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  • Trayvon Martin case 911 call: Screams not George Zimmerman's, 2 experts say

    Updated at 2 p.m. ET: The voice heard crying for help on a 911 call just before Trayvon Martin was shot to death was not that of George Zimmerman, according to two forensic voice identification experts, one of whom told MSNBC on Sunday that he believes the evidence is strong enough to use in court.

    "The tests concluded that it's not the voice of Mr. Zimmerman," Tom Owen, of Owen Forensic Services LLC and chair emeritus for the American Board of Recorded Evidence, told MSNBC.

    Asked if he thought such tests would be admissible in court, Owen said "yes" and noted he had recently used similar testing in testimony at a Connecticut murder case that involved 911 call.


     

    The conclusions of Owen and another audio expert were first reported by the Orlando Sentinel on Saturday.

    Zimmerman told police that he screamed for help during his confrontation with Martin, 17. He claims the shooting was self-defense.

    The 911 call, reposted in this YouTube clip, came on the night of Feb. 26 from a woman who reported someone crying out for help in a gated community in Sanford, Fla.

    In the recording of her phone call, panicked cries and a gunshot are heard.

    The Sentinel said it had contacted the two audio experts.

    Owen told the newspaper he used software called Easy Voice Biometrics to compare Zimmerman's voice to the 911 call screams.

    "I've run it against 300 voices and it was better than 99 percent in all cases," he told MSNBC when asked about its accuracy.

    Owen told the newspaper that the software compared the screams to Zimmerman's voice and returned a 48 percent match. He said he would expect a match of higher than 90 percent, considering the quality of the audio.

    "As a result of that, you can say with reasonable scientific certainty that it's not Zimmerman," Owen told the Sentinel. 

    But he also said he could not confirm the voice as Trayvon's, because he didn't have a sample of the teen's voice.

    The Sentinel said that Ed Primeau, a Michigan-based audio engineer and forensics expert, used audio enhancement and human analysis and came to the same conclusion.

    Thousands of Trayvon supporters march to police station

    The 911 call mentioned in this story can be heard approximately six minutes into this clip.

    "I believe that's Trayvon Martin in the background, without a doubt," Primeau told the newspaper. "That's a young man screaming."

    On Feb. 26, Zimmerman, a white Hispanic, had called 911 to report a "suspicious" person and followed Martin against the dispatcher's advice. Martin and Zimmerman grappled, and Martin was shot in the chest.

    Zimmerman told police that he was walking back to his vehicle when Martin attacked him and slammed his head against the ground and that he shot in self defense. Police declined to arrest Zimmerman citing Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law, which gives wide latitude to use deadly force when a threat is perceived.

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  • Mega Millions lottery jackpot losers: If only ...

    As lottery fever kicked into high gear this week, winning tickets for Friday's historic Mega Millions lottery drawing were sold in Maryland, Kansas and Illinois. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

    RED BUD, Ill. -- The Mega Millions winners — at least three of them — stayed out of sight. The losers, who could number 100 million, had plenty to say Saturday about losing out on the world's largest-ever lottery jackpot and their dashed dreams of colossal wealth.

    Journalists descended on convenience stores in Illinois and Maryland, and lottery officials there and in Kansas proudly proclaimed they sold winning tickets in the $640 million world record-breaking Mega Millions jackpot. The winners will earn $213 million before taxes. Three other ticket holders became millionaires.

    But on the street, online and outside the stores where the winners had purchased their tickets, Americans grumbled about hopes that were raised, and then vanished. And they mused about what they would have done with the money.

    "What do I do with this useless lottery ticket now?" Laurel Ashton Brooks of Greensboro, N.C., asked on Twitter.

    As the jackpot got bigger by the hour on Thursday and Friday, Americans had snapped up tickets while dreaming of quitting jobs, paying off debts, building hospitals, buying an island. On Saturday, they took to Twitter and Facebook to bemoan their lost, razor-thin chance at millions.

    "I knew that when I bought the ticket, that I wouldn't win. But I did it anyhow," said Sean Flaherty, a video game tester in New York City. "The whole notion of 'what if' still has some currency with me."

    Winners in Kan., Ill., Md. share record Mega Millions pot

    Even President Barack Obama's re-election campaign tapped into the widespread lottery letdown. It sent a fundraising email with the subject "Jackpot" that began: "Yeah, we didn't either. So we're still at."

    All told, Americans spent nearly $1.5 billion for a chance to hit the jackpot, which amounts to a $462 million lump sum and around $347 million after federal tax withholding.

    Illinois' winner used a quick pick — an automatically generated set of digits — to select the winning numbers at a convenience store in the small town of Red Bud, south of St. Louis, Illinois Lottery spokesman Mike Lang said. The winning numbers also were purchased at a 7-Eleven in Milford Mill, Md., north of Baltimore, and somewhere in northeast Kansas.

    "It's just unbelievable. Everyone is wanting to know who it is," said Denise Metzger, manager of the MotoMart where Illinois' winning ticket was sold.

    "All day yesterday I was selling tickets and I was hoping someone from Red Bud would win. Never in my wildest dreams did I think this. I'm just tickled pink," added Metzger, whose store will receive $500,000 for selling the winning ticket, lottery officials said.

    Mario Anzuoni / REUTERS

    A woman holds cash and lottery tickets while standing in line to play the lottery at a news stand in Los Angeles on Friday.

    James Sitzes emerged from the MotoMart where his check of his six plays flopped. "I bought them at the right place," he shrugged. "I just didn't have the right numbers."

    "I've been thinking for years what I'd do with all that money," said Sitzes, 70. He'd pay off the house, invest the rest and give away his small plating shop.

    In Maryland, TV cameras descended upon the 7-Eleven where the state's winning ticket was purchased. The harried manager repeatedly said "No interviews" to reporters pressing for details as customers pushed through the media crush for their morning coffee.

    Nyeri Murphy, holding two scratch-off tickets, said she normally plays Powerball but drove to a nearby county to buy $70 worth of Mega Millions tickets this week. "I should have bought them here," she said.

    The third winning ticket was purchased in northeast Kansas, but no other information would be released by the Kansas Lottery until the winner comes forward, spokeswoman Cara S. Sloan-Ramos said. The Kansas location that sold the ticket will receive $10,000.

    No winner had contacted the agency by Saturday morning, Kansas Lottery Director Dennis Wilson said. "We sure want to meet the winner, but we want to tell them, sign the back of the ticket and secure it."

    The winning numbers in Friday night's drawing were 02-04-23-38-46, and the Mega Ball 23.

    Even though just three tickets matched all the winning numbers, the jackpot made a millionaire of at least three other winners and gave a windfall to more than 100 others. Three ticket-holders won $1 million each, and 158 won $250,000 for matching the first five numbers drawn, said Chuck Strutt, executive director of the Multi-State Lottery Association in Urbandale, Iowa.

    View more videos at: http://nbcchicago.com.

    Then were some who won even more modest prizes.

    Lakisha Polks wasn't complaining about that. She matched three numbers with the Mega Ball. "When I came in today, I checked my tickets and I won $150!" she told NBC News.

    But even a meager $2 win was enough to put a smile on Pedro Santiago's face.

    "Well, I feel good," he told NBCChicago.com. "I’ve got enough to play again."

    This article includes reporting by The Associated Press, NBC News and NBCChicago.com.

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  • Hate crime? Iraqi woman's death in California has Muslims wondering

    Mike Blake / Reuters

    Mourners hold a candlelight vigil to remember Shaima Alawadi outside her home in El Cajon, Calif., on Wednesday.

    The beating death of Iraqi-American Shaima Alawadi in a refugee community in a San Diego suburb has brought attention to bias crimes against Muslims, even as police caution against definitively labeling her death a hate crime.

    Alawadi, a 32-year-old stay-at-home mother of five, was found beaten in the dining room of her rented home last week by her 17-year-old daughter, police said. She died March 24.

    Police are investigating the killing as a possible hate crime because of a note found next to Alawadi's unconscious body that threatened the family. An FBI bias crimes squad is assisting.


    On Saturday, she was buried in Iraq, in the Valley of Peace cemetery in the holy Shiite city of Najaf, about 100 miles south of Baghdad.

