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  • Charles Worley, North Carolina pastor, faces backlash, outrage over call for gays to be put behind electric fence

    Anthea Butler, associate professor of Religious Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, joins The Last Word to discuss the violent rhetoric coming from churches on marriage equality.

    A North Carolina church pastor’s call for gays and lesbians to be fenced in so they can eventually die off has triggered outrage among gay-rights and anti-hate groups, with one local citizens organization planning a protest in response.

    The Catawba Valley Citizens Against Hate said it was organizing a peaceful protest against Pastor Charles Worley on Sunday in front of Providence Road Baptist Church just outside Maiden, N.C., “to tell the world that hate is not welcome in our community.”


    The group said the protest would be “in the ideals of Dr. Martin Luther King and Gandhi.”

    “We will not scream, shout or taunt Pastor Worley or his church’s members,” it said on its Facebook page.

    The protest organizer, Laura Tipton, who lives in nearby Hickory, N.C., said she's gotten a tremendous outpouring of support and now expects "400 or more" people to attend.

    "I think the message needs to get out, especially because this is a North Carolina church and North Carolina has gotten a very bad rap," Tipton told msnbc.com. "I think it's important that people know that not all of us feel this way, that there is support for the LGBT community in this state."

    Worley’s Mother’s Day sermon suggesting that “lesbians and queers” should be rounded up to die off touched off a firestorm after a video of it was posted on YouTube this week by the Catawba Valley citizens group.

    The 71-year-old Worley delivered the sermon on May 13, apparently in response to President Barack Obama’s public endorsement a few days earlier of same-sex marriage. Just a day before Obama’s announcement, North Carolina voters approved by a considerable margin a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage and same-sex civil unions in their state.

    In the sermon, an animated Worley told the congregation of his independent Baptist church:

    “I figured a way out, a way to get rid of all the lesbians and queers but I couldn’t get it pass the Congress – build a great big large fence, 50 or a hundred mile long. Put all the lesbians in there, fly over and drop some food. Do the same thing with the queers and the homosexuals. And have that fence electrified so they can’t get out.

    And you know what? In a few years they will die out. You know why? They can’t reproduce. If a man ever has a young'un, praise God he will be the first.”

    Worley continued, his voice rising: “I tell ya right now, somebody said, 'Who you gonna vote for?' I ain’t gonna vote for a baby killer and a homosexual lover! You said, ‘Did you mean to say that?’ You better believe I did!”

    Worley could not be reached for comment on Tuesday. Calls to the church office rang busy.

    The Last Word: Pastor wants to fence in gays

    The church, which is not related to the better-known Providence Baptist Church of Charlotte, originally placed the video on its website but later removed it.  The website could not be accessed for much of Tuesday, possibly due to server overload.

    NBC/WSJ poll: Obama's gay-marriage announcement a 'draw'

    Gay-rights supporters and others were quick to denounce Worley.

    "I am not part of LGBT community. I am an ally, a heterosexual," said Tipton, a social work student at Appalachian State University. "Whether you are straight or gay, people need to stand up against these messages of hate."

    An online petition started by Adam Eyster of Los Angeles called for Worley to step down as pastor.

    “This is hands down one of the MOST offensive things I have heard in my time of the LGBT rights movement,” Eyster wrote.

    Miss. lawmaker denies endorsing killing of gays

    Another petition started by Robert Hare of Jacksonville, Fla., urged state and federal prosecutors to charge Worley with “inciting to commit mass murder”:

    "Freedom of speech or religion is one thing, but when you are exhorting people to 'help in the effort to find the best way of killing every gay person on the planet' you have clearly taken a giant step across the line."

     And in a post on MadMikesAmerica, blogger Erin Nanasi wrote:

    “Pastor Charles Worley is yet another argument for the abolishment of religion. The evil that pervades the minds and hearts of some of the holiest of the holy, the preachers, priests, reverends and pastors will sicken the most hardy among us and the evil that is Charles Worley stains Christians everywhere, but particularly the congregation of the Providence Road Baptist Church, who applaud the venom that spews from the mouth of this monstrous man."

