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  • Shell sues environmental groups to score drilling rights

    Shell, the global oil and gas company, sued more than a dozen environmental groups that oppose offshore oil drilling in the Arctic Ocean on Wednesday, the Los Angeles Times reported. The environmental groups hope to block Shell’s plans to drill exploratory wells this summer in the Chukchi Sea, between Alaska and Russia.

    The idea behind the suits, filed in U.S. District Court in Anchorage, is to beat environmental activists to court. Shell has already spent $4 billion on the project but has not yet started drilling.

    “This is a very unique legal approach. I’m not sure anything like this has ever been done before,” Shell spokeswoman Kelly op de Weegh told the LA Times.


    Shell, which is headquartered in the Netherlands, targeted, among others, the National Audubon Society, the Sierra Club and Greenpeace, which last week sent six activists, including the actress Lucy Lawless, to protest aboard an oil rig in New Zealand. According to AlaskaDispatch.com, Shell is also seeking damages from Greenpeace for its protest occupation.

    Actress Lucy Lawless arrested in oil-ship protest

    PDF: Shell seeks restraining order against Greenpeace

    Whit Sheard, a senior adviser for Oceana, told the LA Times he doesn’t believe Shell has adequately met the requirements of the law.

    “This cleanup plan, just like their previous cleanup plans, is woefully inadequate, based on technology that has never been proven, and continues to be too risky for the Arctic environment,” Sheard said.

    He added: “What are they trying to do, get the courts to declare something legal that hasn’t been challenged as illegal? It seems premature, and potentially unnecessary.”

    BP oil spill trial postponed as settlement talks make progress

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • Obama salutes Iraq war vets at White House dinner

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    President Barack Obama leads guests to a toast as he hosts a dinner for members of the U.S. military who served in Iraq in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Feb., 29, 2012.

    Joshua Roberts / Reuters

    U.S. President Barack Obama speaks during a dinner on Wednesday night.

    See images from the U.S. withdraw from Iraq at the end of 2010 and 2011.

    AP reports: The president who opposed the Iraq war from its outset thanked those who fought its battles by sitting down to a candlelit meal with a small cross section of the million-plus who served there over the past nine years.

    Looking out over a sea of dress uniforms sparkling with medals attesting to years of wartime strife, Obama told the gathering: "In a culture that celebrates fame and fortune, yours are not necessarily household names. You are something more: the patriots who served in our name. And after nearly nine years in Iraq, tonight is an opportunity to express our gratitude and to say once more, welcome home."

    Rachel Maddow shares some video from Wednesday night's White House dinner honoring returning Iraq war veterans.

     

  • School shooting victim never got first paycheck -- now it'll be buried with him

    TODAY

    Danny Parmertor, who was killed in the Ohio school shooting.

    Five months before the high school shooting in Chardon, Ohio, Danny Parmertor did what many boys do when they turn 16: He went out looking for his first job. He dreamed of saving up enough money to buy a car.

    It took time, but eventually, Ernst Lanes hired Danny as a lane captain. For the last month, Danny spent his weekends helping bowlers with scoring and making sure their bowling balls fit correctly, said his boss, Joe Ernst.

    This week, Danny, a junior, was supposed to pick up his first paycheck – $273.50. It wasn’t a lot of money, but he was on his way – maybe just a fraction of the way – to owning his first car.


    Instead, on Monday morning, Danny was killed in the Chardon High School cafeteria. Thomas “TJ” Lane, 17, is accused of pulling out a semi-automatic gun he had stolen from his uncle and firing 10 shots. Five students were hit, all at random, prosecutors said. Three were killed, one was paralyzed, and another was wounded.

    Parmertor died almost immediately. Russell King, 17, and Demetrius Hewlin, 16, died on Tuesday.

    The three who died were friends. Family and friends said Danny loved Xbox and wing night; Russell loved to fish; Demetrius was a cuddly mama’s boy who loved tinkering with computers.

    Tim Ferguson, Demetrius Hewlin’s stepfather, told ABC News that all three played pee-wee football.

    Demetrius’ mother,  Phyllis Ferguson, said she has forgiven Lane, because she doesn’t believe he knew what he was doing. She tries not to dwell on the details of that morning, or to think that her son, who normally ran late, was on time that Monday morning.

    Chardon, Ohio grieves for the three students who died following Monday's shooting rampage: Danny Parmertor, Demetrius Hewlin and Russell King.

    "I don't know what [his] final moments were like, but I can't worry about it," Phyllis Ferguson told ABC News. "You have to accept things done and move on."

    Both Demetrius and Russell’s parents said they will donate their sons' organs.

    "He will live after his death," Phyllis Ferguson told ABC. "For one Demetrius, there's eight people he can help."

    Within a day of the shooting, grim details emerged about Lane's life. His parents are divorced, and his brother was a heroin addict, NBC News reported. Court records show that his father has had run-ins with the law. Lane was enrolled at an alternative school for at-risk youth – a term used on the school’s website.

    In 2009, following a fistfight at his uncle’s house, Lane was charged with assault; he pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct.

    On Monday, after the shooting in the cafeteria, police and witnesses said, Lane was chased out of the high school by an assistant football coach.

    Lane appeared in juvenile court on Tuesday. Geauga County Prosecutor David Joyce said he may be tried as an adult. He likely faces three counts of aggravated murder.

    Back at Ernst Lanes, Joe Ernst has fielded calls from bowlers who met Danny during his short time at the bowling alley.

    “We had people calling here and asking, 'That young man – we saw his photo on television – is that the same boy that helped us?'” Ernst told msnbc.com. “They were very uncomfortable calling and asking but they had to know. He was such a nice boy. He helped us.”

    On Wednesday, Danny's brother picked up his paycheck. It was part of a plan.

    Holding back tears, Bobby Parmertor, Danny's father, told the "TODAY Show": "We’re going to pick up the paycheck and we’re going to bury the paycheck with him."

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • US Muslim aid worker is home -- but no-fly list grounds him again

    Jamal Tarhuni looks over his U.S. passport with his son Rasheed at his home in Portland, Oregon, after returning a month late from a trip to Libya. Tarhuni was denied boarding a U.S. bound flight and summoned for extensive questioning by the FBI.

    After the FBI mysteriously interrogated U.S. citizen Jamal Tarhuni in Tunisia and delayed his flight home to Portland by a month, he finally was allowed to return to his family on Feb. 14, as msnbc.com reported. Tarhuni says he still does not know why he was stopped and could not get the FBI to confirm or deny whether he was on the secret no-fly list.


    Kari Huus


    Follow Kari Huus on Twitter and Facebook.



    On Wednesday, the mystery was solved, partially. When Tarhuni, 55, attempted to fly from Portland to Seattle to deliver a presentation about his experience providing humanitarian aid in Libya, he was denied boarding.


    His story is familiar to people on the FBI’s secret no-fly list. Tarhuni went to a kiosk at Portland International Airport for automated check in. The machine produced a message saying it could not process his request and instructing him to talk to a customer service representative.

    The customer service representative at Alaska Airlines took his driver’s license, then disappeared into another room, he said.

    "After about half an hour I was told that for security reasons I would not be able to fly today," said Tarhuni, who was driving to Seattle, about 175 road miles from Portland.

    He asked the manager at the airline to contact a representative with the Transportation Security Administration. But after a 10-minute cell phone call, the airline manager said there was no one to resolve the problem.

    The no-fly list is maintained by the Terrorism Screening Center, administered by the FBI. According to the FBI web site, the list contains the names of "known and appropriately suspected terrorists." The list has about 20,000 names on it, according to the TSC, including about 500 U.S. citizens. FBI policy prohibits confirming or denying an individual is on the list.

    "In practical terms, I have to drive in the snow and rain to Seattle because I made a commitment to the World Affairs Council to give a presentation," Tarhuni said.

    Related content:

    He was scheduled to speak Wednesday evening at a World Affairs Council event on his experience working with Medical Teams International on humanitarian projects in Libya -- which is where he was before his encounter with the FBI in Tunisia.

