26 September 2011

'L-Word' star kisses girl, gets escorted off plane

An actress who starred in "The L-Word" said she and her girlfriend were escorted off of a Southwest Airlines flight on Monday, because the couple were kissing on the plane.

Leisha Hailey took to Twitter to call for a boycott of the carrier after a flight attendant told them other passengers had complained after witnessing the affection.

Her first tweet said: "I have been discriminated against." She later added, "Since when is showing affection to someone you love illegal?"

Southwest Airlines Co. responded on its website that Hailey was approached "based solely on behavior and not gender." The airline's four-sentence response said passengers were characterizing the behavior as excessive.

A discussion followed on the flight, and the airline said it "escalated to a level that was better resolved on the ground."

Hailey was a musician before joining the cast of the Showtime drama featuring the lives of lesbian friends and lovers living in Los Angeles. She played the character Alice Pieszecki.

The actress and her unidentified girlfriend were on a flight from Baltimore to St. Louis. The kissing occurred in the air and a discussion followed when the plane landed.

Hailey said the encounter between the couple and a flight attendant was recorded.

A message seeking comment from Halley's spokeswoman, Libby Coffey, was not immediately returned.

Southwest's website says it is the official airline of the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation.

Herndon Graddick, senior director of programs at GLAAD, said in an e-mail that "GLAAD contacted Southwest to call for additional actions beyond tonight's statement that ensure all customers feel comfortable and welcomed while traveling."

Earlier this month, the Dallas-based airline kicked off Green Day's lead man Billie Joe Armstrong for wearing his pants too low. The Grammy winner was escorted off a plane after failing to follow a flight attendant's directive to pull the pants up.

Southwest also removed director Kevin Smith from a flight last year because he didn't fit properly in a single seat. His first tweet read, "Dear (at)SouthwestAir I know I'm fat, but was (the) captain (...) really justified in throwing me off a flight for which I was already seated?"

Halley is preparing to launch a 21-city tour to promote breast cancer awareness.

Perry Wants Obama to Halt Air Pollution Rules

Perry Wants Obama to Halt Air Pollution Rules

Gov. Rick Perry on Monday asked President Barack Obama to use his executive authority to prevent or delay implementation of stricter pollution standards, saying they will have an "immediate and devastating" effect on the state.

The standards have stirred up Texas' largest energy companies, which say they don't have adequate time to meet the deadlines without shutting down plants and jeopardizing the reliability of Texas' electric grid. Implementation of the rules starts Jan. 1.

In the letter, obtained by The Associated Press, Perry said the implementation of the Cross State Air Pollution Rules will have an "immediate and devastating effect on Texas jobs, our economy and our ability to supply the electricity our citizens, schools and employers need."

Perry released the letter as he tries to shore up support among conservatives in his bid for the Republican presidential nomination.

The White House said the new standards will save lives.

"We stand behind common sense, vital Clean Air Act protections for public health and clean air," White House spokesman Clark Stevens said. "This rule will prevent over 34,000 premature deaths each year and ensure that American families aren't suffering the consequences of harmful air pollution generated far from home."

The new clean air rules are designed to significantly reduce smog and soot pollution by requiring 27 states, including Texas, to decrease smokestack emissions. The new guidelines apply to sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide emissions, which mostly come from coal-fired plants.

Texas has 19 coal-fired power plants -- more than any other state -- and plans to build nine more. It is one of the few states still adding coal-fired plants and releases more air pollutants than any other state. Most other states are building generation plants that use sources other than coal, particularly natural gas.

On Sept. 12, Texas' largest electricity producer, Luminant, said it would shut down two coal-fired power units and lay off hundreds of workers if the new rules were enforced, even after the EPA offered to help the company meet the tougher standards.

"Mr. President, you have recently proclaimed that your administration is committed to creating jobs," Perry wrote. "These rules do not create jobs. They are a job killer in Texas, and they must be stopped."

Texas, faced with a growing population, few new energy sources and hot summers, has been vocal in its opposition to the regulations since they were announced in July. The state has asked a federal appeals court to review the rules.

Perry has used the new rules as fodder in his long-standing accusation that the EPA under Obama meddles in state affairs, lays down expensive regulations during tough economic times and is forcing companies to cut jobs to offset the cost of complying with environmental rules.


For the latest on Rick Perry's run for the White House, click here to see our special Tracking Rick Perry section. View videos, photos, and stories on the Texas governor's presidential run.

Contaminated Cantaloupe Cause Death in Dallas County

Contaminated Cantaloupe Cause Death in Dallas County

Dallas County has reported the county's first death linked to Listeria-contaminated cantaloupe.

The Dallas County Health Department said Monday that an 89-year-old resident died of listeriosis after eating cantaloupe sold under the Rocky Farm brand name from Jensen Farms in Colorado.

Even though the contaminated cantaloupe were recalled weeks ago, the threat of Listeria lingers.

“What's unusual about Listeria is that it has a very long incubation period,” said Dr. Wendy Chung, chief epidemiologist for the Dallas County Health Department.

Chung said it can take up to two months before people are sickened from eating them.

“You could have eaten a contaminated food product such as the cantaloupe and not come down with symptoms for many weeks later,” she said.

So far, the Colorado cantaloupe have sickened four people in Dallas and more than 60 nationwide.

Some shoppers said they are steering clear of the melon.

“Of course I wont buy cantaloupes of any sort,” said Beth Burke, a Dallas mother of two.

Three in four North Texans eat cantaloupe in any given week at this time of year, according to the Dallas County Health Department

“The message is not to stop eating cantaloupe," Chung said. "The message is to exercise common sense and use good food handling processes.”

Listeria bacteria can grow at room temperature and in the refrigerator. Health experts say it is important to sanitize countertops and vegetable drawers where cantaloupe may have been stored.

Exploding Toilet Injures Woman in DC

Exploding Toilet Injures Woman in DC

A woman was taken to a hospital Monday after being injured by a toilet.

The woman was hurt when the toilet she was using at the General Services Administration building in Southwest exploded, D.C. Fire and EMS said.

