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  • California bill would punish student-teacher romances

    Debbie Noda / Zuma Press

    Enochs High School student Jordan Powers, 18, and James Hooker, 41, a teacher who resigned from the school talk about their relationship on Feb. 28.

    A California lawmaker wants to make it a crime for a teacher to have a romance with a student, even the pupil is over 18.

    Assemblywoman Kristin Olsen, a Republican from Modesto, introduced on Tuesday Assembly Bill 1861, which would make it a felony for a teacher to have an inappropriate relationship with a student. Additionally, the bill seeks to strip teachers of their pensions, if convicted of a work-related felony.

    The bill is a response to the case of Modesto high school teacher James Hooker, 41, who resigned from his teaching position in February over his relationship with student Jordan Powers, now 18.


    Hooker and Powers have defended their relationship, appearing on national talk shows to claim their romance did not turn sexual until Powers was of age. Hooker met Powers during her freshman year at Enochs High School. They now live together.

    "It is an outrage that a high school teacher would engage in a romantic relationship with a student," said Olsen in a statement. "We need to do everything we can to deter this behavior, and to ensure schools are a safe and secure learning environment for our children."

    The bill follows the lead of 23 other states by making it a felony for such relationships, according to Olsen's office.

    Attempts by msnbc.com to contact Olsen for comment were unsuccessful on Tuesday. 

    Currently in California, a teacher can only be charged with a felony for engaging in a relationship with a student who is under 18 years old. Bill 1861 applies to elementary, middle, and secondary schools.

    The student's mother, Tammie Powers, said she supported the bill and wanted to see similar legislation passed in every state. She appeared with Olsen in Sacramento during a press conference to announce the bill. 

    "As parents, we send our children to school with the expectation that they're going to be safe, they're going to receive a good education," Powers told The Sacramento Bee. "Not that they're going to be pursued."

    The bill would not affect her daughter’s case, she said, which is still under investigation by the Modesto police.

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  • Parents protest 4-day suspensions for fifth-graders who shared Nasonex

    Georgia’s largest school district may reconsider four-day suspensions handed to two fifth-graders who shared prescription Nasonex that didn’t belong to them, according to NBC station WXIA.

    Parents of the two students in the Gwinnett County Public Schools, which serves the metro Atlanta area, protested that the penalty for sharing the allergy medicine was too harsh. However, school officials say a policy requiring that parents arrange the administering of prescription drugs through a school clinic is for the safety of all students.


    "There should be some consequence; we just think a four-day suspension is not what's best," Marita Ballard-Murphy, the mother of one of the students, told WXIA. "My daughter certainly doesn't think nasal spray is a bad drug. She thinks it's helpful."

    See the WXIA video

    The mother of the other child called the incident an innocent mistake.

    "They're young," said Tanthia Reid. "It was purely innocent. They share lipstick."

    Although the school district stood by its policy, officials met with the parents Monday and said they might reconsider the girls’ penalties, WXIA reported.

    On Friday, amid high pollen counts in the Atlanta area, Ballard-Murphy’s daughter brought eye drops and her mother’s expired bottle of Nasonex to Sycamore Elementary School.  When the girl saw her best friend sneezing and sniffling, she shared the nasal spray.

    A teacher found the girls with the medicine and determined it did not belong to either of them.

    They were sent home with four-day suspensions, the minimum penalty for violating the school policy.

    Ballard-Murphy says her daughter had perfect attendance; Reid said her daughter is and A and B student.

    Jorge Quintana, Gwinnett schools spokesman, told msnbc.com: "You don’t know who’s allergic to what. What if a third or fourth student were given the medicine and had an adverse reaction? The rules are in place for a reason.”

    This article includes reporting by NBC station WXIA and msnbc.com's Jim Gold.

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  • SAT, ACT organizers crack down on cheating

    Students taking SAT and ACT college entrance exams this fall will have to submit photo IDs with their applications after a widespread cheating scandal at a number of New York high schools, officials announced Tuesday.

    The security change is one of a number of initiatives nationwide following the arrest of 20 current or former high school students accused in a cheating scheme. Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice said some of the students were paid as much as $3,500 to stand in for other students on the SAT exam, a key barometer for many colleges determining admissions.

    "Those who try to cheat will be caught. A fake ID simply won't work to game the system anymore," Rice told Newsday during a press conference on Tuesday. "The problem is that we have kids who think cheating pays ... We have to disabuse them of that idea. If we don't, they're going to be the corrupt -- fill in the blank -- politicians, CEOs, of the future."


    She said 50 students were likely involved in the New York scheme, but she only had evidence to arrest 20. The prosecution cases against the 20 students are still pending.

    Students surrender in SAT cheating scandal in NY

    Rice complained that security procedures were too lax, and was particularly incensed when she learned that one male student allegedly stood in for a female on one occasion. She said students have easy access to phony identification cards, making it difficult for administrators at testing sites to determine if a student is actually who he or she claims to be.

    "These reforms close a gaping hole in standardized test security that allowed students to cheat and steal admissions offers and scholarship money from kids who play by the rules," Rice said.

    During the 2010-11 school year, the SAT was administered to nearly 3 million students worldwide; 1.6 million students took the ACT in 2011.

    "We are committed to ensuring that every student has the opportunity to pursue higher education," Kathryn Juric, vice president of SAT at the College Board, told Newsday.  

    'Spot checks'
    The new testing requirements include making students upload a photograph of themselves when they register for the SAT or ACT. Those unable to upload a photo will be permitted to mail in a photo, which will be scanned by the testing agency.

    Then, an admission ticket into the testing site, containing the scanned photo, will be mailed to the student.

    The photo will not only be printed on the admission ticket, but on the test site roster, and can be checked against the photo ID a student provides at the test center. That photo will be attached to students' scores as they are reported to high schools and colleges.

    Other changes include checking student IDs more frequently at test centers; IDs will be checked when students enter a test site, and whenever they re-enter the test room after breaks, and again when the answer sheets are collected.

    Testing companies also may conduct "spot checks" with enhanced security at random test locations, or where cheating is suspected. Proctors also will receive additional training to help them identify cheaters and high school and college officials will receive more information about reporting suspected cheating to testing companies.

    A spokesman for The College Board noted that some of the security enhancements were developed in consultation with a security firm run by former FBI Director Louis Freeh.

    "By implementing these changes, the College Board and ETS can maintain an honest and fair testing environment for the millions of students who take the SAT each year as part of the college admission process," said a statement issued by the College Board.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • JetBlue flight diverts following captain's erratic behavior

    Police and medics removed the captain from a JetBlue plane after he exhibited erratic behavior, forcing passengers to detain him. NBC's Tom Costello reports.

    A JetBlue flight from John F. Kennedy Airport to Las Vegas was diverted after the pilot began behaving erratically, pounding on the door of the cockpit and yelling about threats from Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan, authorities and passengers said.

    Flight 191 left New York City at about 7:30 a.m. Tuesday with 135 passengers on board, and at about 10 a.m. the plane was diverted to Amarillo, Texas.

    Read the original report on NBCNewYork.com.

    JetBlue said in a statement that the plane was diverted "for a medical situation involving the captain."

    Tony Antolino, a 40-year-old executive for a security firm, said the captain walked to the back of the plane, that he seemed disoriented and agitated, then began yelling about an unspecified threat linked to Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan.

    "They're going to take us down, they're taking us down, they're going to take us down. Say the Lord's prayer, say the Lord's prayer," the captain screamed, according to Antolino.

    "He was irate," said passenger Josh Redick. "He was spouting off about Afghanistan and souls and al-Qaida."

    The Federal Aviation Administration said the co-pilot became concerned about the captain's "erratic behavior during the flight" and locked the cockpit door while the pilot was outside.

    Antolino, who said he sat in the 10th row, said he and three others tackled the captain as he ran for the cockpit door, pinned him and held him down while the plane landed.

    "That's how we landed," he said. "There were four of us on top of him. ... Everybody else kind of took a seat and that's how we landed."

    He was taken to a medical facility after the plane landed. 

    More on Overhead Bin

  • Officer suspended for saying 'Act like a Thug Die like one!' in Martin case

    A 13-year veteran of the New Orleans Police Department has been suspended without pay for his comment “Act like a Thug Die like one!” in response to a story about slain Florida teen Trayvon Martin.

    Jason Giroir is under investigation by the New Orleans Public Integrity Bureau after a remark was posted on WWLTV.com’s website in response to an article about a rally supporting Martin. The slaying of the 17-year-old, who was shot by a neighborhood watch captain, has drawn nationwide attention.


    Giroir has admitted to posting the comment last week. "His statement is, 'Yes, I did it’," Giroir’s lawyer, Eric Hessler, told The Times-Picayune. "He certainly didn't mean it as a racial comment, as an offensive comment, although it came out that way. He acknowledges he should have chosen better words."

    Attempts by msnbc.com to reach Hessler for comment were unsuccessful Tuesday. A woman answering telephone calls at his office said Hessler was in court and would return calls later in the day.

    New Orleans Superintendent Ronal Serpas announced Giroir’s suspension on Monday.

