28 September 2011

4 Shot, 2 Dead in More Philly Shootings

4 Shot, 2 Dead in More Philly Shootings

Police responded to two locations within blocks of each other Wednesday night, finding three people shot, two of which died.

The suspect was also wounded after police shot at him. He is now in custody.

It is unknown if the shootings were related, police say.

Police responded to a shooting at 26th and Tasker streets at around 8 p.m. and found a man shot dead.

Ten minutes later, police responded to another shooting only blocks away at 31st and Tasker streets, where a woman and a man were shot. The man died, police say.

One of the suspects at the 31st and Tasker shootings opened fire on police and fled on foot; officers fired at him. The man was shot but it is still unclear if he was wounded by the officers or in the previous shooting, police say.

The surviving woman and the suspect were brought to Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. The woman was in critical condition.

“The motivation for a lot the shootings is nonsense…petty reasons…especially for someone getting shot or killed," Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small told USA LOCAL NEWS.

A total of nine people were shot in Philadelphia Wednesday. Three of them are dead.

  • School Fight Ends in 4 Bystanders Shot: Cops
  • Man Shot, Killed at North Philly ATM

     

VIDEO: Shirtless Man Torches Boat in Ramapo

VIDEO: Shirtless Man Torches Boat in Ramapo

Police in Rockland County are looking for a man caught on surveillance video torching a boat.

The video, taken early Sunday morning on Sterling Mine Road in Ramapo, shows a shirtless man walking around the boat, then setting it on fire.

The flames spread to five neighboring construction trucks, which were also damaged.

Detective Lt. Mark Emma told the LoHud newspaper he suspected the man either had a grudge against the owners of the construction business, Conserv Construction, or fishing boat owner, Action Plumber.

Detectives are awaiting forensic forensic results to know if an accelerant was used to set the fires, Emma told the newspaper.

State Health Officials Meet With Families Over Tuberculosis Outbreak

Officials from the Texas Department of State Health Services held a public meeting Wednesday night to reassure parents about their concerns over a tuberculosis outbreak at a North Texas high school.

Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, said up to 10 Ennis High School students have the infection.

Health officials assured the people who packed the standing-room-only meeting that tuberculosis is easily treatable with medication.

More than 800 people have been have been tested for exposure to tuberculosis after a teacher developed the infection in August. Students, staff members and anyone who has been in close contact with them have gotten a skin test.

Of the 836 people, 128 tested positive for exposure to tuberculosis. A positive skin test does not mean a person has tuberculosis or is contagious. Those who test positive have a 10 percent chance they will develop tuberculosis at some point in their lifetime.

Health officials will conduct chest X-rays on those who have tested positive to see if they have the bacterial infection. Those abnormal chest x-rays will undergo a third test.

Students who test positive on a skin test can get an X-ray at school inside the state's mobile X-ray truck.

Waxahachie school officials said they are warning their athletes about possible exposure to the infection. The school district said Waxahachie students will be warned to limit their time around Ennis students when the schools meet for an athletic event.

Parents voice frustration

Lavitria Goss said she is frustrated with how Ennis High and the state health department have handled the outbreak.

"I'm off work for a month without pay," she said. "Nobody has offered to help. Nobody has called and said anything. I'm frustrated."

Her two teenage children have tested positive and are confined to one room in the house. Goss, who wears a mask inside her home every day, has tested positive for exposure.

Her chest X-ray was normal, but her elderly mother has an active case of tuberculosis and her 6-month-old niece is hospitalized with complications from contracting tuberculosis.

Goss is trying to keep her home as germ-free as possible by cleaning constantly.

Her children will go back to school when they are no longer contagious but will receive antibiotic treatments for the next nine months.

Jeannine Ohrmundt, who does not have children at Ennis High School, said her family will get tested "just in case."

"I mean, we've been hearing about this for some time now," she said. "You feel concerned, and you're questioning if it was handled properly."

Tuberculosis is spread through prolonged, close contact.

Elderly Man Caught in Crossfire of Deadly Shootout

Elderly Man Caught in Crossfire of Deadly Shootout

Residents in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn are mourning the death of a popular local man they say was caught in a deadly crossfire Wednesday evening.

The 79-year-old man was shot while sitting in front of a barber shop at 358 Marcus Garvey Blvd. at about 5:30 p.m. when a shootout broke out, police said.

The man, who neighbors said was a local named Andy Burke, was struck in the neck when around four shots were fired on the street.

Burke was rushed to Interfaith Medical Center, where he was later pronounced dead. 

Police are investigating the shooting.

81-Year-Old Woman Raped in Her Home: Police

81-Year-Old Woman Raped in Her Home: Police

An 81-year-old woman was awakened in her bed by a man who broke into her Southwest Philadelphia home. The man beat and raped the elderly woman for two hours, police say.

The attack happened the night of Sept. 19 in the woman’s house on the 1300 block of South 51st Street, where the elderly woman has lived for 51 years.

“Perpetrator said, 'don't look at me!' My mother looked so he beat her before he did whatever he did,” a family member told USA LOCAL NEWS. “He stayed in that house for two hours.”

Police say that the man entered the home through a side window and then left through the back door.

The victim’s son and daughter told USA LOCAL NEWS that the attacker beat their mother in the face, busted her lip, and choked her until she almost died.

Although their mother’s physical wounds are healing, emotionally she's got a long road to recovery.

"She's completely embarrassed about what has happened, that's her feelings about it,” her daughter says. “She hasn't told us everything but the things she's told us were brutal."

The Dating Game Has a New Set of Rules

The book "The Rules: Time-Tested Secrets for Capturing the Heart of Mr. Right," published in 1995 and once considered the guide to modern dating, is no longer the final word on how to date.

In fact, those regimented rules don't necessarily work.

"He's not going to land up on your doorstep, you know, that only happens on TV," said relationship expert Dr. Ava Cadell.

For years, Cadell has been telling singles, all is fair in the dating game.

"There are no rules to dating," said Cadell. "There are just lots and lots of options."

Cadell suggests singles should be cautious, but open. Dating in today's world is all about technology and to succeed, singles must embrace it.

"Now, couples are texting instead of kissing and talking and communicating and even having foreplay -- they're sexting instead," she said.

Cadell suggests there are a couple ways to increase the chances of finding a soul mate.

Date a lot. The dating game is a numbers game, she said.

Don't put limitations on a relationship before it even becomes serious.

"Give people a chance, even if there isn't the immediate chemistry, they might be friends with your soul mate," she said.

VIDEO: Shooting on Crowded Brooklyn Street

Police have released video of a shooting on a crowded street in Brooklyn in the hope the public can help identify the gunman.

The shooting happened at about 3 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 27, in front of a McDonalds restaurant at 2154 Nostrand Ave., according to police.

In the video, the shooter, seen wearing a red jacket and light colored pants, comes out of the restaurant with two other men. One of the men, dressed in all black, is seen on the left side of the screen walking backwards and handing a black bag to the other man, who's wearing a white t-shirt and dark jeans.

The man in the white t-shirt then removes a .32 caliber S&W revolver from the bag, places it in his waistband and hands it over to the gunman.

The gunman then shoots at the 18-year-old victim as the victim goes to enter the restaurant.

The shooter and his accomplices fled into the McDonalds and escaped through a side door, police said.

Anyone with information is asked to contact police at 800-577-TIPS or at

usa-local-news.blogspot.com

.

Court: Mass Killer Not Competent for Execution

Court: Mass Killer Not Competent for Execution

Pennsylvania's highest court has ruled that mass killer George Banks is mentally incompetent to be executed.

The state Supreme Court issued a unanimous ruling Wednesday regarding the man who killed 13 people with a semi-automatic rifle in northeastern Pennsylvania nearly 30 years. The victims included five of his own children.

Banks was convicted and has been on death row since the shootings near Wilkes-Barre occurred in 1982.

In 2004, then-Gov. Ed Rendell signed a death warrant for Banks but the execution was stayed after his mother filed a petition asserting that it would violate the U.S. Constitution.

In the latest ruling, the justices said testimony by medical experts at a competency hearing last year established that Banks suffers from severe mental illness and is delusional about his crimes and punishment.

 

Terra Cotta Warriors Visit SoCal

Los Angeles is about to play host to some big-time Chinese VIPs.

On loan from China are 200 incredibly preserved ancient works of art from three Chinese dynasties. They will be on display at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, starting Oct. 1.

The exhibition is a sequel to the museum's incredibly popular Terra Cotta Warrior exhibit in 2008. It now has never-before-seen pieces. It's a collection that spans 1,000 years of Chinese history, including the Silk Road, made famous by Marco Polo.

Many of the items came from ancient Chinese tombs, which are structured like dwellings on earth, according to a news release from the museum. These tombs contain replicas of all the attendants, food, animals, and in the case of emperors, warriors and government officials, needed to ensure a prosperous and comfortable afterlife for the deceased.

The exhibition features four of the famous life-size Terra Cotta Warriors, protectors of China's First Emperor Qin Shihuangdi, whose mausoleum complex is considered the eighth wonder of the world, according to the museum.

Also on display are smaller Terra Cotta Warriors from the imperial tomb complex of the famous Han rebel-turned-emperor and from the fifth Han emperor Jingdi. According to the museum, like their larger counterparts, these warriors have individualized features and are completely outfitted for battle. Only their expressions are peaceful, reflecting that this was a less oppressive dynasty.

