Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Brawl in Arizona Walmart parking lot leaves one dead

A late night brawl in a Cottonwood, AZ, Walmart parking lot late Saturday evening left one suspect dead and seven others, including a police officer injured.  Officials said the officer was shot in the leg when he attempted to break up the melee.  The incident began when a Walmart employee noticed a large group of people gathered in a store restroom.  When she tried to enter the restroom, she was shoved by one of the suspects.

By the time police officers arrived, the group had made its way to the parking lot where officers were immediately attacked, and there was a struggle for an officer's weapon.  Three shots were fired, killing one suspect and injuring two others, but it was unclear who had fired the shots.

Injuries included lacerations and bruising, and seven suspects were arrested and charged with various charges including aggravated assault, attempted homicide and obstruction of justice.

The suspects' vehicle was a Chevrolet Suburban with Idaho plates, and all suspects belong to a family that had been living in their vehicle in front of the store for several days.

CBS News.com story









Thursday, February 26, 2015

Recruiters already targeting LeBron James' 10-year-old son

LeBron James has told college basketball programs to stop recruiting his son.  He told reporters on Wednesday that the 10-year-old LeBron James Jr. has already received scholarship offers.

According to NCAA rules, a prospective player must be enrolled in the 9th grade before any kinds of offers can be made. The rules are meant to curtail monetary assistance, which is strictly forbidden in the NCAA. However, other college standouts like Marquette's Matt Carlino  received an offer from Arizona when he was in elementary school.  College coaches are not prevented from observing players for evaluations, only making offers.

LeBron James rebuked reporters for the attention his son is receiving, but he is also partially responsible for perpetrating some of it.  In December, he tweeted a video of his son in a youth tournament penetrating, scoring and passing in a similar style that he himself plays.

ABC News.com story


Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Obama vetoes Keystone pipeline bill

As promised, President Obama vetoed the Keystone pipeline bill on Tuesday, leaving the project in limbo.  The Senate must override the veto by a two thirds vote by March 3, which does not appear likely, since the majority Republicans are 4 votes short of an override percentage.

Republicans have promoted the bill on its job creation potential, but environmental experts have criticized it due to the potential of carbon emissions and their effect on climate change.  Opponents have also countered that the pipeline would not create a lot of permanent jobs.

Republicans lambasted the president, saying he is too controlled by environmental extremists.  Republican Speaker of the House, John Boehner called the veto a "national embarrassment."

Washington Post article



Tuesday, February 24, 2015

More mystery craters appear in Siberia

More mysterious craters have been spotted in Siberia, and researchers are starting to sound more than a little alarmed about the phenomenon. Vasily Bogoyavlensky, deputy director of Russia's Oil and Gas Research Institute, says at least seven suspicious craters have now been spotted—five of them in a region known as the "end of the world"—and a satellite image shows one of them has at least 20 water-filled "baby craters" around it. "I would compare this with mushrooms: When you find one mushroom, be sure there are [a] few more around. I suppose there could be 20 to 30 craters more," he tells the Siberian Times. He's calling for urgent research "to prevent possible disasters" that could affect cities and oil industry infrastructure in the region.

Bogoyavlensky and other experts believe gas emissions, possibly linked to climate change, are causing the holes to appear and suspect there are many more to be found, reports NBC News. "The processes that are causing them to form likely occur over a wide area of the continuous permafrost in this part of Siberia," the chief of the US Geological Survey's Gas Hydrates Project tells the Huffington Post. She hasn't researched the holes firsthand, but she agrees they demand further study "to determine the processes that cause their formation, how they evolve with time, and whether it is possible to predict where new ones will occur." Bogoyavlensky plans an upcoming expedition to the craters (only one of them has been studied in depth thus far) and intends to install seismic stations in the region.

USA Today story


Monday, February 23, 2015

Inside story of famous World War II photo on 70th anniversary

The iconic flag-raising picture from Iwo Jima that inspired so many Americans was taken 70 years ago today in 1945 on the Japanese island.  The photo, which was taken by Joe Rosenthal, is often credited with turning the war effort around.

The photo, which looks staged, shows five Marines and one Navy sailor who converged on the summit of a mountain to raise a U.S. flag.  It is often thought of as one of the most perfectly composed news photos of all time.

