17 October 2011

Iran Hikers Show Support for Occupy Movement

Iran Hikers Show Support for Occupy Movement

The Iran hikers chose the city of Oakland and the Occupy movement as the backdrop for a rare public appearance Monday.

Sarah Shourd, Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal took part in the an Occupy Oakland rally at Frank Ogawa plaza. They said they wanted to show their support to the movement taking place in their town.

"We were hearing about (the occupations) little bit by little bit," Bauer said. "But it wasnt until getting back here to this city that it really hit me, that this is serious, that this is big."

The crowd erupted in applause.

"I feel proud of this happening in my city," Bauer said.

Up until now Occupy rallies have been mostly economic protests, but the hikers appearance took a turn toward the political. The hikers said they also felt a solidarity with hunger strike going on now in California prisons.

This is only their second public appearance since returning home to the United States after being freed from prison in Iran. They were arrested in July 2009 after Iran said they crossed over its border during a hike in northern Iraq.  Shourd was released in Sept. 2010. Bauer and Fattal were released last month.

All three graduated from University of California at Berkeley and Shourd has been living in Oakland since her release.

The anti-Wall Street protests started in New York City a month ago and have spread across the country.

Occupy groups cite the economic disparity between the richest 1 percent of the population and the remaining 99 percent.  They have been calling for increased regulation of banks and Wall Street investment firms.

There are also occupy groups in San Jose, Walnut Creek, Santa Rosa and San Rafael and other cities.  On Monday afternoon, an Occupy group protested at the gates of Pebble Beach in Monterey County.

Ron Paul Pledges to Cut $1 Trillion If Elected

Ron Paul Pledges to Cut $1 Trillion If Elected

Republican presidential hopeful Rep. Ron Paul is calling for $1 trillion in cuts to the federal budget and says he would eliminate five Cabinet departments as soon as he takes office.

In a ballroom at the Venetian Resort Hotel Casino with a cheering crowd of students behind him, Paul outlined his plan to cut $1 trillion from the federal budget and eliminate five Cabinet departments as soon as he takes office. (The losers: Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Commerce, Interior and Education.) Paul would immediately end all foreign aid and end America's involvement in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Paul also wants to let young workers opt out of Social Security. He would repeal President Barack Obama's health care legislation, as well as major banking and campaign finance regulations. He would reduce corporate taxes, and he also wants to eliminate the Transportation Security Administration because he's concerned that airport screenings violate civil liberties.

"A lot of people will say, $1 trillion in a year, that's too radical," Paul said. "Well, the radicals have been in charge way too long."

Paul is a libertarian who ran for president in 2008. He came in second in Nevada's caucuses that year. He is in Las Vegas ahead of a presidential debate Tuesday.

On Monday, Paul and Mitt Romney were both in Nevada, a state that no one else seems to be contesting in earnest.

Most of the GOP field will convene here Tuesday for a presidential debate at the Venetian Resort Hotel Casino. But Monday, the contenders were scattered, with two canceling events in Nevada to protest the state's decision to move its caucuses earlier in 2012. That move has jeopardized New Hampshire's first-in-the-nation primary.

Michele Bachmann and Herman Cain were both campaigning in Arizona Monday. Rick Perry didn't hold any public events, though he does have staffers on the ground in Nevada and will speak Wednesday at a major conference here. Rick Santorum canceled Nevada events in "solidarity" with the early states. He went to Iowa instead, where he's pinned his presidential hopes on the first-in-the-country caucuses.

And former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, who has staked his whole campaign on New Hampshire, is leading the charge to boycott the state entirely. He says Nevada's decision to move its caucuses to Jan. 14 is an affront to New Hampshire. He campaigned in the Granite State Monday and plans a Tuesday town hall there right on top of the debate.

And Romney, who needs wins in both Nevada and New Hampshire, is facing new pressure from New Hampshire leaders -- including some of his own supporters -- to boycott Nevada after Iowa finalized its caucus date for Jan. 3.

But so far, for Romney and Paul, Nevada's 2012 caucuses are starting to look a lot like 2008, when Romney won overwhelmingly, and Paul placed second. Much of Romney's support came from the state's sizable Mormon population.

For Paul, who has a devoted but narrow group of supporters but has struggled to appeal to a broader cross-section of voters, Nevada is promising. He beat John McCain, the eventual nominee, and the caucus system benefits his supporters' grassroots organizing system.

Online Bank Service Offers Debit Card Rewards

An online banking service is offering "cash back" perks to customers who use its debit card, unlike some national banks that charge or plan to charge debit-card fees.

Boston-based PerkStreet contracts with ATM networks so customers have no fees. It uses a bank in Delaware to insure all customer accounts with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

The husband of Candace Wallace heard about the service about a year ago. The Coppell couple now strictly bank online.

"He just found there are so many benefits with banking with PerkStreet," she said.

Customers can use their PerkStreet debit card to earn various percentages in cash-back bonuses that they redeem in various ways.

"I'd say we've earned about $500," Haywood said. "We always choose the MasterCard."

PerkStreet has a deal with MasterCard that enables customers to get MasterCard gift cards when they earn points for spending with their PerkStreet debit cards.

Customers can also use points to get gift cards to a variety of retailers, including Best Buy, Target, iTunes and Ticketmaster.

Haywood and her husband have their paychecks set up for direct deposit with the online service. Any other checks for deposit are mailed with prepaid envelopes supplied by the online bank service.

But many people prefer to have the option of walking into a bank branch to see a teller if they have a problem.

Brick-and-mortar banks such as First National in Weatherford are rolling out their own promotions, offering customers breaks on overdraft fees.

"It was $30, and now it's $19.95," First National spokeswoman Evon Markum said. "It's helping mom and dad from Wednesday to Friday when the paycheck comes in."

Markum said the bank has seen a surge of new customers sign up following its promotion. She said the bank is considering lowering other fees but wouldn't say which ones.

Indiana Governor Talks Perry, 2012 and VP

Gov. Mitch Daniels says he misses Washington D.C. "like a toothache."

The former head of the Office of Management and Budget under President George W. Bush now spends his time in Indianapolis as the governor of Indiana.

Daniels pulled his name out of the presidential race in May, but his name keeps coming up as a possible VP pick for the eventual GOP nominee.

NBC 5 caught up with Daniels during his recent book trip. He talked about the GOP 2012 campaign, Perry's "Ponzi scheme" comment and even admitted that he regularly talks to several candidates in the Republican field about ideas.


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.

Serial Burglar Targets Homes With People Inside

Dallas police said they have a new lead in a string of burglaries in northwest Dallas -- surveillance footage.

Police think one man is behind a series of break-ins in the area around Midway Road and Walnut Hill Lane. Police said two different home surveillance cameras recorded the man.

Terri Sue Wensinger said she, her husband, three children and three dogs slept through a break-in at their home on Lively Lane.

"It is scary to know if the guy had the intent to hurt someone, that he could get in and he could -- that's the scariest part," she said.

The break-in at her home is one of more than five in the past two weeks in her neighborhood.

"What the police were saying is that it's thrilling for them to go somewhere that has people in it, which is creepy," Wensinger said.

Lt. Max Geron said the burglar tends to strike at night and favors homes with French doors.

"You can tell by the way he looks in and peers through the house, he expects them to be home," he said.

The burglar took Wensinger's backpack and her husband's laptop. In another case, he stole the keys to a luxury car off a coffee table while the homeowner was asleep on the couch.

"You can see the potential for confrontation and escalation of violence, and that's why we're concerned," Geron said.

Wensinger said she and her family are taking precautions.

"I've got my golf club upstairs, and we've been setting our alarm, and we've also changed our locks," she said.

Anyone with information about the burglaries is asked to call Detective Strodtman at 214-670-6047.

McKinney Fire Department Cracks Down on Haunted Houses

The house of one McKinney man will be short some thrills and chills this year.

Scott Rauch turned his entire home, inside and out, into a haunted house last year.

"The front yard was a full graveyard scene; we had walking zombies," Scott Rauch said. "And whenever you enter the backyard, we had a huge maze."

The McKinney fire marshal is enforcing rules that have been in place for a few years that require permits for all haunted houses.

"If you've been in a haunted house, you know as soon as you go in there, you lose all concept of which direction to go," said Andrew Barr, fire marshal spokesman.

People who want to host a haunted house need to have the correct safety measures and equipment in place.

Rauch said the upgrades would cost him close to $3,000.

"I needed fire extinguishers and certain water hoses," he said.

Rauch said 200 people went through his haunted house on Halloween.

"I've already had a lot of the neighborhood kids asking me about it, which when I tell them, 'Not this year; we'll try and do it next year,' they are disappointed," he said.

But Rauch said he would rather the fears be fake than have something truly go wrong. He said he plans on hosting his haunted house next year -- with all of the correct safety measures in place.

Thieves Steal Hospital X-rays For Silver

Police in three counties are on the lookout for thieves who have stolen X-rays from area hospitals in order to obtain the silver they contain.

Three hospitals report the thefts: Lankenau Hospital in Montgomery County, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia and Grandview Hospital in Bucks County.

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2 Women Shot: Caught in Crossfire

2 Women Shot: Caught in Crossfire

Philadelphia Police are investigating a double shooting Monday night in the Wynnefield section of the city.

It happened on the 5800 block of Malvern Street.