And while these warriors have survived for thousands of years, museum officials want to make sure they survive their visit here to earthquake country. Experts have come up with a plan to keep the collection safe in case a quake hits.

"We have ways in which we can tie things off with monofilament," said Paul Johnson, exhibit designer. "We have neoprene, clear vinyl line to hold some of the figures on top of the horses so that they can't rock."

"Warriors, Tombs and Temples: China's Enduring Legacy" opens Saturday, Oct. 1, and runs through Sunday, March 4, 2012.

Judge in Murray Trial Regarded as No Nonsense

He is 62 years old, a graduate of USC School of Law and one of the most respected members of the Los Angeles County bench.

Special Section: The Conrad Murray Trial

He's also the man presiding over the case of People vs. Conrad Murray.

Meet judge Michael Pastor, the jurist who thus far has kept the trial on time and interruption free. He has a standing order to legal counsel to come prepared.

 

Pastor is no nonsense, said NBC4 legal analyst Royal Oakes.

 

"He's very conscious of the fact that in the past, people have criticized judges in high-profile trials. It seems very clear that he wants to be very fair to the jury and fair to the lawyers, but he wants to move them along as quickly as possible without rushing them," Oakes said.

 

A one-time member of the LA City Attorney's office, the New York native was appointed to the bench by Jerry Brown during his first tenure as governor back in 1983.

 

Pastor has had his share of high-profile cases, sentencing actor Jason Priestley in 2000 to five days in jail on a DUI conviction. Actress Cameron Diaz was in his court. Pastor sentenced a photographer to four years in jail for trying to extort $3 million from Diaz for topless photos he took of her when she was 19.

 

Of the massive LA County bench, Pastor is only one of 10 judges designated to handle so called "complex litigation long cause" cases. Attorneys from both the prosecution and defense said he has the right balance between running a tight ship and being cordial to all parties.

"Judge Pastor's hallmark really is preparation. He wants to know the case better than the lawyers, better than the witnesses if at all possible, because he know he has to make instantaneous judgments about admissibility of evidence and clearly, even though the trial hasn't been on too long, it's very evident that he knows his stuff and he knows this case," Oakes said.

NJ Community Demands Answers in Police Shooting Death

NJ Community Demands Answers in Police Shooting Death

Community members gathered Wednesday night to demand answers in the shooting death of Barry Deloatch, the unarmed shot and killed by police in New Brunswick, N.J. last Thursday.

"This isn't just an affront to the Deloatch family, but to all people," said Walter L. Hudson, a spokesman for the Deloatch family.

Hudson went on to announce a plan to "shut New Brunswick down" on Oct. 22, a day some activist groups have designated National Coalition Against Police Brutality Day.

"We are going to shut down traffic," Hudson told the crowd gathered at the Ebenezer Baptist Church. "They are going to listen to us."

Barry Deloatch, 47, was shot just after midnight on Sept. 22, after two police officers chased him into an alley off Throop Avenue and Handy Street. Prosecutors said the officers, who were on routine patrol, stopped to question Deloatch and two other men, and Deloatch fled.

 

The officers then followed him into an alley, "where a struggle ensued and resulted in the shooting," prosecutors said in a statement.

He did not have a gun when he was shot by police. Sources said Deloatch was armed with a stick and hitting officers, but his family maintains he had no weapon of any type on him.

New Brunswick police have remained silent on the incident.

"Let's face it, New Brunswick has had a troubled police department for a very long time," Deborah Jacobs, a local representative from the American Civil Liberties Union, said at the meeting. She asked people to sign a letter by ACLU urging the federal government to probe the shooting. 

Jacobs also showed the crowd a bust card, detailing the rights a civilian has when stopped by police.

The New Brunswick-area branch of NAACP organized the meeting Wednesday. "NAACP has been involved with this from the outset and will continue to be involved until justice has been served for Barry Deloatch and processes are in place to stop these wanton killings in our community," NAACP president Bruce Morgan said in an email announcing the meeting.

Mayor James Cahill last Friday said it was "fully understandable" that people wanted answers but asked for patience as the Middlesex County prosecutors office investigates.

Prosecutors said the two officers have been placed on administrative leave pending the investigation. One has been an officer for two and a half years, the other for six years.

Closure Imminent for Lincoln Theatre

Closure Imminent for Lincoln Theatre

The historic Lincoln Theatre is running out of operational funding, and the city, which owns the theater, says the current budget doesn't include money for the U Street landmark.

The theater, one of the District's most famous landmarks, may be forced to close.

"I don't know how the Lincoln's gonna survive another year," said Jim Graham, Ward 1 councilmember, who sits on the theater's board of directors.

Graham and the other Lincoln board members are holding an emergency meeting Wednesday evening to decide what comes next.

This isn't the first time the Lincoln has been on the brink of closure. Officials were set to announce the theater's closure this summer, but city leaders were able to inject $250,000 of funding at the last minute.

Lincoln Theatre first opened in 1922 to serve D.C.'s black community at a time when segregation kept them from visiting other vees. It was restored and reopened in 1994, and was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1993.

Cable Company Offers Wireless Phones

Cable Company Offers Wireless Phones

Cox Communications already has a foothold in thousand of San Diego homes, now they want to follow their customers when they are out the door.  Cox is now offering wireless service, competing with the likes of AT&T, Sprint and Verizon.

"There will be bumps," said Cox Communications General Manager Dave Bialis, "but they will be small bumps...and then you end up with a better product."

Cox learned from an attempt to get into the wireless market a few years ago but that didn't work out.  Now the cable giant is creating special Cox Solutions stores that look more like an Apple or Sony store.  The stores will sell phones and offer customer service.

But trying to get noticed in the wireless business won't be easy for Cox.

"It's a very tough marketplace, this is a brutal business," said marketing consultant George Whalin.  Whalin says the biggest advantage Cox has over the other wireless companies is a built in customer base and the ability to bundle their services.

Dave Bialis says they will offer bundle packages with the new wireless service, "You might get a free premium service, free unlimited long distance on your home phone, those kinds of things."

The Cox phone service will also pay back customers for unused minutes, depending on the plan that could be as much as $20 a month.

The Cox phone plan will only be offered to people in their business area which makes up about 75% of the San Diego market.  However, since the phone coverage is handled by Sprint, the phones will work anywhere there is Sprint service.  The phones themselves come from popular manufacturers like HTC, Motorola and Samsung.  But George Whalin says it's not about the phones.

"The telephone business is not a good business," said Whalin, "The deal is monthly fees.  It's the monthly charges and the cash flow in those things that is astonishing."

UMD Wins Architecture Award at Solar Decathlon

UMD Wins Architecture Award at Solar Decathlon

The University of Maryland's entry in its Solar Decathlon competition has taken first place for architecture, the Department of Energy said. The overall winner will be announced Saturday.

The competition pits university designed solar-powered homes against each other. The homes are on display this week on the National Mall's West Potomac Park.

The competition involves 10 contests that gauge each house on factors including performance, livability and affordability. The winning home will produce as much or more energy than it consumes.

Maryland's entry is called WaterShed and includes water-saving as well as energy-saving technologies. Maryland, Ohio State and Purdue lead the overall standings. The engineering winner will be announced Thursday.

Martinsville Unemployment Rate Up in August

Martinsville Unemployment Rate Up in August

The city of Martinsville has the highest unemployment rate in the state of Virginia, according to the Virginia Employment Commission. 

The agency reported today that the city’s seasonally unadjusted unemployment rate jumped to 19.4 percent in August up from 17.1 percent in July.  

Arlington County had the lowest jobless rate in the state with 3.9 percent in August, followed by Loudoun County at 4.4 percent. 

Nationally, the seasonally unadjusted unemployment rate was 9.1 percent. 

The Danville region had the highest unemployment rate among metropolitan areas in Virginia with 10.3 percent. 

 

Woman Claims Dogs Were Poisoned

Woman Claims Dogs Were Poisoned

The San Diego County Department of Animal Services is investigating a likely case of animal cruelty.

 

An Ocean Beach dog owner said someone poisoned her two dogs.

 

Both died violently within a half hour of each other.

 
Deborah Powell treated her dogs like children. Her pit bull mix Ed was 5 and the 3-year-old Labrador was named Delilah.

 

“I love them so much,” Deborah Powell said. “They went everywhere with me.”

 

On Monday, she let them out of the house to play.

 

“The pit-mix ran straight to this side of the cot and swallowed something,” Powell said.

 

Four hours later, Ed started having a seizure

 

“Violent whole body seizures, whole body, tense violently seizing, foaming at the mouth,” Powell said.

 

Powell rushed to get him to the hospital, but he died on the way.

 

“He was already gone,” she said. “I tried CPR, but his heart already stopped.”

 

Not even 10 minutes after she got home.... Powell's other dog Delilah had a seizure too.

She died at the hospital.

 

“They went from being completely non-symptomatic to dead in 25 minutes.”

 

The Department of Animal Services said it's likely someone poisoned the dogs.

"For two dogs to die that quickly in a yard... Yeah, that does not point to a natural cause," Daniel DeSousa with the San Diego Department of Animal Services said,

 

But it's hard to pinpoint who did it. Especially since no one has filed any complaints against Powell's dogs.

 

“Without a witness to a case, these kinds of cases are very difficult, almost impossible to prove.”

 

Animal Services said the suspect, if ever caught, could face felony animal cruelty charges.