    "The martyr (Alawadi) used to love all; she made no distinction between religions," Alawadi's father, Nabil, told Reuters.

    "Her husband told me that someone threw a note saying, 'go back to your own country, you're a terrorist' ... Who is the real terrorist, Shaima, or them," he said.

    There was a big jump in hate crimes against Muslims after the September 11, 2001 attacks carried out by al-Qaida, but the number subsided during the middle of the decade.

    But in 2011, the number of anti-Muslim hate groups tripled to 30, according to a recent report by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which advocates for civil rights. There were 186 separate bias crimes in 2010, the highest number in five years, FBI data show.

    "We are considering the hate crime aspect, but we are not labeling it as such," El Cajon Police Lt. Mark Coit said. But he said he could not reveal any details on the status of the case.

    In a sign of how closely the case was being watched, the U.S. State Department expressed condolences for Alawadi's death, and Iraqi government representatives attended the funeral.

    Law enforcement, and Arab and Muslim lobby groups, and even Alawadi's family is uncertain of what happened.

    "The majority of the family believes that it could be anything," said Nazanin Wahid, a friend who is serving as a spokeswoman for the family. "But the fact that they found a note and that the police said initially that it resonates like a hate crime led them to believe that it could be that."

    Growing immigrant community
    Since Alawadi's death, at least two members of El Cajon's Muslim community have reported receiving threatening phone calls, said Sadaf Hane, civil rights director of the San Diego chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

    The Arab community in particular is prone to under-reporting such discrimination because of a distrust of the abuses of authorities, Hane added.

    California police are investigating a brutal attack that left 32-year-old Shaima Alawadi dead. KNSD's Chris Chan reports.

    El Cajon is in eastern San Diego County, which is home to the second-largest Iraqi community in the United States, behind Detroit. More than half of El Cajon's 100,000 residents are of Middle Eastern descent.

    Like Alawadi's family, some of the city's Arab residents are Shiite refugees from Iraq who arrived in the United States in the 1980s and 1990s after fleeing their homeland after Saddam Hussein's 1980 invasion of Shiite neighbor Iran and the long war that followed.

    But the town has seen an even larger surge of Iraqi newcomers since 2008 through a U.S.-funded refugee resettlement program, often joining relatives in the area, said Michael McKay, Deputy Director of Refugee Services at the Catholic Charities Diocese of San Diego.

    A friend of Alawadi's family, Sura Alzaidy, told the San Diego Union Tribune newspaper the note found near Alawadi read: "Go back to your own country. You're a terrorist."

    Alawadi and her husband arrived in the United States in 1993 after spending years in a refugee tent camp. Majed al Hasan was their neighbor there and later became their neighbor in El Cajon.

    The Iraq they fled was terrifying, with secret police torturing and killing perceived enemies of the state, Hasan said. "They come from a war-torn country," McKay said. "To think that you're not safe, still, after coming this far is scary."

    Hoodies and hijabs
    This week, hundreds of mourners stood in front of Alawadi's house in a quiet cul-de-sac nestled in the hills as the sun set, lighting candles for a vigil in her honor.

    Alawadi's mother arrived and her cries of sorrow pierced the air. Wails erupted around her as she walked through the crowd, sobbing and beating her chest.

    Some mourners wore the traditional black cloak and scarf worn by many devout Muslim women. Others wore T-shirts that said "Justice for Shaima Alawadi" above a silhouette of a woman wearing a Muslim headscarf.

    Nelvin C. Cepeda / AP

    Kassim Alhimidi holds the body of his wife, Shaima Alawadi, during a memorial service at the Islamic Center of Lakeside, Calif., on Tuesday. She was buried Saturday in Iraq.

    Alawadi wore such a headscarf, and advocates for the Arab and Muslim community have suggested that her scarf may have been a factor in drawing attention to her as a perceived outsider, if indeed her killing was a hate crime.

    "We're not going to cry, if that's what you wanted. We're not going to take off our scarf, if that's what you wanted," Alawadi's eldest daughter, Fatima, said at the vigil, addressing her mother's killer.

    For many in El Cajon, the case has drawn parallels to that of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed black teenager shot in Florida last month by a Neighborhood Watch volunteer in a killing that has also drawn outrage because of its racial undertones.

    "My condolences go out to the family of Trayvon," Alawadi's 15-year-old son Muhammed said at the vigil, as tears welled up in his eyes. "My candle goes out to you as well."

    Some activists have begun linking the two cases on social media, spurring a popular #hoodiesandhijabs hashtag on Twitter. Martin was wearing a hoodie when he was killed. Students at several college campuses held "Hoodies and Hijabs" rallies on Thursday.

    On Friday night, while his father was in Iraq, Shaima's son Ali Alawadi stayed behind for a candlelight vigil with members of the Iraqi community at the Town Center Community Park in Santee, NBCSanDiego.com reported.

    "I just want to say thank you for honoring my mother," he said. "It means a lot. It gives us more confidence."

  • Fatal Bronx fall: 'You're not going to leave here alive'

    NEW YORK -- Police say a woman who plunged to her death from a Bronx high-rise made a chilling 911 call shortly before her fall, in which another woman could be heard saying, "You're not going to leave here alive."

    Late Friday they arrested a woman in connection to her fall.

    Sienna Edwards died Thursday after falling 14 stories from the balcony of an apartment on East 179th in the Tremont section.


    Police now believe that the 20-year-old fell while trying to escape a group of women who were threatening to kill her, after apparently mistaking her for someone else.

    Edwards' boyfriend told reporters she had gone to the home as a favor for her boyfriend, who needed help delivering birthday presents to his 3-year-old daughter. The boyfriend is not allowed in the apartment because the mother of his daughter has an order of protection against him, sources said.

    Late Friday, police arrested the little girl's mother, Kenya Edmonds, on murder and manslaughter charges.

    This article includes reporting by Shimon Prokupecz of NBCNewYork.com and The Associated Press.

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  • Was 15-year-old Lennon Baldwin's death a result of bullying? Police investigate

    New Jersey police are investigating whether the apparent suicide of a 15-year-old boy is linked to reports that he was bullied at school, according to two sources close to law enforcement.

    The sources said the Morristown High School freshman died at his home in Morris Township by hanging himself after school Wednesday. School officials identified the boy as Lennon Baldwin.

    Read the original report at NBCNewYork.com

    "No one should ever be bullied to the point where they feel they need to take their own life," a friend wrote beneath one of several YouTube videos posted in his memory. "R.I.P. buddy! I will never forget you."


    Investigators from the Morris County Prosecutor's Office Computer Crimes Unit, who are taking part in the probe, have not indicated what type of bullying Baldwin may have endured.

    "He wasn't the kid standing in the corner, disheveled," said Joe Mottola, his bowling coach who spent every Saturday morning with him for the last four years. "He was with the mix, he was with everybody."

    Maureen Adamo, Baldwin's Cub Scout leader, said her son had seen him just days ago. "My son said he seemed to be okay."

    Hundreds gathered at a prayer service Friday afternoon at Assumption Church in Morristown, where mourners cried and hugged each other. The remembrances continued Friday evening in front of Morristown High School where some 60 classmates gathered for a candlelight vigil that was moved to a more private location.

    Supporters also set up a memorial page for him on Facebook that has quickly filled with condolences.

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  • Florida funeral home shooting: 2 dead, at least 12 injured

    MIAMI -- At least one gunman opened fire on a crowd or mourners gathered at a Miami-area funeral home, killing two people and injuring 12, authorities said.

    The shooting happened Friday night at Funeraria Latina Emanuel in the North Miami area. More than 100 people were gathered outside the funeral home when a car drove by and at least one person inside the vehicle fired shots, reportedly with a high-powered weapon, the Miami Herald reported.

    "Horror, it was horrible and it was sounds of horror," said pastor A.D. Lenoir of Westview Baptist Church, NBC 6 Miami reported.

    Lenoir had just finished officiating the service for 21-year-old Marvin Andre, who was killed in a March 18 shooting, according to witnesses. He was buried at nearby Southern Memorial Park Saturday morning

    Among the injured was a 5-year-old girl, McKayla Bazile, according to authorities.