    "Personally I am extremely disappointed, and I am at a loss for what I need to do, and whether justice will be served," said Tarhuni, who was born in Libya but has lived in the United States for more than three decades.

    Tarhuni says he will pursue a legal case if necessary to force the government to restore his right to fly. Among other things, he was planning to facilitate teams of American doctors and nurses who will provide training in Libya, which is trying to recover from a civil war and set up a new government after the ouster of longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi in December.

    In the meantime, Tarhuni was preparing to board a train as early as Thursday in Portland to get to a meeting in Minnesota on March 3, where he and a Medical Teams International representative are slated to speak to a Nobel Prize forum.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

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  • 32 pet dogs euthanized in New Mexico rabies outbreak

    Dozens of pet dogs around one New Mexico city have had to be euthanized since December because they were exposed to rabid animals and hadn’t been vaccinated, the state’s health department said Wednesday.

    In addition to the 32 dogs that were euthanized, livestock and at least one cat also had to be put down in the Carlsbad area.


    In an outbreak documented by state health officials in Eddy County, 22 skunks, one dog and one fox have tested positive for rabies, state health officials announced in a news release.

    Twelve people in the county have received medicine for post-rabies exposure.

    "This is one of the most concentrated outbreaks of rabies that has been seen in New Mexico for decades," Dr. Paul Ettestad, the health department’s public health veterinarian said in a statement. "Everyone should encourage their family and their neighbors to have their pets vaccinated against rabies to protect their community."

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • Online store CafePress clobbered for racist merchandise

    CafePress.com

    If, for whatever reason, you feel the need to diss the Canadians (or any other nationality or ethnicity), CafePress has the shirt for you,

    CafePress, the online store where independent artists and merchants can sell T-shirts, mugs and other collectibles, has removed pages promoting anti-Mexican products after Latino bloggers and news sites brought them to public light this week.

    It's not the first time CafePress — one of the biggest online retailers in the world — has wandered into critics' cross-hairs for selling merchandise that would generally be considered racist or otherwise offensive, and given the way the site works, it won't be the last.

    First, some background:

    CafePress this week pulled down 10 pages offering merchandise with explicitly anti-Mexican themes after Latino media outlets picked up posts by the blogs Tex(t)Mex and Latino Rebels, which noted that CafePress had an "Anti-Mexican Gifts" section.


    "Looking for the right funny gift to express your hate and racism towards Mexicans? Well, CafePress has got the goods for you," Latino Rebels observed.

    CafePress removed the pages, as well as pages in a second section called "Anti-Mexico." It said it regretted "any problems or concerns caused by the images in question."


    M. Alex Johnson

    M. Alex Johnson is a reporter for msnbc.com. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.


    Case closed, right?

    Wrong.

    Quick searches of CafePress on Thursday evening showed hundreds of pages offering merchandise explicitly labeled "Anti-French," "Anti-Arab," "Anti-African" and so on. And there's still plenty of anti-Mexican merchandise on CafePress, like this bumper sticker:

    CafePress.com

    So what's going on?

    What CafePress did was to disable the specific search terms "Anti-Mexican" and "Anti-Mexico" in response to this week's publicity. Much of the merchandise is still there. 

    The same sort of controversy came up before, for example in October, when CafePress removed merchandise that appeared to promote violence against illegal immigrants.

    And it will keep popping up, because CafePress is largely an automated site. There never was a dedicated "Anti-Mexican" section. What there was was a search results page for the term "Anti-Mexican," generated dynamically by its computers when someone asked for it.

    You can test it yourself. On the CafePress homepage, plug in any keyword you want plus "anti" into the search field and you will get back a page generated on the fly from CafePress' database of products. 

    For example, try "Anti Canada." Among the many T-shirts, bumper stickers, mugs and so on is the T-shirt at the top of this post.

    CafePress confirmed in a statement that it doesn't pre-review what merchandise sellers sell there:

    The range of user-designed products varies widely in topic, taste and political opinion. CafePress' independent design community spans the globe, with users representing multicultural and multinational ideals and sentiments. As such, users may upload designs that some find distasteful or offensive, but are nevertheless consistent with our policies for expressions and content on our website.

    The company said customers could notify it of objectionable content at cup@cafepress.com. "We review all requests for content review, measure user-uploaded images against our policies and determine a plan of action if any is appropriate."

    Adrian Carrasquillo of NBC Latino contributed to this report.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • Brigadier General buried at Arlington Cemetery

    Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP

    A rider less horse leads a caisson carrying the remains of Army Brig. Gen. Terence J. Hildner, during a burial services at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va. on Feb. 29. Hildner died of apparent natural causes Feb. 3 in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP

    Cindy Hilder, center with red scarf, widow of Army Brig. Gen. Terence J. Hildner, watches as Army Lt. Gen. Donald Campbell presents her family with American flags during a burial services at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va.

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    Two U.S. Army soldiers salute during a full honors burial service for U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Terence Hildner at Arlington National Cemetery on Feb. 29 in Arlington, Virginia.

    Brig. Gen. Terence J. Hildner received a full honors burial service at Arlington National Cemetery today in Arlington, Virginia.

    Hildner, 49, died of apparently natural causes in Afghanistan, and is the highest-ranking soldier to die during the war. 

    Related links:

     

  • Mom: School was wrong to put my son in cardboard box

    LOS ANGELES -- The mother of a fourth-grade special needs student has filed a claim for damages after her son was made to spend quiet time in a classroom cabinet and, later, in a cardboard box brought in for that purpose.

    Whether it was improper for a teacher to have a special needs student spend quiet time in a classroom cardboard box has not been determined by the Lake Elsinore Unified School District.

    Read NBCLosAngeles.com's report on boy put in box

    There are circumstances when such a technique may be permissible, according to a district spokesman.


    "A special needs child put in a box is just — I cannot comprehend that," said Kim Rollins, whose son is diagnosed with Asperger's, a syndrome on the mild end of the autistic spectrum.

    Sage Rollins, 10, attends class with mainstream students at Ronald Reagan Elementary School in the southwest Riverside County community of Wildomar.

    Compartmentalizing a student in the classroom may be an appropriate way to help a child susceptible to sensory overload, said Mark Dennis, spokesman for the Elsinore school district.

    "It's called a sensory diet, and there are many varieties of adaptations to create a calm environment. A box can be used. A desk with a blanket. A tent. These can all be used inside a classroom," Dennis said, adding that at least one teacher supply catalogue carries a product called the B-Calm Hideaway, a small box-like play area.

    Sage's mother said she first became aware of the box when her son spoke up about taking some scissors to school to cut a hole in it.

    Rollins said she learned from her son that his teacher had designated the classroom closet for his quiet time before bringing the box to the classroom. Rollins said her son told her sometimes he went to the box on his own but that twice she ordered him there.

    "I would never justify that," said psychologist Ron Leaf, PhD, a founding director of the Autism Project, which provides consulting services to school districts.

    Even though some children with Asperger's crave quiet time, Leaf said there are better solutions than relegating them to a box and exposing them to ridicule from fellow students.

    An investigation by the Riverside Sheriff's Department found no evidence of a crime. The teacher remains on paid leave pending the outcome of the district's investigation.

    After learning of the box, Rollins said she removed her son from Reagan Elementary for a few days. But he has since returned to class, with a new teacher.

    Follow NBCLA for the latest LA news, events and entertainment: Twitter: @NBCLA // Facebook: NBCLA

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

     

  • Police: 'Creepy' embalmer sold gold teeth from corpses

    Adrian Kline is suspected of selling dental gold taken from the dead.

    A Colorado embalmer saw a golden opportunity in dead people’s teeth, police say.

    Adrian David Kline, 43, of Brighton, is accused of stealing gold teeth from bodies and cremated remains he handled at funeral homes and selling them to local pawn shops, the Longmont Times-Call reported.

    A Boulder County Grand jury indicted Kline on eight counts of providing false information to a pawnbroker and two counts of providing false information to a secondhand dealer. He turned himself in Friday, the newspaper said.


