Chargers defensive lineman Teair Tart reportedly had hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of luxury items stolen from his home earlier this month.
Thieves burglarized the 29-year-old’s Los Angeles-area property on June 8, according to NBC4.
Chargers defensive lineman Teair Tartt reportedly had $400,000 worth of luxury items stolen from his home on June 8. Getty Images
Several pieces of jewelry and luxe bags valued at around $400,000 were taken in the incident, the outlet added.
The culprits appeared to break in through the residence’s rear, as Tart reportedly found a sliding glass backdoor broken when he returned following the suspected ransacking.
Tart reportedly found a sliding glass backdoor broken when he returned home following the ransacking. Getty Images
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Tart did not seem to be targeted in the incident, as NBC 4 reported several other homes in the area were also hit.
Cops so far have not made any arrests in the case.
Tart, who began his NFL career with the Titans, joined the Chargers just before the start of the 2024 season and in two years in a Los Angeles uniform, he played in 34 games and tallied 61 tackles and one sack.
In January, he inked a three-year, $30 million extension to remain with the team.
“I got a new contract,” he said after singing the deal, “but it don’t change the goals, it don’t change the ambition I got for myself and this team.”
Tart has not yet publicly commented on the burglary.
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Scotland came up agonisingly short of a famous victory at the T20 World Cup as West Indies somehow came through to win a tumultuous game at Headingley.
Put on the back foot by Stafanie Taylor’s 19-ball 47 not out and having lost four wickets for seven runs in their chase of 154, Darcey Carter and Ailsa Lister took the Scots to the point of needing 22 from the last two overs.
Deandra Dottin was in tears while conceding 13 from the 18th over but Windies seamer Aaliyah Alleyne held her nerve through the tension to dismiss Carter for 59, Lister 33 and Kirstie Gordon first ball in the penultimate over.
Still Scotland refused to go quietly. They fought on to the point of needing 13 from the last four balls with two wickets left, only for Qiana Joseph, who had previously dropped catches and bowled two horribly-timed no-balls, to close out a seven-run win – Scotland dismissed for 146.
Scotland were superb for much of the first innings – athletic in the field and clever with the ball – but veteran Taylor, playing her first match of the tournament at 35, hit three sixes in her last five balls to boost an innings that was floundering at 85-5 in the 15th over.
That, ultimately, was decisive.
Having beaten Ireland for their first World Cup win on Saturday, Scotland’s hopes of progressing are not over but, after being denied a major scalp that would have given them a real shot at a semi-final place, they play England next on Saturday.
West Indies are next in action on Sunday against Sri Lanka in Bristol.
Los Angeles’ powerful police union is demanding City Hall slam the brakes on a controversial LAPD oversight overhaul that would expand political influence over police policy, accusing city officials of breaking labor laws and misleading the City Council.
In a letter sent to the City Council on Thursday, the Los Angeles Police Protective League blasted what it called an “embarrassing, systemic blunder” by the Office of the City Administrative Officer, claiming officials never properly engaged the union over proposed city charter changes that could significantly alter police oversight and officer discipline.
The California Post has been reporting on the proposed overhaul since the idea first surfaced before the Charter Reform Commission in April.
Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez is pushing to transfer LAPD auditing to a new Bureau of Police Oversight. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
The proposals would shift significant authority over LAPD policy from the mayor-appointed Board of Police Commissioners to elected City Councilmembers.
At the center of the dispute are claims made during public meetings that city officials had reached out to the union multiple times to discuss proposed charter amendments affecting police officers.
“Somebody within the City Administration and/or the Employee Relations Group did not follow the law and did not formally contact us to meet and confer over potential changes to our city charter, they screwed up,” LAPPL President Ricky Mendoza said in a statement.
The LAPPL is asking the City Council to immediately suspend consideration of any charter amendments. AFP via Getty Images
“They need to own up to their mistake, correct the record with the City Council and follow the law. It’s that simple.”
In a meeting with the Ad Hoc Committee on City Governance Reform on Monday, city officials told councilmembers they contacted LAPPL Director Craig Lally regarding the reforms through emails sent on Feb. 23, March 4 and May 19.