Investigators said two women, ages 61 and 37, were caught in the crossfire of an argument and were each shot in the arm.  Both victims appear to be unintended targets, according to police.

The two injured women were taken to Lankenau Hospital where they are listed in stable condition.

No one has been arrested.

Mold Closes S. Jersey Elementary School

Three schools in Camden County will be closed through Wednesday after one of the schools tested positive for mold.

Cleanup is underway at Waterford Elementary School in Waterford Township, where the mold appears to have come from leaky roof.       

The township's two other elementary schools, Atco Elementary and Thomas Richards Elementary are closed as a precaution.

   

The district used an automated message to alert parents.

Girl Found in Phily linked to 'Dungeon' Case

A missing girl from Florida has been found in Philadelphia and may be connected to the case of four adults held captive in a Tacony basement.

Northeast Detectives said 15-year old Benita Rodriguez, who went missing in West Palm Beach, Florida, was found Monday night in Northeast Philadelphia.

Detective have not revealed her specific connection to the "dungeon" case, but said she is somehow linked to the suspects.

Philadelphia Police allowed a first-time look inside the basement "dungeon" in a Tacony apartment where four mentally challenged adults were locked up and held captive. The victims were discovered Saturday. Three suspects are under arrest.

 

Stray Pig Finds New Home, New Name

Stray Pig Finds New Home, New Name

 That 200-plus pound pot-bellied pig who was found wandering the streets of Prince William County is now safe and sound at a new home.

Wilbur the pig was located last week wandering in Lake Jackson, Va. His owner turned him over to an animal shelter after the five-year-old boar repeatedly escaped from his enclosure.

After seeing him on News4 newscast a viewer decided she and her husband had to make him a part of their family.

They tell us that he is now very happy and living on a 10-acre farm in Catlett, Va. Wilbur also has a new name: Norm.

Norm's new owner said he's fitting in nicely, and their next step is to find him a companion. 

Check out a video sent in from his new owner: 

One Airlifted After Bus, Car Collision

One Airlifted After Bus, Car Collision

The driver of car was seriously injured in a crash with a bus Monday.

The car collided with a bus in the 3200 block of Mattawoman Beantown Road in Waldorf, Md.

A Marland State Police helicopter flew the driver of the car to an area hospital.

The five passengers and driver on the bus suffered minor injuries.

Police Ask for Public’s Help on Second Anniversary of Va. Tech Student’s Disappearance

Police Ask for Public’s Help on Second Anniversary of Va. Tech Student’s Disappearance

On the second anniversary of her disappearance, Virginia State Police is asking for the public's help in its investigation of the 2009 slaying of Virginia Tech student Morgan Harrington.

Investigators are especially interested in information from people familiar with the farm property in Albemarle County where Harrington's remains were found, Lt. Joe Rader said.

A detail that seems insignificant could be important to the investigation, Radar said.

Harrington disappeared Oct. 17, 2009, after leaving a concert at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. The 20-year-old Roanoke woman's remains were found in a hayfield in January 2010.

One Dead in Car Crash on Route 126 in Santa Clarita

One Dead in Car Crash on Route 126 in Santa Clarita

One person was killed in a fiery crash between two vehicles and a garbage truck on the westbound lanes of State Route 126, west of Interstate 5 in Santa Clarita Monday afternoon.

As of 3:30 p.m. Monday, westbound lanes of State Route 126 were still shut down as authorities worked to investigate the scene.

The crash was reported at 2:07 p.m., according to the CHP incident page, when a garbage truck crashed into at least one other vehicle.

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Preliminary Hearing Set for Rockefeller Impostor

Preliminary Hearing Set for Rockefeller Impostor

A preliminary hearing for a man who allegedly posed as a member of the Rockefeller family and who is suspected in the 1985 killing of a San Marino man and the disappearance of his wife is set for January 18.

“Clark Rockefeller”, a 50-year-old German national whose real name is Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter, returned to Los Angeles County in July after being charged with killing John Sohus. Gerhartsreiter had previously been in prison in Massachusetts for kidnapping his own daughter.

The criminal complaint alleged that Gerhartsreiter killed Sohus by using a “blunt object” and may have had something to do with the disappearance of Sohus’ wife.

Gerhartsreiter, who was renting a guesthouse from the couple, disappeared after the couple went missing in February 1985.

He faces up to 26 years to life in prison if convicted of first-degree murder.

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Are Smaller Tracks too Dangerous for IndyCar Racing?

Are Smaller Tracks too Dangerous for IndyCar Racing?

Despite the tragic 15 car crash Sunday that took the life of Indy 500 champion Dan Wheldon, fans at the Auto Club Speedway in Fontana are still looking forward to the return of IndyCar racing next season.

"Nobody likes to see that, but these are gladiators in their own arenas," said Angel Castaneda, a racing fan.

"IndyCars is cool, especially out here in Fontana, but once they put on the suit they know the dangers that come with it," said Jose Padilla, a racing fan.

The track at Las Vegas, where the deadly accident happened, was 1.5 miles in a banked oval shape and was designed for the NASCAR circuit. By contrast the Indianapolis Motor Speedway is a 2.5 mile course in a nearly rectangle shape.

Five time defending NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson doesn't want IndyCars to race on oval tracks, like the one in Las Vegas and the one in Fontana.

"Those cars are going so fast and get airborne frequently on ovals," said Johnson. "I wouldn't run them on ovals. There's just no need to."

But fans in Fontana say not all tracks are the same.

A half mile longer than the one in Las Vegas, the track at Fontana has more room to spread out. Also, the banks aren't as steep. 14% as compared to the 20% curves at Las Vegas.

Wheldon was on record as loving to race in Fontana.

"I actually saw him in Sonoma, and he was very excited, the fact that IndyCar racing was coming back here," said David Talley, of the Auto Club Speedway. "It's just sad that when September 15th rolls around that here he won't be here to be part of the excitement."

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Schwarzenegger's "Last Stand"

Schwarzenegger's

Arnold Schwarzenegger is making good on his cliché tagline.

The former governor will be back on the big screen, playing a former Los Angeles Police Officer  turned small-town sheriff in the Western "The Last Stand.''

Filming began Monday in Nevada and New Mexico.

In the film, Schwarzenegger becomes the sheriff of a sleepy small border town who must take on a drug kingpin that escapes an FBI prison and flees for Mexico.

"The Last Stand'' marks Schwarzenegger's first top billing since 2003's "Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines.''  

Korean director Kim Jee-Woon is helming the film, which also features Forest Whitaker, Johnny Knoxville and "Friday Night Lights''' Zach Gilford. The script is by Andrew Knauer and Jeffrey Nachmanoff.

 

Former LA Fire Chief's Son Arrested

Former LA Fire Chief's Son Arrested

The son of Los Angeles' recently retired fire chief was charged Monday with bribing a Transportation Security Administration agent at Los Angeles International Airport to help him smuggle at least 10 pounds of marijuana onto a flight.

Millage J. Peaks IV, the 23-year-old son of former Los Angeles Fire Department Chief Millage Peaks, was arrested Sunday and charged Monday with bribing a public official, according to FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller.

TSA employee Dianna Perez, 28, of Inglewood also was arrested and charged with accepting the alleged bribe, Eimiller said.

Peaks and Perez appeared before a Los Angeles federal magistrate judge Monday for the first time.

Peaks had checked between 10 and 15 pounds of marijuana in his luggage onto an early morning flight to Boston, according to an affidavit filed in support of the criminal complaint.

The arrests occurred after an American Airlines baggage handler smelled the pot in a bag and alerted supervisors, according to the affidavit.

Peaks' bags were then removed from the aircraft and searched by TSA agents, said FBI agent David Gates.

"Fourteen plastic bags, containing what (Los Angeles International Airport Police Department) officers believed amounted to approximately 10-15 pounds of marijuana, were found concealed inside Peaks' bags," Gates wrote in the affidavit. "TSA then removed Peaks from the aircraft and, together with LAXPD, questioned him concerning the marijuana. Peaks told officers that Perez

was involved."

Peaks allegedly promised to pay Perez $500 per suitcase that held marijuana, and later told officers that Perez had helped him move pot through the airport on nine previous occasions, the document states.

"According to LAXPD reports, during her initial interview with LAXPD, Perez admitted that she knew Peaks and that she had 'help(ed) him earlier in the morning,' but she denied knowing that he had drugs in his checked bags,'' reads the affidavit.

Peaks works for a local construction contractor and his sister is an officer on the airport police force, according to the affidavit.

"Neither his father nor his sister knows that he sells drugs,'' Gates wrote.

The defendant's father retired as Los Angeles city fire chief in July.

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Lincoln Center, Sotheby's Targeted in Tuesday Marches

At least three protests are planned for Tuesday across Manhattan, group leaders tell NBC New York.

Organizers say there will be gatherings outside Sotheby's on the East Side, near the district attorney's office in Lower Manhattan, and at Lincoln Center on the Upper West Side.

The events at Sotheby's and at Lincoln Center were already planned before the Occupy Wall Street protests, but organizers say the Wall Street protesters will help infuse new energy.

Occupy Wall Street Hits 1-Month Mark, NYPD Overtime Hits $3.4M

The Lincoln Center event is being led by a group called the Granny Peace Brigade hoping to ride the momentum of their fellow protesters.

"We see what they were doing, and it ties in," said Edith Cresmer, a member of the group. "People at Wall Street like us because we represent continuity."

