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Tag: penalty

  • ‘I think it was a BS call’: Panthers react to Lathan Ransom’s late flag

    It is one of the most difficult decisions any defensive player makes, when a quarterback is running and your task is to bring him to the ground.

    How much is too much? How hard is too hard? How high is too high?

    The Carolina Panthers were on the wrong side of that equation Sunday when they self-destructed in a 20-17 loss to the New Orleans Saints that was damaging — but not fatal — to their playoff hopes. Nowhere was that more apparent than in the final 12 seconds.

    The Saints were out of timeouts by then. The game was tied at 17-all, and New Orleans had driven from its own 8-yard line to the Carolina 48. Tyler Shough, the Saints’ 26-year-old rookie quarterback, saw a “prevent” Carolina defense designed to stop the pass — with no defensive linemen at all lined up in the interior near the center.

    Shough then ran a draw play for a modest four yards. As he slid, however, Panthers rookie safety Lathan Ransom came barreling in and hit Shough. This caused a 15-yard penalty and much consternation in the Carolina locker room.

    “I think it was a BS call,” Panthers defensive lineman Derrick Brown said. Brown was also called for a 15-yard penalty for hitting Shough on a similar play.

    “He did it all day, he was sliding late,” Brown said. “… But we know how it is. They’re going to protect the quarterback at all costs.”

    New Orleans Saints quarterback Tyler Shough (6) slides and is hit by the Carolina Panthers’ Lathan Ransom (22) during Sunday’s fourth quarter at Caesars Superdome. Ransom’s hit resulted in a 15-yard penalty and an easier potential game-winning field goal for the Saints, who won, 20-17.
    New Orleans Saints quarterback Tyler Shough (6) slides and is hit by the Carolina Panthers’ Lathan Ransom (22) during Sunday’s fourth quarter at Caesars Superdome. Ransom’s hit resulted in a 15-yard penalty and an easier potential game-winning field goal for the Saints, who won, 20-17. Chris Graythen Getty Images

    The Saints certainly could have made a game-winning field goal from where Shough slid. The attempt would have been from 62 yards, and New Orleans kicker Charlie Smyth has that sort of leg.

    Instead, though, Ransom’s penalty made the kick a modest 47-yarder. Smyth drilled it, and Carolina fell to 7-7 and into a tie with Tampa Bay (7-7) atop the NFC South. The two teams will play twice in the final three weeks of the season, but now the Panthers may have to sweep those games rather than split them to take the playoff spot and postseason home game awarded to the division winner.

    To his credit, Ransom stood up and faced questions from the media in the locker room. “Every yard matters in that situation,” he said. “He’s running the ball and I’m just thinking stop him as fast as I can.”

    What does he wish he had done differently?

    “Not hit him,” Ransom said. And later: “I’m mad I got the penalty. That’s all I can say.

    He’s a quarterback, so I’ve got to be more aware of the situation. … Let him slide.”

    Lathan Ransom (22) of the Carolina Panthers tackles Audric Estime (30) of the New Orleans Saints during Sunday’s fourth quarter at Caesars Superdome.
    Lathan Ransom (22) of the Carolina Panthers tackles Audric Estime (30) of the New Orleans Saints during Sunday’s fourth quarter at Caesars Superdome. Chris Graythen Getty Images

    That a penalty would be instrumental in the Panthers’ loss was fitting, given the team was called for 11 penalties for 103 yards. Carolina was sloppy all afternoon, drawing one flag after another. Even on the game-winning field goal, Carolina’s Chau Smith-Wade jumped offside, so New Orleans would have been able to try it again had Smyth missed.

    But the veteran Panthers players were also aware that Ransom’s error didn’t cost them the game. Their defense, after all, had allowed New Orleans to go 78 yards on a game-tying drive and then 62 more on the game-winning one. The offense never scored in the game’s final 25 minutes. There was plenty of blame to go around.

    Veteran safety Nick Scott said Ransom’s aggressiveness was one reason he’s been playing regularly as a rookie.

    “Being a rookie, there’s a lot of highs and lows,” Scott said. “Lathan’s been doing a lot of great things for us this entire season. One play doesn’t define him. … Latham is an aggressive player. He hits extremely hard. He makes a lot of plays, and that’s why he’s here. That’s why we love him, and so we don’t want to take that away from him. So we’re going to keep encouraging and uplifting him, and help him move past this.”

    Brown thought that Panthers quarterback Bryce Young should have drawn a similar flag or two during his scrambles. But he wasn’t. Ransom, however, was called for the late hit, and this loss and that play will sting him for a while.