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  • Dispatcher snores during panicked 911 call

    Shocking audio recordings reveal a 911 dispatcher in Maryland snoring as a frantic woman pleads for help. WRC-TV's Tisha Thompson reports.

    An emergency dispatcher in Montgomery County, Md. was put on administrative leave and an inquiry launched after being recorded snoring during a woman’s desperate 911 call, according to a report by NBCWashington.com.

    Segments of the April 4 recording can be heard in the report broadcast on Tuesday, in which a panicky woman calls to report that her husband is having trouble breathing.

    The initial 911 operator transfers her to a dispatcher, whose job it is to send an ambulance. But after the transfer, the woman is heard saying, "Hello? Hello? Hello?" and getting only silence in return.


    The snoring sound of the dispatcher comes through just as the 911 operator contacts a second dispatcher, and it becomes louder as that dispatcher talks the woman through the emergency and gets her address.

    Just after the panicked woman says, "Now he's all blue," the snore erupts again, and several more times as the second dispatcher speaks to her.

    NBCWashington.com describes part of the exchange:

    2nd Dispatcher:  "Put one hand on his forehand, the other hand underneath his neck and tilt his head back."

    Caller:  "Yes."

    Sleeping Dispatcher:  ((Snore))

    Caller:  "Uh huh."

    In the recording, the second dispatcher repeatedly asked if the woman’s husband was making the noise, according to NBCWashington.com.

    Montgomery County Assistant Fire Chief Scott Graham confirmed to the reporters that the sound was in fact coming from the original dispatcher.

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    "The employee was immediately removed from the floor by his supervisor that night and placed on administrative leave with pay pending the inquiry,” Graham told NBCWashington.com.

    In spite of the sleeping employee, the ambulance dispatch was delayed only 30 to 38 seconds, Graham told msnbc.com.

    The man who was having trouble breathing was taken to a hospital and recovered, he said.

    Firefighters at the call center work a similar schedule to firefighters in the field in Montgomery county, Graham said — working 24 hours, which includes a six-hour rest period, followed by 48 hours off.

    Graham said the dispatcher who fell asleep was 17 hours into a 24-hour shift, or less than an hour from a rest when this incident occured.

    Most dispatchers around the country work 10- to 12-hour shifts, he said, but the shift adopted in Montgomery has helped attract and retain personnel who prefer the large blocks of time between shifts.

    This was the first time a dispatcher had fallen asleep on the job in his 24 years on the job, Graham told msnbc.com.

    "We handle 120,000 calls a year and this was an isolated incident," he said. "I’m not making light of it. It’s very embarrassing. But this is a great reminder to everyone in our department, we have to take care of each other, we have to be vigilant."

    The call center has been operating out of a temporary facility during the renovation of a permanent facility, which is being redesigned so that supervisors can see all the dispatchers who are working at any given time, Graham said.

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  • One dead, 10 injured after blast, chemical fumes at Chicago-area factory

    One person was killed and at least 10 others were injured when a machine used in the manufacture of electrical parts exploded and released chemical fumes, officials said.

    The blast took place at the Arens Controls factory in Arlington Heights, northwestern suburb of Chicago, at about 9 a.m., NBCChicago.com reported.


    The Arlington Heights Fire Department said the injuries were caused by a malfunctioning machine in an area where workers test electrical parts. Workers were using a corrosive liquid at the time, but it's not known whether that caused the explosion.

    "The chemical they were using was a diluted form of potassium hydroxide," said Arlington Heights Fire Chief Glenn Erickson. "At this point in time we don't know what role the chemical had in the accident, if it had any role at all."

    Officials confirmed one person was dead at the scene. Seven workers were injured and three police officers, two from Arlington Heights and one from Buffalo Grove departments, were treated for respiratory problems. The deceased worker's name and age are not yet known.

