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  • Phylicia Barnes case: Arrest made in death of North Carolina teen who went missing in Baltimore in 2010

    Baltimore Police Department / AP

    North Carolina teen Phylicia Barnes went missing in 2010 while visiting family in the Baltimore area.

    A year after the body of North Carolina teenager Phylicia Barnes was found floating in a Maryland river, her sister’s ex-boyfriend has been arrested and charged with her murder, authorities said.

    Michael Johnson, 28, was arrested late Wednesday at his home, Baltimore police said. Authorities announced Thursday he has been indicted by a grand jury on a first-degree murder charge in the death of the 16-year-old Barnes, who went missing on Dec. 28, 2010, while visiting relatives in Baltimore during the Christmas holidays. Her body was found in April 2011.


    At a news conference, Baltimore State's Attorney Gregg L. Bernstein said that he "hopes this will provide [the family] with some measure of closure," The Baltimore Sun reported. He declined to comment on specifics of the investigation, including how Barnes was killed and what evidence led to Johnson’s arrest.

    "I cannot overstate how much effort and dedication have been invested to achieve justice in this tragic case. The Baltimore City Police, Maryland State Police, the Harford County State's Attorney's Office, the FBI and my staff worked relentlessly to bring us to this point," Bernstein added in a written statement.

    Police say Johnson had once dated Barnes’ 27-year-old half-sister Deena and was the last person to see Barnes alive. The three were in Deena’s apartment the day Barnes disappeared, according to police.

    "It's been a long day coming. It's a bittersweet day," Barnes’ father, Russell Barnes, told The Associated Press upon news of an arrest. "I can rest better and maybe Phylicia can rest a whole lot better."

    AP

    Michael Johnson. 28, has been indicted on a murder charge in the death of Phylicia Barnes.

    At the time she disappeared, Barnes lived in Monroe, N.C., and was an honor student at Union Academy, a public charter school.

    Baltimore police launched an extensive search, but it wasn’t until April 2011 that her body was found floating in the Susquehanna River by workers at the Conowingo Dam in northeast Maryland, about an hour’s drive from the apartment in Baltimore where she was last seen.

    Medical examiners ruled the death a homicide but the cause was not publicly released.

    During the frustrating search, Baltimore Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi implored the national media to take note of the case.

    "We would really like the national outlets to help us out here, so if somebody sees her in Missouri, they are able to alert authorities quickly," Guglielmi told AOL News in January 2011.  "It has been incredibly frustrating for me. We've been pitching this since the 29th [and] have not gotten any traction. This case is no different than the Natalee Holloway case. The only difference is Phylicia is from North Carolina, she went missing in Baltimore and she is African-American."

    Holloway is the blonde-haired Alabama teen who vanished while on a high school graduation trip to Aruba in 2005. Her disappearance attracted international media attention. An Alabama judge early this year declared Holloway legally dead although her body has never been found.

    The Barnes case prompted the Maryland Legislature to pass “Phylicia’s Law,” a bill aimed at improving coordination between law enforcement and community groups when a child disappears. The bill requires state law enforcement to post a list of missing children and annual statistics.

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  • After kidnapping, heart patient, 5, returns home

    NCMEC

    5-year-old Porter Stone

    A 5-year-old boy with a heart condition who was kidnapped from St. Louis Children's Hospital this week headed home with his mother, NBCChicago.com reported Thursday.

    Porter Stone was seen being carried out of Ronald McDonald House in Oak Lawn, Ill., by mom Tiffany Stone. He was covered in a fleece blanket as they made their way to O'Hare Airport. From O'Hare they flew to St. Louis.

    Tiffany Stone told reporters Porter "is scared but happy to be going home."

    More on Porter Stone from NBCChicago.com

    Porter was placed on a transplant waiting list for a heart condition Tuesday, the same day his father, 33-year-old Jeffrey Stone, grabbed him and brought him to the Chicago area, police said. It sparked an Amber Alert until Porter was found and Jeffrey Stone was arrested.

    Doctors at Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn watched the boy until Tiffany Stone flew in late Wednesday to be reunited with her son.

    When he was kidnapped, Porter had only a day's worth of medication left in a portable IV bag. He made it to Oak Lawn in time to be treated.

    Police say Porter's parents are going through a messy divorce, and the boy's father does not have custody. According to police, Jeffrey Stone; his mother, Rhonda Marie Matthews; and his aunt, Heather Minton, drove Porter all the way to Alsip, Ill. They stopped to rest at a Baymont Inn, where police caught up with them.

    Previous report: 2 held after boy is snatched while awaiting heart transplant

    All three face kidnapping and other charges and are being held  in lieu of $1 million bail.

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  • Insurer balks at claims in Christmas fire that killed 3 girls, grandparents

    An insurance company said it should not have to pay claims or lawsuits stemming from a Christmas morning fire that killed five people in Connecticut because a contractor renovating the house misrepresented the type and scope of work he did.

    Utica First Insurance Co. argues in a lawsuit filed this week in New York that Michael Borcina misrepresented the number of employees with his company, Tiberias Construction, its sales and payroll, and size and type of work performed. The company says if it knew the facts, it would not have issued coverage.

    The fire in Stamford, Conn., blamed on discarded fireplace ashes, killed 9-year-old Lily and 7-year-old twins Sarah and Grace Badger, and their grandparents, Lomer and Pauline Johnson.


    The lawsuit says those who could be affected include the girls' parents, Madonna and Matthew Badger; Madonna's brother, Wade Johnson, and the estates of the victims. The Badgers are divorced.

    Read the latest on NBCNewYork.com's coverage of the fatal fire

    "We are very disappointed that Tiberias Construction's insurance company is trying to get out from under its legal obligations," said David Grudberg, Borcina's attorney.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    Three sisters who died in a Christmas Day fire appear on a funeral program on January 5 in New York City. Hundreds of people attended the service to remember Lilian Badger, 9, and her twin sisters Sarah and Grace, 7, who died in the blaze in Stamford, Conn., on Christmas morning.

    Authorities have said Borcina, who escaped the blaze, is believed to have placed the ashes in or outside an entryway, near the trash. Borcina and Madonna Badger are friends.

    Richard Emery, Matthew Badger's attorney, said he has to examine the insurer's claim.

    "But at first blush it certainly seems that the insurance company is trying to wiggle out of their responsibility to compensate Borcina's victims," Emery said.

    Emery said he was considering a lawsuit against Borcina "and a lot of other people that we believe are responsible for what occurred."

    Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com

    Stan Twardy, attorney for Madonna Badger, declined to comment, saying he hadn't seen the lawsuit. A message was left with an attorney for the insurance company.

    The insurer says its rules for acceptable types of businesses and risks for which it provides insurance specifies limits on the number of employees, sales, payroll and type of work.

    Matthew Badger has started a project that supports underfunded elementary school arts programs in memory of his daughters.

    "Nothing is going to bring them back, but perhaps their memory can be perpetuated effectively if the foundation that Matthew Badger has started is properly supported," Emery said.

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  • Obama 'somber' in interview about his progress, election

    AP via Rolling Stone

    The Rolling Stone cover with President Obama. The issue hits newsstands Friday, April 27.

    President Barack Obama knows the stakes of this year's election are high.

    After all, he told Rolling Stone magazine, his legacy thus far has been met with mixed reviews.

    The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to issue a ruling in June on whether the individual insurance mandate that is a key component of the Obama administration’s health care law is unconstitutional.

    Though the economy has stabilized, a recent NBC/WSJ poll found that voters feel presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney leads Obama 40% to 34% when it comes to considering which candidate has savvier ideas on shoring up the economy.

    Still, Obama feels confident that this fall voters will reject what he sees as Republicans' "shift to an agenda that is far out of the mainstream — and, in fact, is contrary to a lot of Republican precepts."

    He also underscored that though there have been tense exchanges between his administration and GOP congressional leadership, the president does not see the relationship as “frosty.”

    “When John Boehner and I sit down, I enjoy a conversation with him. I don’t think he’s a bad person,” Obama said. “I think he’s patriotic. I think that the Republicans up on the Hill care about this country, but they have a very ideologically rigid view of how to move this country forward, and a lot of how they approach issues is defined by ‘Will this help us defeat the president?’ as opposed to ‘Will this move the country forward?'"

    In the interview, which writer and Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner described as "somber," Obama said that in many ways, the election is a referendum on his first-term performance.

    "Now, the burden on me is going to be to describe for the American people how the progress we’ve made over the past three years, if sustained will actually lead to the kind of economic security that they’re looking for,” Obama said. “There’s understandable skepticism because things are still tough out there.”

    Obama acknowledged that the unemployment rate, which is at 8.2 percent, is “way too high.”

    "You have folks whose homes are underwater because the housing bubble burst, people are still feeling the pinch from high gas prices,” Obama said. “The fact of the matter is that times are still tough for too many people, and the recovery is still not as robust as we’d like, and that’s what will make it a close election.”

    The past four years have also given the president an opportunity to examine issues of race and describes his own views on the topic as “complicated.”

    "Race has been one of the fault lines in American culture and American politics from the start," he said. "I never bought into the notion that by electing me, somehow we were entering into a post-racial period.

    "On the other hand, I’ve seen in my own lifetime how racial attitudes have changed and improved, and anybody who suggests they haven’t isn’t paying attention or is trying to make a rhetorical point.

    "We all see it every day, and me being in this Oval Office is a testimony to changes that have been taking place.”

    More: Obama leads Romney by six points, but Republican ahead on economy
    Girl meets Obama in a bar, makes best surprised face ever 
    Watch Obama slow-jam with Jimmy Fallon 
    Obama campaign offers dinner at Clooney's 

    TODAY.com contributor Halimah Abdullah is the site’s woman in Washington.

  • Want that prom gown? Make sure it passes high school dress code

    Cedartown High School

    Click the picture to view other dresses in the Cedartown High School dress code for prom.

    Girls who squeeze all but their cleavage, backs and midriffs into their special prom dresses may not get through the dances’ doors this spring as U.S. high schools toughen dress codes.

    “We’ve never had a problem until this year,” said Hal David, principal for Cedartown High School in northwest Georgia. “It was at homecoming when we first saw the dresses our students were wearing -- and they were inappropriate, unacceptable.”

    Students at Cedartown High School aren’t the only ones under greater scrutiny these days, as more American public high schools crack down on plunging necklines and thigh-high slits, educators say.


    Some high school administrators say dresses have become so risqué that staff have created special presentations on acceptable attire and offering approval in advance when girls show pictures of their most-sought after style of dress.

    Teen banned from prom over Confederate dress

    David said the school came up with new guidelines this fall to spare everyone involved in the special day, which came last Saturday for the Cedartown Bulldogs.

    He said parents complained gowns worn during homecoming were too revealing. He said he assembled a team of parents, teachers and administrators to draw up a plan, which included showing pictures of dresses deemed acceptable and unacceptable. To make sure it was accessible to Cedartown’s 1,100 students he posted it on the school’s website. He said staff also placed posters on high school walls, showing pictures of acceptable dresses.

