General News

General

Poarch Creek Indians open largest meat processing plant, retail market in Alabama

Perdido River Meats, a meat processing plant and retail store, is officially open for business in Atmore.

The facility is run by Perdido River Farms, the agricultural arm of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians and has the capacity to process up to 125 head of cattle per week, according to a release from the Alabama Cattlemen’s Association.

“This state-of-the-art meat processing facility…offers the Tribe, and its neighboring farms in Southwest Alabama, the opportunity to offer locally raised and processed beef to consumers,” the release reads.

The $29 million idea took six years to come to reality, and Alabama Agriculture Commissioner Rick Pate expects it to have a massive impact on the local economy.

“You are cutting out every middleman there is, and so all that money is going to the cattleman and all our rural communities struggling and things like this are just huge economics,” Pate told WKRG.

Currently Perdido River Meats is only offering beef cuts, but Atmore’s Grateful Garcia Farm recently they would be adding pork and chicken to the store in the coming months.

“We are so excited to announce that we are partnering with Perdido River Farms to provide pork and chicken for our community,” the farm announced in a Facebook post.

“Perdido River Farms shares our passion for quality meat raised in a humane way. Our chicken and pork will be available in the retail store in the coming months.”

The shop is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to noon on Saturdays, and is closed on Sundays.

Read More
General

Class 6A playoff team looking for new head football coach

Read More
General

Alabama football homecoming 2025 date and opponent announced

Alabama football has its homecoming date and opponent set. And its a late one.

The Crimson Tide will hold its homecoming game Nov. 15 against Oklahoma. Yea Alabama, the university’s NIL collective, announced the date. That’s the third-to-last game of the regular season.

The Sooners make the trip to Bryant-Denny Stadium after beating Alabama in Norman, Oklahoma in 2024, what was Oklahoma’s first season as a member of the SEC.

Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer faced Missouri in the first homecoming game of his tenure this past October, which resulted in a 34-0 shutout of the Tigers.

The Crimson Tide has a homecoming record of 89-13-1.

DeBoer is preparing to head into his second season with Alabama. The former Washington coach finished 9-4, which included ranked wins over Georgia, Missouri and LSU but unranked losses to Vanderbilt, Oklahoma and Michigan.

Nick Kelly is an Alabama beat writer for AL.com and the Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X and Instagram.

Read More
General

Human remains found in Birmingham woods in 2020 identified as woman who vanished 20 years ago

Human remains found in an east Birmingham wooded area in 2020 have been identified a woman who had been missing for 15 years.

Juanisha Latonya Wesley was last seen by her family on April 24, 2005, at the family’s home in Collegeville. Family reported her missing on May 5, 2005.

There were later reports of Wesley being seen in November 2005 at Kelly Ingram Park in the Civil Rights District and at the Motel 8 on First Avenue North in Woodlawn.

She was not seen or heard from after that.

On Dec. 21, 2020, someone surveying a densely wooded area near the intersection of Seventh Avenue South and Exeter Avenue in the Crestwood Green community found a human skull.

The following day, a recovery team from the Jefferson County Coroner/Medical Examiner’s Officer returned to the scene to search the area but did not find any other remains.

Wesley was officially pronounced dead at 5:20 p.m. on Dec. 21, 2020.

She was identified through DNA analysis and comparison.

Chief Deputy Coroner Bill Yates said the cause and manner of death is undetermined currently, pending additional anthropology and DNA studies.

The Birmingham Police Department is investigating the circumstances surrounding the death.

Read More
General

Motorcyclist killed in wreck with Birmingham police vehicle

A motorcyclist was killed in a crash with a Birmingham police vehicle in east Birmingham.

The Jefferson County Coroner’s Office identified the victim as Cesar Vasquez-Vega. He was 26.

The wreck happened at 10:44 p.m. Thursday on Oporto Madrid Boulevard at 74th Street.

Authorities said Vasquez-Vega was the lone rider of a motorcycle. He was pronounced dead on the scene at 11:14 p.m.

The officer was not injured.

Additional details about the circumstances surrounding the wreck have not been released.

The Alabama Law Enforcement Agency is leading the investigation.

Read More
General

Former Auburn guard on the move in 5-team NBA trade

Guard Davion Mitchell is joining the Miami Heat as part of a five-team NBA trade announced on Thursday night. Moving from the Toronto Raptors, Mitchell was among three players acquired by the Heat, which gave up six-time NBA All-Star Jimmy Butler.