There is also continuity with protests of the recent past: In 2009, a group called Take Back NYU seized the college library and dining hall for 40 hours. In the end, they left, and their demands for lower tuition and a free Gaza were unmet.

Two years later, Occupy Wall Street also marched past NYU, but these protesters have gotten worldwide attention. Some hope the clashes with police -- like the one Saturday in Times Square -- fuel a fresh round of attention.

Aaron Miller, a protester who has been at Zuccotti Park for the past 14 days, was in Times Square when police made dozens of arrests.

"We were standing there assembling as per our First Amendment rights," he said. "When they sent the riot police, we were breaking no laws."

Pepper spray victim Kaylee Dedrick wants the police officer who she says sprayed her to be prosecuted.

"It's sad that it happened, it's shocking," said Dedrick. "I hope something good happens. I hope something happens."

FULL OCCUPY WALL STREET COVERAGE

Restaurant Grease To Fuel D.C. Government Vehicles?

Restaurant Grease To Fuel D.C. Government Vehicles?

If Wendell Jenkins has his way, a portion of the city's fleet of government vehicles will one day be powered – in part – by restaurant grease. He is building a $4.2 million bio-diesel plant in Northeast D.C with just that plan in mind.

Jenkins said he’s already signed up restaurants to supply the recycled vegetable oil. He now is hoping to ink a deal with the District government to use his fuel, which he says will be a blend of 20 percent bio-diesel, and 80 percent standard diesel.

“Our renewable fuel, which meets or exceeds the standard specification for bio-diesel, will be the cleanest and greenest bio-diesel available on the East Coast," Jenkins said. 

Speaking before the D.C. Council Monday, Jenkins said there are other benefits: reduction in greenhouse gases, less dependence on foreign oil – and because he’s based in D.C – jobs for local residents.

But Department of Public Works director Bill Howland, who oversees the city’s fleet of vehicles, is urging caution.  Howland said while he would love to use bio-diesel – in part to satisfy alternative fuel requirements – he needs more time and more data to make sure bio-diesel is reliable, particularly for public safety vehicles.

Bike Share Station Coming to Silver Spring

Bike Share Station Coming to Silver Spring

A bike sharing station is coming to Silver Spring, Md.

According to The Gazette, the plans for the new Fenwick Station complex were approved by the Montgomery County Planning Board last week.  The complex will be built in the 8600 block of Second Avenue on the current US Postal Service site.  

The plans call for 310 apartment units and a bike sharing station.

Bike sharing programs allow people to rent bikes, usually by the hour, and return them to one of several stations located around town. Rockville approved a bike sharing program in June and Bethesda also is considering one.

Capital BikeShare is the largest program in the DC Metro area. It has dozens of locations in the District and Arlington, Va.

The US Postal Service's lease on the location for the new complex expires in August.  Construction on Fenwick Station is expected to start in September.

Soldier from Azle Killed in Afghanistan

Soldier from Azle Killed in Afghanistan

The military says a Hawaii-based soldier from Texas died from injuries suffered when enemy forces attacked his unit in Afghanistan.

The Department of Defense announced Monday Army Staff Sgt. Houston M. Taylor, 25, of Azle, died Thursday in Kunar province after enemy forces attacked his unit with small arms fire.

Taylor was born in Portsmouth, VA, on July 29, 1986.  He grew up in Azle and enlisted in the Army on May 5, 2005.  He deployed twice with Alpha Company, 2-8 Infantry Battalion before he was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division at Schofield Barracks on Oahu.

Taylor’s awards and decorations include: Bronze Star Medal, Purple Heart, Army Commendation Medal 2 OLC, Army Achievement Medal 3 OLC, Meritorious Unit Citation, Army Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Iraqi Campaign Medal with 3 Bronze Stars, Afghanistan Campaign Medal with Bronze Service  Star, Global War on Terrorism Medal, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service Ribbon with numeral 3, NATO Medal, and Combat Infantry Badge.

He is survived by his wife Kelsey Rae, his son Rylan Wade, his daughter Avery Laine, both his parents Shawn Taylor and Renee Cremean, and his brothers Austin and Dallas.

Seal Beach Massacre Survivor Released from Hospital

Seal Beach Massacre Survivor Released from Hospital

The lone surviving victim of the Seal Beach Massacre, 73-year-old Hattie Stretz, has been released from the hospital, a hospital spokeswoman said Monday.

Special Report: Complete Coverage of the Seal Beach Massacre

Stretz was at Salon Meritage on Wednesday when Scott Evans Dekraai, 41, allegedly walked in and started shooting. The massacre left eight people dead, including Stretz's 46-year-old daughter, Laura Lee Elody.

Elody, an employee of the salon, was washing her mother's hair at the time of the shooting.

Stretz was taken to Long Beach Memorial Hospital in critical condition. She has since been released, the hospital confirmed Monday.

Also Monday, police released new 911 calls, made from salon customers and employees hiding from the shooter.

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Woman Suspected of Chaining Disabled Adults Starved Man to Death in '81

Woman Suspected of Chaining Disabled Adults Starved Man to Death in '81

The alleged ringleader in the case of four mentally disabled adults found chained to a boiler in a Philadelphia basement spent eight years in prison for starving a man to death in 1981, reports say.

Linda Ann Weston, 51, was convicted of keeping 25-year-old Bernardo Ramos in the closet of her North Philadelphia apartment until he starved to death, reports the Philadelphia Inquirer after looking into articles and reports from the 1981 murder.

According to the reports, Weston locked Ramos in a closet until he died because he refused to pay child support for her sister’s unborn child.

The newspaper articles from 1981 state that Weston and her sister, Venus Weston, beat Ramos with a hammer, tied him up in the closet, fed him only three times over two months, and beat him with broomsticks, reports the Inquirer. They then dumped his body in an abandoned house.

Now, Weston is one of three suspects in the case of four mentally disabled adults found locked in a boiler room in the sub-basement of a Philadelphia apartment building Saturday.

It was the landlord of the apartment building at 4724 Longshore Avenue in the Tacony section of the city who discovered the four people, who all have the mental ability of a 10-year-old, in a boiler room that was so small an average adult would be unable to stand up straight in the room.

Relatives for three of the victims have been located but police are still searching for the family of 40-year-old Herbert Knowles. All four mentally disabled captives were taken to a hospital for treatment. Authorities said the victims appeared to have no physical problems other than malnourishment.

Police on Monday found Dozens of pieces of identification and power of attorney documents for the four victims, pointing to a wide-range fraud scheme.

Investigators are still processing the documents and reaching out to authorities in multiple jurisdictions, Lt. Ray Evers told The Associated Press.

Evers said Linda Ann Weston is suspected of running a long-standing fraud operation.

“Without a doubt, this is just the beginning of this investigation,” Evers said.

Evers told the AP that Weston may have met one of the victims through an online dating service.

“Talk about preying on the weak and weary,” Evers said. “You can't get any lower than this person.”

Evers said two of the victims are from Philadelphia -- one, a woman, had been listed as a missing person since 2005. The other is a man from North Carolina.

Weston, Gregory Thomas, 47, and Eddie Wright, 50, were charged with aggravated assault, kidnapping, conspiracy, false imprisonment, reckless endangerment and related charges, cops said.

Thomas and Wright are being held on $500,000 bail following their arraignments Sunday. It is not yet clear if Weston has been arraigned.

NY Proposes Several Measures to Stop Test Cheating

NY Proposes Several Measures to Stop Test Cheating

The state's Department of Education on Monday recommended several measures to crack down on cheating on high-stakes exams that influence not only the futures of students but also ratings of public schools and teachers' careers.

The report to the state Board of Regents is aimed at cheating by students, teachers and administrators during Regents exams and in scoring.

The report says spot checks using "erasure analysis" of answers led to the investigation of seven unnamed schools. It notes "a statistically improbable grouping of scores" statewide just above the passing mark.

Records released Friday to The Associated Press under a Freedom of Information Law request submitted in July found a growing concern about teachers prompting students toward correct answers or inflating scores, especially those near the 65-percent passing mark.

The state records provided to the AP show the cases also are difficult for the small staff of the state Department of Education to prove. Many cases involve erasures on tests with correct answers with no evidence of what motivated students to make the changes.

Cheating on Regents exams can frustrate parents and students who have sometimes seen all scores expunged because of cheating, forcing even students who had nothing to do with cheating to retake the exams in the summer or the following year.

The concern comes as Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice has prosecuted a college student accused of using a fake ID to take SAT college board exams for six friends in a process she suspects is widespread. Georgia recently revoked the teaching licenses of eight Atlanta teachers and three school administrators over cheating. Cheating investigations also have been undertaken recently in Philadelphia, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

Monday's report to the state Board of Regents, which sets education policy, puts New York on a track from trailing most states in efforts to combat cheating toward a move in 2014 to taking Regents exams on computers and scoring them on computers. That will allow quicker analysis of answers and allow teachers to score tests from other counties, potentially no longer scoring tests of their students.

Other recommendations include:

— Spending more than $2 million in the 2012-13 budget to spot check more Regents exams and move to greater analysis of all Regents exams and their scoring.

— Prohibiting most teachers from scoring their own students' exams, although some benefit was seen in allowing teachers to be present during testing and proctor their students' tests.