    "To say that I’m angry is an understatement. I’m furious," said Serpas in a statement on Monday. "Let me be clear, the hard working men and women of the NOPD do not condone such statements. Giroir by those statements has embarrassed this department with insensitive, harmful and offensive comments. The New Orleans Police Department specifically condemns these comments, and comments like this will not be tolerated in the New Orleans Police Department."

    New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu also issued a statement supporting Serpas' action against Giroir, adding, "The people of New Orleans and my administration will not tolerate this reckless and offensive behavior. I condemn his statements in the strongest of terms."

    The New Orleans police force created a policy regarding Internet posts a few years ago, which states: “Employees shall not post any material on the Internet -- including but not limited to photos, videos, word documents etc. -- that violates any local, state or federal law and/or embarrasses, humiliates, discredits, or harms the operation and reputation of the police department or any of its members,” WWLTV.com reported.

    The probe comes less than a month after Giroir was involved in a deadly shootout on March 1 that is still under investigation.

    Giroir made a traffic stop that escalated to a gunfight that left one man dead and two officers injured. Giroir did not fire any shots and was unharmed, but a bullet hit the Taser he was carrying during the shootout. 

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  • Geraldo Rivera hedges his apology for hoodie remark in Trayvon Martin's death

    Updated at 4:49 p.m. ET: Fox News host Geraldo Rivera apologized Tuesday — sort of — for saying Trayvon Martin's hoodie had as much to do with his death as George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch captain who shot the teen.

    "Heard petition demands my apology to Trayvon's parents," he said on his Facebook page. "Save effort: I deeply apologize for any hurt I caused — that is not my goal or intent."


    Rivera elaborated on his thoughts in an email to Politico.com, offering an apology while also noting that earlier an unnamed "prominent black conservative" had commented on "my 'very practical and potentially life-saving campaign urging black and Hispanic parents not to let their children go around wearing hoodies.'"

    Then Tuesday afternoon, Rivera made it clear on his radio show that he wasn't apologizing for linking Martin's hoodie to his slaying, Erik Wemple, a media blogger for The Washington Post, reported.

    "I apologize for hurting people's feelings. I don't back down from my message," Rivera said. " ... Don't be a 911 call waiting to happen."

    Last week on "Fox & Friends," Rivera stated that "I think the hoodie is as much responsible for Trayvon Martin’s death as George Zimmerman was."

    Rivera later acknowledged that his own son was "ashamed" of him for stating that.

    Rivera insisted he was only trying to protect children. “I remain absolutely convinced of what I said about asking for trouble," he stated. "There’s trouble enough for minority boys and young men not to provoke mad responses from paranoid jerk offs."

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  • Virginia man gets extensive face transplant after gun accident

    Doctors at University of Maryland perform their first full-face transplant on gunshot victim. WRC's Erika Gonzalez reports.

    University of Maryland Medical Center

    Patient Richard Lee Norris after his face transplant.

     

    For the past 15 years Richard Lee Norris has lived as a recluse, his face covered by a mask after being shattered in a gun accident. By day he hid from the public, shopping only at night to avoid the curious stares of children and adults.

    In a groundbreaking, 36-hour surgery that began in the early morning of March 19, a team of surgeons from the University of Maryland gave 37-year-old Norris a new visage: a transplant that included not just the facial tissue from the hairline to the neck, but also the upper and lower jaws, teeth and a portion of tongue. Doctors called it the most extensive full face transplant yet completed.

    A week later, Norris is further along than his doctors had ever hoped. Just three days after the surgery he asked for a mirror to see his new face. He is now able to move his jaws and open and close his mouth.

    Norris has even started to shave and brush his teeth again, said the leader of the surgical team, Dr. Edwardo D. Rodriguez, chief of plastic, reconstructive and maxillofacial surgery at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at the University of Maryland Medical Center.

    University of Maryland Medical Center

    Richard Lee Norris before his face transplant. Due to a gunshot accident, Norris lost his lips and nose and had limited movement of his mouth.

    “This individual has not lived for the past 15 years as you and I know it,” Rodriguez said. “He’s been living behind a mask. This is clearly a transforming event.”

    Norris came to the University of Maryland five years ago looking for help. Doctors wouldn't discuss details, but said that Norris' face had been ravaged by a gunshot. The 12 plastic surgeries helped, but not enough. Norris still lived behind a mask, hiding from the rest of humanity. Rodriguez realized that the only way to give Norris back his life was a full face transplant.

    When the team was ready to embark on its first face transplant they picked Norris as the patient who most needed help. The hope was to give him back a face that would be as close to normal as possible – right down to the teeth and the tip of the tongue.

    “Richard always said he wanted to have teeth again,” Rodriguez said, pointing to a photo showing the puffy faced, but normal looking, Norris six days after the procedure.

    Norris may also benefit from more than a decade of research on immunosuppressing drugs. University of Maryland scientists discovered that by transplanting the jaw as well as the face, they would need lower levels of the medications to keep the body from rejecting the new tissue and bone, said Dr. Steven Bartlett, chair of the Department of Surgery at the University of Maryland Medical Center.

    University of Maryland Medical Center

    Norris in his prom picture.

    Animal research showed that marrow from the jawbone could make all the difference.

    “We realized that there was a massive amount of bone marrow in the jawbone that was vascularized with its own unique blood supply,” Bartlett said. “In that scenario you required much lower than expected long term immunosuppression.

    The surgery itself took place at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at the University of Maryland Medical Center and involved a multi-disciplinary team of faculty physicians from the University of Maryland School of Medicine and a team of over 150 nurses and professional staff.

    Ultimately, Norris’s appearance may seem like a combination of both his and his donor’s faces since his new tissue will drape over his cheekbones and his donor’s jawbones.

    Including Norris, there have been 23 face transplant procedures around the world since the first surgery was performed seven years ago in France on a woman who had been mauled by her dog. In the U.S., 25-year-old Dallas Wiens was the first person to receive a full-face transplant.

    While Norris was getting his face transplant five other patients were receiving organs from the same donor. “This patient was able to donate five organs to five other recipients,” said Charles Alexander of the Living Legacy Foundation of Maryland.

    As for Norris, Alexander said, “it gives this man back more than aesthetics. It gives him back his life.”

    Related stories:

    19-year-old transplant patient sees new face for the first time    

    Chimp attack victim reveals her new face    

    First face transplant patient to Charla Nash: 'Go, girl!'       

  • No sign of 4-year-old last seen at Arkansas Boy Scout camp

    AP Photo/The Jonesboro Sun, Tami Wynn

    Marion County Emergency Search and Rescue Swift Water Rescue Technicians Anton Such, left, and Dwayne McFarland search for 4-year-old Caleb Linn on Monday in South Fork River at Camp Kia Kima, Cherokee Village, Ark., where Caleb was last seen Saturday morning.

    The search for a 4-year-old Arkansas boy who went missing at a Boy Scout camp over the weekend entered its third full day Tuesday.

    Volunteers, law enforcement officers and family members of Caleb Linn fanned out to continue searching the woods and waterways of the 900-acre Kia Kima Scout Reservation in northeastern Arkansas.

    "We'd want them coming for our kids," one searcher, Steve Williams, said.

    Fulton County Sheriff Buck Foley was calling for more volunteers to aid in the search, BaxterBulletin.com reported.


    While divers plunged into a tributary of the Spring River and a helicopter hovered overhead, volunteer searchers went out on horseback, foot and four-wheelers. But by Monday night, there still wasn't any sign of Caleb.

    The boy was last seen Saturday around 11:30 a.m. at a bridge in the camp where he and several other children were helping his aunt clear away storm debris.

    Authorities say Caleb's aunt last saw him at the end of the bridge after he asked whether he could join some of the other children who had left to return to the cabin area about 300 yards away.

    They said Caleb could have wandered off or fallen into the swollen tributary near the bridge.

    Five of the children, who are related, headed up to the main campsite where they were staying as the aunt watched the grounds while a caretaker was away, Fulton County Sheriff Buck Foley said.

    The kids were about 300 yards away when Caleb decided he wanted to join them. His aunt, Rhonda Wright, told him to follow the dirt road and head back to the cabin, Foley said. Then, she went back to clearing debris.

    Investigators don't suspect foul play.

    Caleb could have fallen in the nearby Spring River tributary, which was saturated with rain from storms that swept the region.

    "The way the water's running, you wouldn't hear a splash," Foley said.

    Or he could have veered off into the woods or a nearby field on the ½-mile trek back to the cabin.

    "I think he just wandered off," Foley said.

    'Like looking for a needle in the haystack'
    Even as their third day of searching drew to a close, authorities said they are proceeding under the assumption Caleb is alive.

    "It's still a search and rescue," Foley said late Monday.

    Yet authorities called in cadaver dogs and set a net downstream that could catch a body if the boy did fall into the river. It's also possible that a body could have passed that point before the net was put up, said Major Todd Smith, the assistant chief of enforcement for the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission.

    "It's like looking for a needle in the haystack," Smith said. "There's no way to search the whole river."

    But the searchers were trying their hardest and the weather seemed to be cooperating. Crews have been using helicopters and infrared thermal detecting technology in the search, according to ArkansasMatters.com.