    David said students had plenty of warning before they showed up for prom at the local country club. “And to be fair, we were not trying to embarrass anybody. We just wanted our students to be appropriate,” he said. “We didn’t have to turn away anyone, we didn’t have any issues and everything was fine.”

    Despite rising melanoma rates, teens' tanning for prom still the norm

    Seventeen magazine's Ann Shoket presents five colorful, sophisticated dresses and accessories appropriate for all shapes and sizes.

    But staff at another Georgia high school had a few tears shed at the door.

    “The biggest issue is cleavage and you can’t have rules for cup sizes,” said Ginger Lawrence, assistant principal at Lee County High School in Leesburg, Ga., where 375 seniors are graduating this year.

    Lawrence said she chaperoned the Trojans' prom wielding a 3-inch ruler, making sure the length of hems were no more than three inches above the knees. She said she had to turn away a few students because their dresses were too risqué.

    “One girl went home and put on a tank top and came back,” she said. “The other, well, we didn’t see her again.”

    Courtesy of Cheyenne Niemeier

    Cheyenne Niemeier, a senior at Crawford High School in Crawford, Texas, said she had no trouble finding her dress for prom this year.

    In Crawford, Texas, one parent says there no question prom is a busy time for families, with parents spending up to hundreds of dollars on clothes, meals, tickets and transportation. Parents will spend about $1,078 on the big dance this year, compared to $807 last year, according to a survey by Visa. Sometimes a dress code can help families navigate through a costly purchase, said Renessa Niemeier, a parent of a senior at Crawford High School.

    "We've been aware of the dress code for years, and we abide by it," Niemeier said. "Fortunately, we haven't had any troubles finding a dress. We've bought many dresses over the years, too."

    Her 18-year-old daughter, Cheyenne, said she spent about $500 on her gown, adding that her friends were able to find suitable styles that comply with Crawford's dress code.

    "It wasn't too hard to find a dress, if you look in the right stores," Cheyenne Niemeier said.

    Video: Yearbook photo too racy? Student fights back

    These days, the cuts and look seem to mirror outfits from the popular television show "Dancing with the Stars," says Catherine Moellering, executive vice president of trendspotting firm Tobe in New York City.

    “Prom fashion is living in its own bubble,” Moellering said. “A lot of these girls are watching shows like ‘Real Housewives’ and the Kardashians, mimicking what they are seeing. And more or less, less has become the more.”

     

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  • Secret Service investigating another report of debauchery involving strippers and prostitutes - this time in El Salvador

    According to a report from a television station in Seattle, U.S. military specialists hired prostitutes in El Salvador in 2011 prior to President Barack Obama's trip there. NBC's Kristen Welker reports.

    The Secret Service says it’s looking into a new report that a group of its agents and U.S. military specialists partied hard at a strip club in El Salvador, with some hiring prostitutes, prior to a visit by President Barack Obama last year.

    The report Thursday by Seattle’s KIRO-TV comes on the heels of an agency scandal involving allegations that Secret Service employees hired prostitutes and took them back to their hotel rooms earlier this month in Cartagena, Colombia. Twelve agency personnel who were investigated in that incident have been dealt with: eight were forced out, the agency is trying to permanently revoke the security clearance of one, and three others have been cleared of serious wrongdoing but will face administrative discipline, according to The Associated Press.

    In the KIRO-TV report, investigative reporter Chris Halsne said he interviewed a government subcontractor who worked with a Secret Service advance team in the El Salvadoran capital, San Salvador, prior to a March 2011 visit by Obama to meet with the new president of the Central American country.


    The subcontractor, who was not named, said he joined about a dozen Secret Service employees and a few U.S. military specialists in a visit to a strip club a few days before Obama’s arrival.

    According to the KIRO report:

    This source witnessed the majority of the men drink heavily ("wasted," "heavily intoxicated") at the strip club. He says most of the Secret Service "advance-team" members also paid extra for access to the VIP section of the club where they were provided a number of sexual favors in return for their cash. Although our source says he told the agents it was a "really bad idea" to take the strippers back to their hotel rooms, several agents bragged that they "did this all the time" and "not to worry about it." Our source says at least two agents had escorts check into their rooms. It is unclear whether the escorts who returned to the hotels were some of the strippers from the same club.

    The strip club’s owner confirmed that Secret Service agents and some military members visited the establishment the week prior to Obama’s visit, KIRO reported. The owner reportedly also told Halsne that FBI and DEA agents and U.S. Embassy employees in San Salvador also frequented the club.

    Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano vowed to get to the bottom of the prostitution scandal that cost several members of the Secret Service their jobs. NBC's Kelly O'Donnell reports.

    The Secret Service said Thursday it is looking into the report.

    “The recent investigation in Cartagena has generated several news stories that contain allegations by mostly unnamed sources. Any information that is brought to our attention that can be assessed as credible will be followed up on in an appropriate manner,” the agency said in a statement.

    FBI spokesman Paul Bresson said in a statement: "We always take any allegation of employee misconduct seriously and, if proven to have merit, we will take swift and appropriate action." A spokesman for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said it had no comment.

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  • Severe thunderstorms could hit mid-South, High Plains; Texas hits near-record temperature

    AP

    This NOAA satellite image taken Thursday at 1:45 a.m. EDT shows dense cloud cover over areas of the Ohio Valley through the Mid-Atlantic as a storm system and associated warm front extend through the Ohio Valley.

    Severe thunderstorms are possible Thursday in the central High Plains and the mid-South with damaging winds and large hail the main threats in both locations, the Weather Channel warned.

    Weather.com posted a map showing the areas that could be affected that included parts of Virginia, West Virginia, North and South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi, as well as areas of Texas, New Mexico, Colorado and Nebraska.


    Meanwhile, Texas was hit by near-record high temperatures for April, with the city of Childress experiencing 106-degree heat Wednesday.

    A spokeswoman for the National Weather Service told msnbc.com that was just one degree shy of the record for Texas in April of 107 degrees on April 19, 1925.

    Jody James, NWS warnings coordination meteorologist based in Lubbock, Texas, said he hoped the heat was not a sign that there would be a repeat of the wildfires and drought that hit the state last year.

    He said it was expected to be a little cooler Thursday with a top temperature of 96 degrees, with Friday hitting the upper 80s and then falling to the low 70s by Sunday.

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  • Parents of missing Tucson 6-year-old speak out: 'Tell us what you want'

    The parents of a 6-year-old Arizona girl who has been missing for nearly a week have talked publicly for the first time since their daughter disappeared. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    The parents of a 6-year-old girl missing in Arizona spoke publicly for the first time since their daughter disappeared nearly a week ago, as hundreds of leads but no major breaks in the case came in.

    "We do not want the focus to be taken off Isabel by us being in front of the cameras or by the media. We are here today to plea for a safe return of our baby girl Isabel." Becky Celis said Wednesday.

    Surrounded by volunteers wearing "Bring Isa Home" T-shirts, Becky and Sergio Celis spoke in both English and Spanish in their eastside Tucson, Ariz., neighborhood where their daughter disappeared Friday night, NBC affiliate KVOA.com reported.


    "We are cooperating to the fullest extent with the investigation," Sergio Celis said. "We are increasing the reward. Just please, please, to the person or persons who have Isabel: Tell us your demands. Tell us what you want. We will do anything for her. We are looking - we are looking for you, Isa. We love, and we miss you so much. We will never give up. We will never give up looking for you."

    Investigators have received 300 leads in the girl's disappearance, NBC's Miguel Almaguer reported Thursday. But with no big break in the case, they urged Isabel's parents to go public. She was reported missing Saturday morning.

    No suspects have been arrested in the case. Police say Isabel's parents are working with investigators.

    Full coverage from KVOA.com on Isabel Celis

    The parents have said Isabel, who has two older brothers, was last seen when she was put to bed on Friday night. The family awoke Saturday morning to find the hazel-eyed girl's bed empty, they told police.

    Screen missing
    Authorities say a window to the girl's ground-floor room was open, and a screen was missing.

    Police have said they are treating the girl's disappearance as a "possible abduction" but have yet to rule anyone in or out as a suspect.

    Fliers and posters with photos of Isabel's smiling face, some of her wearing a blue bow in her light brown hair, were plastered all over town. The Pima County Attorney's Office posted an $8,000 reward, most of it from private donations, for information leading to an arrest in the case.

    The search widened on Tuesday to washes surrounding the middle-class urban neighborhood. Police investigators have been paired with FBI agents to knock on every door within a three-mile radius of the family's home, and all local trash companies have been contacted, said Tucson police Chief Roberto Villasenor.

    The family was given the go-ahead to return to their modest single-story house on Wednesday morning, after FBI behavioral analysts had examined the home. The entire block remained cordoned off with police tape, and squad cars were posted at each end. Villasenor reiterated that the search continues.

    "All we think about is bringing her back safely," he said.

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    Investigators also have collected surveillance video from nearby businesses in hopes that some clues might have been caught on camera. A landfill and refuse-transfer station that serve the area have been secured and will be searched, he said.

    "We're at about 300 tips and leads," and all will be pursued, Villasenor said. He added: "We are now concentrating our search on ... some focal points where we're hoping we'll have more success."

    It was not clear whether the FBI's behavioral analysis team had spotted anything of interest in the family's home that two physical searches of the dwelling, including a sweep with specially trained dogs, had overlooked.

    The behavioral analysts planned to interview family members and other witnesses, and Villasenor said the parents were cooperating with investigators. "Obviously (these) are times of emotional distress for them," he said.

    This article includes reporting by NBC station KVOA in Tucson and Reuters.

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  • Autistic boy's father: Why hasn't teacher been fired over 'bullying'?

    When Stuart Chaifetz, a father in Cherry Hill, N.J., was told his autistic son was acting uncharacteristically violent at school, he sent him to class wearing a hidden recording device that caught a teacher on tape bullying students. NBC's Jeff Rossen reports.

    Updated at 4:40 p.m. ET: The father of an autistic boy allegedly bullied by staff at a New Jersey school has vowed to keep campaigning until the teacher of his son's class has her license revoked.

    Stuart Chaifetz, 44, put a wire on his son Akian, 10, and recorded staff in his class at Horace Mann Elementary School in Cherry Hill calling the child "a bastard," talking about vomiting that morning due to a hangover, and apparently teasing the child to the point where he had a "half-hour meltdown."


    At least one classroom aide reportedly lost her job and on Tuesday Superintendent Maureen Reusche said she wanted "to assure our parents that the individuals who are heard on the recording raising their voices and inappropriately addressing children no longer work in the district and have not since shortly after we received the copy of the recording.

    But Chaifetz then said he had discovered that the teacher of his son's class, Kelly Altenburg, was moved to another school and not fired, while a teachers union official told msnbc.com Wednesday that Altenburg "basically was exonerated."

