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He left the country after a £50m money-laundering case. Now he has new life in sun

The money laundering sparked a stranger-than-fiction chain of events involving a lottery winner, student houses and a bomb plot Half Moon Bay, an Auckland suburb where businessman Gregory Candy-Wallace appears to be based A man who ran companies that a court found laundered vast sums of money in Wales and England appears to have started […]

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The money laundering sparked a stranger-than-fiction chain of events involving a lottery winner, student houses and a bomb plot

General view of Half Moon Bay, an Auckland suburb
Half Moon Bay, an Auckland suburb where businessman Gregory Candy-Wallace appears to be based

A man who ran companies that a court found laundered vast sums of money in Wales and England appears to have started a new life thousands of miles away.

New Zealand authorities are “assessing” whether Gregory Candy-Wallace should be disqualified from managing businesses in the country after we informed them he had been operating there. It comes after the 64-year-old Brit settled a legal claim in the UK last year over his having controlled a network of firms that defrauded the taxman, HMRC, of tens of millions of pounds.

There was due to be a civil trial at the High Court in London but the National Crime Agency (NCA) reached a settlement with Candy-Wallace and his companies last June, recovering assets worth £5.8m — a fraction of the more than £50m diverted from the taxman. A judge later said the money recovered was “the proceeds of crime”.

Now WalesOnline can reveal Candy-Wallace — a water polo enthusiast from Sussex whose companies used addresses in Cardiff for the money-laundering scheme — has more recent ventures in Auckland, where he is a majority shareholder in two companies and owns 49% of a third.

We obtained court documents from the UK court case listing Candy-Wallace’s address as a detached five-bedroom house in a wealthy coastal suburb of Auckland, with an outdoor pool and picturesque views onto the yacht-dotted Half Moon Bay. The home is valued at around £900,000.

The Auckland-based firms are FM Group Ltd, which bills itself as a chemical wholesaler; ACM Environmental Services Ltd, an “environmental consultancy service”; and the curiously named 846361 Ltd, which says it is in the business of waterproofing buildings.

Candy-Wallace was previously a director of another Auckland company, Amoeba Investments Ltd, which classed itself as being in the “rental of residential property” industry. The firm owned a four-bedroom semi-detached house in Yorkshire, England, which the NCA applied for permission to seize before reaching a settlement.

Who is Gregory Candy-Wallace?

Candy-Wallace does not appear to be active on social media and — barring coverage of his court case — there is little trace of him on the internet. What can be found is mostly tied to his fondness for water polo, from refereeing in the Sussex league in 2013 to winning a tournament in Guam the same year and playing for a club in Dubai in 2022.

Members of Sussex’s water polo community told us they were puzzled when Candy-Wallace suddenly “disappeared” from the local scene a few years ago without explanation.

Records show Candy-Wallace has been linked to civil tax fraud cases in the UK for two decades. One of his companies, described as a former “CD pressing business”, was found to be “connected with fraud” as far back as 2006 in the form of invalid invoices.

Another civil case dated back to 2005 when firms owned by Candy-Wallace were found to be linked to the “fraudulent evasion” of VAT by what the judge referred to as “the Malaga cell” of an illicit contra-trading network.

WalesOnline’s interest in his activities was first sparked last year when we investigated a network of “dormant companies” in Wales and England. There was little online to indicate what these firms actually did, beyond brief descriptions on Companies House such as “combined office administrative service activities” and “payroll services”.

One director, Damien Paton, was said to be a French national born in 1994. But elsewhere on Companies House his year of birth was given as 1960. In both records he was registered to a French address that was not a real place. Another of the directors was Candy-Wallace.

One of the addresses used by the network was in Cranbrook Street, in Cardiff's student heartland of Cathays
One of the addresses used by the network was in Cranbrook Street, in Cardiff’s student heartland of Cathays(Image: Conor Gogarty)

When we scanned through the many companies, a cluster of 12 stuck out. All were based at the same terraced house in Cranbrook Street in Cathays, the student heartland of Cardiff. It turned out the home was being used as a fake address for money-laundering.

Landlord Nasser Nazemi told us the home started to be bombarded with letters from Companies House in 2017 after businesses had been registered there despite having no connection to the property. “The cheek of it,” said Mr Nazemi. “We had to involve a solicitor to protect ourselves and it ended up costing us about £600 in legal fees.”

