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Thursday, February 5, 2026

Oregon must dismiss more than 1,400 criminal cases due to attorney shortage, court rules

February 05, 2026
Oregon must dismiss more than 1,400 criminal cases due to attorney shortage, court rules

The Oregon supreme court has ruled that a large number of criminal cases across the state must be dismissed due to a severe shortage of public defenders, a major decision that attorneys say will impact more than 1,400 pending cases.

The Guardian <span>The court ruled dismissals are required if the state failed to provide counsel within 60 days after an arraignment for a misdemeanor and within 90 days for a felony.</span><span>Photograph: Dennis Macdonald/Getty Images</span>

The problem has been years in the making and has become a significant constitutional crisis, as people charged with crimes are routinely unable to fight their cases as they wait weeks, months or sometimes years for the state to appoint them lawyers. The attorney shortage – due in part to the increasing difficulty of recruiting attorneys for the low-salary, high-caseload jobs – has meant that people have had cases hanging over them for extended periods of time, impacting their housing, employment and families, advocates say.

Oregon's highest court ruled on Thursday that dismissals are required if the state failed to provide counsel within 60 days after arraignment for a misdemeanor and within 90 days for a felony. Statedataon unrepresented defendants showed that as of this week, more than 1,400 active cases fall in that category, including hundreds of people who have been waiting more than a year for an attorney.

The ruling dictates that the cases be dismissed without prejudice, meaning prosecutors can re-file charges. The court said charges can be brought again "when the state is able to provide the counsel to which a defendant is entitled". The ruling also said dismissal isn't required if during the 60- or 90-day period the defendant failed to appear in court for a required hearing.

The case originated with a man named Allen Rex Roberts, who was charged with unauthorized use of a vehicle and possession of a stolen car in August 2021. The charges were dismissed in October 2022 because of the state's failure to appoint him a lawyer, but in April 2024, prosecutors re-indicted Roberts on the same charges. For the next year, Roberts repeatedly returned to court for hearings where he was supposed to be appointed counsel, but each time no attorney was available. Eventually, his case was again dismissed due to a lack of attorneys.

The right to counsel isenshrinedin the Oregon and US constitutions, and the shortage of attorneys has led to mass violations of those fundamental rights and pushed the criminal legal system to the brink, advocates say. The vast majority of defendants in the state are indigent and cannot afford a private attorney.

"Many folks who are eligible for dismissal after the court's opinion today have been facing the criminal justice system without assistance for months or years," said Jessica Snyder, a lawyer who co-wrote an amicus brief in the case on behalf of the federal public defenders in Oregon. "The harm is great. It has led to individuals losing their housing, losing contact with their children because of no-contact orders, [and] losing the opportunity to preserve evidence in their criminal case."

Some defendants would have been able to quickly resolve their cases if they simply could afford a private attorney, Snyder noted.

"The toll is also psychological. A lot of clients talked about the despair they felt coming back to court over and over again without someone to help them, how confused they felt, how the court wouldn't listen to their concerns or prosecutors wouldn't help them navigate the system," said Snyder.

A previous courtrulingdictated that the state must release defendants from jail within seven days of appearing in court if they aren't appointed an attorney. That means the more than 1,400 cases impacted by Thursday's ruling mostly involve defendants who are already out of custody.

The attorney shortage is a systemic and statewide problem in Oregon, and thecauses are complex, with criminal defense lawyers noting the state has long underfunded public defense, leaving few public defenders overwhelmed with massive caseloads. A backlog of cases during the pandemic and increasing time required to review materials like body-camera footage and digital evidence has further strained the system, advocates say.

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Oregon's crisis is particularly acute, but attorney shortages have createdproblemsacross the country, including inWashington state,Maine,Illinois,UtahandNew Hampshire.

Nadia Dahab, a Portland-based attorney who argued the Roberts case, said she hoped the ruling would force the state to pursue a "solution that recognizes the importance of access to counsel for people charged with a crime and allocates the resources necessary to make sure the public defense system adequately protects them".

