Rec Sports
Ozark United FC announces Youth Academy founding partners
ROGERS — Ozark United FC on July 17 announced its inaugural Youth Academy founding partners: Unilever, Arkansas Children’s and America’s Car-Mart.
As part of the club’s youth development program and pathway, these community-minded organizations will support efforts to expand access to soccer, elevate player development, and strengthen community engagement across Northwest Arkansas, according to a news release.
Earlier this year, Ozark United FC and Sporting Arkansas announced a joint effort to launch six boys’ academy teams competing in MLS NEXT’s new competition tier. The teams, ranging from U13 to U19, will play under the Ozark United FC banner in the Pioneer Conference, attend USL Academy showcase events such as USL Pathway Classic and other elite competitions. Players will receive high-level training, access to national showcase events, and opportunities for exposure to college and professional scouts. A girls’ program is also in development, with more details to be announced in the coming months, according to the release.
Each founding partner will support both Academy operations and community-focused initiatives designed to break down barriers and increase youth participation in soccer, particularly in underserved areas. This collective commitment represents a shared investment in the health, growth, and opportunity of the next generation across Northwest Arkansas, according to the release.
Highlights of each partner’s involvement include:
Unilever will feature its Degree brand on the front of the boys home and away kits, while Dove will appear on the girls kits, as part of Dove’s self-esteem project initiative to help keep girls confident and playing the sports they love.
Arkansas Children’s will appear on the sleeve of all home and away match kits, reflecting its commitment to youth sports as a powerful way communities help kids thrive physically and mentally.
America’s Car-Mart will support grassroots youth clinics and community engagement initiatives, with a focus on underserved youth.
All three partners will also participate in hosting regional ID camps and clinics aimed at identifying and developing local talent, according to the release.
“We’re fortunate to be building this club in a region where community-minded, high-impact organizations thrive,” said Chris Martinovic, co-founder of Ozark United FC. “These partnerships reflect our shared commitment to using soccer as a vehicle for good — on the field and in the community.”
The partnerships are already making an impact, starting with a free youth soccer clinic from 8:30 to 10 a.m. Saturday, July 26, at Mt. Hebron Park. Sign-up details will be available soon at www.ozarkunited.com.
Rec Sports
National Girls & Women In Sports Day Celebration Set For Jan. 25
Young Tar Heel fans are invited to join the North Carolina women’s sports teams for 2026 UNC National Girls & Women in Sports Day, an annual event to highlight women’s athletics at Carolina, brought to you by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina (Blue Cross NC) and Carolina Athletics. The NGWSD celebration is set for Jan. 25 from 12-1:30 p.m. at the Bill Koman Practice Complex on the UNC campus.
The day’s event is intended for girls and boys pre-K through eighth grade. There is no charge to participate, and everyone (including parents/guardians) who registers in advance will receive a complimentary ticket to the UNC women’s basketball game against Syracuse that day at 2 p.m. at nearby Carmichael Arena.
https://goheels.com/form/90
Building on its commitment to support youth mental health, connectivity and resiliency, Blue Cross NC encourages participation in sports and an active lifestyle that supports physical and mental well-being. By partnering with youth, parents and community leaders like Carolina Athletics, Blue Cross NC believes there is opportunity to help reduce stigmas associated with mental health for young people in sports.
The NGWSD event includes mini-clinics with each sport, giving kids the opportunity to try out a variety of skills in a fun environment that’s appropriate for youths of all ages. The majority of the 15 UNC women’s varsity teams – cross country, field hockey, golf, gymnastics, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, swimming & diving, track & field and volleyball – will be represented at the event.
For more information, you can email uncngwsd@gmail.com or visit www.goheels.com
Information about check-in and parking will be emailed to registrants in advance of the event.
Rec Sports
Marshall County Supervisor Kevin Goodman passes away at 63 | News, Sports, Jobs
contributed photo
Kevin Goodman was an elected member of the Marshall County Board of Supervisors.
Kevin Goodman, a first-term Marshall County Supervisor, Haverhill area farmer, Marshalltown High School (MHS) alum and baseball enthusiast who played for the now-defunct Iowa State University (ISU) squad in the 1980s, passed away on Wednesday at the age of 63.
The news was confirmed in an email sent from fellow Supervisors Jarret Heil and Carol Hibbs to county employees, and a cause of death has not been publicly shared.