The firms in the money-laundering network were controlled by Candy-Wallace, according to the NCA, which said the “organised crime group” diverted away more than £50m of ‘pay as you earn’ and national insurance payments by “offering outsourcing services to third-party companies but then failing to pay the appropriate sums to HMRC”.

The funds were initially moved through a complex network of UK bank accounts before mostly ending up in Hong Kong and Taiwan accounts.

Why wasn’t he prosecuted?

After last year’s money-laundering settlement, we raised questions over the NCA’s decision not to bring a criminal case against Candy-Wallace, particularly given that only a small portion of the £50m was recovered — on top of his decades-long links to tax fraud.

As the NCA’s own barrister James Laddie KC put it, the money-laundering ring was a “deliberate and organised” fraud that featured “inducements to secure clients”. Mr Laddie also said the settlement was a “formal acknowledgement” that the funds were the proceeds of crime. Mr Justice Julian Knowles also described the funds in this way and said the network was part of “unlawful” payroll and money-laundering schemes.

People are regularly imprisoned for fraud involving comparatively tiny sums of money. When we asked the NCA why it would not be bringing criminal proceedings, its spokeswoman said: “Civil recovery investigations are an efficient way to reclaim funds that have been acquired through unlawful conduct, and are not dependent on a criminal conviction.”

Jonathan Nuttall
Jonathan Nuttall(Image: Press Association)

There was a criminal prosecution of one person involved in the network, but not for money-laundering. In 2023 one of Candy-Wallace’s associates, Jonathan Nuttall, was jailed for eight years and two months after being found guilty of orchestrating a bomb plot against NCA lawyers.

Nuttall had conspired to plant two explosives in London’s legal district after becoming upset at the prospect of losing his stately home in Hampshire as assets were being seized in the civil case. The 51-year-old’s wife, Amanda Nuttall — who once won £2.4m from her first lottery ticket — agreed to pay £1.4m and give up the stately home as part of the recent settlement.

New Zealand Companies Office is now “assessing” Candy-Wallace’s involvement in the Auckland firms. Its investigations team manager Vanessa Cook told us it is looking into whether his past conduct should disqualify him from directing or managing companies in New Zealand.

Candy-Wallace and the Auckland companies were approached for comment. The only response we received was from a construction business whose email address was listed as a point of contact for one of Candy-Wallace’s companies. The building firm said: “I don’t know Mr Candy-Wallace, haven’t had any dealings with him, and haven’t seen him before.”

In the UK, registering sham addresses on Companies House has been a longstanding avenue for fraud. There is no requirement for those setting up a company to prove its legitimacy — and for those who actually live at the address, the fraud can ruin their credit rating due to the activity linked to their home.

The mass-registering of “burner companies” allows gangs to open UK bank accounts for money-laundering. However, later this year ID verification is finally due to become a requirement to start a company — after more than a decade of the system being abused — though experts have warned the scale of change needed will take time.

If you know of a story we should be investigating, email us at conor.gogarty@walesonline.co.uk



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Jessie Murph Lands Digital Cover of ‘Sports Illustrated Swimsuit’ Issue

NEED TO KNOW Jessie Murph graces the cover of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit‘s July digital issue The singer wore several vintage bikinis and channeled pin-ups for the photo shoot Murph previously performed at the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit runway show in May Jessie Murph is Sports Illustrated Swimsuit‘s latest digital cover star! The “1965” singer, 20, graced […]

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NEED TO KNOW

  • Jessie Murph graces the cover of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit‘s July digital issue
  • The singer wore several vintage bikinis and channeled pin-ups for the photo shoot
  • Murph previously performed at the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit runway show in May

Jessie Murph is Sports Illustrated Swimsuit‘s latest digital cover star!

The “1965” singer, 20, graced the cover of the magazine’s July issue in a series of vintage and pin-up-inspired swimsuits and bikinis as a call back to the 1950s and ’60s. The shoot took place in Key Biscayne, Fla.

The musician sent the camera a flirty gaze as she posed on a wooden bench while wearing a two-piece swimsuit by Juicy Couture. The top of the swimsuit was a white bandeau with oversize puff sleeves printed with bright red cherries.

Instead of matching bottoms, Murph completed the look with low-rise red terry cloth bottoms that tied at the sides.

Jessie Murph for Sports Illustrated Swimsuit.

