Jeffrey Epstein had no 'client list,' died by suicide, DOJ and FBI conclude

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  • Jeffrey Epstein had no 'client list,' died by suicide, DOJ and FBI conclude</p>

<p>Joey Garrison, USA TODAY July 8, 2025 at 12:44 AM</p>

<p>WASHINGTON ― The Justice Department and FBI say they have found no evidence that Jeffrey Epstein kept a "client list," contradicting Attorney General Pam Bondi's past suggestion that such a list from the convicted sex offender and financier existed.</p>

<p>A review of Epstein materials in the U.S. government's procession also found no evidence Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions or that he was murdered while in custody, according to a memo detailing the Justice Department's and FBI's findings.</p>

<p>The memo, first reported July 6 by Axios and later ABC News, comes after President Donald Trump's supporters have pushed for the administration to release details about Epstein's associates after Trump during the 2024 presidential campaign endorsed doing so.</p>

<p>More: Jeffrey Epstein document release highlights his sprawling connections across states</p>

<p>Bondi, when asked about releasing an Epstein "client list" during a February Fox News interview, said: "It's sitting on my desk right now to review."</p>

<p>Justice Department officials did not respond to USA TODAY for a request to comment.</p>

<p>Despite many conspiracies about Epstein's death in a New York federal prison, the FBI concluded he died by suicide on Aug. 10, 2019 as initially determined by New York City's medical examiner and past investigations, according to the memo.</p>

<p>That conclusion is also supported by video evidence of the prison unit where Epstein was housed. The memo says the video ‒ which it plans to release publicly online ‒ confirms that nobody entered any of the tiers in Epstein's housing unit from the time his cell was locked at 10:40 p.m. EDT on Aug. 9, 2019 until around 6:30 a.m. the next morning.</p>

<p>"One of our highest priorities is combatting child exploitation and bringing justice to victims," the memo says. "Perpetuating unfounded theories about Epstein serves neither of those ends. To that end, while we have labored to provide the public with maximum information regarding Epstein and ensured examination of any evidence in the government's possession, it is the determination of the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation that no further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted."</p>

<p>More: Jeffrey Epstein was a convicted sex offender by 2008. Why did the powerful stick with him?</p>

<p>In this file photo taken on July 2, 2020 a photo of Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein is seen as acting US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Audrey Strauss, announces charges against Maxwell during a press conference in New York City.</p>

<p>The memo says the FBI reviewed more than 300 gigabytes of data and physical evidence during digital searches of databases, hard drives and network drives. It also conducted physical searches of locked cabinets, desks, closets and other areas where materials from the Epstein investigation had been stored.</p>

<p>The Epstein files include large volumes of images of Epstein and victims who were minors or appeared to be minors, according to the memo, as well as more than 10,000 videos and images of illegal child sex abuse material and other pornography.</p>

<p>"Through this review, we found no basis to revisit the disclosure of those materials and will not permit the release of child pornography," the memo says.</p>

<p>More: The death of Jeffrey Epstein: Fact, fiction, confusion and a warden reassigned</p>

<p>The review confirmed prior findings that Epstein harmed more than 1,000 victims. Materials reviewed by the FBI included personal details about the victims, including their names, physical descriptions, places of birth, associates and employment history.</p>

<p>US Attorney General Pam Bondi, joined by President Donald Trump, speaks on recent Supreme Court rulings in the briefing room at the White House on June 27, 2025 in Washington, DC.Musk renews criticism over new Epstein report</p>

<p>As his relationship publicly imploded with Trump last month, Elon Musk alleged in a social media post that Trump's name is mentioned in the Epstein files and claimed that's the reason the undisclosed classified documents had not been released. Musk, CEO of Tesla and SpaceX and a former White House adviser, later deleted the post.</p>

<p>Musk in a series of July 7 posts on X, the social media platform he owns, criticized the Trump administration's claims in its new report. He posted an image that reads, "The Official Jeffrey Epstein Pedophile Arrest Counter," which is set to "0000."</p>