    I thought the flag was justified. It’s called that way in the NFL almost every time, because the league does want to protect its marquee players. Ransom is a good player and a smart one. He will learn. But he — and his teammates — walked out of New Orleans hurting.

    Scott Fowler

    The Charlotte Observer

    Columnist Scott Fowler has written for The Charlotte Observer since 1994. He has earned 24 national APSE sportswriting awards and hosted The Observer’s podcast “Carruth,” which Sports Illustrated once named “Podcast of the Year.” Fowler hosts the online series and podcast “Sports Legends of the Carolinas,” which features 1-on-1 interviews with NC and SC sports icons. He also writes occasionally about non-sports subjects, such as the 5-part series “9/11/74,” which chronicled the plane crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 in Charlotte in 1974.
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    Scott Fowler

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  • California touts $544 million in illegal weed seizures. Drop in the bucket, exasperated officials say

    California touts $544 million in illegal weed seizures. Drop in the bucket, exasperated officials say

    Two major state programs to combat illegal cannabis recently sent out news releases lauding their collective seizures of some $544 million worth of illicit weed.

    But when it comes to reining in California’s sprawling black market, experts say it’s just a drop in the bucket.

    Those in the thick of the fight against illegal pot, like Mendocino County Sheriff Matthew Kendall, can’t help but roll their eyes.

    “Don’t get me wrong, I love when those guys [state law enforcement officers] show up to help,” he said, “but I would need 50 police officers for 50 days to even begin putting a dent in it.”

    Mendocino County Sheriff Matt Kendall stands near an illegal cannabis grow in January 2022 in the Halls Valley area near Covelo, Calif.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    So far this year, an estimated $353 million worth of illicit plants have been seized through a California Department of Justice program, while a task force with the governor’s office has seized an estimated $191 million.

    Despite these alarming numbers, some law enforcement leaders say the raids are barely slowing the black market — which, according to a study by Beau Whitney, founder of cannabis economics research firm Whitney Economics, makes up more than half the state’s marijuana sales.

    “If we examine the statistics, it is clear that these operations are not effectively or aggressively putting a dent into the illegal market,” said Siskiyou County Sheriff Jeremiah LaRue.

    For example, operations by the state Department of Justice’s Eradication and Prevention of Illicit Cannabis program, or EPIC, have seized about 77,000 cannabis plants in 36 counties this year. Yet, Siskiyou County alone produces an estimated 12 million to 16 million illegal plants per year. Therefore, if EPIC only focused on Siskiyou for a year, it would eradicate just 6% of the estimated local black market, he said.

    A member of a Siskiyou County sheriff's task force drags cannabis plants out of a greenhouse.

    A member of a Siskiyou County sheriff’s task force drags cannabis plants out of a greenhouse for burial during a Mount Shasta Vista raid.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    This sentiment was echoed by Kendall, who noted that in Mendocino County’s 35-square-mile Round Valley alone there are an estimated 1 million illegal marijuana plants.

    “The black market is as big and bad as ever,” he said.

    The Riverside County Sheriff’s marijuana enforcement team told The Times there is still a lot of work to do to address that county’s black market, which has not gotten any smaller in the last two years.

    In 2022, a Times investigation found that California’s massive illegal marijuana market pushes legal growers toward financial ruin, exacerbates community violence, causes massive amounts of environmental degradation and forces laborers to toil in squalid and often dangerous conditions.

    Since then, many law enforcement leaders say they believe the state has done little to address the problems fueling the black market — onerous taxation and regulations for legal producers, few consequences for illegal operators and limited access to legal marijuana in wide swaths of California.

    “It’s like [state leaders] came to our counties, they sprayed the whole thing with gasoline and lit it on fire,” Kendall said. “Then they start talking about EPIC doing this work that is basically showing up with a garden hose.”

    A spokesperson for Gov. Gavin Newsom referred questions about the concerns raised by local law enforcement leaders to the state Department of Cannabis Control, which did not respond to a request for comment.

    California legalized weed through Proposition 64, a 2016 ballot measure that promised “to tax the growth and sale of marijuana in a way that drives out the illicit market.” Eight years later, the illicit market continues to thrive.

    “California did a horrible job of incentivizing [illegal] cultivators to convert over,” said Whitney, the cannabis economist. “They taxed them heavily, they regulated them heavily, they couldn’t make any money.”

    California charges a 15% excise tax on marijuana sales on top of additional local marijuana taxes. A recent study by cannabis industry research and analysis firm GreenWave Advisors found that legal weed companies owe the state more than $730 million in back taxes, 72% of which is owed by companies that have gone out of business.

