebounds.

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 NBA Roundup: Jeremy Lin stikes again, Knicks beat Raptors 90 87

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