<p>"This is the final straw," Musk later posted regarding the Trump administration's previews promises to release the "Epstein list."</p>

<p>More: Elon Musk escalates feud with Trump: 'Time to drop the really big bomb'</p>

<p>Bondi has faced pressure from Trump's MAGA base to deliver big findings in the Epstein files. But after hyping up the release of declassified government files on Epstein, Bondi on Feb. 27 disclosed about 200 pages of documents that implicated no one else in Epstein's orbit other than Epstein, who died in a federal prison in 2019.</p>

<p>The Trump-appointed attorney general in April cited a review of "tens of thousands of videos" as the reason for a delay in releasing additional Epstein documents.</p>

<p>Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison.</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jeffrey Epstein had no 'client list,' died by suicide: DOJ and FBI</p>

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Annoying People to Death

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<p>Annie LowreyJuly 7, 2025 at 8:31 AM</p>

<p>Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Getty.</p>

<p>The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.</p>

<p>According to the White House, the One Big Beautiful Bill, the president's signature second-term domestic legislation, does not cut Medicaid. According to any number of budget analysts, including Congress's own, it guts the health program, bleeding it of $1 trillion in financing and eliminating coverage for 10 million people.</p>

<p>The White House has found a simple way to square this technocratic circle: lie. A trillion dollars in cuts is not a cut; stripping 10 million people of health insurance does not constitute shrinking the program; the president never said "lock her up"; Joe Biden did not win the 2020 election; up is down and down is up.</p>

<p>Other Republicans are adopting a more complicated form of explanatory geometry. The law implements a nationwide work requirement for Medicaid. Able-bodied adults will have to prove that they are employed, volunteering, or in school in exchange for coverage. "If you are able to work and you refuse to do so, you are defrauding the system," Speaker Mike Johnson explained on CBS. "You're cheating the system, and no one in the country believes that that's right. So there's a moral component to what we're doing." The law does not cut Medicaid, in this telling. It protects the program from abuse.</p>

<p>Johnson's explanation is no less galling than Donald Trump's lies. The Medicaid work requirement will not strengthen the program, improve the labor market, or kick lazy cheaters off government benefits. Rather, it will saddle taxpayers with billions of dollars of new costs and low-income Americans with hundreds of millions of hours of busywork. Red tape will cause millions of people to lose health coverage, some of whom will perish because they cannot access care. Republicans are not protecting Medicaid. They are voting to annoy their own constituents to death.</p>

<p>Why does Medicaid need a work requirement in the first place? To prevent the safety net from becoming a hammock, Republicans love to say. But most people on Medicaid are already working if they can work. And Medicaid doesn't provide its enrollees with cash or a cash-like payment, as the country's unemployment-insurance, welfare, Social Security, and SNAP programs do. You can't eat an insurance card. You can't pay your rent with the guarantee of low co-pays for ambulatory care. Because insurance does not help recipients make ends meet, it does not shrink the labor market, as proved by a randomized controlled trial.</p>

<p>According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, 64 percent of nondisabled adults on Medicaid have a job. Most of the others are not working because they have medical problems or significant caretaking responsibilities, or because they are attending school. Just 8 percent of nondisabled adults seem to be in the category of folks Johnson hopes will be spurred to work by the threat of losing their health coverage. They aren't 28-year-old guys signing up for public insurance so they can play video games all day. They are retirees and people who can't find work in their community.</p>

<p>Thus, the work requirement should really be understood as a work-reporting requirement. Starting in 2027, nondisabled adults will have to log in and tell Uncle Sam what they do with their time in order to afford cancer screenings and bloodwork. Each state with an expanded Medicaid program will have to pay a contractor to create, test, and launch a complex intake-and-verification system in 18 months—six, really, because the Department of Health and Human Services is not expected to release detailed rules on the new requirement until midway through next year. In 2019, the Government Accountability Office found that states had spent as much as $463 per beneficiary setting up such systems in the past. Georgia, the only state that currently has a Medicaid work requirement, spends $9 on overhead for every $1 it spends on medical care through the initiative.</p>

