28 October 2011

SANDAG Approves Transportation Plan

SANDAG Approves Transportation Plan

A Regional Transportation Plan that would improve highways, trolley lines and add jobs to the area was recently approved by the San Diego Association of Governments on Friday.

The $214 billion plan would last through 2050. Highlights include including 156 new miles of Trolley service and a new trolley tunnel downtown. The plan also hopes to improve the North County Coaster, add 130 miles of managed freeway lanes and increase $3.8 billion for bike and pedestrian projects.

Before their final vote, the SANDAG board got an earful from residents, mostly split among business and environmental interests.

“No money should be spent on new highways, but more money should be spent on trains,” Hugh Moore of the San Diego Green Party said.

But those in favor were interested in the economy.

“At the end of the day, it's all about putting people to work,” said Valentine Macedo from Laborers Union Local 89.

The plan overwhelmingly passed 18-1, with Lemon Grove being the only city against it.

Man Arrested for Wife's Murder Pleads Not Guilty: Lakeside

Man Arrested for Wife's Murder Pleads Not Guilty: Lakeside

Two days after he allegedly told San Diego County Sheriff’s deputies that he thought killed his wife, a Lakeside man plead not guilty to a murder charge in an El Cajon courtroom.

Andy Welch, 45, was arrested on one count of murder shortly after 1 p.m. Wednesday when he walked into the Santee sheriff's station and said he may have killed his wife of one year at their home in the 11000 block of El Nopal Rd, according to deputies.

According to the case’s prosecutor, Scott Perillo, Welch shot his 43-year-old wife, Tonya Welch,  with a .40-caliber handgun.

At the station Welch told deputies that he had a fight with his wife the night before and that he had hurt her “really bad", Perillo said.

The deputies reportedly offered to send medics to the home but Welch declined claiming that his wife did not need them.

Deputies later found the body of a deceased woman inside the home at about 1:10 p.m.

The prosecution said deputies discovered Tonya Welch faced down in a hallway bleeding with a bullet wound in her back and chest. The cause of death was said to be a single gunshot wound to the torso.

No motive was given in the case and friends of Tonya said they were surprised Andy Welch could be capable of murder.

According to a neighbor’s son, Tonya Welch seemed angry when she left the home on Tuesday.

“She was going through the gate and all I hear is this loud screech… and she peeled out and she looked real looked frustrated and mad, “said the boy. “I have no idea why because they were a loving couple. “

Only last month, the Welchs celebrated their one year anniversary and two weeks before she was found dead, Tonya Welch left a loving for her husband on Facebook saying that she “couldn’t have been happier”.

“It sure feels good to be in love for reals [sic],” the post said, “an awesome man helps too, thank God I finally got every bit of that .”

Tonya Welch, an East County resident most of her life, leaves behind six children between the ages of 9 and 27.

On Friday, Andy Welch’s bail set at $1 million and he could face up to 50 years in prison if convicted.

Welch is scheduled to have a readiness hearing on January 18 and a preliminary hearing on February 22.

 

Lenders Take Control of A.C. Pier Shops

Lenders Take Control of A.C. Pier Shops

Lenders have taken control of the upscale shopping venue that was supposed to bring new glamor and glitz to Atlantic City.

They prevailed against one other bidder in a foreclosure auction Friday to obtain The Pier Shops at Caesars for just over $25 million. They plan to continue operating the pier while seeking a new buyer.

      

Lenders foreclosed on the shopping center after its owner, Taubman Centers Inc. defaulted on its mortgage. The mall developer owes nearly $150 million.

      

The mortgage was cancelled as part of the sale and the buyer did not inherit the debt.

      

The pier opened in 2006, when no one realized the Atlantic City market was at its height. The resort has since endured nearly five years of plunging revenues and lost market share.

      

Uh Oh! October Snow

A Winter Storm Warning is in effect from Saturday morning through Saturday evening for the southern Poconos, Lehigh Valley, Berks County and Northwestern New Jersey.

Rain will develop overnight in Southeastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware.

  • 100 Thousand Tons of Salt

  • Lehigh Valley Snow Preps

On Saturday, expect rain (heavy at times) in those same areas. In fact, we should see 1 to 2 inches of rain. Coastal Flood Warnings have been issued in the tidal section of the Delaware River and along the shore. The National Weather Service says to expect "numerous roadways to flood and minor to moderate property damage is possible."

There is also a wind advisory along the coastal counties of Delaware and New Jersey with wind gusts up to 45 mph.

The coastal plain should see only a trace to a coating of snow on grass. The Southern and Eastern parts of Philadelphia should see one to three inches of snow. Northern and Western parts of the city should see two to six inches, with the highest amounts in areas of high elevation.

North and West of the region and parts of North Chester, Montgomery County and Bucks County should see four to ten inches. The Poconos will be hit hardest in the region and should see a mix of snow and rain as early as late morning and a total of over 12 inches. 

Snow should only stick to roads if its coming down very heavily. The main problem will be heavy, wet snow accumulating on tree leaves which could lead to power outages.

The storm will be over by early Sunday morning. The snow will melt quickly during the day.

Here's the expected timeline:

North and West of Philly:

4 a.m.-9 a.m. Rain Develops
9 a.m.-2 p.m. Rain Gets Heavier
2 p.m.-6 p.m. Rain to Heavy Snow
6 p.m.-10 p.m. Heavy Snow
After 10 p.m. Snow Ends/Cold Wind

 

Philly:

2 a.m.-8 a.m. Rain Develops
8 a.m.-4 p.m. Rain Gets Heavier
4 p.m.-7 p.m. Rain to Heavy Snow
7 p.m.-10 p.m. Heavy Wet Sow
After 10 p.m. Snow Ends/Cold Wind

South and East of Philly: 

Mid-6 a.m. Rain Develops
6 a.m.-2 p.m. Rain Gets Heavier
2 p.m.-7 p.m. Heavy Rain/Wind
7 p.m.-10 p.m. Rain to Snow/Wind
After 10 p.m. Snow Ends/Cold Wind

Molestation Charges Dropped Against Ex-Teacher

Molestation Charges Dropped Against Ex-Teacher

A former Pennsylvania middle school teacher has pleaded guilty to possession of child pornography but prosecutors opted to drop a molestation charge against him.

Former Easton Middle School teacher Stephen Sullivan pleaded guilty Friday to a single pornography possession charge in return for having another 99 counts dropped. Prosecutors also dropped a molestation case involving a 7-year-old girl after determining the girl's accounts were unreliable.

Police searched Sullivan's home in February after the girl claimed he sexually assaulted her in December 2009. Authorities found numerous pornographic pictures and videos and Sullivan was arrested in March following a suicide attempt.

Assistant Northampton County District Attorney Patricia Broscius says "blatant inconsistencies" in the girl's testimony made it impossible to proceed with the molestation case.

Sentencing is set for January.

 

Man Struck, Killed by Train in Trenton

Man Struck, Killed by Train in Trenton

Police are investigating the death of a man who was struck by a train.

It happened Friday around 10:50 a.m. at the Cass Street Station in Trenton.

Officials from NJ Transit say it appears the man stepped off the platform into the path of an oncoming train and was struck and killed.

Riverline service was suspended between Hamilton Avenue and Bordentown but was resumed shortly before 1 p.m.

No word yet on the identity of the victim. The investigation continues.

 

Crews Battle Delco House Fire

Crews Battle Delco House Fire

Crews are on the scene of a house fire in Delaware County.