Mitchell’s journey to the NBA included a season at Auburn in 2017-18. The Tigers shared the SEC regular-season title and lost to Clemson in the second round of the NCAA tournament in Mitchell’s only season on the Plains. Mitchell played two seasons at Baylor before entering the NBA as the No. 9 pick in the 2021 draft.

At the NBA trade deadline for the 2024-25 season:

  • Miami acquired Mitchell from the Raptors and Andrew Wiggins, Kyle Anderson and a 2025 protected first-round pick from the Warriors.
  • The Detroit Pistons acquired Dennis Schroder, Lindy Waters III and a 2031 second-round pick from the Warriors.
  • The Golden State Warriors acquired Butler from the Heat.
  • Toronto acquired P.J. Tucker from the Jazz and a 2026 second-round pick and cash considerations from Miami
  • The Utah Jazz acquired Josh Richardson, a 2031 second-round pick and cash considerations from the Heat and KJ Martin and a 2028 second-round pick from the Pistons.

Mitchell averaged 6.3 points, 1.9 rebounds and 4.6 assists in 44 games with the Raptors this season. He had made 22 starts in his fourth NBA season.

Mitchell playing for the Sacramento Kings in his first three NBA campaigns before being traded to Toronto in June.

In 271 NBA regular-season games, with 54 starts, Mitchell has averaged 7.3 points, 1.7 rebounds and 3.1 assists.

Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.

Read More
General

Goodman: I’m sick of these refs hating on Auburn’s Chad Baker-Mazara

Opponents hate him.

Refs hate him, too.

What to do about Chad Baker-Mazara?

Baker-Mazara is Auburn’s starting small forward. His game is dynamic, his mouth is a garbage can and his minutes are appointment television. He’s my favorite player in college basketball since Florida’s Joakim Noah, but SEC commissioner Greg Sankey might not agree.

CBM’s vibe is sudden danger, and I mean that in a good way, but I’m starting to think he’s being unfairly targeted by league officials.

Is the SEC going to finish this all-time season with different rules for Auburn’s talkative star? It sure feels that way after Auburn’s victory against Oklahoma earlier this week. Did refs really need to slap CBM with two fouls on one play, or did they just want to get him out of the game?

Keep a close eye on CBM on Saturday when the No.1-ranked Tigers play No.6 Florida at Neville Arena (3 p.m. tipoff). Some veteran players get the benefit of the doubt from officials. Then there’s CBM. He could trip over his own feet and pick up a technical foul.

The fouls that led to his ejection against the Sooners were unjustified, plain and simple. Is it going to be that way for Auburn the rest of the season? Is CBM going to walk into the SEC Tournament with a target on his back? We already know a quick whistle is awaiting him in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.

Everyone remembers last year. Auburn won the SEC Tournament and had all the momentum going into the Big Dance. CBM was a big reason why. He’s one of the best players in the country, and everything was coming together for him at the right time in 2024. Then came the first-round game against Yale.

Refs knew the scouting report on CBM and they ejected him from the game before anyone could even break a sweat. Yale went on to upset Auburn and CBM got the blame.

Refs go into the first round with an agenda. I see it every year. They want to set the expectations early. No funny business. They made an example out of Auburn’s CBM. I tried to warn him about his sneaky elbows before the NCAA Tournament, but he laughed and shrugged it off.

Now it’s to the point where refs in the SEC don’t even call fouls when opponents stick their elbows in CBM’s chest. Against Oklahoma, Sooners freshman Jeremiah Fears elbowed CBM in the open court. Clearly, it was a non-basketball play. Instead of giving Fears a foul, the refs reviewed the film and gave him a high-five.

There is a clear bias against CBM. And all because he talks a little trash. Give me a break. Sankey should issue a formal apology on behalf of the SEC for CBM’s most recent ejection. CBM’s colorful personality isn’t hurting anything and I could make the argument that it’s good for the game.

Auburn is the No.1 team in the country for a lot of reasons. Bruce Pearl is a great coach. Johni Broome is playing like the best big man in the country. Miles Kelly was the missing link. Freshman Tahaad Pettiford is fearless. But, for me, it all starts with Baker-Mazara’s relentless pursuit of driving everyone on the opposing team completely insane.