"Roberts," she added, "is one of thousands, and the harms he suffered through the arrest warrant when the state recharged him and through the impact of having to take off work to go to court every month – those are very exemplary of what lots of others are facing."

Oregon's department of justice had argued against blanket dismissals in the Roberts case.

Dan Rayfield, the state attorney general, said in a statement on Thursday that the state's legislature had stepped up to increase investments, and he said: "Oregonians deserve solutions." He continued: 'Too many are being left without legal representation – some sitting in jail, others stuck in limbo outside of custody, unable to move their cases forward. That is not acceptable for public safety."

Rayfield said the state respects the supreme court's decision to "set clear limits on how long someone can go without counsel" and he expected the Oregon Public Defense Commission (OPDC), the agency that oversees the public defense system, to meet the standards established by the court and "take responsibility for ensuring people are represented".

The OPDC said in a statement it was assessing the decision and that the commission had made progress in reducing the number of unrepresented individuals and would "continue to address the crisis with urgency and transparency". The statement noted that there were 2,494 people without an attorney at the end of January, down 37% from the year prior.

"We will collaborate with our partners in the criminal justice community to respond to this ruling and build on this progress while protecting defendants' rights and public safety," the statement said.

The public defender crisis was exacerbated last year as Oregon abandoned a policy effort to decriminalize drugs, leading to a surge in arrests for possession that furtherburdened attorneys and clogged up the courts.

The Metropolitan Public Defenders, which represents indigent defendants in Portland and the surrounding region, said in a statement that increasing the number of public defenders alone would not solve the crisis, and urged for more reforms that would reduce the volume of cases in the system: "Oregon needs more community-based resources, and the system needs more … alternatives to prosecution and incarceration."

John Wentworth, president of the Oregon District Attorneys Association, which represents the state's prosecutors, criticized the supreme court decision in a statement, saying: "Criminal defendants, their victims and our communities will continue to lack justice as potentially thousands of cases will now be dismissed. This is an immense waste of taxpayers' money."

Wentworth, the district attorney of Clackamas county, called on the state's governor and OPDC to "fix this problem now", writing: "Our indigent defense system must deliver the service it is funded to provide."

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Census Bureau plans to use survey with a citizenship question in its test for 2030, alarming experts

February 05, 2026
Census Bureau plans to use survey with a citizenship question in its test for 2030, alarming experts

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — The U.S.Census Bureauplans to use a survey form with a citizenship question as part of itspractice testof the 2030 census, raising questions about whether the Trump administration might try to make a significant change to the once-a-decade headcount thatfailedduring the president's first term.

Associated Press FILE - Immigration activists rally outside the Supreme Court as the justices hear arguments over the Trump administration's plan to ask about citizenship on the 2020 census in Washington, April 23, 2019. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File) FILE - People walk past posters encouraging participation in the 2020 Census in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood, April 1, 2020. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

Census 2030

The field test being conducted in Huntsville, Alabama, and Spartanburg, South Carolina, is using questions from the American Community Survey, the comprehensive survey of American life, rather than questions from recent census forms.

Among the questions on the ACS is one that asks, "Is this person a citizen of the United States?" Questions for the census aren't supposed to ask about citizenship, and they haven't for 75 years.

Last August,Trump instructedthe Commerce Department to have the Census Bureau start work on a new census that would exclude immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally from the head count.

The Constitution's 14th Amendment says "the whole number of persons in each state" should be counted for the numbers used for apportionment, the process of divvying up congressional seats, and Electoral College votes among the states. The Census Bureau has interpreted that to mean anybody living in the U.S., regardless of legal status.

The bureau did not respond Thursday to inquiries seeking comment about why the ACS questions were being used for the 2026 test.