<p>More than 20 million Americans will have to set up accounts to let the state know that they are in compliance with the work requirement, out of compliance, or not subject to it. This likely means collecting documents, uploading them, waiting for verifications, submitting sensitive personal data, and appealing incorrect determinations, all on what, history shows, will surely be a clunky, faulty system backed by a too-small cadre of overworked and underpaid civil servants. A broken laptop or a faulty internet connection might cause an individual to get rejected; a missed phone call from a caseworker might lead to a person missing out on care. Washington is shifting the burden of public administration onto individuals, and counting on people to fail.</p>

<p>In general, work requirements are far better at weeding out worthy participants than they are at motivating noncompliant ones. Roughly 240,000 Georgians are eligible for the state's work-for-Medicaid initiative, which covers very poor nondisabled adults. Only 5,500 are actually enrolled, thanks to the complexity of the program's rules and the impossibility of its portal. Arkansas kicked nearly 20,000 people off Medicaid when it required applicants to prove that they were working in 2018 and 2019; the change had no effect on employment. One analysis of the One Big Beautiful Bill suggests that each "appropriate" disenrollment from Medicaid will cost taxpayers $5,000 in bureaucratic overhead—not far off from how much Medicaid spends per person to begin with.</p>

<p>Trump's law doesn't protect Medicaid. It requires Americans to spend hundreds of millions of hours a year filling out tedious, unnecessary paperwork. It will cause millions of Americans to lose their health coverage, limiting their access to care and forcing them into debt. An estimated 50,000 people will die each year—many thanks to red tape.</p>

<p>Article originally published at The Atlantic</p>

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<p>- Annoying People to Death</p> <p>Annie LowreyJuly 7, 2025 at 8:31 AM</p> <p>Il...

3 dead, 10 injured in South Philadelphia shooting and a person is in custody, police say

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<p>July 7, 2025 at 7:30 PM</p>

<p>1 / 4Philadelphia ShootingCrime Scene officers bag evidence at the scene of an overnight shooting in Philadelphia, early Monday, July 7, 2025. (Alejandro A. Alvarez/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)</p>

<p>PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Three people were killed and 10 others injured in a shooting early Monday in a South Philadelphia neighborhood, authorities said.</p>

<p>The three people who died were adults, and two of the wounded were juveniles, Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel told reporters. The shooting happened shortly before 1 a.m. along a residential street in Grays Ferry, he said.</p>

<p>"We have numerous rounds that were shot on the block," Bethel said.</p>

<p>Police said one person with a weapon was taken into custody.</p>

<p>Bethel said police had already responded to the same block late Saturday into early Sunday and some arrests were made.</p>

<p>It wasn't immediately known what prompted the shooting.</p>

<p>"This is coward, want-to-be-thugs stuff," Bethel said.</p>

<p>The shooting happened after other shootings in the city and elsewhere around the U.S. over the Fourth of July weekend. Those included at least eight people struck by gunfire near a South Philadelphia nightclub.</p>

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3 dead, 10 injured in South Philadelphia shooting and a person is in custody, police say

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Trump to Brazil: 'Leave Bolsonaro alone'

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<p>July 7, 2025 at 12:03 PM</p>

<p>WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump defended former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Monday in a social media post that said his former ally was the victim of a "witch hunt," a term Trump has used to describe his own treatment by political opponents.</p>

<p>Bolsonaro, who was friendly with Trump when they were both in office, is on trial in Brazil on charges of plotting a coup to stop Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from taking office in January 2023.</p>

<p>"The only Trial that should be happening is a Trial by the Voters of Brazil — It's called an Election. LEAVE BOLSONARO ALONE!" Trump wrote on social media.</p>

<p>In March, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case against Bolsonaro and seven other people, including several military officers, who were charged with plotting a coup to stop Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from taking office in January 2023.</p>

<p>Last month, Bolsonaro denied that he led an attempt to overthrow the government during his trial before the country's Supreme Court, but acknowledged taking part in meetings aimed at reversing the outcome.</p>

<p>Bolsonaro said he and senior aides discussed alternatives to accepting the electoral results, including the possibility of deploying military forces and suspending some civil liberties, but he said those proposals were soon dropped.</p>

<p>The charges stem from a two-year police investigation into the election-denying movement that culminated in riots by Bolsonaro supporters in the capital in early 2023, a week after Lula took office.</p>

<p>(Reporting by Doina Chiacu and Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Marguerita Choy)</p>

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<p>- Trump to Brazil: 'Leave Bolsonaro alone'</p> <p>July 7, 2025 at 12:03 PM</p> ...

