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  • Parent: Students watched porn in classroom

    SAN DIEGO -- The parent of a middle school child is calling for action in the wake of an alleged incident that happened in a seventh-grade classroom.

    The San Diego Unified District confirms nine male students from Bell Middle School were suspended in May, but legally could not say why the students were suspended.

    Now, a parent is telling NBC 7 San Diego the students were allegedly watching pornography on their cell phones during English class and masturbating.


    See the original report at NBCSanDiego.com

    The teacher in the classroom at the time, Ed Johnson, allegedly did nothing to stop the incident, only saying he would give students referrals if he caught them. Sources said Johnson then continued reading to students while at his desk.

    The parent, Edith Duran, said she had a meeting with the vice principal who told her about the sexual activity.

    Duran says her son was not involved in the incident, but was in the classroom at the time, afraid to speak up for fear of being bullied.

    “When I send my child to school I want to feel he's safe. I don't send him to sit in a classroom next to boys watching porn, explicit porn which [the] vice principal did tell me [was] very explicit,” she said.

    “I asked the vice principal how is it this was going on under his nose, a group of boys huddling around a cell phone watching porn; how is it this was going on and he had no idea?”
    According to Duran, the vice principal had no answer for that question, but said this about the teacher's reaction.

    “She said he is in shock. Mr. Johnson is in shock, he can't believe this happened. That's what she said,” said Duran. “Let this be a reality check that he needs to do a better job as far as teaching our children and not just sitting back reading and letting them do whatever it is they want to do.”

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    In the end, Duran believes her son and other students in that class are victims.

    “I do expect a phone call. I want therapy, I want some kind of counseling, not just for my son, but for other children victimized in this situation,” Duran told NBC 7 San Diego.

    Duran said the school did initially promise therapy and counseling for the students in the classroom, but she has heard nothing from the administration, despite her attempts to follow-up.

    She wants more Bell Middle School parents to reach out to her and join her in demanding something be done for the students in the class who she said were victimized by this inappropriate behavior.

    The school district would not comment on whether that teacher is currently under investigation, but sources told NBC 7 San Diego a substitute teacher was placed in the classroom with the teacher following the incident until the end of the school year.

    NBC 7 has been unable to reach the teacher for comment.

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  • Gov. Scott says Florida will not comply with health care law or expand Medicaid

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott now says Florida will do nothing to comply with President Barack Obama's health care overhaul and will not expand its Medicaid program. The announcement is a marked changed after the governor recently said he would follow the law if it were upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court.

    "Florida is not going to implement Obamacare. We are not going to expand Medicaid and we're not going to implement exchanges,'' Scott's spokesman Lane Wright told The Associated Press on Saturday. Wright stressed that the governor would work to make sure the law is repealed.

    Scott told Fox News the Medicaid expansion would cost Florida taxpayers $1.9 billion a year, but it's unclear how he arrived at that figure.


    See the original report at NBCMiami.com

    Scott said the state will not expand the Medicaid program in order to lower the number of uninsured residents, nor will Florida set up a state-run health exchange, a marketplace where people who need insurance policies could shop for them.

    "We care about having a health care safety net for the vulnerable Floridians, but this is an expansion that just doesn't make any sense,'' he told Fox host Greta Van Susteren.

    Scott has gone back and forth on the issue after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Congress cannot withhold federal Medicaid funding from states that opt out of a requirement in the overhaul to expand coverage to those just above the poverty line.

    On the day of the ruling Scott was cautious about the expansion, saying he wanted to read the ruling first. Then during an interview Friday morning on a Jacksonville radio station, Scott said it was unlikely he would go along with the expansion because of the potential cost to the state.

    But the governor told the Tampa Bay Times later in the day that he was still evaluating the ruling and would come up with a plan within a few weeks.

    Scott, the former CEO of a hospital chain, has been a vocal critic of the health care overhaul from the start. He made his first foray into politics by forming a group called Conservatives for Patients Rights that ran television ads criticizing the proposal before it was adopted by Congress.

    Scott has also complained about the growing cost of Medicaid, the $21 billion safety net program that primarily aids the poor but also picks up nursing home bills for senior citizens. The governor backed a push by the Republican-controlled Legislature to shift Medicaid patients into managed care programs, a move that is still awaiting federal approval.

    Scott has rejected federal money in the past, most notably $2.4 billion for high speed rail. His administration has also said no to some money attached to the Affordable Care Act.

    But Scott has said yes to money associated with the federal stimulus program and he has changed some of the positions he advocated during his run for governor. Scott also must weigh the political calculations of saying no to Medicaid because of tight budgets, while it is likely he will continue to push for substantial tax cuts between now and his re-election campaign in 2014.

    According to Census data released last year, Florida had the nation's third-highest rate of residents without health insurance during the past three years.

    President Obama's health care law called for states in 2014 to expand Medicaid eligibility to those making up to 133 percent of the poverty level, or $29,326 for a family of four. While estimates vary, the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration has concluded that as many as 1.95 million more people would join Medicaid and other state-subsidized health insurance programs over the next five years.

    Most of the cost, running into the billions, would be absorbed by the federal government. The Medicaid expansion would not cost the state anything until 2017 — although AHCA estimates that changes to other state-subsidized programs would require state money starting in 2014. AHCA estimates that the overall cost to the state would be $2.4 billion between 2013 and 2018 with the federal government picking up nearly $26 billion.

    But other groups analyzing the potential changes contend that state officials have ``hyper-inflated'' the potential costs because they assume too many people will enroll.

    The ultimate choice, however, won't be Scott's alone. It will also be decided by the Legislature.

  • 3 Boy Scouts, scoutmaster killed in head-on Wyoming crash

    Three teen Boy Scouts and their scoutmaster are dead after their SUV smashed head-on into a motorhome Saturday in northwest Wyoming, NBC News has learned. A child traveling in the motorhome also died, a county sheriff told a Montana newspaper.

    The 10:15 a.m. (12:15 p.m. ET) accident occurred on a remote stretch of Route 120, about 33 miles northwest of Thermopolis, Capt. Len Declercq of the Wyoming Highway Patrol told NBC News.

    The scouts’ southbound 2003 Honda Element drifted into the northbound lane and struck the motorhome, he said.


    The three scouts and a motorhome occupant died on impact, Declercq said.

    The scoutmaster was taken to West Park Hospital in Cody, Wyo., but died later.

    There were conflicting reports about the number of people in the motorhome.

    Hot Springs County Sheriff Lou Falgoust said the fatality in the motorhome was a child 3 or 4 years old, the Billings Gazette reported.

    Two motorhome survivors were in critical condition at Hot Springs Memorial Hospital in Thermopolis, Declercq said. A third motorhome survivor, who was airlifted St. Vincent's Hospital in Billings, Mont., also was in critical condition, he said.

    Falgoust told the Gazette that the Honda was traveling with at least two other vehicles.

    The scouts and the adult with them were from the Woodland Park, Colo., area, Declerq said.

    They were returning from a Boy Scout camp in Cody, NBC station KULR of Billings reported.

    The motorhome was from Florida, KULR said.

    No victims’ names were released pending notification of relatives.

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  • Rodney King remembered as 'symbol of forgiveness'

    Joe Klamar / AFP - Getty Images file

    Rodney King is seen on April 30 speaking with fans in Los Angeles before an event promoting his autobiographical book "The Riot Within...My Journey from Rebellion to Redemption."

    Rodney King was remembered during a Saturday service at Forest Lawn in the Hollywood Hills as a "symbol of forgiveness" who bore the scars of his infamous beating with dignity.

    The Rev. Al Sharpton, who delivered the eulogy, said at a news conference before the funeral that King never showed bitterness to the officers who beat him.

    "People should not be judged by the mistakes that they make, but by how they rise above them," Sharpton said. "Rodney had risen above his mistakes, he never mocked anyone, not the police, not the justice system, not anyone."


    Sharpton added that King had become a "symbol of forgiveness."

    King was found in the bottom of his swimming pool in the backyard of his Rialto home on June 17. His death at age 47 is being treated as an accidental drowning, though autopsy results have still not been released.

    Family members held a private service early Saturday, followed by a public memorial and burial.

    "I will remember his smile, his unconditional love," said daughter Laura Dene King, 28, to a phalanx of news cameras outside the Hall of Freedom at Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills. "He was a great father, a great friend; he loved everyone. People will just have to smile when they think of him."

    Donors who had contributed to the funeral and other arrangements included TV producer Anthony Zuiker, who donated $10,000.

    Rodney Glen King, the man who was at the center of a national debate on civil rights after he was brutally beaten by LAPD in 1991 is dead at the age of 47.