The photo was actually a second raising of a larger flag, after a smaller one had been put up first.  Rosenthal wasn't at the top of the mountain for the first one, but got there as the second one was put up to be more visible to troops fighting below.  The photo also inspired a sculpture that is set at the U.S. Marine war memorial in Arlington, VA.

CNN.com story




Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Las Vegas road rage victim went back to look for suspect

The woman killed in an apparent road rage incident last week returned home to pick up her son and then went back out to find the man now suspected of shooting her, a Las Vegas homicide detective said Tuesday.

Tammy Meyers, a 44-year-old mother of four, had been giving her 15-year-old daughter a driving lesson Thursday when she had an encounter with another driver that left her scared and upset, Lt. Ray Steiber told reporters.

When she got home, Meyers told her daughter to go into the house, wake up the girl's brother and have him get in the car. Meyers' son Brandon, 22, brought a registered firearm with him.

Meyers drove back out of the neighborhood to see if she could find the man, Steiber said.

"The vehicles and persons found each other," he said. "Through the course of them finding each other, at one point Mrs. Meyers was following what we consider a suspect vehicle and then at another point they broke apart and Mrs. Meyers went home."

Shortly after Meyers arrived at her house a second time and got out of her car, a gray or silver sedan pulled into the cul-de-sac and a volley of shots was fired.

The son returned fire, Steiber said.

Meyers was struck in the head by one bullet and was rushed to the hospital, where she died on Valentine's Day after being taken off life support.

Steiber said the family called 911 after Meyers was shot.

The driver, described as a man in his 20s to 30, is about 6 feet tall with medium build. He wore a white V-neck T-shirt.

Steiber said authorities believe a bullet from the suspect's gun killed Meyers, and not one from the son's firearm.

The initial incident came after the suspect was speeding past Meyers as she drove her daughter home from a driving lesson. Seeing the speeding car, the daughter reached over and honked the horn.

Steiber said the man pulled in front, stopped his car and came back to the Meyers car. His words scared mother and daughter. They did not say anything to the suspect, Steiber said.

Vigil for the victim
Meyers' husband spoke at a vigil for his wife on Tuesday. He said some of the facts in the case were starting to get twisted by the media.

"My son is not an animal. My son is a hero in my book," Robert Meyers said. "There were mistakes like everyone of us have made in our lives. But this particular mistake was made to keep a bigger mistake from happening. And my wife paid the ultimate price for it."

Brandon Meyers said he was trying to protect his family.




Thursday, February 12, 2015

Commuter with measles prompts California transit warning

After an infected passenger used commuter trains in the San Francisco area, officials sent out an official warning to passengers who may have come into contact with the man from February 4 to February 6.  The majority of Bay area residents is vaccinated, but the number of parents who are declining to vaccinate their children has risen in recent years.  An infected person is contagious several days before and after the rash appears.

Some symptoms of measles are a high fever, a runny nose, coughing and red, watery eyes.  The actual rash is highly visible on the skin.  Anyone born before 1957 is considered immune, and officials are urging vaccination.  An outbreak earlier in the year was traced to contact with an infected person at Disneyland.  Some complications of contracting measles are pneumonia, encephalitis, and problems with pregnancy, even miscarriage or blindness of the fetus.

ABC News.com story


Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Brian Williams suspended for six months from NBC News

Embattled news anchor Brian Williams was suspended without pay for six months from NBC News.  The controversy surrounding Williams' recanted story about incidents in the early years of the Iraq War triggered the decision to suspend Williams.  The story involved an embellished story in 2003 of being in a helicopter that was hit by enemy fire and forced down.

In the investigation of the story, it was discovered that Williams had done the same in other venues while recounting the story.  Many experts are now questioning his accuracy in reporting other major news stories like Hurricane Katrina and other Middle East stories.  The investigation is likely to damage the esteemed journalist's reputation, which many believed was at the top of his field.

USA Today.com


Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Boston: Six feet of snow and counting

The snowfall in the past month in Boston has been unprecedented.  As of Tuesday, the area had received 72 inches (six feet) of snow in just one month.  This shatters all previous one month totals.  The average snowfall for a whole winter in Boston is 47 inches.