    At least 300 people have joined the search effort since Caleb went missing, ArkansasMatters.com reported.

    "Well at first I didn't, I didn't expect, the boy might be, maybe he was just lost and the longer this has been going on, the less I think about it," Foley told the website.

    According to the report, Caleb was last seen wearing an orange t-shirt and another orange shirt with green sleeves.

    The tributary had receded by Monday so divers could get in the water to clear debris from beneath the bridge and look at images from an underwater camera. Plus, the dry weather and moderate temperatures since Saturday sustained the hope of at least some of the searchers, who could be heard in the woods calling out "Caleb!"

    Caleb's mother and stepfather, who live 150 miles west of Hardy in Springdale, were at the camp Monday. A couple at a cabin with a stroller and overturned tricycle out front said they were Caleb's parents but that they didn't want to talk.

    "We don't want to do any kind of interviews," the man said.

    Down by the river, authorities scaled back the number of searchers looking for Caleb overnight, but didn't call off the search.

    "We don't want to be looking for people after dark," sheriff's deputy Boyd Dailey said.

    No one seemed ready to give up. As dusk fell, people dropped off cases of bottled water and bags of cookies. Police cars and mud-covered pickup trucks lined the dirt road leading down to the river.

    Dailey held out hope that maybe Caleb was heeding the advice adults teach children: Don't talk to strangers.

    "If he's out there, he's scared, and if he's hiding, maybe he'll pop up and somebody will see him," he said.

    He hopped on a four-wheeler and drove up the hill. On the way, an officer flagged him down and asked if there was any news.

    Dailey shook his head.

    "Nothing yet."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Feeling lucky? Mega Millions jackpot now up to $363 million

    The jackpot in Tuesday's Mega Millions drawing has soared to an estimated $363 million, the third largest in Mega Millions history.

    The pot has been growing since Jan. 24, when Mega Millions had its last jackpot winner, according to lottery officials. Tuesday's jackpot was initially forecast to be $9 million less, but stronger than expected sales pushed the drawing to $363 million, officials announced Monday on the Mega Millions website.

    The drawing will be Tuesday at 11 p.m. ET. Odds of winning the jackpot are approximately one in 176 million, according to lottery officials. A winner must match all six numbers to get the jackpot.

    Richard Lustig, a seven-time lottery winner in Florida whose winnings have totaled more than $1 million, hasn't let the slim odds stop him. He shared tips for buying tickets on Tuesday with ABC's "Good Morning America." 

    Among them: Pick your own numbers, don't leave it up to the machine; avoid lottery fever during high jackpots, since your odds are still the same no matter how much you spend; and go online and make sure the numbers you play have never come up before.

    The largest Mega Millions jackpot ever was $390 million, awarded in March 2007. The last time the jackpot was in the $300 million range was last year: On March 31, 2011, seven coworkers in New York state split a $319 million jackpot.

    Mega Millions sells its $1 tickets in 42 states plus the District of Columbia. The retailer who sells the jackpot-winning ticket will receive the maximum bonus of $1 million, according to NBCBayArea.com.

    The last 2012 jackpot was won by a College Park, Ga., woman, and was worth $72 million.

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  • End of coal power plants? EPA proposes new rules

    M. Spencer Green / AP

    This coal-fired power plant is used by the city of Chicago, which last month decided to close it down by the end of 2014. A second coal plant will be closed by the end of this year. Chicago is the only large U.S. city with coal-fired power plants operating within its city limits.

    The Obama administration on Tuesday proposed the first-ever standards to cut carbon dioxide emissions from new power plants -- a move welcomed by environmentalists but criticized by some utilities as well as Republicans, who are expected to use it as election campaign fodder.

    "Right now there are no limits to the amount of carbon pollution that future power plants will be able to put into our skies -- and the health and economic threats of a changing climate continue to grow," Lisa Jackson, head of the Environmental Protection Agency, said in a statement.

    While the proposed rules do not dictate which fuels a plant can burn, they would require any new coal plants essentially to halve carbon dioxide emissions to match those of plants fired by natural gas.

    The proposed standards have divided the power industry between companies that have moved toward natural gas, such as Exelon and NextEra, and those that generate most of their power from coal, such as Southern Co. and American Electric Power.

    Record low prices for natural gas and the looming air rules already have pushed many companies to put older coal plants into retirement.


    "There are areas where they could have made it a lot worse," said Scott Segal, director of the Electric Reliability Coordinating Council, a coalition of power companies. Still, "the numerical limit allows progress for natural gas and places compliance out of reach for coal-fired plants" not planning to capture and sequester carbon dioxide, the chief greenhouse gas.

    Steve Miller, CEO and President of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, a group of coal-burning electricity producers, took a more dismal view, saying it "will make it impossible to build any new coal-fueled power plants and could cause the premature closure of many more coal-fueled power plants operating today."

    Other opponents of the long-delayed EPA proposal say it will limit sources for electricity by making coal prohibitively expensive.

    "This rule is part of the Obama administration's aggressive plan to change America's energy portfolio and eliminate coal as a source of affordable, reliable electricity generation," said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., who as chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee has led the charge against environmental regulations. "EPA continues to overstep its authority and ram through a series of overreaching regulations in it attacks on America's power sector."

    Republicans in Congress and on the campaign trail have claimed that Obama-era rules affecting power plants in recent years could cause blackouts. Numerous studies and an Associated Press survey of power plant operators have shown that is not the case.

    Environmentalists were quick to welcome the proposals, which will be finalized after an undetermined period that will include public comments.

    Frances Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, called it a "historic step ... toward protecting the most vulnerable among us — including the elderly and our children — from smog worsened by carbon-fueled climate change." 

    The American Lung Association agreed. "Scientists warn that the buildup of carbon pollution will create warmer temperatures which will increase the risk of unhealthful smog levels," said board chairman Albert Rizzo. "More smog means more childhood asthma attacks and complications for those with lung disease."

    The proposed rules would affect only new plants, not existing plants, which was a concession to industry. In addition, they would not apply to units that will start construction within the next 12 months.

    Still, the proposals could set the stage for the EPA to regulate existing plants in the coming years.

    The EPA is moving forward on the climate rules, which do not need approval by Congress, after a wide-ranging climate bill died in the Senate in 2010.

    The proposal, which was due to be released last July but was held up at the White House, stemmed from a settlement with environmental groups and states. The government already controls global warming pollution at the largest industrial sources, has adopted the first-ever standards for new cars and trucks and is working on regulations to reduce greenhouse gases at existing power plants and refineries.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Trayvon Martin's family alleges racial profiling before Congress

    Trayvon Martin's parents visited lawmakers in Washington. NBC's Jay Gray reports.

    Updated at 7:55 p.m. ET: As a special prosecutor weighs seemingly contradictory witness accounts about the death of Trayvon Martin, his parents told members of Congress on Tuesday afternoon that they believed their son was a victim of racial profiling and hoped national attention focused on the case means he did not "die in vain."

    Rep. Frederica Wilson, D-Fla., organized the briefing on racial profiling and hate crimes in response to the slaying of Martin, 17, an African American who was shot by George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch captain in Sanford, Fla. Zimmerman, who hasn't been arrested, claims it was self-defense.

    Wilson said Tuesday that she had a sign placed outside her office counting "the number of days that Trayvon Martin's killer is at large." She also briefly took it to the House floor.


    The briefing, which isn't as formal as a congressional hearing, marks the first time Congress has waded into the controversy.

    Ben Crump, an attorney for Martin's parents, told the panel that the family was convinced  Martin was targeted for special attention because of his race, arguing that tougher laws against profiling might have averted the shooting.

    Martin's father, Tracy Martin, urged lawmakers to make "sure that he did not indeed die in vain.”

    Geraldo apologies for hoodie remark

    The briefing came as details of the police report made at the scene of the Feb. 26 shooting were emerging. 

    ABC News, citing "multiple sources" whose affiliations it didn't identify, reported Tuesday that the lead homicide investigator in the case recommended that Zimmerman be charged with manslaughter but was overruled because the state attorney's office decided there wasn't enough evidence.

    The investigator, Chris Serino, filed an affidavit on the night of the shooting stating he was unconvinced by Zimmerman's account, according to ABC, which said the state's attorney's office had no comment.

    At least one witness, a 13-year-old boy, told police he saw a man fitting Zimmerman's description on the ground moaning before a shot was fired. In the original police report on the incident, a Sanford officer wrote that Zimmerman's "back appeared to be wet and was covered with grass, as if he had been laying on his back on the ground," and that he was bleeding from his nose and the back of his head.

    Read the Feb. 26 incident report (.pdf)

    Zimmerman has said he shot in self-defense, and his attorney says he suffered a broken nose and other injuries when attacked by Martin.

    A neighbor told Dateline NBC that she heard what she thought was the moaning of a young person followed by a gunshot. She said that she and her roommate saw Zimmerman straddling Martin's body and that he didn't appear to be trying to help him.

    Thousands march to city hearing on Martin's death

    Special prosecutor Angela Corey called for patience Monday as her team of investigators continues looking into Martin's killing. She didn't say when officials would decide whether there was enough evidence  to prosecute.