    "We lost a symbol, but they lost a loved one," said Zuiker, creator of the CSI: series. "Rodney was a healer."

    King became famous after his videotaped Lake View Terrace beating by Los Angeles police in 1991 was broadcast worldwide, as were photos of his bloodied and bruised face.

    Those images became a national symbol of police brutality.

    "That showed what was evident all over the United States, that police brutality was alive and well," observed Lawrence Tolliver, the owner of well-known barber shop in South LA.

    When four officers charged with felony assault on King were acquitted by a jury with no black members, the verdict sparked a riot that lasted for six days and brought U.S. military presence to patrol LA streets.

    During the unrest, which left more than 50 people dead and caused more than $1 billion in property damage, King famously pleaded for peace by asking, "Can we all get along?"

    King's words were embroidered on the lid of his casket, next to a portrait of him.

    Grant Hindsley / AP

    The Rev. Al Sharpton, right, speaks to reporters before the public memorial service for Rodney King at Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills in Los Angeles on Saturday.

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  • NASA's Super Guppy delivers piece of space shuttle history to Seattle

    John Brecher / msnbc.com

    A crowd in the Georgetown neighborhood of Seattle watches NASA's Super Guppy aircraft approach Boeing Field, carrying a key piece of a space shuttle mockup that will go on display at Seattle's Museum of Flight.


    SEATTLE — It may not be a real space shuttle, but it's ours.

    Today NASA delivered a key piece of the mockup that astronauts used for space shuttle practice to the Museum of Flight in Seattle, my hometown. And it arrived aboard one of the most ungainly-looking airplanes ever built. The wingless mockup is known as the Full Fuselage Trainer, or FFT. The plane has a nickname that's more colorful: the Super Guppy.

    The Super Guppy looks more like a Super Whale. The wide-body turboprop airplane has a cargo hold that's been built up into a bulbous shape, specifically to carry big stuff for outer space. Only five of the Guppies were ever produced, and they were used to cart spacecraft components around for the Gemini, Apollo, Skylab and shuttle programs. This Super Guppy is the only one of its kind still flying, and this week's odyssey with the most important piece of the Full Fuselage Trainer is one of the highest-profile flights the plane has ever taken.


    For decades, the plywood-built FFT sat in a building at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. The crew compartment — the part of the structure that was flown to Seattle today — was outfitted with all the buttons, switches, cockpit displays and middeck lockers that the real shuttles had. None of those gadgets worked, but they helped the astronauts get familiar with the layout before they started handling the real controls. Astronauts could also practice how they'd get out of the shuttle in the event of a landing-strip emergency.

    With the end of the space shuttle era, NASA's Johnson Space Center no longer needed the FFT, so the space agency decided to donate it for display. The Seattle museum made a play for one of the flown shuttles, and even built a shuttle-sized, 15,500-square-foot Space Gallery to display it in. But Seattle lost out to Florida, California, New York and the "other Washington" in the competition for Atlantis, Endeavour, Enterprise and Discovery. The Full Fuselage Trainer served as the consolation prize.

    Most of the FFT's plywood parts could be shipped up by traditional means for later assembly, but the shuttle crew compartment had to be transported all in one piece. That's why NASA's Super Guppy was called into service.

    The airplane has a 25-foot-high, 25-foot-wide, 111-foot-long cargo compartment — big enough to hold the mockup's most awkward piece, even when it's bound up in shrink wrap and a protective steel frame. Over the past couple of days, the Super Guppy has been making a journey from its home at Ellington Air Force Base in Texas, over to California, and then up to Seattle at a top speed of around 200 knots. It wasn't exactly a record-setting pace — but what the Super Guppy lacks in speed, it more than makes up for in the "What the Heck Is That?" department.

    The Guppy flew over my hometown and its surroundings with a Seattle-born astronaut, Greg Johnson, at the controls. Then it floated down to a landing right in front of the museum, which is adjacent to Boeing Field. One of the commentators at the museum called it a "beautifully ugly airplane."

    Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire pointed to the craft with pride as the sky spit down rain. "When we get together in Washington state, we can land the big whale right behind me," she said.

    Museum of Flight

    NASA's Super Guppy and a chase plane fly above the mostly cloudy skies of Seattle.

    Museum of Flight

    After its touchdown at Seattle's Boeing Field, the turboprop-powered Super Guppy taxis over to the Museum of Flight next door.

    Museum of Flight

    The entire front of the Super Guppy swings open to reveal the cargo inside.

    Museum of Flight

    The 65,000-pound Tunner 60K aircraft cargo loader and transporter rolls toward the Super Guppy.

    Museum of Flight

    The cargo compartment for the Full Fuselage Trainer, wrapped in protective plastic, has been taken out of the Super Guppy for a short ride on the Tunner transporter to its new home in the Museum of Flight's Charles Simonyi Space Gallery.

    Several thousand onlookers watched as the Super Guppy's entire front opened up to the side like a four-story-high door. 

    "It's really cool that it's actually able to fly," Allison Kirkman, a 10-year-old student at Spirit Ridge Elementary School in Bellevue, Wash., told me as she watched from the tarmac. "It's an amazing plane, and how they built it is cool, too."

    The shrink-wrapped shuttle crew compartment was moved out of the wide-yawning Super Guppy onto a 65,000-pound mobile transporter, then rolled over to the museum's Charles Simonyi Space Gallery. Over the next couple of months, the shuttle mockup will be assembled in a place of honor, alongside a Russian Soyuz capsule and a prototype lander that was used in Blue Origin's spacecraft development program. Museumgoers like Kirkman will be able to walk through the shuttle mockup's cargo bay — and they might even be able to crawl through the crew compartment, just like the astronauts did.

    Kids, prepare to be amazed ... again.


    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

  • Families brace for mental health cuts. Will other states follow Wisconsin?

    By Lauren Hasler
    Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism

    Donovan Richards first attempted to take his own life at age 4. The Wisconsin boy, who has bipolar disorder and autism, already had been kicked out of three day care programs, and his doctors were sure he would be in an institution before he turned 10.

    To get the intensive treatment her son needed, but she could not afford, Paula Buege, Donovan’s mom, had to win approval from a review board made up of Dane County officials.

    “I had 10 minutes to present his case. And my argument was, ‘If we don’t help him now, you’re going to read about him in the paper one day,’ ” said Buege, of Middleton, who now helps the parents of mentally ill children with a Madison-based nonprofit, Wisconsin Family Ties.

    After years of treatment, Donovan is now a 17-year-old who plays in a band and wants to be a music teacher. While he continues to struggle, he has not been hospitalized for mental health problems in 10 years.

    What saved Donovan from suicide or another tragic fate was a mother’s perseverance and taxpayer-funded mental health services.

    But those public mental health systems in Wisconsin and across the nation increasingly face cuts as they compete for scarce resources, according to an investigation by the Center for Public Integrity, prepared in collaboration with the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism and other nonprofit newsrooms.

    States, desperate to close cavernous budget gaps, have cut $2.1 billion from their mental health budgets over the past three fiscal years, according to a study from the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors’ Research Institute, an independent nonprofit that collects and analyzes mental health services data.

    The problems go beyond money. In interviews with mental health advocates and county and state officials, the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism found that Wisconsin’s public mental health system — once viewed as a national model — has become fragmented and underfunded.

    And many experts fear that as Gov. Scott Walker moves to close the state’s budget deficit, the mental health system will be weakened even further. One county official predicted Walker’s changes could “devastate” taxpayer-financed mental health care in Wisconsin.

    Among the problems facing the state’s public mental health system:

    • The Wisconsin Council on Mental Health, the governor’s mental health planning council, estimates 232,932 adults and 106,149 children in Wisconsin have serious mental health conditions.
    • Overall, 100,238 people received taxpayer-subsidized mental health services through their local county in 2009, according to the nonpartisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau.
    • Walker warned in his March 1 budget address that a “serious and long-term solution” is needed for Medicaid. Demand for existing Medicaid-funded services is expected to create shortfalls of $150 million by June 30 and $1.8 billion in Wisconsin over the next two years as federal stimulus funding ends.
    • The state Department of Health Services (DHS) plans to replace $1.3 billion of that gap with state funds and make up the difference with $500 million in cuts to the Medicaid program —possibly by cutting eligibility, benefits or reimbursement rates.

    “Services have been underfunded with the current budget, and now we’re going to see a $500 million cut to providing essential services to vulnerable populations,” said state Rep. Sandy Pasch, D-Whitefish Bay, a member of the Assembly’s committee on public health.