    Four people stand inside a room with plastic crates. A woman holds an iPad.

    Johnny Casali, center, and partner Rose Moberly talk with state cannabis control inspectors at Casali’s Garberville farm in 2022. Casali and other growers face steep taxes and onerous rules.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    Another challenge is that more than half of California counties don’t allow the sale of marijuana, which restricts access to legal weed in wide swaths of the state and drives demand to the black market.

    There are also major incentives for sellers to opt into the illegal market — they can dodge taxation and licensing fees, while knowing that the penalty for selling or transportation of marijuana without required licenses is only a misdemeanor.

    “From the criminal mindset, there is minimal downside and massive upside to cultivating marijuana illegally and selling it on the black market,” said San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Lt. Larry Lopez.

    Siskiyou County Sheriff LaRue said that, although there are enhanced penalties for certain violations involving tax evasion and environmental crimes, most of the illegal-cultivation offenses do not have harsh enough penalties to deter production.

    Because enforcement measures are limited, Mendocino County Sheriff Kendall said the raids conducted by state agencies are like a game of Whac-A-Mole.

    “We can chop it down and, by golly, it pops up again the next day,” he said.

    A man in green coveralls and a ball cap walks between rows of plants.

    Mendocino County sheriff’s deputies destroy cannabis in a 2022 raid.

    (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

    Raids are also a limited enforcement tool, because they mostly lead to the arrest of laborers — not owners.

    “It is a frequent strategy for the black-market organizers to hide behind the labor force and remain shielded from law enforcement,” LaRue said. “It is rare that higher-level organizers are anywhere near the cultivation areas.”

    Despite the drawbacks and frustrations, Sheriffs LaRue and Kendall and Lt. Lopez still support conducting raids and welcome state assistance.

    But they say that, to have a meaningful effect, raids need to be accompanied by policy changes that address the narrow profit margin for legal cultivators and the minor penalties for illegal ones.

    And after years of calling for change, there’s a growing sense of exasperation among those on the front lines.

    “We have reached a time in the state of California where the architects of these laws — the governor, the legislators — they’re refusing to speak with the carpenters, and that’s the sheriffs and the police chiefs,” Kendall said. “When we say this isn’t going to work, it’s falling on deaf ears.”

    Clara Harter

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  • IDBI Bank gets Rs 2.97 crore GST demand order

    IDBI Bank gets Rs 2.97 crore GST demand order

    IDBI Bankon Tuesday said it has received a GST demand order of ₹2.97 crore along with interest and penalty for alleged excess availment of input tax credit (ITC).

    In a regulatory filing, the private sector bank said the Dehradoon state tax department has issued an order under the GST rules pertaining to 2018-19 fiscal for alleged excess availment and utilisation of ITC.

    The order includes a tax demand of ₹1.42 crore as well as interest and penalty of ₹1.41 crore and ₹0.14 crore, respectively.

    “The bank is evaluating appropriate legal remedy, including appeal, as per law,” IDBI Bank said.

    Shares of IDBI Bank were trading at ₹85.41, down 3.82 per cent over previous close on the BSE.

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  • Referee Can’t Help But Grin While Calling Penalty To Bring Back Huge Gain

    Referee Can’t Help But Grin While Calling Penalty To Bring Back Huge Gain

    BUFFALO, NY—Reached for comment on his experience officiating the NFL divisional round playoff game between the Cincinnati Bengals and the Buffalo Bills, referee Clay Martin told reporters Sunday that he couldn’t help but grin while calling a penalty to bring back a huge gain. “I have to admit, watching those players cavalierly celebrating what they think is a 43-yard pickup, all the while knowing I’m about to toss my flag and wipe that gain right off the board, I couldn’t help but crack a smile,” said Martin, who was observed on television cameras attempting to stifle his laughter after throwing a penalty flag that turned a massive third-down conversion into a ten-yard loss for an offensive holding call. “It’s especially fun when you get to throw the flag right near the guys when they start celebrating and making first-down signals, then watching as the wind goes right out of their sails and they have to make the long walk back downfield. Sometimes they get really mad and start yelling, which we officials all honestly find hilarious. The best part is that I didn’t call holding penalties all the other times they occurred—I waited and bided my time until the penalty would cause maximum frustration to the players and the fans. Man, I love it when the fans get upset.” Later in the game, the officials were seen smiling and giving each other high-fives after a questionable defensive pass interference call allowed the offense to move 57 yards down the field.