 

A neighbor is offering a $1,000 reward for information.

 

Anyone with information is encouraged to call Animal Services at 619-236-2341.

A Shark's Tale: Shark Washed Ashore in Venice Beach Rescued

A Shark's Tale: Shark Washed Ashore in Venice Beach Rescued

A group of Venice Beach surfers came to the rescue of a baby great white shark that had washed ashore near the Venice Pier on Saturday morning.

A fisherman had realized that a shark had hooked onto his line. He and several other fishermen ran down to the beach to pull the shark from the water.

Elvia Van Es, a Venice Beach resident, caught the incident on her camera phone, and posted it on YouTube (warning: contains graphic language).

"Everyone was terrified…This guy in the yellow shorts came out of nowhere," said Van Es. "People started screaming. Guys were yelling, 'shark. It’s a shark. He caught a shark.'"

The man in the yellow shorts, known to locals as Willy, approached the shark and struggled to remove the hook from its mouth.

"The poor shark was bleeding. It was nerve racking," said Van Es.

After the hook was dislodged, Willy and three other men helped drag the shark back into the ocean.

"I wanted to give him the video," said Van Es. "I wanted to tell him, 'You’re amazing. You’re such a hero. I don't have your contact information.'"

Van Es said that’s when Willy got shy and disappeared.

When she approached lifeguards to tell them of what had just happened, Van Es said they weren’t surprised to learn who had saved the day.

"Oh yeah, that’s Willy," said a lifeguard on duty. "We call him the ‘Animal Whisperer.'"

Warning: Video contains graphic language:

 

Suspect ID'd in CSUN Gun Scare

Suspect ID'd in CSUN Gun Scare

Schools officials have identified a California State University, Northridge philosophy student whose alleged comments about having a gun triggered a daylong law enforcement response and partial campus shutdown.

Gahren Moradian, 22, of Burbank surrendered to authorities about 8 p.m. Tuesday, CSUN's Christina Villalobos told City News Service.

The gun scare started with initial reports to university police about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. Witnesses said a man was at the library wearing a white T-shirt emblazoned with the words "human rights violation."

Someone had approached the man, who appeared to be "in distress," and asked if he was OK, said Carmen Ramos Chandler of Cal State Northridge. Apparently, that is when he indicated he had a weapon, though none was seen.

"He indicated that he had a gun and made comments that he was planning to use it," Villalobos said.

Campus police evacuated the Oviatt Library and began a search for the suspect while circulating his description. The campus, however, remained open.

A student contacted authorities and provided a photo of someone fitting the man's description, which authorities also distributed. Moradian turned himself in hours later.

Police used bomb-sniffing dogs during the library search, but found "nothing threatening," said Chandler. 

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Divided Dallas Council Approves Trash Plan

All Dallas garbage must now go to the city's McCommas Bluff Landfill, doubling truck traffic to the area, after a sharply divided City Council vote Wednesday.

The "Flow Control" plan first unveiled in May forecasts that Dallas trash will be treasure in the future as recycling technology and methods for turning waste into energy improve.

City officials say high-tech businesses would spring up around the landfill in the future with the additional volume of garbage. The size of the landfill may actually decline over time as stored garbage is used as fuel, the city says.

Private haulers collect commercial waste in Dallas, much of which is taken to private landfills outside the city limits.

City officials estimate it costs Dallas taxpayers up to $18 million that would otherwise be collected in landfill fees at McCommas Bluff.

"That is the fundamental issue," Mayor Mike Rawlings said. "I am going to vote for the taxpayers."

Private haulers and landfill owners lobbied heavily against the change.

"All the community and my clients are asking you to do is put this on hold and look at all of the options," public relations consultant David Margulies told the council. "It's going to turn out to be a bad decision, it will generate more negative press, and there are better things you can do to ease your concerns about having money for parks."

Neighbors around the city landfill near Interstate 45 and Interstate 20 complained that increased truck traffic could further discourage development in the already blighted area.

"It does not promote, in my opinion, economic development," Councilman Vonciel Hill said. "In my opinion, it stymies economic development."

Paul Quinn College is on Simpson Stuart Road on the other side of I-45 from the landfill. Dozens of students wore T-shirts that read, "We are not trash," to the meeting.

The Rev. Dr. Stephen Nash of Mount Tabor Baptist Church said the neighborhood has heard promises of economic development for many years.

"It's insulting when our economic development project for our community is the same old same old, and one that North Dallas wouldn't tolerate," he said.

To appease critics, the city also promised $1 million of the additional landfill money each year for a community improvement program, and Nash supported the deal.

"Let's not get amnesia about our community partnering once the deal is done," he said.

Councilman Tennell Atkins said discussions are underway with a developer about a new grocery store on Simpson Stuart Road.

Rawlings promised to form a task force with "the best and the brightest" to see that the environmental and economic development promises of flow control are met, and that the community is involved.

"This is a moment of truth for the city of Dallas to decide whether we're going to find something to improve Southern Dallas or if we're just going to talk a good game," Rawlings said.

The City Council approved the trash plan by a 9-6 vote. The council rejected a motion 8-7 to delay the plan for 90 days of additional study.

Officers Leaving Faster Than Replacements Can Be Trained: Police Union

Officers Leaving Faster Than Replacements Can Be Trained: Police Union

D.C. plans to hire 300 new police officers, but the union says they might be able to train them fast enough to keep up with departing officers.

The police department will be ready to train a class of 35 recruits starting Oct. 4, Mayor Vincent Gray said Wednesday. Monthly training classes will consist of 25 to 35 recruits.

Funding for the hiring begins at the start of the new fiscal year on Oct. 1.

The goal is to build the department to 3,900 sworn officers by the end of the 2012 fiscal year. About 3,800 officers are on the force now, but 15-30 quit or retire monthly, News4’s Tom Sherwood reported.

The force is dangerously understaffed, according to union head Kristopher Baumann. City leaders have known for years that the force is effectively shrinking and the new hiring plan won't fix it, he told News4’s Tom Sherwood. People leave faster than new officers can be hired and trained.

The police shortage erupted at the monthly breakfast meeting of the mayor and D.C. Council. Gray said training was shut down before he was mayor.

Rodents Move Into Arlington High

Arlington High School has some unwelcome guests.

Construction at the campus has displaced rats and mice that once inhabited the site of future classrooms and a new cafeteria.

"Unfortunately, because of the construction, a lot of times you have these types of things happen," said Amy Casas, Arlington Independent School District spokeswoman. "You have these animals that are unsettled, and so they tend to come out when you have construction."

She said the displaced rodents have been a slight nuisance but said the district is working on getting rid of them. School maintenance crews and an outside company are working on the problem, she said.

"Of course, we know that this isn't pleasant for anyone, but we certainly want to work to address the issue," Casas said.

Afghanistan Vet Dies After Fight Downtown

Afghanistan Vet Dies After Fight Downtown

An Afghanistan war veteran and George Washington University student died following an altercation outside a D.C. fast food restaurant.

Patrick David Casey, 33, got into a verbal altercation early Friday morning outside the McDonald’s at 19th and M streets, police said. It escalated, and Casey was struck. He fell and hit his head, police said.

Three people ran from the scene, witnesses said.

No one has been arrested.

Casey was working toward a graduate degree in international affairs.

He served in the U.S. Army infantry and returned from Afghanistan last year.

Chargers' Gates: Time to Rest

Chargers' Gates: Time to Rest

Chargers tight end Antonio Gates has caught 537 passes in his career.

For the past two weeks, the only thing he's received has been suggestions.

Freeze a water bottle and roll your foot over it. Use heel cuffs. Wear flip flops.

“You'd be amazed with how many people on Twitter give me different solutions to try to solve my problem,” Gates said Wednesday with a laugh.

After missing last week's game against the Kansas City Chiefs, Gates has decided that prolonged rest is the best route to take if he's to overcome plantar fascitis, which has lingered since last season.

“To me, it's the only solution I haven't tried yet, and I think that's where I'm at it with this point,” said Gates, who spent the offseason without the benefit of the Chargers training staff due to the lockout. "I've done just about whatever it is you can do. Whatever you can imagine, I've done it. So at this point, rest is the only thing that was left for me to try to do and to figure out how to get this thing heeled and back on the football field.”

The Chargers have two games before their Week 6 bye. Asked if he could rest and return in Week 7, Gates, 31, couldn't say.

However extremely unlikely, even this Sunday could be a possibility, he said.

“It'd be difficult; I must say,” Gates said. “There have been times where I've been pretty optimistic about going there, but you know, who's to say? I could tell you what. In a span of two to three days, I've seen miracles happen with my body, personally …

“I'm just trying to stay in it mentally. That's all I can do. Hopefully I can get to the point where I can contribute physically for this football team because, ideally, that's what I get paid to do. I'm just trying to stay in it mentally until I'm able to do something physically.”

Gates finds reasons to stay optimistic.

When he tears scar tissue and it rebuilds, he feels stronger than he did before. Also, the pain now is less severe than last year when he tore his plantar fascia and sustained the plantar fascitis.

His foot no longer bothers him when he wakes up in the morning. He can walk pain-free.

It only troubles him when he plays.

"I just have to take time off," Gates said.

He will test the foot every day. When he feels pain when running and cutting, he knows he must wait longer. When he feels just soreness, Gates said, he'll be ready.