Terri Ann Lowenthal, a former congressional staffer who consults on census issues, said the ACS questions have never been used for a census field test before. She said the 2026 test — which was pared down from six locations to two — has become "a shell of what the Census Bureau proposed and should do to ensure an accurate 2030 Census."

"This full pivot from a real field test is alarming and deserves immediate congressional attention, in my view," Lowenthal said.

The field test gives the statistical agency the chance to learn how to better tally populations that were undercounted during the last census in 2020 and improve methods that will be used in 2030. Among the new methods being tested is the use of U.S. Postal Service workersto conduct taskspreviously done by census workers.

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The test originally was supposed to take place insix places, but the Trump administration earlier this week announced that it had eliminated four sites — Colorado Springs, Colorado, western North Carolina, western Texas and tribal lands in Arizona.

Mark Mather, an associate vice president at the Population Reference Bureau, a nonpartisan research group, said he couldn't speculate on political motivations behind the decision to use the ACS questions, but said the more fundamental concern was methodological.

"The ACS form wouldn't provide a valid test of 2030 census operations," he said. "It's a completely different animal."

In his first term, President Donald Trump unsuccessfullytried to adda citizenship question to the 2020 census form. He also signed orders that would have excluded people who are in the U.S. illegally from the apportionment figures and mandated the collection of citizenship data.

The attempt to add the citizenship question was blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court, and both orders wererescinded when Democratic President Joe Biden arrivedat the White House in January 2021, before the 2020 census figures were released.

Republican lawmakers in Congress recently have introduced legislation that would exclude some non-citizens from the apportionment figures. Several GOP state attorneys also havefiled federal lawsuitsin Louisiana and Missouri seeking to add a citizenship question to the next census and exclude people in the U.S. illegally from the apportionment count.

Follow Mike Schneider on the social platform Bluesky:@mikeysid.bsky.social.

Follow the AP's coverage of the U.S. Census Bureau athttps://apnews.com/hub/us-census-bureau.

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Children in South Carolina are developing rare brain swelling complications after measles outbreak

February 05, 2026
Children in South Carolina are developing rare brain swelling complications after measles outbreak

South Carolinachildren who havecontracted cases of the measles virusin recent months have also been affected by a worrying and sometimes deadly complication, the state's epidemiologist said Wednesday.

The Independent US

Some have developed an inflammatory brain condition known asencephalitis, which refers to swelling in the brain that can cause seizures, intellectual disability or even death.

It's unknown how many children have encephalitis, but Dr. Linda Belltold reportersthat any time people develop theknown complication of measles"there can be long-term consequences, things like developmental delay and impacts on the neurologic system that can be irreversible."

"We want to prevent this potential complication in anyone," she said.

The majority of the state's876 casesare in children, including 233 under the age of five years old and 555 between the ages of five and 17, according to data from the South Carolina Department of Public Health released Tuesday.

More than 200 of the state's 876 measles cases are children under the age of five, health officials say (Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Encephalitis usually occurs within 30 days days of an initial measles infection. Among children who get measles encephalitis, 10 to 15 percent die, according toWired.

And, encephalitis isn't the only complication health authorities have seen due to infections.

Bell noted that there had been cases of pneumonia — a leading cause of child deaths around the world — as well as 19 hospitalizations for complications related to measles in South Carolina since the outbreak's start in October.

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"These are complications we hope to prevent, and increasing vaccination coverage protects those who cannot be vaccinated like young infants, pregnant women and those with weakened immune systems," she said.

The majority — a whopping 95 percent — of cases are in unvaccinated individuals. That's a trend that's been seen in other outbreaks across the country since last year, though South Carolina's is now the largest since another sickened hundreds in West Texas.

The measles-mumps-rubella vaccine offers lifelong protection for 97 percent of people who receive two doses, which is how the U.S. eliminated the highly infectious measles virus in 2000.