— Retaining tests for more than one year, as now required, for potential investigations.

— Moving to "centralized scanning" of multiple-choice questions to better spot possible cheating. New York is unique in relying on local scoring, "and significant investments have been made at the local level to develop infrastructure." That includes assigning teachers to scoring duties and hiring substitutes to cover their classes.

Gary Giordano Loses Bid for Release in Aruba Missing Woman Case

Gary Giordano Loses Bid for Release in Aruba Missing Woman Case

A judge in Aruba turned down a Maryland man's request to be released from jail as a suspect in the presumed death of his travel companion.

Businessman Gary Giordano appealed an order detaining him for 60 days while authorities investigate the disappearance of 35-year-old Robyn Gardner. There’s not enough evidence to hold Giordano, his lawyers said.

The judge rejected Giordano’s request Monday. It was his second failed appeal.

The defense will try again at the end of the month when the 60-day order expires, attorney Michael Lopez said. Prosecutors said they will seek to extend the order.

Giordano denies wrongdoing and says Gardner was swept out to sea while snorkeling Aug. 2. Her body has not been found.

Authorities said they became suspicious of Giordano because he tried to cash in on a travel insurance policy he took out on Gardner and there were inconsistencies in his story. He was detained Aug. 5 at the airport before he could leave the island.

Last week, Chris Lejuez was named the new lead attorney for Giordano. Lejuez defended two security guards once suspected in the disappearance of Natalee Holloway.

Giordano’s family previously hired Casey Anthony’s attorney, Jose Baez. In Aruba, Baez can serve in an advisory role and provide other assistance, but he cannot argue in court.

'Big' Economic Development Deal Brewing at Dallas City Hall

Dallas City Council members held a closed door meeting Monday morning to discuss an economic development deal code named "Project Wall E" on the public agenda.

Spectators were cleared from the room at the council’s Economic Development Committee meeting to conduct a private executive session as allowed by the Texas Open Meetings Act.

"When you do deals, you do due diligence and sometimes it’s very confidential, what you need to do, and what you say. And sometimes you might mess a deal up with public information," said Councilman Tennell Atkins, chairman of the committee.

The cryptic name of "Project Wall E" has sparked wild speculation ranging from a Disney connection, due to the animated character "Wall-E," to some sort of e-commerce deal to a company name with the first letter "E."

Dallas Economic Development Director Karl Zavitkovsky told the Dallas Observer to "focus on the E" as a clue.

In the past several years Dallas has successfully lured big corporate headquarters from other cities including AT&T from San Antonio and Comerica Bank from Detroit.

In return for tax breaks offered to the companies, Dallas gains hundreds of well paid headquarters employees with families that spend money locally.

Officials say vendors that call on the corporate executives also fill Dallas hotel rooms and sometimes open new local offices of their own to be close to the corporate headquarters.

To attract relocations, Dallas boosters promote a low cost of living, the lack of a state income tax and airports located in the middle of the country that allow shorter travel times than cities on the east or west coasts.

Atkins said Dallas is getting more aggressive in selling these advantages.

"It's very important that economic development change and think out of the box. We are going to be a deal maker. We’re going to be doing deals the next four or five years," he said.

Other Central US locations can also be targets for luring away major corporate headquarters.

Sears Holdings Corporation, the owner of Sears and K-Mart retails stores, has been widely reported to be considering a new corporate headquarters location with tax breaks set to expire in 2012 at its current location in the Chicago suburb of Hoffman Estates.

Earlier this month Sears representatives reportedly visited Austin, Texas and Columbus, Ohio.

Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio and the Virginia suburbs near Washington, DC have also courted Sears, according to other reports.

And Sears is attractive to economic development people in North Texas.

"We have talked to Sears," said John Crawford, President of Downtown Dallas Inc, the Dallas Central Business District advocacy group.

But Crawford and experts elsewhere question the expense of relocating some 6 thousand Sears workers.

And Crawford said Illinois has been working hard to keep Sears from leaving.

Crawford said he does not know what party is connected to Project Wall E, but "I’m sure it’s not Sears," he said.

So "Project Wall E" remains a mystery.

Atkins and Zavitkovsky would not answer questions about it Monday but did say a "big" announcement would come when and if the deal goes through.

And their desire for economic development is no secret.

"We’re trying to grow our revenue base. The only way we’ll grow our revenue base is bring more business in. If we had the Texas Rangers in the City of Dallas instead of Arlington, that’s a good deal for the City of Dallas," Atkins said.

Asian-American Group Wants Answers in Soldier's Death

Asian-American Group Wants Answers in Soldier's Death

A national Asian-American civil rights group is asking for a meeting with the Secretary of the Army in for answers in the death of a New York City soldier in Afghanistan earlier this month.

Pvt. Danny Chen, 19, was found dead Oct. 3 with a gunshot wound below his chin. His body was discovered in the living quarters of a forward operating base in the Kandahar province of Afghanistan.

His parents believe he was bullied because of his race, though they still don't know how or if it played a role in his death.

Elizabeth OuYang, the New York branch president of OCA, a national civil rights organization serving Asian Pacific Americans, said Chen's death has left the community "devastated, shocked and horrified."

OuYang penned a letter to Secretary of the Army John McHugh Monday asking him to meet with local Chinese-Americans in New York City to address concerns over racial bullying in the Army.

Around 3,000 Asian Americans serve in the U.S. military, according to OuYang, and "they need to know what affirmative steps the army is taking to integrate, support, and protect its soldiers, particularly minorities who are living and training at these bases," OuYang wrote.

Army officials told Chen's parents last week they've launched a criminal investigation into the Chen's death, including a cause and manner, as well as the circumstances leading up to his death.

OuYang told USA LOCAL NEWS that OCA-NY wanted a timeline on the investigation, an explanation of how the investigation will be conducted and how its findings will be announced to the public.

She said they also wanted to know if there was a hazing culture within the Army and what was being done to fight it.

Chen's parents told NBC New York last week he'd casually refer to conflicts he had with his comrades, but dismissed them as "nothing to worry about."

"The Army told me he died from a gunshot that went from his chin through the back of his head. They said this could be a murder or a suicide," said his father, Yan Tao Chen. "But he absolutely did not take his own life. He would never have done that. Danny was happy to be in the military and was looking forward to coming home." 

Chen's funeral last week was widely covered in local ethnic newspapers, and the community remains invested in the case, according to OuYang.

4-Year-Old Falls From Third-Story Window in Silver Spring

4-Year-Old Falls From Third-Story Window in Silver Spring

A 4-year-old boy is hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries after apparently falling from a third-story window in Silver Spring, Md., Monday.

A teen heard a child crying behind a building in the 100 block of Schuyler Road and called for help, Montgomery County Fire and Rescue said.

The child was conscious when police and fire and rescue arrived.

His condition is unknown.

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

Analysis: Occupy Wall Street Goes Global

Analysis: Occupy Wall Street Goes Global

As the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators celebrate the first 30 days of their movement, New York's movement has spread around the globe. Hundreds of thousands demonstrated in Europe and America over the weekend – and there were protests too in Asia and Australia. 

I covered the demonstrations in the streets of New York in the 1960s -- including major confrontations between police and students at Columbia and CCNY. Those demonstrations were not always non-violent but they had clear aims. The young people were protesting against the war in Vietnam and for civil rights. There was no ambiguity. These were their goals; there was no doubt about it. These young voices were enough to persuade Lyndon Johnson not to run for another term as President. They polarized American politics.

I heard the kids of the Sixties shout: “Hey, hey, LBJ, how many kids have you killed today?”; “No war! Peace Now!” and: “One, two, three four. We don’t want your ----ing war!”; “Hell no, we won’t go!.”

And the civil rights protests did more singing than shouting. The favorite song, which became a hymn, was “We Shall Overcome.” The words:

“We shall overcome

“We shall overcome some day

“Oh, deep in my heart

“I do believe

“We shall overcome

“Some day.”

And among the Occupy Wall Street crowd today are Kirby Desmarais of Brooklyn: ”As a family, we make too much money in this city to qualify for public health insurance, and we don’t make enough for private insurance.”

Heather Marko: “I’m here because I’m p.o. ed. I I’m always like yelling about things and it’s finally -- there are other people yelling too.”

Chrissy Walford, of Massachusetts said: “I couldn’t sleep at night or look at myself in the mirror if I didn’t come out... everyone has to act.”

In Orlando, Florida, real estate developer John St. Lawrence told the Associated Press: “I don’t think the underlying theme is a mystery. We saw what the banks and the financial institutions did to the economy.”

In Pennsylvania, the Occupy Pittsburgh group demanded that Bank of New York Mellon pay back money they say it overcharged public pension funds around the county. In Rome, firefighters battled flames at an Interior Ministry building, after a Molotov cocktail was thrown. Anarchists, some wearing ski masks, torched cars, broke windows and clashed with police. In London, one protester said: “We’re giving people a real voice against a government that just ignored us.”

In Belleville, France, one demonstrator said: “Government isn’t listening to the people and dialogue with them is impossible. You are not listening to us, whatever we do, however we vote, however we demonstrate,” according to the AP.

I spoke to the prominent American historian Kenneth Jackson. He said the fact that the demonstrations have spread across the globe from Wall Street shows how much New York is still “a trendsetter.”