The cause of the explosion is under investigation.

The woman was seriously hurt but is expected to be OK.

Former Fairfax Sperm Donor Learns of 70 Kids

Former Fairfax Sperm Donor Learns of 70 Kids

A lawyer who leaned on a Virginia sperm bank to help him get through school recently learned he has dozens of offspring.

For three years while attending law school at George Mason University, 33-year-old Boston attorney Ben Seisler donated sperm at Fairfax Cryobank, he revealed for a new Style Network documentary. He planned to stay anonymous but learned of a website that connects offspring and siblings to each other and their sperm donors.

“Today I know of 70 kids,” he said.

“That does seem like a high number,” said Dr. Michelle Ottey, of Fairfax Cryobank. “So most sperm banks have internal limitations that they have created. Fairfax, for example, has a limitation of 25-30 family units per donor.”

That's 25 to 30 births per a population of 800,000 thousand people.

"The way that we track this information is twofold,” Ottey said. “We track the actual units or sperm specimen that are distributed for each donor as well as relying on the patients to report their pregnancies and births."

Although it won't disclose numbers, Fairfax Cryobank will stop selling a donor's samples if it reaches its designated limit. Donors are supposed to disclose if they've supplied other sperm banks.

“We do currently ask that question,” Ottey said. “We always ask that question. ‘Have you even applied to be a sperm donor at another bank?’ And we ask that question multiple times during the screening process. It has happened in the past that there have been serial donations at multiple cryobanks. We work very hard not to allow that to happen."

Although there are federal guidelines, there are no federal laws or regulations about the number of offspring a donor can father.

Fairfax Cryobank follows guidelines set by the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. When Seisler was donating 10 years ago, some of the current limitations were not in place.

"They're not my kids,” he said “I don't see them as my kids.”

6-Year-Old Dead in Prince George's County

6-Year-Old Dead in Prince George's County

Police are investigating the death of a 6-year-old girl in Landover, Md.

The child was found unresponsive in a bathtub in the 3500 block of Hubbard Road, according to Prince George's County police.

Stay with News4 and usa-local-news.blogspot.com for updates as they become available.

New Job Opportunities Come to Victorville

A new factory is coming to Victorville and with it, 100 new jobs.

Several companies, including GE, Rubbermaid and Pratt & Whitney have already moved there.

"I got fired from my last job and I've been looking ever since. There's just no work up here," said Hesperia resident Juan Rodriguez.

That grim reality is slowly changing with the announcement from United Furniture Industries of North Carolina that it is bring a Simmons furniture factory to Victorville.

The company has signed a nine-year, $16 million lease at the Southern California Logistic Center to manufacture upholstered furniture.

The United Furniture projects coordinator said California beat out five other western states, mainly due to its location and workforce.

"Most of our major vendors that we buy product from raw materials and things have operations in Southern California," he said.

Victorville's first term mayor, Ryan McEachron, said a public-private partnership got the ball rolling.

But a skilled workforce sitting on a 17 percent unemployment rate sealed the deal.

"It's a dent in that problem. We can't ever hope to turn this economy around without the creation of jobs," said McEachron.

One-hundred people will be hired next month, 400 in the next three years.

Word has already leaked out and job seekers are on the hunt.

"I'm an air force mechanic, but I can't get a job," said Victorville resident Dee Kirkham. "I've been unemployed for two years. So I figured this is my niche. I want to get there first."

United Furniture will hold a job fair for the first 100 positions on Oct. 15, 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. at the San Bernardino County Department of Workforce Development office in Hesperia.

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Man Found Suffering From Gunshot Near Oxon Hill Metrobus Stop

Man Found Suffering From Gunshot Near Oxon Hill Metrobus Stop

Metro Transit Police are investigating a shooting that may have happened near a bus stop in Oxon Hill, Md., Sunday.

A 53-year-old man was found near the intersection of Glassmanor Drive and Irvington Street. Witnesses said he did not look well and called EMS.

A short time later, emergency crews determined that the victim was suffering from a gunshot wound.

He was taken to an area hospital and remains in stable condition.

The victim, who has a cognitive disability, is believed to have traveled by bus and train to a church in the District.

It’s not clear if he was at the bus stop or somewhere else when he was shot.

Anyone with information about the case should call Metro Transit Police at 202-962-2121.

Medal of Honor Winner Visits LA

Medal of Honor Winner Visits LA

Sergeant Dakota Meyer says he still hasn't gotten used to being called an American hero, despite being awarded the medal of honor in a ceremony at the White House this month.

"I received it on the behalf of the Marine Corps. The Marines that died that day, and that's what it's for. It's not for me. I'm the furthest thing from a hero," according to Meyer.

Sergeant Meyer is in Los Angeles as part of a tour promoting the medal. On Monday he did some sightseeing, including a stop at Universal Studios.

But this VIP tour is a long way from the battlefield.

Two years ago Meyer was a 21 year old Marine corporal stationed in Afghanistan's Kunar Provence. Under ambush, he saved 13 Marines and 23 Afghan soldiers.

Tragically his four best friends were killed. Meyer helped recover their bodies.

"Because of your honor, 36 men are alive today," President Obama said at the award ceremony on September 15th. "Because of your courage, four fallen American heroes came home."

Along with the Medal of Honor, Sergeant Meyer got to share a beer with the Commander in Chief.

"I just asked him what he would do in my shoes, at 23 years old, to be successful, what advice would he give me? He said don't rush into any decisions," according to Meyer. "Go to college. Get an education.”

Sergeant Meyer says he hasn't yet decided on his own future, but he did start a scholarship fund for the children of wounded veterans.

"Everyone wants to talk to me and pay attention to me," according to Meyer, "but my story is one of millions out there.

Sergeant Meyer says he'll honor his fellow Marines during his visit to California with a stop at Camp Pendleton.

Bryan Stow Progress "Magical"

Bryan Stow Progress

In a posting entitled "Magical," Bryan Stow's family members said the Giants fan continues to show amazing progress.

Timeline: Bryan Stow Case

Last week, they announced that he made the significant turn from simple facial responses to speaking.