    However on Thursday, Reusche and the education board president issued a statement saying it disagreed with the union official's claim, adding "the District does not consider the matter closed at this time as the investigation remains ongoing."

    Chaifetz, an investigator with an animal protection group, Showing Animals Respect and Kindness, or SHARK, believes Altenburg was one of those making offensive comments in the classroom, and as the teacher in charge she should be held responsible for what he considers bullying behavior by other staff.

    "When did teachers become more important than children?" he said.

    "Even if she said nothing, she should be fired because that room was her responsibility," he added.

    Chaifetz decided to put a wire on Akian after staff repeatedly complained the child was hitting them and throwing chairs around. He could not understand why his "wonderful, happy" son would act in this way and decided to find out what was going on in the class. Akian's autism meant he was unable to explain.

    Chaifetz, speaking in a YouTube video that contained clips from the February recording, said the tape revealed that staff at the school were "literally making my son's life a living hell." 

    "Okay, Akian, you are a bastard," was one comment on the tape from a woman Chaifetz said he's "99 percent" sure was the teacher.

    "Go ahead and scream, because guess what? You are going to get nothing until your mouth is shut," a woman's voice was heard saying in another exchange.

    He also recorded a conversation between two people in the class talking about the consequences of a night out drinking wine with a friend. 

    "You know what I was doing this morning?" said one woman. "Heaving?" asked the other. "Oh my God, so bad. The wine won."

    Speaking to msnbc.com Thursday, Steve Wollmer, communications director for the New Jersey Education Association, the state's largest teachers union, said that when he said Wednesday that Altenburg "basically was exonerated" he did so based on the district's statement that those who had used inappropriate language were no longer working in the district.

    Wollmer said that as Altenburg had been reassigned to another school within the district, he thought she had been cleared. He admitted that he should have been more specific and said she had been cleared of making the "inappropriate" and "horrible" statements.

    He said he did not know why Altenburg was still apparently under investigation.

    Wollmer added that Altenburg was “very serious about her work, really sees it as her life’s calling and is very good at it.”

    Speaking in general terms, he said that "before people accuse people of things, they want to know if they're accusing them fairly or accurately."

    "What if she were not present at the time? There were teacher aides involved in this. What if she were not in that immediate part of the room? If you don't witness something, how can you stop it?" Wollmer said.

    Altenburg's attorney, Matthew B. Wieliczko, said that "at this time, we have no comment," when contacted by msnbc.com.

    Chaifetz said the school district's Tuesday statement "certainly made the public think that teacher was no longer there -- how else do you read that unless you are a Harvard-educated lawyer."

    "I'm not letting this go. I will take this to the department of education and get her license revoked so she cannot work anywhere else," Chaifetz said.

    "I think there need to be offenses that teachers get fired for, regardless of tenure or not," he added. "When you can prove bullying by a teacher, tenure should be meaningless."

    Child 'doing much better'
    Akian has now left Horace Mann, and Chaifetz said he was "doing much better now he's away from there."

    "He doesn't have any of the behaviors he had then. It only happened when he was with the teacher, Kelly Altenburg, and the aide," he said. "But I think he's got some scars from this. How could he not?"

    The YouTube video containing clips from the recording had more than 2.9 million views as of 9 a.m. ET Thursday, and an online petition to "pass legislation so that teachers who bully children are immediately fired" had 111,000 signatures.

    Chaifetz said the response has had been "overwhelming."

    Dad wires up autistic son, 10, to expose 'bullying' by teaching staff

    "There are so many wonderful people, people with stories of them being bullied, they are coming in every hour, hundreds of emails," he said. "This is really pervasive. There's a lot of bullying, there's a lot of bullying of special needs kids. It's like an epidemic."

    He said his son's case had "opened up a big window into what's going on."

    "People feel like they're alone," he said. "One positive thing that has come out of this: They saw a parent standing up and it's helping them stand up too."

    The Associated Press has found at least nine similar cases across the U.S. since 2003. It said parents of special needs students had secretly recorded teachers using insults like "bastard," "tard," "damn dumb" and "a hippo in a ballerina suit." A bus driver threatened to slap one child, while a bus monitor told another, "Shut up, you little dog."

    Chaifetz said he had given advice to "a couple" of other parents on how to put a wire on their child, after they contacted him about it, but cautioned people to check to laws in their state.

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  • 'Violent police impersonator' preying on Miami elderly

    Miami Police

    A rendering of the suspect police say they're looking for in a series of attacks on the elderly in Miami.

    Miami Police say they are looking for a “violent police impersonator” who identifies himself as a police officer to his elderly victims, then demands their ID and robs them.

    Police say the man pretending to be an officer wears a black shirt that reads “police” and flashes a badge at his unsuspecting victims in their 70s and 80s as they walk in Little Havana.

    Read the original story on NBCMiami.com

    He asks his victims, like Enrique Campos, to give him all their money and identification, sometimes saying he’s with immigration and needs their documents. When the victim hesitates he beats them, as he did Campos, the 78-year-old man said.


    There have been seven incidents of robberies and confrontations involving a police impersonator with a similar vehicle and MO since March 6, police said.

    Rafael Acsina said he was barely 30 feet from his front door one recent night when a man pretending to be a police officer – who wore a shirt that said "police" on the front and carried a gun – drove up and accused him of having drugs.

    "He said you have to come with me in my car," said Acsina, who at 46 is the only victim younger than his 70s.

    Then the man got out of his car and started to frisk him as though he were going to arrest him – but really he was grabbing his belongings out of his pockets, Acsina said.

    In one case, the suspect briefly kidnapped a victim, police said.

    Miami Police spokesman Sgt. Freddie Cruz said the suspect stopped that victim as he was driving, got his information, and “then made the victim get in his car and told him he was going to take him to jail. Several blocks later, after driving, he dropped the victim off. We don’t know what his intentions were, but this is a concern to us.”

    Watch US News crime videos on msnbc.com

    Police say they are looking for a white Latin man who is between 25 and 35 years old, is between 5 feet 10 inches and 5 feet 11 inches tall, weights 190 to 200 pounds, has short hair, and has tattoos on both arms.

    He possibly drives a black four-door Ford Taurus with tinted windows and is considered armed and dangerous, police said.

    Police ask anyone with information to call Miami-Dade Crime Stoppers at 305-471-TIPS.

    Acsina said the man who accosted him was drunk, and that once he realized he was not a real police officer he managed to escape unharmed. But the experience terrified him and is something he will never forget, he said.

    "I didn’t expect that somebody would try to kill me with a gun," he said.

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  • Catholic school teacher says she was fired over fertility treatments

    Emily Herx knew infertility treatments would be costly, but she never anticipated that part of the price would be her job.

    Herx was told she could no longer work at the Catholic school where she’d been teaching for the past seven years because of Catholic doctrine forbidding in vitro fertilization.

    The 32-year-old mother of one is now suing the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend and St Vincent de Paul School for discrimination. She says her dismissal for using IVF came completely out of the blue.

     “For two years my supervisor has known about it and said she was praying for us,” Herx told TODAY’s Ann Curry. “So there was no warning. There was nothing. So in my heart I had support and I was being honest about it.”

    Related: IVF, surrogate or all natural, does it really matter?

    The firing has been hard on the entire Herx family. 

    “It’s been a very emotional time for both of us – actually my whole family,” Herx told Curry. “We’ve struggled, trying to wrap our minds around what’s happened here, just because I was such a devoted teacher and I loved my job so much. [We were] just trying to expand our family. To have this happen was just awful.”

    For Emily’s husband Brian, there was a sense of betrayal.

    “We’ve been extremely hurt by this,” he told Curry in a shaking voice. “She was dedicated to the school. She loved the students there. She loved what she did there. And unfortunately it was all ripped away from her.”

    Related: Birth defects more common in IVF babies

    For its part, the school denies that there was any discrimination and says that it “has clear policies requiring that teachers in its schools must, as a condition of employment, have a knowledge and respect for the Catholic faith and abide by the tenets of the Catholic Church.”

    One of those tenets holds that IVF treatments are a sin because, the Diocese explained in a statement, they “frequently involve the deliberate destruction and freezing of embryos.”

    In her lawsuit, Herx claims that her bishop told her that IVF “is an intrinsic evil, which means no circumstances can justify it. “ She also claims in her lawsuit that her parish pastor told her that she was a “grave, immoral sinner” for pusuing IVF.

    The church sees the case as a test of constitutional guarantees of religious freedom.

    The diocese tells TODAY that is supports infertility treatments for its employees, just not in vitro fertilization, which the church believes contradicts its right-to-life beliefs.

    “The Diocese views the core issue raised in this lawsuit as a challenge to the Diocese's right, as a religious employer, to make religious based decisions consistent with its religious standards on an impartial basis,” the Diocese said in a statement.

    Related: Frozen embryo "open adoption" raises hopes, questions

    The case is a complex one, says Mary Anne Case, a law professor at the University of Chicago.

    “There are no parts here that are just ordinary legal business,” Case said. “There are people with very strong stakes – personal, ideological, religious.”

    Beyond this, the Herxes will be battling to show that their case is different from one that the Supreme Court recently decided in favor of a church in a workplace discrimination case based on a “ministerial exception” allowing religious organizations extra leeway when it comes to firing employees for behaviors they consider unsuitable.

    The Herxes’ lawyer says their case is different.

    “We don’t believe that Emily fits within the “ministerial exception,” and her facts are distinguishable from that case,” said attorney Kathleen Delaney. “The teacher in the other case was a Lutheran minister. She had a title of a minister. She taught religion courses and she had to go through religious training and education as a condition of her employment. None of these facts are present in Emily’s case.”

    Emily Herx was a literature and language teacher at St. Vincent de Paul School. In her lawsuit, she’s seeking her job back as well as compensation for mental anguish and emotional distress.

    Linda Carroll is a regular contributor to msnbc.com and TODAY.com. She is co-author of the new book "The Concussion Crisis: Anatomy of a Silent Epidemic”

     

    Indiana Catholic school teacher Emily Herx tells TODAY's Ann Curry she was shocked when she was fired from the job she loved after undergoing IVF procedures.

     

  • Philly police: Activist who complained about vandalism was the vandal

    PHILADELPHIA -- A neighborhood activist who spoke out about the vandalizing of dozens of cars near his home now has been arrested in the case, police say.

    David Toledo is accused of slashing tires in the neighborhood, Northeast Detectives Capt. John McGinnis told NBC10.

    See video, read the original report on Philadelphia's NBC10.com

    At a press conference Wednesday evening, police said Toledo had been arrested and charged with two counts of felony mischief, 47 counts of criminal mischief, false reports and other related offenses.


    Police say they questioned Toledo extensively on April 16, the same day the most recent vandalism was reported on Aldine and Teesdale Streets as a dozen or so more cars were targeted.

    Toledo has spoken to NBC10 several times since coverage of tire slashings in the area of the 4000 block of Aldine Street and surrounding roads began to surface in February. The vandalism dates back even further than that, according to neighbors.