“It is with deep sadness that we share the passing of Marshall County Supervisor Kevin Goodman. Kevin lived a remarkable life filled with family, adventure, and service to his community. We will remember his passion for serving his community. Everyone at Marshall County shares our deepest condolences to Dana and the entire Goodman family,” they wrote.
Heil, the current board chairman, also shared reflections on working with Goodman, who narrowly won the 2024 Republican primary over Bill Schendel before coasting to victory in the general election that November.
“Kevin really enjoyed serving the people of Marshall County. He loved learning all aspects of county government. Today is a very sad day. I’m really going to miss Kevin as he was a great friend to me and to many. God bless him and his family,” he said.
In his own statement, Marshall County Attorney Jordan Gaffney expressed a similar sentiment.
“Kevin had a heart for helping others, and his time as a Supervisor reflects that he was committed to doing so. I’m thankful for Kevin’s service to our community, to have had the opportunity to get to know him, and to have talked baseball with him,” Gaffney said. “Kevin’s passing is a major loss for our community, and my heart hurts for his family and loved ones, for whom this loss is experienced most. Kevin is missed. And his family and friends are in my thoughts and prayers.”
Marshall County Auditor/Recorder Nan Benson recalled Goodman’s warm nature and eagerness to learn as a relative newcomer to the job.
“As County Supervisor, Kevin was known for his passion for learning and his willingness to take on his new roles and responsibilities to better serve residents. Kevin’s work reflected a genuine desire to make a positive difference, and his contributions will have a lasting impact on Marshall County. Kevin will be remembered for his dedication, integrity, and for me his smile and cheerful ‘hello’ as he came into our meetings,” she said. “I still have the photo of Kevin, (Sheriff) Joel Phillips, and myself when we were sworn into office on Dec. 20, 2024, by Judge Jennifer Miller. He was a great co-worker, eager to learn, and he served his community with dedication, humility, and a deep commitment to public service.”
Despite his passions for agriculture, history and baseball, Goodman’s greatest joy came from raising his three children alongside his wife Dana, his oldest son Christian said.
“He loved people. He loved his family. He’s got a very strong group of buddies, and they stay in contact every year. He’s always been the connector in getting the guys together,” Dana said. “He loved teaching young kids baseball and softball. He always said he thought maybe he should’ve been a history teacher. He loved history, and he never met a stranger he didn’t know. He’s a good guy. He trusted people, loved farming (and was) very passionate about feeding cattle.”
Christian, a Class of 2010 MHS graduate, added that his father took pride in doing things “the right way,” was always working to improve and was never afraid to think outside the box.
“Whether it was feeding cattle or baseball, he was a very analytical and creative individual. I just know (that) there was just no quit in the guy. It didn’t matter what the situation was. He wasn’t gonna back down from it,” he said. “We had people come and work for us (on the farm), and they’ve all reached out and said how much they enjoyed working with him because he treated everybody like they were his family. And he was a really genuine person. I’ve been told that by a lot of people that there was just something about him that made you feel comfortable, and I know a lot of people have told me in the last few days that they would lean on him for support at times — stuff I didn’t even know about. He was never afraid to stop and help somebody in need.”
Even recently, Christian said, Kevin had assisted a woman with a flat tire just down the road, called deputies to ensure that she was safe and offered to pay for a new one before McAtee Tire owner Tom Wahl stepped up to donate it himself.
“That was not uncommon for him to do those kinds of things. From the time we were little, he coached our sports teams, and in talking to my teammates from those youth league sports, that was a time in their life that they remember because he made it memorable because of how he taught baseball and the things that he told them and the values that he (instilled),” Christian said. “It wasn’t just about winning, obviously. He taught a lot of life lessons to young kids, and I know that he helped out a lot of kids that didn’t have the funds to play in those kinds of leagues. And he made sure they had a fair opportunity. It’s just the kind of guy he was, and he really loved to see people succeed and get better. And he didn’t care who you were or what you were doing.”
In addition to youth coaching, he coached softball at MHS and served as an umpire. Christian felt that his father approached the county supervisor role with a similar vigor and cared deeply about doing a good job.