"I'm quite sure there's going to be  some soreness there, and I can deal with that," Gates said. "But pain is my No. 1 determinant factor in whether I go or don't go. It ain't the soreness. It has nothing to do with soreness.

"The one thing I've learned over the last eight years is if you can only play when you're 100 percent healthy, then you really serve no purpose to this team, this league. That ain't what I'm trying to do. I'm not trying to get to a point where it's all going away. I'm just trying to get to a point where I can tolerate it and go out and play."

Wildfires Hit Texas Agriculture for $152 Million

Wildfires Hit Texas Agriculture for $152 Million

Enough fencing to cross Texas from east to west nearly seven times, more than 1,500 head of livestock and swaths of pasture nearly twice the area of Delaware have burned in Texas wildfires this year.

As if the state's crippling drought hadn't banged up Texas agriculture enough, experts with Texas AgriLife Extension Service said Wednesday the wildfires continue to burn through the dried remains on a daily basis.

David Anderson, an economist with the service, estimated Texas agriculture lost $152.1 million through Sept. 19. The bulk of that total comes from the 5,965 miles of fences and other infrastructure that burned. Second are the nearly three million acres of scorched pasture.

That all comes on top of the estimated $5.2 billion lost to crops and livestock from the drought in Texas. It has been the worst single-year drought on record and more than four-fifths of Texas is in exceptional drought.

Since wildfire season started on Nov. 15, 2010, officials say firefighters have responded to 23,519 fires. And there doesn't appear to be an end in sight.

The Texas Forest Service said this week that the wildfire danger would continue through fall and possibly into winter. Below average moisture and above average temperatures are predicted through the end of the year.

Timber losses have also been huge in East Texas where more than 200,000 acres or $97 million of timber have burned since the start of wildfire season last November.

Sewage Spill Could Cost City

Sewage Spill Could Cost City

The sewage spills from two blacked out San Diego pump stations earlier this month could cost city residents a ton of money.

Questions are now being raised about a decision nearly ten years ago, when the city didn’t invest in backup generators.

When the SDG&E grid was blacked out on Sept. 8, the pumps at waste water stations 1 and 64 both lost their dual electric power feeds.

A 2002 consultant's report had recommended installing backup generators there, for about $3 million apiece.

But that didn't happen.

The result? Raw sewage flooded through the stations for five hours.

The outflow from Pump Station 64 went into Los Penasquitos Creek, its lagoon, and out into the ocean at Torrey Pines State Beach, prompting closures for five miles in each direction for nearly six days.

City officials are reporting a total of 2.6 million gallons for that spill.

"We still see spills even during localized outages,” Travis Pritchard, a Coastkeeper environmental scientist said. “It doesn't take a giant, region-wide outage to cause the sewage spills."

At Pump Station 1, the original figure cited for the sewage that ran into the Sweetwater River and San Diego Bay was 120,000 gallons.

But that's since been revised upwards by a factor of 6 to 870,000.

"I would like the city to take steps to make sure proper backup is in place,” Pritchard said.

The Public Utilities Department is now re-assessing the need for non-grid 'redundancy' at those stations and several others among the 82 the city operates.

At Station 64, the site may only accommodate an emergency portable generator.

 

Environmentalists say the 'unprecedented' scope of the SDG&E blackout is something officials now have to take into consideration going forward.

"I don't want to second-guess the decision made in 2001 or 2002, because at that time that may have been the best decision for the city,” San Diego Public Utilities Department Assistant Anna Sasaki said. “Whenever you have incidents happen, you take stock. You reevaluate. And that is what we're going to be doing."

Second Stray Pot Belly Pig Captured in Anne Arundel Co.

Second Stray Pot Belly Pig Captured in Anne Arundel Co.

A second homeless, domestic pot belly pig seen living for weeks around an office park near the Baltimore-Washington Parkway in Linthicum has been safely captured, according to Anne Arundel County Animal Control.

The male pig named after a frog -- Kermit, since his previously captured female counterpart was called Miss Piggy -- was tranquilized and apprehended on Hammonds Ferry Road Wednesday.

Officers caught Miss Piggy last week.

The couple will be spayed and neutered and put up for adoption if no one claims them.

The Maryland Department of Natural Resources determined the pigs weren’t feral and not an ecological danger when they were loose.

The pigs may have been pets that outgrew their welcome and were abandoned, DNR officials suggested.

SDPD Captain Retires After 41 Years

After 41 years of service, Capt. Jim Collins is retiring from the San Diego Police Department.

Wednesday afternoon his colleagues lined up, saluting him, as he walked out the doors of the downtown headquarters.

“I’d say it's been a great career,” Collins said. “I've had a good time, I've been very fortunate; I've had some great assignments.”

Those assignments have included many high profile cases like that of Robert Alton Harris. Collins and his partner Steve Baker surrounded Harris' hide-out in Mira Mesa in July, 1975, and took Harris into custody.

They did not know at the time of the arrest, one of the boys Harris had shot in the head was Baker's own son. Collins was the one to give his partner the news.

As head of the robbery unit, he also investigated the Danielle Van Dam case, when he says he and his team worked 16 to 18 hour days, seven days a week to get a solid case against David Westerfield.

“A little girl, totally innocent little girl, taken out of her bed in the middle of the night,” he said with a sad tone.

In his office, a picture of Danielle hangs on the wall beneath a citation for exceptional performance. 

There is also a picture of friend and former San Diego Police Department partner, Julie Cross, killed in the line of duty while working for the Secret Service.  There's also a book of notes dating back to 1972, many from civilians, thanking him for his professionalism, commitment and compassion.

“Homicide is the ultimate crime," he said, "There is no worse crime. The victim can't speak for themselves, so we have to speak for the victim.”

He said he will miss the people who made the job great.

"It's going to be kind of emotional, I'm looking forward to retirement,” Collins said. “I earned it after all this time.”

Giuliani Looks in NH for Possible Presidential Bid

Giuliani Looks in NH for Possible Presidential Bid

Rudy Giuliani has dispatched a key emissary to New Hampshire to gauge interest in a possible presidential bid.

The former New York City mayor's top political adviser, Jake Menges, hosted private meetings Wednesday with several New Hampshire Republicans. They included Manchester Mayor Ted Gatsas, likely gubernatorial candidate Kevin Smith, Congressman Charlie Bass and Stephen Talarico, owner of Manchester Harley-Davidson.

Giuliani has visited New Hampshire four times this year, but has been noncommittal about his intentions. Menges didn't indicate a final timeline for his decision.

Smith, a Giuliani supporter in 2008, says there may be room for Giuliani given continued dissatisfaction with the current Republican presidential candidates.

But time is running out. New Hampshire will host the nation's first Republican presidential primary in less than four months.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.

History Buffs Fighting to Save Old Building

In Rockwall County, there’s a fight to preserve a piece of history.

The county has decided to sell the old Rockwall County Annex Building, leaving the fate of the 94-year-old building in the hands of the buyer.

Rockwall Historian Sherri Fowler said the annex is valuable piece of property and that it's been a fixture for seven generations of her family.

History buffs like Fowler hope to save the annex, which was built in 1917 as a Ford dealership. As the county moves forward, they hope it won’t forget its past.

"I think all those generations might be sad that we might be losing a piece of Rockwall history,” said Fowler, who is the chair of the Rockwall County Historical Commission.

But the annex is building the county can no longer afford or use, so the county commissioners voted to sell it and move the offices taking up residence in the annex to the new county courthouse.

"Unfortunately it would be a great parking lot for either the county or the city,” said Rockwall County Commissioner David Magness. "But I think we'll let someone else make the decision on what to do with that."

The new courthouse will have a dedication ceremony on Nov. 11, Veterans Day.

Water Returns to One Fort Worth Pool

Summer just ended, but the city of Fort Worth is already preparing for next summer.

After a briefing to the city council last week, city parks crews started the process of getting Marine Park Pool ready for next May.

Those who visit the park this week may think they're seeing a mirage as water is actually flowing into the pools for the first time in more than two years.

No one will be swimming in the water until the start of next summer, but crews are presently checking to see how well it holds water. Parks officials have said that they know there are leaks, pipe issues and tile problems, but $120,000 should get the pool ready for a summer run in 2012. It will cost another $100,000 to operate the pool.

The reason why Marine Park Pool was selected is that the facility, built in 1926, is in the best condition and that Northside has no other alternatives.

"There are no YMCAs, the school districts around here don't have pools, this area is the greatest need," said Fort Worth City Councilman Sal Espino.

The preparations for next summer will be for just a short run, because after next summer comes to an end so too will the 85-year-old pool.

"In May 2013, it's going to be a brand new pool, a family aquatic center," Espino said. "[With a] shade house, slide, bath house for $3.5 million, funded by community development block grants."

During this year's election most council members campaigned on opening up the city pools again. Residents were clamoring for something during the record summer heat and are pleased to be seeing some signs of progress.

"I think it's a good idea for the kids around here so they can come and have fun," said Cecilia Juarez, who lives near the park.

Her young children don't know how to swim just yet, but she's hoping with the pool opening they will have that chance.

As of right now there are no other plans regarding the city's aquatic center. The current plan costs $66 million and can't be fully implemented. The parks advisory committee will look at the best way to move forward with additional pools, until then Marine Park may be the city's only entry in the pool business.

However, councilman Joel Burns is working on a public-private partnership to get Forrest Park Pool up and running again, but its not clear how close that is to being accomplished.