“There clearly may be a long-term seismic change taking place and yet we don’t know yet where we’re going. Something is definitely wrong and it’s not yet clear what the ultimate outcome will be,” Jackson said.

Certainly the phenomenon of the 2010s is still hard to define. Clearly from New Zealand to Germany and Taipei something is happening. There is unrest and there is confusion. Amid the turbulence in the air, it’s hard so far to draw conclusions.

But one thing is certainly clear: there’s an epidemic of frustration and deep unhappiness spreading around the world. And, if it doesn’t get fixed, it will get worse.

Viral Meningitis Confirmed at L.I. High School

Viral Meningitis Confirmed at L.I. High School

A staff member of a Long Island high school has been diagnosed with viral meningitis, a serious and somewhat contagious inflammation of the membranes that cover the brain and spinal cord.

The West Babylon school district informed parents of the confirmed case through its website, >, and automated telephone messages Monday.

Viral meningitis is not as serious as bacterial meningitis, which can result in disability or death if not treated promptly, according to the Center for Disease Controls.

Still, because the symptoms of viral meningitis are similar to those of bacterial meningitis, it's important for people suspected of having the disease to seek medical care and have their spinal fluid tested, says the CDC.

Different viruses that cause viral meningitis are spread in different ways, but most commonly through direct contact with an infected person's stool.

The West Babylon school district outlined measures on its website for reducing the risk for viral meningitis, including washing hands thoroughly and often, cleaning contaminated surfaces like handles and doorknobs, and following general good hygiene practices.

School principal Ellice F. Vassalo also said surface cleanings were being done in rooms occupied by the staff member.

Local Marine Surprises Girlfriend with Proposal

A local Marine managed to pull off the surprise of a lifetime.

With the help of his  friends at MCAS Miramar, Lance Corporal William Bell was able to keep his marriage proposal a secret.

Leianna Seals thought she was in San Diego to pick up a gown for the upcoming military ball.

Bell won an engagement ring and gown in a contest in which he shared his love story about how they met in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

Much to her surprise, Bell proposed instead and she said: Yes!

"It was an awesome surprise, first time in Southern California, so I'm loving the weather, here from Southern New Orleans, so I'm just speechless. I don't know what else to say," said Seals.

They haven't set a wedding date yet.

The military ball is next month.

Toxic Fumes Force Evacuation of School

A San Bernardino Fire Department hazmat team was called to the Art Institue of San Bernardino after four students were overcome by noxious fumes early Monday.

The students had difficulty breathing after inhaling a bucket of cleaning materials.

The fumes forced the evacuation of 1,250 persons from the campus located along the 600 block of East Brier Drive in San Bernardino.

The incident happened around 9:20 a.m. when students were mixing the cleaning solution in a bucket intending to clean up some paint.

“They inhaled it and it irritated their lungs,” San Bernardino City Fire Department spokesman Tom Rubio said.

Two female students were taken to a hospital for treatment. Two other students were treated on the scene and released.

None of the injuries is believed to be serious, Rubio said. But the incident has tied up 14 fire units  from San Bernardino, San Manuel Fire Department, Loma Linda Fire Department, and San Bernardino County Fire Department.

Half of the students have been allowed to return to classes. The building in which the fumes were produced remains closed until the hazmat teams finish their cleanup.

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Guilty Plea in Phila. Police Officer's Death

Guilty Plea in Phila. Police Officer's Death

A Bucks County man entered a guilty plea Monday in the death of a Philadelphia Police officer.

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Engineers Rappel Down National Cathedral

Engineers Rappel Down National Cathedral

The daredevil engineers who captivated tourists and residents by rappelling down the Washington Monument to inspect it for earthquake damage began a similar operation at the National Cathedral Monday.

Emma Cardini and Katie Francis, members of the Difficult Access Team from Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, began rappelling down a 234-foot tower at the front of the cathedral shortly after 1 p.m. The engineers are looking for damage caused by a 5.8-magnitude earthquake that shook the nation's capital on Aug. 23.

The cathedral also sustained damage during Hurricane Irene a few days later.

Cardini and Francis are using cameras, cell phones and iPads to record apparent damage to the exterior of the cathedral.

Last week, stone masons removed 2 tons of stonework from a pinnacle of the cathedral that had been damaged. Three of the four pinnacles on the central tower, which date to 1963, were severely damaged in the earthquake.

The cathedral has been closed since the earthquake but is scheduled to reopen Nov. 12.

Inexpensive Beer for Chargers Fans

Inexpensive Beer for Chargers Fans

Thirsty for a brew at the Chargers game? Well you’re in luck – Business Insider recently found that Qualcomm Stadium has the fourth least expensive beer price of all the NFL stadiums.

The lowest cost for a small draft beer at the stadium is $6, compared with $9 for the St. Louis Rams. The average cost across the NFL is $7.13, making Qualcomm's price a relatively good deal for football fans.

But it turns out it’s less expensive to drink beer at a baseball game. Petco Park’s lowest beer price is $5, but is only in the top 10 for least expensive beer. A small daft is only $4 for the Arizona Diamondbacks patrons at Chase Field.

The most expensive small beer in Major League Baseball is $7.25 at Fenway Park where the Boston Red Sox have sold out every game since 2003.

Children Cured With Blood Cord Transplant

Children Cured With Blood Cord Transplant

An extremely rare and often fatal disease -- Malignant Infantile Osteopetrosis -- was the basis of an unlikely friendship that formed between the Shaffers from Landsdowne, Pa. and the Alnornoz's from Ecuador when both of their sons were diagnosed.

The only treatment for the disease is a stem cell transplant or a bone marrow transplant.

"Cord blood is a life line for some patients," said Doctor Anders Kolb from Nemours DuPont Hospital. He treated both children.

Mason Shaffer had his life-saving cord blood transplant in 2009. A year later when the Alnornoz's contacted Dr. Kolb in an effort to get treatment for their son, Dr. Kolb asked the Shaffers to reach out to the family for support.

"We immediately wanted to be able to help someone else because we had no one else when we were diagnosed," said Marc Shaffer.

When little Joaquin underwent his cord blood transplant in 2010, the Shaffers were there to walk the Alnornoz's through the grueling, five-month process, which ultimately was a success.

"We keep in touch with them," said Sebastian Alnornoz. "They just give us a big relief because they gave us hope."

If you're pregnant, you can ask your doctor about cord blood donation.

Sisters of Accused Kidnapper Speak Out

Sisters of Accused Kidnapper Speak Out

Two sisters of the woman police call the alleged ringleader of a human trafficking ring are speaking out.

   

Linda Weston is charged along with Gregory Thomas and Eddie Wright with keeping four mentally challenged adults captive in a tiny, Tacony basement room, in order to steal their social security and disability checks. All three are under arrest.

Two of Linda Weston's sisters told NBC10's Justin Pizzi they're shocked but not surprised about the charges, saying she's been doing this sort of thing for years.

   

"She goes from city to city to city so the cops won’t catch up to her, but they finally caught up to her," said one of the sisters, who did not give her name.

   

She added, that she'd like to see Weston locked up for life, saying "if they let her go she’s gonna run and do the same thing."

Philadelphia Police said Linda Weston was convicted of murdering a family friend in 1983 and served eight years in prison.

   

Police said they now believe Weston can be linked to several more cases of kidnapping mentally challenged people, holding them hostage and stealing from them.

   

 

Weapons Stolen From LAPD SWAT Center

Weapons Stolen From LAPD SWAT Center

Thirty submachine guns and handguns were stolen last week from a building in downtown Los Angeles used by LAPD’s Special Weapons and Tactics unit.

The 15 MP-5 submachine guns and 15 colt .45 handguns were modified to fire small plastic bullets, similar to those used in paintball, LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith said.

“These weapons are not functional,” Smith said. “They will not shoot bullets. You cannot shoot bullets without extensive modifications.”

Cmdr. Smith noted that while doable, converting a modified gun back to lethal use is no easy task. In many cases the effort would require the expertise of an armorer.

The weapons were moved to the secure training facility at 14th and San Pedro streets the night of Oct. 12 in preparation for a scheduled training the following day, according to an LAPD spokesman.

The guns, which were placed in a locked box on the first floor of the multi-story building, were discovered by a police officer Oct. 13 around 9 a.m.

A series of doors were broken into to retrieve the guns and burglars are thought to have prematurely abandoned the scene since electrical equipment was left stacked near a back door.

There was no surveillance camera in the room form which the weapons were stolen, Smith said.

Commercial crime detectives are conducting an investigation into the burglary. The department’s Professional Standards Bureau is overseeing an internal investigation into any personnel issues.

LAPD hopes to retrieve the stolen weapons.

With the SWAT armory only a half-mile from the training site, questions arose as to why the weapons were housed overnight in a less-guarded storage area.

Smith said questions regarding the transfer of the weaponry and accessibility of the weapons will be addressed in the internal investigation.

It is still unknown whether the burglary was the work of professionals or commercial burglars.

“This could be one of those commercial burglaries we see downtown sometimes where someone just happens to get lucky and get some of our weapons or it may be something more than that, Smith said. “We’re not sure yet.”

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Police Chase, Fatally Shoot Dog That Mauled L.I. Woman

Police Chase, Fatally Shoot Dog That Mauled L.I. Woman

A dog shot down by police in front of a pre-school in North Merrick, Long Island, is believed to be the canine that mauled a woman in the area late last month.