On Monday, the family said he's now speaking in complete sentences in videos to his children and engaging in conversations with visitors.

Stow was attacked outside Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Opening Day and suffered significant brain damage. LAPD has since arrested two suspects. 

In their blog, Stow's family members said in the past week has been filled with progress. Stow now has physical and occupational therapy five times a week and that he can sit on the side of his bed and in a chair next to his bed.

They seemed to get the most pleasure writing about being able to take Stow outside in the sun. That happened for the very first time last Friday.

"We got the OK to take Bryan outside for the first time in almost six months. He was moved to a cardiac chair and we went out to a secluded patio. Bonnie asked Bryan how it felt to be outside. Bryan, sitting in the sun, with his eyes closed said, 'It's magical.'"

Engineers to Rappel Down Washington Monument

Structural engineers will begin rappelling down all four faces of the Washington Monument Tuesday to check for any external damage that might have been caused by last month's earthquake.

At a press conference Monday afternoon, National Park Service officials announced that a preliminary inspection had been completed on the monument's interior. The Park Service also released a surveillance video taken during the Aug. 23 earthquake, which showed pieces of stone falling in the obelisk's interior while visitors scrambled for safety.

The Park Service, citing safety concerns, said that there is no timetable for reopening the landmark to visitors and added that dozens of pieces of stone fell inside the monument during and after the earthquake.

Engineers told NBC4's Derrick Ward that most of the damage was done to the top of the monument, where several cracks formed. National Park Service spokesman Bill Line told the Associated Press that the cracks will need to be temporarily filled in as part of the monument's annual winterizing process. 

The 5.8-magnitude earthquake was centered near Mineral, Va., and shook cities up and down the East Coast. In addition to damaging the Washington Monument, the quake also caused significant damage to the Washington National Cathedral. 

Dallas Wiens Reveals New Acrylic Eyes

Dallas Wiens Reveals New Acrylic Eyes

Dallas Wiens, the nation's first full-face transplant recipient, crosses another milestone.

The Fort Worth father lifted his sunglasses to reveal new acrylic eyes.

Doctors at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston fitted him for his new blue eyes last week.

Wiens lost his vision when he was severely burned in a construction accident in 2008. Wiens received a new face in March thanks to a donor.

Next, Wiens will get a leader dog. The Southlake Lion's Club is raising money through a benefit ride this weekend to buy a $50,000 seeing eye dog for Wiens.

More: Southlake Lions Club "Ride for the Blind" Information

Philly Man Gets 35-70 Years in Police Cadet Deaths

Philly Man Gets 35-70 Years in Police Cadet Deaths

A second Philadelphia man charged in the mistaken-identity killings of two teen police cadets has been sentenced to 35 to 70 years in prison.

The Philadelphia Inquirer reports that 21-year-old Derek Barnes pleaded guilty to two counts of third-degree murder on Monday, the day his trial was to start.

Prosecutors say Barnes and co-defendant Anthony Satchell mistook the victims for rival gang members.

They say Barnes pulled out a gun, but had it deflected by a girlfriend. Authorities say Barnes, then 19, told Satchell to shoot, and he did.

Satchell is serving a life term in the 2009 deaths of 15-year-old Harvey Lewis and 17-year-old Dominique Smith, both Philadelphia Police Explorer Cadets.

Lewis' mother has said her son was killed as he tried to walk home before his curfew.

 

Magic Carpet Ride Takes a Wrong Turn at Disney's "Aladdin"

Magic Carpet Ride Takes a Wrong Turn at Disney's

The show did not go on after a malfunction during “Disney’s Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular” show at the California Adventure theme park Sunday.

A video posted on YouTube shows two performers, playing Aladdin and Jasmine, were left hanging by their harnesses during the 4:45 p.m. show Sunday.

“We regret any inconvenience this may have caused you. Once again this performance cannot continue,” said a show announcer. “Ladies and gentleman, boys and girls, we ask that you please exit using the doors on your right.”

Show-goers were first to report the malfunction on Twitter and YouTube. The show was halted and audience members were quickly evacuated as the crew worked to fix the problem, according to reports.

Both performers were harnessed and they were uninjured, said a Disney spokeswoman.

The park resumed all “Aladdin” shows Monday.

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Animal Rescue Group Calls for Perry to Help With Hay Crisis

Animal Rescue Group Calls for Perry to Help With Hay Crisis

A farm animal rescue group is asking for Gov. Rick Perry's help with the hay crisis threatening Texas ranchers.

Bob Williams, the founder of Ranch Hand Rescue in Argyle, called the hay crisis a nightmare.

"I can't sleep at night," he said. "It's the worst feeling in the world. People are frightened."

Ranch Hand Rescue created an online petition that asks Gov. Rick Perry to use state resources to bring hay in from other states.

"Being such big cattle and horse country, I'm sure he's heard the need for hay now," said Marty Polasko, a member of the group's board. "But I think the petition shows unification. This is something that's important."

The lack of hay has Ranch Hand Rescue and people who own livestock scrambling.

"We get several calls every day from organizations and individuals who just can't afford to feed their animals," said Kim Thomas, Ranch Hand Rescue board member.

Williams said smaller rescue groups are going to have a hard time surviving without hay because they don't have the money to buy it. Ranch Hand Rescue got their hands on some hay, but it wasn't cheap.

"It's tripled or quadrupled its price," Polasko said.

"You could get the hay at a good price up north, but then, you have to ship it a thousand miles," Thomas said.

Ranch Hand Rescue said its mission is to get more hay for itself and others in desperate need. In addition to their petition to Perry, the rescue group is working with the Cowtown Coliseum to host a second hay drive.

North Texas Icon Mr. Peppermint Dead at 84

North Texas Icon Mr. Peppermint Dead at 84

Jerry Haynes, better known as Mr. Peppermint, died from complications due to Parkinson's disease.

According to WFAA-TV, his show was the longest-running locally produced show in the history of the station.

In fact, Mr. Peppermint appeared in more than 6,000 episodes. He was known for his red-and-white suit, straw hat and candy-stripped cane.