    "I grabbed her so we could go and she was screaming and I'm like 'why are you screaming,' I thought she was scared," said Someta Etienne, WSVN-TV reported. "Then I saw the blood coming from her pants."

    Alvaro Zabaleta of Miami-Dade Police said that it is too early to determine the motive for the shooting.

    "Whenever you have these types of services, you have a lot of people present, they all become witnesses," Zabaleta said. "Too early to tell what the motive may be and if the person in the viewing has anything to do with it."

    An eyewitness told NBC 6 that a suspect in a white Pontiac opened fire on people as they waited outside for their turn to view the body.

    "I was in the foyer, shaking hands, galvanizing with the people and shots were fired," said Lenoir.

    Police were looking for six men who were in a white 2006 or 2009 Pontiac or Impala, according to WSVN-TV.

    NBC 6 Miami contributed to this report.

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  • Tracking your kids for safety -- and for health

    Wp Simon / Getty Images stock

    Technology makes it possible to keep tabs on our kids in a way our parents couldn’t. We can put GPS trackers on them and in the vehicles they drive, get text messages automatically when they return home from school, get an audible alert when a toddler strays, and soon, even updates on whether or not they’ve brushed their teeth.

    Each act of tracking has its health and/or safety benefits and it’s easy to see why parents would want to use these helpful products. Their use, though, raises questions. Are we using technology in instances when we should be parenting? And, are we raising a generation whose expectation of privacy that’s very different from ours?

    Each family needs to assess their kids and their situation, and then weigh the benefits of tracking technology against the invasion of privacy.

    For instance, I wouldn’t argue against using a proximity sensor that would alert me to when my toddler wanders more than 150 feet away. I’ve had a few heart-stopping moments when I realized I was watching the wrong blue jacket. But I also worry that using an alarm regularly might make me less vigilant, so I’d probably only use it in crowded places like Disneyland.

    The bottom line is that technology is a tool that when used wisely can help. Check out the following devices and tell us which ones make sense and which have taken things a step too far.

    Brickhouse Security

    Toddler Tag
    Clip the Toddler Tag Child Locator to your child’s clothing or bag, and a 56dB alarm will sound if he wanders more than 30 feet from the parental locator unit. Or press a button at any time to trigger the alarm, if you lose sight of him.
    Price: $39.95 on BrickhouseSecurity.com

    GreenGoose

    GreenGoose Toothbrush Tracker
    No more breath tests — sensors inside the Toothbrush Tracker register when your child has brushed her teeth. The device, which attaches to any toothbrush, sends a signal back to a receiver, called the GreenGoose Egg, which connects to your home’s Wi-Fi router. The Egg then sends a notification to the app you download to your iPhone (Android version coming later this year).

    Also later this year, you’ll be able to purchase a kit to track how well you’re taking care of your pet. Inside you’ll find the Egg, a leash sensor to track when and how long you walk the dog, a collar sensor to measure when you play with him, a food sensor to note when you feed him and a treat sensor.
    Price: $49 for the starter kit, $9 for additional sensors on GreenGoose.com

    Schlage

    Schlage LiNK Wireless Keypad Deadbolt Starter Kit
    With the Schlage LiNK Internet-enabled door lock, you can receive a text message alert each time your latch-key kid uses her unlock code, letting you know she arrived safely home. Or, if you prefer she use a physical key, you can use any computer, iPhone or Android phone to remotely unlock the door. If you cancel your subscription, the codes will continue to work and you can program new ones manually using the door lock.
    Price: $213.17 on Amazon.com plus $8.99 per month subscription

    Cellphone Tracking Services
    When you give your child a cellphone, you can track their location — or at least the location of the phone. For $5 a month, Sprint will let you locate up to four phones with its Family Locator service. AT&T’s Family Map service locates two people for $9.99 a month, or five people for $14.99. With the Verizon Family Locator ($9.99 a month), you can set up location-based alerts so you know when your child gets home, in addition to locating anyone on your Family Share plan. And, T-Mobile just added its FamilyWhere service, which enables you to track up to 10 mobile devices.

    inthinc Technology Solutions Inc

    Tiwi
    You can’t always be in the car with your new teen driver, so Tiwi does the monitoring — and nagging — for you. It monitors speed, whether your child is wearing a seatbelt, how aggressively he’s driving and whether he’s traveled outside his designated SmartZone.

    Any concerns and the device will tell your teen and send you a text message, voicemail or email. The device and plans are pricey, with a month-to-month contract costing $24.99 a month, plus $599 for the hardware; or a one-year contract costing $54.99 month plus $299 for the hardware. For an extra fee, you can add voice service ($2.99 a month plus $15 cents per minute) or roadside assistance and emergency support ($9.99 per month), which includes voice service.

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  • Trayvon Martin marchers to Sanford, Fla., police: 'We want an arrest. Shot in the chest'

    NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    Updated at 1:27 p.m ET: SANFORD, Fla. -- Civil-rights leaders from the NAACP and other groups led thousands of other protesters on Saturday in a march to the city’s police headquarters to demand the arrest of the man who shot and killed Trayvon Martin.

    The Rev. Jesse Jackson, the Rev. Al Sharpton and NAACP President Benjamin Jealous were among those leading the rally through Sanford’s streets, marching behind a huge yellow banner with the words “Justice for Trayvon.”

    “We want an arrest. Shot in the chest,” marchers chanted.


    With gospel music playing in the background, protesters were marching from a technical high school campus on 13th Street through a predominantly black neighborhood to the Sanford Police Station several blocks away. The throng stretched for blocks, weaving past homes, churches and small businesses, many of them boarded up.

    The rally was organized by the NAACP. Its chapters from South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama arranged buses to bring participants to the rally, while others traveled by car.

    "Because of the age of the young man and because of the circumstances of his death, every community can identify with that," said Bernard Simelton, president of the Alabama state conference of the NAACP. "We've had things like that happen in Alabama where somebody gets killed and the police just sweep it under the rug. It just touches everyone."

    The marchers were demanding the arrest of George Zimmerman, the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who says he was defending himself when he fatally shot 17-year-old Martin during a scuffle. Martin, who was black, was unarmed as he walked from a convenience store, and the case has become a racial flashpoint with protesters across the nation calling for his arrest. Zimmerman's father is white, his mother Hispanic.

    NAACP President and CEO Ben Jealous joins MSNBC to discuss the investigation into the death of Trayvon Martin.

    Sanford police did not immediately arrest Zimmerman, saying they had no information to disprove his assertion that he acted in self-defense. A special prosecutor has since been named to look into the case.

    Are old photos of Martin, Zimmerman deceptive?

    At a press conference before the march, Jealous and Sharpton denied media reports that Sharpton planned to call for an economic boycott of Sanford or the surrounding central Florida area, calling it a "media fabrication."

    "Put to rest the rumor that there is any discussion of a boycott of the community," Jealous told reporters.

    Sharpton said there could still be unspecified action against national corporations that support the "Stand Your Ground" laws like the one police cited when they declined to arrest Zimmerman. The law gives citizens wide latitude to use deadly force when a threat is perceived.

    Sharpton declined to identify those corporations but said, "We take nothing nonviolent off the table."

    A Florida NAACP leader said that Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee’s stepping aside temporarily was not enough, and that he should be fired.

    Martin’s death has also attracted international attention.

    About 300 people gathered outside the U.S. Embassy in London on Saturday in a show of solidarity for the Martin family's cause. Some read poems and others carried placards with the slogan 'No Justice, No peace.' At the end of the three-hour vigil, 17 black balloons where released in honor of the slain teenager.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this story.

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  • Florida man faces two years in prison for killing bunnies

    A Florida man will likely get two years in prison after pleading guilty to killing three bunnies by twisting them with his hands.

    Reginald Owen Sear Jr., 35, of Winter Haven, pleaded guilty on Friday to three counts of cruelty to an animal, two counts of child abuse and one count of domestic battery, The Ledger of Lakeland, Fla., reported.

    Sear killed the bunnies during a May 24 argument with his wife over who would wake up to feed the animals, according to police reports cited by The Ledger.


    He took the bunnies into the bathroom and twisted them to death with his hands. The couple’s children didn’t witness the killing but one child reported seeing Sear emerge from the bathroom with blood on his face, according to the newspaper.