    The injuries sustained by the other workers and officers were not considered life-threatening, the Chicago Tribune reported.

    About 50 employees were evacuated and remained outside more than three hours after the incident as firefighters and police continued to investigate.

    Police said they were waiting for occupational safety inspectors arrival before they conduct a full investigation.

    "Destruction and devastation in there from the equipment that exploded," Arlington Heights police Cmdr. Kenneth Galinski told NBCChicago.com at the scene. "A lot of twisted metal."

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  • Texas yearbook labels some special needs students 'mentally retarded'

    Seniors at a Mesquite, Texas, high school will have to wait for a reprinted version of their yearbook, this after the initial publication labeled some special-needs students "mentally retarded." KXAS-TV's Andres Gutierrez reports.

    A Dallas-area high school was forced to pull back its yearbooks after a section described some students with special needs as “mentally retarded.”

    Officials at the Mesquite Independent School District have apologized to families and students of Mesquite High School, east of Dallas, for a section dedicated to students with disabilities that contained errors and offensive language, district spokeswoman Laura Jobe said.

    “It was with the best of intentions and not meant to ridicule or disparage anyone in any way,” Jobe told msnbc.com on Tuesday. “We believe the students didn’t understand the term ‘retarded’ was not acceptable. It was just an error that was overlooked and got printed, unfortunately.”


    Jobe said she did not read the two-page section, but did see a photocopy of one page, which was sent to her office. She said a section read: “some of the disabilities the students in the Special Education Program have are being blind, deaf or non-verbal.”

    She added:  “Specific disabilities of students were also cited in the yearbook, with some labeled as both blind and deaf, as well as mentally retarded.”

    Students on the yearbook staff, a team of mostly seniors and a teacher advisor, also did not have parental permission to publish the photos of the students with special needs, Jobe said.

    A special education teacher noticed the errors on Friday after 100 copies of the publication had been distributed to the senior class at Mesquite, Jobe said. Mesquite High School has about 2,800 students.

    The school collected all the yearbooks and sent them back to the publisher, Jobe said. She said the section will be taken out and the yearbooks glued back together. Students will get their copies by next week, she said.

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    "The principal did call the parents on Friday evening -- the parents of the students who were in that section -- [and] explained to them what had happened," Jobe said. "They were extremely understanding."

    High school seniors, such as Alexandra Doverspike and Iman Hijaz, said they believe it was an honest mistake.

    "You know everybody wants to be included, not left out," Hijaz told NBCDFW.com. "I think it was nice to make the page."

    "I feel like everybody makes mistakes, and it's fixable," Doverspike told NBCDFW.com.

    The school district plans to include additional training for staff members who work with yearbook production.

    Some parents, like Christie Rawson, whose son is graduating from Mesquite High School on Saturday, are still upset.

    “This should have been flagged during proofreading,” Rawson told msnbc.com. “The school made a mistake, and the graduating class shouldn’t have to leave school on this note. People need to have a greater sense of understanding and respect for all people. I want to congratulate the Class of 2012 and for them to move ahead on a positive note.”

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  • Census Bureau: 2010 population count was pretty accurate

    AFP / Getty IMages

    Census officials say the overall 2010 population count was well-executed.

    The U.S. Census Bureau is getting better at counting the number of people living in the United States, though it’s still disproportionately overlooking some minorities.

    A review of the accuracy of the 2010 census found that it overcounted the total U.S. population by 0.01 percent, or about 36,000 people. That compares to a census overcount of 0.49 percent in 2000 and an undercount of 1.61 percent in 1990.


    “On this one evaluation — the net undercount of the total population — this was an outstanding census,” Census Bureau Director Robert Groves said in a press release.

    The post-enumeration survey measured the coverage of the nation’s household population (excluding the 8 million people in “group quarters,” such as nursing homes or college dorms). It surveyed a sample of the 300.7 million people living in housing units and then matched the responses to the census, resulting in estimates of error.

    Census officials said renters were slightly undercounted and homeowners slightly overcounted in the 2010 census.