CBM is old school. He talks trash the way Michael Jordan, Larry Bird and Charles Barkley talked trash. CBM should get his own camera feed during the NCAA Tournament. He’s that fun to watch and he plays with an angry passion that has gone completely dormant in the NBA.

I’m 100 percent positive that the NBA is not ready for CBM’s game next season.

The Association went limp years ago. Players who make over $100 million refuse to play on back to back nights. Enforcers are a thing of the past. There are no rivalries. Everything is a foul. Steph Curry Syndrome ruined the league. Luka couldn’t be bothered to play defense in the NBA Finals. Kevin Durant is the King of Cry. Fans have nicknamed Devin Booker “Charmin Ultra-Soft.”

One player, spoiled brat Jimmy Butler, quit on his team, the Miami Heat, during the middle of the season.

Fans are constantly bemoaning this new NIL era of collegiate athletics. I get it, but it’s not all bad. This season, SEC basketball is a more entertaining product than the NBA. It’s because players like CBM are playing with passion on the college level instead of toiling away in the G-League or watching from the bench in the NBA.

CBM talks more junk than a waste management convention in Las Vegas. He might be a headache for refs, but he’s the reason why college basketball has never been better.

BE HEARD

Got a question for Joe? Want to get something off your chest? Send Joe an email about what’s on your mind. Let your voice be heard. Ask him anything.

Joseph Goodman is the lead sports columnist for the Alabama Media Group, and author of the book “We Want Bama: A Season of Hope and the Making of Nick Saban’s Ultimate Team.”

Read More
General

Seattle was 1 yard from a Super Bowl win, then ‘Scrap’ happened

The Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles will meet in the 59th Super Bowl on Sunday. Counting down to the NFL title game, AL.com is spotlighting a Super Bowl hero with Alabama football roots daily through Sunday. The series started Monday with Bart Starr, looked at Joe Namath on Tuesday, John Stallworth on Wednesday and Justin Tuck on Thursday, and continues with West Alabama alumnus Malcolm Butler:

Has there ever been a more improbable Super Bowl hero than New England Patriots cornerback Malcolm Butler?

Butler flashed into the national consciousness on Feb. 1, 2015. With the Seattle Seahawks on New England’s 1-yard line, Butler intercepted a pass with 20 seconds to play to preserve the Patriots’ 28-24 victory in Super Bowl XLIX.

Butler had been working at a Popeye’s when he returned to football in 2011 at Hinds Community College in Mississippi before playing two seasons at West Alabama.

Butler got his foot in the door in the NFL when he was invited to New England’s rookie minicamp as a tryout player in 2014. The coaching staff liked Butler enough to keep him for the offseason program and training camp. Then he made the team coming out of the preseason.

As a rookie, Butler had played 184 defensive snaps in 11 regular-season games and 15 defensive snaps in two postseason games when the Patriots put him on the field in the second half of the NFL championship game. Butler played only 18 defensive snaps in Super Bowl XLIX, but they were an action-packed set.

New England turned to Butler with third corner Kyle Arrington struggling.

Butler got busy as soon as entered the game, and not just because Seattle quarterback Russell Wilson targeted him as an unseasoned rookie. On the Seahawks’ final possession of the third quarter, Butler stopped running back Marshawn Lynch after a 2-yard gain, tackled wide receiver Jermaine Kearse after a 6-yard completion and broke up a deep pass to Kearse on consecutive snaps to force a punt from the New England 47-yard line.

On the first play after the two-minute warning, Butler broke up another deep pass to Kearse from the Patriots 49-yard line. After Seattle moved to a first down at the New England 38, Wilson tried another deep throw to Kearse. Butler broke it up again. But this time, Kearse caught the falling football sitting on his rear end at the Patriots 5-yard line with 66 seconds to play.

After Lynch was stopped 1 yard from the goal line, Wilson tried to throw to wide receiver Ricardo Lockette from a stack formation. But Butler jumped the route to make his first NFL interception.

During the celebration of its centennial season, the NFL picked Butler’s pick as the fifth-greatest play in league history.

What made it even more improbable was it came from a defensive call that New England had installed that week – Goal Line Three Corner – and the Patriots coaches ran Butler out on the field just in time to make the play.

Matt Patricia, New England’s defensive coordinator at the time, detailed what happened after he called “Goal Line Three Corner” during an appearance on the “Games With Names” podcast last week.