    Pasch estimates Medicaid cuts could leave 65,000 Wisconsin residents without subsidized health insurance to pay for mental health treatment.

    Untreated mental illness isn’t just a personal hardship; it’s a major driver of Wisconsin homeless and prison populations. Nearly one-third of all inmates in the state prison system are classified as mentally ill, the state Department of Corrections estimates.

    Wisconsin DHS secretary to make big changes
    As part of Walker’s controversial budget-repair measure, Dennis Smith, the Republican governor’s DHS secretary, has been given a mandate to reshape Medicaid-funded services to close the budget gap.

    Smith hinted that big changes may be coming. In a statement, Smith said the state will focus its mental health care dollars on models that are centered on people’s needs, are community-based and are statistically proven to work. Mental health experts say such programs are in short supply in Wisconsin.

    Smith said state officials will “examine the entire continuum of care at every age” and coordinate mental health care with other medical needs —a move long sought by mental health advocates.

    Integration of mental health care with physical health care would help identify and prevent mental illnesses and reduce social stigma, said William Greer, president and CEO of the Mental Health Center of Dane County, a nonprofit agency that provides mental health and substance abuse services.

    “The human mind and body are one and the same,” Greer said at a February symposium, adding that treatment should be available “under one roof.”

    The new health secretary vowed to work with legislators, consumers, advocates and taxpayers in an “an open and deliberative process,” to identify ideas that will improve health while controlling spending, DHS spokeswoman Beth Kaplan said.

    But some advocates are still leery about how Smith will manage a $500 million cut to the state’s health services for the poor. In a previous position as a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington, D.C., Smith encouraged states to opt out of Medicaid to save money and shed federal control over health care spending.

    In one of his first moves, Smith announced on March 18 that enrollment for the BadgerCare Basic program, which covers adults without dependent children who were unable to enroll in BadgerCare Core, is now frozen.

    Buege is worried about how her family may be affected by changes to Medicaid. Losing the benefit would leave her son without his medications and access to psychiatrists — the tools, she said, that have kept him mentally well instead of mentally ill.

    “We’re going to still go to the hospital, we’re still going to go to the doctor,” Buege said. “People can’t afford to pay the bill. So who’s it going to impact? It’s going to impact everybody.”

    Jane Pedersen of Menomonie in northwest Wisconsin has watched someone suffer needlessly because of a lack of affordable health insurance.

    Pedersen has traveled to Madison seven times to protest Walker’s budget repair bill. She said she knows a person with a mental health disability and no insurance who stopped taking medication when he could no longer afford it. When he began to hallucinate, he spent several days in a hospital’s intensive care unit, she said.

    “These people without health insurance tend to wait until they’re very sick to get help. ER care is the most expensive,” Pedersen said.

    Counties run mental health programs
    In Wisconsin, unlike in most other states, county governments run the publicly funded mental health care system, which is supported primarily by three funding streams: Federal Medicaid dollars matched by the county, state funding and local property taxes.

    Walker has proposed cuts to Medicaid and funding to local governments. He also is seeking to freeze local property taxes to prevent officials from making up for the loss of state funding by raising taxes.

    Some local officials are alarmed by Walker’s plan.

    “This could significantly devastate mental health and substance abuse (services),” said William Orth, director of the Sauk County Department of Human Services.

    While many states have cut funding in recent years, Wisconsin has maintained support for mental health services — although advocates say the system still falls far short of meeting the state’s needs.

    Mental health expenditures in Wisconsin at the county level actually increased by about 16 percent between 2005 and 2009, to more than $428 million, according to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau.

    But those increases may not mean more services, considering that “the cost of doing business has gone up” in health care, according to Ted Lutterman, director of research analysis for the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors Research Institute in Alexandria, Va.

    It’s not clear what’s in store for mental health care in the current budget. The few broad categories in the governor’s budget that mention mental health care, including operation of the state’s two mental health institutes, show small increases from current funding levels, but little detail is available.

    “Funding is being cut everywhere and mental health is getting increases. I think that shows where Walker’s priorities are. It clearly displays he has compassion for the mental health community,” said state Sen. Mary Lazich, R-New Berlin, a member of the Senate public health committee.

    But Pasch said she is “very concerned” how well services for the mentally ill will fare when local governments start cutting their budgets.

    “When resources start becoming more and more scarce, my experience being a psychiatric nurse for 30 years is that mental health services are one of the first things to get cut,” Pasch said.

    If fewer poor people are insured under Walker’s proposed budget, counties still will be on the hook to pay for core mental health services, including hospitalization, according to Kathy Roetter, director of Wood County Unified Services, which provides mental health care to residents in central Wisconsin. But counties would lose federal Medicaid matching funds for those newly ineligible people, she said.

    DHS statement on mental health care
    The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism asked Smith to comment on the future of the state’s public mental health care system.

    On the state's overall mental health funding: We are concerned that some individuals with mental illness are under-served in the current system or must navigate through a complex delivery system on their own. We will examine the entire continuum of care at every age. Our approach will be to identify models of care that work, support them, and replicate them. These models should be person-centered, community-based, and use evidence-based practices. Individuals will benefit from the coordination of their mental health services with other acute care medical services they need. We have already met with a variety of partners in the mental health community and have heard directly from consumers themselves. We look forward to working with everyone who is involved with improving the care to individuals in need of mental health services.

    On how the governor’s plan for $500 million in cuts is reflected in the budget: The Medicaid program faces a $1.8 billion shortfall, largely because of the expiration of more than $1 billion of federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funds on July 1. We are replacing those funds for DHS with $1.3 billion in new state General Purpose Revenue (GPR). To make up the rest of this federal shortfall, we will be looking for $500 million in savings in our Medicaid program. To bend this cost curve, and reduce expenditures by the projected amount, the Department will commence an open and deliberative process with legislators, stakeholders, advocates and taxpayers to identify and implement ideas aimed at improving health outcomes and controlling spending growth.

    Care for mentally ill shifts, leaving gaps
    Over the past 50 years, public mental health care in the United States has moved away from locked hospitals to community-based programs. Shifting federal budget priorities, a movement that advocated for the least-restrictive environment for the mentally ill, and a new generation of drugs for psychiatric disorders allowed more people to remain in the community.

    In 1955, psychiatric hospitals in the U.S. housed more than 550,000 people, according to research by Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, a research psychiatrist and founder of the nonprofit Treatment Advocacy Center, which is based in Arlington, Va. By 1994, that number had dropped by 87 percent to 71,619 people.

    But as hospitals emptied out, the funding didn’t necessarily flow to those community programs. Much of it simply disappeared.

    A recent study from the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) found that when adjusted for population and increased medical costs, the United States spent $261.7 billion in 1955 and only $30.9 billion in 2006 in funding for mental health care.

    Wisconsin lacks services for young
    Hugh Davis, executive director of the nonprofit Wisconsin Family Ties, says funding isn’t the only problem afflicting Wisconsin’s public mental health system. One of the greatest problems he and other advocates see is the lack of adequate mental health care for children and teenagers.

    “There is ample evidence that that system has been neglected by our state for a long time,” said Davis, whose organization helps families with children who have emotional, behavioral and mental disorders.

    He points to data that show Wisconsin is last among all Midwestern states in the percentage of children with serious emotional disturbance who are served by the public mental health system.

    In an investigation of rural health care last year, the Wisconsin State Journal found the state has just 90 child psychiatrists, forcing some children in northern Wisconsin to wait up to two years to get counseling or medication.

    System ‘just too complicated’
    Lori Krinke of Madison, who has three children with disabilities, said it took her a long time to get help for her youngest son. Krinke is associate director of Wisconsin Family Ties.

    Krinke said last year, it was nearly two months before she could find a bed at a state-run mental health facility for her teenager, who was no longer safe at home because he was chronically suicidal.

    “Honestly, if he hadn’t gone to Winnebago (Mental Health Institute), he would not have made it to his 14th birthday,” she said.

    Krinke says people with serious mental illnesses in Wisconsin have to jump through too many hoops to get the help they need.

    “When it came to looking for resources for mental health for children, I didn’t even know where to turn. Frequently, the people who work within the system don’t know how to navigate the system. It’s too complicated,” Krinke said. “And the funding isn’t there.”

    Smith, the new health secretary, acknowledged the complexity and gaps in the system.

    “We are concerned that some individuals with mental illness are underserved in the current system or must navigate through a complex delivery system on their own,” he said.

    Community-based programs underfunded
    The outpatient programs that partly replaced hospitalization — including drugs, counseling, case management and day programs — are cheaper and more effective for maintaining mental health for all but the most serious cases. But in some parts of Wisconsin, they’re hard to come by.