    NBC News' Luke Russert contributed to this report.

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  • Dramatic rescue for Calif. gray whale entangled in discarded fishing net

    A California gray whale is moving freely after rescuers spent seven hours untangling it from a discarded fishing net. Rescuers suspect the whale had been dragging the net--which was filled with dozens of dead animals--for weeks. KNBC-TV's Vikki Vargas reports.

    A California gray whale is moving freely after rescuers spent seven hours untangling it from a discarded fishing net off the Orange County coast, local media reported.

    The young whale was spotted Friday night off the coast of Dana Point Harbor, Calif., covered in nearly 50 feet of fishing wire. Rescue crews suspected it had been dragging the nylon netting, which was filled with dead sea animals, for nearly a week.

    "We had a sea lion, we had several sharks ...  the whole ecosystem, you know, was in that netting," Dave Anderson, who works with DolphinSafari.com and was part of the weekend rescue, told NBCLosAngeles.com.

    Anderson got permission from the National Marine Fisheries Services Friday evening to attach a buoy to the mammal to monitor it overnight as a team of wildlife experts assembled for a rescue attempt the following morning, The Los Angeles Times reported.

    The challenge: to cut through the netting without hurting the whale, which they named "Bart" after one of the boaters who stayed with the whale overnight as it drifted up the coast, reported The LA Times.

    The rescue involved seven tiring hours of sawing through the nylon as rescue crews followed the whale for mile after mile out to sea.

    "It was getting very frightening towards the end of the day because we were running out of time," Anderson told NBCLosAngeles.com. Crews were using grappling hooks and lines to reel in the mammal and a knife to cut away debris, according to The LA Times. Then, at last, a line snapped as the whale dived down, pulling buoys down with it.

    "Those buoys just went under the water all of a sudden," Anderson told NBCLosAngeles. "And when they went under the water, I mean, it was like a scene from 'Jaws.'"

    When the whale came back up, he was free.

    More about Bart the whale on NBCLosAngeles.com

    Anderson, who does whale-watching tours, told NBCLosAngeles.com that many dolphins and whales die in fishing nets each year, and he's grateful to have saved one.

    "He came right up to our boat and almost mouthed, like, a thank you. It was pretty awesome."

    According to The LA Times, Bart was last seen four miles off Corona de Mar, and appeared healthy.

    NBC station NBCLosAngeles.com contributed to this report.

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  • Police identify body of beloved Vermont teacher Melissa Jenkins

    Vermont police believe they have found the body of a beloved 33-year-old science teacher who went missing on Sunday. NECN's Jack Thurston reports.

    Updated at 5:50 p.m. ET: Vermont police have confirmed that they have found the body of Melissa Jenkins, a 33-year-old school teacher who had been reported missing.

    On Sunday evening, a friend of Jenkins went looking for her and found her Suzuki Grand Vitara a short distance from her home. The car was still running and Jenkins' 2-year-old son in the back seat. Jenkins was nowhere to be found.

    Vermont state police say there were signs of a struggle but they wouldn't go into further detail.

    On Monday afternoon, as Vermont state police searched along a remote road, they noticed a wooded section that appeared to have been disturbed.

    After a brief search, detectives found a body in the woods.

    Jenkins, a single mother, taught science and used to coach basketball at the prestigious St. Johnsbury Academy in Vermont, which counts former President Calvin Coolidge among its alumni. The boy's father, B.J. Robertson, would not comment on Jenkins' disappearance.

    "She's got a real gift with students who either haven't liked science before or learning science doesn't come easy to them," headmaster Tom Lovett said. "She's got a real gift with them."

    Between 100 and 200 students gathered at the academy Monday night after the news came out that a body had been found, the Associated Press reported. Classes were canceled Tuesday; a vigil was scheduled for that evening.

    Jenkins grew up in Danville, a tight-knit town west of St. Johnsbury where she attended the Danville School, the AP reported.

    Violent crime is rare in this part of Vermont, the AP reported.

    In September 2010, Pat O'Hagan, a 78-year-old grandmother, disappeared from her home in Sheffield, about 20 miles north of St. Johnsbury. Her body was found almost a month later about 10 miles from her home in Wheelock.

    Police have ruled the death a homicide, but no arrests have been made. Authorities have not said whether they believe Jenkins' case is connected.

    After an extensive missing persons search that lasted less than 24 hours, police have now focused all of their attention on searching for Jenkins’ killer.

    “Although I cannot disclose the details of how the body was found, or the condition of the body, this death is considered suspicious,” an official said.

    A family friend said Jenkins left her home that night to meet up and help someone out.

    "She would do anything for anybody. She definitely will be greatly missed," Ron Craig, of Peacham, told the Associated Press.

    Craig, who said he and his wife occasionally babysat Jenkins' son, said it's scary that police did not know if this was an isolated incident. "We've been locking our doors all the time because you just don't know what's going to happen," he said.

    Police believed the crime occurred sometime between 7 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. Sunday night.

    NBC station WHDH and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Supreme Court expresses skepticism over constitutionality of health care mandate

    The Supreme Court's conservatives questioned whether Congress has the power to require Americans to buy health insurance. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    Updated at 6:45p.m. ET Two years after a hard-fought victory, President Barack Obama’s signature legislative accomplishment -- the health care reform law -- seemed at risk of being struck down as the Supreme Court heard arguments Tuesday.

    “I think it’s very doubtful that court is going to find the health care law constitutional,” NBC’s Pete Williams reported after watching the two hours of oral argument before the high court. “I don’t see five votes to find the law constitutional.”

    While it's difficult to know for certain after Tuesday's oral arguments, the conservative justices appeared skeptical of the constitutionality of the law’s requirement that uninsured people purchase insurance.

    Read the transcript of Tuesday's arguments here (.pdf)

    Court observers caution that one shouldn't read too much into what any particular justice says during oral arguments; a justice will sometimes test out a theory and his or her comments don’t necessarily indicate which way he or she will decide.

    But there were few encouraging hints for the Obama administration from Justice Anthony Kennedy, a potential swing vote on the court, or from any of the conservative justices.

    NBC's Pete Williams, who has been listening in as the Supreme Court hears arguments about President Obama's health care reform law, says he thinks it's "very doubtful" the high court is going to find the law constitutional.

    “It’s risky to predict, but if I had to predict right today, I would say the law is in trouble,” Williams said.

    The court is expected to hand down its ruling in June.

    Veteran Supreme Court lawyer Tom Goldstein, who was in the court room Tuesday for the arguments, said it was “very worrisome” for the Obama administration’s side of the case. 

    The fate of the health care overhaul hinges on the issue the justices weighed during the argument Tuesday morning: does Congress have the power to force individuals to buy a product they otherwise would not have purchased?

    Much of Tuesday’s battle focused on the extent of Congress’s reach under the power to regulate interstate commerce which the Constitution assigns to it.

    Court signals it will decide constitutionality of insurance mandate

    The four liberal members of the court seemed inclined to accept the administration’s s argument that Congress has ample power under the commerce clause to require uninsured people to join the insurance market. 

    But Solicitor General Donald Verrilli, arguing the case for the Obama administration, was “hunting for a fifth vote -- and it really wasn’t at all obvious where that might come from,” Goldstein said.

    The Supreme Court's conservatives questioned whether Congress has the power to require Americans to buy health insurance. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

    Verrilli tried to defend the requirement that uninsured people purchase insurance. “Everyone subject to this regulation is in -- or will be in -- the health care market,” Verrilli told the court. “They are just being regulated in advance. That's exactly the kind of thing that ought to be left to the judgment of Congress and the democratically accountable branches of government.”

    But Verrilli came under constant pressure from the conservative justices.

    Kennedy asked Verrilli at one point “Can you (the government) create commerce in order to regulate it?” Verrilli replied, “That's not what's going on here, Justice Kennedy, and we are not seeking to defend the law on that basis.”

    Listen to that exchange between Justice Kennedy and Donald Verrilli here (.wav)

    Kennedy told Verrilli at another point that the high court “must presume laws are constitutional. But, even so, when you are changing the relation of the individual to the government in ... a unique way, do you not have a heavy burden of justification to show authorization under the Constitution?”

    Justice Kennedy “seemed to have grave concerns,” Williams reported. It did not seem during the oral argument that Kennedy “found the justification that he needed” for the law, Williams said.

    Hear the audio recording of the Supreme Court case on President Obama's historic health care reforms.

    Read the transcript of Tuesday's arguments here (.pdf)

    Chief Justice John Roberts told Verrilli that the Obama administration’s argument was built on the idea that people can’t control when they enter the market for health care or what they need when they enter that market.

    “The same, it seems to me, would be true, say, for the market in emergency services: police, fire, ambulance, roadside assistance, whatever,” Roberts said. “You don't know when you're going to need it; you're not sure that you will. But the same is true for health care. You don't know if you're going to need a heart transplant or if you ever will…. So can the government require you to buy a cell phone because that would facilitate responding when you need emergency services?”

    Listen to that exchange between Chief Justice Roberts and Donald Verrilli here (.wav)

    Verrilli insisted that the two cases were different. 