“I have, like, 6,000 pounds of flesh sitting there,” Patricia said. “I have Chandler Jones, Dont’a Hightower, Jamie Collins, (Alan) Branch, Vince (Wilfork). This is like an 18-wheeler out there. I understand: Just give the ball to Lynch. But we had just stopped them. These are some of the best players in the NFL right there, so I was like, ‘They’re going to panic. They’re going to throw it.’ I was worried about the Snag 7 Flat (a pass to the running back coming out of the backfield). …

“We’re good on the rub. They’re going to go to the Snag 7 Flat — the got-to-have-it-play to the other side. They’re going to pick the linebacker. So I’m on with High. I go, ‘Hey, make sure you don’t get picked here.’ I’m like, ‘This is going to be to be Snag 7 Flat to your side.’ So I’m watching the left side of the offense, the right side of the defense, and the ball is snapped, and I look and it’s Snag 7 Flat, and we get picked. Chandler (Jones) is peeling late because he had the peel call. … But if it was good throw, I was like, ‘This is going to be a touchdown.’ …

“I didn’t even see the play on the other side. I was so worried because the guy’s open in the flat. So everyone’s going crazy. And I’m like, ‘What?’ I don’t even know. I’m like, ‘What happened?’ …

“But when they built the stack, (Brandon) Browner looks at Malcolm and goes, ‘Listen, I’m going to choke the (expletive) out of them. You just go.’ And if you watch the play, Browner, he’s literally got his hands around his neck. And then Malcolm just goes. So I didn’t see any of that. I’m like, ‘We got picked.’ Everyone’s like, ‘No, he picked it!’ I’m like, ‘I didn’t even know we had the ball.’”

For the next three seasons, Butler was a starter in the New England secondary before leaving in free agency for the Tennessee Titans. In 2015, he was a Pro Bowl selection, and in 2016, he made second-team All-Pro. Butler added 17 regular-season interceptions to his famous postseason one.

The player called “Scrap” went to two more Super Bowls with the Patriots, and Butler played every defensive snap in New England’s 34-28 overtime victory against the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI on Feb. 5, 2017.

FOR MORE OF AL.COM’S COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OUR NFL PAGE

Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.

Read More
General

How did Trump defeat Kamala Harris so easily? This chart explains it all

The math is simple.

The reason why President Donald Trump defeated former Vice President Kamala Harris in 2024 can be “explained in one chart,” veteran reporter Chris Cillizza wrote on X.

“Why Democrats lost, explained in 1 chart (this is taken from a recent NYT-Ipsos poll),” Cillizza posted, along with a screengrab of a poll from The New York Times that asked Americans their most important issues.

The issues broke down among groups:

Themselves personally:

  1. The economy
  2. Health care
  3. Immigration
  4. Taxes
  5. Crime

Democratic Party

  1. Abortion
  2. LGBT policy
  3. Climate change
  4. The state of democracy
  5. Health care

Republican Party

  1. Immigration
  2. The economy
  3. Taxes
  4. Guns
  5. Abortion

Simply put, the GOP was better suited among the electorate, per the poll.

AP VoteCast, an extensive survey of more than 115,000 voters nationwide, found that the fate of democracy appeared to be a primary driver for Harris’ supporters. It was a sign that the Democratic nominee’s messaging in her campaign’s closing days accusing Trump of being a fascist may have broken through.

By contrast, Trump’s supporters were largely focused on immigration and inflation — two issues that the former Republican president hammered since the start of his campaign. Trump pledged that tariffs would bring back factory jobs and that greater domestic oil production would flow through the economy and lower prices.

Overall, the presidential candidates’ coalitions, based on race, education and community type, appeared largely similar to the 2020 results. Preliminary AP VoteCast findings, however, hinted at some shifts among demographic groups that could be meaningful for the ultimate outcome, including among younger, Black and Hispanic voters.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Read More
General

Tennessee storms that killed mother and daughter, injured 3 were possibly a tornado

Two people were killed in eastern Tennessee when severe storms with a possible tornado moved through the region.

Local officials announced Friday morning that a mother and daughter from the same household were killed when the storm passed through the Deer Lodge and Sunbright areas of Morgan County on Thursday night.

That is according to a social media post by the county emergency management agency. Three other injuries were also reported, officials said.

The Tennessee Highway Patrol said on social media that troopers were in Morgan County ensuring resident safety and assessing and helping with structure damage.

The Morgan County School District said on its website that schools would be closed Friday because of “significant damage from tornadoes in parts of our county.”

Read More