    About 30 years ago, Wisconsin was seen as having one of the top mental health systems in the country because of its strong county system, according to Shel Gross, director of public policy for Mental Health America of Wisconsin, a Milwaukee-based nonprofit advocacy group. But in recent years that system has actually become a liability, he said.

    There is significant variation from county to county in the quality of mental health care because county boards decide what to offer and how many people they can afford to help.

    As one measure, Shawano County spent the least on each person receiving services in 2009 at $1,534, while Jackson County spent $9,571 on each client — six times as much, according to figures provided by DHS and analyzed by the Center.

    “It’s not fair that residents get different services depending on where they live,” said Roetter from Wood County.

    Demand, cost up; community aid down
    State funding for human services, including mental health care, comes to counties primarily in what are called community aids. While medical costs have risen and demand has increased, the state’s community aids funding has remained nearly flat for more than 20 years, according to a report by the Wisconsin Council on Mental Health.

    Community aids funding for the current year is $257.6 million. If adjusted for inflation, the amount of community aids has actually fallen by more than $185 million in 20 years, according to the council.

    Another stream of funding from the state to counties is shared revenue, which usually goes to pay for highways and other county services. The governor’s budget cuts shared revenues to counties by $36.5 million in calendar year 2012, from an estimated $183 million in 2011.

    If the cuts in shared revenue and freeze in property taxes proposed by Walker are approved by the Legislature, counties will need to cut somewhere.

    “How do you choose?” said Sarah Diedrick-Kasdorf, a senior legislative associate with the Wisconsin Counties Association. “How do you pick? Children or the elderly? Someone with a mental illness or a mother who needs help?”

    Buege is glad that when her son needed it the most, the help was there.

    “My kid is living proof; he would be costing us all a lot of money right now if we didn’t get those services,” she said. “And instead he’s going to be a taxpaying member of society.”

    Reporter Kate Golden of the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Reporting contributed to this report. The nonprofit center (www.WisconsinWatch.org) collaborates with Wisconsin Public Television, Wisconsin Public Radio and the UW-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication and other news media. Lauren Hasler is at lhasler@wisconsinwatch.org.

     

  • New York-area politicians condemn Egypt's new leader over bid to free terrorist

    New York political leaders are voicing outrage at Egypt’s next president after he promised to fight to free a terrorist linked to the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and a later plot to blow up New York City landmarks.

    President-elect Mohammed Morsi told a crowd in Tahrir Square he wants convicted terrorist Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman released from a United States prison. “I see signs for Omar Abdel Rahman and detainees pictures,” Morsi said.  “It is my duty and I will make all efforts to have them free, including Omar Abdel Rahman.”


    Rahman is serving a life sentence for his role in a plot to blow up the Holland and Lincoln Tunnels, the United Nations and other targets in the 1990s.  He has also been linked to the first World Trade Center bombing that killed six and injured more than a thousand.

    See the original story on NBCNewYork.com

    Astrid Riecken / Getty Images

    Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y.

    New York politicians blasted Morsi’s comments Friday.

    “President Morsi’s offensive statements are an insult to the memories of the victims of the World Trade Center bombing,” Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said.  “Sheik Rahman is a terrorist who planned to kill innocent Americans, rest assured he will stay right where he belongs -- in jail for the rest of his life.”

    Egypt counts on billions of dollars in aid from the United States, and a State Department spokeswoman declined to comment on Morsi’s speech.

    But Rep. Peter King, R-NY, who chairs the House Homeland Security Committee, called Morsi’s speech “evidence that he is an Islamist and a radical who cannot be trusted.” 

    "This is a disgraceful way for him to start his presidency," King added.

    Egyptian leader vows to free 'Blind Sheik' jailed in US

    Stephen Ferry / Getty Images

    Workers on Feb. 26, 1993, rebuild the parking garage destroyed when a van containing explosives was detonated by terrorists in beneath the World Trade Center complex, resulting in the death of six and injuries of over 1,000 others.

    Tri-state leaders said Morsi’s comments are raising serious questions as to what kind of leader he will be.

    Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., called Morsi’s statement “…not only outrageous, but it is cause for deep concern about Mohammed Morsi’s respect for the rule of law and democracy.  Any attempt to free this convicted terrorist must be met with swift condemnation.”

    Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., said the U.S. will never free the sheik.

    “Omar Abdel-Rahman is a terrorist with American blood on his hands and he will serve the rest of his life in detention," he said.

    A spokeswoman for the Egyptian consulate in New York declined to comment.  But NBC News Correspondent Aymen Mohyeldin, who was in Cairo for the speech, said Morsi went off script to make the comments and was likely making the statements for domestic consumption – not to anger the United States.

    Hai Do / AFP - Getty Images file

    Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, seen in 1993

    “The Muslim Brotherhood, and Morsi now, are taking the position he be released on humanitarian extradition more so than overturning his conviction,” Moyeldin said. Muslim Brotherhood leaders are saying Morsi does not plan to repeat the comments in his address Saturday and has condemned acts of terror against the West in the past.

    Rahman is in ailing health in a North Carolina prison. A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment, except to say the "Blind Sheik" remains behind bars.

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    Big changes are in store for Egypt now that Mohammed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood, once banned in Egypt, has won Egypt's first democratic presidential election. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

  • Harrison Township remembers fallen soldier

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Marines salute the hearse carrying the casket of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Steven P. Stevens, who was killed in Afghanistan, at Selfridge Air National Guard Base in Harrison Township, Mich. on June 29, 2012.

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Hailey Nagel waits for the remains return of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Steven P. Stevens.

    John M. Galloway / AP

    Family members react as the casket of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Steven P. Stevens is transferred at Selfridge Air National Guard Base.

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  • Police captain accused of making girl, 15, take off clothes for sex check

    Broward Sheriff's Office

    Authorities say Juan de los Rios made a 15-year-old girl take her clothes off when he saw her talking with a boy inside the back seat of a car.

    A Florida police captain was arrested Friday after authorities said he made a 15-year-old girl remove her clothes to prove she wasn't having sex in the back seat of a car, NBCMiami.com reported

    Juan de los Rios, 46, is charged with two counts of lewd and lascivious conduct on a child under the age of 16 by someone over the of age 18. The charge is a second-degree felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison and up to a $10,000 fine, the station reported. 


    The Sun Sentinel reports that de los Rios is an 18-year veteran of the Miramar Police Department. The paper reported that he's been suspended without pay.

    According to the arrest affidavit, de los Rios found the girl talking with a 19-year-old boy in the back seat of the car on Jan. 18.

    The station reported he asked her if they had been having sex. She told investigators she and the boy were just talking.

    Watch US News crime videos on msnbc.com

    Authorities told NBCMiami.com that de los Rios then told the girl to remove her pants and underwear so he could see if she was telling the truth. The girl told investigators de los Rios "inspected" her with a flashlight and told her to pull down her blouse so he could check for bruising.

    The girl's older sister persuaded her to tell their parents, who then reported the incident to Miramar police, the station reported. 

    It's not clear if de los Rios knew the girl prior to the incident.  

    He was being held in lieu of $30,000 bail, the Sentinel reported. 

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  • Police: Adult 'provoked' small children to fight on camera

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

    Authorities in California are trying to identify the people responsible for a video that showed two young children fighting.

    In the video, titled "My nephew messed him up for picking on his home boy," two boys are seen kicking, punching and choking each other while an adult shooting the video eggs them on.

    An adult voice in the video can be heard saying, "Get off the ground, Charlie."


    The video ends when a child breaks up the fight.

    Someone found the video -- first posted on Facebook -- and reported it to the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department.

    Sheriff's officials said it appeared the kids were being "provoked by an adult."

    “What’s most disturbing is that there are adults nearby that are not stopping it,” department spokesperson Cindy Bachman, "The adults that are seen in the video are not setting any kind of example for these children."

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    "It’s our responsibility -- if we have information, if we know who these people are -- to call in."

    The location of the fight and the time it was taken were unknown.

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  • Bullied bus monitor case: 4 students get one-year suspensions

    AP

    In this image taken from AP video, bus monitor Karen Klein speaks during an interview June 21.

    One-year school suspensions were handed down Friday to four seventh-graders who were accused of bullying a bus monitor in Greece, N.Y.,  in a case that led to hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations to the 68-year-old woman.

    The Greece Central School District said the four boys and their parents agreed to the punishment, NBC station WHEC of Rochester reported.