    In the same vein as Roberts, Justice Samuel Alito said the market for health care was no different from the market for burial. 
    “I don't see the difference,” Alito said. “You can get burial insurance. You can get health insurance. Most people are going to need health care, almost everybody. Everybody is going to be buried or cremated at some point. What's the difference?”

    Verrilli said “one big difference, Justice Alito, is you don't have the cost shifting to other market participants.” 

    Listen to that exchange between Justice Alito and Donald Verrilli here (.wav)

    Alito shot back, “Sure you do, because if you don't have money then the state is going to pay for it.” Or he added a family member is going to pay.

    Making the most vigorous defense of the law was Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg who said enactment of the health care law was akin to the creation of Social Security in 1935. 

    Art Lien/NBC News

    Paul Clement argues on behalf of the respondents of Florida.

    “Congress, in the '30s, saw a real problem of people needing to have old age and survivor's insurance,” she said. “And yes, they did it through a tax, but they said everybody has got to be in it because if we don't have the healthy in it, there's not going to be the money to pay for the ones who become old or disabled or widowed. So they required everyone to contribute.” 

    Ginsburg said Social Security caused “a big fuss about that in the beginning because a lot of people said -- maybe some people still do today -- I could do much better if the government left me alone. I'd go into the private market… I'd make a great investment, and they're forcing me to paying for this Social Security that I don't want; but, that's constitutional.”

    If Congress wants to address the problem of the uninsured then, Ginsburg said, “Social Security is its model.”

    Listen to that exchange between Justice Ginsburg and Paul Clement here (.wav)

    Arguing on behalf of Florida and 25 other states was Paul Clement, the former solicitor general in the Bush administration, replied to Ginsburg that Congress could have raised taxes in order to pay for the uninsured -- instead of forcing people to buy insurance. “We could have a tax that's spread generally through everybody to raise the revenue to pay for that subsidy. That's the way we pay for most subsidies.”

    Both conservative and liberal justices seemed to agree that Congress could require people who showed up at the doctor’s office for treatment for purchase insurance -- but the conservative justices seemed entirely unpersuaded that Congress could force people to buy insurance before they had any medical need.

    Art Lien/NBC News

    Attorney Michael Carvin represented the National Federation of Independent Business during the proceedings.

    In what might be an encouraging signal for supporters of the health care law, Kennedy did display some concern about younger people who chose to go uninsured.  

    In questioning attorney Michael Carvin, who was representing the National Federation of Independent Business, Kennedy raised the possibility that federal intervention might be justified.

    “The young person who is uninsured is uniquely proximately very close to affecting the rates of insurance and the costs of providing medical care in a way that is not true in other industries,” Kennedy said. “That's my concern in the case.”

    Carvin replied that “it would be perfectly fine” if Congress allowed insurers to gauge actuarial risk for young people, but the 2010 law prohibits them from buying “the only economically sensible product” -- catastrophic insurance.

    NBC's Pete Williams contributed to this report.

  • 6,500 families might have to evacuate in deadly Colo. wildfire

    Updated at 7 p.m. ET: CONIFER, Colo. -- The bodies of a husband and wife were found at one of 23 homes destroyed or damaged by a wildfire that has forced hundreds to flee the mountainous area southwest of Denver, authorities said Tuesday. A third person was missing from the same area where the man and woman were found.

    The body of a woman, later identified as Linda Lucas, 76, was found outside the burned home on Monday evening and a man's body, identified as Sam Lucas, 77, was found inside on Tuesday, said Daniel Hatlestad of the Jefferson County Incident Management Team.

    Authorities do not yet know whether the deaths were caused by the fire, which has grown to about 7 square miles and was "not contained in the slightest."


    The fast-moving wildfire was reported at midday Monday and spread quickly amid dry, windy weather.

    The fire was burning several miles and mountain ridges west of Denver's tightly populated southwestern suburbs, which were not under threat.

    The area of pines and grassland is mountainous and sparsely populated, dotted with hamlets and the occasional expensive home. It is about 25 miles southwest of Denver at an altitude that ranges from 7,000 to 8,200 feet.

    About 900 homes have been evacuated and the residents of another 6,500 houses were warned Tuesday to be ready to evacuate  because of a spot fire that was sparked outside the main fire.

    Jefferson County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Jacki Kelley had said earlier that the wildfire may have been a controlled burn from last week that sprang back to life because of strong wind gusts.

    Ryan Lockwood, a spokesman for the Colorado State Forest Service, said his agency conducted the controlled burn on Thursday on land belonging to the Denver Water Board as part of an ongoing attempt to reduce fire danger. Such burns are common in the West to thin out vegetation in the hopes of preventing fires.

    "This has been going on for the past year," Lockwood said.

    Wind gusts that reached near 90 mph fanned the flames on Monday, preventing air crews from spraying retardant and keeping firefighters mostly on the defensive. With winds lighter Tuesday, firefighters were attacking the fire on the ground and dropping slurry from an air tanker.

    By midday Tuesday, officials were urging patience in a meeting with about 60 frustrated evacuees gathered at Conifer High School. The evacuated residents groaned when Hatlestad of the Jefferson County Incident Management Team announced that the fire was 0 percent contained and expected to spread to the northeast with the afternoon winds.

    Hatlestad repeatedly told residents asking about their home streets, "I can't tell you where the fire will go." Hatlestad had no estimate when they could get home or when homeowners would find out whether their homes have been spared.

    Crews from Arizona, Utah and South Dakota have been called in for support, with the blaze churning through rugged terrain rich with dry brush. Roughly 450 firefighters are expected on the scene.

    Air support arrived Tuesday and planes were able to make slurry drops on the blaze, NBC station KUSA reported. Air support consisted of a SEAT and a heavy P2V airplane dropping fire retardant over the fire. Two National Guard helicopters are enroute from Buckley Air Force Base to start dropping water also, KUSA said.

    There were no other reports of injuries, but a sheriff's deputy who was alerting residents to leave was trapped in his patrol car after he inadvertently drove into a ditch in the thick smoke, Kelley said. He summoned help by radio.

    One evacuee left behind a Corvette and a small airplane to escape the flames. Cindi Sjaardema said it was the first time in 34 years that she has had to flee the area.

    "We decided, 'Let's move now,' thinking we'd make two trips. But when we left, we passed a checkpoint and they said we couldn't go back," she said. "My husband argued with the guy, (and) said, 'I left a Corvette back there, I'm going back.' But I said, 'No way. It's insured. It's just stuff.' We got out, and thank God."

    Single-digit humidity values, winds blowing at 40 to 50 miles per hour and a lack of snowfall during the past month put most of eastern Colorado under a red-flag warning for high fire danger, the National Weather Service said.

    The high winds also had prompted flight delays at Denver International Airport on Monday. Smoke from the wildfire poured into Denver on Tuesday.

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

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  • EXCLUSIVE: Hackers turn credit report websites against consumers

    Dan Clements

    This hacker shopping list appeared recently on what appears to be a Russian-based website offering credit reports for sale. Prices are based on the victims' credit scores.

    The most important tool consumers have to fight against ID theft has been turned against them by hackers, msnbc.com has learned. Websites that offer consumers a chance to see their credit reports are being brazenly used by hackers to steal victims' information.

    The prices of the reports rise and fall depending on the credit score of the victim. For consumers with credit scores in the 750s, report data might fetch $80; reports from victims with scores in the low 600s sell for about half that, according to "for sale" pages viewed by msnbc.com.

    "It shows how people with good credit and a net worth now have a bull’s-eye on their backs," said Dan Clements, who operates the Internet security firm CloudEyez.com. Clements gave msnbc.com a virtual tour of the marketplaces, which he has been observing for months.

    The most troubling part of these markets however – many hosted in the .su domain, which stands for the now-defunct Soviet Union – is the ready availability of credit reports and the hackers' bragging about how easy it is to infiltrate websites like AnnualCreditReport.com or CreditReport.com.


    "I'm selling super prime credit reports and scores which include all 3 bureaus and other information," brags one advertisement on one site. 

    Clements helped msnbc.com view dozens of credit reports on the forum, many of which had CreditReport.com stamped across the first page. But others viewed by msnbc.com indicated they were stolen from AnnualCreditReport.com and Equifax.com. Clements said most other online credit report and some credit score suppliers were hit, too --  he shared a page showing a victim's score produced at CreditKarma.com.

    "We really have no idea how many reports have been used or put up for sale in the 'libraries,'" said Clements, who also operates a consulting firm. 

    The credit report trade shows why even simple credit card fraud – long considered a relatively benign form of ID theft – can escalate quickly into a full-blown identity nightmare. Criminals with stolen cards can obtain background reports, credit reports and ultimately open new accounts using the information gleaned about the victim, Clements said.

    In one how-to posted on a bulletin board, a hacker describes one brute-force attack used to gain access to credit report websites. Most sites are protected by "challenge" questions such as, "Which bank holds the mortgage on your home?"  But there's a critical flaw, the hacker said:

    "Normally all ... of them will ask you the same question," the hacker wrote.

    Because the sites use the multiple choice format, it's easy to use the process of elimination and determine the correct answers, he claims.

    The hacker explained that the trick is to open several credit report sites and keep trying random answers until one set works.