Sports Illustrated/Derek Kettela


For glam, the star wore her jet-black hair piled high on her head into a loose bun. Murph’s makeup was kept simple for the cover; she wore a light smoky shadow and black liner on her eyes and went for rosy shades on the apples of her cheeks and lips.

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE’s free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. 

Other photos from the sexy shoot featured Murph in more vintage-feeling looks. She went simple in a black two-piece bikini that had a molded-cup bra top with a heart at the center of the bust and matching black cheeky bottoms that sat low on her hips. She completed the look with square-framed Chanel sunglasses in black.

Jessie Murph, Sports Illustrated.

Sports Illustrated/Derek Kettela


Murph’s boldest look for her Sports Illustrated Swimsuit cover shoot was another vintage-looking swimsuit in a bright blue and white gingham print. The set featured a bustier top in blue and white gingham print that put her cleavage front and center, while the bottoms sat low on her hips and showed off a hint of cheek.

The “Blue Strips” singer accessorized the playful look with an oversize sunhat in a smaller blue and white gingham print. She added a gauzy gingham-print scarf over her hair, which she wore in loose waves, and posed poolside for photographer Derek Kettela.

Jessie Murph, Sports Illustrated.

Sports Illustrated/Derek Kettela


Murph’s Sports Illustrated Swimsuit cover comes after she performed her track “Touch Me Like a Gangster” at the end of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit runway show on May 31.

Jessie Murph performs during the runway for the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Runway Show.

John Parra/Getty


The PEOPLE App is now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! 

“I mean, who wouldn’t want to do that?” Murph told the outlet of the opportunity to debut the song. “Sports Illustrated is so iconic. It was a no-brainer.”



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Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone enters flat 400m at USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone is entered in the flat 400m and not the 400m hurdles (her Olympic gold medal and world record event) for the Toyota USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships from July 31-Aug. 3. The entry deadline was Wednesday at 2:59 a.m. ET. For McLaughlin-Levrone, and others who didn’t enter events before the deadline, there […]

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Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone is entered in the flat 400m and not the 400m hurdles (her Olympic gold medal and world record event) for the Toyota USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships from July 31-Aug. 3.

The entry deadline was Wednesday at 2:59 a.m. ET.

For McLaughlin-Levrone, and others who didn’t enter events before the deadline, there is an opportunity for a late registration appeal, but that is very rare, according to USATF.

Notables not entered in any events include three-time Olympic shot put gold medalist Ryan Crouser, who has been sidelined from recent competition due to a reported elbow injury. Crouser has a bye into September’s World Championships in Tokyo as a defending world champ from 2023, so he does not need to compete at nationals to make the world team.

Paris 2024 Olympic Games - Day 11 - Athletics

Cole Hocker wants to become the second American man to win a world 1500m title, but that’s not his only 2025 goal.

Olympic 400m gold medalist Quincy Hall, who has also missed recent competition due to injury, also did not enter nationals. Hall is not a reigning world champion, so he is in line to miss worlds.

Full entry lists are here.

McLaughlin-Levrone said in the spring that she expected to choose one of the flat 400m or 400m hurdles for nationals, but not both. The flat 400m and 400m hurdles overlap at nationals with the flat final and the hurdles semifinals separated by about 15 minutes.

The top three in most events at USATF Outdoors make the world team. In the 100m and 400m, several more typically make the team for relay purposes.

McLaughlin-Levrone could still qualify for worlds in the 400m hurdles if she enters Diamond League races between nationals and worlds, qualifies for the Diamond League Final and then wins at the Diamond League Final from Aug. 27-28 in Zurich.

The World Championships schedule has the 400m and 400m hurdles overlapping, though none of the rounds for the two races are on the same day.

McLaughlin-Levrone is the two-time reigning Olympic gold medalist in the 400m hurdles, plus has broken the world record six times.

She didn’t race at the last World Championships in 2023 due to injury. Before the injury, she planned on racing the flat 400m and not the 400m hurdles at the 2023 Worlds. She has never raced the flat 400m at a global championship.

McLaughlin-Levrone is the second-fastest American woman in history in the flat 400m (48.74 from 2023) and the world’s sixth-fastest woman for 2025 (49.43).

Three Americans have run faster in 2025: Aaliyah Butler (49.09), Olympic 200m gold medalist Gabby Thomas (49.14, not entered in the 400m at nationals) and Bella Whittaker (49.24).