    Under a plea deal, Sear is expected to receive about two years in prison and five years' probation when he is sentenced April 11 by Circuit Judge Ellen S. Masters.

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  • $640 million question: Who are the lucky three to share record Mega Millions jackpot?

    NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

    Updated 4:03 p.m. ET -- Who are the lucky three? That was a common question on the minds of all the rest of us Mega Millions losers on Saturday after lottery officials announced that three lottery tickets sold in Kansas, Illinois and Maryland hit the world record-breaking $640 million jackpot.

    The morning after the drawing, most Americans were left with dashed fantasies of what they would have done with more than half a billion dollars.  In New York City, Sean Flaherty hoped to trade in some of his 12-hour days working as a video game tester to spend more time with his wife and daughter.

    "I knew that when I bought the ticket, that I wouldn't win," Flaherty said Saturday. "But I did it anyhow. Because, I don't know, it would be like Christmas."


    Each winning ticket was expected to be worth more than $213 million before taxes. The winners, for now, remain unidentified and no one has publicly come forward yet to claim the prize.Illinois' winning ticket was sold in the small town of Red Bud, near St. Louis. Mike Lang, spokesman for the Illinois Lottery, said the winner used a quick pick to select the numbers.

    Dennis Metzger, the manager at the Motomart in Red Bud that sold the winning ticket, said she has no idea who the lucky person is.

    "Everyone is wanting to know who it is," said Metzger. "All day yesterday I was selling tickets and I was hoping someone from Red Bud would win. Never in my wildest dreams did I think this. I'm just tickled pink."

    Paramedic Dan Parrott walked away from the store with only $5 in winnings after checking his $40 worth of tickets, not enough for that new house, new car and the new ambulances he'd decided would help him spend the jackpot.

    "I'd love to have all that money, but with all of that money comes responsibility," he said outside the store. "But it'd still be awesome."

    NBC's Luke Russert reports from outside the Maryland store where a winning ticket to Friday's Mega Millions jackpot was sold.

    In Maryland, the winning ticket was sold at a 7-Eleven store in Milford Mill, near Baltimore. The harried manager could only repeatedly say "No interviews" to the reporters pressing for details.

    Maryland does not require lottery winners to be publicly identified; the Mega Millions winner can claim the prize anonymously.

    The winning Maryland ticket was a single quick-pick ticket, in which numbers are automatically selected, and was sold at about 7:15 p.m. on Friday. The owners of the 7-Eleven, Ethiopian immigrants Abera and Mimi Tessem, will get a $100,000 seller's bonus, said Carole Everett, spokeswoman for the Maryland Lottery.

    Nyeri Murphy, holding two scratch-off tickets, said she normally plays Powerball but drove to neighboring Harford County to buy $70 worth of Mega Millions tickets this week. "I should have bought them here," she said.

    The Kansas ticket was sold in the northeastern part of the state. No other information would be released by the Kansas Lottery until the winner comes forward, spokeswoman Cara S. Sloan-Ramos said. Kansas law also allows lottery winners to remain anonymous.

    Personal finance expert Suze Orman weighs in on the Mega Millions craze.

     

    The winning numbers in Friday night's drawing were 02-04-23-38-46, and the Mega Ball 23. Winners could receive either a one-time payment of their share or take it in 26 annual installment payments.

    What is the first thing you'd do with the Mega Millions lottery winnings?

    Even though just three tickets matched all the winning numbers, the jackpot made a millionaire of at least three other winners and gave a smaller windfall to more than 100 others. Three ticket-holders won $1 million each, and 158 won $250,000 for matching the first five numbers drawn, said Chuck Strutt, executive director of the Multi-State Lottery Association in Urbandale, Iowa.

    The estimated jackpot dwarfs the previous $390 million record, which was split in 2007 by two winners who bought tickets in Georgia and New Jersey.

    Americans spent nearly $1.5 billion for a chance to hit the jackpot, which amounts to a $462 million lump sum and around $347 million after federal tax withholding. With the jackpot odds at 1 in 176 million, it would cost $176 million to buy up every combination. Under that scenario, the strategy would win $171 million less if your state also withholds taxes.

    No matter who wins the jackpot, one certain winner is the Internal Revenue Service. The tax-collecting agency subjects lottery winnings of more than $5,000 to a 25-percent federal withholding tax.

    From coast to coast, people stood in line at retail stores Friday for one last chance at striking it rich.

    Maribeth Ptak, 31, of Milwaukee, said she only buys Mega Millions tickets when the jackpot is really big and she bought one Friday at a Milwaukee grocery store. She said she'd use the money to pay off bills, including school loans, and then she'd donate a good portion to charity.

    "I know the odds are really not in my favor, but why not," she said.

    Sawnya Castro, 31, of Dallas, bought $50 worth of tickets at a 7-Eleven. She figured she'd use the money to create a rescue society for Great Danes, fix up her grandmother's house, and perhaps even buy a bigger one for herself.

    "Not too big -- I don't want that. Too much house to keep with," she said.

    Willie Richards, who works for the U.S. Marshals Service at a federal courthouse in Atlanta, figured if there ever was a time to confront astronomical odds, it was when $640 million was at stake. He bought five tickets.

    "When it gets as big as it is now, you'd be nuts not to play," he said. "You have to take a chance on Lady Luck."

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this story.

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  • Are old photos of Trayvon Martin, George Zimmerman deceptive?

    Reuters and AP

    An undated photo released by the Martin family public relations representative shows Trayvon Martin, who was shot and killed at age 17. George Zimmerman, right, is pictured in this 2005 police photo taken after the now-28-year-old allegedly assaulted an officer. The charge was later dropped.

    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- When he was shot, Trayvon Martin was not the baby-faced boy in the photo that has been on front pages across the country. And George Zimmerman wasn't the beefy-looking figure in the widely published mugshot.

    Both photos are a few years old and no longer entirely accurate. Yet they may have helped shape initial public perceptions of the deadly shooting.


    NBC's Michael Isikoff reports on George Zimmerman's arrest at an Orlando bar, where he allegedly interfered with a law enforcement official investigating underage alcohol sales.

    "When you have such a lopsided visual comparison, it just stands to reason that people would rush to judgment," said Kenny Irby, who teaches visual journalism at the Poynter Institute, a journalism think tank in St. Petersburg, Fla.

    The most widely seen picture of Martin, released by his family, was evidently taken a few years ago and shows a smiling, round-cheeked youngster in a red T-shirt. But at his death, Martin was 17 years old, around 6 feet tall and, according to his family's attorney, about 140 pounds.

    Trayvon Martin case: Mayor says police resisted release of 911 tapes

    Zimmerman, 28, is best known from a 7-year-old booking photo of an apparently heavyset figure with an imposing stare, pierced ear and facial hair, the orange collar of his jail uniform visible. The picture, released by police following the deadly shooting, was taken after Zimmerman's 2005 arrest on an assault-on-an-officer charge that was eventually dropped.

    In a police video made public this week of Zimmerman being brought in for questioning a half-hour after the shooting, the 5-foot-9 man appears much slimmer.

    In a case that has caused a nationwide furor over race and the laws of self-defense, Martin was shot to death by Zimmerman in the city of Sanford on Feb. 26 as the unarmed black teenager was walking back from a convenience store.

    George Zimmerman, the man who shot Trayvon Martin, had gotten into an altercation with an officer several years ago. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer whose father is white and whose mother is Hispanic, has claimed self-defense, saying he opened fire after Martin punched him in the face, knocked him to the ground and began slamming his head on the sidewalk.

    Black leaders and others are demanding Zimmerman's arrest on murder or manslaughter charges, but state and federal authorities are still investigating.

    Betsi Grabe, a professor at Indiana University-Bloomington who has studied the effect of news images on public opinion, said photos that gain the most traction play into the desires of both journalists and the public for a story with a distinct victim and aggressor.

    theGrio: Trayvon Martin's parents must grieve in the spotlight

    "At the center of most stories we tell in our society, cross-culturally and across the centuries, is the struggle between good and evil," she said. "If the ingredients are there, that is what journalists will grab onto and present."

    Grabe said it is natural to present the most innocent-looking image of the person believed to be the victim, and the most menacing one of the suspect.