    The recipe is highly detailed, including helpful tips such as, "Take a shot of screen to remember what answers you gave. After that click the submit button and see what it says."

    Dan Clements

    This bulletin board post, intentionally cut off to be incomplete by msnbc.com, shows a hacker discussing how he allegedly defeats credit report website security.

    A would-be credit report thief needs additional information to get credit report access, but that can often be gleaned by ordering background checks using the victim's stolen credit card. Reports stolen from Intellius.com and BeenVerified.com, which provide previous addresses and a host of other valuable information, also were found on the site.

    One victim whose credit report was spotted on the site told msnbc.com that she found one instance of credit card fraud on her accounts around the time the data theft was first discovered by Clements. She now pays to maintain a credit freeze on her credit reports.

    "You hear about this kind of thing all the time but you never think it will happen to you," said the victim, who requested that her name be withheld. "And when it happens, you think, 'Great. Now what do I do?'”

    For years, consumers have been advised to visit AnnualCreditReport.com once each year to see their reports. Federal law requires the nation's three largest credit bureaus – Experian, Equifax, and Trans Union – to maintain the site, under the direction of the Federal Trade Commission.

    That's still good advice – looking at your credit report is the best way to detect identity theft. But the site is apparently both an ally and a foe now.

    The FTC would not comment on hackers' use of AnnualCreditReport.com.

    In the past, the FTC has sued companies for inadvertently selling credit report data to hackers, however. In 2011, the agency settled with Settlementone Credit Corp., ACRAnet Inc. and Fajilan Associates after those firms unknowingly sold reports to criminals. The three firms were ordered to submit to 20 years' worth of security audits.

    Those firms prepare reports for car dealerships and other credit granters. Raiding consumer-facing sites like AnnualCreditReport.com is even more brazen, however.

    CreditReport.com is operated by credit bureau Experian; that firm also provides credit reports to consumers as part of AnnualCreditReport.com.

    "Experian is aware of schemes such as this to access reports illegally, and we have taken measures within our systems to mitigate the issue," said Experian in an e-mail to msnbc.com. "We are constantly evolving our systems to prevent fraud and criminal activity, but do not comment publicly on the specifics of our fraud prevention methods." 

    Trans Union and Equifax, which also provide reports through AnnualCreditReport.com, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Kenneth Lin, CEO of CreditKarma.com, said the firm had received "a handful" of complaints about compromised accounts and worked quickly to shut down access. CreditKarma credit score reports show no account information or other personal data, so the security risk posed by an imposter getting a victim's score is minimal, he said.

    "That's intentional. That's a security feature," he said. The site also uses more difficult challenge questions than AnnualCreditReport.com, Lin added.

    Solving the problem of credit reports stolen through consumer websites is no small task. One irony of the hackers' ability to easily raid such sites is that many consumers report great frustration getting their own credit reports through AnnualCreditReport.com.  The challenge questions are sometimes so arcane – such as, "Which bank held your previous auto loan?" -- that legitimate consumers can't answer them easily.  

    "But anyone who does any research can probably figure out what the answers are before you can," said Jay Foley, who runs IDTheftInfoSource.com. In other words, it's too easy for criminals to get credit reports, but it's too hard for consumers.

    One of the websites where Clements observed the stolen card activity – kurupt.su – dropped mysteriously off the Web late last week. The site was well-known as a haunt for criminals and scam artists in the computer underground. But Clements says that will hardly put a dent in the stolen data trade.

    "You currently can't stop this scam because the 'soft inquiry' of a consumer pulling their own report doesn't record in the majority of credit files," he said, explaining that a consumer would never know if a criminal pulled a copy of their report. "Unfortunately, it allows the bad guys, by impersonating you, to download your credit file and leave no tracks."

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  • Letter writers take Arizona governor to task after Obama encounter

    Haraz N. Ghanbari / AP

    Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer points during an intense conversation with President Barack Obama after he arrived at Phoenix-Mesa Gateway Airport on Jan. 25, 2012, in Mesa, Ariz.

    Arizona Gov. Janet Brewer’s office was flooded with mail condemning the Republican leader for wagging her finger at President Barack Obama during a tense airport encounter in January.

    “I don’t have the exact breakdown, but most of the correspondence that came in was negative,” Matthew Benson, Brewer’s spokesman, told msnbc.com on Monday.

    Benson said the governor’s office received more than 12,000 letters, many of them from out of state, following the exchange between the leaders on Jan. 25. Many were in the form of email, while others had been handwritten and one was written on a typewriter, Benson said.


    The Arizona Republic reported on Sunday that it had obtained 100 letters randomly selected by the governor’s office after filing a public-records request.

    Brewer and Obama were seen engaged in a tense conversation at the base of Air Force One’s steps in Mesa. Both could be seen smiling and speaking at the same time.

    Arizona governor, Obama in ‘tense’ exchange over book

    The exchange was generally understood to involve her criticism of the president in her published book, “Scorpions for Breakfast,” something of a memoir of her years growing up. The leaders have sparred most prominently on illegal immigration and Arizona’s tough law aiming to curb it.

    Brewer has said she meant no disrespect to the president.

    Veterans, housewives and middle-school students from New Orleans were among those who took the governor to task, according to the Arizona Republic.

    "If you approached me like you did the president I would have taken great comfort by poking you in the nose," wrote Eleanor Tafolla from Cathedral City, Calif., the newspaper reported.

    Chuck Bower of Indiana sent in his support of Brewer, writing in his letter: "The only thing you did wrong was wave the 'wrong' finger in his face."

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  • Landmark Catholic priest abuse trial begins in Philadelphia

    PHILADELPHIA -- After nine years and two grand jury reports, prosecutors have brought a landmark case to trial that explores how the Archdiocese of Philadelphia dealt with child sex-abuse complaints against scores of Roman Catholic priests.

    Monsignor William Lynn is the first U.S. church official ever charged over his handling of abuse complaints. He supervised more than 800 priests as the secretary for clergy in Philadelphia from 1992 to 2004.

    Prosecutors charge that Lynn kept dangerous priests in parish work around children to protect the church's reputation and avoid scandal. They say the church kept secret files dating to 1948 that show a long-standing conspiracy to doubt sex abuse victims and protect priests.

    Assistant District Attorney Jacqueline Coelho called the case "a battle between right and wrong within the archdiocese and the office of secretary for clergy."

    Defense lawyer Thomas Bergstrom said Monday that Lynn had the "ugly job" of overseeing sex abuse complaints, but that Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua alone determined priest assignments and transfers.

    "There is documentary evidence that the sexual abuse of children happened in the Catholic Church," Bergstrom said. "We're not going to run from that. He (Lynn), perhaps alone, is the one who tried to correct it."

    Solemn in court
    Lynn, 61, appeared solemn in court, where he has appeared over the past few months for pretrial hearings and jury selection.

    He has been under investigation for eight years, through two grand jury investigations that blasted Bevilacqua and his successor, Cardinal Justin Rigali, saying they covered up child sex complaints lodged against more than 60 priests.

    The church kept secret files dating back to 1948 that show a long-standing conspiracy to doubt sex abuse victims, protect priests and avoid scandal, Assistant District Attorney Jacqueline Coelho said in opening statements.

    "You can't protect the church without keeping the allegations in the dark," Coelho told jurors, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported. "He kept the parishioners in the dark and he kept the faithful in the dark."

    Coelho called the case "a battle between right and wrong within the archdiocese and the office of secretary for clergy."

    Coelho outlined the decades-old sexual abuse complaints found buried in secret archives to build a case against Monsignor William Lynn, who supervised priests as secretary for clergy from 1992 through 2004. Lynn is the first U.S. church official charged for his administrative role in the sex abuse crisis.

    He is on trial with the Rev. James Brennan, who is charged with the attempted rape of a 14-year-old boy in 1996. Both men entered not guilty pleas before the jury Monday.

    Co-defendant Edward Avery, a defrocked priest, entered a surprise guilty plea Thursday to a sexual assault charge and will serve 2½ to five years in prison. Avery also acknowledged that the archdiocese kept him in parish work despite knowing of an earlier complaint lodged against him, a point that could bolster the conspiracy charge against Lynn.

    Coelho said the archdiocese did little or nothing about sex abuse complaints until the church's sex abuse scandal exploded in Boston in 2002.

    "Victims are met with skepticism and priests are believed ... at all costs," Coelho said, speaking softly to the jury.

    'Warning signs or red flags'
    Attorneys for Lynn and Brennan plan to attack the credibility of the priests' troubled adult accusers, though that strategy took a hit last week when Avery pleaded guilty, confirming one accuser's account of a brutal 1999 sexual assault inside a church sacristy. All three priests were to be tried together before Avery admitted that he abused a 10-year-old altar boy.

    Prosecutors say the 61-year-old Lynn transferred priests to new parishes when a problem arose or told parishioners that their priest was taking a "health leave" when he was going for therapy or to a "safe" assignment at an old-age home. Before long, problem priests were back in parish work, with unsupervised access to children.

    "By ignoring warning signs or red flags, Fr. Lynn kept Brennan and Avery in ministry, where they were able to hurt children," Coelho said.