    The bullying was captured on video, posted on the Internet and triggered widespread outrage, but was followed by an effort to raise a little money to send Karen Klein on a nice vacation. That might turn out to be a real nice vacation: By Friday afternoon, the “Lets Give Karen – The bus monitor – H Klein A Vacation!” campaign on Indiegogo.com, a site devoted to raising money for various causes, had raised $667,000.


    "This is definitely the highest-grossing and fastest-grossing campaign we've ever seen," Indiegogo.com spokesperson Rose Levy told msnbc.com last week.

    WHEC reported that during the one-year suspension, each student will attend an alternative program at the district’s reengagement center. They will also be required to complete 50 hours of community service with senior citizens and will also have to complete a formal program in bullying prevention, respect and responsibility. 

    Donations for bullied bus monitor soar 

    The YouTube video that started it all emerged in the middle of last week. It goes on for 10 minutes and shows the four boys repeatedly harassing Klein on the last day of school. 

    The online campaign raising money to send a bullied New York school bus monitor on vacation has surpassed its goal – by more than half a million dollars. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    All four students have since sent written apologies to Klein through the Greece Police Department. Klein has also met with some of their parents, but not the boys themselves.

    This article includes reporting from NBC station WHEC of Rochester, N.Y., and msnbc.com staff.

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  • Closer views of Colo. wildfire damage

    Brendan Smialowski / AFP - Getty Images

    Damage in the Mountain Shadow neighborhood, about 72 hours after wildfires swept through, waits to be cleaned in Colorado Springs, Colo. on June 29, 2012.

    Brendan Smialowski / AFP - Getty Images

    A sprinkler waters burnt grass in the Mountain Shadow neighborhood in Colorado Springs, Colo. on June 29, 2012.

    Carolyn Kaster / AP

    Burnt appliances sit abandoned in the Mountain Shadow neighborhood devastated by raging wildfires in Colorado Springs, Colo. On June 29, 2012.

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    A home damaged by fire stands in the Mountain Shadow neighborhood in Colorado Springs on June 29, 2012.

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  • Tornado mom Stephanie Decker meets Obama

    Pete Souza / The White House

    Walking tall: President Barack Obama welcomes Stephanie Decker, her husband Joe Decker, and children Reese and Dominic, to the Oval Office, June 29, 2012.

    Stephanie Decker, the Indiana mom who lost her legs shielding her two children from a deadly tornado, walked triumphantly across the Oval Office with President Obama on Friday -- thanks to her new prosthetics, and a personal invitation from the president.

    Decker was home with her kids on March 2 when a 175-mph tornado ripped through Kentucky and Indiana, killing 36 people. Taking shelter in the basement, she threw a blanket over her two children and shielded them from flying debris with her body as their house was torn apart by the storm. Her children made it through without a scratch, but Decker nearly bled to death and ended up losing both legs, one below the knee and the other just above.

    Decker has blogged for TODAY Moms throughout her recovery, and wrote about having a surprise phone conversation with the president back in April.

    On Friday she spoke with Obama about new prosthetic limb technology used for the military, the Associated Press reported, and a foundation that helps children with prosthetic limbs play sports. Decker and her family are huge baseball fans; for Mother's Day, the TODAY show surprised her with a day of fun in New York City, including makeovers and a chance to meet the Yankees.

    Decker, 37, walked arm-in-arm with Obama, along with her husband, Joe, 42, and their son Dominic, 9, and daughter Reese, 6.

    On her Facebook page Friday, Decker called the presidential visit a "phenomenal moment."

    "To have the president know and (take) the time to talk to us, it gives us motivation," she told The Associated Press.

    More: Find out about Stephanie Decker's fund for tornado victims, the Stephanie Decker Foundation.

    Related stories:

    Tornado mom at home: Humbled, healing, hopeful

    I want to play with my kids again

    Don't take a moment for granted

    You all inspire me

    Mother's Day surprise for Stephanie Decker

    Tornado mom's parent-to-parent chat with Obama

  • Justice Department won't pursue case against Holder

     

    Updated 4:!6 p.m. - As expected, the Justice has informed Congress that the U.S. attorney will not prosecute Attorney General Eric Holder for contempt, despite Thursday's House vote.

    "The longstanding position of the Department of Justice has been and remains that we will not prosecute an executive branch official under the contempt of Congress statute for withholding subpoenaed documents pursuant to a presidential assertion of executive privilege," says Deputy Attorney General James Cole in a letter to the House speaker, John Boehner.

    The letter notes that during the Reagan administration, DOJ took the position that the contempt statute could not constitutionally be applied to an official who asserts the president's claim of executive privilege. That policy was first articulated in a memo written by Ted Olson when he was at DOJ in 1984. 

    Cole writes that the position has been asserted several times since then, most recently during the Bush administration in 2008.

    He concludes by saying that the Justice Department has determined that Holder's response to the House committee subpoena "does not constitute a crime" and the Department will not refer the matter to a grand jury "or take any other action to prosecute the attorney general."

  • Parents of 'Bully' teen appeal dismissal of lawsuit over son's suicide

    Brian Ach / AP Images for National Center for Learning Disabilities

    David and Tina Long watch "Bully" director Lee Hirsch speak at the National Center for Learning Disabilities' 35th Annual Benefit Dinner at the Mandarin Hotel on April 18 in New York City.

    The parents of a Georgia teen whose suicide was included in the 2011 documentary “Bully” are appealing a judge's decision to dismiss their federal lawsuit against the Murray County school district, which they blame for his death through “deliberate indifference” toward years of bullying.

    The attorney for David and Tina Long says a notice of appeal was filed June 15, NBC station WRCB of Chattanooga, Tenn., reported.  The Longs’ son, Tyler, was found dead on Oct. 17, 2009, hanging by a belt tied to a closet shelf in his room.


    Tyler, who had Asperger’s syndrome, had been picked on since the fifth grade, the Longs claimed. He was unable to comprehend certain facial expressions and body language, so kids would take advantage of him, they said.

    The Chatsworth Police Department said it would not bring any criminal charges for events leading up to Tyler's death, WRCB reported in 2009.  

    The Longs in 2010 sued the school district and the principal of Murray County High School in Chatsworth, claiming Tyler killed himself because school officials failed to protect him from the bullying even though middle school and high school administrators had been told of the harassment and of Tyler’s medical conditions.

    On May 23, Judge Harold Murphy of the U.S. District Court in Rome, Ga., tossed out the suit in a 186-page ruling favoring the school district:

    "Even viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to Plaintiffs, the Court cannot find that Defendants' response was clearly unreasonable, caused additional harassment, or demonstrates an official decision by Defendants not to remedy disability harassment. Under those circumstances, the Court finds that Defendants' actions do not rise to the level of deliberate indifference."

    Tina Long  told WRCB after the ruling, "We're in shock. The judge seemed to agree with us, but has dismissed the case."

    The Longs this week told WRCB they are hoping to appeal, but say their ability to fight the case in court could be hampered by a lack of money.

    “Based on the ruling, even if a school is aware that a student is being severely abused on an ongoing basis and fails to protect him, they are immune from liability,” the Longs said in a prepared statement. “Parents all over the country need to know of this ruling. We, as parents, thought that the school was legally obligated to protect our kids, and we vow to try with everything that we have to make that happen."

    The Longs' lawyer, W. Winton Briggs, told WRCB in a statement:

    "This outrageous ruling and application of the law needs to be exposed. The decision is shocking in that the judge found that Tyler was the subject of ‘severe, nearly constant bullying.' The case came to rest on the exceedingly high standard constituting Deliberate Indifference, which needs to be reformed to protect our children.”

    Murray County school officials did not immediately respond to msnbc.com requests for comments.

    After Murphy’s ruling, defense attorney Martha Pearson said school officials were “extremely pleased with the result,” the Daily Citizen of Dalton reported.

    The film "Bully" features a town meeting hosted by WRCB in Chatsworth in 2009. The film also traces bullying incidents involving other families from around the United States.

    The Longs also took their anti-bullying case to national television, appearing with Ellen DeGeneres on “Ellen” in March with their twins, Troy and Teryn, who they said are still bullied at school even after Tyler’s death. “Bully” filmmaker Lee Hirsh also appeared.

     

     

    Msnbc.com's Jim Gold contributed to this article. Follow him on Facebook here.

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  • Former Connecticut principal accused of stealing money from student account

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

    A former Connecticut elementary school principal has been arrested, accused of taking more than $10,000 from students for her personal use.

    Police charged Maria Moulthrop, 51, the former principal of Hopeville Elementary School in Waterbury, Conn., with second-degree larceny on Thursday. She's accused of spending $10,186.21 from an unauthorized school account on personal expenses, according to a Waterbury police report.