“He always gives it everything he’s got. He’s always trying to be better, and that was just who he was. Of course, he brought whatever he could to try to do the best job that he could, and watching everything else go on and the other stressors in his life, he gave it everything he had to perform in that role,” he said. “He lived life to the fullest, and I don’t think he ever cheated himself. He got the full life experience… I was really looking forward to watching him continue to sit in that county supervisor’s position, and looking back on it, I wish that he could have gotten into that kind of a position sooner because he’s a servant to the people.”
Goodman, a Republican, had recently started his second year in the role — attending the regular meeting on Dec. 31 and the organizational meeting on Jan. 2 — and was slated to serve a four-year term through the end of 2028. According to Benson, a vacancy will be declared at the regular Jan. 14 meeting, and within 40 days, the county’s appointment committee will work to choose a new supervisor who would then likely run to serve out the remainder of Goodman’s term in the November election.
——
Contact Robert Maharry
at 641-753-6611 ext. 255 or
rmaharry@timesrepublican.com.
Rec Sports
What if youth sports weren’t about winning? How KidsUnited Frisco | Plano builds confidence 1 kick at a time
Toddlers carefully tap soccer balls with growing coordination, while older children practice focused footwork. Classes move seamlessly from one age group to the next, stretching from morning sessions to evening play, seven days a week. Each one is designed to help children grow not just as athletes, but as confident, capable individuals.
That steady hum of activity reflects the heart of KidsUnited Frisco | Plano: a year-round, indoor early childhood development program that uses soccer as a tool to help children ages one and a half to nine reach critical developmental milestones.
What makes KidsUnited Frisco | Plano unique?
Unlike traditional youth sports programs built around competition and seasonal schedules, KidsUnited Frisco | Plano takes a fundamentally different approach. The program focuses on individual skills development, with small class sizes and personalized coaching that allows each child to progress at their own pace.
“We focus on age-appropriate developmental milestones as the child progresses through our program, and we use soccer as the main tool for reaching those milestones and inspiring a lifelong love for the game,” head coach Bella Lopez said.
For the youngest age groups, there are no more than 10 children in each class, with two coaches on the field to ensure individualized attention. For older kids, class sizes do not exceed 12 children, and the coach to student ratio does not surpass 1:6. This structure allows athletes to get more touches on the ball, more repetition and more feedback, creating an environment where learning feels both supportive and fun.

Additionally, all coaches are certified and bring extensive soccer experience. Many have competed at the collegiate, semi-professional or professional level, equipping them to teach proper technique, refine form and build strong fundamentals in every player.
Beyond their expertise, the coaches are the heart of each session, dedicated to helping children grow both on and off the field. They focus on creating classes that are engaging, safe and filled with meaningful moments, encouraging a lasting passion for the game.
A curriculum built for growth
At the core of KidsUnited Frisco | Plano is a structured, 52-week curriculum developed by national KidsUnited head coaches. The curriculum is refreshed continuously throughout the year. While the focus areas remain consistent—body and ball mastery, and life skills—the drills change weekly to keep children engaged and challenged.
Life skills become a more intentional part of the curriculum starting around age three and a half, when children begin working on concepts such as perseverance, teamwork, leadership and decision-making. These lessons are woven directly into drills, as well as one-on-one or two-on-one scrimmages. This helps children learn how to navigate challenges in a low-pressure environment.
“The lesson that’s built into [this program] is that … you’re not going to get [the skill] on day one, … but you can do hard things little by little in a safe, comfortable, smaller type of environment,” Lopez said.

Building confidence early
For many families, one of the most noticeable outcomes of the program is confidence. Younger classes include parent-assisted instruction, helping toddlers feel comfortable as they bond with both caregivers and coaches. As children grow, the emphasis shifts toward independence and problem-solving, without the pressure of winning or losing. Families can also take advantage of a trial option to experience the program firsthand and see if it is a good fit for their family.
Coaches provide individualized feedback after every class, reinforcing progress and helping children recognize their own growth.
Families are incredibly happy with their experience.
“This soccer school has been an amazing experience for our family. The coaches are encouraging, organized and truly care about each player,” one family member said. “My child has grown not only in soccer skills, but also in confidence, teamwork and sportsmanship. Communication with parents is clear, the environment feels safe and welcoming, and practices are always fun and engaging. We’re so glad we signed up.”