    A more complex portrait of the two figures has emerged since then. A photo of a beaming Zimmerman looking sharp in a jacket and tie has come out, along with a more recent picture of Martin, with gold teeth and a white sleeveless undershirt. At the same time, it was learned that Martin had been suspended from school for marijuana residue in his backpack.

    George Zimmerman's brother spoke out for the first time Thursday night, defending his brother's actions in the killing of unarmed Florida teen Trayvon Martin and saying that medical records will back his account of the shooting. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    The Associated Press has not been able to verify the sources or creators of what are purported to be more recent photographs of Martin circulating online and elsewhere. The family's attorney has not released the photos.

    "Everyone's views seem to be gyrating back and forth with each new scrap of evidence that comes out," said David O. Markus, a prominent Miami defense attorney. "This is why we have courts and juries, and why the process is slow. No one should rush to judgment."

    Gordon Coonfield, a communications professor at Villanova University in Pennsylvania, said the early perceptions of Zimmerman as a vigilante may ultimately have no bearing on the case.

    He cited the case of Rodney King, the black motorist beaten two decades ago by white Los Angeles police officers in an episode captured on video. The officers were acquitted in state court, though two were later found guilty on federal charges.

    "I think the nation felt quite certain it saw the truth of what happened to Rodney King, and the DA tried the case as if the images spoke for themselves," Coonfield said. "Yet the state criminal court decided the images were not self-evidently true. The defense won by offering a more convincing explanation of the images, focusing on what could not be seen - officers' motives, reasoning, and judgment."

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  • Official: Winning lottery ticket sold in Maryland

    In the hopes of striking it rich, people across the country are scooping up Mega Millions tickets. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

    Updated at 1:56 a.m. ET: The Associated Press is reporting that Maryland lottery officials have announced early Saturday their state sold what could become the world's largest lottery payout of all-time, but it was unclear if that ticket holder would get sole possession of the $640 million jackpot.

    Carole Everett, director of communications for the Maryland Lottery, told the AP the winning Mega Millions ticket was purchased at a Baltimore County store. She said it's too early to know any other information about the lucky ticket-holder or whether others were sold elsewhere in the nation.

    The winning numbers for the Mega Millions prize were 46, 23, 38, 4, 2; mega ball was 23, lottery officials said late Friday.


    National lottery officials were expecting to list early Saturday on their website how many winning tickets were sold and from what states, but Maryland sent out its news release and called media organizations hours before the scheduled announcement. The headline of its news release said the winning sale was "one of several nationwide," but Everett told The Associated Press she couldn't immediately confirm any others.

    "We're thrilled," Everett told the AP. "We're due and excited."

    The estimated jackpot dwarfs the previous $390 million record, which was split in 2007 by two winners who bought tickets in Georgia and New Jersey.

    In most participating states, tickets were on sale Friday until 10:45 p.m. EST, lottery officials said. The drawing was held in Atlanta at 11 p.m. EST.

    Hopeful future millionaires formed long lines at stores.

    Odds of winning the entire jackpot were 175 million to one, said Margaret DeFrancisco, president and chief executive of the Georgia Lottery Corporation.

    The Associated Press contributed to this story.

    Related stories

     

  • Perry's campaign cost Texas taxpayers twice as much per day as Bush's in 2000

    Nati Harnik / AP

    Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks with workers at a meat plant Thursday in South Sioux City, Neb.

    Texas taxpayers spent $3.6 million paying for Gov. Rick Perry's state-provided security as he flew around the country during his brief Republican presidential campaign, the state said Friday — money that Democrats want him to pay back.

    The Texas Department of Public Safety disclosed that it spent $1.8 million on food, fuel, hotels and other expenses and another $1.8 million on overtime guarding Perry during his travels from August through January.

    Most of that travel was out of state as Perry sought the Republican nomination and carried out his duties as head of the Republican Governors Association.


    M. Alex Johnson

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



    Texas Democrats have called on Perry to pay back the money from his campaign war chest. But Perry has refused, citing the example of Gov. George W. Bush, whose 2000 campaign also used state-provided security.

    Catherine Frazier, a spokeswoman for Perry, said Friday in a statement: "Governor Perry is governor of Texas no matter where he travels, and it is unfortunate we live in a world where security is a top concern, but that is the reality. Providing security detail for the governor's family is a customary policy that dates back numerous administrations."

    It's likely that some taxpayers won't be satisfied with that answer, because Bush's campaign cost the state on average half of what Perry's cost, even when the figures are adjusted for inflation.

    Perry's bill works out to an average of $22,500 a day for his out-of-state political activities during the 160 days he was in the presidential race.  

    Before the Secret Service took over Bush's security at the end of March 2000, the Texas Department of Public Safety spent $3.9 on Bush's out-of-state security, state records show. 

    When you run that through the Commerce Department's cost of living inflation adjustment formula, Bush's bill was about $5.25 million in today's money. But that was spread over 455 days from Jan. 1, 1999, to March 31, 2000 — an average of only $11,428 a day.

    The Houston Chronicle reported that while Perry's campaign generally paid for his personal travel expenses, his security detail is paid through the state gasoline tax and vehicle registration fees.

    "One way to protect taxpayers' money is by not spending it unnecessarily," Texas House Democratic leader Jessica Farrar said in a letter to Perry in January, when the bill was still only $2.6 million, NBC station KXAN of Austin reported at the time. "If someone discovers tax dollars have been spent unnecessarily, it should be reimbursed either to general revenue or directly to taxpayers."

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  • Society reporter moonlighting as stripper fired by Chronicle

    twitter.com

    Sarah Tressler

    Houston Chronicle society reporter Sarah Tressler talked about her dismissal from the paper on ABC's Good Morning America Friday after another publication exposed her second job as a night club stripper.

    The Houston Press, an alternative weekly, first exposed the "double life" of Tressler on Monday in a feature story with the headline "Writer by day, stripper by night." It also drew attention to Tressler’s blog — Dairy of an Angry Stripper — which included pictures of her scantily-clad self, as well as rich detail from the inside of the gentlemen's club.

    At the Chronicle, the largest daily newspaper in Texas, the society reporter rubs elbows with the ultra-wealthy and usually conservative VIPs who attend lavish charity balls and luncheons.


    Chronicle editors would not discuss Tressler's dismissal and referred the call to marketing.

    "It is a personal matter concerning an employee and we don’t comment on such matters," said Naomi Engle, Marketing & Community Affairs Specialist at Houston Chronicle.

    Tressler, told the ABC host that the paper had dismissed her because she did not tell her supervisors about the off-hours gig.

    She had recently been brought on as a full-time reporter at the Chronicle, so the time she spent picking up extra income from dancing had dwindled, she said.

    Tressler told ABC that she did not expect anyone to reveal her secret because that seemed "like such a mean thing to do."

    Tressler, who holds a bachelor’s degree and a Master’s Degree, told ABC that earning money was her main incentive for stripping in clubs, which she started doing when she was a freelance writer for the Chronicle and others. She indicated that she would continue her work in the clubs. She also works as an adjunct professor at Houston University.

    "I had three jobs, I lost one of them and now I have two jobs," Tressler told ABC. "I was a stripper/reporter/professor and now I’m just a stripper/professor, and I don’t think that’s too bad."

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  • Years before Trayvon Martin case, Zimmerman had run-in with police

    George Zimmerman, the man who shot Trayvon Martin, had gotten into an altercation with an officer several years ago. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    George Zimmerman, the man accused of killing Florida teen Trayvon Martin, had a run-in with police in Orlando in July 2005, court documents show.

    The incident occurred when Zimmerman allegedly interfered with an undercover officer attempting to arrest employees of a bar on charges of selling alcohol to minors, NBC News National Investigative Correspondent Michael Isikoff reported.

    The court ordered Zimmerman to attend anger management classes. Get the full story in the video above.

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  • Court documents: Susan Powell's blood, hand-written note expressing fear were found in Utah home

    Amber Hardman / Hardman Photography via AP

    Susan Powell, the Utah mom who went missing in 2009.

    TACOMA, Wash. -- Authorities investigating the 2009 disappearance of a Utah woman found her blood in the family home and a hand-written note in which she expressed fear about her husband and her potential demise, according to documents unsealed Friday.