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  • The days of IRS forgiveness for RMD mistakes may soon be over

    The days of IRS forgiveness for RMD mistakes may soon be over

    Katie St. Ores has a 100% track record of getting her tax clients out of paying the steep penalty for missing a required minimum distribution from their retirement funds. That amounts to only two households getting forgiveness, but it represents a lot of dollars, because the fee for any sort of mistake with RMDs is 50% of what’s missing, which could be tens of thousands of dollars.   

    Now’s the time to make things right if you forgot to make your RMD payment by Dec. 31 for 2022, paid the wrong amount or realized you got it wrong in a past year. The faster you correct it, the more likely the IRS is likely to waive the fines — and your chances are good overall, despite the agency’s stern reputation. 

    Beware, though, that new rules are going into effect in 2023 that could make the IRS less accommodating. For one thing, the age to start RMDs is going to 73 this year, and then 75 in 2033, which means the government is going to be hungry for the missing revenue. Even more important, the penalty will be reduced to 25% — or 10% if you’re really quick about reporting it. 

    The IRS doesn’t publicly track how many people miss or make mistakes with their RMDs, but financial advisers and tax professionals say it happens often enough, and they consider the IRS to be quite liberal about granting waivers. 

    St. Ores, who is a financial adviser and tax preparer based in McMinnville, Ore., thinks the IRS has responded generously so far because they know the rules are complex and mistakes happen.

    “They know people are getting up there in age, and so they’ve probably said up to now, let’s just grant it,” says St. Ores. 

    But the new penalties seem worded to avoid waivers in the future, especially because of the extra reduction to 10% if you act to quickly correct mistakes. Up to now, the IRS has taken pains to point out how to ask for a forgiveness on its website, but now there will be new emphasis on the lower penalties. 

    “The 50% penalty effectively ‘scared’ taxpayers to withdraw RMDs, so reducing the penalty could reduce the fear of additional tax, leading to more taxpayers missing their RMDs,” says St. Ores. “Between more taxpayers that potentially neglect to take their RMDs because of a not-as-high penalty and confusion over the current required age, the IRS will probably collect more taxes overall.”

    What to do about past mistakes

    There are a lot of different ways to mess up your required minimum distributions. The amount you’re supposed to pay is calculated according to a formula that takes your account balance of all your qualified tax-deferred accounts and multiplies it by a factor related to your age. 

    When you get started taking the money out, it works out generally to about 4% of the account value. You keep taking RMDs every year from your designated start time until the accounts are empty (or you die). The beginning age in the past was 70½, then it moved to 72, and now it’s changing to 73. 

    “These things can get complicated,” says Isaac Bradley, director of financial planning at Homrich Berg, an investment firm based in Atlanta. He advised one couple that accidentally took the distribution from the wrong spouse. 

    Another easy mistake is taking the wrong amount because of a math error. Sometimes, the problem is just about communication, because people tend to have multiple 401(k)s at old employers or several rollover IRAs that aren’t consolidated. The adviser helping make the calculations might not know of an account held at a different custodian, and that could throw off the whole equation.

    David Haas, a financial adviser and president of Cereus Financial Advisors, based in Franklin Lakes, N.J., has had to help family members correct RMDs, mostly having to do with inherited IRA accounts. 

    “You’re supposed to take RMD for the person who died, if they didn’t already take it,” he says, but a lot of people miss those in the confusion of grief. 

    Then once you inherit the account, you have to take RMDs over a 10 year period to empty the account. 

    “With one relative, she just kept on missing it and that was her fault. She didn’t realize what she was supposed to do. People don’t know the law, and it’s very confusing,” Haas says. 

    The first step is realizing you made a mistake, and then once you know that, pay the amount that’s missing. You need to file a special form with the IRS for the tax year in question (Form 5329), which you can send in at any point — you don’t have to wait until you file your next tax return. 

    If you want to ask for a waiver, you need to attach a letter explaining the mistake. If your request is not granted, then you pay the penalty.   

    While the process isn’t excessively complicated, you might want to consult with a tax professional to make sure you’re not making more mistakes in calculating the amount that’s missing. It could turn out to be a lot of paperwork if you have missed multiple years. 

    Kenneth Waltzer, a financial planner based in Los Angeles, had a client who did not realize he had inherited an IRA and missed the RMDs on it for five years. “He ignored emails about it,” says Waltzer. “When he came to us, it added up to over $100,000.” 

    For Katie St. Ores, the message going forward is going to be: Get it right the first time. Forgiveness may not be so easy to come by in the future. “I’m trying to stay on top of my clients taking their RMDs on time,” she says.  

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