    "I hope the cops get them before the neighbors find out who it is because something bad is going to happen," Toledo said after some cars were vandalized in mid-March. "My wife said 'somebody is watching us, watching the cops' because when they're here nothing happens."

    Now police say that it was Toledo who was causing sleepless nights for neighbors concerned that their cars would be vandalized while they slept. A town watch was formed and police even offered a big reward for an arrest in the case.

    All along, Toledo, who lives on Aldine Street, was there speaking out against the vandalism. 

    "This will be the last time that you're going to get my car because you will get caught," Toledo told NBC10 after just his tires were slashed on March 20. "The $10,000 reward, I don't want the money, all I want is their hands so I can smash them so they can never do it again."

    It's unclear if Toledo is responsible for all the area vandalism but police do believe he at least committed some of the tire slashings on Teesdale, Aldine and Erdrick Streets, McGinnis said.

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    NBC10 also spoke exclusively with Toledo's mother, who reacted strongly to her son's arrest.

    "I think he's being set up," she said. "He doesn't go around slashing tires. He's got better things to do in life -- he's got a life!" 

    The local town watch program Toledo claimed to be a part of held a meeting at 7 p.m. at Frankford and Aldine. In spite of Toledo's claims, the town watch says he was never a member of their organization.

    Philadelphia Police urged neighbors who feel betrayed by Toledo to not take matters into their own hands.

    “Let the justice system take care of Mr. Toledo,” said Capt. Frank Bachmayer. “We don’t want any type of retaliation.”

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  • Unborn baby shot in Los Angeles riots: 'I'm still here'

    Jessica Evers survived a shooting while still in the womb during the 1992 Los Angeles riots. John Cadiz Klemack reports.

    Twenty years ago, amid the shock of the ongoing Los Angeles riots, there was a story that really grabbed headlines: The youngest victim of the violence had been shot while still in her mother’s womb.

    On April 30, 1992, Elvira Evers, then 7 ½-months pregnant, watched her Compton block fill with vehicles laden with stolen loot. The nearby swap meet had turned into a free-for-all.

    As she waited for her eldest son to come home that night, she pushed her 5-year-old daughter Nela into her home.

    “I started getting nervous,” Elvira Evers said.

    For more on the L.A. riots, visit NBCLosAngeles.com

    A minute later, she felt like her body was aflame. She’d been shot in the belly.


    Amid the chaos occurring all over the South Los Angeles region, it would have taken 40 minutes for an ambulance to arrive, so a friend drove Evers to St. Francis Medical Center. She had an emergency caesarean section and didn’t wake up for a week.

    When she finally opened her eyes, still in the hospital, she instantly began to cry.

    “And I was just like, oh, my God, my baby,” Evers said.

    A nurse came to her side, asking, “Why are you crying?”

    Evers thought she’d lost her baby. But she hadn’t, and the nurse took mother to child.

    “I saw the baby and I touched her and I cried and I cried,” Evers said.

    Today, Evers has a hidden mark from the 9 mm bullet that injured her. Her daughter, Jessica, now almost 20, has just a scar on her elbow.

    Evers said the experience changed her, made her appreciate life more. Every year, every birthday, she remembers the riots and the circumstances of Jessica’s birth.

    “I get sad. Because 20 years ago, I was supposed to be dead. So I have to give God thanks,”  Elvira Evers said.

    As for Jessica Evers, she feels her survival was for a purpose, one she’s still trying to understand.

    “As each day goes by,” Evers said, “I try to find out what I’m here for.”

    Despite her amazing story, Jessica said she doesn't see herself as all that special.

    "I'm innocent, but then again there are other innocent people that got hurt too," she said.

    Twenty years later, there's one thing Jessica can say with confidence: "I'm still here."

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  • Authorities: Remains in Texas creek likely boy who was starved to death

    NBCDFW.com

    Authorities are conducting tests on the body of Johnathan Ramsey to determine if he was starved to death.

    Skeletal remains found in a rural creek south of Dallas are likely those of Johnathan Ramsey, a 10-year-old boy who was allegedly starved to death by his parents, authorities said Wednesday.

    Judge Bill Woody said the Dallas County medical examiner made the provisional identification based on circumstances of the case as described by investigators. DNA test results are pending, and X-ray tests will be conducted to determine if the boy was starved to death, he added.


    The medical examiner's office declined to comment because the case involves remains found in another county.

    Read the full story at NBC 5 Dallas Fort Worth

    The boy's father, Aaron Ramsey, and his stepmother, Elizabeth Ramsey, face charges of injury to a child. Each is being held at the Dallas County Jail on $500,000 bail.

    Authorities say the boy was confined to a room and starved as punishment. 

    According to affidavits, the boy's father said he found the boy unconscious in his room and that he wrapped the child up and put him in a vacant nearby house's storm shelter. Ramsey told investigators he dumped the boy's body in Ennis, Texas, a day or two later.

    The Dallas Morning News reported that the remains were discovered Saturday in a creek bed where authorities say the child's father told police he put the body last year. The bones also were inside a sleeping bag matching one described by the father.

    The remains were found "under a log" in three feet of water, Woody said. 

    Starla Swanson, the boy's maternal step-grandmother, said the medical examiner's office contacted Johnathan's mother with the news on Wednesday.

    "It's been very rough knowing that he's been gone this long," Swanson said. "Her emotions and the whole family's are so mixed, but now it's become painfully real."

    The Associated Press and msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report.

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  • A crime by the highway: Poisoning trees to make billboards easier to see

    By Myron Levin, Lilly Fowler and Stuart Silverstein
    FairWarning.org

    Tallahassee Democrat

    Robert Barnhart, right, and his wife, Kimberly. Barnhart claims he was fired by Lamar Advertising in August 2011 when he refused to continue poisoning trees that blocked the view of Lamar billboards. He has been granted immunity in a criminal investigation, and has sued over loss of his job.

    Robert J. Barnhart was a crew chief for a billboard company, and a soldier in a war on trees.

    Trees were the enemy if they spoiled the view of a billboard. On days of an attack, Barnhart, 27, would arrive by dawn at Lamar Advertising Co. in Tallahassee, Fla. After removing the magnetic Lamar logo from a company truck, he would set forth with a machete, a hospital mask and a container of what he described as a "pretty gnarly" herbicide.

    It was all about being fast: Hack into the roots or base of the tree, douse the wound with herbicide, and get out of there. The Lamar executive who gave the orders, said Barnhart, called it "a hit and run."


    Barnhart’s account, detailed in court papers and in statements to investigators, is the focus of a criminal investigation. It also is the basis for a whistleblower suit in which Barnhart, who through his lawyer declined to be interviewed, maintains that he was fired because he would not keep poisoning trees. His claims are supported by sworn testimony from Barnhart’s former supervisor, Chris Oaks, who admitted that he, too, had illegally poisoned trees before Barnhart took over in 2009 as poisoner-in-chief.

    As long as there have been billboards, trees have been getting in the way. And billboard companies have been removing them — sometimes legally, sometimes not. News archives are replete with accounts of mysterious tree disappearances near billboard sites. Usually, no one gets caught, due to lack of evidence or to officials failing to aggressively pursue those responsible.

    North Carolina Department of Transportation

    Poisoned trees near a billboard for a topless dance joint in North Carolina in 2006.

    Fewer trees means more viewing time for motorists, and more money for billboard operators. A 500- foot clearance in front of a sign creates more than five seconds of viewing time for a motorist going 60 mph.

    It’s uncertain if the Tallahassee tree-poisonings were isolated, or reflect a pattern at Lamar. The Baton Rouge, La., company has nearly 150,000 billboards, more than any other U.S. outdoor advertising firm.

    Barnhart and Oaks said they acted under orders from Lamar’s former regional manager, Myron A. "Chip" LaBorde, who ran company operations in Florida and Georgia and was past president of the Florida Outdoor Advertising Association LaBorde died of pancreatic cancer last summer.

    Hal Kilshaw, a Lamar vice president and chief spokesman, declined to discuss the criminal investigation, but said "cutting of trees or poisoning of trees without the required permits would be contrary to company policy."

    Charges in the tree-poisoning case could be filed soon. Meanwhile, another tree-killing binge in the Florida panhandle has also drawn attention. In that episode, billboard operator Bill Salter Outdoor Advertising cleared more than 2,000 trees from public rights of way to enhance views of its signs.

    Florida transportation officials acted "in flagrant violation of the law" in issuing permits for the cutting, a grand jury found in January, because, among other things, they did not require Salter to compensate the state for the loss of the trees, valued at $1 million to $4 million. The permits were issued to Salter after a state legislator, Greg Evers, intervened by making calls to the state Department of Transportation. The agency is currently negotiating with Salter for repayment.

    Tree pruning also happens routinely, and legally, by arrangement between billboard operators and private landowners. The industry has lobbied for state laws to allow tree-cutting along public highways under certain conditions. According to the Outdoor Advertising Assn. of America, the industry trade group, 29 states, including Florida, have "reasonable" regulations on clearing vegetation that blocks views of signs. The group says on its website: "The OAAA discourages vegetation control that is not in compliance with state and local laws and regulations."

    However, environmental groups have criticized these laws, asking why publicly owned trees that provide beauty and shade should be removed to accommodate advertising signs. Though billboard companies pay for the cutting, critics say permit fees and compensation for destroyed trees do not meet the real cost to taxpayers. Moreover, they note, in states that permit vegetation removal, illegal cutting still takes place.

    Lamar’s Kilshaw said his company’s record is good. "We have over 150 offices, we have thousands of employees, we’ve been in business over 100 years," he said. The record shows Lamar is "doing the right thing almost all the time, almost everywhere."

    'An honest, legitimate mistake'
    In 2008, Lamar was sued by the state of Connecticut after the company and a tree service trespassed on state land and removed 83 trees along Interstate 84, including oak, spruce, maple and birch trees up to 37 inches in diameter. They "swept a swath of destruction," said then-Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, "obliterating a vital environmental buffer protecting homeowners from noxious noise and views."

    The problem was that Lamar had a permit to trim — not cut down — trees. It also felled trees outside the permitted area.

    Florida Office of Agricultural Law Enforcement

    An oak tree in Florida allegedly poisoned by Robert Barnhart. The tree "had signs of dying and chop marks near the base," said the report by Florida investigators.

    It was "an honest, legitimate mistake," Kilshaw said, adding that a state transportation official had observed the work without raising objections. But a judge found Lamar liable in October, 2010. In lieu of paying damages, Lamar agreed to fund a replanting program for an estimated $181,000.

    In 2009, Lamar was forced to pay about $182,000 to an irate Ohio couple for illegally felling 34 trees on their property to improve views of a sign.

    The dispute began in the late 1990s when, according to John Blust, he and his wife rebuffed Lamar’s offer to plant a sign on land they owned in the Dayton suburb of Beavercreek.