According to the Star-Telegram, Mr. Peppermint ran a fictitious music shop and lead viewers who he called "little gumdrops" on adventures with his friends Muffin Bear and Mr. Wiggly Worm.

He wasn't just a television icon. According to WFAA, Haynes also appeared in more than 50 motion pictures, the television shows "Dallas" and "Walker, Texas Ranger."

Increased Coffee Consumption May Decrease Depression

Increased Coffee Consumption May Decrease Depression

Coffee drinkers, there’s a new reason to pick up that second cup in the morning: A study has found that depression risk decreases when women increase caffeinated coffee consumption.

The study, published in the Archives of International Medicine, observed more than 50,000 women for roughly 25 years. Women wrote how much caffeine they consumed throughout the day and study authors checked in on their mental state.

Depression risk decreased as women reported drinking more cups of coffee. Women who drank two to three cups of coffee per day had a 15 percent less threat of future depression. Those who consumed more than 4 cups each day decreased their risk by 20 percent.

Does this mean you’ll increase your coffee consumption? Tell us in the comments below, let us know on Facebook or tell us what you think on Twitter @nbcsandiego.

 

How to Keep Our Children from Being Left Behind

How to Keep Our Children from Being Left Behind

The No Child Left Behind Law, enacted to ensure that the children of America get the best education possible, is in trouble. President Barack Obama, says it’s not working – and he intends to free the states from its rigid requirements.

“Congress hasn’t been able to do it, so I will,” the President said. “Starting today, we’ll be giving states more flexibility to meet high standards.”

In other words, No Child Left Behind is leaving many children far behind. And the time is long overdue to fix it.

Exactly what Obama wants -- or the Republicans who have already taken a stand against him want -- is still a bit unclear. Obama says he won’t make states comply with the No Child Left Behind Law if they agree to higher standards to improve their schools. If so, they will get waivers from the law’s deadlines.

The Republican chairman of the House education committee, John Kline, concedes that the law needs to be changed but he condemns the Obama administration for “doing it with executive orders and rewriting rules. This is executive overreach.”

What the citizens of America are left with is a murky situation. Exactly what rules and orders will be re-written? Are we facing further politicization of the issue of better education for our kids?

President Obama and his secretary of education, Arne Duncan, have urged a re-writing of the law to encourage states to raise standards, concentrate drastic interventions only on the worst failing schools and use test scores to evaluate teacher effectiveness. It amounts to a shift from federal to state influence over educational policy. Yet Obama warned: “This doesn’t mean that states will be able to lower their standards or escape accountability.”

Obama said that the states could apply for waivers of 10 central provisions of the No Child law, including the provision that all students must be proficient in math and reading by 2014.

Two educators praised Obama’s initiative. Sara Robertson of the National Education Association told me it was “a step in the right direction.”  Yet, she said, much more needed to be done. Teachers have been criticizing the No Child Left Behind “test-label-punish approach”  for more than 10 years, she said, and “the NEA believes there must be common sense measures of student progress, freedom to implement local ideas, respect for their judgment and the right to be a part of critical decisions.” 

Jack Jennings of the Center on Education Policy told me it was a “dereliction of duty” for Congress to fail to revamp the NCLB law in the last three years. “What we’ve had chiefly are political problems. On the House side, the Tea Party members don’t believe there should be a federal role in education.  But, when the Democrats controlled both houses earlier in the Obama administration, the education problem slipped right off their radar screen. “

Jennings said that, with the Obama administration relaxing some requirements for teachers and administrators, “there should be less pressure on teachers and principals.”

The law, he says, will be less “punitive.”    

It appears that, for a brief time, there may be more stability in the nation’s educational system. But the ability of Obama to control the situation temporarily isn’t likely to produce harmony.

There is no Democratic or Republican way to educate a child. It’s unfortunate that the wrangling between the parties seems to be at the expense of the children, who indeed are being left behind.                      

 

No 'Jersey Shore' Tax Credit

T won't stand for tax-credit in MTV's “Jersey Shore” GTL motto.

Gov. Chris Christie has blocked a $420,000 film credit that was approved for the show last week by the state Economic Development Authority.

The money was approved to cover production costs for the hit reality series' inaugural 2009 season.

Christie suspended the film tax credit program in 2010 to close a budget deficit, but the 2009 season still qualified.

Christie says he “duty-bound” to ensure taxpayers are not footing a bill for a project that “does nothing more than perpetuate misconceptions about the state and its citizens.”

A tweet from @GovChristie on Monday said: "Today I stopped tax dollars from being wasted on programs that don't work & that subsidize projects like "Jersey Shore""

Actually most of the cast members aren’t from New Jersey, but from New York.

The show centers on the cast living and partying along the beach and boardwalk in Seaside Heights, where they live the so-called “GTL” lifestyle -- or gym, tan and laundry.

While Seasons 1 and 3 followed the eight cast members spending their summer in Seaside Heights, Season 2 took them to Miami Beach and Season 4 relocated the group to Italy.

MTV confirmed in June, that Season 5 will be back ‘down the shore’ in Seaside Heights.

 

Air Date Set for Gustavo Dudamel on "Sesame Street"

Air Date Set for Gustavo Dudamel on

Los Angeles Philharmonic conductor Gustavo Dudamel is set to appear on "Sesame Street" in early 2012, according to Sesame Workshop.

The Dude's appearance will air on Feb. 6, 2012, a representative from Sesame Workshop said Monday.

Although filming usually occurs in New York, Dudamel's scene was taped in Los Angeles, the LA Times reported last month.

In a promotion photo released by the LA Phil, the maestro is seen conducting a chorus of Muppet penguins.

The Venezuela native became the music director of the LA Phil in 2009

"Sesame Street" began its 42nd season Monday.

Sotheby's Auctioning Off Produce "Gems" for $10,000

Sotheby's Auctioning Off Produce

Sotheby's is foraying into treasures of the edible kind: the famed auction house will be selling off crates of purple cauliflowers, black cherry tomatoes and other produce gems for $1,000 each Tuesday night.