In the 400m hurdles this year, McLaughlin-Levrone owns the world’s second-best time (52.07), trailing only 2023 World champion Femke Bol of the Netherlands (51.95).

At the Paris Olympics, McLaughlin-Levrone lowered her 400m hurdles world record to 50.37. She hasn’t lost a 400m hurdles race since 2019.

Dalilah Muhammad

Dalilah Muhammad, an Olympic 400m hurdles champion, plans to retire at age 35.





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Aztec Volleyball Reveals 2025 Schedule

SAN DIEGO – San Diego State volleyball head coach Brent Hilliard announced the team’s highly anticipated schedule for the upcoming 2025 campaign, with the Aztecs slated to play 29 regular-season matches this fall, highlighted by 18 Mountain West encounters and 11 non-conference clashes. In all, SDSU’s attractive yet challenging schedule features 15 teams that finished […]

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SAN DIEGO – San Diego State volleyball head coach Brent Hilliard announced the team’s highly anticipated schedule for the upcoming 2025 campaign, with the Aztecs slated to play 29 regular-season matches this fall, highlighted by 18 Mountain West encounters and 11 non-conference clashes.

In all, SDSU’s attractive yet challenging schedule features 15 teams that finished with a winning record last year, combining for a 258-159 ledger (.619), as three of those squads qualified for postseason play.

The Aztecs commence their regular-season slate in earnest when they travel to the Bay Area for the California Tournament, Aug. 29-30, in Berkeley, where they will battle the host Golden Bears and San Francisco, respectively.

SDSU maintains a 6-2 advantage in the all-time series vs. Cal but dropped a narrow three-set decision in its last meeting against the Bears at Aztec Court at Peterson Gym to open the 2022 campaign. Likewise, the Scarlet and Black is 6-2 in program history vs. the Dons but suffered a similar result the last time the two schools met in the 2015 season opener at USF.

The Aztecs will add to their frequent flyer miles the following weekend for the Flo Hyman Classic, Sept. 4-6, in Houston, Texas. SDSU opens the tournament against the host Cougars before squaring off against LSU and Omaha, respectively.

The Aztecs captured three of five matches vs. Houston between 1979 and 1985 but the two teams have not met since. Similarly, the Scarlet and Black has not faced the Tigers since the 1991 season, with SDSU maintaining a 3-1 edge in the all-time series. In addition, the Aztecs’ tournament finale in the Lone Star will feature their first-ever encounter with the Mavericks, who advanced to the second round of the NIVC.

SDSU continues its non-conference slate the following week when it makes the short drive up the freeway for the LBSU Tournament, Sept. 11-13 at the Walter Pyramid in Long Beach. The Aztecs will open the event against Oregon, which advanced to the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Championships last year and finished with a final No. 10 national ranking, before locking horns with UC Riverside and host Long Beach State.

SDSU owns a slim 6-5 advantage against the Ducks all-time but will be looking to avenge a four-set defeat in the 2023 home opener on Aztec Court.  In addition, the Aztecs are 16-3 all-time vs. the Highlanders, including a four-set triumph at the CBU Invite last year. Meanwhile, SDSU sports a 26-19 ledger against the Beach in program history. However, the two teams have not met since the 2021 campaign, when the Scarlet and Black was dealt a three-set defeat in Long Beach.

The road weary Aztecs will finally open their home schedule, Sept. 18-20, with a pair of matches with local adversaries UC San Diego and San Diego, respectively, followed by a clash with Yale.

SDSU has defeated the Tritons in all 15 previous meetings, including a three-sweep at the UCSD Invitational in 2023. The Tritons are led by former Aztec player and assistant coach Melanie Greene, who is entering her second season as a head coach on the La Jolla campus.

In addition, San Diego State will be renewing acquaintances with the Toreros for the first time since 2022, when USD claimed a four-set decision to grab a 33-27 advantage in the all-time series.

Meanwhile, the Aztecs will be engaging the Bulldogs for the first time in program history to wrap up their non-conference slate.

San Diego State will resume its role as road warriors for its first four conference battles, opening its Mountain West slate at Fresno State (Sept. 25) and San José State (Sept. 27), followed by a swing through Air Force (Oct. 2) and Nevada (Oct. 4).