Expanding access across North Texas
KidsUnited Frisco | Plano was the first KidsUnited location in Texas. It brought the nationally recognized program from the Northeast to one of the region’s most active youth sports communities, located at the border of Frisco and Plano.
That success is now fueling expansion.
The organization plans to open at least two additional locations in North Texas by early to mid-2025, including clubs in Celina and McKinney. The expansion aims to make the program more accessible for families who currently travel from surrounding cities such as Prosper, Aubrey and Melissa.
As the footprint grows, the mission remains the same: offering consistent, year-round development during the most formative years of childhood.
Frisco | Plano location: 4568 SH 121, Plano. Click here to learn more and try a class today.
Celina | Northwest McKinney location (coming soon): 8176 FM 2478, Bldg. 13, McKinney. Click here to contact the team now and take advantage of Founding Member Rates.
Follow the action @kidsunited_frisco.plano on Instagram and Facebook.

The above story was produced by Multi-Platform Journalist Sydney Heller with Community Impact’s Storytelling team with information solely provided by the local business as part of their “sponsored content” purchase through our advertising team.
Rec Sports
Signing your kid up for soccer? You might need a second job
There was a time when signing your kid up for soccer or softball didn’t take a big investment. But in recent years, the financial commitment required for some youth sports has grown dramatically.
Parents now regularly spend thousands of dollars each season on registration, travel, equipment and other costs. And the entrance of private equity firms into the industry has helped accelerate the growth in expense.
Todd Frankel, a reporter for the Washington Post, recently wrote about the growing costs of kids’ sports. He spoke to Texas Standard about some of the factors that are driving the trend. Listen to the interview above or read the transcript below.
This transcript has been edited lightly for clarity:
Texas Standard: Give us a sense of how much money some parents are actually paying for their kids to participate in sports. I mean, it’s easy to sort of talk in these broad terms and it might sound like hyperbole, but I was kind of shocked by what you reported here.
Todd Frankel: Yeah, they are eye-popping numbers, but I think any parent who has a kid playing sports these days, they’re sort of the rules of the road. And they are shocking. I mean, folks are being charged just to try out for these teams.
And these, again, as you pointed out, the Pop Warner/Little League stuff that most folks grew up with a generation ago, that’s still around, but it’s been sort of supplanted and also competing against these like travel clubs and these club sport teams that are year-round. You know, they cost $3,000, $4,000 a year easy – $50 to try out, and then there’s fees all along the way.
And, you know, it’s really turning youth sports into a luxury good.
Is this across the board? I mean, are there certain sports or certain leagues that are more affordable? You mentioned the Pop Warner thing’s still out there, but where’s all this money going?
It’s sort of tricky. So those other cheaper options are still out there, but what happens is – and I was speaking to some academics and folks who study this – is starting around second grade, which is pretty young, folks start getting sort of lured into this club sports world, and by fifth grade, there’s fewer and fewer players around to play the lower-end sports. And so everyone sort of feels compelled, “oh well, maybe Johnny down the street’s doing it, my kid should follow him.”
And some sports definitely cost more, like ice skating is a famous example of just incredible investment – ice hockey as well. Soccer’s cheaper, baseball’s a little bit cheaper.
But again, the costs are so much higher than they were a generation ago. And you’re getting more. You’re around practices, three practices a week.
Another big thing that I was sort of even surprised by was this sort of growth in what’s called youth sports tourism, right?
So on the weekend, mom and dad and the family are loading up and driving three, four hours or even hopping on a plane to go play in a weekend youth sports tournament at these new facilities that are just for youths, right? They’re not for adults.
So it’s an entirely different world than what most folks are aware of.
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It seems like much bigger business, and I say that with intent because you report that private equity firms have taken notice of what’s happening here. What role have they actually played in driving this trend?
Yeah, so, you know, I think they took notice that folks are willing to spend a lot of money.
As someone told me, families will cut back on a lot things before they cut back on spending for their kids. And these private equity and venture capital investors have started getting into this – buying up some of these facilities, wrapping up a bunch of these leagues… Like one group bought up/owns almost 100 different flag football leagues across the country. And they see the profit opportunity there.
And the concern is, what’s driving which? I think this was sort of happening and private equity got into it. But as they are going to do, they’re probably going to push this a little bit further.
But I wonder if they can only push so far, because surely there’s gotta be some sort of backlash. Is there any, as far as you can tell? Are parents looking for alternatives?