A mother and daughter read together at a vaccine clinic in West Texas last year. Cases in South Carolina have since exceeded those reported in the Lone Star State's outbreak (Getty Images)

But, rising vaccine hesitancy and misinformation has left communities unprotected, doctors say.

"There's also a misconception that measles is just a routine childhood infection, that it's not consequential," Stanford Medicine's Dr. Sruti Nadimpalli explained in astatement. "In reality, it suppresses the immune system and the potential complications are very serious, including severe debility and death."

In the Palmetto State, however, the tide is starting to turn.

Bell said there had been a strong increase in vaccinations last month: the largest since the beginning of the outbreak.

"No vaccine offers 100 percent protection against infection, but the MMR vaccine is one of the most effective vaccines in preventing infection," she said.

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U.S. loads World Baseball Classic roster with MVPs, Cy Young Award winners

February 05, 2026
U.S. loads World Baseball Classic roster with MVPs, Cy Young Award winners

The United States finalized its roster for the 2026 World Baseball Classic on Thursday, locking in a group that features both reigning Cy Young Award winners, multiple Most Valuable Players and retired Los Angeles Dodgers icon Clayton Kershaw.

Most players already had confirmed their plans to compete in the tournament that begins March 5, but Thursday's announcement revealed the Americans' complete arsenal of arms and deep collection of infielders to go with just four primary outfielders.

"We constructed this roster with one goal in mind: to bring home a WBC Championship for the U.S. fans," Team USA general manager Michael Hill said in a statement. "I would like to thank the Major League Clubs for trusting us with this incredible group of talented players."

"Building this team was never easy, but it was done with purpose and pride," Team USA manager Mark DeRosa added. "These players know what it means to wear USA across their chest, and we're ready to go to work and bring the World Baseball Classic trophy back home."

The U.S. has won only one WBC, in 2017. The Americans lost to Japan in the 2023 final -- the last time the tournament was played.

New York Yankees star Aaron Judge serves as the team's captain and will be joined in the outfield by veteran Byron Buxton and up-and-comers Corbin Carroll and Pete Crow-Armstrong.

The 37-year-old Kershaw, who retired from his legendary MLB career after the Dodgers' World Series title, previously had said he would pitch in this WBC. It's not clear to what extent he will be used.

The Americans don't have to worry about starting pitching. American League Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal and National League Cy Young winner Paul Skenes will anchor the rotation.

The United States opens pool play against Brazil on March 6 in Houston before facing Mexico on March 9 and Italy on March 10. The championship game will be played March 17 in Miami. Here's the team's 30-man roster:

Cal Raleigh, Seattle Mariners

Will Smith, Los Angeles Dodgers

Infielders/utility

Alex Bregman, 3B, Boston Red Sox

Ernie Clement, UTIL, Toronto Blue Jays

Paul Goldschmidt, 1B, free agent

Bryce Harper, 1B, Philadelphia Phillies

Gunnar Henderson, SS, Baltimore Orioles

Brice Turang, 2B, Milwaukee Brewers

Bobby Witt Jr., SS, Kansas City Royals

Outfielders

Byron Buxton, Minnesota Twins

Corbin Carroll, Arizona Diamondbacks

Pete Crow-Armstrong, Chicago Cubs

Aaron Judge, New York Yankees

Designated hitter

Kyle Schwarber, Philadelphia Phillies

David Bednar, RHP, New York Yankees

Matthew Boyd, LHP, Chicago Cubs

Garrett Cleavinger, LHP, Tampa Bay Rays

Clay Holmes, RHP, New York Mets

Griffin Jax, RHP, Tampa Bay Rays

Brad Keller, RHP, Philadelphia Phillies

Clayton Kershaw, LHP, retired

Nolan McLean, RHP, New York Mets

Mason Miller, RHP, San Diego Padres

Joe Ryan, RHP, Minnesota Twins

Paul Skenes, RHP, Pittsburgh Pirates

Tarik Skubal, LHP, Detroit Tigers

Gabe Speier, LHP, Seattle Mariners

Michael Wacha, RHP, Kansas City Royals

Logan Webb, RHP, San Francisco Giants

Garrett Whitlock, RHP, Boston Red Sox

--Field Level Media

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Mexico World Baseball Classic roster, 2026 WBC schedule

February 05, 2026
Mexico World Baseball Classic roster, 2026 WBC schedule

Mexico returns to compete in the World Baseball Classic again this year.