    The files raise further questions about why Susan Powell's husband was never charged in her disappearance before he killed himself and their two young sons in a gas-fueled inferno in Washington state earlier this year. Investigators in West Valley City, Utah, never arrested Josh Powell or even publicly labeled him as a suspect in Susan Powell's disappearance.


    A prosecutor in Washington state who was getting a first look at the files Friday said if it was his case, he would have charged Josh Powell with murder.

    "There is direct evidence. There is circumstantial evidence. There is motive," said Pierce County prosecutor Mark Lindquist. "There is everything but the body."

    The documents, used as justification to search the home where Josh Powell was staying last year, detail a widespread case that investigators had built against him.

    In West Valley City, Utah, police are under fire over what some are calling a botched investigation into the disappearance of young mother Susan Powell. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    Shortly after Susan Powell disappeared, authorities found blood evidence on a floor next to a sofa and determined that it was Susan Powell's. They found several life insurance policies on Susan Powell that totaled $1.5 million. The documents describe Josh Powell as unwilling to help in the investigation.

    A safety deposit box used by Susan Powell had a hand-written letter titled "Last will & testament for Susan Powell," according to the documents. She wrote in that letter that she did not trust her husband and that they'd been having marital troubles for four years.

    The letter also said that "if Susan Powell dies it may not be an accident, even if it looks like one," according to the documents.

    Josh Powell always maintained his innocence and said he had taken their boys, then 2 and 4, on a midnight camping trip in freezing temperatures the night she disappeared.

    Cops: Josh Powell murder-suicide house was sham

    One of the children, Charlie, told investigators in an interview shortly after Susan Powell disappeared that she had gone on the camping trip with them but did not come back home and did not know why, according to the files. A few weeks later, he told a church teacher with no emotion: "My mom is dead."

    Pool / Getty Images

    Photos of Charlie Powell, right, and Braden Powell are displayed during their funeral service on Feb. 11.

    Powell moved with the boys to his father Steve's home in Puyallup, Wash., but Steve Powell was arrested and charged with voyeurism and child pornography last September. The boys were placed with Susan Powell's parents for their safety.

    On Feb. 5 — a few days after incestuous images found on his computer prompted a judge to order him to undergo a psycho-sexual evaluation — Josh Powell locked a social worker out of his rental house, attacked the boys with a hatchet and then ignited the home in an explosive, gas-fueled inferno. The social worker was not injured.

    Charlie Powell was 7; Braden Powell was 5.

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  • Two teachers accused of verbally abusing student with cerebral palsy

    Jose Salinas, 10, pictured on a Facebook page set up by supporters after two instructors, were captured on a recording apparently mistreating the fourth grader, who has cerebral palsy. The page is called "We got your back, Little Joe!"

    A school district in Alabama has placed two teachers on leave after they were accused of verbally abusing one of their students, a fourth-grade boy with cerebral palsy, a school official confirmed Friday.

    "The only thing I can confirm is that the teachers are on leave," said David Sewell, an official with Houston County Schools in Alabama. "It is being investigated."

    The incident was reported to the district by the boy’s mother, Melisha Salinas, according to an article on ABCnews.com, who learned about her son’s treatment by attaching an audio recorder to the wheelchair used by her son, 10-year-old Jose Salinas.


    The tape reportedly records the voice of fulltime special education teacher Alicia Brown and fulltime teacher’s aide Drew Faircloth castigating Jose for his "disgusting" drooling — which is involuntary — and suggests that the boy was left alone for long periods of time with no instruction, according to the ABC report.

    "You drooled on the paper," a male’s voice in the recording says — allegedly that of Faircloth. "That's disgusting."

    "Why is my paper wet?" a female teacher is heard demanding on the tape, the ABC report said. "Look at me and answer. That's not an answer. That's not even a word."

    "You have got drool all over your face and it is gross," the voice reportedly said.

    The mother told ABC she knew her son was not happy in school and decided to plant the recording device after another student told her that the teacher had been "mean" to Jose, nicknamed Little Joe at school.

    Salinas took the recordings — taped over three days — to the Houston County School, and the two staffers were placed on administrative leave. When the instructors returned to the classroom last Friday, Salinas took the recording to the press, according to the ABC account.

    On Monday, they were placed on paid administrative leave again, the Houston school official said.

    Jose is back in school, and reportedly much happier.

    Outraged community members set up a Facebook page, "We Got Your Back Little Joe!!!," which has more than 6,000 supporters.

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  • 101-year-old woman who was evicted is heading home again

    John T. Greilick / The Detroit News via AP

    Texana Hollis, 101, talks to Jahzara Cheeks in Detroit. Hollis was evicted from her home in September because her son failed to keep up with property tax payments.

    DETROIT -- A 101-year-old woman, Texana Hollis, who was evicted from her foreclosed house is expected to move back home next week.

    The Detroit News reported that Hollis on Wednesday is expected to be back in the home where she previously lived for about 60 years.

    Detroit Free Press columnist Mitch Albom and his charity S.A.Y. Detroit are helping to renovate Hollis' house. The author's charity bought the home from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to fix it up for Hollis.


    Hollis was evicted Sept. 12 after her 65-year-old son failed to pay property taxes linked to a reverse mortgage and HUD foreclosed. Two days later, the department said she could return.

    But that didn't happen because HUD said the home was unsanitary and unsafe.

    Tamer Construction of Dearborn installed new walls, floors, ceilings and a roof, a new kitchen and bathroom, carpeting, electrical system and furnace, The Detroit News said.

    Hollis said she plans to bake cookies for visitors to the home on Wednesday, said Chad Audi, president and CEO of Detroit Rescue Mission Missionaries, which led the fight to help her.

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  • Sheriff wants to dig up yards where killer John Wayne Gacy once was seen

    AP

    An Illinois sheriff wants to dig up a backyard where serial killer John Wayne Gacy was once spotted at dawn, shovel in hand. Gacy, convicted of 33 murders, was executed in 1994.

    An Illinois sheriff hopes to excavate a Cook County backyard in hopes of finding more victims of serial killer John Wayne Gacy, the Chicago Tribune reported. Gacy, convicted of killing 33 boys and young men and then stuffing them in the crawl space beneath his house, was executed in 1994.

    But Anita Alvarez, the state’s attorney for Cook County, has so far denied Sheriff Tom Dart’s request, saying the sheriff does not have enough new information to merit a warrant.

    The yard was dug up in 1998 after a retired homicide detective tipped off authorities that he had seen Gacy there one early morning in the 1970s, shovel in hand, the Tribune reported. They chatted briefly, and the detective went on his way. That dig produced a glass marble and flattened sauce pan.


    Dart started looking into Gacy last year. He also wants to excavate Gacy’s mother’s yard, and the yard where Gacy once worked as a maintenance man, the Tribune reported.

    Last year, his office exhumed bodies of victims and identified one, William George Bundy, who went missing at age 17, the Tribune reported.   

    Gacy reentered the news again in February, when friends of a Gacy victim announced they believe that he had an accomplice in the murder of their roommate, John Mowery, a 19-year-old former Marine who disappeared on the night of Sept. 25, 1977.

    Witnesses suggest John Wayne Gacy had an accomplice

    Attorney Robert Stephenson told msnbc.com that he conclusively believes that “this individual was involved as an accomplice at least in this one (murder) and we suspect others as well.”

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  • "That pot of gold is beautiful right now!" But what is the first thing you would do with the Mega Millions lottery winnings?

    In the hopes of striking it rich, people across the country are scooping up Mega Millions tickets. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

    Venus Wilson has been fantasizing about winning the Mega Millions lottery. The first thing she would do? "Faint!" the security officer said at her post outside of JPMorganChase in Midtown Manhattan on Friday. "Then, when I get up, go get my check, and go shopping."

    Wilson, 31,  has bought seven lottery tickets. Other than passing out, she's got big plans if one ends up being a winner: She'd invest in real estate, but first, she would make sure her friends and family were taken care of.

    "I would donate to St. Jude's for cancer research, for breast cancer, do stuff like that. Because come on, why not? Don't be stingy. God didn't bless you with it for no reason. Help people out. And I would pay off my parents' doctor bills, and I would help family and friends," she said. "Then I would go crazy [shopping]. I swear -- I would go crazy."