But after reviewing those communications, the police union says none of the emails addressed police oversight, officer discipline, the LAPD, the Police Commission, Boards of Rights or any other issue tied to the proposed charter amendments.
Police union leaders say proposed changes to LAPD governance could alter how disciplinary decisions are handled. JHVEPhoto – stock.adobe.com
“The word police never appears,” the union wrote.
Instead, the emails allegedly focused on unrelated city personnel matters, including civil service hiring reforms, authorized staffing positions and retirement system issues affecting other bargaining units.
The union also said it uncovered an additional June 11 “Last, Best and Final Offer” email that city officials did not mention during council discussions.
According to LAPPL, that communication similarly dealt with vocational trainees, clerks and Department of Water and Power personnel rather than police operations.
The league says the omission is more than a paperwork mistake.
City Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez speaks at a City Council meeting as a police-related motion is addressed. Jonathan Alcorn for CA PostThe dispute comes as City Hall advances a package of reform proposals that could appear on the November ballot. David Buchan for Ca Post
Under California labor law and a California Supreme decision, public agencies are generally required to meet and confer with employee organizations over matters that affect working conditions and representation rights before placing certain charter changes before voters.
The union says City Hall failed to satisfy those obligations before advancing the proposed ballot measures.
As a result, the LAPPL is asking the City Council to immediately suspend consideration of any charter amendments affecting police officers until the required labor negotiations take place.
City officials have argued the LAPD reforms are intended to improve accountability and modernize city governance. The union, however, says the process itself has now become the issue.
“If the city administration completely failed to follow clear legal guidelines and chose to hide that mistake until the end of the legislative process,” the letter states, “the Council should suspend any further consideration of Charter amendments that impact LAPPL members.”
The City Administrative Officer’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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Women around the western world keep learning, again and again, that their interests too often come second to other groups.
In the UK, a reckoning is now underway after decades of left-wing feminists and activists ignoring the sexual abuse of young women at the hands of so-called “grooming gangs” — many of whom are made up of South Asian immigrants.
For years, these vulnerable teens and young women were denied justice. And activists didn’t speak up for them because calling out these allegedassailants wouldn’t be politically correct.
Eighteen men in Newcastle, England, were convicted of luring girls with drugs and alcohol then forcing them to have sex. Northumbria Police/PA
It’s a symptom of a worldwide progressive instinct to put women second behind other “vulnerable” groups. Here in the US, feminists have sneered at women who say that they do not want transgender females in their bathrooms or locker rooms or prisons.
It sends a message: Women are a protected class … unless they’re one-upped by another, supposedly more oppressed population. Then they become sacrificial lambs for the intersectional cause.
A report published June 16 by Member of Parliament Rupert Lowe claims young British girls have been groomed and sexually abused en masse, often by Pakistani and Muslim perpetrators, across some 149 districts in the UK.
A government report found that police “shied away from” recording groomers’ ethnicities. JTana – stock.adobe.com
It called out the “systematic targeting of vulnerable girls, overwhelmingly white British, by predominantly Muslim Pakistani gangs,” which Lowe claims amounts to “one of the most horrendous failures in the history of the country.”
According to the report, which was a non-government independent inquiry led by Lowe, Muslim grooming gangs have been active in the UK since at least the 1950s. It claims that 87% of offenders convicted for child sexual exploitation have “distinctively Muslim names,” per court records and official inquiries.
The young women victimized by grooming gangs, some of them very young teens, have experienced abuse, gang rape, STIs, forced pregnancy and abortion, and even coerced Islamic conversion.
Member of Parliament Rupert Lowe chaired a report on grooming gangs which was released Tuesday. SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
And this isn’t the first report to suggest that the situation has been going on for years, with little acknowledgement or minimal justice served. A separate 2025 inquiry, commissioned by the government, also found that “the ethnicity of perpetrators” has been “shied away from” in official reporting and police statistics.
You would think this sort of victimization would be a concern of feminists. Instead, it has largely been met with silence — because, in the world of progressive politics, calling out perpetrators who are members of a minority group is verboten.
Julie Bindel, a self-described “left-wing feminist concerned about child sexual abuse,” claimed that one of her editors at a premier British publication told her “we would be called racist if we publish” her factual reporting on grooming gangs.