The blaze broke out Friday afternoon at a home located on Gradyville Road in Glen Mills.

Firefighters were able to bring it under control shortly before 7 p.m.

No one was injured. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

 

Fat Jokes Land Doc in Hot Water

Fat Jokes Land Doc in Hot Water

A local doctor and part-time comedian learned that some jokes are better suited for the comedy club rather than a medical magazine.

John D. Kelly IV, 54, is an orthopedic surgeon at the University of Pennsylvania. He also performs as a stand-up comic and specializes in “good, wholesome humor to enliven the spirit,” according to his website.

But a recent routine from Kelly did anything but “enliven the spirits” of readers of Outpatient Surgery Magazine. Kelly writes a monthly humor column for the publication, according to the Inquirer. One article he wrote back in August packed with one-liners aimed at obese patients landed him in some hot water.

The Obesity Action Coaltion posted excerpts from the article on their website in which Kelly lists characteristics of obese patients that surgeons should worry about. The jokes include:

  • "There is a comma in your patient's body weight."
  • "The radio skips when your patient walk into the room."
  • "IV access requires a priest."
  • "The OR transporter demands danger pay."

Obesity Action also posted the following passage from Kelly's article:

Our patients are getting bigger and bigger. Not only is the obesity epidemic to blame, but the abundance of food, protein shakes and the steroid craze are generating larger and larger patients. I worry when I do surgery on these behemoths because complications increase and exposures are truly more difficult.

Readers of Outpatient and the University were also less than amused. The Inquirer reports that Penn issued a statement saying Kelly’s comments “do not in any way reflect the health system’s views."

The reaction from the magazine’s editor, Dan O’Connor, caused even more outrage. O’Connor didn’t take the column off the magazine’s website until earlier this week, according to the Inquirer. While addressing the situation, the Inquirer reports O’Connor stated that Kelly “maybe’ crossed the line but that he would “not muzzle him, we apologize to those we offended, and we march on."

Kelly, it turns out, was much more apologetic. The doctor conducted an interview with the website Former Fat Dudes last Saturday. Kelly claimed that he’s issued an apology and answered every email he received from readers regarding the article. During the interview, Kelly claims that he “blew it,” did not respect the “dignity” of his patients and “didn’t recognize” that it was a “different audience than the comedy clubs.”

But Kelly also claims the hurtful jokes aren’t appropriate for any audience. “I will revamp my comedy routines now that I know the potential hurt some jokes can inflict,” he told the website. “Obesity is a real problem but can only be remedied with kindness, compassion and absence of judgment.”

Kelly also issued an apology to Obesity Action which has since been posted on their website:

I am asking for forgiveness for a recent column I wrote. I confess I am frustrated by the obesity epidemic and the risks I see my patients undergo. I did not use a constructive vehicle to affect change and instead used oneliners my comedian colleagues have used for decades. I was obese once – in college. I played football was not happy with the way I looked. I share the frustrations of many and used my medical knowledge (and Grace) to lose the weight. Ironically I see patients no one else will see and actually have more empathy than most. I made a lazy decision to use recycled lines in order to meet my deadline. I know not to judge and that this problem will be best rectified with compassion and kindness. I never meant to hurt anyone and I will endeavor to let other comedians learn of the potential harmful effects their words can have.

If you have other suggestions as how I can undue some of the hurt I have caused, please feel free to let me know.

 

In spite of the controversy, Kelly is still a well-liked and highly respected doctor according to the Inquirer. The Inquirer reports he’s received high ratings from patients at Penn and also received several “teacher of the year” awards when he worked for the Temple University School of Medicine.

Kelly’s twin brother Michael, a lawyer from Wilmington, issued the following statement in defense of the doctor:

I think the world of my brother, and I have met no finer human being. He graduated at the top of his class in med school, was an All-State athlete, is an accomplished artist, and possesses ambidextrous surgical skills that are unmatched in my opinion. Years of patient surveys confirm the fact that Dr. Kelly is extremely kind, compassionate and respectful to all of his patients, all of them. 

I ask that the public judge Dr. Kelly by his countless "good" acts and not by one mistake. As someone who helps fight the battle against medical conditions caused by obesity, Dr.Kelly, an accomplished comedian,  was trying to use expressions popularized by professional comedians to focus attention to a very serious health problem in this country. He did not intend to offend or show disrespect to anyone, and he has apologized publicly for his mistake. We all make mistakes.

 

Facebook Leads to Skatepark Arrests

A week after facebook helped police nab an alleged burglar, the social media site is again receiving credit for helping authorities make another arrest.

Erik Sammartino, 19, James O’Brien, 24 and John Rutkowski, 20, all of Somers Point, were arrested on Thursday after allegedly trying to steal from an aging Ocean City skateboard park.

The dismantling of the park, located on the 800 block of 6th Street, was recently authorized by the city. On Wednesday, police were alerted to facebook messages related to the park’s removal. One message from Sammartino caught their attention.

“The one suspect said, ‘I didn’t walk out of the place empty handed last night,” said Captain Steve Ang of the Ocean City Police.

Police established surveillance at the park Wednesday night. Around 8 p.m., police say they spotted two men exiting a parked vehicle and attempting to break into the secured park. They left the area when they couldn’t find an entrance, according to investigators.

Around 12:45 a.m. on Thursday, police say the two suspects returned to the park along with a third person riding a bike. One suspect allegedly broke into the park through a hole in the fence. Police say he tried to remove a 20-foot aluminum skateboard rail and hand it to the other two men. Police quickly moved in and arrested Sammartino, O’Brien and Rutkowski.

All three men are charged with theft while O’Brien is also charged with trespassing.

“Facebook, it’s used by the good people, it’s used by the bad people,” said Captain Ang. “In this day and age, people just put it out there for the world to see and police can use it as a tool to solve crime.”

 

14-Year-Old Boy Shot in Southwest Philly

14-Year-Old Boy Shot in Southwest Philly

A teenage boy is in the hospital after a shooting in Southwest Philadelphia.

It happened on Friday around 7:10 p.m. on Grays Avenue near 66th Street in the Elmwood section of the city.

Police say the victim, 14, was shot in his buttocks. He was taken to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia where he remains in stable condition.

No arrests have been made. No word yet on any suspects.

 

Purse Snatcher Stabs Himself: Cops

Purse Snatcher Stabs Himself: Cops

An alleged purse snatcher is in police custody after suffering self-inflicted wounds, according to police.

Investigators say the suspect snatched a woman’s purse early Friday evening at the Trader Joe’s on 21st and Market. Police then say the man escaped in his vehicle.

Responding police officers spotted a man inside a car fitting the alleged victim’s description later on at 30th and Market. When approached by police, investigators say the man stabbed himself, suffering a minor injury.

He was apprehended and taken into police custody. No word yet on the man’s identity.

 

Obama Dines at Liberty Tavern in Clarendon

Obama Dines at Liberty Tavern in Clarendon

Two retirees, a U.S. Postal Service worker and a business owner from politically important Midwestern and Southwestern states, all donors to President Barack Obama's re-election campaign, got a rare opportunity Thursday to bend his ear over dinner in Arlington, Va.

Obama said after the dinner at The Liberty Tavern on Wilson Boulevard in the Clarendon section of Arlington that he's president because of people like them.

"This dinner is important because I'm only president thanks to the work of millions of Americans like the four I just met,'' he tweeted.

According to arlnow.com, the president ate swordfish with white beans and lamb sausage.