Well, yes, there’s definitely backlash. And it’s mostly like that, you know, any parent I talk to about this were just sort of a knowing laugh when I brought this up. Because everyone goes through this at different levels, you know?
Some folks have much worse times. Some of it’s just a little bit of a financial strain. But there was surveys showing that parents are getting second jobs to afford their kids sports. And I was kind of like, that can’t be true. But then, secondhand, I heard from friends that I know of who they’ve done that same thing for their kids.
And so we are probably reaching a tipping point where how much more can you possibly get folks to pay? But even if it just sort of stays where it is, it’s still a really big strain for a lot of families. But no one wants to be the first one to pull out.
And as I said earlier, the problem is, these earlier, cheaper options, they don’t seem as attractive. And they’re, quite frankly, not – especially if you can somehow squeeze out and do the fancy stuff, it’s kind of hard to say no.
Rec Sports
ECNL and IBERCUP Partner for International Boys Youth Soccer Tournament – SportsTravel
The Elite Clubs National League has announced a long-term partnership with the IBERCUP to bring U11 and U12 soccer clubs from around the world to America for an international boys youth tournament for the first time.
IBERCUP x ECNL International – Raleigh, NC USA 2026 will kick off Labor Day Weekend in 2026, bringing players and teams from around the world to North Carolina. Nearly 200 U11 and U12 teams from Europe, South America, Asia and the United States will play in the four-day tournament, which will provide competitive, developmental and cultural opportunities for players, teams, coaches and clubs.
“For nearly two decades the ECNL has brought together the best clubs in America for competition, and we are thrilled to be able to expand that mission to bring some of the best clubs across the globe here to the United States,” said ECNL President Christian Lavers. “The IBERCUP has hosted fantastic events all over the world, featuring household club names with future world stars, and we could not have asked for a better partner to help create what will be the most exciting event on the calendar for U11 and U12 American soccer players.”
“This partnership with ECNL is an important milestone for IBERCUP,” said IBERCUP President Filipe Rodrigues. “Bringing an international IBERCUP tournament to the United States has long been part of our vision.
“Together with ECNL, we will offer young players a competitive environment that reflects the reality of international football, where performance, learning, and cultural exchange go hand in hand. We are confident this event will become a reference point for youth football in the U.S.”
Tournament Format
IBERCUP x ECNL International – Raleigh, NC USA 2026 will provide 7v7 min-game competition at U11 and U12 boys age groups. Teams will be guaranteed six games during the four-day event, with every team competing for the tournament championship in a combination of group and knock-out play.
More information regarding IBERCUP x ECNL International – Raleigh, NC USA 2026, including competing teams and group placements, are set to be announced in due course.
Rec Sports
Riverside Church Hoops Sex Abuse Trial Opens With Graphic Testimony
A trial about a dark chapter in basketball history opened Thursday in New York with a former player testifying that the multimillionaire coach of the pioneering Riverside Church youth basketball team regularly molested him as a child, but the program’s prestige and the stigma of speaking out about sexual abuse kept him silent for nearly 50 years.
Daryl Powell, a Marist College star in the early 1980s, is one of 27 men suing Riverside under New York’s 2019 Child Victims Act, and, Rolling Stone reports, the case is among the first in the city to go to trial under the law. As detailed in a joint investigation by Rolling Stone and Sportico, Powell and his fellow plaintiffs claim the church negligently failed to supervise Ernest Lorch, the longtime head of the basketball program and a former church trustee who died in 2012, and should have known of his alleged propensity to prey on kids from New York’s poorest neighborhoods.
Riverside has denied any wrongdoing by the church or its officials, and reiterated that stance Thursday during opening arguments. Attorney Phil Semprevivo told the jury that if there was abuse by Lorch, “that’s essentially on him” and not the church.
Dressed in a sweater vest and donning a headset to aid what he described as severe hearing loss, Powell, who filled the witness stand with his 6-foot-5-inch frame, graphically described how Lorch frequently abused him. Lorch, Powell said, fondled him as a teen during “jockstrap inspections,” rubbed his bare buttocks and told him to be a “good boy” after paddling him with four or five “hard whacks,” and sniffed his genitals after practices to check if he’d showered. “I could feel his breath on them,” Powell testified.