    Longmont police allege that Kline, who worked as a contract embalmer at multiple funeral homes in the Denver metropolitan area, removed gold crowns from bodies prior to embalming and removed dental gold from cremated remains.

    Longmont pawnbrokers found it “creepy” and “weird” that he was pawning dental gold repeatedly and called police, according to the Times-Call.

    Valuables and metals removed from bodies are either supposed to be disposed of or recycled, investigators told the newspaper.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • Woman: Priest denied me Communion at mom's funeral because I'm gay

    Barbara Johnson knew last Saturday, the day of her mother’s funeral, would be difficult. But she and her lesbian partner of 20 years had no idea that the priest at St. John Neumann Catholic Church in Gaithersburg, Md., would be a source of her grief.

    Johnson, 51, of Washington, D.C, walked into the church, mourning the mom she described to msnbc.com as “a really cool woman; she was 85 going on 58.”

    When Johnson and her partner arrived at the church – which her mom had attended, and her dad, too, before he died years prior – they were summoned by Rev. Marcel Guarnizo, a man they were meeting for the first time. He didn’t express his condolences, Johnson said, instead curtly getting down to business.


    Johnson had painfully written a eulogy; her niece had also penned one. “We only allow one eulogy,” Guarnizo informed them, despite the fact that the church’s music director had told them otherwise, Johnson told msnbc.com. Johnson said she asked her partner to plead with Guarnizo to allow for two while she was called away for her pallbearer duties.

    The day, already tense, was about to get significantly worse. Johnson said the priest denied her Communion at her own mother's funeral, telling her he couldn't give it to her because she was gay.

    When it came time to hand out bread and wine, Guarnizo “issued a strong admonition that only Catholics in a state of grace can receive Communion,” Johnson told msnbc.com. “I went up. I was standing next to my mother’s casket and he covered the bowl, and said, ‘I cannot give you Communion because you are with a woman, and in the eyes of the church, that is a sin.’ I stood there with my mouth open in a state of shock for – I don’t know how long.”

    But he wasn’t finished, Johnson said. Guarnizo had finally agreed to allow two eulogies, but she said family members told her that he proceeded to walk out of the service in the middle of Johnson’s dedication to her mother – something he didn’t do during her niece’s eulogy.

    As the final insult, Johnson told msnbc.com, Guarnizo failed to attend her mother’s burial: “When the funeral home director appears, he says, ‘Father Marcel has taken ill. He says he has a migraine and is unable to accompany your mother’s remains to the cemetery.’ This was, for me and my family, his most egregious act.”

    The Johnsons now want Guarnizo removed from his post, and are seeking an apology from him.

    “You brought your politics, not your God into that Church yesterday, and you will pay dearly on the day of judgment for judging me,” Barbara Johnson wrote in a letter to Guarnizo. “I will pray for your soul, but first I will do everything in my power to see that you are removed from parish life so that you will not be permitted to harm any more families.”

    Msnbc.com emailed Guarnizo on Wednesday but did not receive any response from him. Long videos online show him delivering anti-choice speeches, calling abortion clinics “veritable death camps.”

    Priest doesn't apologize, but archdiocese does
    Johnson, whose story was first reported in The Washington Post, said that Guarnizo has yet to apologize to her family or make any public remarks, but on Tuesday, the Archdiocese of Washington sent Johnson a letter of apology after she spoke with the secretary there.

    “In my years as a priest, I have encountered many pastoral situations and know that kindness to those experiencing personal loss is a necessary part of the Church’s call to charity,” said the letter, signed by Rev. Barry Knestout of the archdiocese. “The fact that you did not experience this is a cause of great concern and personal regret to me. It is understandable that you and your family would expect the funeral of your mother to be a time of fond remembrance of her life and comfort from the Church in the midst of family grief.”

    The letter apologized for the “lack of pastoral sensitivity.”

    Guarnizo’s behavior was against the Archdiocese of Washington’s policy, according to a statement issued by officials.

    “When questions arise about whether or not an individual should present themselves for communion, it is not the policy of the Archdiocese of Washington to publicly reprimand the person,” the statement said. “Any issues regarding the suitability of an individual to receive communion should be addressed by the priest with that person in a private, pastoral setting.”

    When asked how she identifies herself religiously, Johnson told msnbc.com, “I’m a Catholic. I’m deeply influenced by eastern religion philosophy and the nonviolence of Gandhi and the Dalai Lama along with my church upbringing.”

    Her parents worked hard to provide a Catholic school upbringing for her and her siblings.

    “I’ve had a very rich and complex relationship with the Catholic church. As an adult, being a lesbian presents conflicts with one’s spirituality. I’ve been fortunate particularly in the last several years – I’ve received Communion every time I’ve gone to church,” she said.

    'My mother loved the Catholic Church ... If she loved it, it was good'
    For Johnson, however, the Catholic Church and Guarnizo are totally separate.

    “It’s very important for everyone to know that my mother loved the Catholic Church. Her life was not celebrated properly; she wasn’t treated with respect by Father Marcel. His actions have turned people. I have gotten email upon email saying, ‘I’m not going back,’ and I say, ‘Please go back, because that man does not represent the Catholic Church.’ My mother loved the Catholic Church, and if she loved it, it was good.”

    Johnson said she’s been overwhelmed by the support she has received from elsewhere in the church since the funeral.

    “That’s where I’m focusing. Our family’s mission is to heal. The thing that would be required for that, we believe, would be an apology from Father Marcel. We greatly appreciate the apology from the Archdiocese. We also think he needs to be removed from parish life so no one ever has to experience this on the most tragic day of their lives again.”

    Gay and lesbian-friendly faith leaders have backed Johnson.

    “Shunning a grieving daughter at her mother’s funeral is a heartless act that violates the great commandment Jesus gave us to love God and love our neighbor. When judgment trumps compassion the Gospel is lost. My heart goes out to a lesbian daughter who loved her mom enough to eulogize her while enduring such unfaithful actions,” said Rev. Troy Plummer, executive director of Reconciling Ministries Network with United Methodist Church.

    Added Dr. Michael Adee, executive director of More Light Presbyterians: “We grieve that this daughter and her family experienced judgment rather than grace and care. We cannot imagine how a priest or pastor could fail to provide pastoral care during the funeral of a loved one.”

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • Criminalizing homelessness? Fallout feared from anti-Occupy bill

    Occupy protesters Anthony Gales, left, Ben Grady, center, and James Martin, right, eat dinner at the campsite on Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2012, in Nashville, Tenn.

    Legislation passed by Tennessee lawmakers, apparently aimed at shutting the Occupy Nashville camp, could have a chilling effect on free speech and perhaps even criminalize the homeless, housing and civil liberties activists say.

    The state's House of Representatives on Monday approved the Senate version of a bill -- the "Equal Access to Public Property Act of 2012" -- which prohibits unauthorized camping -- including sleeping and storing of personal belongings -- on public grounds, and the governor says he will sign it. Violators would face up to 11 months and 29 days in jail and/or a fine of $2,500.


    The measure follows an unsuccessful attempt by the state to evict the Occupy protesters from Nashville’s Legislative Plaza in October.

    “It chills the spirit of freedom of speech and assembly by targeting a particular form of expression,” said Hedy Weinberg, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee. “When you recognize that the Occupy folks were choosing to camp and put up tents as the very means by which they were expressing their frustration with the government -- to have that then be identified as criminal, challenges their right to political speech.”

    The legislation does not specifically refer to the plaza where Occupy protesters have gathered, instead describing public property in one section as "a state park, recreation area, wildlife refuge, historic building, educational institution or natural green space." It notes the legislation is "specifically intended to protect state interests jeopardized by the activity of camping on state property that is not compatible to or designated for such activity."

    The broad language poses a major problem for the homeless, said Charles Strobel, founding director of Room in the Inn and its Campus for Human Development, a religious nonprofit that provides services to the homeless in central Tennessee.

    “I think it’s what they might refer to as unintended consequences,” he said. "… It’s criminalizing the right to exist as a human being. It’s outlawing homelessness."

    Strobel, who has worked with the homeless community for 34 years, described the legislation as "cruel and mean.” He said it will join a number of measures, such as "quality of life" offenses, that the homeless already have to contend with.