    A neighbor proved more obliging, and the billboard went up there. But it turned out that the Blusts’ trees were in the way. They lived a few miles from the property, and did not learn of the destruction of their woodland until alerted by a cousin.

    Blust told FairWarning that he sought compensation, and "If they had sent me $3,000, it would have been all over." But a Lamar executive "laughed at me over the phone from Baton Rouge, Louisiana," said Blust, who then decided to sue.

    A jury awarded the Blusts more than $2.2 million in punitive damages. Appeals dragged the marathon case into 2009, when an appeals court ruling led to Lamar paying damages and attorney fees.

    "In that case, our contractor made a mistake," Kilshaw said, "and simply went across a property line, and we ultimately paid on that."

    For his part, Blust, 76, said he was "satisfied that I caused them pain. Did we make a lasting impression on the management of Lamar? If they’re still cutting down trees, I guess we didn’t."

    What is unusual about these episodes is that someone got caught. More often, over the years, the culprits remained unknown or were not aggressively pursued by authorities.

    For example, a 1985 report by the General Accounting Office cited dozens of incidents in Georgia of illegal tree cutters acting with impunity, including a case in which about 500 trees were poisoned near three signs along interstate highways.

    In Louisiana, said the GAO, "over 2,000 feet of vegetation and trees were cut and cleared to enhance the visibility of two signs. We counted over 900 stumps from destroyed trees at this site."

    In a 1996 deposition, a former billboard company tree trimmer testified that he had cut down and poisoned trees in the Los Angeles area for many years, usually without the owners’ consent. The former employee, Fred Jackson, worked until the late 1980s for two large billboard companies, Foster & Kleiser and Patrick Media, that eventually merged and were absorbed by Clear Channel Outdoor.

    Jackson said he occasionally was confronted about what he was doing, and would make up a lie. It might be "‘I’m working for the Edison Company,’" Jackson testified. "That was a great one."

    More recently, illegal tree clearing near billboards and "supergraphics’’ — giant ads draped on buildings — has been a problem in Southern California, said Dan Freeman, an official with the state Department of Transportation, or Caltrans.

    "The billboard industry — well, my impression of them is they’re kind of lawless," said Freeman, Caltrans’ deputy director of maintenance for Los Angeles and Ventura counties. "They pretty much do whatever they want."

    "We’ve been victim a number of times to people who come in the middle of the night, with a chainsaw, and just kind of clear cut the area immediately in front of one of these supergraphics or a large billboard," Freeman told FairWarning.

    "And, of course, we call them," Freeman said, referring to the sign company, "and they say, ‘We have no idea who could have done it. My, what a terrible thing.’ They don’t own up to it. We have had a very, very difficult time in getting traction on prosecuting them."

    The right to be seen
    Billboard companies have sometimes claimed an inherent right to have unimpaired views of their signs. If revenues go down because of public trees, they have argued, public agencies should pay damages. This has been a hard sell.

    For example, a Tennessee appeals court rejected an industry lawsuit against the state department of transportation over its failure to maintain unrestricted views of roadside signs.

    "It is true that wild vegetation, as well as that planted by the State, has and will have a normal tendency to grow taller," said the 1979 ruling. "Plaintiffs seem to insist that the licensing of a billboard confers some special right of visibility or imposes some special duty upon the State to maintain visibility of the licensed billboard. No authority has been cited or found to sustain this novel theory."

    In 2006, the California Supreme Court rejected claims of billboard operator Regency Outdoor, which had sued the city of Los Angeles, claiming it lowered the value of its signs by planting palm trees for a beautification project.

    "The right to be seen from a public way…simply does not exist," the Supreme Court ruled. "Regency cannot claim unfair surprise from the plantings. Local governments have long planted trees along roads for aesthetic reasons, to lessen the burdens of climate, and for other salubrious purposes."

    So the industry has turned to state legislatures to establish the right to be seen. Under laws or regulations of most states, billboard operators can legally cut back trees and other vegetation along state and federal highways. Typically, they must pay for a permit, file a work plan, and either replant or pay for lost trees.

    The Outdoor Advertising Assn. of America failed to respond to interview requests, but in an email described vegetation control as "a common, longstanding practice along roadways for the sake of safety and visibility."

    Once state rules are in place, billboard companies often lobby state legislatures to relax restrictions and expand the freedom to cut. In the past year, for example, the industry pushed through such changes in Georgia, North Carolina and Wisconsin.

    In Georgia billboard companies won more freedom to clear trees, though the new law is tied up in a court challenge. The industry’s legislative success followed years of cultivating lawmakers. From 2001 through 2010, billboard owners and the Outdoor Advertising Association of Georgia contributed at least $467,522 to candidates for state office, according to a report by the advocacy group Scenic Georgia.

    The Outdoor Advertising Association also did some wining and dining, last year hosting 34 Georgia legislators and two board members of the state Department of Transportation at a golf outing at the Reynolds Plantation resort, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

    A Georgia Department of Transportation spokeswoman said that in the past five years, the agency has completed investigations into 20 complaints of illegal tree cutting, and collected about $203,000 in compensation.

    In North Carolina, the industry-backed law passed last July expanded the cutting area to up to 380 feet on each side of billboards — up from 250 feet before. This translates into extra viewing time of 1.5 seconds for motorists approaching billboards at 60 mph. State transportation officials estimated that up to 200,000 trees could be removed in the next five years as a result.

    From 2005 through June, 2011, billboard interests donated at least $206,000 to state legislative and gubernatorial candidates in North Carolina, according to a report by the nonprofit group Democracy North Carolina, and research by FairWarning.

    "They’ve got a lot of money, and it’s amazing how cheaply legislators can be bought," said North Carolina resident Charles Floyd, a retired University of Georgia business professor who has written extensively about the billboard industry and is critical of the new law.

    Even in states such as North Carolina that provide a legal means to enhance billboard views, incidents of illegal cutting and poisoning still occur. In some respects, loosening restrictions is the path of least resistance, reducing the number of violations and need for enforcement.

    "If you legalize vandalism,’’ Floyd complained, "that helps out a lot.’’

    Since July, 2006, the North Carolina Department of Transportation recorded 88 incidents of illegal tree removal near billboards, according to agency data reviewed by FairWarning.

    The cost to the state was $923,000 under a formula based on the size of lost trees. Of that amount, records show, the state was able to collect only about $39,000. Without admitting liability, Lamar paid $18,487.50 to settle one of the cases.

    Criminal probe in Florida
    Soon after Barnhart filed his whistleblower suit, he led state agriculture officials to an oak tree he claimed he had poisoned next to a CVS pharmacy in Tallahassee. When the lab results came back in October, they revealed a herbicide, Triclopyr, in soil and vegetation samples.

    Florida Department of Transportation

    The stump of one of more than 2,000 trees allegedly cut by a billboard company in northern Florida. According to a grand jury report, state officials issued permits to cut the trees "'in flagrant violation of the law."

    He told officials it was one of seven to 10 trees he had illegally poisoned since 2009. Sometimes, he said, he used a machete before pouring in the poison, other times drilled holes in a tree, and on still other occasions he simply cut them.

    Barnhart has been granted immunity by the state attorney in Tallahassee. Asked to comment on the criminal probe, State Attorney William Meggs said his office is continuing to gather information.

    In a deposition taken in the whistleblower case, Chris Oaks, Barnhart’s supervisor, confirmed Barnhart’s account. Oaks admitted to poisoning trees himself under orders from his boss, LaBorde.

    Oaks, 35, claimed he initially balked, saying he thought Lamar must first get permits.

    "And he told me, he said to just jump over the fence and do what needs to be done and kick a little dirt over it," Oaks testified, referring to LaBorde, "and if you don’t know how to do that, I’ll take out my gun and I’ll shoot you in the head."

    Oaks said he figured LaBorde was joking. But "I felt then that I needed to do what the man was telling me for fear — not for death, I didn’t really think he would kill me, but I did feel like it was threatening to my job," Oaks said.

    "I just want to get it clear that none of this was me," Oaks said. "I did not want to do any of this."

    Barnhart said fear of getting caught on a surveillance camera and, according to his lawyer, pressure from his wife led him to come forward. Barnhart said that after suffering a back injury and going on light duty, he told managers that he would no longer poison trees when he came back. In August, he says, he was fired.

    Lamar contends it never fired Barnhart. The company’s response is less clear cut on the other alleged violations, such as criminal mischief and illegal handling of poisons.

    "Any act or omission by Lamar was done in good faith," the company said in court papers. "To the extent that the actions of any Lamar employee were, in fact, in violation…, those actions directly violated Lamar’s corporate policies and procedures and were, thus, beyond the course and scope of their employment."

    FairWarning is a nonprofit, online investigative news organization focused on public health and safety issues.

    Support for this story came from the Fund for Investigative Journalism.

  • Star prosecution witness comes under fierce questioning in John Edwards trial

    Andrew Young, a longtime aide to former presidential candidate John Edwards, admitted there were discrepancies between his tell-all book and his court testimony. NBC's Lisa Myers reports.

    GREENSBORO, N.C. — John Edwards' lawyers got their first crack at the prosecution's star witness in his campaign finance criminal trial Wednesday, attacking former aide Andrew Young for inconsistencies in his account of the 2008 Democratic presidential candidate's affair with his campaign videographer.

    During cross-examination, Edwards' lead defense attorney, Abbe Lowell, focused on discrepancies between Young's tell-all book "The Politician" and what he said this week in court.


    Full trial coverage

    Analysis by Hampton Dellinger

    Using Young's earlier testimony, in which he attributed the discrepancies in his book to the passage of time and the need for more research, Lowell asked Young whether he had corrected his book in the paperback version that came out six months after the hardback copy. Young said he hadn't.

    Lowell also asked Young whether he was the kind of person who has a better memory after the fact — and again, Young answered no.

    Noting that Young wrote in the book that Edwards wouldn't call his mistress, Rielle Hunter, on the day she gave birth, Lowell asked, "Did you know that, in fact, John Edwards called her in the delivery room?"

    Young said he wasn't aware of that call.

    At one point, Lowell asked, "You really hate Mr. Edwards, don't you?"

    Young responded, "I have mixed feelings."

    Lowell said Young gave different accounts of the campaign when he was interviewed by the FBI and when he went on a book tour.

    Young was shown invoices of his commissions from political organizations that were actually submitted under his wife's name. Asked whether his wife had ever worked for the Edwards campaign, Young said no.

    Young is scheduled to return to the stand for more cross-examination Thursday. His wife, Cheri, who was in court for the first time Wednesday, is expected to be the next prosecution witness.

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  • Wanted: Poacher who cut off cougar's paws

     

    Investigators are trying to track down who cut off the paws of a 135-pound cougar found dead Wednesday morning near a California freeway.

    Andrew Hughan, public information officer for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, said the case is being investigated as poaching. It is illegal to take body parts, he said, even if — as it appears — the animal was first killed by a car. "It’s still desecrating a specially protected species," he said.