“As an Arlington restaurant and independent business people, we’re just extremely flattered,” Liberty Tavern co-owner Stephen Fedorchak told arlnow.com. “It’s an honor. We understand the magnitude of it but we wanted to have fun with it as well. We offered the same hospitality we strive for with every guest that comes in our restaurant.”

Obama's re-election effort offered "Dinner with Barack" to help boost campaign contributions in the April-to-June fundraising quarter, during which it reported raising more than $47 million. Giving was not required, but the campaign requested donations of at least $5 from anyone willing to contribute.

Keeping its end of the deal, the campaign was paying for one night in a hotel and flying in the contributors from Arizona, Colorado, Indiana and Minnesota -- all states important to Obama's

re-election hopes.

Of those states, Obama lost only Arizona in 2008. His campaign has floated the idea of trying to compete this time around in the traditionally Republican-leaning state. Minnesota traditionally

leans Democratic, but most of the upper Midwest states, which have suffered as a result of the economy, appear to be up for grabs heading into next year's presidential contest.

The donors were identified as: Juanita Martinez, a retired teacher from Brighton, Colo.; Wendi Smith, an artist and retired professor from Corydon, Ind.; Ken Knight, a U.S. Postal Service

employee from Chandler, Ariz.; and Casey Helbling, an entrepreneur and small-business owner from Minneapolis.

Reporters allowed into the upstairs dining room before any food or drinks were served heard Obama and Knight chat about spring training and the Chicago White Sox, Obama's favorite baseball team.

Obama, dressed casually in slacks and a shirt with the sleeves rolled up, then asked each donor where they were from as reporters were escorted back downstairs. He spent about an hour at the

restaurant before returning to the White House.

Vice President Joe Biden, a subsequent addition to the dinner, did not attend because he was out of the country, having led a U.S. delegation to Saudi Arabia on Thursday to offer condolences after

the recent death of the kingdom's second-in-line for the throne.

Obama had dinner with campaign donors when he first ran for president. The dinner contest will be held quarterly as the presidential race steams toward a November 2012 finish line.

In a video announcement from his 2008 campaign, Obama said he wanted to meet donors over dinner because national political candidates spend too much time at fancy fundraisers with the

well-to-do, closed off from hearing the concerns and needs of ordinary people.

Coincidentally, Thursday's dinner was scheduled a day after Obama returned from a three-day fundraising swing through Nevada, California and Colorado. He headlined six fundraisers, including at the Bellagio hotel in Las Vegas and the Hollywood home of actors Melanie Griffith and Antonio Banderas. The trip also included stops where Obama met everyday people, including at Roscoe's, a popular chicken restaurant chain in Los Angeles.

Two months ago, Obama had lunch on Capitol Hill with a group of campaign volunteers who were selected based on essays they wrote about organizing. Obama got his start in politics by working as a community organizer in Chicago.

Possible Mountain Lion Sighting in D.C.

Some believe a mountain lion may be lurking in northwest Washington.

One neighbor described the creature as larger and wider than a deer, with the long tail of a cat. 

Another woman said she was walking her dog in McLean Gardens at the edge of Glover Park when she spotted the large cat last week.  The cat, which she believes is a mountain lion, ran off into some nearby woods.

Someone else reported seeing the cat last February.

The latest sighting happened Wednesday afternoon, according to a News4 viewer who says she spotted the animal near the Beltway exit to Connecticut Avenue. 

They all agree it looks like a mountain lion.

Animal control officers say they are taking the reports seriously.  While they haven't confirmed it is a mountain lion, they say it could very well be one. 

A spokesperson for the Washington Humane Society said someone may have been keeping the cat as a pet and then released it once they couldn't take  care of it anymore. 

Officers will patrol the neighborhood Friday.  There have been no reports of injuries associated with this creature.

Woman Allegedly Tries Hiring Hit Man

A Loudoun County school bus driver is in custody, accused of trying to hire a hit man to kill her boyfriend and his other girlfriend.

Ann Jenene Cinnamon is facing up to 10 years in prison in connection with the alleged plot.

Prosecutors said it started when Cinnamon met a man on a website called “Be Naughty.” They said she asked him if he had any friends who could “do her a favor.” That alleged favor: murder a woman she called her boyfriend’s mistress. He allegedly told her that he would see what he could do. He also told someone else about their conversation: the FBI.

Investigators said federal agents tracked and recorded negotiations between Cinnamon and the man she thought was helping her find a hit man. They said she drove a hard bargain too -- offering to pay just $500 for the hit, and not even offering to pay for the killer’s airfare. Prosecutors said she even asked for a two-for-one deal because she later wanted her boyfriend dead, too.

Cinnamon was arrested last week. She remains in federal custody.

Green Does Not Mean Go on Metro

Green Does Not Mean Go on Metro

Four Green Line Metro stations will be closed this weekend. In addition, maintenance on the Red and Orange lines will cause travel delays.

On the Green Line, the Waterfront, Navy Yard, Anacostia and Congress Heights stations will be closed from 10 p.m. Friday until 5 a.m. Monday. Shuttle buses will be available, but customers should allow 30 additoinal minutes of travel time.

Trains will share one track between Dupont Circle and Judiciary Square on the Red Line. Metro says customers should allow 30 minutes of extra travel time or make alternate travel plans. They are expecting crowded conditions.

On the Orange Line, trains will share one track between Carrollton and Cheverly. Customers should expect an extra 20-minute wait.

Meanwhile, Metro will open two hours early Sunday -- at 5 a.m. -- for the benefit of customers traveling to the Marine Corps Marathon.

Arlington Cemetery Station on the Blue Line will open after the start of the race.  Metro will operate additional Blue Line trains from 5 to 9 a.m., and from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.  Blue Line trains will operate every 7 1/2 minutes between Franconia-Springfield and Stadium-Armory stations.

Buses that normally use the Pentagon Transit Center will be relocated to Pentagon City Station between 4 a.m. and 4 p.m. Customers who normally transfer between bus and rail at the Pentagon should plan to travel via Pentagon City instead.

Race participants are encouraged to use a SmarTrip card or a plastic cover to protect paper farecards. In previous years, race participants have had their farecards demagnetized due to moisture.

Deer Rescued From Tidal Basin

There was a water rescue Friday morning in the Tidal Basin near the National Mall. And nope, it did not involve a hapless tourist or college student prank gone wrong.

Instead, a male deer had inadvertently gone for a morning swim.

Video of the incident shows he had no trouble swimming -- he just couldn’t scale the high walls around the basin, and likely would have drowned without help.

U.S. Park Police, D.C. Fire and EMS, and a swift water rescue team responded to the scene.

They tranquilized the animal, secured him to the side of a boat, and then pulled him back to land. The deer was then strapped to a gurney as they guided him from the water.

D.C. Animal Control officers said the deer is in good shape despite his ordeal. They planned to warm him up, then set him free in a local park.

U.S. Park Police spokesman Bill Line said it's rare that deer venture out as far as the Tidal Basin, but it happens more this time of year due to mating season.

30 More Days in Jail for Aruba Missing Woman Suspect

30 More Days in Jail for Aruba Missing Woman Suspect

A judge in Aruba ordered a Maryland man remain in jail without bond another 30 days.

Gary Giordano is suspected in the presumed death of his travel companion, 35-year-old Robyn Gardner, of Frederick, Md.

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

Investigators 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, authorities have said. He was detained Aug. 5 at the airport before he could leave the island.

Missing Autistic Boy Found Alive in Virginia

A boy missing all week was found alive in Hanover County, Va., Friday.