    "So this is just one of a number of situations that you’re constantly facing with the homeless, that they are being shuffled around and, of course, in this case, they just have to keep walking … God forbid that they stop and rest," he said late Tuesday.

    Related story: Tale of a Southern 'Occupy': Nashville aims to bridge political divides

    Some homeless had sheltered at Legislative Plaza before the Occupy protesters arrived, since there were only about 1,500 beds available to the city’s estimated more than 4,000 people who need them, Strobel said.

    As many as 50 homeless people lived in the Occupy camp at the height of the protest, but that number has dropped to about 10, said Lindsey Krinks, a 27-year-old student at Vanderbilt Divinity School and a homeless advocate who is also an Occupy member.

    “A lot of people have cleared off the plaza because they’re so concerned about getting jail time and fines that they can’t pay and having all of their belongings confiscated ... which is really problematic when you are looking at people who have so little to begin with," she said. 

    Among those is Nathan Rice, 32, who said he has lived on the streets since 13 and recycles cans for money. He arrived at the Occupy camp in mid-November and said he is "pretty much committed" to the movement.

    “It was just a safe place to sleep and people treated me fairly nice,” Rice said of the Occupy camp. "They didn’t look at you as just homeless ... they looked at us as equals.”

    One of the legislation's sponsors, Republican Rep. Eric Watson, said in an email that the legislation “does nothing to impact the homeless population” and did not elaborate. He directed msnbc.com to the text of the legislation regarding questions about the bill's intent. 

    The other sponsor, Republican Sen. Dolores R. Gresham, did not respond to an email and phone calls from msnbc.com seeking comment by early Wednesday afternoon.

    But in an interview with The Associated Press on Monday, she said the purpose was to make the grounds around the Capitol available to all visitors.

    AP Photo/Erik Schelzig

    Sen. Dolores Gresham introduces her bill seeking to ban unauthorized camping on public property on the Senate floor in Nashville, Tenn., on Thursday, Feb. 23, 2012.

    "Certainly that was never the intent that the homeless would be in any way impacted by this bill," the Somerville Republican said.

    Health concerns and preservation of state resources are cited in the bill among the reasons to impose the changes.

    "It is in the state’s interests to be a good steward of public land and manage and protect it in such a manner as to ensure that future generations of Tennesseans are able to continue to enjoy the natural treasures and rich beauty of this state," the bill said.

    While many other Occupy camps have been shuttered across the country using similar regulations since Occupy Wall Street began in September, U.S. District Court Judge Lynn Winmill in Idaho issued a temporary order on Monday allowing Occupy protesters in Boise to keep their tents.

    The judge wrote that the camp was in a public place that is "highly visible and physically close to the seat of government, making it a natural forum for political protests." He has not allowed sleeping but said an argument could be made for it as a protected freedom of expression, according to KBOI2.com.

    The order was issued in response to a new law signed last week by Idaho's governor intended to remove the protesters from the property surrounding a vacant courthouse where they've camped out since early November, The Associated Press reported.

    Criminalization of the homeless in jurisdictions around the country “has become progressively worse over the last couple of years,” said Neil Donovan, executive director of the National Coalition for the Homeless.

    “A number of communities are passing ordinances like this to push back against the Occupy movement and when you look at communities, some do it more artfully than others, and this is certainly not in that camp,” he said. “It’s quite apparent that they are constructing this to limit … very distinct behavior and actions.”

    Donovan said it was a “flagrant targeting” of a group of individuals and said he thought it was unlikely to stand up in court. When asked how the legislation compared to others on the books, he said it was among "those ordinances that violate people's rights" and was "part of a collective movement" to restrict the rights of those who engage in "reasonable activities."

    “Anytime that a state engages in this type of behavior it opens the door and creates a path for other ordinances and other laws that will affect the homeless so we would strongly object to this” kind of legislation, he added.

    A separate process is also under way in Tennessee to write new procedures for the use of the plaza amid an ongoing federal lawsuit, filed by the local ACLU, which alleges that the state illegally revised the rules controlling the site last October when it tried to evict the Occupy protesters.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • Maine police find body of slain Florida firefighter

    AP

    Florida firefighter Jerry Perdomo was reported missing Feb. 16.

    Updated at 4:49 p.m. ET: Authorities in Maine on Wednesday identified a body found in the woods near the town of Newburgh, just outside Bangor, as a Florida firefighter missing for more a week.

    The body was found Wednesday morning by a state game warden and his dog. The state medical examiner’s office identified the body as Jerry Perdomo, 31, of Orange City, Fla. An autopsy will not begin until Friday at the earliest, the Maine Department of Public Safety said.

    The discovery came one day after a suspect in Perdomo's death was arrested. Perdomo, who was a Seminole County, Fla., firefighter, was reported missing Feb. 16. 


    A Bangor man, 24-year-old Daniel Porter, has been charged with murder.

    According to an arrest warrant, Porter owed Perdomo $3,000 and told police the firefighter threatened him and his family during a game of pool.

    Waldo County Sheriff Dept. / AP

    Daniel Porter is charged in the death of Jerry Perdomo.

    A police investigation began after a woman described as Perdomo's girlfriend told police in Bangor that she last saw him Feb. 16 with a handgun and that he told her he was going to meet someone who owed him money.

    According to the affidavit, Porter told police Perdomo was dead but would not say where his body was.

    The affidavit also said Porter and Perdomo were involved in drugs and had exchanged death threats in January. Porter complained to police that a man he believed was Perdomo had thrown rocks at his house.

    Each man told investigators he had been threatened by the other.

    "Perdomo stated that he observed Porter with a machine gun and that Porter threatened to shoot him and put him through a wood chipper," according to the affidavit. "Porter stated that Perdomo threatened to cut off his hands and kill him."

    The affidavit cites evidence showing that Porter drove Perdomo's rented car to a Wal-Mart store in Bangor and abandoned it, and threw a bag containing Perdomo's wallet, cell phones and keys into a trash container behind a Bangor supermarket.

    Records also show that Porter and his girlfriend had purchased a handgun at a pawn shop on Jan. 20.

    Earlier this week, in an interview from her home in Orange City, Fla., Perdomo's wife, Tonya, described the father of 3- and 10-year-old children as "a dedicated dad. He helps people out a lot."

    The firefighter had left Florida in a rental car and told his wife he was going to see friends in Maine, which she said was not unusual because he had friends from all over.

    Porter was arrested Tuesday at a home in Jackson, Maine, that was rented by Porter's father, Maine police said. The house is believed to be the last place Perdomo was seen alive, investigators said, according to ABC News.

    The property where the body was found is believed to be owned by relatives of Porter, police said.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Feds allege $279 million auto insurance fraud scheme in New York

    Federal agents and NYPD detectives have arrested dozens of suspects on federal charges of participating in a $279 million insurance fraud scheme.

    The 36 people charged include 10 doctors and three attorneys who are alleged to have participated in the scheme, officials said. They face maximum jail sentences ranging from 30 to 70 years, if convicted.

    Read NBCNewYork.com's original story on insurance fraud scheme

    Suspects were charged with racketeering and money laundering, among other counts. Officials said the Brooklyn-based operation was the largest single no-fault auto insurance fraud scheme ever charged.


    The scheme took advantage of a state law requiring every vehicle in New York state to have no-fault auto insurance, enabling the driver and passengers to get benefits of up to $50,000 per person for injuries suffered in an accident, regardless of fault.

    Under the law, payments for medical treatments had to be made quickly, meaning those in the car would not have to file time-consuming personal injury lawsuits.

    Some medical clinics have been created in New York entirely for the purpose of defrauding insurance companies under the no-fault law.

    In some cases, clinic operators would also arrange for other allegedly fraudulent businesses to give unnecessary treatments, and would provide referrals from doctors. Those treatments were also billed to the auto insurance companies and included acupuncture, physical therapy, X-rays, and orthopedics.

    In return, the clinic heads received cash kickbacks for the referrals.

    The scheme also used recruiters to bring in patients, and paid them thousands per referral.