Police said the dog was shot down in front of a complex that included a chiropractor's office and an early childhood development center at Jersusalem Avenue and Meadowbrook Road.

According to authorities, the dog was spotted running in and out of the woods alongside Meadowland Parkway a short time before it was shot.

It was pursued by police on the ground and in the air, and was followed to the commercial center.

Police released gunfire in rapid succession, shooting down the animal.

"All caution was used at this location," said Det. Lt. Kevin Smith at the scene.

The animal has been removed from the scene and was taken to the town of Hempstead, where the owner of the dog will be brought in to identify it.

Police have been searching for one of the two dogs that attacked a woman Sept. 29 as she finished her walk outside the Brookside school in North Merrick. 

Surveillance video of the attack showed two dogs, one light brown and the other darker-colored, ripping at the victim's head, arms and legs, according to police. The attack was unprovoked.

The victim, identified by a neighbor as Sashi Sharma, 62, called 911 during the attack. Three officers arrived and opened fire on the dogs, killing one.

The other escaped and had been on the loose since then.

Police said Monday the owners of both dogs have been identified, but no charges are expected to be filed because there was no evidence the dogs were mistreated or trained to fight.

FBI Seeks Fingerprints, Offers Immunity in Gray Campaign Probe: Post

FBI Seeks Fingerprints, Offers Immunity in Gray Campaign Probe: Post

This past weekend had to be one of the best -- and worst -- Sundays in Mayor Vincent Gray’s entire life as a politician.

Gray stood before tens of thousands gathered to celebrate the dedication of the new Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial along the Tidal Basin.

Given the international coverage and audience, it probably was the largest crowd ever for Gray.  He gave a stem-winder of a speech calling on President Barack Obama and Congress to grant voting rights to the District’s 600,000 citizens.

But that same morning, The Washington Post threw a big, fat blanket over Gray’s moment on the national and international stage.

In a story that led the front page -- and accompanied by a major time-line graphic on an inside page -- The Post reported that the FBI has sought fingerprints and given immunity as part of its probe into allegations Gray’s 2010 campaign paid off Sulaimon Brown with cash and a government job for his part in attacking then-Mayor Adrian Fenty on the campaign trail.

The probe has been under way since late spring, but the new details -- scant as some thought they were -- provoked rumors that U.S. Attorney Ronald Machen is close to wrapping up his investigation.

Actually, no one knows except Machen and his team. 

Monday, Mayor Gray reluctantly met with News4 and other reporters to respond to The Post story.

Gray declined to comment on the timing of the story -- again, his aides were privately furious -- but said he’s innocent and is looking forward to the U.S. Attorney completing the investigation that Gray said surprised him.

“Look, I’m surprised that this thing happened in the first place,” he said. “The fact that we’ve had to spend months working on this, if anybody had suggested to me that this is what we would have to spend our time on, I would have said, ‘No way,’ and certainly it’s not what I wanted to do. So the surprises were right from the very beginning.”

McDonald's Launching In-Store TV Channel

For those who crave news, entertainment and advertising while chomping on a burger will be lovin' the news coming out McDonald's headquarters.

The Oak Brook-based fast food chain announced Monday it will provide more than 11,000 of its United States stores with a new digital television channel -- The McDonald's Channel.

It's an "entertainment network based on purpose built programming focused on what a McDonald's customer is most passionate about...Sports, lifestyle, entertainment, and music," according to a statement on the official McDonald's channel website. 

McDonald's plans to use the channel to provide a "family-friendly" atmosphere when dining-in. Programs lined up include children's music videos, travel channel programs, movies such as Where the Wild Things Are and television shows like Merlin.

The chain has also developed its own original programming like McDonald's sports news, specials on extraordinary high school athletes.

The restaurant promises to keep content localized with news updates and stories about local individuals.

The channel is high definition and they expect more than 26 million captive American diners per month to access the channel. 

Algae Bloom Affects Much of Texas Coast

Algae Bloom Affects Much of Texas Coast

An algae bloom known as red tide that is killing fish and making throats scratchy up and down the Texas Gulf Coast did not surprise researchers who knew the ongoing drought made conditions ripe.

Texas Parks and Wildlife marine biologist Meridith Byrd said Monday the geographic scope of this red tide -- from Galveston to South Padre Island -- is the largest since 2000.

Byrd and other scientists started preparing early in the summer because they recognized the state's brutal drought was creating the warm, salty waters closer to shore that the algae love.

The Cameron County health department warned people with respiratory illnesses, including asthma, to avoid South Padre Island and Boca Chica beach Sunday until further notice. The last red tide along the Texas coast was 2009.

Texas Scaling Back Two-a-Day Workouts

Texas Scaling Back Two-a-Day Workouts

Texas public high school football players will likely have far fewer two-a-day practices starting in 2012.

After a summer of record temperatures, the University Interscholastic League on Monday approved rules designed to reduce the the number of two-a-day practices. That includes banning them for the first four days of training camp.

Teams also would be banned from having two-a-days on consecutive days. On days when teams practice twice, players must be given at least a two-hour break between sessions.

The changes must still be given final approval by state Education Commissioner Robert Scott, but he is expected to accept the UIL's recommendations.

The NFL recently banned two-a-day practices under its new collective bargaining agreement and many colleges have scaled back multiple-practice days in recent years.

NJ Man Hides Heroin in Son’s Toy Bag

NJ Man Hides Heroin in Son’s Toy Bag

Prosecutors say a northwest New Jersey man has admitted hiding 500 bags of heroin inside his 5-year-old son's toy bag because he thought police wouldn't search it.

Thirty-one-year-old Christopher Ennis of Branchville faces up to six years in state prison after recently pleading guilty to using a juvenile in a drug distribution scheme. He's due to be sentenced Dec. 16.

Ennis was arrested after a traffic stop in April while driving with the child.

Sparta police stopped Ennis for having an expired inspection sticker, and he then allowed them to search the vehicle. Officers soon found the heroin - valued at $10,000 - and some hypodermic needles mixed in with children's toys and clothes.

Sussex County prosecutors say Ennis eventually admitted using his son as a decoy to trick police.

Your First 60 Days: What to Expect

Your First 60 Days: What to Expect

OK, so FamiliesGo!'s connections to Chicago are tenuous at best: The Brooklyn-based startup that aspires to take the hassle out of planning family vacations uses a Chicago-based staffing agency.

But still, founder Eileen P. Gunn's recent piece for Inc.com detailing her first 60 days of running the company yields a great snapshot of what launching your own company is like.

Gunn details the highs and lows with equal aplomb, as well as a commendable calm throughout. Gunn is honest with herself about her challenges and faces them head on. It's too bad the piece doesn't indicate the day number for each check-in, but there are still great checkpoints that serve as barometers of what you could imagine for your new venture idea.

Some of the stops on her rollercoaster include a cruise line responding to her blog's complaints about them: "This isn't anything I'll make money from, but it's validating (and great for my ego)." She also ponders how to get her newsletter running ("I've managed to harvest maybe two-dozen names for a newsletter list... Clearly I need to be more clever about getting people who visit the site to hand over their email address") and mild worries about a drop in traffic ("I expected seasonal dips like this... but my base is still small enough that I need bigger and steadier growth").

Until virtual reality becomes an actual reality, this is a good way of looking at your future as an entrepreneur if you're still fence-sitting. Read the full Inc.com piece here.

Q&A: Optimo Hats on Opening a Second Location

Q&A: Optimo Hats on Opening a Second Location

Not every business is struggling. In fact, some are indeed flourishing during these trying times.

True, Optimo Hats may not be a household name, but you've definitely seen their products: The Beverly institution's dashing wares have been donned by movie stars (all the hats in 2009's Public Enemies were made there), comedians (Bernie Mac frequented the store) and pretty much anyone you see out on the streets wearing a striking, old-fashioned derby, trilby or Panama hat.

Owner/Hatmaker Graham Thompson started the store in the mid-'90s, and while it has certainly flourished, its main drawback is its location. No matter where you live in the city, it's a trek out to Beverly and back. Thompson knows this.

And so now, Thompson has decided to do something about it. Come mid- or late-November, Optimo Hats will be opening its second location in the Loop. I gave Thompson a call to talk about what's involved with running two stores at once, what the process was like of scouting locations and what other plans he has for the future.

What can you tell me about the second location?

Graham Thompson: We're opening up in the Monadnock Building, which is at Jackson and Dearborn. You can Google it and the Wikipedia page on it is pretty accurate. In a nutshell, it was built in 1893, I think, Daniel Burnham built it. It's got all this architectural significance, and it's just a completely cool building. I really love the zone that we're in. It's just the cultural center of Chicago, old-school Chicago. It's just really our vibe.

That's totally the right vibe for you guys.

Graham Thompson: Oh, totally. Yeah. We looked for quite some time more in the Gold Coast area and couldn't really find something that was perfect for me. When we saw this all the pieces just fell into place. We are gonna open probably mid-November. We're shooting for mid- to end of November.

What made you start thinking of expanding?

Graham Thompson: We've been here for 15 years and I've been thinking about a downtown location for probably 10 years. I didn't really seriously start to look into this and think about it [until] the last two years. I knew the time was approaching. Well, actually, before that. I guess for the last five years.