    She also has plans to keep the cash flowing: Wilson wants to open soul food restaurants and laundromats, and get an accountant to invest her leftover winnings.

    "You have to keep it coming. A lot of people, they win all that money, and then they're broke," she said. "Some people don't believe in the lotto. But look at the gold pot. It's like the leprechaun with the rainbow. That pot of gold is beautiful right now," Wilson said.

    Wilson was among the New Yorkers canvassed Friday about the first thing they would do if they won Mega Millions, which has hit $640 million.  Hundreds more gave their responses on our Facebook page.

    What to buy when you win the jackpot

    'A dollar and a dream'
    Therese Schoenwandt, 29, has been swept up by the lottery fever. The nursing student got engaged two weeks ago and sat in Barnes & Noble on Friday, flipping through "Wedding Planning For Dummies." 

    Elizabeth Chuck / msnbc.com

    Therese Schoenwandt, 29, a nursing student who recently got engaged, purchased a lottery ticket for the first time this week.

    "I've never done a lotto ticket before. I usually don't believe in that stuff," she said. "It's all over the papers, and it's all over the news. Yesterday when I saw people lining up outside stores for it I said, 'You know what, I'm going to buy a ticket.' Peer pressure!"

    Her first act if she wins: Pay off her mother's mortgage in Brooklyn. The she will plan her wedding, and put the rest in the bank.

    Ivan Martinez, 50, who was handing out fliers in Manhattan's diamond district, had high hopes of helping out his family back home in Puerto Rico with the one ticket he purchased earlier in the day. "It's a dollar and a dream," he said.

    Richard Gallo, a 47-year-old customer service representative in the watch industry, said if he won, the first thing he would do is jump in the car and drive. "Before I even turned the ticket in, I would take a trip. Wherever I ended up, I ended up. Basically just to step away from everything, think about it and come back. You get caught in that whirlwind."

    Others weren't as confident about the dream's possibility. "It's all fixed," said a man who refused to give his name but was filling out his numbers for a ticket. "Do you know anyone who's won? It's all fixed, if you ask me." Then he continued filling out his ticket.

    Personal finance expert Suze Orman weighs in on the Mega Millions craze.

    On our Facebook page, many readers weighed in: "Sign the back of the ticket. Then go on a vacation to clear my mind while deciding who a good financial adviser would be to go to," wrote Christopher Ringen. 

    Others said they would pay off debt for family and friends or their churches, or donate to animal shelters. For some, though, it was just about making life a little more comfortable: "Never fly coach again," wrote Rebecca Hayes.

    But not everybody has bought into the hype. "It doesn't really attract me," said Louis Carrasquillo, 50, a sales rep at Montecristo Cigar Shop on 5th Avenue in New York.

    "Have I thought about it? Probably. I passed by the booth and I thought it would be great, but I'm just a working person. I'm not really a gambler."

    If he did win that kind of cash, he would give money to his church for a new school and cafeteria, he said.

    As the Mega Millions Jackpot lottery winnings continue to grow, the NOW panelists discuss how the lucky winner is not the only beneficiary of the lucrative system.

    But Carrasquillo said he was turned off by some lottery tips he heard from a newscaster: "If you're going to get divorced, get divorced before you win. What's that about? Change your phone number, 'cause you're going to hear from family members you haven't heard from. You gotta be kidding me."

    Why even skeptics are rushing to buy a Mega Millions ticket

    Mega Millions is played in 42 states plus Washington, D.C. Friday's drawing happens at 11 p.m. ET. The largest Mega Millions jackpot ever won was $390 million in March 2007, when the prize was split between two tickets sold in Georgia and New Jersey.

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  • Ohio city employee: I exposed myself to colleagues in 'contest of private parts'

    An Eastlake, Ohio city employee claims that members the female office staff collected images of his genitals that were taken at a so-called private parts "contest." Tom Meyer reports.

    An Ohio city employee exposed himself and sent photos of his genitals to a co-worker as part of a "contest of private parts," according to NBC affiliate WKYC.

    Eastlake building inspector Rich Vild told Channel 3 News he dropped his pants in front of two female co-workers in September in the parking lot of a night club. Vild also sent a photo of his penis to a different female colleague's cell phone.


    The inspector told WKYC he regrets his "stupid" actions every day, but he said that many city hall employees were involved.

    "A couple people go out and have a couple drinks and people coerce you into doing something," Vild said.

    "There were other people there who were supposed to do the same thing. I left after that, so I don't know what happened."

    A colleague even used one of the snapshots as a screen saver for her work computer, Vild said.

    Mayor Ted Andrzejewski told WKYC he had no idea the contest was happening on city time, but said he would start checking computers for obscene photos. Vild was suspended for two days in February, but the mayor did not contact police.

    Andrzejewski told Channel 3 he didn't think any laws have been broken. But according to the police chief, exposing yourself could violate public indecency laws and texting unsolicited photos of a sexual nature could constitute pandering obscenity, WKYC reported.

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  • Mega Millions jackpot grows to $640 million -- could go higher

    Each ticket has a one in nearly 176 million chance of winning, but that didn't stop people from dreaming about what they'd do if they won the jackpot. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.

    The Mega Millions lottery hit $640 million Friday, according to lottery officials, raising what was already a record-shattering prize.

    That's a cash payout of $462 million, according to the Mega Millions web site.  

    The even larger prize is expected to add to the lottery frenzy across the country. Hopeful future-millionaires have formed long lines at stores across the 42 states, plus Washington, D.C. and the Virgin Islands, where tickets are sold.

    What to buy when you win the jackpot

    The drawing for the fortune is set for late Friday in Atlanta.


    Ticket sales in California are expected to hit $333 million, with $189 million in New York and $94 million in Texas. In all, the lottery is expected to generate sales of $1.4 billion for this drawing.

    Nobody matched all six numbers in Tuesday's regular draw, and the total jackpot has been growing since.    

    Players pay $1 for a ticket and must pick five numbers from 1 to 56 plus a Mega number from 1 to 46 to win the jackpot.

    But at $1 a ticket, what are the odds of picking a Mega Millions winning ticket -- even at a "lucky" store?

    According to Dr. Ken Alexander, a mathematics professor at USC, the odds of winning are one in 175.7 million. That raises the question: Why not guarantee you win by buying all possible ticket combinations?

    “Well, a number of things get in the way of that,” Alexander said.

    Personal finance expert Suze Orman weighs in on the Mega Millions craze.

    Assuming 350 million tickets are sold, there’s a better than 90 percent chance that there will be at least two winners. So after taxes, you’ll likely come out with a loss.

    And, assuming it takes about five seconds to fill out each card, you'd need five years to mark the bubbles on the game tickets. There goes that plan.

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    A student and her friend dropped a more reasonable $20 at a 7-11 near USC Thursday for 20 tickets. That made Michelle Chong's odds of winning 1 in 9 million -- daunting odds, but at least she bought herself some excitement Friday.

    "It's just the excitement that you might win," said Chong. "The number is so big."

    Why even skeptics are rushing to buy a Mega Millions ticket

    Had Chong purchased 50 tickets, her chances of winning the jackpot would be comparable with her odds of being struck by lightning.

    Based on U.S. averages, you're about 8,000 times more likely to be murdered than win the lottery and 20,000 times more likely to die in a vehicle crash.

    But what about the strategy of choosing outlets that have previously sold winners?

    "If you buy them from some store that sells a lot of tickets, then the store is more likely to have a winner,” Alexander said. “But your 10 (tickets) have the same probability as if you buy them from anywhere else.” 

    In the hopes of striking it rich, people across the country are scooping up Mega Millions tickets. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

    The largest Mega Millions jackpot ever won was $390 million in March 2007, when the prize was split between two tickets sold in Georgia and New Jersey. The largest Powerball jackpot was $365 million won in 2006 on one ticket held by eight workers at a Nebraska meatpacking plant.

    Patrick Healy and John Simerson of NBCLosAngeles.com contributed to this report.

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  • Bales' attorney claims 'information blackout' from government

    Anthony Bolante / Reuters

    Attorney John Henry Browne, right, discusses the case of Staff Sgt. Robert Bales in Seatttle on Friday. With Browne is associate counsels Emily Gause.