The country has been represented in every WBC tournament since the tournament's inception in 2006 and is coming off its best finish in 2023, when the team finished third. The team had not previously finished better than sixth after a second-round exit in 2006.

The 2026 roster features a few MLB standouts in Randy Arozarena, Alejandro Kirk and Jarren Duran.

The team will compete in Pool B during the group stage in Houston when play begins in March. The group also features rival the USA, Brazil, Great Britain and Italy.

Pitcher: David Bednar Pitcher: Matthew Boyd Pitcher: Mason Miller Pitcher: Nolan McLean Pitcher: Clayton Kershaw Pitcher: Brad Keller Pitcher: Griffin Jax Pitcher: Clay Holmes Pitcher: Garrett Cleavinger

Team USA World Baseball Classic roster: Meet the squad

Mexico World Baseball Classic roster

Pitchers

  • Alexander Armenta

  • Javier Assad

  • Brennan Bernardino

  • Taj Bradley

  • Alex Carrillo

  • Jesus Cruz

  • Daniel Duarte

  • Robert Garcia

  • Luis Gastelum

  • Andres Munoz

  • Samy Natera Jr.

  • Gerardo Reyes

  • Jose Urquidy

  • Victor Vodnik

  • Taijuan Walker

Catchers

  • Alejandro Kirk

  • Alexis Wilson

Infielders

  • Jonathan Aranda

  • Noel Diaz

  • Nick Gonzales

  • Joey Meneses

  • Joey Ortiz

  • Jared Serna

  • Rowdy Tellez

  • Luis Urias

Outfielders

  • Randy Arozarena

  • Jarren Duran

  • Julian Ornelas

  • Alejandro Osuna

  • Alek Thomas

Coaches/Staff

  • Benji Gil (Manager)

  • Vinny Castilla (Bench coach)

  • Jacob Cruz (Hitting coach)

  • Roberto Magallanes (Hitting coach)

  • Elmer Dessens (Pitching coach)

  • Horacio Ramirez (Pitching coach)

  • Gil Velazquez  (First base coach)

  • Tony Perezchica (Third base coach)

  • Manny Del Campo (Bullpen coach)

  • Santiago Chavez (Bullpen catcher)

Mexico World Baseball Classic schedule

Pool B play – Daikin Park in Houston

  • March 6 vs. Great Britain, 1 p.m. ET

  • March 8 vs. Brazil, 8 p.m. ET

  • March 9 vs. United States, 8 p.m. ET

  • March 11 vs. Italy, 7 p.m. ET

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Mexico World Baseball Classic roster and schedule for 2026

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Knicks guard Miles McBride reportedly set for core muscle surgery, likely out until playoffs

February 05, 2026
Knicks guard Miles McBride reportedly set for core muscle surgery, likely out until playoffs

The New York Knicks reportedly could be without Miles McBride until the playoffs as the guard needs sports hernia surgery,according to The Athletic's Fred Katz.

The 25-year-old McBride has played 35 games this season and is averaging 12.9 points, 2.8 assists and 2.6 rebounds in a little over 28 minutes per night. His pending long-term absence is one reason why the Knicks went out onacquired Jose Alvarado from the New Orleans Pelicansahead of Thursday'sNBA trade deadline.

[Subscribe to Yahoo Sports NBA on YouTube].

This isn't the first injury issue for McBride this season. He missed eight games in December with a high left ankle sprain. That same ankle has caused him to sit out the Knicks' past five games as the team awaited test results.