911 Calls Reveal Moments After Husband-Wife Shooting

Newly released 911 recordings depict a New Jersey man -- who was later accused of arranging his wife's killing -- screaming in agony and pleading with emergency dispatchers to send medical help.

Kashif Parvaiz was trying to summon an ambulance to Cedar Street on Aug. 16, where he had been shot and his wife had suffered a fatal gunshot wound.

“I just got shot in my leg. I’m bleeding!” shouted the husband.

Detectives contend Parvaiz was performing an act on the phone when he called 911. Prosecutors say the 26-year-old husband and father actually orchestrated the death of his wife, Nazish Noorani, by conspiring with a female friend to stage a fatal ambush.

Both Parvaiz and his alleged accomplice, Antoinette Stephen, 27, are in jail awaiting trial on murder and conspiracy charges. Police say Stephen fired the bullets that killed Noorani, then purposely wounded Parvaiz to make it look like he was also a target of the attack. 

Mitchell Ansell, Parvaiz’s defense attorney, told USA LOCAL NEWS his client played no role in the plot to kill his wife, and that his co-defendant is solely responsible for the killing.

“There is no question she acted alone,” Ansell said. “My client was attacked and seriously wounded and we believe the evidence will show Ms. Stephen killed my client’s wife.”

USA LOCAL NEWS was unable to reach Stephen’s defense attorney for comment.  She has also pleaded not guilty.

Initially, investigators said Parvaiz described the attack as having been carried out by three men who shouted “terrorist” as they opened fire on the couple

Ansell said he hasn’t seen any statements made by his client to police.

“My client does dispute the content of those statements as set forth by the prosecutor,” he said.

 

ICE Arrests Thousands in 7-Day Sweep

ICE Arrests Thousands in 7-Day Sweep

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents recently fanned out across the country in a week-long sweep known as Cross Check.

They arrested 2,901 convicted criminals who are not U.S. citizens and were not legally in the country.

Arrests were made in all 50 states as well as four U.S. territories and involved a collaboration of more than 1,900 ICE officers and federal, state and local law enforcement agents.

"The results of this targeted enforcement operation underscore ICE's ongoing commitment and focus on the arrest and removal of convicted criminal aliens and those that game our nation's immigration system," ICE Director John Morton said. "Because of the tireless efforts and teamwork of ICE officers and agents in tracking down at-large criminal aliens and fugitives, there are 2,901 fewer criminal aliens in our neighborhoods across the country."

At least 1,282 of the arrested individuals had multiple criminal convictions. More than 1,600 of those arrested had felony convictions including manslaughter, attempted murder, kidnapping, armed robbery, drug trafficking, child abuse, sexual crimes against minors and aggravated assault. Of the total 2,901 people arrested, 42 were gang members and 151 were convicted sex offenders.

In addition to being convicted criminals, 681 of those arrested were also immigration fugitives who had previously been ordered to leave the country but failed to depart, ICE officials said. Additionally, 386 were illegal re-entrants who had been previously removed from the country multiple times. Because of their serious criminal histories and prior immigration arrest records, at least 146 of those arrested during the enforcement action were presented to U.S attorneys for prosecution on a variety of charges including illegal re-entry after deportation, a felony which carries a penalty of up to 20 years in prison.

This is the second Cross Check sweep this year and the largest. The first nationwide Cross Check operation in May resulted in the arrest of 2,442 convicted criminals.

Murder Trial Might Start in January for 25-Year LAPD Officer

Murder Trial Might Start in January for 25-Year LAPD Officer

The case of a 25-year member of the Los Angeles Police Department accused in the slaying of her ex-lover's wife in 1986 might go to trial next year.

Video: Interrogation of Former LAPD Detective

Jury selection is scheduled to begin Oct. 24 in the case of former LAPD Detective Stephanie Lazarus. The trial might begin in January, court officials told the Associated Press on Wednesday.

Lazarus, 51, pleaded not guilty to murder in the case of Sherri Rasmussen, who was shot three times at the victim's Van Nuys townhouse. In June 2009, investigators recorded video of Lazarus' interrogation.

During the interrogation, she was asked about Rasmussen.

"You're accusing me of this? Is that what you're saying?" Lazarus said. "I can't believe this."

Lazarus, who was not a suspect in 1986 because detectives believed two robbers were to blame, was arrested as she left the interrogation room.

It was a saliva sample taken from a bite on the victim's arm that linked Lazarus to the crime, according to investigators.

Follow USA LOCAL NEWS for the latest LA news, events and entertainment: Twitter: @USA LOCAL NEWS // Facebook: USA LOCAL NEWS

TJ Maxx, Dallas Co. DA Bust Major Theft Ring

TJ Maxx, Dallas Co. DA Bust Major Theft Ring

Investigators with the Dallas County District Attorney's office joined up with the parent company of TJ Maxx to break-up a major theft ring.

Seventeen people have been indicted in the case, accused of stealing thousands of dollars from the TJX Companies which owns TJ Maxx, Marshalls and Home Goods.

The group would then return the stolen merchandise for gift cards which they would sell on websites like Ebay, Craigslist and even Facebook.

The arrests were the result of a year-long investigation between the DA's office and the retailer.

"We all know we're in a down economy, and we know people aren't spending as much as they used to as consumers," says Chief Investigator, Tony Robinson. "For a major retail corporation to take this kind of loss, we're talking in excess of $400,000 that we know of, it's a major impact on a corporation's bottom line."

The investigator described the group as highly organized and said they may soon have expanded their operations to other parts of the state or country.

 

Police Investigate Queens Playground Torching

Police Investigate Queens Playground Torching

Several city agencies are investigating the torching of a children's playground at the Alley Pond Park in Queens.

The arson happened sometime between Tuesday evening and Wednesday morning, according to authorities. Fire was set to the playground at the park, located at Springfield Boulevard and 76th Avenue in Oakland Gardens, damaging the ground surface and several pieces of playground equipment.

Both police and the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation are investigating.

Local City Council member Mark Weprin said thousands of local children use the playground.

"Anyone who witnessed the action or has relevant information should come forward," said Weprin. "The children of our community have lost access to a beautiful and safe place to play."

Anyone with information is asked to contact the NYPD Crime Stoppers hotline at 800-577-TIPS.

Lancaster Mother Pleads Not Guilty to Drunk Driving

Lancaster Mother Pleads Not Guilty to Drunk Driving

Stanesha Nicole Allen, the Lancaster mother involved in a car crash Sunday morning that injured 6 children, pleaded not guilty to drunk driving and flipping an SUV on Wednesday.

Allen was charged with 6 counts of child abuse and child restraint law violation, as well as single counts of DUI, according to the District Attorney’s Office.

The crash occurred at 6:15 AM on Sunday morning when Allen, behind the wheel of a 2002 Toyota Sequoia on Avenue I, drifted off the road. Her vehicle flipped onto a dirt shoulder near 65th Street East, ejectingsome passengers and injuring others.

Allen’s 2 year-old foster son had his left leg and right food amputated, and her 4 year-old daughter suffered a fractured skull, according to the Los Angeles Daily News.

The other 4 children in the vehicle were transported to Antelope Valley Hospital on Sunday to receive treatment for their injuries. 

Allen’s bail is set at $1.7 million. She could receive a maximum 19-year prison sentence if convicted.

Allen will return to court on October 7th.

 

Pilot OK After Plane Upends at Meacham

Pilot OK After Plane Upends at Meacham

A plane upended after landing at Fort Worth Meacham Airport Wednesday.

The plane was landing when it ended up off of the runway and on its nose. 

The pilot, who was the only person on board, was not injured.

According to the tail number, the aircraft is a 1973 Cessna A185F out of Fort Worth and is registered to Ten South Skywagon LLC.

The FAA is investigating.

Pilots Report More Laser Attacks in North Texas

Pilots Report More Laser Attacks in North Texas

Pilots are reporting more laser attacks in the skies above above North Texas.

"Laser attacks on aircraft, and we do call them attacks because they are very dangerous, they're on the increase", says Scott Shankland with the Allied Pilots Association.

The bright light from a laser can leave pilots momentarily blinded.

The latest incident occurred just before 10:30pm Tuesday, when American Airlines Flight #657 to Albuquerque was still climbing after taking off from DFW airport. The green laser light filled the cockpit as the MD-80 was about two miles above North Forth Worth.

"You've got a very dark cockpit and all of a sudden the cockpit is illuminated with a very bright light. it's equivalent to having someone stick a flash camera in front of your face in the dark and set it off" says Shankland. "About 93 percent of the attacks are by green lasers and the problem with green lasers is they are much more powerful they have a far greater range and the wavelength of the green lasers are the ones that can actually cause permanent eye damage."

Pilots have already reported 2500 incidents nationwide this year -- nearly the same number as all of last year. There have been 64 this year in North Texas alone, and four of them happened just this week.

"A lot of people like to think of this as a prank or a science experiment to see how far they can shine the laser, but we consider it to be a potential threat to human life," says Lynn Lunsford, the regional spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration. "Many of the events that we have are probably inadvertent, but there have been quite a growing number of events that are clearly on purpose"

In a written statement, American Airlines spokesman Tim Smith emailed "aiming a laser at any aircraft is an extraordinarily dumb thing to do".

When violators are found, the FAA is cracking down with fines up to $11,000 per incident.