The second annual Art of Farming event is designed to celebrate what local farmers and sustainable food supporters call edible heirlooms, and the process and care it takes to cultivate them.

"You educate the people and teach the people where you are and what you do," said Brian Gajeski, a farmer from Riverhead, Long Island.

Gajeski, 35, is one of the 25 New York farmers supplying produce for the Sotheby's event.  His family has worked the land in Riverhead for four generations. They grow 15 varieties of tomatoes, onions, cauliflower, corn and a slew of other vegetables and fruits. 

These produce prizes are usually stacked and sold at their Sound Avenue farm stand or at farmers markets. But on Tuesday, they're going straight to Sotheby's on the Upper East Side, where they'll be sold for $1,000 each. In all, ten crates will be sold.

The money raised from the auction will support programs at GrowNYC and the Sylvia Center at Katchkie Farm, which help sustain current farmers and educate the next generation of farmers and healthy food ambassadors.

"Sustainable farming and preservation of heirloom varietals are true art forms," said Amy Todd Middleton, senior vice-president of worldwide marketing for Sotheby's.  "We are proud to support our local farmers."

Gwen Gajeski, the family farm stand manager and Brian's mother, said the family treasures the truly local aspect of farming for a community.

"We like when it goes from a seed all the way to the harvest and the person's table, and they say this is grown on Long Island," she said. 

"It's not always an easy life," said Brian Gajeski.  "It's more 5-to-9 than 9-to-5. But plant something, grow it and sell it, then see the smiles on people's faces when we bring something in."

"It's great to see that," added Gwen Gajeski.  "I wonder how many people will be eating our vegetables tonight."

For more information, visit >. 

Former Inmate Wants to Cook Death Row's Final Meal for Free

Former Inmate Wants to Cook Death Row's Final Meal for Free

A former Texas inmate who cooked the final meals for hundreds of condemned prisoners is offering to start doing it again at no cost to the state now that officials have ended the practice of allowing the special last requests.

Brian Price, who wrote a cookbook called "Meals to Die For," about his former duties and now runs a restaurant on Houston County Lake in East Texas, said Monday the move by prison officials was "cold-hearted." If it's tax dollars people are worried about, he said, he'll make a last meal for free for any condemned inmate in Texas.

"I am offering to prepare, and or pay for, all of the last meal requests from this day forward," he said. "Taxpayers will be out nothing."

Officials who oversee the country's busiest death chamber stopped the practice of giving special final meals last week after a prominent state senator complained about an extensive request from a man being executed for his role in a notorious hate-crime dragging death. The prison agency quickly said condemned prisoners will now get the same dinner that other inmates eat that day.

Department of Criminal Justice spokeswoman Michelle Lyons called Price's proposal "a kind offer."

"It's not the cost but rather the concept we're moving away from," she said.

The meal flap erupted after Lawrence Russell Brewer was executed for the hate crime slaying of James Byrd Jr. in Jasper more than a decade ago. Brewer, a white supremacist gang member, was convicted of chaining Byrd, 49, to the back of a pickup truck and dragging him to his death along a bumpy road in a case shocked the nation for its brutality.

For his final meal, Brewer asked for two chicken fried steaks, a triple-meat bacon cheeseburger, fried okra, a pound of barbecue, three fajitas, a meat lover's pizza, a pint of ice cream and a slab of peanut butter fudge with crushed peanuts. Prison officials said Brewer didn't eat any of it.

The request raised the ire of Sen. John Whitmire, who is chairman of the Texas Senate's criminal justice committee. He called the tradition of offering a special last meal ridiculous and illogical.

Since Texas resumed carrying out executions in 1982, the state correction agency's practice has been to fill a condemned inmate's request as long as the items, or food similar to what was requested, were readily available from the prison kitchen supplies.

The exact request almost never was filled, Price said Monday. He noted that when one condemned inmate asked for two T-bone steaks, the prisoner got a hamburger steak instead.

Price made 220 final meals, beginning in 1991 and until his parole in 2003, while serving 14 years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Huntsville Unit for a pair of convictions related to the abduction of his brother-in-law and a sexual assault on an ex-wife.

He already was working as a prison cook, and volunteered to make a final meal after other cooks indicated they were squeamish about the task. The condemned inmate complimented his work and the duties stuck.

AIDS Project LA Opens New Site Ahead of AIDS Walk LA

AIDS Project LA Opens New Site Ahead of AIDS Walk LA

No community is immune to the AIDS epidemic, but now thanks to the opening of a new service site, Los Angeles’ hardest hit area gets a much better chance at preventing AIDS from reaching larger proportions.

On Monday, AIDS Project Los Angeles (APLA) opened the doors to its Vance North Health and Wellness Center on the 3700 block of South La Brea Avenue in Baldwin Hills. The new building is named for philanthropist Bob North’s son, Vance, who died from AIDS-related complications in 1995.

“The site’s opening comes at a crucial point in the epidemic,” said Craig Thompson, APLA’s executive director. “Thirty years in, we’re still seeing new data showing that HIV continues to disproportionately plague MSM (men who have sex with men) and rates are on the rise.”

In regions like South Los Angeles, the crisis is worsened by a crippling lack of resources, particularly for MSM and transgender communities, said Thompson.

During Monday’s event, AIDS Project LA (APLA) announced a legacy gift from Bob North who has committed to donating his estate to the agency. APLA will also be renaming its “Necessities of Life” food pantry program in honor of Vance North, according to an agency spokesman.

The opening event coincides with National Gay Men’s HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, marked annually on Sept. 27. It also comes just before AIDS Walk Los Angeles, APLA’s biggest annual fundraiser on Oct. 16

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NJ Moves 2012 Presidential Primary to June

NJ Moves 2012 Presidential Primary to June

New Jersey's presidential primary will no longer be a winter affair.

New Jersey has moved its presidential primary back to June in 2012 after a failed attempt four years ago to raise the state's influence in presidential politics by switching the election to February.

That's because 22 other states had the same idea and moved their elections to Feb. 5.