    Animal Rescue Team, the organization that helped find the mountain lion, said that the animal's genitals had also been removed. Fish and Game initially confirmed that information. They later said it was erroneous.

    The mountain lion was a 2- to 3-year-old male — a teenager, in human terms, according to Hughan — when it died along a rural stretch of Highway 101, a major commuting route for Los Angeles.


    Here’s what they know: At about 5 a.m. the California Highway Patrol received a call from a motorist who spotted a deer in a southbound lane of the highway, a few miles from the small town of Buellton, population 2,500.

    When the highway patrolman arrived, he found no deer, but spotted a dead cougar — badly torn up after apparently being hit by a car. He pulled the animal off the road and into the brush, and called a game warden.

    When the game warden was nearing the scene, he came upon an elderly couple — tourists from Oklahoma, who had pulled off the highway in their car to capture a fawn that was wandering next to the freeway, Hughan said. He took the fawn, which was unhurt, and went to get the mountain lion.

    Graphic image warning: A picture of the mountain lion can be viewed by clicking this link.

    But he couldn't find the cat. It was only several hours later with the help of a wildlife rescue worker that they found the mountain lion carcass, now mutilated and discarded, well off the road.

    The working theory, according to Hughan, is that the doe spotted the cougar and was trying to draw the predator away from her fawn when the cougar ran into traffic and was hit.

    And then the poacher — possibly someone listening to the police scanner, he speculated — rushed to the scene with tools to salvage body parts.

    Two male mountain lions were found mutilated last fall, according to Tim Dunbar, executive director of the Mountain Lion Foundation, a nonprofit in California. One had been shot, the other killed by a car, and both had paws and genitals removed.

    Animalrescueteam.net

    A fawn rescued when investigators were looking for a dead mountain lion that had been reported along Highway 101 north of Los Angeles. The cougar may have been chasing the fawn's mother. It is now being cared for by Animal Rescue Team, a wildlife rescue and rehabilitation organization.

    The paws were probably taken to be stuffed and sold into the lucrative black market as trophies, said Stephanie Boyles Griffin, a wildlife biologist with the Humane Society of the United States.

    She said poachers take mountain lion genitals to sell as ingredients for traditional medicines. Claws from the animal sometimes end up in jewelry.

    "One reason it’s illegal even to take the parts of an animal that was already killed is because there’s no way to know if they were taken from an animal that was killed accidentally or intentionally by a poacher," said Boyles Griffin.

    Mountain lions have been "specially protected" under California state law since 1990 and it is illegal to possess their body parts. The main species in California is not considered endangered, though it is rare. It is legally hunted in some states.

    For now, information on the crime is scant.

    "We’ve got a dead lion, no idea where the doe is, but the fawn is fine," said Hughan.

    He’s hoping that a $2,000 reward will turn up some new information in the case.

    "There’s really no hope of catching these guys unless somebody rats 'em out," said Hughan. "Money talks and hopefully the reward will go up and somebody will rat them out."

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  • Marine who criticized Obama on Facebook: I wish I could take it back

    Gregory Bull / AP

    The Marines say Staff Sgt. Gary Stein will be discharged for criticizing President Barack Obama on Facebook. He has since apologized to the president.

    Sgt. Gary Stein, the 26-year-old Marine who learned Wednesday he would be discharged for his online comments criticizing President Barack Obama, wishes he could take it back.

    “People ask me, ‘Would you go back and change those words?’ I would most definitely,” Stein told msnbc.com. “I would articulate my point better.”

    On March 1, Stein wrote on a closed forum for active-duty meteorologists and oceanographers that he would say "Screw Obama" and not follow all orders from him, according to Courthouse News.


    “Obama is the economic enemy,” he wrote in the post. “He is the religious enemy ... He is the ‘fundamentally change’ America enemy … He IS the Domestic Enemy.”

    Marine who criticized President Obama on Facebook to be discharged

    Five minutes later, another Marine took down his post, but not before someone Stein knew took a screen shot and forwarded the comment to Stein’s superiors.

    Stein had already been warned about a Facebook page he had started in 2010, which he named Armed Forces Tea Party.

    “They said, ‘All we ask is that you write that the views are not that of the Marine Corps or the Department of Defense,’” Stein said. He said he put up the disclaimer that day.

    The Facebook page, which had six moderators, including Stein, included posts about contraception, gays in the military, pundit Keith Olbermann and Obama. One post included a photo of Obama with the word, “Jackass” written underneath. Stein said that was not his post.

    Service members are, according to Directive 1344 of the Department of Defense, allowed to express personal opinions on political candidates, but not as representatives of the Armed Forces.

    Last month, a three-member military panel recommended that he be booted from the Marine Corps. On Wednesday, Brig. Gen. Daniel Yoo accepted their recommendation that Stein be dismissed for violating military law.

    Stein said he repeatedly told Marine Corps officials he would shut down the Facebook page and not speak with the press if they allowed him to complete his contract, which ends in three months, but they refused.  

    “I think they’re trying to use me as an example,” Stein said. “Senior officers don’t want to hear, ‘You were the person who let this Gary Stein situation get out of hand. I think there might have been peer pressure among the senior enlisted.”

    Maj. Michael Armistead, a Marine Corps spokesman at Camp Pendleton, could not confirm whether this negotiation took place.

    Stein, an Arizona native, has been a Marine for nine years and was deployed to Iraq from 2005 to 2006. Although he regrets his post, he still believes his online activity should be protected by the First Amendment of the Constitution. Still, he said he would caution other service members to think before posting their opinions.

    “I’m not telling them to zip it up or shut up; be conscious of what you post,” he said. He said he believes the Marine Corps should clearly rewrite the rules for social media in the wake of his dismissal.

    In a phone interview Wednesday, Stein sounded tired. A former weather forecaster, he lost his security clearance and started working as a scheduler on a rifle range at Camp Pendleton. He said his wife’s grandmother died Tuesday night and he was diagnosed Monday with a throat disease. He said the Marine Corps is waiting to discharge him so that he can go through treatment.

    “It’s been a rough day,” Stein said. “I’m disappointed. Not only in the Marine Corps, but in myself.”

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    He said he plans to go through treatment and tend to his wife and 4-year-old daughter. He has been a licensed real estate agent for two years; last night he posted a house for sale on his personal Facebook page.

    He also wrote on Facebook that he would not accept racist or vulgar posts.

    “I will ban you and you will never be on the page again,” he said.

    And he said he has also apologized to the president.

    “If he was in front of me right now, I would salute him, say, ‘Yes, Mr. President, No, Mr. President,’ and when I walked away, I would still disagree with his policies. But those are two separate things.”

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  • George Zimmerman: Prelude to the shooting of Trayvon Martin

    Gary W. Green / Pool / EPA

    George Zimmerman, center, speaks with his attorney Mark O'Mara during an April 20 bond hearing at the Seminole County Courthouse in Sanford, Fla.

    SANFORD, Fla. -- A pit bull named Big Boi began menacing George and Shellie Zimmerman in the fall of 2009.

    The first time the dog ran free and cornered Shellie in their gated community in Sanford, Fla., George called the owner to complain. The second time, Big Boi frightened his mother-in-law's dog. Zimmerman called Seminole County Animal Services and bought pepper spray. The third time he saw the dog on the loose, he called again. An officer came to the house, county records show.



    "Don't use pepper spray," he told the Zimmermans, according to a friend. "It'll take two or three seconds to take effect, but a quarter second for the dog to jump you," he said.

    "Get a gun."

    That November, the Zimmermans completed firearms training at a local lodge and received concealed-weapons gun permits. In early December, another source close to them told Reuters, the couple bought a pair of guns. George picked a Kel-Tec PF-9 9mm handgun, a popular, lightweight weapon.

    By June 2011, Zimmerman's attention had shifted from a loose pit bull to a wave of robberies that rattled the community, called the Retreat at Twin Lakes. The homeowners association asked him to launch a neighborhood watch, and Zimmerman would begin to carry the Kel-Tec on his regular, dog-walking patrol -- a violation of neighborhood watch guidelines but not a crime.

    Few of his closest neighbors knew he carried a gun -- until two months ago.

    On February 26, George Zimmerman shot and killed unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin in what Zimmerman says was self-defense. The furor that ensued has consumed the country and prompted a re-examination of guns, race and self-defense laws enacted in nearly half the United States.

    During the time Zimmerman was in hiding, his detractors defined him as a vigilante who had decided Martin was suspicious merely because he was black. After Zimmerman was finally arrested on a charge of second-degree murder more than six weeks after the shooting, prosecutors portrayed him as a violent and angry man who disregarded authority by pursuing the 17-year-old.

    But a more nuanced portrait of Zimmerman has emerged from a Reuters investigation into Zimmerman's past and a series of incidents in the community in the months preceding the Martin shooting.

    Based on extensive interviews with relatives, friends, neighbors, schoolmates and co-workers of Zimmerman in two states, law enforcement officials, and reviews of court documents and police reports, the story sheds new light on the man at the center of one of the most controversial homicide cases in America.

    The 28-year-old insurance-fraud investigator comes from a deeply Catholic background and was taught in his early years to do right by those less fortunate. He was raised in a racially integrated household and himself has black roots through an Afro-Peruvian great-grandfather - the father of the maternal grandmother who helped raise him.

    Handout / Reuters

    George Zimmerman is pictured in a school photo from 1998 in this handout photo obtained by Reuters.

    A criminal justice student who aspired to become a judge, Zimmerman also concerned himself with the safety of his neighbors after a series of break-ins committed by young African-American men.

    Though civil rights demonstrators have argued Zimmerman should not have prejudged Martin, one black neighbor of the Zimmermans said recent history should be taken into account.

    "Let's talk about the elephant in the room. I'm black, OK?" the woman said, declining to be identified because she anticipated backlash due to her race. She leaned in to look a reporter directly in the eyes. "There were black boys robbing houses in this neighborhood," she said. "That's why George was suspicious of Trayvon Martin."

    Mixed household
    George Michael Zimmerman was born in 1983 to Robert and Gladys Zimmerman, the third of four children. Robert Zimmerman Sr. was a U.S. Army veteran who served in Vietnam in 1970, and was stationed at Fort Myer in Arlington, Va., in 1975 with Gladys Mesa's brother George. Zimmerman Sr. also served two tours in Korea, and spent the final 10 years of his 22-year military career in the Pentagon, working for the Department of Defense, a family member said.

    In his final years in Virginia before retiring to Florida, Robert Zimmerman served as a magistrate in Fairfax County's 19th Judicial District.

    Robert and Gladys met in January 1975, when George Mesa brought along his army buddy to his sister's birthday party. She was visiting from Peru, on vacation from her job there as a physical education teacher. Robert was a Baptist, Gladys was Catholic. They soon married, in a Catholic ceremony in Alexandria, and moved to nearby Manassas.

    Gladys came to lead a small but growing Catholic Hispanic enclave within the All Saints Catholic Church parish in the late 1970s, where she was involved in the church's outreach programs. Gladys would bring young George along with her on "home visits" to poor families, said a family friend, Teresa Post.