Some federal lawyers want to leave. They can't find jobs because Trump's policies are closing typical exit paths.

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  • Some federal lawyers want to leave. They can't find jobs because Trump's policies are closing typical exit paths.</p>

<p>Jack Newsham July 7, 2025 at 2:42 PM</p>

<p>Getty Images; Tyler Le/BI -</p>

<p>Lawyers have left the federal government as Donald Trump has targeted the nation's workforce.</p>

<p>Some typical off-ramps have closed as Trump takes a light touch with corporate crime.</p>

<p>Nine current and former government lawyers and recruiters told BI about the harsh legal job market.</p>

<p>Whenever a new president takes office, the revolving door between the federal government and the private sector starts to spin a little faster. Agency heads, their deputies, and their deputies' deputies typically exit to make room for the new president's picks, and take up jobs in C-suites and think tanks.</p>

<p>At elite law firms, the practice became so routine that it was the subject of a running joke. "Out with WilmerHale, in with Jones Day," law professor Orin Kerr tweeted when Donald Trump won in 2016, a nod to each firm's ideological reputation. In 2020, when Joe Biden won, he flipped the names.</p>

<p>In 2024, Trump and his allies made clear that they were going to do things differently.</p>

<p>It wasn't just Biden's appointees who needed to go; it was thousands of federal workers who the administration saw as roadblocks to its agenda. The goal, Trump aide Russell Vought said, was to "put them in trauma" and make them want to quit. The administration has also prioritized immigration, while de-emphasizing financial regulation and corporate crime prosecution — closing some of the usual off-ramps.</p>

<p>Now, the revolving door is jammed.</p>

<p>Recruiters and lawyers in and outside government told Business Insider that it's increasingly hard to move from public to private sector work: there's a large supply of job seekers, and comparatively low demand for their expertise and experience.</p>

<p>One federal lawyer who recently resigned said it took him months to find a new job despite working in a prestigious role, forcing him to stay at his job longer than he wanted. "I had a responsibility to my family to bring home a paycheck," he told Business Insider.</p>

<p>White collar slowdown</p>

<p>Typically, the roughly 40,000 lawyers who work for the US government can parlay their experience drafting, interpreting, and enforcing a dense thicket of laws and regulations into well-paid jobs for law firms and large businesses.</p>

<p>Over the last few months, law firms across Washington and in New York have been inundated with résumés, and they're being choosy, especially when hiring white-collar criminal defense lawyers — many of whom are former federal prosecutors.</p>

<p>"White-collar demand is down across the board," whether it comes to recruiting from the government or poaching a partner with an established clientele from another law firm, said Karen Vladeck, the founder of Risepoint Search Partners, a legal recruiting firm.</p>

<p>"For your standard white-collar partner right now, they want to see twice as much business as they want to see from another practice." In other words, law firms are skeptical that hotshot criminal defense lawyers can reel in the kind of revenue that they used to.</p>

<p>Another headhunter told BI that only "very senior" lawyers coming out of US Attorney's Offices were getting interviews — and even those candidates were taking haircuts on compensation. The same job seeker who might have been able to get an offer for $1 million or $1.2 million in the past as a defense-and-investigations specialist might get $750,000 today, the headhunter said.</p>

<p>Another issue, said Jack Zaremski, who runs Hanover Search Partners, is that Big Law firms already have a deep bench of white-collar litigators — and a partner at a large law firm said there isn't much work to go around for colleagues who focus on that kind of work.</p>