But in 2012, Republicans and Democrats plan to penalize states that vote before March 1.

Acting Gov. Kim Guadagno, who is taking over for Gov. Christie Monday while he is out of town politicking, signed the bill to move it back to June, when other local elections are held.

She says moving the election up to Feb. 5 had cost the state $12 million.

The bill had widespread support. It passed the Assembly 78-0 and the Senate by 39-0.

Man Stabbed in Throat at Trolley Station

Man Stabbed in Throat at Trolley Station

A man was stabbed at the Old Town trolley station, according to San Diego Police Department.

At about 12:30 the 45-year-old victim was stabbed in the throat with a knife.

The suspect ran to 4800 Pacific Highway where he came across a victim of hit-and-run accident, who was sitting in his car. The suspect punched the victim of the hit-and-run accident in the chest then forced victim out of his car. The suspect then stole the hit-and-run victim’s car and it was last seen driving north on Pacific Highway.

The stolen vehicle is a white 1992 Buick sedan with Cal Disabled Person’s plate #37915DP.

Police have described the suspect as a black male between age 30 and 40. He is roughly 6’1” and weighs between 230 and 240 pounds. Witnesses also described him as very agitated.

The victim was transported to a nearby hospital, no word on his medical condition.

This is the second stabbing near a trolley station this month.

Lockheed Laying Off 540, Mostly in Texas

Lockheed Laying Off 540, Mostly in Texas

Lockheed Martin Corp. is laying off 540 employees in plane-making operations in Texas, Georgia and California.

The company said Monday it expected most of the affected workers to leave by year end.

Lockheed is trying to cut costs in response to pressure to limit defense spending.

A spokeswoman says 370 of the layoffs will be salaried executive and administrative jobs in Fort Worth, Texas. Another 115 will be in Marietta, Ga., and 55 in Palmdale, Calif.

Man Accused of Throwing Son Off Boat Pleads Not Guilty

Man Accused of Throwing Son Off Boat Pleads Not Guilty

The man accused of tossing his 7-year-old son off a sightseeing boat in Newport Beach Harbor pleaded not guilty Monday to child abuse and resisting arrest charges.

Sloan Briles, 35, faces of to six years in prison, if convicted.

Briles was on the "Queen" sightseeing boat Aug. 28 with his girlfriend and two sons when he allegedly started poking the boy and made him cry, Deputy District Attorney Cyril Yu said. Briles allegedly threw his son off the boat after threatening to do so if the child did not stop crying, according to prosecutors.

The boat's first mate moved the craft into position to prevent another vessel from striking the boy, who was treading water, according to prosecutors. The captain threw a floatation device into the water, and the boy was helped out of the water by people in another boat.

Briles also jumped into the water, but Yu said that was to avoid a crowd of upset passengers. The boat's passengers called 911 to report the case.

Briles is accused of resisting arrest when deputies arrived on the "Queen."

His girlfriend defended Briles, saying, "He was just messing around with his kids and thought it would be fun, and thought wrong."

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Abandoned Dallas Shopping Cart Crackdown

Dallas city leaders want more help from stores on shopping carts that roll away from parking lots where they belong.

A trial program run by the city the past five months has recovered more than 600 abandoned carts.

The program focused on five problem neighborhoods.

 

City officials say the most serious abandoned cart nuisance is in Vickery Meadows area near Skillman and Abrams where many people without cars live in large apartment complexes near stores.

"It makes your neighborhood look awful," said resident Norma Jean Edmiston.

A block away from a Fiesta Mart Store on Abrams, Edmiston and resident Jeremiah Johnson walked past several abandoned carts on a side street.

"They’re everywhere. I mean, you walk down the street you’ll probably find a few more. They’re everywhere," Johnson said.

Two Fiesta carts sat beside a bus stop on Skillman.

"Some of the people have a lot of groceries, so they’ll push them to the bus stop, and get on the bus and just leave them there," he said.

City officials said Fiesta has been cooperating by collecting carts and the company is also considering corrals at nearby apartment complexes where store representatives would collect carts.

"A lot of the stores have been great, open, working with us," said Assistant Dallas Code Compliance Director James Childers.  "A lot of them have stepped up and said 'We’re willing to do whatever it takes to address the problem.'"

The new Walmart and Sam’s Club stores at Skillman and Northwest Highway have carts with wheels that automatically lock if the cart is taken off the property.

Monday, the Dallas City Council Quality of Life Committee received a briefing on results of the program so far and options for expanding it citywide.

Council Members wanted more stores to take responsibility for their carts and perhaps offer customers other ways to carry groceries home, including collapsible carts or special handles that can carry several grocery bags at once.

But committee members wanted to let companies decide which locations deserve more attention instead of forcing it on them.

"It’s obviously so much easier to do a voluntary program. And when we see compliance with that, we like to keep it a voluntary program. But if it’s necessary and we find we have to go to a mandatory program, we can move in that direction," Councilmember Angela Hunt said.

Childers said a more detailed plan will be presented to the committee later this year. 

"This Is It" Announcment Video Won't be Seen by Jury

Video of Michael Jackson announcing his "This is It" concert tour will not be allowed into evidence in the involuntary manslaughter trial of Dr. Conrad Murray.

Special Section: Murray Trial | Case Timeline | Juror Profiles

Opening statements are scheduled to begin Tuesday morning. Murray is charged in the June 2009 death of Jackson. He pleaded not guilty.

It was March 2009 when Jackson made his announcement that he would be doing one final concert tour.

Defense attorneys for Murray argued that the tape would demonstrate that Jackson has only agreed to ten shows and he was in poor health. By the time of his death three months later, Jackson was scheduled to do 50. The pressure of added shows resulted in extreme stress for Jackson, according to defense attorneys.

Defense attorneys also argued the video would show that Jackson's chemical dependency had started and he was hungover for the announcment.

The March 2009 press conference was not relevant to what happened the day Jackson died, Judge Michael Pastor said Monday.