Season-Ticket Holders Fight for Dodger Bankruptcy Representation

Season-Ticket Holders Fight for Dodger Bankruptcy Representation

The Los Angeles Dodgers season-ticket holders are continuing their fight to have a say in the team's bankruptcy hearing.

Special Section: The Changeup

The group filed a motion Tuesday with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware seeking the court's appointment of an official committee, said Robbin L. Itkin, an attorney representing the ticket holders.

"There should be an official committee of season ticket holders who can represent the interests of the approximately 17,000 season ticket holders in the bankruptcy cases," said Itkin in an e-mail to NBC LA.

This is the second attempt at representation in the case. The last request was denied by a judge on Sept. 14, said Itkin.

"The reality is that the debtors have opposed the basic desire of its most loyal and financially invested fans on whose goodwill they are dependent -- the season ticket holders -- to have a seat at the table in this reorganization," wrote the group in its latest motion (PDF).

The Dodgers filed for bankruptcy protection on June 27, blaming Major League Baseball for refusing to approve a multibillion-dollar TV deal with Fox Sports that owner Frank McCourt was counting on to keep the troubled franchise afloat and meet payroll.

Follow USA LOCAL NEWS for the latest LA news, events and entertainment: Twitter: @USA LOCAL NEWS // Facebook: USA LOCAL NEWS

Fort Worth Changes Domain Name

Fort Worth Changes Domain Name

The city of Fort Worth will change the domain name of it's official website on Saturday.

The new address, FortWorthTexas.gov, replaces FortWorthGov.org.

Government regulations require the city and state to be included in the name to avoid confusion with other government entities.

Current email addresses pointing to @fortworthgov.org will continue to work.

The cost to move to the new domain cost the city about $5,000.



 

Reebok Toning Shoes DonĂ¢€™t Tone: FTC

Reebok Toning Shoes DonĂ¢€™t Tone: FTC

Reebok has agreed to refund $25 million to consumers to settle charges of deceptive advertising.

Reebok deceptively advertised that its “toning shoes” strengthen and tone muscles, according to the Federal Trade Commission.

Reebok’s EasyTone walking shoes and RunTone running shoes have retailed for $80 to $100 per pair, while EasyTone flip flops have retailed for about $60 per pair. Ads for the shoes claimed that sole technology featuring pockets of moving air creates “micro instability” that tones and strengthens muscles as you walk or run.

“The FTC wants national advertisers to understand that they must exercise some responsibility and ensure that their claims for fitness gear are supported by sound science,” FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection Director David Vladeck said.

Under the settlement, Reebok is barred from:

  • Making claims that toning shoes and other toning apparel are effective in strengthening muscles, or that using the footwear will result in a specific percentage or amount of muscle toning or strengthening, unless the claims are true and backed by scientific evidence;
  • Making any health or fitness-related efficacy claims for toning shoes and other toning apparel unless the claims are true and backed by scientific evidence; and
  • Misrepresenting any tests, studies, or research results regarding toning shoes and other toning apparel.

Consumers who bought Reebok toning shoes can submit a claim to the FTC for a refund. For more information and to file a claim, click here.

Police Brutality Claims Against Gardena Police Officers

An alleged police beating involving officers from the Gardena Police Department has come under scrutiny.

The incident was caught on grainy video from an apartment security camera (embedded, above).

The incident occurred on March 26 in Gardena when Perry Alexander was pulled over by officers. Gardena police claimed Alexander became combative, but Alexander -- who is facing charges of resisting arrest and assaulting a police officer -- told a different story.

"They told me to step out of my car, which I did, and walk to the back of my car, which I did, and place my hands on the trunk, which I did," Alexander said.

He said then they searched him but he had nothing in his pockets, and then "the officer punched me in my face very hard for two times for no reason."

Alexander's attorney, Alison Triessl, said she is waiting for audiotapes that will bear out Alexander's story.

She said they will show "he was begging them to stop and that he was saying 'what have I done? What have I done?'"

Triessl showed photographs of her client that showed a black eye, a gash on his forehead and a bruised cheek.

While Alexander was in court entering a not guilty plea, his family and friends demonstrated outside.

His mother, Marilyn Alexander, said she just wanted justice for her son.

"He didn't deserve the beating by the police officer. It's just not right," said Marilyn Alexander.

Beef Sold in Texas on Recall List

Beef Sold in Texas on Recall List

Tyson Fresh Meats Inc. is recalling about 131,300 pounds of ground beef because a family in Ohio fell ill after eating meat produced by the company that was contaminated with E. coli, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported Wednesday.

The recall involves beef sold as Kroger and generic brands at Kroger supermarkets; Butcher's Beef at Food Lion supermarkets; and generic beef sold to SAV-A-LOT, Spectrum Foods, Supervalu and the Defense Commissary Agency, company spokesman Gary Mickelson told The Associated Press.

Tyson produced the affected meat at its plant in Emporia, Kan., on Aug. 23, the USDA said in a news release. Four children became ill after eating the meat with their family in Butler County, Ohio, in the second week of September, said Butler County Health Department director Pat Burg.

A 9-year-old child was hospitalized for about 10 days with severe diarrhea, said Burg, who declined to release the family's name. Ground beef from the family's home tested positive for the bacteria. No other cases have been reported in the southwest Ohio county, Burg said.

The family told health officials that they bought the Tyson beef at a Kroger supermarket. Kroger said it sells both a generic and a Kroger brand of beef, but the recall in Ohio applied only to generic products.

Cincinnati-based Kroger spokesman Keith Dailey said the ground beef in question would have been taken off store shelves on Sept. 12, because of when it was produced. He said Kroger is tracking the beef to the geographic divisions where it was distributed and will have in-store signs notifying customers of the recall and details of the recalled beef.

"We encourage our customers to check their freezers and refrigerators," Dailey said. Also, Kroger loyalty card holders who bought the beef will be notified by email or telephone, and their cashier receipts will automatically print out recall information.  

The Butcher's Beef brand meat was shipped to Food Lion stores in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Virginia and West Virginia and to Bottom Dollar Food stores in North Carolina, the company said in a news release.

Food Lion encouraged its customers to check their freezers for the product, with UPC code (725439922241) and return it to the store for a full refund.

The products being recalled include 5-pound packages of Kroger-brand ground beef packed in 40-pound cases, with a product code of D-0211 QW, which was distributed in Tennessee and Indiana; 3-pound packages of Butcher's Brand beef packed in 36-pound cases with the code D-0211 LWIF, which was distributed in North and South Carolina; and 3-pound packages of generic labeled beef packed in 36-pound cases with a product code D-0211 LWI, which was sold in Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Tennessee,Texas and Wisconsin.

The beef, all 73/27 lean to fat ratio, had a "best before" date of Sept. 12 and the number 245D inked on the packages. The ground beef was sold in pre-packaged printed tubes that are put directly into retail meat cases, Mickelson, Tyson Fresh Meat's spokesman, said in a news release.

He said it is likely that most of the affected product has already been consumed but urged consumers to check their freezers and return or discard any beef listed in the recall. South Dakota-based Tyson Fresh Meats is a subsidiary of Tyson Foods Inc., of Springdale, Ark.

A list of retail stores that received the product will be posted on the USDA's website

Buy Home, Get Free Meals for 15 Years

Buy Home, Get Free Meals for 15 Years

The slow housing market has inspired one San Diego restaurant owner to market her Mission Hills property the best way she knows how – with free food.

Terryl Gavre's Mission Hills estate has been on the market for 5 weeks and in an effort to sell it quick, she's tossing in a delicious deal.

Buy the estate and get free breakfast at her restaurant, Café 2-22 not once or even twice but for the next 15 years.

"I thought, you know, 'I need to think outside the box. How do I get more people to come look at my house?' The housing market is slow in general so why not offer something they can't get when they buy any other house,” Gavre said.

"People will come in and say 'Oh, I love that restaurant; omigod, that kitchen looks just like the one at Café 222'. "

Gavre’s restaurant, located in downtown San Diego has been profiled by Food Network and is known for hand-made specialties like pumpkin waffles and her peanut butter-and-banana-stuffed French toast.

One happy buyer will walk away with two homes on the lot separated by a courtyard and a free breakfast once a week.

The price tag on the property may be $1.4 million but the incentive will save you approximately $8,000 in free food.

Now, what foodie can pass up that offer?

 

8 Abducted Kids Back With Foster Parents

8 Abducted Kids Back With Foster Parents

The eight children found hidden in a van in Harrisburg, Pa., after their biological parents abducted them from a child welfare agency in Queens are now back in the care of their foster parents.

The Payne children, ranging in age from 11 months to 11 years, are back in New York City with the foster parents who had been looking after them before they were abducted on Sept. 19.

The sudden changes in their lives -- going from foster care to being abducted by their biological parents, and going back into their foster parents' homes -- have been difficult for the children, a source with the Administration for Children's Services tells NBC New York.

Making the situation more traumatic, the Payne boys had just started unsupervised weekend visits at home with their mother, Shanel Nadal, and will likely not be able to see her at all anymore, the source said.

Nadal took the kids during a visit at the child welfare facility and fled with them and their biological father, leading police on a manhunt for more than a week. She and the father were arrested Tuesday in Pennsylvania.

Before they were taken, five of the children were in the care of Linda Mitchell, who told NBC New York last week that she loved them and wanted them back in her home.

