A trashed bathroom. Seized passports. Shifting accounts in TV interviews and social media posts. An encounter with the Brazilian criminal justice system. The saga of American swimmer Ryan Lochte and three teammates during the Rio Olympics has produced a head-spinning series of developments in Brazil and beyond. Here is the latest:---MORE MONEYBrazilian prosecutors made a last-ditch effort Friday to increase the amount of money that American swimmer James Feigen would have to pay before leaving the country. A judge allowed Feigen to fork over $10,800 to a Rio charity after police determined he and his teammates werent robbed but rather vandalized a gas station bathroom early Sunday morning. After paying, Feigens passport was returned. Prosecutors later appealed the decision and proposed upping the fine to about $47,000. The dispute is largely moot. If prosecutors win their appeal, Feigen would only have to pay if he ever wanted to return to Brazil.---GETTING OUT OF RIOFeigen took off Friday night on a flight from the Rio airport to the U.S. The trip home for Gunnar Bentz and Jack Conger was a little more eventful. They boarded a plane Wednesday night to leave Rio, but authorities removed the pair from the jet. Police were not satisfied with the swimmers account of the robbery-that-wasnt incident and wanted more information. Bentz and Conger talked with authorities on Thursday and were whisked through airport security and got on a plane that night. They were greeted back home with yard signs that said Go Jack and Welcome Home.---APOLOGIESLochte took to Instagram Friday and apologized for not being more careful and candid in how I described the events. At the same time, he stood by the part of his story about someone pointing a gun at him. Bentz issued his own apology later in the day, saying it was an honor and dream come true to be on the U.S. swimming team. He also stressed he was only a witness and not a suspect to the events. He provided a fuller account of the ordeal and maintained gas station guards had pointed guns at the swimmers.---SECURITY VIDEOVideo reviewed by police confirmed the athletes vandalized parts of the gas station, leading to an encounter with station employees. The video shows one of the swimmers pulling a sign off of a wall and dropping it on the ground. A gas station worker arrives, and other workers inspect the damage. Authorities said the swimmers broke a door, a soap dispenser and a mirror while intoxicated after celebrating the final swimming events of the games.---WHATS NEXTThe International Olympic Committee has established a disciplinary commission to investigate the incident involving Lochte and his teammates. IOC disciplinary commissions have the power to issue sanctions. USA Swimming is expected to convene its executive board to discuss likely punishment, as it did when Michael Phelps was arrested for a second DUI two years ago. In addition, police are still deciding whether to bring charges.Fausse Vapormax Noir . Belfort (24-10) needed just 77 seconds to down Henderson in the headlining bout of Saturdays "UFC Fight Night: Belfort vs. Henderson" event at Goiania Arena in Goiania, Brazil. The fight served as a rematch of the pairs 2006 meeting, which Henderson won by decision. Nike Air Max 270 React Soldes . No. 13-seeded John Isner and No. 21 Philipp Kohlschreiber were among six players who dropped out of the tournament on Tuesday, joining No. 12 seed Tommy Haas and two other players who withdrew on Monday. http://www.outletairmaxpascher.fr/fausse-air-max-270-react.html . Lack made 20 saves for his third shutout of the season as the Canucks blanked the St. Louis Blues 1-0 in the first post-Olympic game for both teams night. Nike Air Max 97 Ultra Pas Cher a Vendre .J. Jefferson has been charged with assaulting his girlfriend. Air Max 90 Homme Pas Cher Fausse . -- Nathan Pancel scored twice as the Sudbury Wolves defeated the North Bay Battalion 4-2 on Saturday in Ontario Hockey League action.HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. -- Trainer Marcial Navarro has been suspended a total of 60 days and trainer Bruno Tessore for 10 days for medication violations, according to rulings issued by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation earlier this week. The rulings became effective as of Nov. 11.The rulings against Navarro, for 20 and 40 days apiece, were accompanied by fines totaling $7,500 and were for positive tests on two horses that raced this summer at Gulfstream Park -- Dave Hoeght, who finished second in the third race July 31, and Jaidens Best, who won the third race May 18. According to the ruling, Dave Hoeght tested positive for a combination of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatories flunixin and phennylbutazone.dddddddddddd The ruling stated that Jaidens Best tested postive for clenbuterol, a bronchodilator that also has muscle-building qualities, and methocarbamol, a muscle relaxant.Tessores suspension, which was accompanied by a fine of $3,000, was for a positive test for methocarbamol from the horse Cowboys Princess, who won the first race July 21, the ruling said.Two horses trained by Navarro, Dave Hoeght and first-time starter Dancing Gia, were scratched out of races on Wednesdays program at Gulfstream Park West, and a third, Erichs Talisman, was scratched from Thursdays eighth event. ' ' '