    The parent-teacher organization account, organized by Moulthrop, was funded by selling $1 snacks, including Rice Krispy treats, ice-cream sandwiches and Slushies, to students at lunchtime, forbidden by a school-district policy. She would also sell the snacks at school fundraisers. 


    Waterbury Police Department

    Former elementary school principal Maria Moultrhop was arrested after the school discovered she set up a fake account, funded by money from students and going on a personal shopping spree.

    The police investigation found that, unlike with other legitimate PTO accounts at the school, Moulthrop had the sole authority over how the money was spent.  A forensic audit on the account determined Moulthrop used the money to buy a flat-screen television, thousands of dollars in gift cards, an iPod, a digital camera, a backpack leaf blower and groceries, and to get her car fixed.

    Moulthrop’s lawyer, Rachel Baird, told NBCConnecticut.com that much of the money was used on school-related expenses.

    “She would use some of the money to reward students who had good attendance records," Baird said. “She would buy new books for the students because she knew that encouraged their reading.”  

    Moulthrop resigned late last year after she was accused of inflating students' scores on standardized tests. During the state investigation, school officials uncovered questionable expenditures made while school wasn’t in session without permission from the Board of Education, so they contacted police.

    Moulthrop was released Thursday on a $50,000 bond. She is scheduled to appear in court July 9.

    This article includes reporting by msnbc.com's Andrew Mach and NBCConnecticut.com.

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  • Vietnamese immigrant charged with helping al-Qaida in Yemen

    A Vietnamese immigrant has been charged in New York over an alleged role in helping al-Qaida in Yemen.

    Minh Quang Pham was arrested in Britain. He is accused of traveling to Yemen to train with members of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, or AQAP. 

    Pham is also accused of helping the group with its online propaganda efforts. Investigators said he was in Yemen from December 2010 through July 2011.


    See the original report at NBCNewYork.com

    Sources familiar with the case said he met with numerous leaders of AQAP in Yemen, including the terror group's then leader, Anwar al-Awlaki, and Samir Khan, editor of its English-language magazine "Inspire," and took a loyalty oath. Both Americans-turned-terror leaders were killed in a drone strike last September.

    "The defendant not only pledged an oath to al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, and received military training from AQAP, he also helped design and disseminate its propaganda,"New York FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Janice K. Fedarcyk said.

    Security officials have said AQAP has become the leading overseas terror threat to the U.S. 

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    Two underwear bomb plots, including one that targeted a Detroit-bound jetliner, as well as a plot to bomb cargo planes in 2010, originated in Yemen.

    As for Pham, the court papers said he played a role in creating online propaganda for AQAP. He is charged with conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization. 

    Jonathan Dienst is WNBC's chief investigative reporter. Shimon Prokupecz is WNBC's investigative producer.

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  • Congress sends student loan and transportation package to Obama

     

    Updated 2:12 p.m. - Congress ended months of partisan bickering on Friday by passing and sending to President Barack Obama a comprehensive extension of highway and infrastructure projects, along with a one-year extension of low student loan rates that were set to double.

    The House voted 373 to 52 to approve a $120 billion, 27-month bill to fund highway projects. Attached to that bill was the student loan extension, which prevented rates from doubling from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent on July 1.

    The Senate approved the package shortly thereafter in a 74-19 vote. The legislation now heads to the White House for the president's signature.

    The package lumps together some of the biggest stumbling blocks to beguile lawmakers in the past few months. Squabbling over how to finance each priority had divided the Republican-controlled House and the Democratic-run Senate.

    Republicans had also insisted on including a measure to move the Keystone XL oil pipeline forward. President Obama and Democrats opposed it, though, and it was ultimately omitted from today’s bill.

    Instead, Republicans were able to use funds set aside for "beautification, bike paths, and sidewalk lighting" for higher priority infrastructure projects such as the national highway system instead.  They were also able to keep funding at current levels.

    The package also cuts the average review and permitting process for new infrastructure projects in half, done mostly by streamlining environmental reviews so they can run concurrently, something for which Republicans had also fought.

  • Attorney asks for day off trial to enter Ernest Hemingway look-a-like contest

    Andy Newman / Getty Images North America

    Charles Bicht is congratulated by previous winners of the annual Ernest Hemingway look-alike contest in Key West, Fla., on July 24, 2010.

    A Florida attorney representing a man accused in a murder-for-hire plot filed for a trial suspension for an unusual reason: He wanted a day off to participate in an Ernest Hemingway look-alike contest.

    Frank Louderback, of St. Petersburg, asked U.S. District Court Judge Steven Merryday to suspend the trial on Friday, July 20, so he could drive to Key West to participate in the annual competition, The Miami Herald reported.

    Louderback represents Jerry Bottorff, who's accused of conspiracy to commit murder for hire in the 2007 killing of 37-year-old Thomas Lee Sehorne. 


    The Herald reported that Bottorff and his wife, Christie, who is the victim's widow, and alleged gunman Luis Lopez will stand tria starting July 9. 

    Louderback's plan was to be in Key West on July 21 for the crowning of the winner who most resembled the influential American author who penned "For Whom The Bell Tolls," "The Old Man and the Sea," and other works of fiction.  

    He has already paid non-refundable deposits for hotel rooms for friends and family members, according to the Herald.

    Judges have been known not to hold court on Fridays during lengthy trials, the Tampa Bay Times reported. But Judge Merryday wasn't persuaded by Louderback's request.

    Louderback told msnbc.com that he thought his motion had a chance of being granted.

    "Instead he came with his literary gem," Louderback said. 

    Merryday wrote: "Between a murder-for-hire trial and an annual look-alike contest, surely Hemingway, a perfervid admirer of grace under pressure, would choose the trial." 

    He quoted poet Dorothy Parker, who once wrote that Hemingway "works like hell and through it."

    After quoting from "The Sun Also Rises," Merryday made his decision: "Best of luck to counsel in next year’s contest. The motion is denied."

    In response, Louderback told The Times, "It'll give me another year to get older, fatter and grayer."

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    The Times reported that Louderback has already competed in the contest three times, which is part of Key West's annual Hemingway Days festival. The festival pays homage to the Nobel Prize winner, who lived and wrote in Key West during the 1930s.

    Last year, more than 120 competitors participated in the contest.

    Louderback told msnbc.com he was "disappointed" by Merryday's ruling but will still keep his place in the contest in case he can make it. 

    His son is a pilot and had offered to fly Louderback to Key West in case he gets out of court early.

    "I'll ask them (contest officials) to put me in the back somewhere even though it's done alphabetically," Louderback said. "That may buy me an hour or so."

    A call to Merryday's office was not immediately returned.

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  • LA police: 'Teardrop Rapist,' wanted since 1996, may have struck again

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

    Police say a man dubbed the "Teardrop Rapist," who is linked to at least 35 attacks on women in the southern Los Angeles area, may have struck again.

    Since attacks began in 1996, multiple composite sketches of the suspect show a changing face, but his mode of operation hasn’t changed, authorities said.

    "He will approach them. He tries to make conversation with them. He'll pull out a weapon,” Los Angeles police Detective Jesse Alvarado said.


    Investigators say the man strikes in the early morning hours, often before the sun comes up. 

    The most recent attack happened 5:30 a.m. June 15 in southeast of downtown LA. 

    Read more, see video on the Teardrop Rapist on NBCLosAngeles.com

    A 29-year-old woman was approached by a man who attempted to converse with her and then produced a handgun and forced her to walk into an alley where he attempted to sexually assault her, police said.

    A vehicle came into the alley and the suspect fled on foot.

    "He is the type of person that will flee the minute he believes he may be seen by someone," Alvarado said.

    Detectives said the sexual assaults have happened across a broad swath of the city -- within six police divisions and in an unincorporated area. Many of the incidents have occured in South Los Angeles and Koreatown.  

    In 33 of the 35 cases, Latina women have been the victims.  

    Watch US News crime videos on msnbc.com

    In April, the Los Angeles Police Department released nine different sketches of men described by victims in similar attacks. Many of the sketches show one or two teardrop tattoos under one eye.  

    At that time, police said the most recent assault was in November 2011. The new incident has neighbors frightened.  

    "I feel scared especially since we have a lot of little kids on this block," says Margarita Martinez, a South Los Angeles resident.  

    Martinez lives only a block away from where the suspect is believed to have hit last. Officers say the rapist has assaulted girls and women ranging from 14 to 41 years old.  

    "Maybe I'll carry a shank or pepper spray," Martinez said.  

    Detectives said the rapist is leaving behind DNA that has already linked him to 10 sexual assaults. They are hopeful word of mouth will lead to a break in the case.  