Eight-year-old Robert Wood Jr., who is autistic, wandered away while with his father, brother and a woman at North Anna Battlefield Park about 2:45 p.m. Sunday, police said.

He was found by a citizen in what authorities called "somewhat of a gully" on quarry property about 2 p.m. -- not far from where he was last scene -- and flown to VCU Medical Center, where he was reunited with his family, WWBT NBC12 in Richmond reported. Authorities described his condition as serious, but he is expected to be OK.

"He is here and safe," said his mother, Barbara Locker. "Thank you for your prayers, your thoughts. Thank you for searching. He is a strong little fella."

"Robert is a very strong and determined little boy," said his father, Robert Wood Sr. "We never gave up hope that he would return home safe. The family has been here every hour and been involved in the search 200 percent. Thank you so much everybody. Robert Is home!”

Robert's parents described him as severely autistic and unable to talk.

Thousands of volunteers participated in the search this week, including more than 800 Friday.

"The great dedication, optimism and vigilance of the many people who donated their time and energy to the search and rescue effort reflects the goodness of our commonwealth," Gov. Bob McDonnell said in a statement released Friday afternoon. "The actions of so many this week have demonstrated, yet again, that Virginians are good neighbors who care about each other and help those in need in times of trouble."

A candlelight celebration was planned for 7:30 p.m. at the Doswell Community Center, WWBT NBC12 in Richmond reported.

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

Apple Store Employees Heard Lululemon Attack

After a morning of bloody testimony from an evidence technician, the jury in the Lululemon Athletica murder trial heard from two employees at the Apple Store next door, who heard the incident.

Jana Svrzo testified she heard loud hysterical noises, yelling and screaming coming from the Bethesda Row Lululemon from 10:10 p.m. until 10:19 p.m. March 11, the night Jayna Murray was killed by her coworker, Brittany Norwood. She heard two distinct voices, one saying, "Talk to me. Don't do this." That was followed by more high-pitched screaming and someone calling out, "God help me. Please help me."

During cross-examination, Norwood's lawyer Doug Wood asked Svrzo that if someone is yelling "help me," wouldn't she have gone to help. She replied she doesn’t know what she would have done.

Apple store manager Ricardo Rios also testified to hearing the yelling next door.

Surveillance video showed the employees listening at the wall between the stores.

A Lululemon employee testified that she worked March 11, and Norwood was wearing a different pair of pants for work than what she was found in the next morning, when she claimed to have been a victim, attacked alongside Murray by a tall man and a short man. Authorities said she put on size 14 men’s sneakers to make bloody footprints to support her story.

Traces of blood were found in sinks at the store, an evidence technician testified. Prosecutors suggested Norwood changed out of bloody clothing and washed the sneakers used to make footprints in one of the sinks.

Elia Rab, another Lululemon employee, testified Norwood called her the night of the attack at 9:51 p.m. asking for Jayna Murray’s cell phone number because Norwood had left her wallet in the store. Rab suggested she call the store manager, who lived right across the street from the store, but Norwood wanted Murray to return to the store.

When she did, she double parked, authorities said. The car was found about two blocks away, and blood from both Murray and Norwood was found on the gear shift, the steering wheel and the driver’s side door, the evidence technician testified.

An evidence technician also testified to blood splattered higher than six feet on the walls, a sign of the violent nature of the fight.

During cross-examination, Norwood’s defense suggested six-to-eight weapons may not have been used in the fight and that those items may all have been bloody because they were collected together as evidence.

Norwood's defense is that she killed Murray when she lost control during an argument, so it wasn’t premeditated first-degree murder.

Maryland Tolls to Increase Next Week

Maryland Tolls to Increase Next Week

The Maryland Department of Transportation is reminding drivers to prepare for increased tolls around the state starting next week.

Rates for cars and light trucks at the Fort McHenry and Harbor Tunnels in Baltimore, as well as the Key Bridge on I-695 will increase by $1 starting Tuesday. The Chesapeake Bay Bridge Toll will jump from $2.50 to $4 for those vehicles.

The plan also includes stiffer penalties for drivers who pass through toll plazas without paying. The old fee of $3 per offense is gone. Now the state will use video cameras to catch violators and fine them up to $15 each time, depending on which toll was skipped.

The tolling plan also includes discounts for EZ-Pass users and regular commuters. The state's transportation authority said the increase will generate $90 million in its first full year, and will help repay significant debt incurred during recent road rehabilitation projects.

Prince George's Snow Plows Get Tracking Systems

Prince George's Snow Plows Get Tracking Systems

Snow removal trucks started rolling out at 4 a.m. Friday morning to test out a new GPS-based tracking system in Prince George's County, Md.

For the first time in the county, the Department of Public Works will be able to monitor its fleet of snow emergency vehicles in real time using a GPS system that doesn't look too different from Google maps.

They canvassed more than 5,000 miles of county roads, and each truck was equipped with a new automated vehicle locator system. The AVL, as the drivers call it, looks like a large GPS device inside the truck. 

"They can tell where every truck is and where every truck has been," said Vanessa Gordon-Watson, a truck driver with the DPW.

The new technology will be helpful to residents who call the command center after a snow storm and want to know how close a plow is to clearing their street, Gordon-Watson said.

Next year, the department plans to expand the system to allow Prince George’s County residents to log on from their personal computers and track the plows for themselves.

 

Howard University Helping Occupy D.C.

Howard University Helping Occupy D.C.

Students, faculty and alumni from Howard University showed support to those participating in the Occupy Wall Street-style protests Friday by marching in their own demonstration.

Protesters planned to gather Friday evening on the Howard campus, then march to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce on H Street to join two other rallies.

Organizers of Friday’s march said the goal is to bring more racial diversity to the protests.

They believe the issues raised by these demonstrations should resonate with area African-Americans, who experience unemployment and poverty in greater percentages than others.

30 Years for Ex-Alexandria Teacher in Child Porn Case

30 Years for Ex-Alexandria Teacher in Child Porn Case

A former fourth-grade teacher in Alexandria's public schools was sentenced Friday to 30 years in prison for producing child pornography after admitting he victimized students around the world.

Justin M. Coleman, 36, of Falls Church, videotaped himself with two girls, who were unaware of what they were being told to do, engaging in sexually explicit conduct. Those girls were not his students.

He also admitted altering existing images of child pornography to superimpose faces of students he taught during stints in Italy, Japan and at John Adams Elementary in Alexandria, where he taught until earlier this year.

“Justin Coleman was a lurking, stalking predator who victimized little girls for years around the globe,” said U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia Neil MacBride, whose office prosecuted the case.

Coleman was discovered after Italian authorities provided a tip to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

“In my 25 years of law enforcement, I have not seen a more ... disturbing case,” said John Torres, special agent in charge of ICE's homeland security investigations. “What he did was vile. It was disgusting. It was perverted.”

Coleman's collection of child pornography included more than 70 videos he had recorded in school classrooms that depicted him masturbating behind an unaware student and attempting to film up the skirts of female students.

Coleman apologized for his actions in court, but U.S. District Court Judge Gerald Bruce Lee had none of it, imposing a 30-year term that was higher than what is called for under federal sentencing guidelines. He also imposed a lifetime on probation following release and ordered him to undergo sex offender treatment at the federal medical prison in Butner, N.C.

“You must be separated from us,” Lee told Coleman.

MacBride said there is no evidence Coleman had sexual contact with any of his students or that he ever distributed the images he created over the Internet.