The kids' mother claimed she took her children to protect them, alleging that there was abuse going on in their foster care.

"Any mother who's going through this -- do what you got to do to protect your babies," she said after she was arrested.

An agency source confirmed the Queens Child Advocacy Center looked into a March 2011 allegation of abuse and examined all the children in Mitchell's home, finding no evidence of any abuse.

The agency said it believed Mitchell was an "outstanding" foster parent and planned to keep the children in the same homes so as not to disrupt their lives any further, said the source.

An official said ACS is also investigating the Forest Hills, Queens, agency from which the Payne children were abducted. A separate audit of security on the Forestdale campus concluded there should be alarms on doors and suggested the facility seal the stairway from which the Paynes left the building.

Forestdale will have to submit a detailed security plan to ACS for approval, the agency official said.

Seton Hall Offers Big Tuition Break for Top Students

Seton Hall Offers Big Tuition Break for Top Students

Seton Hall University has a novel new deal to entice top students to attend.

Under a plan announced Wednesday, they'll get a tuition break so steep they'll be paying the same rate as an in-state student heading to public Rutgers University.

To qualify, students would have to apply by Dec. 15, rank in the top 10 percent of their high school class and score at least 1200 on the SAT or 27 on the ACT. Their yearly tuition would be $10,104, which would be frozen for four years, as long as they maintain a 3.0 grade-point average.

Regular tuition at the Catholic school in South Orange is $31,440. Room, board and fees add about $13,000.

About one-sixth of this year's freshman class at Seton Hall would have qualified.

Police Searching for Armed Highway Robbers

Police Searching for Armed Highway Robbers

A string of armed robberies targeting stranded drivers on Inland Empire freeways has a team of California Highway Patrol and Redlands Police investigators stepping up surveillance and patrols.

The armed robbers, who police say are still at large, are responsible for several robberies between Sept. 18 and the early morning hours of Sept 19.

Most of the victims were stranded drivers on freeways, including Interstates 15, 10 and 210 and State Routes 91 and 60 in San Bernardino and Riverside counties, said CHP Officer Mario Lopez.

"They were robbed at gunpoint by three to four male Hispanics wearing hooded sweatshirts," Lopez wrote in a written statement.

The men are also responsible for several violent crimes that occurred around the same time as the freeway robberies, according to police. Police believe those crimes include two freeway shootings and two armed robberies in Mentone and Redlands.

The robbers have been seen driving several vehicles, including a white full-size pickup truck with a utility bed and rack, a red Honda Accord and a tan Honda or Hyundai sedan, according to investigators.

The San Bernardino Sun has photos of the men and one of the vehicles on its website.

Anyone with information should contact the California Highway Patrol at 909-388-8000, the Yucaipa Police and Sheriff Department at 909-790-3105 or Redlands Police at 909-798-7688.

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New Recycling Program on Hold in Arlington

New Recycling Program on Hold in Arlington

The Arlington City Council postponed a vote on the proposed changes to their recycling program.

Republic Waste Services, which collects the city's trash and recyclables, requested the delay so that they would have more time to refine their automated collection program.

The company wants to switch Arlington residents from recycle bins to 95-gallon carts that can be collected by a lift on CNG-powered trucks and not people.

The change is expected to cost Arlington residents and additional $1.09 per month.

There is no word on when the new plan may go in place.

Horton Plaza Renovation Faces $2M Shortfall

Horton Plaza Renovation Faces $2M Shortfall

Horton Plaza is hanging onto its iconic Broadway fountain, and developers don’t care how much it costs.

A plan to renovate Horton Plaza and add a park where the vacant Robinson’s May store is near approval, pending the final thumbs up from the Centre City Development Corp. (CCDC) advisory board Wednesday afternoon.

The plan has been the subject of much debate over the past several months, with members of the public voicing a need for more shade and art features. Since a July meeting with the public, the CCDC has come through with a plan that will cost $2 million more than its budget allows, according to the CCDC plan.

If the board approves the plan Wednesday, the developers will immediately start drawing their construction plans, expected to be 80 percent completed by this coming June.

The committee says they decided to go through with the plan, despite the shortfall, because they did not want to compromise the quality of the materials. They will instead seek outside funding – however, details on where that funding might come from were not disclosed in the plan.

Generally, the renovation will preserve the historic elements already established in the area, such as the fountain (see below). It will add more trees, a digital art screen, trellis structures, luminaries, public seating, a media wall and auditorium seating.

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What do you think of this plan? Comment below, send us your thoughts via Twitter @nbcsandiego or add your comment to our Facebook page.

Amtrak to Work on NYC's East River Rail Tunnels

Amtrak to Work on NYC's East River Rail Tunnels

Work crews will shut down one of Amtrak's two tunnels under New York's East River during the weekends as part of a four-year project to replace track and repair drainage problems.

Amtrak and the Long Island Rail Road said Wednesday the repairs should not affect their train service. The LIRR shares Amtrak's tunnels.

"It's something we wanted to do for a while now," said Amtrak spokesman Cliff Cole. "The whole area's been in need of an upgrade."

Crews will work in one of the tunnels from 10 p.m. on Friday to 5 a.m. Monday, Amtrak said. Beginning next year, they will work in both tunnels.

Each tunnel has four tracks. Amtrak plans to put in new rails and ties, rock ballast and a new drainage system. The work will last through the middle of 2015.

In May a broken rail in one of the tunnels caused an Amtrak train to derail, resulting in a week of delays for commuters.

An inspection after the derailment revealed serious water drainage problems, the LIRR said in a written statement.

Both railroads plan to run their regular schedule of trains during the repairs.

Amtrak has said it needs to modernize and expand its tunnels through the New York area. Planners had hoped to build a new $8.7 billion tunnel under the Hudson River that would end at a new station deep under Manhattan's 34th Street. That project fell through last year after New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie balked at his state's share of the cost.

Amtrak is now studying whether to build a less ambitious Hudson River tunnel, known as the Gateway Tunnel. That tunnel would join up with existing tracks at Penn Station.

NTMWD Goes to Stage 3 Water Restrictions

NTMWD Goes to Stage 3 Water Restrictions

Beginning Nov. 1, North Texans who receive their water from the North Texas Municipal Water District (see list below) will be allowed to water their lawns only once every two weeks through next March.

That's the short version of the story anyhow.

Specifically, the NTMWD will initiate Stage 3 of the NTMWD Water Conservation and Drought Contingency and Water Emergency Response Plan -- and man is that a long title.

The goal of Stage 3 is a 10 percent reduction in water use as well as increased awareness of ongoing water conservation efforts. 

“The U.S. Drought Monitor anticipates the drought will persist or intensify through December 2011, so we are concerned about the declining water levels of our reservoirs,” said Jim Parks, executive director of NTMWD.  “Conservation is a must, especially when it comes to watering your lawns.  Stage 3 means consumers are allowed to water their lawns only once every two weeks.”

In addition to the record extreme heat of last summer and the ever-present drought conditions, NTMWD still can’t pump water from Lake Texoma due to the presence of invasive zebra mussels.

Lake Texoma normally provides almost a quarter of NTMWD’s raw water supply.  Due to the infestation, it sits untapped while the NTMWD primarily relies on Lavon Lake though water from Lake Chapman is also used.

As of Sept. 26, Lavon Lake's elevation was down over 11 feet and is at 52 percent of usable capacity.  In addition, as of the most recent measurement, NTMWD’s Lake Chapman water supply is at 35 percent due to the continued drought.

The NTMWD Board action requests that Member Cities and Customers (including indirect customers) implement the following water conservation strategies:

  • Initiate Stage 3 of the Member Cities and Customers drought contingency and water emergency response plans no later than November 1.
  • Limit landscape watering with sprinklers or irrigation systems to once every two weeks between November 1 and March 31 and eliminate watering from 10 AM to 6 PM. Residents should check with their city water department for specific city restrictions.
  • Foundations, new landscaping, new plantings (first year) of shrubs, and trees may be watered for up to two hours on any day by a hand-held hose, a soaker hose, or a dedicated zone using a drip irrigation system. 
  • Wait until the current drought has passed before establishing new landscaping and no hydroseeding, hydromulching or sprigging allowed.
  • Do not drain and refill swimming pools except to replace normal water loss.
  • Halt non-essential city government water use including street cleaning, vehicle washing, operation of ornamental fountains, etc.
  • Accelerate public education efforts on ways to reduce water usage by 10%.
  • Initiate engineering studies to evaluate alternatives should conditions worsen.
  • Watering of golf courses using treated water is prohibited except as needed to keep greens and tee boxes alive.

The NTMWD serves the following member cities: Allen, Farmersville, Forney, Frisco, Garland, McKinney, Mesquite, Plano, Princeton, Richardson, Rockwall, Royse City and Wylie. Additionally, the NTMWD lists the following towns as customers: Bonham, Caddo Basin SUD, Cash SUD, College Mound WSC, Copeville SUD, Crandall (Kaufman Four-One), East Fork SUD, Fairview, Fate, Forney Lake WSC, Gastonia-Scurry SUD, Greater Texoma Utility Authority (GTUA), Josephine, Kaufman, Kaufman Four-One, Lavon W.S.C., Little Elm, Lucas, Melissa, Milligan WSC, Mount Zion WSC, Murphy, Nevada WSC, North Collin WSC, Parker, Prosper, Rose, Hill SUD, Rowlett, Sachse, Seis Lagos UD, Sunnyvale, Terrell and Wylie Northeast SUD.