A ban on parking in the streets, school closings, and transportation headaches are just a few of the issues taking a toll on Boston residents.  School districts haven't had a full week of school in a month.  High profile court cases like the murder trial of Aaron Hernandez have been put on hold.

The city is even running out of places to put the snow.  It was okayed to dump the snow into the Boston Harbor which is usually not permitted.  The winter weather so far is unimaginable to most residents, who just want it to stop.

CNN.com story


Monday, February 9, 2015

Egypt soccer riot leaves more than two dozen dead

A riot Sunday night broke out outside a major soccer game in Cairo leading to a stampede and as many as 25 deaths.  The match between Egyptian Premier League clubs Zamalek and ENPPI came just three years after a similar riot killed 74 people.

Fans blame the violence that sparked clashes on security and police actions that included tear gas and bird shot.  The Zamlek fans, who are known as White Knights, say that they were not allowed into the match due to security concerns that were related to previous violence.  Turmoil in Egypt has been ongoing, and the inevitable violations of human rights are also political in nature.  Two recent Egyptian presidents, Hosni Mubarek in 2011, and Mohammed Morsi in 2013, were forced out of office in violent takeovers.

CBS News.com story


Friday, January 30, 2015

Humans of New York blogger raises more than $1 million for school

Sometimes success comes out of failure.  What started out as a fail for blogger/photographer Brandon Stanton has turned into a major success for him and a group of Brooklyn, N.Y., schoolchildren.

Stanton's campaign to raise $100,000 to send middle school students to visit Harvard University had yielded more than ten times the goal as of Thursday night and gone viral, with still a week to go until the campaign's end. Barring inflation, the fund now has enough to send the incoming 6th grade students of Mott Hall Bridges Academy on Harvard visits for about 25 years, plus enough to launch a scholarship.

Stanton is the creator behind the wildly popular Humans of New York blog and Facebook page, which he launched in 2010 after being fired from his job trading bonds for the Chicago Board of Trade. As of late Thursday, 36,702 people had donated $1,094,686 to send the students to the Cambridge, Mass., campus.

"Just amazing," Stanton tweeted. "And in less than five days."

Stanton takes photos of New Yorkers and sends them out via his Humans of New York blog and Facebook along with prose or a quote that describes their lives or living situations. Though often sparse with words, the snippets often give a broad picture of the person's existence or personality.

On Jan. 19, Stanton sent out a photograph of Mott Hall Bridges eighth grader Vidal Chastanet, who complimented his principal, Nadia Lopez. The photo drew lots of attention via social media and motivated Stanton to do something.

A few days later, he decided to start a fundraiser to help the school in Brooklyn's Brownsville, a neighborhood that holds the highest crime rate in the city. Stanton latched onto Lopez's goal of taking the incoming 6th grade class on a tour of Harvard at the beginning of every school year.

On the webpage of the crowdfunding campaign he launched at Indiegogo.com, Stanton wrote of Lopez: "Since many of her scholars have never left New York, she wants them to know what it feels like to stand on the campus of one of the world's top schools, and know that they belong. She thinks the experience will broaden their horizons and expand their idea of their own potential."

USA Today.com story



Thursday, January 29, 2015

Cuba demands end of trade embargo, return of Guantanamo Bay


Cuban President Raul Castro has demanded that the United States hand back its Guantanamo Bay military base - an apparent bargaining tool in the restoration of full diplomatic relations between the countries.

Castro also asked for a complete lifting of the decades-old trade embargo and for compensation for its effects, saying that without these changes the recent diplomatic thaw "wouldn't make any sense."

President Barack Obama pledged earlier this month that the White House would move quickly to restore ties with Havana, scrapping a slew of travel and economic restrictions with immediate effect and dispatching a U.S. delegation to Cuba for a first round of historic talks.

Already on the agenda are the re-establishment of regular, scheduled commercial flights, the establishment of formal embassies in Havana and Washington and the removal of Cuba from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism — a step the United States says it will consider. The Americans, meanwhile, want to make sure Cubans have freer access to the Internet.

Castro set out Cuba's demands during the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States summit on Costa Rica on Wednesday.