Defense lawyer Peter Greenspun had requested a 15-year sentence and said Coleman suffered from mental health issues and alcoholism.

“This man gets what he has done, the pain he has caused and the necessity to change,” Greenspun wrote in court papers.

Union Station Closes Main Hall for Weekend for Earthquake Damage Repairs

Union Station Closes Main Hall for Weekend for Earthquake Damage Repairs

The main hall of Union Station closed at 6 p.m. for the beginning of earthquake damage repairs.

The hall will remain closed through the weekend and is expected to reopen by 6 a.m. Monday.

“We closed the main hall this evening as a precaution,” Union Station General Manager Mark Polhemus said. “Nothing is more important to us than the safety of Union Station visitors and workers.”  

After the Aug. 23 quake, workers removed loose plaster from the ceiling and made temporary repairs. It was inspected for risks to the public.

But a small piece of plaster fell Friday, hitting a restaurant employee.

Signs and Amtrak and Union Station employees will direct people around the hall to where they need to go.

Netting to catch any other falling plaster was to be put in place Friday evening. Complete restoration of the ceiling begins next week.

The restaurant employee grazed by the plaster Friday was not injured.

Va. Gov. Appeals FEMA Denial of Quake Aid

Va. Gov. Appeals FEMA Denial of Quake Aid

Gov. Bob McDonnell asked President Barack Obama on Friday to reconsider the Federal Emergency Management Agency's decision to deny aid to Virginia for the August earthquake that rattled the East Coast and caused substantial damage at its epicenter.

In a 13-page letter to Obama and 34 pages of documentation and attachments, McDonnell said state government alone can't address seven disasters since April, including the quake, Hurricane Irene and three deadly spring tornadoes.

In appealing again for aid to Louisa County, the quake's epicenter, McDonnell said damage exceeds $22 million, more than double the $9 million estimate the state cited in its initial September aid request.

“Louisa County clearly needs federal assistance in order to recover from the strongest earthquake to impact Virginia in over a century,” McDonnell, a Republican, wrote to the Democratic president.

“Disaster relief is a proper responsibility of the federal government. Volunteer groups are ill-equipped to repair earthquake damage and while state and local officials are doing everything they can, federal assistance is necessary in ensuring that affected Virginians are able to repair their homes and get back on their feet,” he wrote.

McDonnell said 1,404 Louisa homes were damaged, 400 more than the earlier request, with two destroyed and 80 sustaining major damage. He also said that continued inspections have turned up evidence that aftershocks have worsened the original quake damage.

Besides toppled brick walls and chimneys -- some of it to homes that predate the Revolutionary War -- the most serious damage and expensive damage has been to foundations, visible only to engineers inspecting crawlspaces and basements, according to the documents.

Besides the charts and spreadsheets, the packet McDonnell forwarded to the White House also contains a two-page letter in which both of Virginia's Democratic U.S. senators and all of its 11 U.S. House members -- including GOP Majority Leader Eric Cantor -- join in McDonnell's appeal.

“Given how rare this type of earthquake event has been in this area, the overwhelming majority of residents in this community lack earthquake insurance protection,” the joint congressional letter said.

McDonnell has also applied separately last week for nearly $64 million in public aid to local governments, particularly for destruction to Louisa's public schools. Louisa High School and Thomas Jefferson Elementary School were so heavily damaged that they are closed indefinitely, McDonnell said.

The written appeal came just eight days after McDonnell met face-to-face with Obama before the president's speech in Hampton promoting legislation to establish preferential hiring for military veterans, part of a three-day campaign-style bus tour promoting his jobs bill in North Carolina and Virginia.

Ex-Coworker Charged in Death of Burger King Manager

Frederick, Md., police charged a man with first-degree murder in the March slaying of a Burger King manager.

It was a cold-blooded crime that rocked the community. Assistant burger king manager Jacinta "Patty" Ayala was shot to death while preparing to open the restaurant March 18.

“It’s culminating with the charging of Jose Reyes Mejia-Varela with murder, robbery and related charges,” Frederick Police Chief Kim Dine.

The 21-year-old Mejia-Varela was a former coworker of the victim.

Investigators needed hundreds of hours of legwork to charge the suspect, police said. Mejia-Varela  was only questioned initially because he had  worked at the Burger King, but under routine questioning, police discovered that he was in the country illegally after being deported to El Salvador in 2009.

“His family is here, and he came back to be with his family,” said Thomas White, of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The victim arrived at the restaurant about 5:30 a.m. March 18. She was discovered shot to death about a half hour later by a coworker and someone making a delivery.

In a statement, Ayala’s family thanked police, adding it “gives us the sense of relief and anticipation that justice will be served. Patty was a loving mother to her three children, girlfriend, sister and friend, and we will miss her deeply.”

Mejia-Varela was in the custody of federal authorities on charges of illegally entering the country, when investigators were able to link him to the case, police said. They would not provide any details.

“The breakthrough was the hard work -- these gentlemen behind me consistently doing the hard work and putting this together as a puzzle and putting that puzzle back together,” Frederick police Lt. Clark Pennington.

“We realize how this horrific crime affected the Frederick community, and it’s unacceptable, and we are very pleased to bring this case to a successful conclusion,” Dine said.

Brother, Sister Sentenced for Store Owner's Death

Brother, Sister Sentenced for Store Owner's Death

A brother and sister have been sentenced to prison for their roles in the robbery and murder of a District of Columbia store owner.

Shanika Robinson was sentenced in D.C. Superior Court on Friday to 54 years in prison. Her brother Leon was sentenced to 75-and-a-half years.

They were convicted in August in the 2009 murder of Shahubbudin Rana, an owner of a northeast Washington store.

Prosecutors said Shanika Robinson married Rana's brother to help him get a green card, with the promise she would receive monthly payments of $2,000 in return.

The payments stopped when Rana learned that Robinson was having an affair. She then enlisted her brother and another man to rob the store. Rana was stabbed, beaten with a hammer and set afire during the robbery.

Residents Survey Damage After Carson Fire

Some residents of a Carson mobile home park were allowed to inspect their homes Friday, a day after a fire at a nearby construction site spread through the neighborhood and prompted evacuations.

"I feel lucky, really lucky," said resident Virginia Cortez, who was escorted by a sheriff's deputy to her home, which was not damaged. "I'm going to get my medicines and some clothes... because I don't know when we're going to come inside again."

The fire damaged about 11 homes was ruled accidental.  No injuries were reported.

Some residents spent the night in a shelter after the 139-unit park was evacuated.

"I had no jacket, nothing," said resident Amy German. "I came here with my ID, but no clothes."

Don Goodheart's home is a total loss.  He spent Friday sorting through his belongings, salvaging what he could.

"Mostly clothes, that's the only thing we are salvaging," Goodheart said.

On Friday, Angeles Mercado was still in the pajamas he was wearing the day before, as he and his wife ran from the fire.

"This is the worst kind of thing," Mercado said.  "I am 89 years old. This is the worst."

Crews have not determined the cause of the fire, which began at about 5 p.m. in the 21000 block of South Avalon Boulevard. The wood frame structure burned quickly, and winds carried embers to the mobile home park.

Some flames were 100 feet high, said Mark Savage of the Los Angeles County Fire  Department.

"I looked out on my front porch and the fire was shooting up really, really high," a resident told NBC4. "I could feel the heat on my face."

Embers started a grass fire near Carson High School.

"You could feel the heat from the flames just bursting in," said a woman who was in a nearby hair salon during the fire. "You could actually feel it from the glass on the inside."