Defense attorney Michael Flanagan wanted the jury to hear and see the tape themselves, but now "I guess we're going to have to have it described." The first witness is expected to be called Monday afternoon. That witness is Kenny Otrega, the director of the "This Is It" tour and someone who spent time with Jackson in the days and weeks leading up to his death.

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Getting Out of Debt by Going All Cash

Getting Out of Debt by Going All Cash

Brooklyn Man Gets Jail for Beating Cat to Death

Brooklyn Man Gets Jail for Beating Cat to Death

A Brooklyn man will spend six months in jail for fatally beating a relative's 9-pound cat with an umbrella.

Lordtyshon Garrett was sentenced Monday for animal cruelty.

The cat, named Madea, was beaten in October 2009. She suffered a collapsed lung and had to be euthanized.

According to an ASPCA blog post on the incident, Garrett trapped the 4-year-old cat in the bathroom shower with the water on. When she was released, soaked and breathing laboredly, Garrett chased the cat around the apartment while repeatedly jabbing and beating her with an umbrella.

Madea was gray, with black and butterscotch markings. Her eyes were green.

State Supreme Court Justice Dineen Riviezzo also sentenced Garrett to five year's probation.

The district attorney's office says Garrett also has to undergo anger management training, and perform 20 days of community service.

Wife Considered Suspect in Veterinarian's Death

Wife Considered Suspect in Veterinarian's Death

A prominent North county veterinarian, who investigators believe was a victim of murder, was found dead in the driveway of a Rancho Santa Fe home in January 2010.

Eighteen months later, court documents reveal his wife "was and remains a suspect" in the man's death.

On Jan. 17, 2010 Robert Stonebreaker, 53, was found dead early at a property on Paseo Delicias. His Porsche was found about a half-mile away the night before, crashed down a 15-foot embankment.

At first, investigators believed Stonebreaker walked to the home, then collapsed as a result of the injuries he received in the accident. An autopsy later revealed, however, that the 53-year-old's injuries weren't consistent with a car crash.

San Diego County Sheriff's Lt. Dennis Brugos said Stonebreaker was likely killed at the scene where his body was found and that he died of blunt force trauma.

Stonebreaker, who owned the Animal and Bird Hospital of Del Mar and a boarding facility for birds called FreeFlight, is survived by his wife, Pam and their two daughters, Kristen and Kelly.

Pamela Stonebreaker is listed on federal court documents as a plaintiff in a lawsuit involving The Guardian Life Insurance Company and Western Reserve Life Assurance Company.

The latter issued a policy to Robert Stonebreaker providing life insurance benefits of $250,000 but could not process the claim without a cause of death identified according to the court records.

The San Diego Union Tribune reports Pamela Stonebreaker's attorneys filed documents on July 18 denying she had anything to do with her husband's death.

Homicide investigators are asking anyone with information about Robert Stonebreaker's personal life that may have lead to the homicide to call the San Diego County Sheriff's Department.

Homicide Investigation Turns Historical

Homicide Investigation Turns Historical

A homicide investigation into human bones found underneath a home in Oceanside has turned into a case of historical preservation.

The Medical Examiner found the bones were very old and could possibly be of Native American origins. The office did not say how old the bones could be, but they are informing the Native American Heritage Commission of their findings.

The commission works towards the preservation of Native American remains, according to their website.

The bone fragments were found by a construction crew during a project in Oceanside's Capistrano neighborhood.

The collection of small bone fragments were found inside compacted dirt, six inches under the ground surface, said Oceanside police captain Leonard Mata in a media release.

He said the homeowner claimed that the concrete steps the bones were under had to be at least three decades old.

Prosecutor: Consultant Stole $1M from NYC Mayor

Prosecutor: Consultant Stole $1M from NYC Mayor

A political consultant accused of stealing more than $1 million from Mayor Bloomberg has been turned into a scapegoat by mayoral staffers eager to distance themselves from unsavory campaign practices, a defense lawyer told jurors Monday as the consultant's criminal trial began.

"There is fraud here, but it's campaign fraud by Mr. Bloomberg and his people," lawyer Raymond Castello said in his opening statement at John Haggerty's trial.

Haggerty is accused of taking the mayor's money to underwrite an elaborate 2009 poll-watching effort but then mounting only a meager operation and using most of the cash to buy his father's house. The mayor's representatives have said that his campaign broke no laws and followed standard practices. Prosecutors have not accused him of wrongdoing.

But the defense told Manhattan jurors Monday that the case would revolve around the billionaire mayor, and they sought to paint a picture of a self-financed candidate surrounded by loyalists who skirted campaign rules, blurred the line between the public and private sphere and didn't hesitate to bend the law to Bloomberg's benefit.

"This case is about winning at all costs. That's what Michael Bloomberg is all about," Castello told the jurors. "He spent over $100 million to win his third term as mayor of New York City. And he did not want to lose."

Prosecutors gave a less dramatic accounting of events, saying that Haggerty had outlined plans to provide more than 1,300 poll-watchers and instead pocketed hundreds of thousands of dollars and executed a cover-up after questions were raised by a reporter.

Haggerty didn't have the money to buy his father's house, but he did have "access to one of the largest mayoral campaigns this city has ever seen. ... And with it, the mayor's money," Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Brian Weinberg told the jurors.

The case could prove to be uncomfortable for the mayor, who is expected to testify, and stands to provide a rare peek behind the scenes of the $109 million effort that won the Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-unaffiliated candidate his third term at City Hall. Attorneys said that Bloomberg's first deputy mayor, Patricia Harris, would be among several staffers called to testify.

Castello called into question the motivations of the Bloomberg employees, saying they had all been granted immunity by prosecutors.

"Mr. Bloomberg has paid or is paying large sums of money to almost every witness who is testifying," the lawyer said.

Former Deputy Mayor Kevin Sheekey testified Monday that he had asked Haggerty to handle poll watching for the 2009 campaign. Bloomberg donated $1.2 million to the state Independence Party, which agreed to pay Haggerty $1.1 million for the effort, prosecutors said.