    The operation had ties to Russian organized crime, officials said.

    "The criminal enterprise, while it lasted, was obscenely profitable," FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Janice K. Fedarcyk said in a statement.

    Those charged will be arraigned in federal court in Manhattan.

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  • Gay Ariz. sheriff fends off new attack -- from sister

    Embattled Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu is fending off new allegations -- this time from his sister.

    An embattled Arizona sheriff who earlier denied he threatened to deport his ex-lover to Mexico is fending off new allegations – this time from his sister, who claims he had an inappropriate sexual relationship with a student from a Massachusetts boarding school he once ran.

    Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeau, who is running for Congress in Arizona's 4th Congressional District, denies the allegations made by Lucy Babeau, and his camp is questioning her mental stability.

    In a story broadcast Sunday, Lucy Babeau told ABC15 that her brother had an inappropriate relationship with a male student at the DeSisto School, a private boarding school for troubled teens in Stockbridge, Mass., while Paul Babeau directed the school. Babeau was executive director and headmaster of DeSisto from 1999 to 2001.


    Lucy Babeu told the ABC15 she confronted her brother after finding a teen student from the school living with him.

    “I said, ‘What is this student from DeSisto doing here?’ He says, ‘Lucy, he's my boyfriend. I love him.'" At the time, the student was 17, which is above the legal age of consent in Massachusetts, according to ABC15.

    The story also said physical and sexual abuse occurred at the school under Babeau’s stewardship. The TV station cited former students and state records as saying the school used controversial disciplinary methods, including forcing misbehaving students to strip down and wear nothing but a sheet or to sit facing the wall for hours.

    Babeu declined an on-camera interview, but his spokesman sent ABC15 this statement:

    "DeSisto Private School's mission was to save troubled, yet talented youth in a therapeutic environment. The Sheriff served three years and was recognized for helping restore financial stability of the school. He was never the target of any investigation or lawsuit. Sheriff Babeu is a recognized leader for Victim's Rights."

    On Tuesday, Babeau’s campaign launched a counterattack against his sister. The Rose Law Group, which has supported Babeau, put out a two-page dossier detailing what it said was Lucy Babeau’s medical history and alleged behavioral problems, The Arizona Star reported. It also distributed a letter from the former teen at DeSoto. In it, he denies having had “any inappropriate sexual relationship” with Babeau.

    Lucy Babeau, reached at her home in North Adams, Mass., called the dossier “slanderous” and said several portions were false.

    Sheriff Babeau, known for his tough stance against illegal immigration, made national headlines in mid-February after the Phoenix New Times published an article in which a man claimed the sheriff threatened him with deportation for refusing to promise never to disclose their years-long relationship.

    Babeau held a press conference and acknowledged he is gay but denied the allegations of misconduct against him. Babeau also resigned as Arizona co-chairman of Mitt Romney’s GOP presidential campaign.

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  • Murderer on the run after mistaken release

    Authorities were searching Wednesday for a convicted murder with an "extensive" criminal history who was accidentally released from custody while awaiting a court appearance in South Carolina, the sheriff's office says.

    York County Sheriff's Office

    Thomas Aaron Whitlock was released Monday from the York County Detention Center, which only realized the mistake nearly 24 hours later when arrangements were being made to return him to prison, the York County Sheriff's Office says.

    Thomas Aaron Whitlock, a 31-year-old convicted of second-degree murder in 2009, was let go Monday afternoon from the York County Detention Center -- which only realized the mistake nearly 24 hours later when arrangements were being made to return him to prison in Windsor, N.C., according to the York County Sheriff's Office.


    Whitlock had been taken to York County for a court appearance on drug-related charges.

    "I could go into a lot of discussions that we've had as to how this took place," Sheriff Bruce Bryant told The Charlotte Observer. "We deal with thousands and thousands of prisoners each year, book close to 7,000 prisoners each year. There has been a mistake made."

    South Carolina records show Whitlock had previously been convicted on burglary, robbery and drug charges. He was arrested in April 2010 by FBI agents who found him hiding under a home in Dallas, Texas, and he was later sentenced to between 11 and 14 years in the death of Jamie Thompson in Charlotte, the newspaper said.

    The Sheriff’s Office said it was working with other law enforcement agencies and the North Carolina Division of Adult Correction to find the fugitive. Bryant also has launched an investigation into how Whitlock was released.

    Bryant announced a $5,000 reward for information leading to Whitlock's recapture. People with information were urged to call the Sheriff's Office at 803-628-3059 or to go online at http://www.yorkcrimestoppers.com/.

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  • 24-year-old mayor's personal life story guides political career

    By Kate Snow and Jessica Hopper
    Rock Center

    Svante Myrick, the new 24-year-old mayor of Ithaca, N.Y., shies away from increasingly frequent comparisons to President Obama, but he admits the president’s journey certainly influenced his decision to enter politics.

    “Well, if this, you know, guy with that name and those ears can do it, then a guy with this name and these ears can do it,” Myrick said.

    When he was just a teenager, Myrick’s grandmother gave him a copy of Barack Obama’s book, “Dreams From My Father.” As a biracial teenager, he found solace and motivation in reading Obama’s story.

    “It was so full of things I saw in my own story.  I mean, his struggle with his identity growing up without his father and raised by a white mother in a largely white school district. I mean, he had been through things and he had wisdom,” Myrick said. 

    Myrick’s mother is white and his father is African American.  The family was at times homeless. Myrick’s father struggled with drug addiction and faded from his life when he was six years old, Myrick said.   He was raised primarily by his mother and grandparents in a Earlville, N.Y., a tiny town with just one stoplight.  He and his three siblings were the only black kids in the town, Myrick said.

    “Our family was the black neighborhood,” Myrick joked. 

    Myrick entered politics while still a student at Cornell University.  He was elected to Ithaca’s City Council when he was a junior.  He served on the council for four years before running for mayor.


    “Frankly, there’s nothing you can tell people that will show them that you’re ready to do it.  All you can do is point to what you’ve done already,” Myrick told Kate Snow in an interview scheduled to air Wednesday, Feb. 29 on Rock Center with Brian Williams.

    While running for mayor, the democrat admits that his age was sometimes a hurdle. He wore out two pairs of shoes canvassing the town of 30,000 people to convince voters to support him.

    “When somebody questions your age, it’s not that they’re wondering if you’ve had enough birthdays to do the job.  They’re wondering if you’re dedicated enough, they wonder if you know enough about the city.  They wonder if you have the experience it takes to get things done and if you show them those things, then the age is just a number,” Myrick said.

    Along with his political experience, Myrick’s rise from humble beginnings also seemed to resonate with voters.  His mother, Leslie Myrick, worked multiple jobs to support the family. When NBC News interviewed her, she’d just finished an overnight shift at the front desk of a local hotel.

    “He’s full of love and has always been full of love,” Leslie Myrick said of her son.

    Myrick seems to have gleaned his own wisdom from his upbringing.

    “I’m sure it makes you a little tougher.  I’m sure you learn to take advantage of every opportunity you’re given, you know?” Myrick said.  “Because you know what it’s like to not have those opportunities, you know? You learn to recognize an advantage when you see one, I think and it, I don’t know, it’s a motivator.”

    Leslie Myrick said that a young Svante devoured books as a child and was a “real charmer.”

    She quietly campaigned for her son during his mayoral run, rarely revealing she was his mom when she would knock on a door.

    “Ordinarily, I would not tell them, but if I thought they were on the fence and if I thought the personal touch would help, I would tell them,” she said.

    Svante Myrick calls his mom a superhero.

    “I think she had superpowers to keep all five of us together and to keep us clothed and fed and housed and to get us our first jobs and to get us to practice and back and to get us to these meetings and to get us all off to college safely and soundly and sanely,” Myrick said. 

    When Myrick tries to thank his mother, he says she shrugs it off and instead apologizes for what she couldn’t provide for him.

    “It’s a feat of human endurance.  It’s up there with, you know, climbing Mount Everest. It’s unlike anything I’ve ever seen,” Myrick said of his mother. “It’s like she doesn’t know what she did. She saved our lives, all of us.”