The first thing we needed to do was expand our production facility here, because I knew that was going to have to get bigger to give us more of a capability to expand. We had to do that first. So we got settled in, and for the last year I've been really looking quite seriously. It took us about a year. When we found this location, it just worked on so many different levels. It's just got that feeling where I knew we were in the right place, and we plan on really establishing ourselves there, to be there for a long time.

Will this second location differentiate itself somehow from the current location?

Graham Thompson: We wanted it definitely to have its own character. It's not going to be the same thing as here. We're going to have different stock there. Slightly different styles. But we want the place to be a comfortable, enjoyable place for our customers to hang out, just to kinda feel like at home like they do when they're down here at this location. I wanted it to be one of those places -- this is one of our main reasons for locating downtown, is that a lot of our growth is on out-of-state clients now. We're having more and more people visit Chicago and they want to see us, and they're only in town for a day or a short period of time, and it's just very difficult for them to get to see us [in Beverly]. That was one big thing.

This is going to be great for a lot of our local Chicago business. So many people work so close to there. And I want it to be a location that people who are familiar with our store now and like our store now -- they'll have a reason to go to both stores. 

You mentioned in our e-mails that this second location would make things easier for you. Can you elaborate a bit on that?

Graham Thompson: It's going to allow us to certainly present more product. We don't have any more room to display our product here, so it's going to give us an additional showroom. It's going to give us a space that we can pretty much dedicate solely to retail. It's going to help us with being a lot closer to our customer base, rather than it always being a trek out to our factory. But again, it's not going to be a secondary store that is a shadow of the first store. There'd be no reason to go.

It's not going to be like Starbucks.

Graham Thompson: No, it's not going to be like that at all. I want it to be like, our customers love this place, they love the new place. Someone's in from out of town? They're gonna enjoy going to both places. The building is so cool, it's just a great feeling walking into this lobby. If you go down there, you can see it. It's really our style. It's a walk from the train line to Beverly, so it connects the two stores very well. It keeps us in the south end of the city.

How do you expect this to affect your day-to-day, running two stores, because obviously you can't be in two places at once.

Graham Thompson: Well, I'm going to be at both stores. Maybe two days a week here, two days a week there. We've had to build up staff in preparation for this. As we grow I want to try to continue to scale our business in a way that allows us to improve our product. Improving our product does not mean that I need to be sitting there overseeing every minute detail of everything. It's just about, as we grow, making sure that everyone on our team is passionate about what they do and is all after the same goals. We can have people specialize more directly in what they're doing.

For example our sewing is better than ever. Our sewers are very focused on what they're doing. I've hired a production manager who is an engineer, and he's going to be helping us refine the quality of all of our processes even more. This is the team I want to assemble. I've been doing less sales directly than I used to because our sales manager just does such a great job with all of that. Once our customers know they're in good hands, then it's all cool. I don't have to be around to do every little detail, so, I'm not stepping away from the business per se, but as it grows I want to be able to...

You want to grow with it.

Graham Thompson: Grow with it, and just try to focus on things that I'm excited to do.

Like what?

Graham Thompson: As we get more hats going, as we get the number of hats that we sell up, one of the things we can do is afford to invest more and more in having things custom-made for our product. So we can always use this sort of scale to reinvest in things that are going to grow our quality. I think it'd be no different than if we were making high-end automobiles or whatever. Growth can give you the income that you need to invest in more and more quality. That's our goal. We want to be the benchmark of quality with hats in the world, not just in Chicago. That's our niche. This store is going to get that word out more, especially more to the global community.

That's a really exciting part of what we do. We're a Chicago company. Chicago is the hat town. There is so much rich culture here that's tied to hats. People feel it hear. A lot of proud hat-wearers, people who know how to wear hats live in Chicago. That's what's cool about being here and manufacturing here. But globally, we're starting to ship hats all over the world. We don't have hundreds going to each country, but, like, every week, we're sending hats to different countries. Japan, Iceland, the UK. Things are just kinda popping up.

How do hat tastes vary internationally compared to over here?

Graham Thompson: I think it's kinda subtle. We're not selling enough to really see patterns as much. It's pretty eclectic and all over the place. But I think the new store is gonna help us reach more of an international clientele, and I just want to keep pushing that. That's our niche. We want to make the best men's dress hats in the world. And to do that, I don't want to just sit back and say, "We're doing that, and that's all we're going to do. We're going to keep making exactly how we do it." I think to stay on top we need to continually refine our product.

I think a very important point is we've found that our customers have always appreciated that. They're right along with us. They are happy with the hats that they've bought, and they see how great they are in the long haul. Every time we get a softer felt or something that's finer or better, they love it. They love to see that. So, I guess that's what I'm planning to do more and more of, to keep tweaking our product.

Finally, do you have any advice for other business owners who are thinking of opening another location? Something you wish you knew starting out in this process that you learned the hard way?

Graham Thompson: I would say definitely do not rush into any location. I've had a few deals fall through that I was very excited about and I'm so glad that we backed out of them or that they didn't go through. Don't talk to yourself into any location. Really, really wait until it feels right. Definitely, if you're going to make a move, make sure you're ready to do that and it's not going to affect your quality. What we thought about a lot was never just about, "We need more money, we need more sales. Let's just open a new store up." I know we couldn't just do that. How are we gonna make it? How are we gonna make the hats? If we're maxed out at our production now, how could we throw another store open? It'd just result in hats being late, customers being upset, and us being stressed. I really wanted to avoid that, so I thought a lot about that before we opened. We needed to make sure that we'd be prepared for the business that a new store would bring and that quality and service would not suffer. That's certainly my goal. I'm sure that everything isn't going to be totally perfect and smooth. We're gonna have some issues and problems and we're going to have to learn as we grow. I feel confident that we're prepared and we're making this move at the right time, and we've got a fabulous staff that's ready for it, and that's all I could ask for.

Why It's Good To Be King in Chicago

Why It's Good To Be King in Chicago

New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman usually reports from such Third World dictatorships as Pakistan, Syria and Egypt. Friedman is used to dealing with autocrats. But this Sunday, Friedman reported from the Chicago mayor’s office, where he found … an autocrat.

As part of the run-up to Rahm 2016, Friedman portrayed Emanuel as “a progressive in the age of austerity” whose task is “a microcosm of what the whole country will have to do for the next decade: find smart ways to invest in education and infrastructure to generate growth while cutting overall spending to balance the budget -- all at the same time and with limited new taxes. It’s a progressive agenda on a Tea Party allowance.”

To a Chicagoan, Emanuel’s plans aren’t so interesting -- we know he wants to lengthen the school day and put more cops on the street. What’s interesting is hearing him declare that the city’s financial crisis requires a strongman whose policies are above democratic give-and-take.

“I want to be honest about this budget,” the mayor declared. “Almost every one of these ideas has been discussed and debated before. But politics has stood in the way of their adoption. Maybe in the past, we could afford the political path. But we have come to the point where we can’t afford it any longer. The cost of putting political choices ahead of practical solutions has become too expensive. It is destroying Chicago’s finances and threatening the city’s future. In all of these reforms, we will be guided by principle, pragmatism and progress -- not politics. What we simply cannot do is to temporize any longer. We can’t kick the can down the road because we’ve run out of road.”

As an example of a decision corrupted by politics, he cited the 2003 Chicago Teachers Union contract, in which teachers got a pay raise and a shortened school week. In exchange, “politicians did not get a teachers’ strike.” Most people would call that collective bargaining. Emanuel wants to be even more of a one-man show than Richard M. Daley, who once told a new speechwriter that he’d like working in Chicago because it was not a political city, but a city where, as the speechwriter put it, “consensus has become more conspicuous than conflict.”

When Emanuel proposed his longer school day, he said the time for arguing was over. It was time to do what was best for the children.

“Rahm is not negotiating, he’s announcing," Barbara Radner, director of DePaul University's Center for Urban Education, told the Tribune.

After meeting with Congress as president-elect, George W. Bush cracked, “If this were a dictatorship, it’d be a heck of a lot easier, as long as I’m the dictator.”

Deep down, most mayors, governors and presidents probably feel that way. But our system is built on give-and-take, not one-man rule. So far, Emanuel’s dictatorial instincts have been counterproductive. His high-handed attempts to steamroll the teacher’s union seems to have made its leaders more determined to resist a longer school day. Last week, they filed a complaint with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board, seeking to block schools from extending their days.

It’s good to be king, but there’s a reason the prime minister makes the laws.

Mt. Soledad Rehearing Denied

Mt. Soledad Rehearing Denied

A full panel of federal judges has declined to rehear the case of a war memorial cross atop Mt. Soledad in a public park in San Diego that has been deemed unconstitutional by the court.

A group fighting to preserve the monument announced Monday that the 11-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied its request. Five of the judges dissented, stating the cross should stay.

A three-judge panel in January ruled that the cross conveys a message of religion and is unconstitutional.

Kelly Shackelford said her organization will appeal to the Supreme Court. Shackelford is an attorney for the Mount Soledad Memorial Association, which oversees the monument.

The 29-foot cross in the San Diego suburb of La Jolla was dedicated in 1954 in honor of Korean War veterans.



Copyright NBC San Diego / Associated Press

4 Disabled Adults Chained to Boiler, Police Seek Public’s Help

Police are trying to find the family of a mentally disabled man found with three other disabled adults chained inside a squalid Philadelphia basement Saturday.