With 18 league matches in an unbalanced schedule, the Aztecs will face each MW school both at home and on the road, except for the aforementioned battles against the Falcons and Wolf Pack, as well as home clashes with Colorado State (Nov. 13) and Wyoming (Nov. 15). The Rams captured both the Mountain West regular-season and tournament championships last year, while the Cowgirls advanced to the Great Eight round of the NIVC.

Following its excursion to Reno, SDSU opens a three-match homestand against New Mexico (Oct. 9), UNLV (Oct. 11) and Mountain West newcomer Grand Canyon (Oct. 16). The Aztecs avenged a tough five-set road loss to the Lobos last year with a home sweep in the penultimate regular-season match after posting an earlier triumph over the Rebels at home in the lone meeting between the two squads.

Meanwhile, the Scarlet and Black has faced the Lopes on one prior occasion, dropping a straight-set decision at the GCU Invitational in 2019. In their final year as Western Athletic Conference members, the Lopes posted a 20-11 overall record in 2024, including a second-place mark of 11-5 in league play.

Following a return engagement with UNLV in Las Vegas (Oct. 18), SDSU will face Utah State and Boise State in four consecutive matches at alternating venues, battling the Aggies (Oct. 23) and Broncos (Oct. 25) on the road, before squaring off against the same respective squads the next week on Aztec Court (Oct. 30 and Nov. 1).

SDSU fell short in a pair of close matches to USU last season and dropped a five-set thriller at Boise State in its lone match between the two squads.

Following road tests at Grand Canyon (Nov. 6) and New Mexico (Nov. 8), the Aztecs return to the friendly confines of Peterson Gym for a four-match homestand to close out the regular season. SDSU will lock horns with Colorado State (Nov. 13) and Wyoming (Nov. 15) before hosting rematches with San José State (Nov. 20) and Fresno State (Nov. 22).

In October of 2024, the Aztecs defeated the Rams and Cowgirls in consecutive matches for the first time since 2012. The Scarlet and Black also toppled Wyoming in Laramie for the third straight year to complete its first season sweep of the Cowgirls since 2011.

In addition, SDSU captured both meetings against the Spartans last season and took two of the three matches vs. the Bulldogs, including a four-set triumph in the first round of the conference tournament.

For the fourth time in five years, the Mountain West Championship will be held at UNLV’s Cox Pavilion in Las Vegas, Nevada, from Nov. 26-29, with the league’s top six teams vying for the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.

Coming off a successful 20-10 campaign in 2024, Coach Hilliard and the Aztecs will benefit from the return of 10 letterwinners, including Taylor Underwood, a two-time all-Mountain West honoree who ranked 10th in the conference with a team-high 3.18 kills per set.

In addition, SDSU has added seven newcomers to its 2025 roster, including outside hitter Ella Schabort, a Division I transfer from Binghamton,  along with former prep standouts Kendall Mairs and Zara Stewart.

Season tickets are now on sale for San Diego State’s 2025 home schedule and may be purchased online at the link above or by calling 619-283-SDSU.





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CUI Ties School Record with 231 Academic All-PacWest Honorees

Story Links IRVINE, Calif. – For the second time in the NCAA DII Era at Concordia University Irvine, a record 231 student-athletes from this past school year earned Academic All-PacWest honors. This is also the fourth straight summer that at least 200 or more Concordia student-athletes that competed in PacWest Conference […]

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IRVINE, Calif. – For the second time in the NCAA DII Era at Concordia University Irvine, a record 231 student-athletes from this past school year earned Academic All-PacWest honors.

This is also the fourth straight summer that at least 200 or more Concordia student-athletes that competed in PacWest Conference sports made the list.

To qualify, student-athletes must earn at least a 3.00 cumulative GPA during the 2024-25 academic year and be a member of the active roster or redshirt at their school.

The CUI women’s track and field team collected the most Academic All-PacWest selections from the school with 40, while the men’s track and field squad featured 33 honorees.  CUI women’s track and field also tied Point Loma for the most in that sport across the league.

Meanwhile, the CUI baseball team racked up an eye-popping 31 Academic All-PacWest selections, which is the most in the program’s NCAA D2 era as well.

The nationally-ranked CUI women’s soccer team nearly had the entire roster earn academic accolades with an amazing 24 honorees this time. The nationally-ranked CUI softball team added 17 award recipients while the two basketball teams combined for 18 selections. The entire starting lineup that won the PacWest Championship in men’s tennis was named Academic All-PacWest and both women’s volleyball and men’s soccer each had 14 honorees.