    Myrick credits his high school teacher, Jonathan Sherry, with pushing him to really think about his future. He said that he wasn’t much of student, but after getting near perfect scores on the SATs, Mr. Sherry encouraged him to apply to Cornell. Myrick had never heard of the Ivy League school which was less than 100 miles away from his family’s home.

    “I saw from a young age what he was capable of,” Sherry said.

    When Myrick left high school, he left a note behind in a yearbook for Mr. Sherry.

    “P.S. In 2040, when I’m president, I’ll keep you in mind for secretary of education,” the note read.

    Myrick, like any trained politician, now refuses to talk about any presidential ambitions.

    “Ithaca is my home, you know.  This is the place I want to serve, so I’m excited about serving here,” he said.

    He’d have to wait 10 years before he’d even be eligible to run for the presidency.

    For now, the new mayor still lives like a college student. He has a handful of roommates who live in a house not far from Cornell.

    “He doesn’t cook very much, but I know whose peanut butter spoons those are,” said roommate Eddie Rooker.

    Myrick and his roommates, all in their twenties, jokingly call the home they share “the hall of justice.”  Under one roof lives Ithaca’s mayor, a city council member and a member of the county legislature.

    Despite all of his hard work, Myrick does not consider himself a self-made man. He believes strongly in  the government programs that helped sustain him as a child.

    “This is not the story of a self-made man.  This is a story of a community that conspired together to raise, you know, a child.  I mean, that’s the truth,” Myrick said.

    Editor’s Note: Kate Snow’s full report, ‘Mr. Mayor,’ airs Wednesday, Feb. 29 at 9 pm/8 c on Rock Center with Brian Williams.

  • 'Oh, my God': 911 calls from school shooting

    Police have released the 911 calls made moments after a teen gunman opened fire at an Ohio school, killing three students and injuring two others. NBC's KevinTibbles reports.

    Police have released 911 recordings from the school shooting in Chardon, Ohio, revealing the chaos and fear from Monday’s incident that left three students dead and two others wounded.

    "We just had a shooting at our school. We need to get out of here. Oh, my god," one crying female caller told a dispatcher.

    "Everyone's running away," the caller added.

    Another caller, a male student, instantly identified the gunman as Thomas Lane, a student, and said he appeared to be shooting at random.

    "What was his beef with these kids? Do we know?" the dispatcher asked.

    "I have no idea," he said, adding: "He's very quiet and he doesn't really talk to anyone."

    In a separate call, an adult pleads with the dispatcher: “Chardon High School. We got shots fired. Gunshots. Multiple gunshots. We need help. We need help badly.”

    By the time the 17-year-old shooter was in custody, he had fired at five teens in the close-knit community of 5,000 residents, located about 35 miles outside of Cleveland.

    The calls, recorded by the Chardon Police Department and Geauga County Sheriff’s Office and released on Tuesday, describe a scene of panic as students ran for cover in the cafeteria, where Thomas, known as T.J., allegedly opened fire just after 7:30 a.m.

    “We are in lockdown. We need assistance right now!” another female cries in a separate call.

    NBC affiliate WKYC.com published a string of 911 calls, from the initial reports of a gunman on school property to the high school principal confirming T.J. Lane’s identity as the alleged shooter.

    Third student dies in Ohio school shooting

    Report: Teen suspect in Ohio shooting from violent family

    Slideshow: Photos from Chardon

    “Hey, it’s the principal at Chardon again. The alleged shooter ran out the back door… past the pool, alright?”

    The dispatcher asked for a description of what he’s wearing. The principal told her he has a white t-shirt on and then said, “We have a name, we think.”

    “Is that Thomas?”

    “Yup,” he responds.

    Lane did not attend Chardon High, instead attending nearby Lake Academy, a school for students with academic or behavioral problems.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Stockton, Calif., takes 'first step towards bankruptcy'

    STOCKTON, Calif. -- The city of Stockton in California's crop-abundant Central Valley has the second-highest foreclosure rate in the nation and one of the highest crime and unemployment rates. It was named America's most miserable city in a national magazine — twice.

    And now, officials say this river port city of 290,000 is on the brink of insolvency and could become the nation's largest city to fall into Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection.


    The City Council voted late Tuesday to use a new California law to enter mediation with its creditors. City leaders said they hoped the plan to renegotiate Stockton's debt would help it avoid bankruptcy.

    Dozens of residents spoke against the move, saying they feared it would do the opposite, KRCA-TV reported.

    "If they vote for mediation, it is the first step towards bankruptcy," former City Manager Dwane Milnes said. "That means 1,000 people could lose retirement benefits."

    6 cities where home prices are falling sharply

    Stockton will be the first city to test the state law, Assembly Bill 506, which is less than 2 months old. It requires local government agencies to undergo mediation or hold a public hearing and declare a fiscal emergency before filing for bankruptcy.

    In 2008, Vallejo became the biggest California city to file for bankruptcy, and it emerged from bankruptcy last year.

    Budget gap
    Under the plan, the city will skip some bond payments in an effort to restructure its precarious finances.

    Along with defaulting on about $2 million of debt payments through the end of its current fiscal year, the city located about 85 miles east of San Francisco will seek mediation with its major bond holders to try to get a break on its debt to help tackle a budget gap projected to range from $20 million to $38 million.

    While Stockton officials say they hope to avert bankruptcy, the city has hired an attorney who represented much smaller Vallejo, which drew national attention to financial problems of local governments in the most populous U.S. state.

    Dead letter offices: States closing the most mail centers

    Stockton's attorney, Marc Levinson, said mediation could keep the city from following in Vallejo's footsteps and suffering the stigma of bankruptcy.

    "This is really the city's last and best chance to avoid a bankruptcy case," Levinson said.

    But Stockton residents who have seen hard times grip their city in recent years are bracing for the possibility it will land in bankruptcy court despite its financial restructuring plan.

    "That's the end of the plank — and we're on that plank," 68-year Stockton resident Rosalio Estrada told Reuters.

    'It's been tough'
    In recent years, thousands of new homes mushroomed in Stockton, part of a housing boom in suburban development that attracted buyers from the Bay area and beyond.

    But when the economy crashed and the construction bubble burst, Stockton was battered by foreclosures and lost income from property taxes and other fees. Multi-year labor contracts with escalating costs added to the burden, forcing officials to make deep emergency cuts to the city payroll, including its police department.

    "It's been so challenging. Since 2008, the whole market was essentially turned upside down," said Randy Thomas, a Stockton real estate broker with the Cornerstone Real Estate Group. "A lot of folks were losing their homes. A lot of people were getting evicted, and it's been tough on a lot of people."

    City leaders say Stockton could soon be unable to pay its debts. The city has a $15 million deficit — $6.6 million from the last fiscal year and $8.7 million expected for the current fiscal year, according to documents.

    Forecasts also show deficits ranging from $20 million to $38 million for the fiscal year 2012-2013 and increasing in subsequent years.

    Some residents are losing faith.

    Marty Carlson, a waitress at Bradley's American Bistro in downtown Stockton, said business, along with her tips, has been on the decline for years. She's had enough, she said, and plans on leaving Stockton soon.

    "They're (the city) not the only one going bankrupt," Carlson said. "It's time to move on. I'm ready."

    Nearly one in five Stockton residents live below the poverty level, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, and the city's unemployment rate in December was 15.9 percent, down from 18.1 percent a year-earlier but well above the national average of 8.3 percent and California's lofty 10.9 percent that month.

    Poor management?
    Stockton's finances have also been hurt by two decades of poor management, generous retirement benefits for city workers, unsustainable labor contracts and too much debt, said City Manager Bob Deis, who last week made public the default and mediation plan.

    Deis said Stockton can neither afford more cuts to its services to save money nor raise revenue with tax increases due to the city's weak economy, leaving the city little option but to ask its major bond holders for a break on some its debt.

    Wall Street reacted swiftly to Deis' default plan by cutting Stockton's credit rating.

