Local:
- Richard Tillman, the clearly troubled brother of the late NFL player and Army Ranger Pat Tillman, has pleaded guilty in federal court to setting fire to a San Jose post office last summer. Tillman had appeared to be unraveling in the days and weeks before the arson attack, and posted to social media about "taking down the system." [KPIX]
- 49ers defensive lineman Keion White was shot in the ankle following some sort of altercation at a San Francisco nightclub after the Super Bowl. The address and name of the nightclub have been withheld, but it was apparently in the Mission District, and the altercation occurred around 4 am, when the club was likely closing. [ABC 7 / Chronicle]
- A curious moment went local viral in which state Senator Scott Wiener appeared to snub a handshake from SF Mayor Daniel Lurie on Friday during a ribbon-cutting event at the Castro Theatre. Wiener shrugs it off as entirely "unintentional," saying, "There were like 10,000 things going on at the moment. I like the Mayor a lot [and] support him. We shake hands all the time..." [KRON4]
- A 70-year-old man who was arrested by police in San Pablo Saturday night after refusing to leave the San Pablo Lytton Casino, and after getting handcuffed by security staff there, suffered a medical emergency in police custody not long after and died. [Chronicle]
National:
- Bay Area Congressman Ro Khanna was one of two lawmakers to review the undredacted Epstein Files today. Khanna says that the documents likely incriminate six new men, including one who is "pretty high up" in a foreign government, and another prominent individual. [Axios]
- How many people really tuned into that Kid Rock-led, Turning Point USA-sponsored alternative Halftime Show? It appears the online broadcast got 6.1M concurrent viewers, while the actual Halftime Show with Bad Bunny likely had well over 100 million viewers. [New York Times]
- After rupturing her ACL a little over a week ago, Olympic Gold medalist skier Lindsey Vonn says she has "no regrets" after breaking her leg in a crash on Saturday. [CNN]
Video:
- Vanessa Diaz, a Loyola Marymount University professor, unpacks the cultural impact of Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Halftime Show, for PBS News Hour.
Top image: Richard Tillman via Facebook