Per the conference’s award rules, 26 Concordia student-athletes were honored and counted twice as members of the cross country teams and also as distance runners with their respective track and field teams.

CLICK HERE for the full list of 2024-25 Academic All-PacWest student-athletes

Due in part to three new schools joining the PacWest last year, a record total of 2,728 student-athletes across the league made the cut.

An astounding 186 had a perfect 4.0 grade point average in their undergraduate or graduate studies.

CLICK HERE for the full PacWest Conference article

Back in 2023, CUI also had 231 Academic All-PacWest honorees.

*NOTE: Many of Concordia’s teams this past season did not compete in the PacWest Conference such as water polo, swimming and diving, lacrosse, men’s volleyball and beach volleyball. Those sports are included in other academic award announcements throughout the summer. Other conferences stagger their academic announcements throughout the summer months. Also, all NCAA DII-sponsored teams (women’s lacrosse is a club team at CUI) are eligible for the D2ADA Academic Award which is always announced in the later half of the summer.

Men’s Lacrosse (RMAC) – CLICK HERE

Swimming & Diving (PCSC & CSCAA) – CLICK HERE

Men’s Volleyball (MPSF) – CLICK HERE

Beach Volleyball
(AVCA) – CLICK HERE

Men’s Water Polo (WWPA & ACWPC) – 
CLICK HERE

Women’s Water Polo (GCC & ACWPC) – CLICK HERE & CLICK HERE 

 



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Women’s Track and Field Named USTFCCCA All-Academic Team

Story Links Charleston, S.C. – The College of Charleston women’s track & field team has been named as one of the 2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Track & Field All-Academic Teams by the USTFCCCA.  Requirements for this prestigious award are for all student-athletes on the indoor and outdoor rosters to have a cumulative […]

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Charleston, S.C. – The College of Charleston women’s track & field team has been named as one of the 2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Track & Field All-Academic Teams by the USTFCCCA. 

Requirements for this prestigious award are for all student-athletes on the indoor and outdoor rosters to have a cumulative GPA above 3.0 on a 4.0 scale. The Cougars surpassed the requirements and finished the 2025 season with a cumulative GPA of 3.55. 

In addition to the impressive academic achievements by the team, individuals Sophia Brown, Bella Hudson, Emily Kreek, and Abby Fush were recognized by the CAA for finishing the spring semester with High Honors with Distinction. The qualification for this honor is to maintain a 4.0 GPA for the season. 

For the complete list of USTFCCCA honorees, click here: USTFCCCA All-Academic Teams list  

 



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Maple Grove Volleyball coach sentenced to 33 Years for sexually abusing more than a dozen victims

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (Northern News Now) – A man was sentenced on Tuesday to 400 months in prison for the production of child pornography, according to Acting U.S. Attorney Joseph H. Thompson. The man was identified as 33-year-old Dorian Christopher Barrs. According to court documents, for nearly a decade, Barrs used his position as a volleyball […]

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MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (Northern News Now) – A man was sentenced on Tuesday to 400 months in prison for the production of child pornography, according to Acting U.S. Attorney Joseph H. Thompson.

The man was identified as 33-year-old Dorian Christopher Barrs.

According to court documents, for nearly a decade, Barrs used his position as a volleyball coach to prey on and sexually abuse his players and other victims, as young as 14-years-old.

Barrs coached volleyball for Maple Grove High School and club volleyball programs and also coached players in private lessons.

Court documents showed Barrs used social media to groom, sexually exploit, and abuse young girls for his sexual gratification

He often used another minor’s identities, ‘catfishing’ victims.

Barrs allegedly sent and received sexually explicit images and videos, as well as engaging in sexual acts with at least five of the minor victims.

According to court documents, at least 19 minor victims have been identified who Barrs victimized in his scheme, 14 of whom were being coached by Barrs.

Barrs was sentenced to 33 years in prison, followed by a lifetime of supervised release

“This case represents every parent’s nightmare,” said U.S. District Judge Nancy E. Brasel.

“The 33-year prison sentence in this case serves as a stern warning to those who prey upon and sexually exploit children for their own gratification,” said FBI Minneapolis Special Agent in Charge Alvin M. Winston Sr.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office commended the bravery of the victims in this case.

According to court documents, the first victim came forward in 2024, followed by more victims.

Click here to download the Northern News Now app or our Northern News Now First Alert weather app.



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