    The 2010 count missed about 2.1 percent of black Americans and 1.5 percent of Hispanics. That's statistically comparable to levels in 2000. The non-Hispanic white population was slightly overcounted.

    “While the overall coverage of the census was exemplary, the traditional hard-to-count groups, like renters, were counted less well,” Groves said. “Because ethnic and racial minorities disproportionately live in hard-to-count circumstances, they too were undercounted relative to the majority population.”

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    The accuracy of the count is a big improvement from 1940, when the black undercount was estimated at a whopping 8.4 percent, according to an Associated Press review of records recently released online. That means more than a million blacks weren’t accounted for in 1940, an undercount that had ramifications at the time on the political map and the distribution of resources, according to the AP.

    The total population of the U.S. was counted as 308,745,538 in 2010, a 9.7 percent increase from the 2000 count.

    As required by the Constitution, the census has been conducted every 10 years since 1790. The population count is used to allocate House seats and federal money for roads, schools and social programs.

    The Associated Press and msnbc.com's James Eng contributed to this report.

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  • Too hot to work at a lingerie shop?

    Brendan Mcdermid / Reuters

    Lauren Odes and her attorney Gloria Allred (R) speak at a news conference in New York, May 21, 2012. Odes is suing her former employer, claiming she was dismissed for dressing too provocatively.

    The website for a Manhattan lingerie boutique called Native Intimates has a photograph of a well-endowed woman pushing her breasts together. So, it’s odd that an employee of the shop is claiming she was fired for being “too hot.”

    But that’s exactly what Lauren Odes is alleging.

    “When I was first told that I was ‘too hot’ and that my breasts were too large I was shocked,” said Odes in a statement released Tuesday. Her sexy appearance, she said, got her a pink slip from an employer who sells intimate apparel much sexier than your basic slips.

    Not surprisingly her story is getting a lot of media attention thanks in part to the celebrity lawyer representing her, Gloria Allred, who held a press conference Monday about the allegations. Allred has taken on many high profile and controversial discrimination cases in her day, including the case of a banker who claimed in 2010 she was fired for being too sexy.

    In Odes’ case, however, the work environment would seem a bit more conducive to a little cleavage.

    Odes began working for Native Intimates on April 24 handling data entry and shipping tasks, but by May 1 she was out of a job. She alleges her supervisors told her that her choice of clothing was disliked by the company’s owner, an Orthodox Jew.

    In a statement, Allred said a complaint has been filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in New York claiming Odes “was simply fired for being attractive and for not conforming to the religious strictures imposed by top management, apparently for having female body parts, despite having ably performed her professional duties.”

    A woman reached by phone at Native Intimates would only say: “We’re not interested in giving a comment.”

    A spokeswoman for the EEOC would not comment on the complaint.

    Odes is alleging two types of discrimination: one based on gender and another based on religion.

    Being too hot is not a protected category under the nation’s labor laws, but being terminated because you’re a woman or for religious bias is a legal no-no.

    It’s unclear exactly why Odes was fired, but what is clear is employers have a lot of latitude in restricting what their employees can wear.

    “All companies, regardless of whether they’re selling lingerie or whatever, are permitted to have and enforce dress codes that an owner sees as appropriate,” said Keisha-Ann G. Gray, an employment attorney for Proskauer, a law firm that represents employers. “They are permitted to require their employee to dress conservatively,” she noted, if it’s applied equally among workers of different genders, religions, and races.

    Odes said she asked about a dress code when she was hired. She said she was told to look around and see what everyone else was wearing. "The dress varied from very casual athletic wear to business dress,” she said.

    She also claimed she was wearing “very covered up attire” but it was her body that was the target of her employer’s disdain. She said that at one point a female employee suggested that she consider taping down her breasts.

    Women are often held to a double standard at work when it comes to their appearance, said Anne York, associate professor of economics at Meredith College’s School of Business in Raleigh, N.C.