    Lynn remains the focal point of the trial. He could get up to 28 years in prison if convicted of two counts each of conspiracy and child endangerment.

    He has argued that he prepared a list of 37 accused priests in 1994 and sent it up the chain to Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua — only to have Bevilacqua have it shredded. The cardinal died this year, but his videotaped deposition could be played at trial.

    The trial will be closely followed by Catholics across the country, including some who say their lives were destroyed.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Bodies in Detroit woods are those of missing women

    Elizabeth Conley / AP

    Relatives of Abreeya Brown and Ashley Conaway leave the scene where their bodies were found Sunday.

    DETROIT -- The bodies of two women found over the weekend in a wooded area in Detroit are those of two best friends reported abducted nearly a month ago, according to the medical examiner’s office.

    Wayne County medical examiner's spokeswoman Brooke Blackwell said the bodies of Abreeya Brown and Ashley Conaway were found gagged and bound with duct tape in a shallow grave. Both women had been shot in the head, Blackwell said.


    Brown, 18, and Conaway, 21, were abducted Feb. 28 by two armed men outside their home in the nearby enclave of Hamtramck, according to Brown's stepfather, Charles McGinnis. He told police he exchanged gunfire with the captors before they drove away. Relatives said one woman was able to send text messages for a short time from inside the trunk, but that neither had been heard from since.

    Police earlier arrested Brandon Cain, 26, and Brian Lee, 24. Both men are scheduled together for a preliminary hearing on Friday on charges of assault with intent to murder.

    Family members of the slain women spoke with local media on Monday.

    “We should not lose our children, our daughters to such a travesty; we shouldn’t lose our children to evil and rotten men," Latrina Conaway, sister of Ashley Conaway, told the Detroit Free Press. "We’re just going to stand strong. We’re going to walk the judicial system down to the wire. We know justice shall prevail. But for me, this is just the beginning.”

    Lois Brown, mother of Abreeya Brown, said she was heartbroken.

    "She's in the kingdom of heaven," Brown told the Detroit News. "I am very glad we have the suspects in custody; now we don't have to chase them down. Now I am in mourning."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Trayvon Martin was suspended three times from school

    The parents of Trayvon Martin comment on reports that their son was suspended from school for having an empty bag of marijuana.

    Trayvon Martin, the teenager whose shooting death has sparked a national uproar, was suspended from school last month for having a baggie that contained marijuana residue in his book bag, a family spokesman said Monday.

    "There was no substance found. There was a baggie that school officials believe may have formerly contained marijuana. There was no arrest or citation from the police," Ryan Julison said.

    The Miami Herald reported that Martin was suspended two other times from school. The first time was for missing school or being late.

    In October, Martin was suspended with friends for writing “W.T.F.” on a hallway locker, according to a school report obtained by the Herald. A security guard looking through his backpack for the graffiti marker and instead found women’s rings and earrings and a screwdriver, described by the staffer as a “burglary tool.”

    Ben Crump, an attorney for Martin’s parents, told the Herald they had never heard about the bag of jewelry.

    “And anyway, it’s completely irrelevant to what happened Feb. 26,” Crump told the Miami Herald. “They never heard this and don’t believe it’s true. If it were true, why wouldn’t they call the parents? Why wasn’t he arrested?”

    Martin's mother, Sybrina Fulton, suggested in comments at a news conference that the marijuana residue report was aimed at smearing her dead child.

    "They killed my son and now they're trying to kill his reputation," she said.


    Toxicology test results were still pending on the body of Martin, 17, who was shot Feb. 26 inside a gated community in the central Florida city of Sanford by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman. Martin was visiting his father in Sanford while he was suspended by Miami-Dade schools. He was unarmed.

    Zimmerman has not been charged in Martin's death and claims self-defense.

    He told police that Martin knocked him down with a single punch and slammed his head into the sidewalk several times before he shot him, according to The Orlando Sentinel.

    Report: Police report details Zimmerman, witness accounts

    Martin's killing has ignited racial tensions. Martin was black; Zimmerman's father is white and his mother Hispanic.

    Also Monday, Florida's Department of Juvenile Justice confirmed that Martin does not have a juvenile offender record. The information came after a public records request by The Associated Press.

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  • Woman's body will be flown back to Iraq; killing a hate crime?

    Police in El Cajon, Calif., are investigating a brutal attack that left an Iraqi woman dead. KNSD-TV's Chris Chan reports.

    Services at an East County mosque were held Sunday to honor an El Cajon woman who was found severely beaten inside her home with a threatening note left nearby.

    Friends of Shaima Alawadi, 32, remembered a warm, loving woman who was a wonderful mother to her five children.

    At the same time they are anticipating more information from investigators about the suspicious death of the Iraqi immigrant who moved in to the rental home on Skyview Street two months ago.


    Alawadi was found in the dining room by her 17-year-old daughter March 21. She was transported to a local trauma center and died Saturday after being on life support for three days.

    A threatening note was discovered very close to where Alawadi was found officers said. The family say they received a similar note earlier this month, however did not report it to authorities. 

    Police would not confirm the contents of the note however a spokesperson for the local chapter of the Counsel of American-Islamic Relations said he is concerned the beating may be a hate crime.

    Iraqi woman beaten in Calif. dies; threat note left at scene

    "The body was found with a note that essentially says, 'You guys are terrorists, go back home, you don't belong here.' That's the message,"said CAIR Executive Director Hanif Mohebi.

    Neighbors said the family – which includes as many as five children – moved into the rented home in El Cajon about two months ago. Alawadi and her two daughters wore headscarves, according to their neighbors.

    “When you add violence against woman, the loss of life of a mother on top of that and the fact that this innocent woman may have been targeted solely because of her appearance and her set of beliefs, it’s a strike not just at the Muslim community but at the humanity for all of us here in San Diego,” said family friend Kamaal Martin.

    For more, visit NBCSanDiego.com

    Nazanin Wahid said Alawadi was a friend to everyone at the Islamic Center of Lakeside on Mountain View Avenue because the community is close-knit and members know each other very well.

    "This place holds a very special value to them because their children grew up here and they still come here, so this is their center, our center, their community, our community," said family friend Nazanin Wahid.

    Based on Alawadi’s injuries and other evidence retrieved at the scene, police said this case is being investigated as a homicide.

    Sunday morning flowers were seen at the porch of the Alawadi home. A cross with the words “Give Thanks to the Lord” was also seen near the front door.

    On Sunday, the family was making plans to fly Alawadi's body back to Iraq. Alawadi's father is Sayed Nabeel Alawadi, a Shiite cleric in Iraq, a Muslim leader in Michigan told the Detroit Free-Press. The Iraqi government will pay for shipping expenses of the body, he said.

    Hayder Al-Zayadi, a family friend, told the Free-Press that Alawadi moved to the United States in 1993 with her family and was part of a wave of Shiite Muslim refugees who fled to Michigan after Saddam Hussein cracked down on an uprising in 1991.

    After living in Dearborn for a few years, she moved to the San Diego area in 1996, graduated from high school and became a housewife raising five children, Al-Zayadi said.

    Thousands of people have liked a special page on Facebook calling for "One Million Hijabs for Shaima Alawadi."

    Alawadi's report has been sealed by the medical examiner per a police request.

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  • Census: 8 of 10 Americans now urbanites

    Move over, New York City. Nine of the 10 most densely populated areas in the U.S. are out West, and eight out of 10 Americans are now urbanites, a U.S. Census Bureau report released Monday shows.

    The Charlotte, N.C., area is growing at the fastest rate, increasing by 64.6 percent, followed by Austin, Texas, at 51.1 percent, according to census figures from 2000 to 2010.

    “It’s one of those things we’re seeing -- the South and West are definitely growing, and growing more than other regions in the country,” Stacy Gimbel Vidal, spokeswoman for the U.S. Census Bureau, told msnbc.com. “It is hard for us to speculate the 'why' people are flocking to and congregating in those areas.”


    The nation’s urban population grew by 12.1 percent from 2000 to 2010, outpacing the nation’s overall growth rate of 9.7 percent for the same period, according to census figures.

    Of the 10 most densely populated urbanized areas nationwide, nine are in the West, with seven of those in California.

    The nation’s most densely populated urbanized area is Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, with nearly 7,000 people
    per square mile. The San Francisco-Oakland area is the second most densely populated at 6,266 people per square mile, followed by San Jose (5,820 people per square mile), and in the Central Valley, Delano, with 5,483 people per square mile, ranks fourth, according to census figures.

    The New York-Newark area is fifth, with an overall density of 5,319 people per square mile.

    “Urban areas — defined as densely developed residential, commercial and other nonresidential areas — now account for 80.7 percent of the U.S. population, up from 79.0 percent in 2000,” the bureau said in a release. “Although the rural population — the population in any areas outside of those classified as ‘urban’ — grew by a modest amount from 2000 to 2010, it continued to decline as a percentage of the national population.”

    The census data identifies two types of urban areas: “urbanized areas” of 50,000 or more people and “urban clusters” of at least 2,500 and less than 50,000 people. There are 486 urbanized areas and 3,087 urban clusters nationwide.