The fire was knocked down at about 7:30 p.m. One hundred firefighters using 40 pieces of equipment responded.

Damage was estimated at $3.1 million -- $2.5 million for the  senior living center and $600,000 for the mobile home park. The Renaissance Apartment  Development project was about nine months from completion.

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Defense Expert: Michael Jackson Injected Fatal Dose of Sedative

Jurors in the involuntary manslaughter trial of Michael Jackson's personal physician heard details Friday regarding the defense's version of what happened in the hours before the King of Pop's death.

Conrad Murray Trial: Propofol Guidelines, Testimony Timeline, Juror Profiles

The jury, through witness testimony and detectives' interview with Dr. Conrad Murray, has already heard about the early hours of June 25, 2009 as the prosecution attempted to show that Murray abandoned his superstar patient after he administered a powerful surgical sedative in the bedroom of rented Holmby Hills mansion.

But defense attorneys have told jurors that Jackson is to blame for his own death. They claim the King of Pop created a "perfect storm" of drugs in his system, administering the fatal dose of propofol when Murray left the bedroom on the day he died.

Testimony from Dr. Paul White in support of the defense's theory was followed by a tweet from sister La Toya Jackson Friday after court recessed: "MiCHAEL DID NOT KILL HIMSELF!!! HE WOULD NEVER DO THAT!!!!!!"

White, the defense's propofol expert, took the stand Friday to challenge a prosecution medical expert who referred to the defense theory as "crazy." White's testimony became a battle of words with the prosecution's propofol expert -- Dr. Steven Shafer.

The self-injection theory is the only theory supported by Murray's statement to police, White testified. He claimed there was no evidence to support the theory that Murray used an IV to administer the powerful drug.

Dr. Murray's Interview With Detectives: Part 1 | Part 2

Evidence found in the bedroom suggests Jackson received propofol with an injection, White said. Shafer told jurors Murray used an IV drip to administer the sedative.

Based on levels of sedatives Murray told investigators he gave Jackson, the singer should not have stopped breathing, White testified. Murray told investigators he realized when he returned from the bathroom on the morning of June 25, 2009 that the entertainer had stopped breathing.

The evidence shows a rapid injection of 25 milligrams of propofol less than one hour after Murray slowly infused 25 milligrams of the anesthetic, White testified.

"You think it was a self-injection of propofol between 11:30 (a.m.) and 12 (p.m.)?'' defense attorney J. Michael Flanagan asked

"In my opinion, yes,'' White said.

White claimed Shafer didn't take into account the levels of the sedative lorazepam that Jackson may have accumulated in his body.

The defense has attempted to portray Murray as a caring physician who was not motivated by financial gain. Jackson was willing to take great risks in his quest for sleep, according to defense claims.

"There are two good reasons why Michael Jackson has, in a sense, been put on trial here," said legal analyst Darren Kavinoky. "If you're the defense team, you want to shift all focus away from Conrad Murray. But, more importantly... all of this relates to whether there was an intervening act that would cut Dr. Murray's criminal responsibility."

Judge Concerned About Trial Delay

The trial was expected to wind down Friday as White faced cross-examination. But prosecutors indicated Thursday they need more time to examine evidence submitted by defense attorneys.

That means White's testimony will continue next week. Prosecutors want more time to review an analysis prepared by the defense based on tests on samples taken during the pop star's autopsy.

"This is the entire crux of the defense case,'' Deputy District Attorney David Walgren said before the judge agreed to the delay.

Judge Michael Pastor had indicated to jurors they could expect to get the case soon. The judge met with attorneys Thursday, and a transcript of the meeting indicated the judge has concerns about losing jurors.

"Every single member of that jury and all the alternates are paying extraordinary attention to every witness," Pastor said.

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Pilot Wasn't Distracted by Skydiving Sex Stunt: FAA

Pilot Wasn't Distracted by Skydiving Sex Stunt: FAA

The Federal Aviation Administration says a videotaped skydiving sex stunt did not violate any of the Administration's regulations.

FAA spokesman Ian Gregor said video evidence confirms that the pilot of a small plane was not distracted during the stunt over Kern County.

Earlier this month, Gregor said any activity that could distract the pilot while he's flying could be a violation of federal regulations.

Skydive Taft owner David Chrouch said he fired part-time skydiving instructor and porn star Alex Torres and hasn't decided whether to fire the company's receptionist, Torres' partner in the video.

The video shows the two having sex in a plane before jumping out in tandem and continuing the act midair.

Authorities say Torres had posted the video on his blog but removed it on Monday.

Taft police Lt. Ed Whiting told KGET-TV in Bakersfield that no criminal charges are pending.

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Early Morning Vandenberg Launch Adds Spectacle to Science

Early Morning Vandenberg Launch Adds Spectacle to Science

Years of delay ended with an amazing sight early Friday along the California coast when a Delta II rocket blazed into the night sky with a NASA satellite from Vandenberg Air Force Base.

Follow the Satellite: @NASANPP | More Images: 30th Space Wing Facebook Page

There was "a lot of celebration in control room," said launch director Tim Dunn. A crowd that gathered at a public viewing area near the base cheered when the rocket ignited and sent a burst of light along the dark horizon (Scroll down to view image gallery).

Observers described viewing conditions as clear without "even and hint of fog." NASA invited 20 Twitter followers to tweet the event from the base.

The science behind the spectacle is an Earth-observing satellite designed to improve weather forecasts and monitor global climate. The Dodge Caravan-sized satellite joins other satellites already orbiting the planet and gathering data about the atmosphere, oceans and land.

Meteorologists can use information from the National Polar-Orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System Preparatory Project (NPP) mission to improve forecasts. Researchers also will use the information to get a better idea of wildfire behavior and long-term climate shifts.

The satellite will "make America a more weather-ready nation," said Mary Glackin, NOAA's deputy undersecretary for Oceans and Atmosphere.

Problems with development of several instruments led to a delay with the launch, originally scheduled for 2006. The satellite is expected to orbit Earth for about five years.

The next scheduled launch at Vandenberg AFB, a Minuteman III rocket, is scheduled for Feb. 25. 

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Man Arrested After Six-Hour Standoff with SWAT Officers

Man Arrested After Six-Hour Standoff with SWAT Officers

A six-hour standoff between a man and Los Angeles Police Department SWAT officers ended early Friday after police fired tear gas into a Wilmington home.

A Hispanic man in his 30s, was taken into custody around 1 a.m. in the 2400 block of South Avalon Boulevard in Wilmington, said LAPD Officer Gregory Baek.

His name has not been released.

The standoff started when a woman called 911 emergency services around 6:30 p.m. Thursday.

"The victim told us she had left her apartment after the suspect had forced his way in following some sort of domestic dispute," said LAPD Sgt. Julie McInnis, a Harbor division watch commander.

The woman reportedly fled from her Wilmington apartment with her 2-year-old son and 3-year-old daughter after a confrontation with the children's father according to McInnis.

The man then barricaded himself in the residence, said police.

According to Innis, the SWAT unit was called in and nearby buildings were evacuated.

The man claimed he was armed although officers did not see a gun during the standoff. No information about a weapon has been released.

He was taken to a hospital to undergo an examination, required police protocol after being exposed to tear gas.

The man was taken into custody on suspicion of domestic violence and spousal abuse and could be charged with child endangerment as well, McInnis said.

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Dodgers Make History With MLB's First Female Trainer

Dodgers Make History With MLB's First Female Trainer

The Dodgers are set to make MLB history by hiring Sue Falsone as head trainer.