"The re-establishment of diplomatic relations is the start of a process of normalizing bilateral relations, but this will not be possible while the blockade still exists, while they don't give back the territory illegally occupied by the Guantanamo naval base," Castro told delegates.He also demanded the U.S. end the transmission of anti-Castro radio and television broadcasts and deliver "just compensation to our people for the human and economic damage that they're suffered."

However, the demands are unlikely to derail the process of restoring ties. Both the U.S. State Department and the Cuban Foreign Ministry have told NBC News on and off the record that there will be no turning back from the resumption of relations.The U.S. established the Guantanamo base in 1903, and the current Cuban government has been demanding the land's return since the 1959 revolution that brought it to power.The Obama administration has pledged to close the high-security prison at the facility, and has been transferring terror detainees to their own countries.

MSNBC.com story


Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Obama pays respects to Saudi Arabia, defends ties to Kingdom

President Obama was present in Saudi Arabia to pay respects to the Kingdom, after the death of King Abdullah.  Washington dignitaries and the President were accompanied by Michelle Obama, to underscore the problems the U.S. has often had with women's rights in the ultraconservative Middle Eastern country.  Obama felt that it was necessary to show a presence of solidarity with the nation that has supported the U.S. in many security and economic issues in the past.

Saudi Arabia's new monarch, King Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, greeted Obama at the steps of Air Force One after it landed in Riyadh.  The two men had met previously, but Tuesday's meetings marked their most substantive discussions.

A senior administration official said Obama raised the issue of human rights broadly in his discussions with the new monarch, but did not tackle specific matters, including the case of a Saudi blogger who was convicted of insulting Islam and sentenced to 10 years in prison and 1,000 lashes.    

ABCNews.com story


Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Asteroid's moon seen during Earth flyby

The asteroid that flew close to Earth Monday didn't come alone. NASA images released Monday reveal the asteroid, officially known as 2004 BL86, has its own small moon. The grainy, black and white photos show the asteroid, about a third of a mile in size, spinning through space, with its 230-foot-wide moon trailing behind.

It was far enough that it didn't pose a threat to Earth, but close enough to give scientists and amateurs a chance to observe a large asteroid up close. Observers on the ground didn't see much when the asteroid was closest to Earth Monday morning, because it wasn't at its brightest. Only a portion of its illuminated side was visible, according to Sky & Telescope magazine. The asteroid brightened as it got farther from the Earth because its face became more fully illuminated, the magazine said.

"While it poses no threat to Earth for the foreseeable future, it's a relatively close approach by a relatively large asteroid, so it provides us a unique opportunity to observe and learn more," Don Yeomans, the recently retired manager of NASA's Near Earth Object Program Office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said in a NASA news release.

Observers without binoculars or a scope watched from their computers on The Virtual Telescope Project 2.0. The asteroid was discovered on January 30, 2004, by a telescope of the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research survey in White Sands, New Mexico.

CNN.com story


Monday, January 26, 2015

Northeast braces for "crippling and potentially historic" blizzard

A historical blizzard is set to dump more than 2 feet of snow on parts of the Northeast Monday and Tuesday, crippling the area, and causing authorities to activate emergency shelters and disaster plans.  The 'nor-easter' is a deep low pressure system forming off the coast of South Carolina that could pack winds with 75 MPH gusts along coastal areas.

Many airlines revised flight times and refunded tickets that had already been bought.  The deepest, heaviest snow is expected to fall north of New York City, in the Boston area.  The NFL's New England Patriots, who play in this week's Super Bowl in Phoenix, are expected to leave Boston at 12:30 p.m. Monday, before the storm hits Boston.

Many stores had empty shelves from shoppers stocking up on necessities. Home improvement stores also reported a brisk business on Sunday from homeowners getting ready to protect their homes.



Sunday, January 11, 2015

Civil rights matriarch relates real-life Selma story

103 year old Amelia Boynton Robinson is immortalized in the new movie, "Selma", released this past weekend detailing the events that led to the attack on many protesters in December, 1965, known now as Bloody Sunday.  Boynton-Robinson attended a private screening of the movie in her home with family and friends, since she is too frail to travel to the premiere of the film.

She was middle-aged at the time and was a victim of police brutality that left her unconscious at the foot of the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama.  Her injuries and condition, along with others injured in clashes with police led the county sheriff to remark that the bodies should "be left for the buzzards".