    "This individual is known by someone in the community. It's going to take someone to say this does look like my neighbor," Alvarado said.

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  • Five killed, 1 injured after tow truck and car collide in Pennsylvania

    NBCPhiladelphia.com

    A car and tow truck collided in Lehigh County, Pa., killing five people. The passenger in the tow truck survived and was taken to the hospital.

    Five people were killed and another was injured when a tow truck and a car collided Thursday afternoon in eastern Pennsylvania, police said.

    State Police Cpl. Mark Rowlands said the car ran a stop sign and was hit by a tow truck on a rural road in Heidelberg Township, about 15 miles outside of Allentown, Pa. All four people in the car – three males and one female – and the man driving the tow truck died in the collision, which happened around 2:35 p.m. Thursday, according to a police press release.

    A male passenger in the tow truck suffered non-life threatening injuries and was taken to Lehigh Valley Hospital-Cedar Crest.

    Images of the collision aftermath show the car badly mangled beneath the tow truck, which was hauling a box truck at the time of the crash.


    Police said the vehicles crashed into a utility pole, causing more than 200 customers of PPL, a utility provider in Allentown, to lose power.

    PPL spokesman Michael Wood told msnbc.com the routine outage allowed rescue crews to remove bodies from the vehicles and clean up downed power lines.

    Power was fully restored about six hours after the crash. 

    A spokesman for the Lehigh County coroner’s office told msnbc.com Friday that officials were still trying to identify victims of the crash and contact their families.  

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  • Alleged Fort Bragg shooter faced court martial, discharge, officials say

    The Army soldier who allegedly shot and killed his battalion commander at Fort Bragg, N.C., on Thursday was facing court martial and possible discharge from the Army on criminal charges, U.S. military officials told NBC News. The Army specialist, whose identity has not been released, was also shot and critically wounded, and is not expected to survive.

    According to officials, the specialist walked up to his battalion commander, a Lieutenant Colonel, and without warning pulled a pistol and shot the commander three times in the head and twice in the chest. Other soldiers rushed the shooter, who was shot in the head in the ensuing struggle and critically wounded, officials said. A third soldier also suffered a minor gunshot wound.


    Officials said the shooter had been an Army specialist for 8 years, and was accused of stealing a tool box worth $1,700 from Fort Bragg motor pool, and was in line for a special court martial on criminal charges. That specialist had also been a member of the security detail in Afghanistan for the officer killed Thursday.

    The soldier shot his commander during a safety brief – in this case, a 10- to 15-minute lecture about staying safe for the upcoming Fourth of July weekend.

    “This is a tragedy for our community,” Col. Kevin Arata, spokesman for Fort Bragg, said at a press conference. “We don’t yet know the reasons for the shooting, but are working with the unit and the affected families to help them through this difficult period.”

    Special agents from the Army’s Criminal Investigation team were on site Thursday evening.

    Msnbc.com's Isolde Raftery contributed to this report.

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  • UK won't extradite sex offender accused of raping, molesting girls in US

    Interpol via AP

    Britain's High Court on Thursday blocked a U.S. bid to extradite Shawn Sullivan to Minnesota, saying the state's restrictive treatment program for sex offenders was too draconian.

    LONDON -- Minnesota prosecutors' efforts to have a convicted sexual predator brought to trial in the United States were thwarted on Thursday when Britain's High Court dropped extradition proceedings, saying the U.S. hadn't guaranteed the suspect would be kept out a program some deem draconian. 

    Shawn Sullivan, 43, is accused of molesting two girls and raping a third in the 1990s in Minnesota. Sullivan fled the United States and eventually ended up in London, where authorities caught up to him two years ago. 


    Judges Alan Moses and David Eady said in a ruling finalized Thursday that if Sullivan were returned to the U.S., he could face a real risk of being placed in the state's civil commitment program -- which provides for the indefinite detention of people found to be sexually dangerous -- and suffer "a flagrant denial of his rights." 

    'Slap in the face'
    One of Sullivan's accusers called the decision "a slap in the face." 

    "That whole argument is just irrational," Jessica Schaefer, 29, told The Associated Press. Sullivan allegedly molested her and her cousin when they were both 11.

    "It's just another loophole in the justice system that caters to the criminals. All they have to do is find a loophole or a technicality and they walk. ... "I feel like I'm just pleading for justice, and I'm not getting anywhere." 

    UK court backs extradition of Assange in sex case

    The AP does not identify alleged victims of sexual assault without their consent. The Minnesota women Sullivan is accused of attacking as children agreed to let the AP use their names. 

    Two Minnesota prosecutors in the counties where Sullivan faces charges defended their decision not to guarantee Sullivan would be kept out of the program, saying it was "not in the interests of public safety." 

    "I think it's way beyond reasonableness for them to interfere in how we conduct business," said Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman. 

    Irish conviction
    Sullivan escaped to Ireland as prosecutors prepared to file charges, and while staying there was convicted of sexually assaulting two 12-year-old girls. Sullivan, a dual U.S.-Irish citizen, moved to London using an Irish passport that spelled his last name in Gaelic as "O'Suilleabhain." 

    The British judges made clear in an earlier decision that they would have supported Sullivan's extradition had it not been for the sex treatment program, which they described as among the toughest in the U.S. 

    America's only female chain gang toils in Phoenix

    The program, which began in its current form in the mid-1990s, allows courts to commit a person for sex offender treatment if a judge decides the person is sexually psychopathic or sexually dangerous. As of April 1, 641 people were in Minnesota's program. 

    The program faces constitutional challenges by some who say it holds people indefinitely after their prison sentences. One 64-year-old man received a provisional discharge earlier this year when he was allowed to move into a Minneapolis-area halfway house. Only one other person was ever released from the program, and was soon taken back into custody on a violation. 

    The justices in London outlined a litany of concerns in their June 20 decision, noting offenders don't have to be mentally ill to be committed; their offenses don't have to be recent; and in some cases, they don't even have to have been convicted of a crime. 

    UK judge Moses said on Thursday that "the United States will not provide an assurance," thus allowing Sullivan's appeal, according to The Independent newspaper.

    "The appellant will be discharged from the proceedings," the judge said, according to the paper.

    'Open the floodgates'
    Officials with the Minnesota Department of Human Services said they don't know of any instances where someone without a criminal conviction has been placed in the program, though they acknowledged it's theoretically possible. 

    Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom, who charged Sullivan with molesting the 11-year-old girls, said authorities hadn't decided whether to pursue civil commitment. However, he said making such a guarantee "could open the floodgates." 

    "It's a very slippery slope to go down once you start making agreements," Backstrom said.

    NJ man returning to stand trial over girl's killing

    Peter Wold, Sullivan's criminal defense attorney in Minnesota, said the British judges balked at the prospect of indefinite detention. "That offended them, and it should offend a lot of people, to have the prospect of people being committed with no end in sight," he said. 

    Human rights concerns periodically complicate efforts by U.S. prosecutors to extradite suspects. For example, European Union countries typically won't extradite suspects who could face capital punishment to the U.S. unless American prosecutors give assurances they won't seek the death penalty. 

    Still, Bruce Zagaris, a Washington, D.C.,-based attorney specializing in international criminal law, said this was one of the first cases he had seen in which the U.K. has said no to extradition. 

    "I think foreign courts no longer give us the benefit of the doubt," Zagaris said.

    Cops hunt 'predator' who killed six-year-old girl, dumped her body in Utah canal

    Sullivan still faces a civil case in Minnesota, and Michael Hall III, the attorney representing the three alleged victims, said he expects that to go forward. He said significant punitive damages are possible. 

    Sullivan's attorney in the civil case was out of the office Thursday and did not return a message. 

    Hannah Treziok, who was 14 when she says Sullivan raped her, said she was disappointed with the British court's ruling but that she had prepared herself for this possibility. 

    "The reality is, we, the victims, have for 18 years been fighting the good fight, and there is no shame in that," she said. "Even though it is not the exact outcome that we desired ... we brought him out of the shadows and exposed him for who and what he really is." 

    The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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  • Report: US student fighting for life after chimps attack at South Africa's Jane Goodall Institute

    Erin Conway-Smith/AP, file

    Chimpanzees sit in an enclosure at the Chimp Eden rehabilitation center, near Nelspruit, South Africa in this Feb 2011 photo.

    An American studying chimpanzee behavior in South Africa was “fighting for his life” after he was attacked by two of the animals, according to a report.

    The chimpanzees dragged the man for more than a mile, under a fence and into their enclosure at Jane Goodall Institute Chimp Eden near Nelspruit, The Telegraph newspaper reported.