She is believed to be the first female head trainer for a major league baseball club. The announcement is expected to be made next week.

Dodger players are familiar with Falsone. She has been a physical therapist and consultant for the team since 2008. She is also known for introducing the team to yoga classes.

Falsone even conducted several on-field yoga classes for fans during off days. Dodger outfielder Andre Ethier, who has embraced yoga because of Falsone, attended some of those classes and stretched alongside delighted fans.

Stan Conte, the Dodgers' head athletic trainer for the last five years, will remain with the organization and continue to oversee its medical department, according to an MLB report.

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Region's Poorest Could Pay More for Medical Care

Region's Poorest Could Pay More for Medical Care

Southern California’s poorest residents would pay more for hospital and emergency room care, and the state would pay less to their doctors, under a plan being negotiated with federal health officials.

Because Southern California has the highest number of Medi-Cal recipients in the state, people here will be disproportionately affected. LA County’s public hospital system is already bracing for an onslaught of patients who can no longer afford to go to a regular doctor, a top county financial official told NBC LA.

The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have already approved part of the plan, agreeing earlier this week to let California pay 10 percent less to doctors and nursing homes for adult patients covered under the state’s Medi-Cal program.

The state also wants to cap the number of times a Medi-Cal patient can see a doctor each year and charge co-pays of $100 per day for hospital visits. A trip to the emergency room would cost $50 under the plan.

Dr. Tom Horowitz, a family doctor in Los Angeles, said he gets calls daily from patients who are seeking a doctor who will accept Medi-Cal insurance. He already limits the number of slots for Medi-Cal patients, Horowitz said, and is likely to have to cut them further once the fee reductions kick in.

“As it is, Medi-Cal pays well below our cost of doing business,” Horowitz said.

For example, one of his patients is an adolescent who is infected with HIV. Her visits typically take about 45 minutes, but Medi-Cal only pays $18 for the entire appointment.

“That doesn’t pay for me keeping my lights on, much less the staff time,” Horowitz said. “It’s just something you do out of altruism.“

When the cuts kick in, it will only get worse, Horowitz and others said.

“This is a penny-pinching, pound-foolish measure that puts people’s lives at risk,” said Dr. Jack Chou, who practices family medicine at Kaiser Permanente in Baldwin Park. “Physicians who take on Medi-Cal patients are already losing money.”

Los Angeles County stands to lose 5 to 10 percent of the revenue that normally flows in to treat patients at its outpatient clinics, said Alan Wecker, Chief Financial Officer for the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services.

The county is worried that patients who can’t find doctors who will take their Medi-Cal insurance will flood public hospitals, Wecker said. And, if the co-pays on hospital care are approved, the county could wind up holding the bag, he said. That’s because if patients can’t afford the co-pays, the county will have to absorb that cost.

LA County already spends $3.7 billion per year in health services for people who are poor and disabled.

State health officials say they have to pay less to doctors – and charge more to patients – in order to keep services flowing during a time of intense budget problems.

The Brown administration says that neither the fee reductions nor the increased co-pays would harm patients. Toby Douglas, director of the state Department of Health Care Services, said in a statement that officials would monitor patients to make sure that they continue to receive care under the new rules.

If the new co-pays are approved, patients would pay $3 or $5 for pharmaceuticals, $5 to visit a doctor or dentist, $50 to go to the emergency room and $100 per day for hospital stays. The hospital co-pay, however, would be capped at $200.

Patients would also be limited to seven doctor visits per year – unless they can prove that the additional visits are medically necessary.

Norman Williams, a spokesman for the state Health Care Services Department, said federal officials are “close” to deciding whether to allow the co-pays and the limit on doctor visits.

To be legal, regulators must be satisfied that the changes will not harm patients and that they are justified by the state’s poor fiscal condition.

On Wednesday, federal health care officials said they would not allow California to reduce the amount of money it pays for poor patients to go to the hospital, or to reduce the fees doctors are paid for treating children.

But Cindy Mann, Deputy Director of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services, said that the state had justified the reduction in fees to doctors.

“Many of the state’s original rate cut proposals are now off the table,” Mann said. “While we recognize the remaining cuts will have a significant impact on the affected providers, the state has submitted extensive data demonstrating that the remaining cuts will not jeopardize Californian’s access to care, and has agreed to ongoing monitoring of access to care for the affected services. “

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Michael Moore to Appear at Occupy Oakland

Michael Moore to Appear at Occupy Oakland

While Mayor Jean Quan was getting booed back into city hall, Michael Moore was planning a trip to the revamped Occupy Oakland.

The notorious political commentator was scheduled to appear at book signing in Oakland on Friday, and Thursday he wrote on his blog that he plans to visit Occupy Oakland at Frank Ogawa Plaza before his signing.

Occupy Oakland has taken center stage of the national occupy movement after Quan and city officials decided to crackdown on the protesters' encampment in front of city hall earlier this week.

When the response turned violent, and a former Iraq war veteran was caught on YouTube with a serious injury, Occupy Oakland found itself being talked about by the likes of Keith Olbermman, Fox News and The Drudge Report.

Moore was one of those people who took notice, putting up links to articles about the closure of Occupy Oakland and going on "Countdown" with Olbermann to talk about the crackdown.

Reports suggest that Moore will make an appearance around 3:30 p.m. and he is scheduled to appear at a PCA Bookstore Meeting in Oakland at 5:15 p.m.

Moore will not be the first celebrity to visit Occupy Oakland. Rapper Lupe Fiasco stopped by when he was performing in Oakland last week and promised to provide the protesters with anything that they needed.

Palo Alto Doctors to Separate Conjoined Twins

Palo Alto Doctors to Separate Conjoined Twins

For two little girls from the Philippines, the doctors at Packard Children’s Hospital in Palo Alto are a God send.

Conjoined twins Angelica and Angelina Sabuco are relying on the doctors to separate them on Nov. 1.

The surgery comes after months of preparation and planning and it will take six hours alone just to cut the 2-year-olds, who are attached at the chest and abdomen, apart.

"This is a major operation, but we really expect both twins to survive and to do well," said pediatric surgeon Gary Hartman, MD.

Hartman has performed more of these types of surgeries than any other surgeon, according to NBC Bay Area's Marianne Favro, who sat down with the doctor Friday.

The doctor told Favro that the biggest challenge facing the girls would be splitting their liver because the two of them share one and the risk of hemorrhaging is high

The girls and their family now live in San Jose and their mother, Ginady Sabuco, says she has been praying to God since she first found out her children were conjoined when she was seven months pregnant.

"I was asking God: why us, why me?" she said. "I want them to live normally, like other children." said Ginady, explaining the separation. In addition to the obvious psychosocial difficulties,

Despite medical team of 20 physicians and nurses confidence that the two girls will be able to survive the operation, they face many challenges.

Beyond the psychological adjustment to living separate lives, the girls livers that are tightly fused, intestines that touch and joint sternums.

The doctors also had to start using tissue expanders on the girls back in the Spring to help cover the hole that will be left where the doctors separate the two.

Both girls do have separate hearts, though they touch at their tips, and their digestive systems function separately.

The girls will be in intensive care after the surgery and they will be in the hospital for four to five days before being transferred to a regular room for about a week.