The Knicks have won eight straight games following Wednesday's134-127 double overtime victoryover the Denver Nuggets. At 33-18, they sit second in the Eastern Conference.

On Wednesday, the Knicks acquired Dalen Terry from the Chicago Bulls in exchange for Guerschon Yabusele. That moved allowed them to flip Terry to the Pelicans for help at guard with Alvarado now that McBride is seemingly sidelined until the playoffs.

Alvarado is averaging 7.9 points, 3.1 assists and 2.8 rebounds per game this season.

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Cuban president says he's willing to talk to U.S. but preparing a 'defense plan' as fuel crisis worsens

February 05, 2026
Cuban president says he's willing to talk to U.S. but preparing a 'defense plan' as fuel crisis worsens

HAVANA — Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said the government is preparing for severe fuel shortages as he denounced the Trump administration's measures that have cut oil supplies to the island.

NBC Universal

"It is reprehensible that a power such as the U.S. would adopt such a criminal policy against a country, as it affects food, transportation, hospitals, schools, economic production and the functioning of our vital systems," Díaz-Canel said.

"We are going to take measures that, while not permanent, will require effort. What else are we to do?" he said during a nationally televised news conference Thursday.

He said the government would roll out a contingency plan in the next week to deal with the fuel shortages.

Díaz-Canel said there is a long list of issues that can be addressed between Cuba and the U.S. He said he's willing to engage in dialogue on any issue, but without pressure or preconditions and with respect for the country's sovereignty.

He said Cubans "do not hate" and recognize the values of the North American people. But the Cuban president said they're preparing a "defense plan" and stated that Cuba is a nation of peace and not a threat to the U.S.

"We aren't in a state of war," Díaz-Canel said, "but we are preparing ourselves in case we have to move to a state of war."

During a briefing Thursday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt repeated President Donald Trump's claims that Cuba's government is about to collapse.

"The president is always willing to engage in diplomacy and I believe that's something that's taking place, in fact, with the Cuban government," she said.

Trump said over the weekend that the U.S.is talking with "the highest people" in Cuba, something Cuba's deputy foreign minister, Carlos de Cossio, confirmed Wednesday when hetold CNNthat Cuba and the U.S. had "some exchanges of messages" that were "linked" to the highest levels of Cuba's government.

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De Cossio has reiterated inmultiple interviewsthis week that there is no official bilateral dialogue or negotiation with the U.S. right now, but they are open to dialogue if certain criteria are met.

Díaz-Canel said Cuba has not received oilshipments from Venezuelasince December. The South American country was the main provider of oil to Cuba, but that ended after the U.S. military operation that led to the capture of former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on Jan. 3.

In Havana, reaction to the president's upcoming contingency plan to grapple with fuel shortages was bleak.

"The future of Cuba is very dark," Frank Palomares, a publicist, said. "It's difficult for there to be changes here, and they tend to be delayed."

University student Melani Alarcon said: "We're going to be very bad off, without being able to do anything. In my case, I won't be able to study. There is no future in Cuba right now."

Trump has said he asked Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum to stop oil shipments to Cuba. Mexico has been the second largest supplier of fuel to the island for years. Sheinbaum announced over the weekend that she would send food and other humanitarian aid to the island and called for diplomatic dialogue.

Since Maduro's capture, the Trump administration has turned its focus to Cuba. Trump and others in his administration have said Cuba is a "failing nation" and the government will fall.

It's unusual for the communist-run country's president to hold a news conference on short notice like he did Thursday. It reflects the mounting economic pressure Cuba is facing amid the rising tensions with the U.S.

Cuba has been in the midst of anacute economic crisisfor several years. The number of tourists arriving to the island has declined since the pandemic, and U.S. sanctions have cranked up since then. Chronic shortages in food and medicine have plagued the nation for years, andextended daily blackoutsdue to oil shortages have worsened.

Carmen Sesin reported from Miami, and Orlando Matos reported from Havana.

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