Unfortunately, the few progressive feminists who did speak out were shamed and shut down. Labour MP Sarah Champion was forced to resign as shadow inquiries minister after she wrote an op-ed on the issue of grooming gangs. Her piece was described as “incendiary” and “dangerous” by a fellow female Labour MP Naz Shah.
Sarah Champion had to step down from a leadership position in Parliament after writing about grooming gangs. House of Commons / Laurie Noble
It’s not that the female victims of sexual abuse don’t matter to the #MeToo crowd. But what women targeted by grooming gangs have learned is that the identities of their perpetrators make their own experiences less politically convenient.
The leftist worldview that emphasizes identity politics and intersectionality also places groups on a hierarchy — and, unfortunately, these frequently non-white, Muslim and/or migrant groomers check more boxes than the disadvantaged young women they victimize.
This pernicious trend is not all that different from what’s going on in the United States. Here, too, women are being told that their concerns about their own safety come second.
Women who object to biological males in their private spaces and even prisons have been maligned as bigots and summarily canceled by lefty activists who are, ostensibly, feminists.
Women have been asked to surrender their spaces in the name of transgender rights. AFP via Getty Images
You see, trans women outdo biological women in the victim hierarchy.
Women are so often asked to put their own needs, their concerns and even their own safety aside in favor of protecting other groups. None of this would be the case if the left could acknowledge something quite obvious: that calling out bad actors in a minority group is not bigotry — and, in fact, failing to call out predators and criminals is its own betrayal.
Still-missing Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei authorized in-person meetings with the US to finalize the peace deal, according to a report.
Khamenei gave his negotiation team the green light to head to Switzerland for the first round of negotiations with the US on Friday under the memorandum of understanding, according to a statement released by his office.
Khamenei, who has yet to be seen in public since he was injured at the start of the war, instructed his team not to yield to any demands made by Washington that he deems excessive.
In this picture obtained from Iran’s ISNA news agency, Mojtaba Khamenei (C), son of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, walks along a street in Tehran on May 31, 2019. ISNA/AFP via Getty Images President Donald Trump, right, signs a Memorandum of Understanding between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the United States as Secretary of State Marco Rubio, left, look on at the Palace of Versailles June 17, 2026, in Versailles, France. ZUMAPRESS.com
The ayatollah, who ascended to the seat when his father and much of his family was killed in an Israeli strike at the start of the war, is believed to have been disfigured in the blast. US intelligence also reported that he is believed to be “probably gay” following reports he underwent treatment for “impotence” in London as a young man.
This is a breaking story. Please check back for updates.
The jet-setting model and actress is always on the move, so it makes sense that she recently teamed up with Samsonite on a decadent, dessert-inspired travel collab.
“I’ve always been a really big fan of the brand,” the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit model told Page Six Style, describing her exclusive Chocolate Mauve colorway as “so pretty and rich, like a chocolate cake.”
The limited-edition line includes pieces that are “great for everyday or travel” — like the Better Than Basic Convertible Backpack, which slips easily over the handle of a rolling carry-on but also makes an excellent work bag.
“There’s a bottom compartment that’s extra insulated, so as a mom, you could put an ice pack down there, and anything perishable for your kids or a bottle,” explained the “Next Gen Chef” host, who is currently expecting her second child with husband Christian McCaffrey.
Samsonite Culpo will be doing a meet and greet for limited customers at Macy’s Herald Square on June 24 in support of her Samsonite partnership. Samsonite
While most people dread packing for travel, Culpo loves it, telling us her top hack is to prep a list and use packing cubes so everything is easy to find within your suitcase.
As for her other travel must-haves?
“A sleep mask, chargers for all of my devices, of course, [and] a travel bag for all my skin care and makeup necessities. Plus, I always have an electrolyte of some sort, especially being pregnant.”
Added Culpo, “I use this Slip silk sleep mask and the one with the eyelash cutouts because it’s more comfortable, and it gives you a better blackout experience.”
The fashion influencer also swears by bringing scented candles along while traveling, since they remind her of home when she’s away from her family: “I’m a creature of comfort, clearly.”