    "It was part of their upbringing to know that there are people in need, people more in need than themselves," said Post, a Peruvian immigrant who lived with the Zimmermans for a time.

    Post recalls evening prayers before dinner in the ethnically diverse Zimmerman household, which included siblings Robert Jr., Grace, and Dawn. "It wasn't only white or only Hispanic or only black -- it was mixed," she said.

    Zimmerman's maternal grandmother, Cristina, who had lived with the Zimmermans since 1978, worked as a babysitter for years during Zimmerman's childhood. For several years she cared for two African-American girls who ate their meals at the Zimmerman house and went back and forth to school each day with the Zimmerman children.

    Trayvon Martin's parents saw their son's killer face-to-face for the first time in court on Friday, where George Zimmerman took the stand to say he was "sorry for the loss of your son." A judge set bail at $150,000. NBC's Kerry Sanders reports.

    "They were part of the household for years, until they were old enough to be on their own," Post said.

    Zimmerman served as an altar boy at All Saints from age 7 to 17, church members said.

    "He wasn't the type where, you know, 'I'm being forced to do this,' and a dragging-his-feet Catholic," said Sandra Vega, who went to high school with George and his siblings. "He was an altar boy for years, and then worked in the rectory too. He has a really good heart."

    George grew up bilingual, and by age 10 he was often called to the Haydon Elementary School principal's office to act as a translator between administrators and immigrant parents. At 14 he became obsessed with becoming a Marine, a relative said, joining the after-school ROTC program at Grace E. Metz Middle School and polishing his boots by night. At 15, he worked three part-time jobs -- in a Mexican restaurant, for the rectory, and washing cars -- on nights and weekends, to save up for a car.

    After graduating from Osbourn High School in 2001, Zimmerman moved to Lake Mary, Florida, a town neighboring Sanford. His parents purchased a retirement home there in 2002, in part to bring Cristina, who suffers from arthritis, to a warmer climate.

    Young insurance agent
    On his own at 18, George got a job at an insurance agency and began to take classes at night to earn a license to sell insurance. He grew friendly with a real estate agent named Lee Ann Benjamin, who shared office space in the building, and later her husband, John Donnelly, a Sanford attorney.

    "George impressed me right off the bat as just a real go-getter," Donnelly said. "He was working days and taking all these classes at night, passing all the insurance classes, not just for home insurance, but auto insurance and everything. He wanted to open his own office -- and he did."

    In 2004, Zimmerman partnered with an African-American friend and opened up an Allstate insurance satellite office, Donnelly said.

    Then came 2005, and a series of troubles. Zimmerman's business failed, he was arrested, and he broke off an engagement with a woman who filed a restraining order against him.

    That July, Zimmerman was charged with resisting arrest, violence, and battery of an officer after shoving an undercover alcohol-control agent who was arresting an under-age friend of Zimmerman's at a bar. He avoided conviction by agreeing to participate in a pre-trial diversion program that included anger-management classes.

    In August, Zimmerman's fiancee at the time, Veronica Zuazo, filed a civil motion for a restraining order alleging domestic violence. Zimmerman reciprocated with his own order on the same grounds, and both orders were granted. The relationship ended.

    Speaking publicly for the first time since her husband fatally shot unarmed Florida teen Trayvon Martin, Shellie Nicole Zimmerman said her husband, George Zimmerman, is "not a violent person" and poses no danger to the community.

    In 2007 he married Shellie Dean, a licensed cosmetologist, and in 2009 the couple rented a townhouse in the Retreat at Twin Lakes. Zimmerman had bounced from job to job for a couple of years, working at a car dealership and a mortgage company. At times, according to testimony from Shellie at a bond hearing for Zimmerman last week, the couple filed for unemployment benefits.

    Zimmerman enrolled in Seminole State College in 2009, and in December 2011 he was permitted to participate in a school graduation ceremony, despite being a course credit shy of his associate's degree in criminal justice. Zimmerman was completing that course credit when the shooting occurred.

    On March 22, nearly a month after the shooting and with the controversy by then swirling nationwide, the school issued a press release saying it was taking the "unusual, but necessary" step of withdrawing Zimmerman's enrollment, citing "the safety of our students on campus as well as for Mr. Zimmerman."

    Neighborhood in fear
    By the summer of 2011, Twin Lakes was experiencing a rash of burglaries and break-ins. Previously a family-friendly, first-time homeowner community, it was devastated by the recession that hit the Florida housing market, and transient renters began to occupy some of the 263 town houses in the complex. Vandalism and occasional drug activity were reported, and home values plunged. One resident who bought his home in 2006 for $250,000 said it was worth $80,000 today.

    At least eight burglaries were reported within Twin Lakes in the 14 months prior to the Trayvon Martin shooting, according to the Sanford Police Department. Yet in a series of interviews, Twin Lakes residents said dozens of reports of attempted break-ins and would-be burglars casing homes had created an atmosphere of growing fear in the neighborhood.

    In several of the incidents, witnesses identified the suspects to police as young black men. Twin Lakes is about 50 percent white, with an African-American and Hispanic population of about 20 percent each, roughly similar to the surrounding city of Sanford, according to U.S. Census data.

    One morning in July 2011, a black teenager walked up to Zimmerman's front porch and stole a bicycle, neighbors told Reuters. A police report was taken, though the bicycle was not recovered.

    But it was the August incursion into the home of Olivia Bertalan that really troubled the neighborhood, particularly Zimmerman. Shellie was home most days, taking online courses toward certification as a registered nurse.

    On Aug. 3, Bertalan was at home with her infant son while her husband, Michael, was at work. She watched from a downstairs window, she said, as two black men repeatedly rang her doorbell and then entered through a sliding door at the back of the house. She ran upstairs, locked herself inside the boy's bedroom, and called a police dispatcher, whispering frantically.

    "I said, 'What am I supposed to do? I hear them coming up the stairs!'" she told Reuters. Bertalan tried to coo her crying child into silence and armed herself with a pair of rusty scissors.

    Police arrived just as the burglars -- who had been trying to disconnect the couple's television -- fled out a back door. Shellie Zimmerman saw a black male teen running through her backyard and reported it to police.

    After police left Bertalan, George Zimmerman arrived at the front door in a shirt and tie, she said. He gave her his contact numbers on an index card and invited her to visit his wife if she ever felt unsafe. He returned later and gave her a stronger lock to bolster the sliding door that had been forced open.

    "He was so mellow and calm, very helpful and very, very sweet," she said last week. "We didn't really know George at first, but after the break-in we talked to him on a daily basis. People were freaked out. It wasn't just George calling police ... we were calling police at least once a week."

    In September, a group of neighbors including Zimmerman approached the homeowners association with their concerns, she said. Zimmerman was asked to head up a new neighborhood watch. He agreed.

    'Please contact our captain
    Police had advised Bertalan to get a dog. She and her husband decided to move out instead, and left two days before the shooting. Zimmerman took the advice.

    "He'd already had a mutt that he walked around the neighborhood every night -- man, he loved that dog -- but after that home invasion he also got a Rottweiler," said Jorge Rodriguez, a friend and neighbor of the Zimmermans.

    Around the same time, Zimmerman also gave Rodriguez and his wife, Audria, his contact information, so they could reach him day or night. Rodriguez showed the index card to Reuters. In neat cursive was a list of George and Shellie's home number and cell phones, as well as their emails.

    George Zimmerman was released on bail ahead of his trial for second degree murder in the death of Trayvon Martin. Rev. Al Sharpton has the latest developments in the case.

    Less than two weeks later, another Twin Lakes home was burglarized, police reports show. Two weeks after that, a home under construction was vandalized.

    The Retreat at Twin Lakes e-newsletter for February 2012 noted: "The Sanford PD has announced an increased patrol within our neighborhood ... during peak crime hours.

    "If you've been a victim of a crime in the community, after calling police, please contact our captain, George Zimmerman."

    Setting the stage
    On Feb. 2, 2012, Zimmerman placed a call to Sanford police after spotting a young black man he recognized peering into the windows of a neighbor's empty home, according to several friends and neighbors.

    "I don't know what he's doing. I don't want to approach him, personally," Zimmerman said in the call, which was recorded. The dispatcher advised him that a patrol car was on the way. By the time police arrived, according to the dispatch report, the suspect had fled.

    On February 6, the home of another Twin Lakes resident, Tatiana Demeacis, was burglarized. Two roofers working directly across the street said they saw two African-American men lingering in the yard at the time of the break-in. A new laptop and some gold jewelry were stolen. One of the roofers called police the next day after spotting one of the suspects among a group of male teenagers, three black and one white, on bicycles.

    Police found Demeacis's laptop in the backpack of 18-year-old Emmanuel Burgess, police reports show, and charged him with dealing in stolen property. Burgess was the same man Zimmerman had spotted on Feb. 2.

    Burgess had committed a series of burglaries on the other side of town in 2008 and 2009, pleaded guilty to several, and spent all of 2010 incarcerated in a juvenile facility, his attorney said. He is now in jail on parole violations.

    Three days after Burgess was arrested, Zimmerman's grandmother was hospitalized for an infection, and the following week his father was also admitted for a heart condition. Zimmerman spent a number of those nights on a hospital room couch.

    Ten days after his father was hospitalized, Zimmerman noticed another young man in the neighborhood, acting in a way he found familiar, so he made another call to police.

    "We've had some break-ins in my neighborhood, and there's a real suspicious guy," Zimmerman said, as Trayvon Martin returned home from the store.

    The last time Zimmerman had called police, to report Burgess, he followed protocol and waited for police to arrive. They were too late, and Burgess got away.

    This time, Zimmerman was not so patient, and he disregarded police advice against pursuing Martin.

    Michael Mcparlane / Politicalcartoons.com

    Click here to view this cartoon slideshow.

    "These @!$%#s," he muttered in an aside, "they always get away."

    After the phone call ended, several minutes passed when the movements of Zimmerman and Martin remain a mystery.

    Moments later, Martin lay dead with a bullet in his chest.

      

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  • Principal at center of Atlanta test-cheating scandal resigns, report says

    A central figure in the Atlanta Public Schools’ test-cheating scandal has resigned, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported on Wednesday.

    According to the newspaper, investigators said Christopher Waller, former principal at Parks Middle School, played a key role in the cheating over four years at the school.

    State officials launched investigations into allegations of widespread test-cheating in Atlanta Public Schools after the Journal-Constitution’s reports in 2008 and 2009 called to question gains in the Georgia Criterion-Referenced Competency Test.


    Officials with the school system issued an intent-to-fire letter last week, according to the Journal-Constitution.

    Waller cited personal reasons for his departure, the Journal-Constitution reported.

    “I've enjoyed being a principal in Atlanta Public Schools, working with students, parents, my fellow teachers and administrators," Waller said in a statement, the Journal-Constitution reported. "I appreciate the guidance and kindness offered [to] me during my time with the system."