<p>White-collar criminal enforcement has been declining since the Obama administration, according to Syracuse University's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, which compiles federal law-enforcement data. The number of white-collar criminal cases filed yearly fell from a high of more than 10,000 in the mid-1990s to about 4,300 today.</p>

<p>Though prosecutions were down, there was still work for Big Law's ex-prosecutors keeping their clients out of court. After the 2009 financial crash, banks needed outside help dealing with crisis-related investigations, the large law firm partner said. The 2012 Libor scandal and similar rate-rigging allegations led to even more work. That has pretty much dried up, the partner said, and banks' in-house lawyers can do some of the work that they used to have to outsource.</p>

<p>Trump, who was convicted of falsifying business records, has shown skepticism for white-collar criminal enforcement. His Justice Department has slashed its corruption unit and made moves to close its tax division and fold its responsibilities into other parts of the agency. One of his early executive orders paused cases under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which bans paying bribes to foreign officials to get business. (Several have since resumed.) He has also pardoned people and companies that collectively owed $1.3 billion for offenses like securities fraud and tax evasion, erasing their debts to the government and their victims.</p>

<p>Matthew Burke, a former federal prosecutor on the team led by Jack Smith that charged Donald Trump with keeping classified documents after his presidency and trying to subvert the 2020 election, said that while his experience deterred some potential employers, it attracted others. Scale LLP, a firm of about 80 lawyers that focuses on the tech sector, said in May that Burke would lead its investigations practice.</p>

<p>"There undoubtedly were doors that were closed to me because of what I've done, but there will also be doors that will be opened," he said. It's been "informative to know what doors have been closed and which have been opened," he added.</p>

<p>It's not just criminal cases where the administration's approach is being felt. Some financial regulatory lawyers are also stuck in a tightening job market, as the administration attempts to pare down the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. A former bureau lawyer said that among some people who have managed to stay employed, the common attitude is "They're gonna have to drag me out of here."</p>

<p>The Trump administration's efforts to reduce headcount at the Bureau have been put on hold by the courts. The CFPB employees' union said in an email that some of its members have taken other jobs, but "many more remain ready to get back to the work we were hired to do."</p>

<p>Job market challenges aren't universal</p>

<p>Some CFPB managers have been able to parlay their experience into jobs at financial technology firms, law firms, and banks or credit unions, the former bureau lawyer said. And some people leaving the Justice Department are still in high demand. Deep familiarity with international trade restrictions and export-control laws makes some lawyers valuable to tech companies worried about running afoul of US sanctions and trade restrictions. Antitrust experience is also a plus, Vladeck and others said.</p>

<p>Charles Cain, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission's FCPA Unit, went to work at EY, according to a LinkedIn post. He was one of at least five lawyers who announced their departures from the unit at a meeting in late March, according to Mark Yost, a former member of the unit who was present.</p>

<p>Some former feds are having a much tougher time on the job market. Waves of civil rights lawyers have been fired or left the Justice Department and other agencies, like the Department of Education.</p>

<p>"There are only so many civil rights-related jobs out there, and a lot of people are competing for them," said Stacey Young, a former Justice Department attorney who leads the networking group Justice Connection.</p>

<p>Despite competition for open roles, relatively few lawyers, regardless of where they work, are quitting or being terminated without something lined up. While the D.C. area unemployment rate has ticked upward, the national rate for legal occupations — a group of about 1.8 million people of whom 1.1 million are lawyers — was 2.1% in May, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, below the 4% average across the US workforce. For lawyers, a smaller group of workers for which estimates are less reliable, the first-quarter unemployment rate was about 1%.</p>

<p>Still, a glut of supply on the job market means lawyers will need to broaden their search. Vladeck tells job seekers to think of landing their next job outside government as a Trivial Pursuit pie, with each slice representing a more niche avenue for employment: boutique firms, in-house counsel roles, nonprofits, or legal-adjacent roles.</p>

<p>"In order to get a job in this market, you have to pay attention to each of those slices," Vladeck said. "You can't rely on the DOJ to Big Law path."</p>

<p>Have a tip? Know more? Reach Jack Newsham via email ([email protected]) or via Signal (+1-314-971-1627). Do not use a work device.</p>

<p>on Business Insider</p>

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Some federal lawyers want to leave. They can't find jobs because Trump's policies are closing typical exit paths.