“I’m such a homebody that when I travel, I really try to prioritize the things that make me feel the most comfortable and remind me of home,” Culpo said.
That also includes a travel-sized perfume; the star’s partial to Le Labo Lavande 31, and even shares it with her husband.
“[Christian] actually bought it for me — he bought it for us. Or, he bought it for himself, and I stole it,” she joked.
“I like the Le Labo scents because they’re multisex, so you can share. And they last forever.”
When it comes to clothing, Culpo prefers to pack lots of black clothing so she doesn’t have to worry about coordinating outfits — “and also, what if something spills?”
While pregnant, she’s been relying on comfy Bumpsuits paired with a cashmere cardigan or duster, like the ones from her Naadam collaboration.
“I love the challenge of packing everything you need, but not too much — just enough,” she said.
Why Trust Page Six Style Shopping
This article was written by Erica Radol, Page Six Commerce Reporter. From identifying the top anti-aging skincare secrets the stars trust to dishing on the latest fashion collabs to finding a great deal on all of the above, Erica has a knack for reporting on – and even testing – Hollywood’s bestselling fashion and beauty products. Before joining Page Six in 2025, she wrote about entertainment, lifestyle and shopping trends for Us Weekly, The Daily Beast, Entertainment Tonight, Well+Good and Hearst.
“The View” co-host Whoopi Goldberg voiced support of the Knicks’ plan to meet President Trump in the wake of their NBA championship triumph, saying, “I want all those black men to stand in our house.”
During a Thursday debate over whether the team should have accepted the offer, Goldberg gave the surprising defense of Knicks owner James Dolan’s decision to go, making them the first NBA team to visit Trump’s White House.
“I want them to go. I want all those black men to stand in our house and remind all of those people, as we tried to remind the vice president, that when you try to destroy one part of history, you’re destroying all of our histories,” said Goldberg, a longtime critic of Trump’s.
“The View” co-host Whoopi Goldberg argued in favor of the Knicks meeting President Trump. Getty Images for Tribeca Festival
“And they, as champions – not only as amazing basketball players, but as people who were down and came back up – this is what this looks like. This is what this looks like,” she continued.
“So, I want them to go. I want them to go. If only so the kids know that nobody – nobody – can keep you down if you are rising up.”
The audience went wild after Goldberg’s defense of the Knicks’ plan to visit Trump, yelling “yeah!” and whooping.
Still, many of Goldberg’s co-hosts took the opposite stance, or said they were torn on the issue.
Co-host Sara Haines said the White House invitation puts the team in “a really precarious position.”
Alyssa Farah Griffin agreed, saying, “I think it puts the players in such an uncomfortable position.”
The New York Knicks are honored at City Hall in Manhattan Thursday following a ticker-tape parade. Stephen Yang for NY Post
“I’m feeling two ways about it,” co-host Joy Behar said. “Like, yes, maybe you have to respect the White House. You don’t have to respect who’s in the White House, though.”
President Trump attended Game 3 of the NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden on June 8. Getty Images
Sunny Hostin noted that the previous five NBA championship teams during the Trump administrations have refused to meet with the president, saying, “I think there’s a reason for it, and that’s because he politicizes the events that come before him.”
After Goldberg’s defense of the Knicks’ move, Hostin said: “I remain very conflicted over it.”
She argued that the invite puts “a lot of pressure on the captain of the team, Jalen Brunson,” especially after “Jose Alvarado, the Puerto Rican player, was already approached … and he said, ‘I will do what my team decides.’”
Vice President JD Vance joined “The View” Tuesday to promote his new book. American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. via AP
“The View” hosts also drew comparisons to the recent UFC Freedom 250 event at the White House, when American wrestler Josh Hokit bizarrely called former First Lady Michelle Obama “a man.”
“What you were saying about showing up there and standing tall,” Haines said, addressing Goldberg.
Dolan, a friend of Trump’s, said Wednesday the Knicks had accepted an invite from the president, who attended game three of the NBA Finals on June 8 at Madison Square Garden.
“I’ve known him for 30 years, and I’m very proud to bring the team to the White House,” Dolan said on WFAN.