    Moody's Investors Service on Friday lowered Stockton, California's general fund-supported debt ratings to below investment grade, a move affecting about $341 million in debt, and Standard & Poor's Ratings Services cut its issuer credit rating on the city to speculative grade.

    Fitch Ratings on Monday downgraded by several notches its underlying ratings on four series of Stockton Public Finance Authority water revenue bonds, leaving each at BBB-, the firm's lowest investment grade rating. Fitch does not rate the city.

    Stockton officials may be using default and talk of bankruptcy to try to wring concessions from city labor units to further cut expenses, said Matt Dalton, chief executive of Belle Haven Investments in White Plains, New York, which has more than $1 billion in municipal bond assets under management.

    "They need to fire a shot across the bow so that everybody knows they're serious," Dalton said.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

  • Virginia repeals one-a-month limit on handgun purchases

    RICHMOND, Va. -- A Virginia law limiting handgun purchases to one per month was repealed Tuesday, over the opposition of gun control supporters and relatives of victims who survived the Virginia Tech massacre.

    Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell signed the bill into law after it was passed two weeks ago by the GOP-controlled General Assembly. He did not comment on signing the bill, though he said earlier he supported repealing the law.


    The governor met Saturday with families of people killed or injured in the April 2007 shooting rampage at Virginia Tech, the worst mass shooting in U.S. history. The families had hoped to persuade him to veto the bill, although they knew it was a long shot.

    Andrew Goddard, whose son Colin was wounded at Virginia Tech, was at the meeting. He said the governor had previously said he would sign the bill and "it would have been very difficult for him to go back on it."

    McDonnell is seen as a contender for his party's vice presidential nomination in 2012. He signed the repeal a day after a high school student opened fire with a handgun at an Ohio school, killing three students and wounding two others.

    Colin Goddard of the Brady Campaign, a survivor from the 2007 Virginia Tech massacre, shares his thoughts regarding Monday morning's shooting at Chardon High School and the NOW panel weighs in on the need for stricter gun control laws.

    Opponents worry that lifting the limit could spur an increase in gun violence.

    'They have not learned'
    Goddard, president of the Virginia Center for Public Safety, reserved his harshest criticism for legislators who passed the bill.

    "They have not learned a damn thing," Goddard said. Alluding to Monday's school shooting that left three students dead in Ohio, Goddard said: "Here we are watching kids dying in other states, and we're going to be a purveyor of firearms for other states."

    Lori Haas, whose daughter Emily was wounded in the shooting that left the gunman and 32 others dead at Virginia Tech, said she was disappointed by the governor's action.

    "Getting rid of the one-handgun-a-month law will make it easier for gun traffickers to purchase handguns in bulk," she said in a written statement. "There have been too many tragedies in other states fueled by guns that come from Virginia, and this will only make the situation worse."

    Del. Scott Lingamfelter, R-Prince William and sponsor of the repeal bill, said the one-handgun limit didn't accomplish much for law enforcement.

    April 16: On the anniversary of a campus shooting, the Virginia Tech community gathered to commemorate the 32 people who lost their lives. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    "I think Virginians deserve effective laws, and one handgun a month has been overtaken by technology and improved background checks," he said. "Criminals don't go into gun stores, stand there in the bright light, hand over their driver's license and stand there and wait for the vendor to see if they have a criminal record."

    He added: "If you really want to get after gun crime, you get after people who use guns illegally. You don't punish law-abiding citizens."

    The 1993 law was a major legislative legacy of Democratic former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, passed when Virginia was a favorite armory for East Coast criminals. It never applied to rifles or shotguns.

    The law was intended to slow the flow of guns from Virginia to New York City and other metropolitan areas in the Northeast. In 1991, the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms found that 40 percent of the 1,236 guns found at crime scenes in New York had been purchased in Virginia.

    Goddard said the repeal legislation was one of 30 gun bills his organization opposed this year in a session that has seen an increase in conservative measures pushed by Republicans, who strengthened their House majority and gained control of the Senate in last November's elections. Ten of those bills are still alive, he said, whereas in previous years only one or two pro-gun bills typically were passed.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

  • One dead, 3 missing after Coast Guard helicopter crashes off Alabama

    Updated at 5:05 a.m. ET: MOBILE, Alabama -- One crew-member died and three were missing after a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter crashed off Alabama's coast on Tuesday.

    The Coast Guard said in a statement early Wednesday that one crew-member was found unresponsive and was later declared dead.

    Petty Officer Second Class Elizabeth Bordelon said the MH-65 Dolphin crashed just after 8:30 p.m. local time (9:30 p.m. ET) in Mobile Bay near Point Clear, Alabama.


    The flight originated from the Aviation Training Center in Mobile, Bordelon said.

    A response cutter from Dauphin Island and two additional MH-65s from New Orleans were dispatched to assist in the search, she said.

    A Mobile County Sheriff's Flotilla crew, an HU-144 twin-engine aircraft and an Alabama Marine Resources vessel were also activated.

    "Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of the crew-members during this difficult time," the Coast Guard said in a statement, adding that it was working through the night to find the three missing crew-members.

    "This is our family we're talking about," Bordelon told the Mobile Press-Register.

    The Press-Register reported that winds were southeast at around 15 miles per hour and the water temperature 63 degrees Fahrenheit on Tuesday night. Average water depth in the area averages at 13 feet, the newspaper said.

    According to an overview on the U.S. Coast Guard website, the MH-65 Dolphin is its "most ubiquitous aircraft."

    It is "certified for operation in all-weather and night-time operations, with the exception of icing conditions," the overview says.

    The cause of the crash was not immediately known.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

    Msnbc.com staff, The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

  • 'Devastation ... like we've never seen' in twister-hit town

    At least 12 people were killed after devastating tornadoes and storms steamrolled through the Midwest and South. NBC's Lester Holt and TODAY's Al Roker report.

     

    Updated at 8:45 p.m. ET: HARRISBURG, Ill. -- At least 12 people were killed -- including several crushed by debris -- as tornadoes marched across the Midwest, flattening parts of several towns including the tourist hub of Branson, Mo.

    Hardest hit was Harrisburg, where four women and two men died, some 100 others were injured and more than 200 homes were destroyed or damaged.

    Most if not all the Harrisburg dead were killed by a home tossed atop their own property early Wednesday, a witness said.


    Whitney Curtis / Getty Images

    Steve McDonald stands among debris from the home of his mother-in-law, Mary Osman, who was killed in the twister that raced through Harrisburg, Ill.

    "It's a house on top of a house," said Mike Hancock, 29, who with several others tried to rescue the victims. "We crawled in there as much as we could. Then there wasn't enough stability, the whole foundation was shaking. We had to get out of there," he said.

    "We have devastation in our community like we've never seen," Mayor Eric Gregg told a press conference, where officials said the twister had peak winds of 170 mph, making it an EF-4 on the 1-5 scale used by the National Weather Service, with 5 being the most severe.

    "There are hundreds of homes damaged, millions of dollars in damage," he added. "The hospital is severely damaged. There's a mall with 10 stores that was destroyed."

    Forecasters warned more twisters could strike the Tennessee Valley and southern Appalachians through Wednesday evening as the storm system moved east.

    Rock Center reports on the aftermath of the powerful tornadoes that ripped through America's heartland, killing at least nine people. The twisters blew houses on top of each other and toppled buildings as they hopscotched through parts of Missouri, Illinois and Kansas. NBC's Lester Holt and The Weather Channel's Jim Cantore report from Harrisburg, Ill., one of the towns hit hardest by the tornadoes.

    Three other deaths were reported in Missouri, where a suspected tornado hit a mobile home park outside the town of Buffalo. One person died there and around a dozen people were injured. Two others died in the Cassville and Puxico areas of Missouri, state officials said. Three deaths were reported in eastern Tennessee, The Associated Press reported.

    In Harrisburg, police issued a curfew overnight and the area most impacted was evacuated as a precaution. Some 3,300 customers were without power in the town of about 10,000.

    In Kansas, 12 people were injured when a EF-2 tornado made a five-mile-long run through Harveyville on Tuesday night, officials said. Three of the injured were in critical condition, and 40 percent of the town suffered damage.