While the relatives of three of the mentally disabled adults have been located, police are still searching for the family of 40-year-old Herbert Knowles. Knowles has the mental capacity of a 10-year-old and may be from the state of Virginia, police say.

It was the landlord of the apartment building at 4724 Longshore Avenue in the Tacony section of the city who discovered the four mentally disabled adults locked in a boiler room in the sub-basement that was so small an average adult would be unable to stand up straight in the room.

Landlord Turgut Gozleveli thinks the victims were there for only a few days, as he says he works in the basement every day and found the victims Saturday.

The landlord says one man chained to a boiler said nothing as he was freed.

Gozleveli says the alleged ringleader, 51-year-old Linda Ann Weston of the 2500 block of North 29th Street, is the mother of his tenant.

Weston served eight years in the starvation death of Bernardo Ramos, 25, after he refused to support her sister's unborn child, reports the Philadelphia Inquirer. Weston held Ramos in the closet of her North Philadelphia apartment in 1981 until he died.

Gozleveli says he met Weston and her boyfriend, Eddie “the Rev. Ed” Wright, a 50-year-old homeless man, at the apartment Thursday. They are charged along with 47-year-old Gregory Thomas, who lived at the same address as Weston, with kidnapping, assault and other charges.

The sub-basement room they were in called to mind a Cold War-era bomb shelter and contained a makeshift bed, mattress and sheets, said Officer Tanya Little, a police spokeswoman. The adults were chained to the boiler with a bucket for a toilet and very little to eat or drink.

“It was horrible,” she said Sunday. “The space was very tiny and confined.”

The 29-year-old woman and the men, who are 31, 35, and 40, were taken to a hospital for treatment. Little said the victims appeared to have no physical problems other than malnourishment.

Philadelphia police and the FBI are investigating whether the suspects were holding the victims to collect their disability benefits.

It's not clear how the suspects knew the victims.

 

Former Celebrity Security Guard Guilty in OxyContin Trafficking

Former Celebrity Security Guard Guilty in OxyContin Trafficking

A Maryland man who worked as a security guard for several famous recording artists was found guilty of oxycodone distribution Friday.

Joseph Emmanuel Mann, 57, of New Carrollton, Md., led an OxyContin ring throughout the D.C. area from 2003 through 2011, authorities said. He was able to obtain large quantities by using various identities, donning wigs and hats and using several names and birth dates to get OxyContin 80 mg pills from multiple pharmacies. Co-conspirators said they saw him wear neck braces and carry crutches into pharmacies, pretending to be in a great deal of pain.

Mann sat in a wheelchair for the duration of the trial though no witnesses ever saw him in a wheelchair prior to his arrest July 12, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

Evidence showed Mann sold more than 20,000 pills, distributing them near schools, libraries and restaurants and on the National Mall. Many were resold in northern Virginia, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.

Mann worked as a security guard for several celebrities, including Stevie Wonder, Tina Turner, Lionel Richie and Marvin Gaye. He faces up to 20 years in prison. Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 27.

No Injuries in High-Rise Fire

No injuries were reported, but the cause of a big fire on Chicago's north side remains under investigation.

Thick black smoke could be seen for miles as it poured from the upper stories of a high-rise in the 5900 block of North Sheridan.

Numerous ambulances and fire trucks responded to the building, at 5901 N. Sheridan Rd., at about 1:15 p.m.

All apartments and stairwells of the 16-story building were searched by fire crews without anyone being found and without any injuries reported.

A roofing company which was reportedly working on the roof has representatives on the scene, but the cause of the fire is not known.

Antonio Gates Poised to Make Return

Antonio Gates Poised to Make Return

All was well Monday morning when the Chargers returned to practice after a bye week of rest, recovery and relaxation.

Tight end Antonio Gates (foot) was on the field for the first time in nearly a month, running well and catching red-zone passes at the back of the end zone. Running backs Ryan Mathews (calf strain) and Mike Tolbert (concussion) were participating, too.

After a week away, the team had gained something extremely valuable: separation.

As the roster grew to nearly full health, two of the three other teams in the AFC West appear to have weakened, as the upstart Oakland Raiders lost their starting quarterback to injury, and the Broncos traded away their top receiver for a conditional draft pick.

On the Chargers' end, it'll take a setback to keep Gates from returning to game action Sunday against the New York Jets. With him back, the offense was nearly at full strength Monday, barring the absence of wide receiver Vincent Jackson, whose status will be updated after practice.

Defensive end Luis Castillo (tibia) did not practice and is the only Chargers player assured of missing Sunday's game.

Meanwhile, around the AFC West, Jason Campbell broke his right collarbone Sunday against the Cleveland Browns, landing hard on his shoulder at the end of a second-quarter scramble. He is expected to miss several weeks.

According to multiple reports, the Raiders have reached out to free agent quarterbacks David Garrard and Josh McCown while inquiring about Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer, who has held true in his threat to retire if not traded.

Bengals management has, to this point, fulfilled its role in the stalemate, deflecting all outside interest for Palmer. Garrard also needs surgery, according to reports, and is not an immediate option.

Campbell threw for 1,170 yards with six touchdowns and four interceptions for the Raiders, considered to be the Chargers' greatest competition in the division race. They are 4-2, a half game behind the Bolts (4-1) in the AFC West standings.

On Monday morning, before the Chargers could hit their Mission Valley practice field, the Broncos sent Pro Bowl wideout Brandon Lloyd to the St. Louis Rams for a conditional sixth-round draft pick, which will reportedly become a fifth rounder if Lloyd catches 30 or more passes during the remainder of the season.

Christie: Workers in NJ Will Pay Less Taxes in '12

Christie: Workers in NJ Will Pay Less Taxes in '12

Most workers in New Jersey will be paying less in payroll taxes starting in January.

That's when a reduction in the Disability Insurance tax takes effect.

Gov. Chris Christie announced at a town hall in Little Falls on Monday that the $190 million cut will save workers about $87 a year.

Assemblyman Matthew Milam, a South Jersey Democrat who sponsored the legislation in the Assembly, says the law is designed to provide tax relief by preventing excessive accumulations in the state disability benefits fund.

Christie previously signed a law cutting $57 million in Family Leave Insurance taxes. That tax break began in January.

Rookies Step Up in Bears Win

Rookies Step Up in Bears Win

Until Sunday night, an undrafted free agent was the Bears rookie with the greatest impact.

Though first-rounder Gabe Carimi was effective until he was injured, it's Dane Sanzenbacher who has had the most playing time and effect on the Bears' season. Stephen Paea and Chris Conte changed that against the Vikings.

The Bears traded draft picks to get Paea, a highly-touted defensive lineman out of Oregon State. His strength was well-known because of the display he put on at the NFL combine, breaking the bench press record. But until Sunday, he was yet to dress for a game. Matt Toeina's injury allowed Paea to play, and he made an immediate impact. He sacked Vikings QB Donovan McNabb in the end zone, giving the Bears two points for a safety.

Chris Conte, the third-rounder out of California, played before Sunday, but the benching of Chris Harris and Brandon Merriweather gave Conte a chance to start. Conte wasn't dazzling, but his three tackles and three assists got the job done. He didn't allow any long-yardage to break out, which is what caused Merriweather and Harris to lose their jobs.

“We didn’t allow any big plays,” said Conte, who made his first NFL start. “We made some tackles and kept the ball in front of us. We made them beat us and they couldn’t.”

We've been critical of Jerry Angelo's drafting prowess in the past, and one game will not change that. However, Bears fans can have some hope for the future when two rookies play so well when called upon.

Why CookItForUs Might be Heating Up: Guest

Why CookItForUs Might be Heating Up: Guest

I’ve written about the nascent startup for nibblers called CookItForUs several times, each time with skepticism and excitement. Anytime you write about a product you might actually use, the heart beats a touch faster.

For the uninitiated, let me give you the 30-second version of what the team is up to: CookItForUs connects a network of food makers with food consumers, utilizing a recipe database so large that you could never taste each dish before you die. Instead of constrained restaurant menus, think about any recipe you have ever seen on the Internet or TV -- made and brought to you. Heck, a cursory glance at the startup's website yields peeks at recipes for everything from bacon chocolate-chip cookies to sweet-potato burritos.

Hide the credit card, right?

Of course, there are risks in the strategy, as it is so grand. All that food-creating and eating requires a colossal network. As I noted before, if the company can hit scale, the potential market, eating, is simply massive ($1.335 trillion yearly, in the U.S.). Some things sound crazy until they work, and CookItForUs is just such an idea.

But a recent encounter with CookItForUs founder Moshe Tamssot has me rethinking the odds I would have laid on the startup. The team appears focused, cognizant of the dilemma involving the poultry and the pre-form, and honestly seems capable of pulling off its dream.

As I was standing around a campfire, happily supping my whisky and melted cheese-on-a-stick, I could not help but want them to succeed. The idea of food, of every note and title, with socially engaged pricing is simply too compelling to be neutral about. The team is currently working on building itself up before it takes on a large round, but I would suspect that when the time comes, it won’t be too hard to come by.

Startup communities need all sorts of companies, and while food might be hot at the moment, Chicago’s scene is certainly stronger thanks to the mad scientists of CookItForUs. Forks up!

Alex is a writer and technologist who covers emerging companies in the Midwest. He has worked previously for numerous early stage technology companies, contributes to The Next Web, and has a particular interest in watching the social web monetize.