    Rock Center's Harry Smith investigates the largest cheating scandal to ever hit America's public schools. Atlanta Public Schools, once praised for soaring test scores, has come under fire after a 10-month investigation revealed widespread cheating by teachers on standardized testing. Dr. Beverly Hall, the former superintendent of Atlanta's public schools, speaks in her first national television interview.

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  • Judge: Leaning toward approving huge BP settlement in Gulf oil spill

    A judge on Wednesday said he was leaning toward approving the settlement proposed by BP and a coalition of plaintiffs' lawyers to compensate individuals and businesses for the 2010 Gulf oil spill.

    The plaintiffs' lawyers represent more than 100,000 individuals and businesses, but the proposal also has its critics -- among them shrimp processors, recreational fishermen and Halliburton, BP's cement contractor on the Macondo well.

    "I'm leaning in favor of doing it, but I'm not going to do that from the bench here today," U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier said during a hearing in New Orleans, the Times-Picayune reported.


    Barbier said that he intended to write a full order within a few days and that a final decision would not happen for several more weeks.

    While most of the proposal's compensation was not capped, BP has estimated its exposure at $7.8 billion. The oil giant and lawyers' coalition agreed on the terms last month in a bid to avoid a trial that could take years.

    The 2,000-page proposal would replace the Gulf Coast Claims Facility, which has managed claims so far, and is broken down into two categories:

    • Economic and property damages. Individuals or businesses in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, four Texas counties on the gulf and Florida's Panhandle and west coast may apply as long as they didn't take an earlier payment. Exceptions are: recreational fishermen, financial institutions, casinos, racetracks, oil companies and insurers.
    • Medical benefits. These may be sought by cleanup workers and people who live within a half mile of Gulf Coast beaches or a mile from Gulf wetland areas. "Certain respiratory, gastrointestinal, eye, skin and neurophysiological" conditions, such as "dizziness, headaches, fainting" would be compensated, according to a summary of the proposal.

    How much compensation an individual or business receives would be determined by complicated formulas based on various factors.

    Some other highlights:

    • The claims deadline would be April 22, 2014, or six months after the settlement's effective date, whichever is later.
    • Lawyers' fees were estimated at around $600 million and would not come from any funds set aside for victims.
    • An appeal process will be in place.
    • A $2.3 billion fund to compensate seafood fishermen is the only part of the proposal that is capped. Shrimp processors want to be included in the fund.

    Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., discusses damage from the BP spill.

    BP has already taken a $37 billion accounting loss for the spill but, even with a settlement, it still faces tens of billions of dollars of potential claims from the U.S. government and several gulf states.

    Clean Water Act fines alone could reach as high as $17.6 billion if gross negligence is determined.

    In addition, BP and Macondo partners Transocean, which owned the drilling rig, and Halliburton, which cemented the well, have sued each other.

    Halliburton also objects to the proposed settlement, saying it makes Halliburton "liable in part for settlement payments."

    Wednesday's decision comes a day after a former BP engineer, Kurt Mix, was arrested and charged with obstruction of justice. He's accused of having deleted hundreds of text messages about the size of the spill.

    Last Friday was the two-year anniversary of the worst U.S. oil spill, which was triggered when the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded on April 20, 2010, killing 11 workers and unleashing crude that wasn't fully contained until July 2010.

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  • Marine who criticized President Obama on Facebook to be discharged

    Handout via Associated Press

    Gary Stein, a Marine stationed at Camp Pendleton near San Diego, learned Wednesday that he will be discharged from the military for his online comments criticizing the Obama administration.

    The U.S. Marine Corps has decided to discharge a sergeant for criticizing President Barack Obama on Facebook.

    The Corps said Wednesday that Sgt. Gary Stein will be given an other-than-honorable discharge for violating Pentagon policy limiting speech of service members.

    The discharge means he will lose all military benefits. According to a Facebook post on the site that originally got him in trouble, the discharge was postponed. Stein's "discharge will be postponed until results of a medical condition, he was diagnosed with on Monday, are returned and treatment is discussed," the message said.

    Two weeks ago, Stein was denied a restraining order that would have temporarily halted his dismissal.


    He had sought relief from U.S. District Court Judge Marilyn Huff after a military board recommended his dismissal.

    Judge Huff declined to intervene for Stein, saying since she is not a military expert, she cannot rule on issues of military law.

    Stein, a nine-year member of the U.S. Marines, started a Facebook group called "Armed Forces Tea Party" in 2010.

    Since its creation, the page has displayed numerous posts criticizing President Barack Obama that Stein's commanding officers called into question.

    “How can some words that I wrote on Facebook outweigh my 9 years of service?” Stein asked in court on April 13.

    One posting brought up during a recent hearing showed President Obama's face superimposed on a jackass, the Associated Press reported.

    Another document brought forward in an earlier proceeding revealed that Stein posted on a Marine meteorology and oceanographic Facebook page March 23, "As an active Marine I say, 'Screw Obama' and I will not follow orders from him."

    There were at least four other times a U.S. attorney told Stein to tone down his "inflammatory" political comments. His lawyers say the possibility of discharge is "absurd" and "heavy handed." Stein's lawyers say the Marine Corps is trying to "railroad a good Marine out of the Corps" for expressing his First Amendment rights.

    After Stein posted objections to Obama's health care policy and encouraged others to go against the orders of superiors if they disagreed with the actions, the U.S. Marine Corps decided to reconsider a previous decision to not take punitive action against him.

    The military started monitoring Stein's Facebook group after he posted his stance against prosecuting Americans for burning the Quran in Afghanistan.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Rodney King anniversary: 20 years after LA riots, have race relations improved?

    Twenty years after his almost-deadly beating, Rodney King reflects on the LA riots and gives his perspective on the killing of Trayvon Martin.

    Twenty years ago this weekend, riots broke out in Los Angeles – and spread to other cities – after a California jury acquitted three white and one Hispanic Los Angeles police officers in the videotaped beating of black motorist Rodney King.

    The riots that erupted on April 29, 1992, were among the most lethal in U.S. history. By the time order was restored, 53 people had died, nearly 3,000 people were injured and thousands of businesses were damaged or destroyed.

    In one of the most searing images beamed into living rooms across the country from the disturbance, a mostly black mob enraged by the acquittal dragged white truck driver Reginald Denny from his cab at a south Los Angeles intersection and beat him unconscious while news helicopters hovered overhead.


    Nearly a year later, a federal jury convicted two of the police officers of a federal charge of violating King’s civil rights and sentenced them to 30 months in prison. Two other officers were acquitted. King eventually received a $3.8 million settlement from the city, and the case led to sweeping changes in LAPD.

    More recently, King has been promoting his just-published memoir, "The Riot Within: My Journey From Rebellion to Redemption."

    AP Photo/George Holliday/Courtesy of KTLA Los Angeles

    The beating of Rodney King by a group of Los Angeles police officers was captured on videotape by a citizen.

    As Los Angeles, and the nation, reflects on the anniversary this weekend, many are asking the same plaintive question King uttered on the steps of city hall during the riots two decades ago: "Can we all get along?"

    Many seem to agree that the city is safer today and relations between ethnic groups have improved. A recent poll of Los Angeles residents by the Center for the Study of Los Angeles at Loyola Marymount University found that most say L.A. is unlikely to see a repeat of such riots in the coming years.

    KNBC's Lucy Noland talks with three people whose lives were deeply affected by the 1992 LA riots.

    NBCLosAngeles.com has a special package of stories and videos about the 20th anniversary of the riots here.

    Do you think race relations have improved? Take the poll below and then join the discussion on Facebook.

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  • Cops: 4 take police bait car for joy ride as cameras roll

    Police say a group of teens swiped a vehicle for a joy ride, not knowing it was a bait car carrying a surveillance camera that caught their 20-minute trip around Albuquerque on video.

    “It was one of the cars we park randomly around the city, specifically in hot spots where we have repeated auto burglaries and auto theft,” Albuquerque Police Officer Robert Gibbs said on Wednesday.

    Bait cars, also called decoy cars, are commonly used by law enforcement agencies nationwide to catch car thieves. Vehicles are often modified with GPS tracking, audio and video surveillance and can be remotely controlled. In a Texas case, police have turned to the public’s help in locating a couple who took a "bait car" with a hidden camera for a quick spin.

    Link to the video: See the decoy car escapade


    Surveillance video from Albuquerque shows a 15-year-old boy jumping into the driver’s seat of the car, picking up three friends along the way, according to KOAT-TV, an ABC News affiliate in Albuquerque.

    The scene is joyous with smiles and high-fives, the teens calling each other “dog.”

    "I saw this car with the keys inside. I opened the door, it was unlocked. I grabbed the keys and was like, this is the car," the teen driver says in the video.

    Video: Cops catch car thieves with hidden camera

    It doesn’t take long for the teens to get worried and begin to conspire. They talk about ditching the car and torching it, blaming the whole thing on someone else, according to KOAT-TV.

    "Oh my God, dog, what if we go to jail for this?! This is grand theft auto, dog! I'm (expletive) hopping the (expletive) out and running for my life! I'm on (expletive) probation," one of teens is heard saying.

    Video: Boy, 11, steals car, goes for joyride, police say

    But their ride comes to an end when the boys see red-and-blue lights flashing in the rear-view window.

    “That’s a cop,” a teen passenger is heard saying.

    His pal confirms the obvious.

    Gibbs said the four boys, whose identities were withheld because of their age, were charged with auto burglary and unlawful taking of a motor vehicle, both felony offenses.

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  • Dying veteran protests Spirit Airlines' no-refund policy

    Spirit Airlines will not issue a refund to a dying veteran who found out he has terminal cancer two weeks after he bought his plane ticket. WFLA-TV's Jeff Patterson reports.

    Jerry Meekins, who is battling cancer, has a new foe: Spirit Airlines. 

    Meekins recently purchased an airline ticket from Spirit Airlines to visit his daughter in New Jersey. "Two weeks after I bought the ticket, I found out I was terminal," Meekins, a Vietnam veteran, told NBC affiliate WFLA-TV in Tampa, Fla.

    Read the original report from WFLA-TV

    Meekins says his doctors advised him not to fly. But when he asked Spirit Airlines for a refund, they refused.  

    When contacted by WFLA-TV, Spirit Airlines issued this statement: "Our reservations are non-refundable, which means we don't do refunds and we are not going to issue Mr. Meekins a refund."

    The airline also said that it offers low-cost travel insurance that covers a variety of unexpected circumstances and added, "It wouldn't be fair to bend the policy for one and not for all."

    So Meekins stood outside Tampa International Airport on Tuesday with signs that say "Corporate greed is spelled Spirit Airlines" and "Spirit Airlines tells dying man no refund."

    "My primary goal," Meekins said, "is to have them change their policy of a blanket coverage of no refund."

    What do you think? Should Spirit Airlines make an exception for terminally ill customers? Tell us about it on Facebook.

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