<p>- Some federal lawyers want to leave. They can't find jobs because Trump's policies are closing typical e...

Fantasy Baseball 2-Start Pitcher Rankings: This Marlin 'has a higher ceiling than any other starter available'

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  • Fantasy Baseball 2-Start Pitcher Rankings: This Marlin 'has a higher ceiling than any other starter available'</p>

<p>Fred ZinkieJuly 7, 2025 at 10:16 PM</p>

<p>This is a tough week to stream starters for fantasy baseball. There are just a couple pitchers on this list who I would be excited to start, with a few others who qualify as desperation plays in 12-team leagues.</p>

<p>[Smarter waivers, better trades, optimized lineups — Yahoo Fantasy Plus unlocks it all]</p>

<p>Unfortunately, the list of one-start streamers isn't any better. Things are a little more appealing on the hitting side, as the Reds and Red Sox can both provide multiple options.</p>

<p>Two-Start Pitchers (listed in order of preference)Nick Martinez, Reds, 28% (vs. MIA, vs. COL)</p>

<p>Although Martinez has been inconsistent, he has a 3.97 ERA and 1.09 WHIP since the beginning of May. He will start off the week against a Marlins team that has been average against righties, before wrapping things up with an appealing home start against a Rockies offense that ranks 29th in runs scored on the road. Having RP eligibility makes Martinez even more appealing in head-to-head leagues.</p>

<p>Eury Pérez, Marlins, 38% (@CIN, @BAL)</p>

<p>After failing to throw five innings in each of his initial four starts, Pérez enjoyed his most dominant outing since returning from Tommy John surgery when he struck out seven Twins across six shutout innings of one-hit ball on July 3. He will likely be inconsistent this summer, but Pérez is averaging 98.1 mph on his fastball and has a higher ceiling than any other starter who is available in most Yahoo leagues. His matchups aren't easy this week, but they also aren't scary enough to keep him on waivers.</p>

<p>José Soriano, Angels, 42% (vs. TEX, vs. ARI)</p>

<p>Soriano leads all qualified pitchers in ground ball rate, and has recently had some dominant starts when he has combined all of those grounders with plenty of strikeouts. But Soriano continues to walk too many batters, which makes him susceptible to awful starts when plenty of ground balls slip through the infield. Soriano has one favorable matchup (Rangers) and a difficult one (D-backs), and is more appealing in points leagues, where he can't do damage in the WHIP category.</p>

<p>Noah Cameron, Royals, 44% (vs. PIT, vs. NYM)</p>

<p>After allowing just three earned runs in his initial five starts, Cameron has been less consistent en route to logging a 4.74 ERA and 1.30 WHIP over his past five outings. Still, the rookie produced a solid 24:9 K:BB ratio in those five starts, and his two worst appearances came against offenses that lead their respective leagues in runs scored (Yankees, Dodgers). Cameron doesn't go deep enough into games to have a high ceiling, but should be serviceable against an average lineup (Mets, 13th in runs scored) and a bad one (Royals, 30th in runs scored).</p>

<p>Jansen Junk, Marlins, 6% (@ CIN, @BAL)</p>

<p>The ERA estimators are all over the map on Junk, who has an eye-popping 33:2 K:BB ratio and has allowed just one homer in 37.1 innings. It's easy to look at his .339 BABIP and 66.5% strand rate and assume that he has been unlucky, but a deeper dive shows that living in the strike zone has allowed hitters to tee off on the right-hander (92.5 mph average exit velocity, 25.4% line drive rate). We are dealing with small sample sizes when assessing Junk, and he has two opponents who are above average in runs scored since June 1. He's a boom-or-bust option.</p>