Boynton Robinson fought for voters rights in the south and U.S. that eventually led to civil rights legislation like the Voting Rights Act and Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination in 1968.  She had personally persuaded MLK to focus on Selma.  The camaraderie of the early pioneers of civil rights was evident at the gathering watching the film at her home.  "I couldn't understand why they were beating us, but I was not afraid."

CNN.com story


Friday, January 9, 2015

Obama proposes free community college

President Obama outlined a proposal on Thursday for free universal community college for the nation's students and workers that is expected to save enrolled students about $3800 a year.  The plan will be discussed in the President's State of the Union message scheduled for January 20.

The plan is similar to an already established program in Tennessee, which requires students to maintain a 2.0 average, have a mentor and also complete community service.  The Tennessee program is funded by lottery proceeds.  Tobacco tax funds were considered, but that source of funding has been steadily dwindling.

The proposal would benefit approximately 9 million students, but there is concern about the building capacity of the nation's 1,100 community college.  Congress would have to approve the plan which would cooperate with states on a voluntary basis.

USA Today.com story


Thursday, January 8, 2015

Desperate 911 call as semi drags minivan 16 miles through a snowstorm

A family in a minivan called 911 this morning when their car was stuck under a moving semi-truck in Michigan, police said.

A dispatcher received a call at 1:57 a.m. this morning from the family of Matthew Menz, 46, who was traveling northbound on I-75, south of Roscommon, Michigan, according to the Roscommon County Sheriff's Office.

Because to "poor visibility from the snow," the minivan rear-ended the semi-truck pulling a large trailer, the sheriff's office said. Police received a call from a passenger of the minivan, which was stuck.

"The caller's minivan became lodged under the trailer and was being pulled down I-75 unbeknownst to the driver of the semi-truck," police said in a statement.

The four minivan occupants could not see due to snow and couldn't tell dispatchers their exact location, according to the sheriff's office.

The 911 call between the minivan and the dispatcher reveals a tense situation.

“It was snow blinding. We ran into the back of a semi-truck and he’s not stopping and our car is embedded underneath of it," the caller from the minivan said. “Our windshields have completely shattered. I can’t see nothing.”

"I just want to get off the back of this thing," the caller added.

The Crawford County Sheriff's Office eventually located the vehicle, south of Grayling on northbound I-75.

"Deputies successfully stopped the vehicles without incident, 16 miles from where the original collision had occurred," police said. "The four occupants of the minivan were transported by ambulance to Grayling Mercy Hospital for evaluation. However, no serious injuries are suspected."

ABC News.com


Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Millions caught in icy grip as Arctic front pushes south

Besides snow and blowing snow, 80 million Americans will remain in the grip of icy cold temperatures for the next several days.  Dangerous wind chills are expected to linger through Wednesday.  On Monday, whiteout conditions forced schools in Sioux Falls, SD, to release students early.  

In Chicago, four inches of snow blanketed the city overnight Monday, and it was so cold that maintenance crews were forced to deice fire hydrants with blow torches.  There was also a concern about rail switches freezing on railway lines which can cause derailments.

Iowa received more snow which caused a crash involving at least 20 vehicles, which closed down Interstate 80.  In Wisconsin, wind chill values were near -35 degrees F.

CBS Story about cold


Sunday, January 4, 2015

7-year-old girl survives Kentucky plane crash

On Saturday, January 3, an Illinois family was headed from Florida to their home in southern Illinois when their plane crashed in a heavily wooded area of western Kentucky.  Four of the people on board, a dad, mom, 14-year-old daughter and 9-year-old niece all died in the crash, but a plucky second grader, Sailor Gutzler walked away from the crash as the sole survivor.

The girl's dad had taught his daughters survival skills and Sailor used that knowledge to guide her 3/4 mile trek through a dark, thickly wooded area.  She used a branch to make a torch from the burning wing of the plane.  Even though she was injured with a broken wrist and numerous cuts, she managed to reach the home of Larry Wilkens, who put in the 911 distress call to authorities.

Searchers combing the area on Sunday called her survival "miraculous". The girl's family thanked all responders for their help in assisting Sailor and locating the plane wreckage.

NBC News story