Officials: No threat to Super Bowl
There is no specific threat of an attack connected to the Super Bowl and related events despite concerns about the rise of white supremacist extremism, law enforcement officials said Wednesday.
The FBI has made several arrests in the Tampa, Florida, area of people who allegedly took part in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol. But Michael McPherson, chief of the Tampa FBI office, said no links have been found indicating something similar might occur surrounding Sunday’s game.
“There are no credible threats to the Super Bowl, or any related activity, at this moment,” McPherson said at a news conference.
The game at Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium between the Chiefs and hometown Buccaneers will be different than any other. It comes amid the coronavirus pandemic that will limit attendance and impose numerous health-related restrictions.
Still, law enforcement officials are treating the game as they always have — especially since the 9/11 terror attacks — with some 70 different agencies involved and hundreds of personnel on duty to guard against any kind of attack.
“The Super Bowl is an attractive target,” said David Pekoske, acting deputy secretary of the Homeland Security Department. “We can’t take our eye off the ball.”
Because of the pandemic, the number of fans at the game will be about a third of the roughly 70,000-seat capacity of the stadium. There will be no tailgating, masks must be worn and the NFL is providing a safety kit containing masks and hand sanitizers to all fans entering the stadium.
As in the past, flight restrictions are being imposed around the stadium and its attendant events.
The FBI chief added that social media is the preferred method for extremists — domestic or foreign — to plan and organize any kind of operation. Tips from people who see such communications are a key way law enforcement agencies can disrupt them, he said.
THE QUOTE
“I don’t think there’s a play that he doesn’t think he can make. ... Which tells you the kind of confidence he has in his own game.”
— Buccaneers QB Tom Brady on Chiefs counterpart Patrick Mahomes
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THE NUMBER
No additional NBA players tested positive for COVID-19 in the last week, the league announced Wednesday, after nearly two dozen games had to be called off in the last month because of virus-related issues. That continued a good two-week trend: After 27 players were positive in results released between Jan. 6 and 19, only one player has been positive since. The NBA has called off 23 games this season for virus issues.