Quick facts about separating conjoined twins:

  • Most conjoined twins do not survive pregnancy. The occurrence of conjoined twins is estimated to range from 1 in 50,000 births to 1 in 100,000 births worldwide, and the overall survival rate is approximately 25 percent. 
  • Angelina and Angelina are classified as Thoraco-omphalopagus; they are joined at the chest and abdomen. Their livers, diaphragms, sterni  (breast bones), chest and abdominal wall muscles are fused.  They have separate hearts, brains, kidneys, stomachs and intestines.
  • Separation surgery is performed in the United States about six times per year.
  • This will be the sixth separation of conjoined twins for lead surgeon Gary Hartman, MD.
  • This is the second set of conjoined twins separated at Packard Children’s. Yurelia and Fiorella Rocha-Arias were separated at the hospital in November 2007.
  • Below is video of the two in action:

2.5M California Children Plagued by Secondhand Smoke

2.5M California Children Plagued by Secondhand Smoke

About 2.5 million California children under the age of 12 are either exposed or at risk of exposure to secondhand smoke, according to a new report from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

"There's good news and bad news. The good news is California has low smoking rates," said Dr. David Grant, co-author of the study. "The bad news is there are still plenty of kids getting exposed to secondhand smoke in California."

California has the second lowest adult smoking rate in the country, behind Utah, said Grant.

The brief from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research found that LA has a relatively high percentage of homes where smoking is allowed inside the house, about 4.1 percent. That is despite having one of the state's lowest percentages of households where at least one member smokes -- 10.8 percent.

About 561,000 kids live in homes where smoking takes place indoors. Another 1.9 million kids have at least one family member that smokes outside.

African-American children are three times more likely to be exposed to secondhand smoke than other racial or ethnic groups, said Grant.

Although the percentage of children exposed to secondhand smoke remains similar in different regions across the state, a focused campaign in Los Angeles could make the biggest difference due to the sheer number of children, said Grant.

The report's authors suggested targeted public health messages, to help protect against secondhand smoke. So far, policy changes have had the biggest impact, said Grant.

Creative Ways to Make Money in Sour Economy

Creative Ways to Make Money in Sour Economy

With unemployment rates at nearly 12 percent in California, people in our community are trying anything they can to make money.

Special Section: Back to Work

Many have tossed aside their resumes and focused on other skills. For graphic designer Timm Freeman, that meant posting an ad as a handyman. His post on Craigslist explains that he is "trying every possible way to feed my family and pay the rent."

"I've gone and procured items from Ikea or other furniture places. I've even built a gazebo in a guy's backyard and that was awesome," said Freeman, 42.

"It's a humbling, humbling experience. This economy is just knocking people down. No one cares who I am or who I was at all," Freeman said.

The single father of a 9-year-old son admits he became depressed and drank his way through the unemployment lows. Freeman recently celebrated three years of sobriety.

"I got to the point where I have to get into action," he said. "I have my son, I have my girlfriend and her two children who I love dearly, and I need to carry my own weight."

Former Yahoo employee turned business student, Kenny Liao, makes extra bucks with odd jobs. Recently, he picked up flats of water at a local store and delivered them to Creative Support on the UCLA campus.

"When I originally started, I had a full-time job and it was just some side income. Now as a student, I have zero income and running some tasks every now and then helps supplement," Liao said.

The job was worth more than the approximately $50 for two hours work, said Shannon Hahn, who posted the job online. Hahn works with young adults with developmental disabilities from Creative Support.

"The students were able to do it, so it was really nice for them to use something without having too much difficulty," Hahn said.

Liao, who is studying for his master's degree at UCLA Anderson School of Management, said he has made connections through his various jobs. Liao wants to work in the movie business.

"I've actually met a few folks who work in entertainment. So meet them, find out about their jobs, find out about what they do in entertainment," Liao said.

The group found Liao's profile on TaskRabbit.com, which describes itself as the country's first service-networking platform. It builds on the idea of neighbor helping neighbor.

"So if you need dry cleaning pickup, groceries delivered, a seamstress in your neighborhood, you can connect with them right on Task Rabbit," said site founder, Leah Busque, 31.

"We have full-time Task Rabbits that are cashing out at $5,000 a month," Busque said.

The former IBM software engineer began Task Rabbit during the heart of the recession in 2008.

"I had people who wanted to become Task Rabbits who were lawyers, that were pharmacists, that were teachers, that were just laid off," Busque said.

Users can post a job on the website and Task Rabbits will bid on it, creating real-time alerts of their fees and availability to perform the service. Users then hire the person who works best for the project.

Task Rabbits go through various background checks and are rated and reviewed after each job. Another website, getaround.com, follows the same idea but allows drivers to offer up their cars.

Dave Speaker of Hawthorne has been renting out his 2000 BMW Z3 convertible since July.

"I think I have made about 1,500 bucks," Speaker said.

Speaker adds the total is after Getaround took nearly half of his bottom line. The company, founded in 2009, provides insurance for cars, owners and renters, and worked on California's car sharing legislation signed into law just last year.

Getaround began as a graduate-school project. Its research found car sharing reduces greenhouse gases by 40 percent and most vehicles sit idle 92 percent of the time, used for only an hour a day, according to the company.

"It was just sitting in the garage gathering dust, the battery was dying. I had to replace the battery because it died," Speaker said of his vehicle.

Getaround and Task Rabbit are just a couple of websites providing alternative incomes in a tough economy.

People can rent out their apartments on AirBNB or iStopOver.

Park Circa can help make money off unused parking spaces and driveways.

Users can turn private bathrooms public with a future startup called Cloo.

These startups have become full-fledged businesses. Task Rabbit has raised nearly $7 million, allowing it to expand to four new cities, including Los Angeles, up from two in March. Getaround has raised $3.4 million.

"We've really been able to champion the idea of micro-entrepreneurship to give people the ability to be their own bosses, set their own schedules, name how much they want to earn to do their own jobs," Busque said.

Since he began to promote himself online, Freeman said he books one to two handyman jobs a week, making a couple hundred dollars.

His "do what I can" attitude is not lost on David Pisarra, a Santa Monica divorce attorney who has hired him for five jobs and counting.

"He has been a great help to me over the last two and half years," Pisarra said. "Americans are resilient from the get-go and this is just showing that we, by nature, will dig down and come up with what we have to do to survive."

"Almost all of my clientele is word of mouth. All I have is my reputation for getting things done," Freeman said.

He suggests leaving pride at the door and looking ahead toward future opportunities.

"Go outside of your comfort zone. Take a job that's beneath you. Having any job makes you more attractive to any employer," Freeman said.

Update: If you have any suggestions for great side incomes, we want to hear from you. Leave a comment below.

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Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Double Murder

Man Sentenced to Life in Prison for Double Murder

A Los Angeles man who killed two people in December 2008 was sentenced Thursday to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Leonard Mitchell, 48, was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder on May 25 in the deaths of Alexander Castro, 23, and Adriana Pizarro, 34, a civilian sheriff employee.

In addition to the life sentence, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge William Ryan ordered Mitchell to serve a consecutive term of 25 years to life in prison.

Jurors deliberated for a day and a half, following a nine-day conviction trial in May, according to the LA District Attorney's office.

"On Dec. 20, 2008, Mitchell fatally shot Alexander Castro, 23, after the two men had a verbal confrontation. The victim, who was inside of his vehicle at the time of the attack, was fatally wounded by a gunshot to the face. Castro died at the scene," according to a statement from the DA's office.

Pizarro was struck by a stray bullet as she was leaving a family member's home. She worked at the Compton sheriff's station as a records clerk. Pizzaro later died at the hospital.

Mitchell was arrested 10 days later.