<p>Andre Pallante, Cardinals, 11% (vs. WSH, vs. ATL)</p>

<p>Pallante has allowed just two runs over 18 innings in his past three starts. Still, that success has come with an unimpressive 9:5 K:BB ratio, and the 26-year-old's continued inability to punch out batters (6.0 K/9 rate) gives him one of the lowest ceilings of any starter. His greatest appeal is to Roto managers who are hoping to chase wins without destroying their ratios.</p>

<p>Andrew Heaney, Pirates, 21% (@ KC, @ MIN)</p>

<p>Heaney has struggled on the road (5.79 ERA), which is part of the equation for both of his starts this week. Fortunately, the Royals rank last in runs scored, and the Twins are an average matchup. Heaney's ERA has risen every month this year, which makes him a risky option this week.</p>

<p>Simeon Woods Richardson, Twins, 7% (vs. CHC, vs. PIT)</p>

<p>After nearly a month in the Minors, Woods Richardson rejoined the rotation on June 10. Although his initial start went poorly, over his past four outings the righty has produced a 1.71 ERA and 0.76 WHIP. Still, his 16:7 K:BB ratio in those four starts is an unimpressive mark, and he has benefited tremendously from a .143 BABIP. Woods Richardson has polarizing matchups this week, as the Cubs rank 2nd in runs scored and the Pirates place 29th. I would leave him on waivers in 12-team leagues.</p>

<p>Brady Singer, Reds, 49% (vs. MIA, vs. COL)</p>

<p>Thanks to his inability to control the strike zone (80:38 K:BB ratio), Singer regularly struggles to keep the bases clean (1.34 WHIP) and limit scoring (4.36 ERA). Like his teammate Martinez, Singer is more appealing than usual this week thanks to a two-start schedule that includes favorable matchups. But there is a good chance that the right-hander is not even up to such a manageable task.</p>

<p>Jeffrey Springs, Athletics, 30% (vs. ATL, vs. TOR)</p>

<p>Although still homer prone, Springs deserves credit for posting a 2.97 ERA, 0.99 WHIP and 30:8 K:BB ratio since the beginning of June. The lefty is one of many Athletics pitchers who have struggled at home this year (4.73 ERA), which is where both of his starts will occur this week. The Braves have had one of the worst offenses in the past month, while the Blue Jays have had one of the best and are also the toughest team in baseball to strike out. I can't recommend Springs at this venue.</p>

<p>One-Start Streamers</p>

<p>In order, here are the best streamers for the week, with their start date and Yahoo roster rate in brackets.</p>

<p>Chase Burns vs. COL (Friday, 51%)</p>

<p>Ryne Nelson @ LAA (Friday, 43%)</p>

<p>Eric Lauer @ CWS (Wednesday, 29%)</p>

<p>Charlie Morton vs. NYM (Thursday, 22%)</p>

<p>Dean Kremer vs. MIA (Friday, 25%)</p>

<p>Cade Horton @ MIN (Wednesday, 15%)</p>

<p>Gavin Williams @ CWS (Friday, 44%)</p>

<p>Trevor Rogers vs. MIA (Saturday, 31%)</p>

<p>Patrick Corbin @ LAA (Thursday, 10%)</p>

<p>Cam Schlittler vs. SEA (Wednesday, 7%)</p>

<p>Michael Lorenzen vs. NYM (Saturday, 12%)</p>

<p>Bailey Falter @ KC (Wednesday, 13%)</p>

<p>Favorable Monday-Thursday hitting matchupsReds vs. Marlins</p>

<p>Although Miami has made some pitching improvements of late, their staff should still give up some runs when they spend four days at Great American Ball Park. Cleanup hitter Austin Hays (16%) is the top player to add, while Noelvi Marte (23%) recently returned from the injured list and has upside.</p>

<p>Red Sox vs. Rockies, Rays</p>

<p>Facing the Rockies pitching staff is usually a recipe for success, and the Red Sox will open their series against the Rays by taking on Taj Bradley (4.79 ERA). With two lefties and a pair of right-handers on the docket, finding Boston hitters who remain in the lineup for all matchups is important. Roman Anthony (49%) is the top option to add, while Carlos Narvaez (21%) is a good catching streamer this week.</p>

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