More information and tips on water conservation can be found at > and >.

Dog Bites Woman, Woman Shoots Dog

Dog Bites Woman, Woman Shoots Dog

Here's a list of recent activities drawing the attention of North Texas law enforcement. List compiled on Sept. 28, 2011.

Historic Sonny Bryans BBQ Catches Fire

Flames were spotted at the original Sonny Bryan's BBQ restaurant on Inwood Road in Dallas early Wednesday morning. Fire crews managed to put the fire out fast and the business is expected to be up and running by this weekend. Read more on the fire here.

Neighbors Help Others in Dallas Apartment Fire

Neighbors went door to door to make sure everyone escaped an early morning fire in Dallas. Fire damaged a building at The Falls at Highpoint Apartments on Markville Drive early Wednesday morning. No one was injured in the blaze. You can read more about the fire here.

Dog Bits Woman, Woman Shoots Dog

A Dallas woman reportedly shot a dog early Wednesday morning after the animal attacked her and bit her in the arm. Dallas police tell us the lady was taken to Baylor hospital after being bitten. The incident happened in the 300 block of North Jim Miller Road. The dog died from the gunshot wound.

Robbery at the Car Wash

Mansfield police are investigating a robbery at the Jett Car Wash. Police tell us they were called to the business in the 700 block of West Debbie Lane where they found two victims. One of the victims had been hit in the head by one of the robbers. The victims told the officers there were two people, armed with handguns who entered the business and demanded money, they then took off on foot with an undisclosed amount of cash.

NYC to Get More Audible Crosswalk Signals

NYC to Get More Audible Crosswalk Signals

To help make crossing the street easier for elderly New Yorkers and the visually impaired, city officials announced plans Wednesday to install more audible pedestrian signals at 25 intersections within the next year.

The audible devices emit a clicking sound that alerts sight-impaired pedestrians that it's time to walk.

Officials said 21 intersections citywide already have the devices, and another 25 are due to get them.

To request an audio cue, pedestrians press a button -- which also makes a clicking sound to help them locate it.

"The new APS signals, along with the shortened crossing distance and additional traffic upgrades in one of Chelsea's most dangerous intersections, are upgrades that are good for people of all ages,” said City Council Speaker Christine Quinn.

Duncanville Middle School Lockdown Released

The Duncaville Independent School District has locked down Brandenburg Intermediate School after a robbery suspect was believed to be in a home across the street from the school.

Due to the police activity in the area, school officials instituted a low-level lockdown. Under a low-level lockdown, movement around the campus is permitted, but no visitors are allowed.

The school is located at 1903 Blueridge Drive, not far from the intersection of U.S. 67 and South Main Street.

Just before 1:40 p.m. officers cleared the scene and the lockdown was released.  Officials said the person being sought by police wasn't found at the location.

Duncanville police are still investigating the case.

University of Maryland Celebrates Alumnus Jim Henson

University of Maryland Celebrates Alumnus Jim Henson

Last year, researchers at the College of William & Mary found that, for the first time ever, American creativity is inching downward.

The findings set off a flurry of media coverage and hyperbolic claims on the supposed "creativity crisis."

Whether or not the nation is in the midst of a full-blown "creativity crisis" is debatable, but there is no doubt that creative talent must be nurtured in order to maintain a competitive position in the world order. After all, cognitive flexibility, inventiveness and design thinking play an important part in adapting to rapidly changing and unpredictable global forces.

If ever there was a poster boy for this kind of creativity, it's Jim Henson, a University of Maryland puppetry major who brought what had become a marginalized enterprise to the fore. On Friday, his alma mater celebrated his creative legacy at a campus-wide party for what would be his 75th birthday.

The event featured Kermit-themed treats, musical performances readings of Henson's work by members of the School of Theatre, Dance, and Performance Studies, and remarks by university president Wallace Loh.

"Jim Henson will always be an inspiration to students at the University of Maryland," Loh said.  "It takes talent as well as creativity to make a bunch of puppets -- maybe I should say Muppets -- into household names around the world. It takes skill as well as ingenuity to enable children to learn while entertaining them, and to enable grown-ups to enjoy themselves by becoming children again."

Henson -- who graduated from the University of Maryland in 1960 -- is best known for his innovation in puppetry as creator of the Muppets. He created an individualized major in puppetry, according to the University of Maryland website.

“Truthfully, the chair of the department many years ago told him that puppetry was fun but that he would never make a living out of it," said event organizer Leigh Wilson Smiley, director of the MFA in Performance program to a Maryland Community News Online reporter. 

Henson landed his own twice-daily, five-minute show, Sam and Friends, on our very own WRC-TV -- where he introduced an early version of Kermit the Frog -- while he was still a freshman in college.

He made major innovations in puppetry while on the show, melding hand puppets with marionettes and using close-ups to create an intimate environment and to keep the puppeteer off-camera. He also began to animate the puppets with rods, instead of strings, to give the foam rubber characters he invented more lifelike movement.

The University of Maryland has celebrated Henson over the years with major events like "The Muppets Take Maryland" in 1997, and a 2003 class gift of a statue of Henson and Kermit.

Loh has said that he hopes Jim Henson's memory will inspire creativity and innovation in his university's students.  

Weiner Gets Most Write-In Votes in Special Election

Disgraced Rep. Anthony Weiner has at least had one political victory since his downward spiral of sexting -- he got more write-in votes in the special election to fill his seat than anyone else.

Results from the Board of Elections Wednesday show Weiner received 31 write-in votes -- 11 from Brooklynites and 20 from Queens voters -- in the Sept. 13 election where was not a candidate.

Weiner resigned his seat in June, 20 days after he misfired a photo of his enlarged groin onto Twitter, setting off a scandal that eventually revealed he had been having a series of sexually charged relationships with strange women.

Republican Bob Turner won the special election with more than 37,340 votes, beating Democrat David Weprin, who got 33,656.

Turner was sworn in that week and serves until the end of 2012.

Others who got write-in support include Michael Bloomberg, with one vote, Lamb Chop, with one vote, Mayor Quimby, with one vote, and Someone Who Will Do Something, with one vote.

Pepper-Spray Cop Gets Protection After Threats

Pepper-Spray Cop Gets Protection After Threats

The deputy NYPD inspector seen on video appearing to release pepper spray into a crowd of demonstrators during a Wall Street protest has been given extra security after his personal information was posted on a website.

The inspector has been receiving death threats at his home and other harassing calls. Sources say the information was posted by hackers.

Another video has also emerged showing the same inspector appearing to spray different people seconds after the first group.

The clash with protesters happened Saturday when police made dozens of arrests. The protest has been ongoing downtown for days. The organizers, Occupy Wall Street, say they "no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the 1 percent."

Police have also provided extra security to the deputy inspector's family.

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said the NYPD is looking into the matter, along with the Civilian Complaints Review Board.

Calif. Sued Over Cuts to Disabled

Calif. Sued Over Cuts to Disabled

Advocates for the developmentally disabled are suing the state, claiming it has underfunded services for some 245,000 Californians.

The Arc California, an advocacy group, and United Cerebral Palsy of San Diego filed suit Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Sacramento.

California has frozen provider reimbursement rates since 2003. The state reduced reimbursement rates by 3 percent in 2009 and has since increased the reduction to 4.25 percent.

Attorney William McLaughlin said the state violated federal law by reducing rates without federal approval. He says the state also violated its own Lanterman Act, which guarantees the disabled the right to services to live as independently as possible.

Nancy Lungren, spokeswoman for the California Department of Developmental Services, said "difficult decisions are needed" given the state's budget shortfall.



Copyright NBC San Diego / Associated Press

Mother's Tearful Testimony in Tysons Toddler Death

Mother's Tearful Testimony in Tysons Toddler Death

The mother of the 2-year-old girl killed at Tysons Corner gave tearful testimony Wednesday about the night her daughter was tossed off a sixth-level pedestrian bridge at Tysons Corner Center by her grandmother.

Mary Kathlyn Ogdoc took her 2-year-old daughter, Angelyn, to the mall last November with her parents, including Angelyn's grandmother, Carmela dela Rosa. Ogdoc, who avoided looking at her mother and referred to her only as “Carmela” and “the defendant,” described for the jury turning around on the walkway and seeing her mother leaning over the railing but no longer holding Angelyn. She said she yelled, “What just happened,” and then ran to daughter on the ground below, News4’s Julie Carey reported.

Ogdoc described seeing a blank expression on dela Rosa's face after the incident.

Dela Rosa killed Angelyn out of hatred for her son-in-law for getting her daughter pregnant out of wedlock, according to the prosecution. Ogdoc testified that dela Rosa began crying and stormed out of the room when she learned about the pregnancy. On Ogdoc’s 21st birthday, the card from her mother included a note saying she felt betrayed and disappointed because Ogdoc got pregnant and married young.

The commonwealth rested its case Wednesday.

Defense lawyers argue that dela Rosa was legally insane when she dropped Angelyn off the walkway. Their first witness was dela Rosa’s husband, who said his wife’s mental health steadily declined in the months leading up to the child’s death, Carey reported.

Jurors heard a videotaped confession from dela Rosa on Tuesday. They also saw surveillance video showing dela Rosa throwing Angelyn off the walkway.

Dela Rosa could get up to life in prison.