    An attorney for Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who has been charged with killing 17 Afghan civilians in two villages, said Friday that the defense team is “facing an almost complete information blackout from the government,” which is having a “devastating effect” on their investigation.

    Bales, a 38-year-old father of two, is accused of creeping into the villages at night on March 11 and attacking the villagers. The Army has charged him with 17 counts of murder, six counts of attempted murder and six counts of assault. Nine children, four men and four women, were slain.

    “We are facing an almost complete information blackout from the government which is having a devastating effect on our ability to investigate the charges preferred against our client,” his civilian attorney, John Henry Browne, said in a statement. 


    Maj. Chris Ophardt, a spokesman for 1st Corps, Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington, said the investigation was ongoing.

    “The prosecution will provide the defense with evidence in accordance with the Rules for Courts-Martial and the Military Rules of Evidence. Within these guidelines the prosecution is and has been communicating with the defense,” he said in an e-mail. 

    Browne, who is in Seattle, was speaking about members of the defense team in Afghanistan. He said they had tried to interview injured civilians being treated at Kandahar Hospital but were denied access and told to coordinate with prosecutors. He said that the following day, the prosecution team interviewed the wounded, with defense counsel only later learning that they had been released from hospital and there was no contact information for them.

    “These witnesses are now who knows where … people just disappear into the countryside in Afghanistan,” he said later Friday at a press conference. “They (prosecutors) actually promised us that if we sent people to Afghanistan … that they would cooperate and make witnesses available for us, and they obviously violated that promise.”

    Browne also said in the statement that his team was denied access to medical records of the wounded, making it “even more impossible” to locate them, and that the prosecution was “withholding the entire investigative file from the defense team.”

    Afghan massacre: Sgt Bales case echoes loudly for ex-soldiers on hotline for vets

     The Army doesn’t have any requirement to provide evidence to the defense at this point, according to military rules governing courts-martial. The next stage of the legal process is the Article 32 hearing, akin to a civilian grand jury, and which is “supposed to be a discovery tool for the defense,” Michael Navarre, an adviser at the National Institute of Military Justice and a former Navy prosecutor and defense counsel, told msnbc.com.

    In general, most military prosecutors are cooperating with the defense and will provide some information -- though not everything -- prior to the Article 32 hearing to ensure it goes smoothly, he added, noting that some evidence may even be discovered after that proceeding.

    “As a defense counsel, one of your jobs is to … build a public record as to what the government’s doing during the course of their investigation and also to some degree build sympathy for your client,” he said. “Given the seriousness and the gravity of the charges against his client, I would say it’s not uncommon to point out that the government isn’t being cooperative with your client in the investigation given the current public perception of his client.”

    Browne said that though the defense team didn’t have the right to certain discovery materials until 30 days before the Article 32 hearing, he’d had better dealings in the past with prosecutors.

    “We usually have the cooperation of prosecutors and they will give us information ahead of time just so we can be prepared and that’s just not happening in this case,” he said at the press conference. “My gut, from a defense lawyer’s standpoint, is when the prosecutors are not cooperating there’s a reason, and that reason usually is because they don’t really have much of case.”

    “If they want cooperation from us, they better start cooperating more,” he later added.

    How Staff Sgt. Bales' lawyers are fighting for his life

    Bales, of Bellevue, Wash., is being held at a U.S. military prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kan. He was on his fourth tour in a war zone since signing up for the Army after the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001. He had been in Iraq on his previous tours, during which he suffered a foot injury and a traumatic brain injury in a vehicle rollover, media reports say.

    Browne said Bales was “holding up,” communicating with his wife, being treated well. He said Bales had seen a chaplain.

    Some military law experts interviewed by msnbc.com said they expect the defense to mount a legal pincer attack, in which Bales’ attorneys may try to win acquittal by attacking the evidence but have a fallback position aimed at winning a lesser sentence than the death penalty -- which Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has said could be sought in this case.

    That fallback position could be diminished mental capacity, which they may attribute to his reported combat injuries and mental trauma.

    For alleged Afghan shooter, death penalty unlikely

    U.S. military officials told NBC News on Friday that the Army was preparing to conduct a psychological exam of Bales. The exam, known as the “706 Board,” is considered routine in such cases and will include a team of psychiatrists.

    It's likely Bales would remain at Fort Leavenworth and the board doctors would travel to him, though a final decision has not been made.

    NBC’s Chief Pentagon Correspondent Jim Miklaszewski and news producers Karen Lucht and Courtney Kube contributed to this report.

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  • California officials: Man's claim bear saved him from lion attack not substantiated

    California wildlife officials are casting doubt on a man’s claim that he was saved from a mountain lion attack when a bear pulled the big cat off him, according to a local newspaper.

    Robert Biggs, 69, of the northern California town of Paradise, says a mountain lion jumped on his back and knocked him over on Monday while he was walking on trails, a story that's been reported by many media outlets.

    “I had a rock in my right hand, and I come around and swing and hit him in the side of the head, and it made a big screeching sound. And I come back to swing again, and I come around, and just about half way there, I see this dark figure grabbing the neck of the mountain lion and tearing it down [to] the ground behind me,” Biggs told Fox40.com, noting the dark figure was a “mama bear.”

    But Department of Fish and Game spokesman Patrick Foy told the Paradise Post: "We did interview Mr. Biggs and we are unable to substantiate a lion attack."

    Harry Morse, another department spokesman, said they had no plans to pursue the alleged mountain lion and that a warden determined Biggs’ injury was not consistent with such an attack, the Paradise Post reported. But officials will test DNA from blood found on a backpack to see if it did belong to a mountain lion, Foy said.

    Biggs got a few scratches in the alleged encounter.

    “I’m sure the bear was trying to save me because the way it was looking at me just two minutes before I was standing there watching her, and she was looking at me like we were old friends,” he told Fox40.com.

    Foy said it was not likely a bear would be so friendly with a man. There have only been 16 verified mountain lion attacks from 1890 to 2007, none of which were in Butte County, in which Paradise is located.

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  • Mom hit by lightning: 'I could feel my legs on fire'

    "I could feel my legs on fire," said Donna Deas, a Florida woman hit by lightning when a bolt struck a tree just a few feet away from where she and her family were standing. Deas said her legs were completely paralyzed for more than 20 minutes after the strike. WTVJ-TV's Jennifer Reeves reports.

    For the Deas family of Florida, a little stroll to the Toys “R” Us became an ordeal they will never forget.

    “At first I thought it was a car bomb. I mean, that's the way it felt. I’m like, am I in Iraq or something?” Donna Deas said. “When I grabbed the baby and I’m coming out of the truck, (there was) a big explosion. And I could feel my legs on fire.”

    The lightning struck a tree in the Hialeah, Fla., parking lot on March 15, just a few feet from where Deas and her family were standing. Donna was able to lay baby Haley in the truck just in time, before she and her husband James felt the shock, knocking them both out.

    “My husband fell on the ground. I'm telling him, ‘Don't move, don't move. Just wait, just wait,’” Donna Deas recalled.

    For more, visit NBCMiami.com

    She said her legs were completely paralyzed for 20 to 30 minutes after the strike. But fortunately her baby was inside the truck and not a few feet away, she said.

    “Thank God that baby didn't make it to that stroller or she would have been zapped,” she said, pointing at it.

    Florida is known as the lightning capital of the United States, with more than 500 people injured by lightning each year.

    “It wasn't raining or lightning and thundering,” Deas said. “It was just overcast and it was just bam, it was like in a split second.”

    Lightning can strike up to 10 miles away from the actual storm, even where it's not raining.

    “I know one thing,” Deas said. “When it’s raining outside, I'm staying home.”

    The National Weather Service says that if you find yourself outside in a thunderstorm, get inside a safe building or vehicle as fast as possible.

    It says a safe building is one that is fully enclosed and has plumbing or wiring. Once inside, stay away from showers, sinks and bathtubs, as well as televisions, computers and other electronic equipment.

    A safe vehicle “is any full enclosed metal-topped vehicle” such as a car, minivan, bus or truck with a hard top. When inside, do not use electronic devices such as the radio during a storm.

    Do not take shelter under trees, and stay inside until 30 minutes after you hear the last thunder.

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