    NBC affiliate KSHB TV reported that an apartment complex and a church were among the damaged buildings in the town of about 250 people.

    Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback issued a disaster declaration for the area, parts of which were without power.

    NBC's Al Roker reports on the unseasonable tornadoes that ripped through Illinois.

    Other hard-hit areas included Branson and Lebanon in Missouri.

    In Branson, 32 people were treated at one hospital for injuries, mostly cuts and bruises. A tornado moved through downtown overnight, heavily damaging the city's famous theaters and hopscotching up Highway 76, uprooting road signs and scattering debris.

    Officials on Wednesday gave the tornado a preliminary rating of EF-2 and said it ran an 8- to 10-mile path.

    The injuries could have been far worse had the storm hit next week, when the tourist season picks up.

    "If it was a week later, it'd be a different story," said Bill Tirone, assistant general manager for the 530-room Hilton and adjacent Branson Convention Center, where windows were shattered and some rooms had furniture sucked away by high winds. Hotel workers were able to get all guests to safety as the storm raged.

    Mark Schiefelbein / AP

    Storm debris is piled near the entrance to the Dick Clark's American Bandstand Theater in Branson, Mo., on Wednesday.

    John Moore, owner of the damaged Cakes-n-Creams '50s Diner, said the apparent twister appeared to "jump side to side" as it moved down the entertainment district, right through the convention center, across a lake and into a housing division.

    "The theater next to me kind of exploded. It went everywhere. The hotels on the two sides of me lost their roofs. Power lines are down. Windows are blown out," Moore said. "There's major, major destruction. There has to be millions dollars of damage all down the strip."

    Jennifer Verhaalen said she saw a white funnel cloud followed by a wall of rain as the storm closed in on the town around 1 a.m.

    She said she retreated to a back bedroom with her husband as the storm slammed into two hotel buildings, tearing the roof off one.

    PhotoBlog of the destruction

    Across the road, a strip mall lay in tatters, its roof missing and several walls collapsed.

    Branson has long been a touristy outdoor destination for visitors who came to see the beauty of the surrounding Ozarks. But the city rose to prominence in the 1990s largely due to the theater district, where venues featured the star power of country music and celebrities including the Osmonds and Andy Williams.  

    John Hanna / AP

    Damage in Harveyville, Kan., includes this home.

    In Lebanon, a tornado was reported at 12:25 a.m. and numerous reports came in of damage in the area.  A tractor-trailer was reported to have been blown off Interstate 44 nearby.

    Newburgh, Ind., also saw damage from severe storms. Several homes and a business were hit, though no injuries or deaths were reported.

    The National Weather Service said it was forecasting more tornadoes on Wednesday, including "one or two possibly strong" ones as well as "damaging wind over parts of the Tennessee Valley to southern Appalachians" into the evening.

    The system also skirted northern Arkansas, bringing gusts of up to 60 miles per hour in the northwest. A wall cloud was reported in Cherokee Village, where trees were scattered along roads, the weather service said. Residents of Clay County in northeastern Arkansas reported hail the size of golf balls, and similar-sized hail was reported in Mountain Home.

    Mathew Fowler / Harveyville Gazette via AP

    Damage is seen Wednesday morning in Harveyville, Kan., after an apparent tornado passed through Tuesday night.

    In northern Oklahoma, gusts of up to 80 mph flipped trailers and damaged homes near Cherokee.

    Tornado season normally starts in March, but it isn't unusual to see severe storms earlier in the year. Forecasters have a particularly difficult time assessing how serious a season will be in part because tornadoes are so unpredictable. This year, two people were killed by separate tornadoes in Alabama in January, and preliminary reports show 95 tornadoes struck that month.

    NBC News, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • White House issues rules to keep terrorism suspects under FBI control

    The Obama administration, responding to restrictions imposed by Congress, issued guidelines late Tuesday on when the FBI can take custody of newly arrested terrorism detainees.

    It's clear the federal government intends to squeeze as much flexibility as it can from the restrictions included in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 aimed at giving the military control of those detainees.

    What to do with captured terrorists has divided Congress. The issue came to a flash point after the arrest of Umar Abdulmutallab, the so-called “Underwear Bomber,” who attempted to detonate explosives on a Detroit-bound flight from Amsterdam.


     

    Some Republicans called to have Abdulmutallab tried before a military commission and declared an enemy combatant. Some Democrats pushed for him to be tried in civilian court, where he eventually pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life in prison.

    The new law requires that the United States military take custody of non-U.S. citizens closely linked to al-Qaida who have helped plan or carry out an attack against the U.S. or one of its coalition partners. But under the regulations issued late Tuesday, that won't happen instantly.

    "A rigid, inflexible requirement to place suspected terrorists into military custody would undermine the national security interests of the United States," says the policy directive issued by the White House.

    Under the new procedures, a federal agent who suspects that a terrorist might fall under the rules must notify the U.S. attorney general. The suspect could be transferred to military custody only with the approval of the attorney general, chairman of the joint chiefs, director of national intelligence, and the secretaries of the State, Defense, and Homeland Security departments.

    Even then, the suspect might be transferred back to civilian custody to be put on trial, the rules say.

    The law also gives the president authority to waive the military custody requirement for individuals or entire categories of cases. President Obama has issued waivers in advance for certain situations, including times when "placing a foreign country's nationals or residents in military custody will impede counterterrorism cooperation," or when a foreign government refuses to extradite a suspect to the U.S. if that would mean placing the suspect in military custody.

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  • Briefcase full of cash ripped off from parked Bentley, police say

    A briefcase full of cash was stolen Tuesday from a Bentley parked on a California street, police said.

    The Glendale News-Press said witnesses reported a possible fight after they saw a man kicking in the window of a white Bentley parked behind a business in Glendale about 12:09 p.m. PT. The man fled with possibly two other men, and they shed clothing to conceal their appearance, Police Sgt. Tom Lorenz told the newspaper.

    It wasn't clear how much money was in the briefcase.

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  • Florida woman charged with setting fire to 3,500-year-old cypress tree

    Phelan M. Ebenhack / AP

    A firefighter sprays water on the smoldering base of what remained of a 3,500-year-old cypress at Big Tree Park in Longwood, Fla., on Monday, Jan. 16, 2012. The 118-foot-tall bald cypress tree named "The Senator" collapsed after it caught fire.

    A central Florida woman has been charged with setting a fire that burned one of the world's oldest cypress trees, local media reported.

    Investigators said that two witnesses identified 26-year-old Sara Barnes as the person who caused the 118-foot-tall bald cypress tree named "The Senator" to burn and collapse Jan. 16. It was a tourist attraction in central Florida long before Disney World was built.


    The Seminole County parks department said the ring samples showed the tree was roughly 3,500 years old.

    Authorities said the tree burned quickly after twigs and branches were piled at the base as if someone was starting a campfire.

    The Orlando Sentinel reported that Barnes also took photos of the fire with her cellphone.

    The Office of Agricultural Law Enforcement searched Barnes' Winter Park home on Tuesday and confiscated her cellphone and laptop.

    Authorities also reported finding methamphetamine, scales and drug paraphernalia. Barnes reportedly told investigators she set the fire while trying to use illegal drugs.

    According to the Sentinel, another person apparently was with Barnes when the tree was set on fire, though that person has not been publicly identified or charged.

    Jail records didn't say if Barnes had an attorney.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Wyoming lawmakers reject doomsday bill

    CHEYENNE – Wyoming lawmakers have voted down legislation to deal with a doomsday scenario, including plans to buy an aircraft carrier and create a state currency.

    According to the Star-Tribune in Casper, House Bill 85 was rejected 30-27 by the Wyoming House of Representatives on Tuesday.


    The bill was originally created to form a state-run “government continuity task force,” to prepare Wyoming for potential disruptions in food and energy supplies after a complete breakdown of the federal government.

    The bill gained national attention after its sponsor, Rep. David Miller, a Republican from Fremont County, pushed for plans for the state to implement its own military draft, standing army and purchase of an aircraft carrier.

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