Asked how he felt after Lorch’s abuse and later as an adult, Powell began to cry and answered: “I never thought a man would do something like that to me. I was scared, frightened, angry, lonely and heartbroken.”
Yet he stayed with the program into his early twenties because Riverside also offered him the hope of escape from the grinding poverty his family endured in 1970s Harlem. “I lived in a very deprived neighborhood—the ghetto, very messy with a lot of drug addicts, running numbers, a lot of people on the street, gang-infested,” he testified.
The lure of a coveted Riverside jacket, bag and sneakers enticed Powell to try out for the team. Later, Lorch frequently gave him money for food and took him on team trips across the country and around the world, including the former Yugoslavia, and eventually helped land him junior college and major college scholarships.
Lorch also pulled strings to get him into high school. As a Manhattan native, public school league rules forbade Powell from playing for a school outside the borough. But somehow, he testified, Lorch got him into DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx, a powerhouse at the time. “It was like making the NBA,” Powell testified.
In a rare moment of levity, Powell recited names of some Clinton basketball greats: “Tiny Archibald [an NBA Hall of Famer], Butch Lee [a star at Marquette and in the 1976 Olympics] … myself.”
Powell testified that he never felt he could tell anyone about the alleged abuse. Lorch represented “a father figure,” he said, something that was absent in Powell’s home life. The subject was also so taboo in that era that he felt there was no way he could admit to what happened. “We couldn’t disclose that,” he testified, “because at that time, you didn’t want to be a faggot or a homo.”
Powell revealed in a previously undisclosed incident that he once told a Riverside assistant coach, Kenny “Eggman” Williamson, about Lorch’s abuse. Williamson was a prominent figure in New York basketball circles who went on to become a successful college assistant coach, pro scout and NBA front office executive. He died of cancer in 2012 while serving as the assistant general manager of the Memphis Grizzlies.
Powell had previously been asked in his 2023 deposition for the lawsuit whether he had spoken about abuse to Williamson and replied, “No.” But on Thursday, Powell said he remembered the exchange clearly because it happened the day of the infamous New York City blackout of 1977. Powell testified he was at a tournament where Williamson was coaching him, which was canceled because of rioting. Williamson took Powell home with him rather than letting him go back to his unsafe neighborhood.
Semprevivo, Riverside’s attorney, objected to the testimony, pausing the proceedings before Powell could answer fully. Eventually, Judge Alexander Tisch overruled the objection and allowed Powell to continue. “I had a moment now, one on one, with somebody I trust,” Powell testified, referring to a discussion with Williamson that day. “I said, ‘Mr. Lorch is looking down my shorts, hitting me with the paddle.’”
According to Powell, Williamson told him, “If you know what I know, you better not say anything, or you’re not playing for this team anymore.”
Powell continued: “I was devastated. I shut my mouth up. I wanted to stay on the team.”
The trial’s first day also revealed both sides’ strategies, which could have an effect on the 26 other lawsuits. In his opening statement, Powell’s attorney Paul Mones said the plaintiff will prove Riverside allowed Lorch to “operate completely on his own and abuse him” and other players, either because those in the church hierarchy were “incompetent or they just didn’t care.” Either way, Mones said, “The church was negligent.” The attorney called it “a heartbreaking failure on the part of an esteemed institution” to protect a person under their care.
Powell’s side is expected to call two fellow teammates and plaintiffs, Mitchell Shuler and Byron Walker, to the stand during the trial.
In Riverside’s opening statement, Semprevivo reminded the jury, consisting of six jurors and three alternates, that “the burden of proof” belongs to “the plaintiffs, not Riverside.” He told the jury they’d have to ask whether plaintiff witnesses “have an interest in this case.”
The defense also seems keen to claim Powell’s hardships in life aren’t attributable to his time with Riverside, saying there was no current harm “with respect to these allegations.” To that point, Powell at times seemed to struggle to elaborate on specific examples of what damage he suffered as an adult from Lorch’s abuse, though he brought up issues with his marriages and with women generally.
Semprevivo also said the jury should consider why Powell waited so long to bring suit. Throughout his adulthood, Semprevivo said, Powell had “opportunities to be heard” but did not take them.
On Friday morning, Riverside attorneys will cross-examine Powell. The trial is expected to continue into next week.
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