    Other notable census finds:

    • The New York-Newark area continues to be the nation’s most populous urbanized area, with 18,351,295 residents. Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim is the second most populous (12,150,996), followed by the Chicago area (8,608,208).
    • Maine tops the nation as the most rural state, beating out Vermont. According to the new data, 61.3 percent of Maine’s population lives in rural areas, compared to Vermont’s 61.1 percent.
    • States with the largest rural populations were Texas (3,847,522), North Carolina (3,233,727) and Pennsylvania (2,711,092).

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  • Designer's sleeping bag coat transforms - and warms - Detroit's homeless

    The Empowerment Plan

    Veronika Scott, with a homeless woman who now sews coats, is helping transform Detroit.

    One young designer is using her talents for what lies far beyond Fashion Week: the real world.

    Veronika Scott, 22, created the "MWPR" coat, which doubles as a sleeping bag for Detroit’s struggling homeless population (approximately 20,000). Warm and waterproof, the outerwear boasts yet another remarkable feature — it was also constructed by the homeless. Part of Veronika’s project, called “The Empowerment Plan,” is to help give jobless women a way to earn money by teaching them how to sew and produce within the garment industry, offering them a new way to support themselves. It’s a coat that’s giving two-fold.

    “If done right, this would be a way to help end the homeless cycle,” Scott told TODAY.com. “We give homeless women jobs while in the shelter, so they can earn money, find a place to live, and gain back their independence for themselves and their family.”

    The Empowerment Plan

    The sleeping bag, of which there are now 275, is currently distributed in Detroit.

    Interestingly, it all started as a school project “gone awry” at Detroit’s College for Creative Studies, says Scott. “After months of developing this product for a class, I had begun to realize that I wasn't really designing for a tangible need, I was trying to solve an emotional one.”

    Scott didn’t quite imagine she’d spent her first year out of school working with an outreach program in Detroit, distributing her coat (275 and counting) and building an entire production company with a unique focus: "We are a nonprofit with a product, one that can be offered to the public to help our cause,” she said.

    It's an impressive accomplishment that's earned Scott respect from fellow clothing manufacturers in Michigan. "It’s evident that Veronika has put a lot of thought into the technical design of the MPWR coat,” said Mark Valade, president and CEO of Dearborn-based clothing company Carhartt, which specializes in outerwear. “Designing a multi-use product presents many challenges, especially when the uses of the product are so distinctly different... The coat is highly durable, fully-functional, cost-effective and destined to help countless people in need."

    In the coming year, Scott intends to go national by selling her product online, and offering a one-to-one donation for every coat sold, much like the TOMS shoes model. Buyers will also be able to view the coat sewer’s history, and then choose the city they want their donated coat to go to. It’s a thoughtful way to connect consumers with the personal work her company accomplishes.

    Helping the public good isn’t generally a top priority for a designer, but it’s just that passion that Scott thinks the industry is missing.

    “Designers should be more involved in using their talents towards social good issues,” she said, adding that it’s an opportunity for artists and designer to work in an environment that fosters and supports creative endeavors.

    And more than anything, it seems, it help fosters collaboration in the most unlikely of places. Scott isn’t just manufacturing her coat, she’s also working with her clients on ways to improve its capabilities.  

    “[Homeless individuals] have given us the critique we need to adjust the coat accordingly. Their feedback is being listened to and helping to change the coat, as the coat is always changing. And for them, they feel a part of this whole design process.”

    Rina Raphael is a TODAY.com editor who has a great respect for any 22-year-old helping change the world.

    More:
    Author helps save home for 101-year-old Detroit widow

    New Israeli law bans underweight models in ads
    Jennifer Lopez: I'm a size 6 (unless I overeat, then I'm an 8)

  • Military: Fetus not among 17 Afghan massacre victims

    Kari Bales, the wife of Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, the soldier who stands accused of murdering 17 Afghan civilians, talks exclusively to TODAY's Matt Lauer about the "devastating" accusations against her husband, saying "this is not him."

    The Army said Monday that an unborn child was not among the 17 victims in the shooting massacre of civilians in two villages in Afghanistan allegedly perpetrated by Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, contradicting an Afghan official who spoke to The New York Times.

    Kandahar Province Police Chief Brig. Gen. Abdul Raziq told The New York Times that one of the slain females was pregnant and Americans were counting her unborn fetus as a victim. But Army Lt. Col. Jimmie E. Cummings, Jr., told msnbc.com a fetus was not among the victims of the March 11 attacks in which Bales, 38, is charged with premeditated murder.


    “The information that we have collected up to now, this is not true,” Cummings, a spokesman for NATO's ISAF & U.S. Forces - Afghanistan, wrote in an email to msnbc.com. “The 17th is not from a pregnant female or any of the wounded passing away. At this time, the evidence available to the prosecution team indicates 17 victims of premeditated murder and 6 victims of assault and attempted premeditated murder.” 

    The death toll breaks down to four men and women each, and nine children, Cummings wrote. One man and one woman, plus four more children, were wounded.

    “I think one of the things you can assume is that it was difficult to collect evidence in this case and it was difficult for them to necessarily identify every victim right away,” said Michael Navarre, a director of the National Institute of Military Justice and a former Navy prosecutor and defense counsel.

    New details emerged over the weekend in the case. Military prosecutors told NBC News that the attacks came in two waves, with Bales allegedly returning to his base after the first attack and then slipping out again.

    Military prosecutors allege that Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, accused of a deadly rampage which left 17 Afghan civilians dead, came in two waves, with Bales returning to his base after the first attack and then slipping out again. NBC's John Yang reports.

    The father of two from Bellevue, Wash., was charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder, six counts of attempted murder and six counts of assault. He is being held at a U.S. military prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kan.

    His wife, Karilyn Bales, said she did not believe her husband had done this.

    “I don't think anything will really change my mind in believing that he did not do this,’’ she told TODAY’s Matt Lauer in an exclusive interview that aired Monday. “This is not what it appears to be.’’

    Military wives rally around Karilyn Bales

    “I just don't think he was involved,’’ she said. “I don't know enough information. This is not him. It's not him."

    The timeline of the killings remains unclear. One Afghan guard working from midnight to 2 a.m. saw a U.S. soldier return at 1:30 a.m., and the guard’s replacement saw a U.S. soldier leaving the base at 2:30 a.m., but it was unclear whether it was the same soldier.

    There are reports that there is surveillance video, and that Bales allegedly walked back to the base and turned himself in.

    For alleged Afghan shooter, death penalty unlikely

    Karilyn Bales said her husband was fit for a fourth deployment and that she was not aware of any obvious signs of post-traumatic stress disorder or the traumatic brain injury that he allegedly suffered on one of his tours. 

    Bales 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 spent three years in Iraq on his previous tours, during which time he lost part of a foot and suffered a traumatic brain injury (TBI) due to a vehicle rollover, media reports say. Two days before he allegedly attacked the Afghan villagers, he saw the aftermath of a bombing in which a fellow soldier had his leg blown off, The Associated Press reported.

    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.

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

    Gary Solis, former head of the Marine Corps’ Military Law Branch and current adjunct professor of law at Georgetown Law School, said the fact that the crime occurred in a combat zone in a distant country complicates the task for prosecutors given the possibility of numerous crime scene complications. But they agreed that pursuing an insanity defense based on PTSD would be a difficult case to make, too.

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  • 'I just killed my wife,' man tells cops

    A Pennsylvania man was arrested in what Chester County Prosecutor Tom Hogan calls a "cold-blooded, pre-planned killing" of the man's estranged wife, the mother of his four kids, outside a convenience store.

    James Hvizda is accused of killing his wife Kimberly Hvizda -- who had a restraining order against him -- around 11 p.m. Sunday in the parking lot of the Wawa in Upper Uwchlan Township, according to authorities.

    "This was a cold-blooded, pre-planned killing," said Hogan. "The defendant executed his wife, the mother of his four children, with casual efficiency. Those four children are now left without a mother and with a father charged with murder."

    For more, visit NBC10.com

    According to a criminal complaint, Hvizda allegedly met his wife at the Wawa where she worked and the two began a conversation in front of the store.

    Read the entire criminal complaint

    Prosecutors say the couple eventually walked over to Kimberley's van where Hvizda allegedly pulled a knife and stabbed her multiple times. A co-worker found Kimberly's body in the parking lot of the store. She was pronounced dead at the scene, according to investigators.

    According to the criminal complaint, Hvizda rang the doorbell at the Upper Uwchlan Township Police Department at 11:10 p.m. This was the conversation between Hvizda and Cpl. Joseph Carr, who was on duty:

    Carr: “How can I help you?”
    Hvizda: “I just killed my wife.”
    Carr: “What?”
    Hvizda: “I just killed my wife.”
    Carr: “Where?”
    Hvizda: “At your Wawa.”
    Carr: “Is she alive?”
    Hvizda: “No she is dead.”
    Carr: “How did you kill her?”
    Hvizda: “With a knife.”

    Kimberly had a protection from abuse order against her husband that was issued last November and was to remain active until November 2014, according to authorities.

    Hvizda was in custody Monday morning awaiting arraignment on first-degree murder and other charges.

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