    The paper said the victim of the attack had not been named. However, it said it understood he was a “young university student from the United States who had been observing the animals at the reserve for several weeks.”

    Jeffrey Wicks, a spokesman for private ambulance firm Netcare911, told the Telegraph that witnesses said the man was leading a group of tourists when the attack happened.

    "A ranger at a chimpanzee sanctuary near Nelspruit is fighting for his life after he was attacked by two frenzied animals while leading a tour group at the park this afternoon," he added. "According to eyewitnesses, two chimpanzees grabbed the man by his feet and pulled him under the perimeter fence and into the enclosure."

    Armed escorts for paramedics
    Paramedics needed armed escorts as they went in to treat the victim, NBC’s Rohit Kachroo reported. It was unclear whether this caused any delay.

    The victim was stabilized at the scene and taken by ambulance to a private hospital in Nelspruit, NBC said. There have been no similar attacks at the reserve, which opened more than six years ago.

    David Oosthuizen, Jane Goodall Institute executive director, confirmed the reserve was on lock down following the incident, The Telegraph said.

    NBC's Meredith Vieira sits down with Charla Nash, who recently underwent a face transplant that's helped her regain the life she had before being brutally attacked by a chimp.

    "We understand that the gentleman is stable and we really feel for him," he told the paper. "This has been very upsetting for everyone – it is just horrific. We are an organization that's respected worldwide for the work we do so anything like this is very bad."

    Victim of chimpanzee attack shares progress, optimism

    He added that some of the animals kept there had been abused before they were rescued and taken to the institute.

    "These chimpanzees have six times the strength of a human being so you have to respect them and we certainly do," he said.

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  • Your family is probably losing $155K from 401(k) plan, and why new rules won't help

    A two-income American family with an average income that dutifully invests in a 401(k) plan using typical strategies will lose $155,000 – or about 30 percent of what they should have saved for retirement -- to Wall Street fees, according to a study by an economic justice advocacy organization. 

    The Demos study, released last month, is just the latest in a long string of research showing 401(k) plans are a better deal for Wall Street than for you. Many show that people lose about one-third of their retirement money to fees that they don't even know they're paying. The actual lifetime impact of fees is a matter of widespread debate, but it shouldn’t be. In one dramatic example, John Bogle, the inventor of index funds, demonstrated how fees can consume 80 percent of an investor's money through something he’d dubbed “the tyranny of compounding fees.” (Click on the link to see his proof.)

    But some relief may be on the way. Regulations first set in motion in in 2007 (!) will finally kick in next week. Soon, 401(k) statements will include a fact box -- similar to the new info-boxes on credit card bills -- that lists the fee rates (“expense ratios’) associated with fund selections and shows in dollars how much the investor paid.


    The disclosure box is a welcome change, but it's probably not going to make much of a difference, laments Robert Hiltonsmith, author of the Demos study.

    "It will be underwhelming from a sticker shock point of view. It will not have the effect the doomsayers predict," Hiltonsmith said. The dollar amounts shown will reflect annual amounts, not the real harm from loss of compounding growth, he said.  A 27-year-old with $10,000 invested in a mutual paying a 1 percent expense ratio will pay only about $100 in fees in a year, a number that will hardly inspire shopping around, Hiltonsmith figures.

    But that benign-sounding 1 percent annual fee is the source of most 401(k) folly. Compounded, it can result in loss of one-third of retirement savings, or more.

    Doing the math to determine real investing costs from fees is tricky. It involves a long series of assumptions on factors so individualized that no 401(k) projection model is easily generalized.  Instead, the Demos study and others like it are merely "for instance ..." examples.

    An obfuscator's dream
    Wall Street protectors use this to their advantage. The Investment Company Institute, which is critical of the Demos study and others like it, uses its own calculations to claim the average investor pays only $248 annually in 401(k) fees and $20,000 during their lifetime. Even that conservative estimate should be alarming, when the average 401(k) balances is $75,000, according to Fidelity Investments, and those close to retirement (ages 55-64) have an average balance of $100,000.

    It doesn’t have to be hard to see how recurring fees devour much of your 401(k) money. Here's a simple, if slightly imprecise, way to think about what happens when someone takes 1 percent of your money every year.  If you had a dollar, and someone took one penny every year for 30 years, you'd only have 70 cents at the end. That's what investing in a 401(k) mutual fund does to your money. These fee losses are obscured by additional contributions you make, and by market ups and downs – complex 401(k) statements are an obfuscator's dream -- but there's no way around it: Fees are killing most investors' returns.

    (If you are a stickler for math, more precise calculations will appear at the bottom of this column. They usually just muddy the conversation, however.)

    How does Wall Street get away with this? Obscurity sure helps, but there is another element of human nature that the system was born to exploit and that most people seem incapable of avoiding: Behavioral economists call it "hyperbolic discounting."  In short, Wall Street does a much better job of thinking about both time and money than you do.

    Try this experiment, now oft repeated in the behaviorist world: If I offered you $50 today or $100 one year from now, which would you choose?  Most take the $50 and run.  Now, let's do the same exercise with a slight adjustment.  If I offered you $50 five years from now, or $100 six years from now, which would you pick? Almost certainly the $100.   But notice: if I asked you the same question in five years, you'd probably take the $50 again.  That’s a funny way to think about money (the technical term is “dynamic inconsistency”).

    The most obvious lesson from hyperbolic discounting is that people's choices are often focused on immediate gratification.  But the other side of that coin, behaviorists tell us, is that people are too quick to discount rewards in the future and, to our point, to discount the impact of future financial pain. In other words, telling someone they might be missing $150,000 from their retirement account 30 years from now means almost nothing to them – they get angrier about a $35 overdraft fee taken last week from their bank account.  Wall Street's genius is this: By stealing people's money from the future, they avoid consumers' wrath.

    Perhaps it's possible to educate all Americans on the tyranny of compounding investment fees; and creating a fact box on consumers' quarterly statements that inspires them to shop around for lower-cost mutual funds is a step in that direction. But behavioral economists say that's highly unlikely to make much of a difference.  Better to create a system that by default enters workers into low-cost, relatively safe investment vehicles and let them pick riskier, more expensive options if they wish, Hiltonsmith says.

    “Even if there was more sticker shock, (workers) wouldn’t know what to,” he said. “The way things are now, we’re asking workers to take on a full-time job, to be financial experts.”

    Anyone who thinks the current system is working is doing an awful lot of hyperbolic discounting when it comes to society’s future.  Perhaps the most sobering fact in the Demos study, one that Hiltonsmith downplayed, is that his "perfect" investing couple had only $350,000 in their 401(k) at the end of 40 years. Does anyone think Mr. and Mrs. Perfect can live for 20 years on $350,000?  And these two did everything right -- they invested between 5 percent and 9 percent of their income every year, starting at age 25. They never stopped making contributions -- which nearly everyone does during job changes or tough times -- and they never made a withdrawal, which roughly one-third of investors do. Still, they were left with just $175,000 each at age 65.  Once and for all, that should expose the dirty little secret of 401(k) plans:

    The math doesn't work.

    Now, onto the math assumptions from above.  For Demos’ model, Hiltonsmith created an imaginary couple who worked from 1966-2005. Each earned the median income for their gender during that time (a range from $50,000 to $70,000 total, annually) and socked away a slowly increasing amount of their income during that time, starting at 5 percent and ending at 9 percent. Half their money was invested in a stock fund, half in a bond fund. Average growth and average published stock and bond fund fees from 2010 were applied to their accounts, and average trading costs were also deducted. No employee match was considered in the calculation, given the wide variety of matching programs – and the fact that many firms suspended matching contributions during the recession. Of course, the couple is a pure abstraction -- there were no 401(k) accounts in the 1960s.  But it takes this kind of modeling to create a hypothetical that covers an investor's entire work life, and their potential lifetime loss from fees.

    As for my "one penny" calculation: Taking one penny every year from a dollar is not the same as taking 1 percent, but it's close.  Because the initial dollar amount drops with each deduction, each 1 percent annual hit is slightly less. To wit, 1 percent of 99 cents is less than 1 percent of 100 cents.  Do the math, and you'll find taking one percent of someone's money every year for 30 years is the equivalent of taking 26.03 percent. Still quite a lot of money for nothing.

    What should you do with this information? Absent a better idea, put all your 401(k) money in an index fund, which will have fees that are 70 percent to 90 percent lower than standard mutual funds.  And watch your next quarterly statement for those depressing fee boxes. Most employers have two months to comply with the rules that take effect July 1, so you won’t start seeing the fee information until your first statement after Aug. 10.

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