Haggerty's lawyers have suggested the mayor's campaign chose a roundabout way of funding the so-called ballot security effort to avoid associating itself with the practice, which has at times been subjected to court scrutiny as an alleged tool for voter suppression. A civil court judge has told the Independence Party — which hasn't been criminally charged and says it did nothing wrong — that its conduct "doesn't smell right."

Castello argued Monday that prosecutors can't prove that the money was stolen from Bloomberg because the mayor gave the money in a donation that, according to campaign finance law, could not legally be earmarked for a specific purpose.

Woman Dies, Child Hurt in Auto vs. Pedestrian

Woman Dies, Child Hurt in Auto vs. Pedestrian

A car hit “multiple” pedestrians, killing a woman, on Roosevelt Boulevard Monday afternoon, police say.

Though police have not released the exact number of people struck in the automobile vs. pedestrians accident yet, they confirm that a woman has died from her injuries and a child has been brought to a local hospital.

A witness told USA LOCAL NEWS that a truck cut off a car, which in turn jumped the curb of a very narrow sidewalk along the southbound side of Roosevelt Boulevard and struck the pedestrians.

The accident occurred at about 2:40 p.m. Monday, closing several lanes in the Pennypack Park area of Roosevelt Boulevard.

The child was transported to St. Christopher’s Hospital, according to authorities.

Thousands Enter CA Schools Without Vaccines

Thousands Enter CA Schools Without Vaccines

Last year's class of California kindergartners had a record high percentage of parents who used a personal belief exemption to avoid immunization requirements, a development that concerns state health officials.

More than 11,000 kindergartners missed at least one vaccine in 2010 because their parents decided to forgo inoculation. At nearly 2.5 percent of the state's 470,000 kindergartners, that's California's highest rate of declined vaccines since at least 1978, the year before the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine was required.

The percentage is more than double that in certain parts of the state, particularly in more affluent coastal communities in Northern California.

The public debate over childhood vaccinations has been growing throughout California, where last year a deadly spike in whooping cough cases killed 10 babies and sickened more than 9,100 people. The outbreak prompted a state law that requires middle and high school students to get whooping cough booster shots before going back to school this year.

The percentage of parents who sign vaccine exemptions based on personal beliefs has been rising steadily since 2004. The increase coincides with rising use of the Internet for information, said John Talarico, chief of the immunization branch for the California Department of Public Health.

"We really think a lot of it is due to honest, valid concern that parents do the best thing for their child coupled with misinformation that gets out through various forms of communication," he said.

He said state health officials want to study the personal-belief exemptions to better understand trends and behaviors. For now, he is hoping the trend will begin to slow, especially with media coverage of last year's whooping cough deaths.

Just last week, state health officials said the number of reported measles cases in California had reached a 10-year high of 28. Of those, 22 people were either unvaccinated or their vaccination status was unknown.

"When people can see disease around them, it generally drives them to think about the benefit the vaccine can give their children versus whatever else they hear," he said.

Vaccine statistics for this year's kindergartners will not be available until 2012.

Parents can file two types of vaccine exemptions — a medical exemption or a personal belief exemption. The medical exemption is rarer and typically is reserved for children who cannot be vaccinated because of auto-immune disorders or allergies. It requires a doctor's signature.

For a personal belief exemption, parents are not required to supply any information to explain their decision.

Doctors and medical experts say vaccines are a reliable means of preventing illness with little risk of injury, but some parents don't buy into the safety of immunizations. They cite concerns about vaccines making their children susceptible to autism or diabetes.

In a comprehensive safety review of vaccines issued last month, the Institute of Medicine found there is no link between vaccines and autism or diabetes. The institute, part of the National Academy of Sciences, found that serious side effects of vaccines are rare and can include fever-caused seizures and occasional brain inflammation.

The increasing number of kindergartners entering school without immunizations poses a risk to others, especially children who have legitimate medical exemptions that prevent them from getting their shots, said Linda Davis-Alldritt, a school nurse consultant at the California Department of Education.

"Disease prevention is really a very important thing," she said. "These are diseases that can be very serious, and it can cause death and it can cause long lasting illnesses."

Parents receive information from schools and the Department of Education about the importance of inoculation and the dangers of unvaccinated children spreading infectious diseases to the rest of the community.

Overall immunity of a population to illness typically is achieved when 90 percent of the population is properly immunized. But Talarico, California's top immunization officer, said that can be misleading because unvaccinated children tend to cluster in pockets where like-minded parents decide to forgo immunizations.

"When we see these clusters, that represents the possibility of transmission of disease more quickly and in a more sustained fashion," he said.

A cluster of unimmunized children in San Diego led to an outbreak of measles in 2008 that infected 12 children. Nine of them had not been inoculated because of their parents' objections, while three others were too young to be immunized.

In some schools, as many as 30 percent of kindergartners are vulnerable to at least one vaccine-preventable communicable disease, according to data from the state Department of Public Health. The majority of schools have 100 percent immunization rates.

Certain areas of California have higher exemption rates than others. In Marin, Sonoma and Santa Cruz counties, more than 6 percent of incoming kindergartners in 2010 had parents file a personal belief exemption. By comparison, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Fresno counties had rates below 2 percent.

Barbara Lowe Fisher, co-founder and president of the National Vaccine Information Center in Vienna, Va., said parents sometimes decide to file the personal belief exemption form because they cannot find a doctor who will sign a medical exemption form.

"We've had families whose children have had reactions to vaccines, and some of them have become injured or even died. They want to make an independent, informed decision for their other children, and they can't find doctors who will write medical exemptions," she said.

She said the mission of her nonprofit is to prevent vaccine-related injuries or death through public education. It does not take a position on whether parents should have their children vaccinated, but it does defend a parent's right to opt out of a vaccine.

Some parents base their decision on what they hear from others or see on the Internet, rather than in consultation with a medical expert, said Catherine Flores Martin, director at the California Immunization Coalition, a Sacramento nonprofit that receives some of its funding from vaccine manufacturers.

"Parents have access to so much information on the Internet and I think a parent, even when they're really well educated, will have a hard time sifting through the credible resources versus the anecdotal stories," she said. "You can find whatever you want on the Internet to support your belief."