    While a supervisor may have thought she might turn off customers, she said, a well-endowed woman would seem like the perfect fit for a lingerie business. 

    Parking spaces in New York City can be hard to come by, as evidenced by the 12 by 23-foot spot in Greenwich Village currently on sale for a cool million.

  • Veteran fights VA to keep PTSD diagnosis

    Sometimes the terror strikes Daniel Hibbard, a 29-year-old Army veteran of the Afghanistan war, when he's driving and a song comes on the radio that he used to listen to while on patrol.

    "I'll be thinking and thinking and visualizing being back in combat and I’ll break down and cry," he said.

    Sometimes Hibbard is spooked at a bar or restaurant, where there are too many people and his back must be up against a wall. "I can feel something’s not right," he said. "I’m always looking around."

    Hibbard served as a sergeant in Afghanistan between 2005 and 2006. While there, he shot and killed people, saw dead bodies and survived IED explosions and rocket-propelled grenade and mortar fire.

    These traumatic experiences have transformed the father of two. "When I joined, I was 20 years old and there weren’t a damn thing wrong with me," Hibbard said. He joined in August 2003 and served for six years.


    Hibbard, who lives in Louisville, Ky., has been twice diagnosed at Veterans Affairs facilities with post-traumatic stress disorder since 2010. But something unexpected happened last month: Hibbard received a letter reversing his PTSD diagnosis. His new diagnosis, which was assigned without an in-person examination or assessment, is personality disorder.

    "It makes me feel like I’m being called a fraud, a fake," Hibbard said of the diagnosis. "You might as well and go ahead and burn my record and say I was never in the military."

    Hibbard is contesting the decision, which will provide him with mental health care but strip him of PTSD-related financial benefits, with assistance from AMVETS, a nonprofit veterans' organization that helps service members trying to secure claims, benefits and medical diagnoses.

    Gene Brainer, the Louisville-based AMVETS national service officer who is handling Hibbard's appeal, declined to discuss the specifics of the case, citing medical privacy regulations. He did say, however, that in the last several months VA doctors who review claims appear to be scrutinizing established medical findings more closely than in years past.

    In particular, Brainer has noticed that the regional VA office has requested reviews for cases in which a veteran has already been evaluated by a board-certified doctor and given a diagnosis, which is used to determine monthly disability benefits. During a review, another board-certified doctor can issue a new diagnosis without seeing the veteran, thereby overturning the original doctor's finding.

    "They are putting their opinions, exam results and diagnosis above the findings of their counterparts and rationalizing that they were more thorough and probing in their review and examination than the attending psychological counselors," he said of the reviewing doctors. Brainer, who has 20 years experience in the field, said he's seen this happen with as many as six veterans in the Louisville area recently. Many of the reversals, he said, were for veterans awarded disability benefits at 100 percent of the entitlement rate.

    The Department of Veterans Affairs does not track diagnosis reversals, but maintains that reviews are rare and conducted when it is not clear from the clinician's examination or opinion that the diagnosis is correct.

    "VA carefully considers the potential repercussions of any change in a previously assigned diagnosis," Josh Taylor, a spokesman for the Department of Veterans Affairs, told msnbc.com in a statement. "When any change in an evaluation is to be made, particularly where a mental disorder is involved, VA strives to reconcile the evidence and continue the previous diagnosis. Only where the prior diagnosis is shown to be clearly erroneous, will VA make a correction."

    Taylor could not comment on Hibbard's case because of medical privacy regulations, but said that one's disability benefits can fluctuate as a mental illness worsens or improves over time.

    Taylor also noted that in 2010 the VA simplified its PTSD diagnosis process and relaxed its standards for proving service-related PTSD. Since then, more veterans have been awarded PTSD-related mental health care and disability benefits. Of the 476,515 veterans who were receiving mental health services for PTSD in 2011, about 100,000 served in Iraq or Afghanistan, a 35 percent increase since 2008.

    Jay Agg, a spokesman for AMVETS, told msnbc.com that the organization is concerned Hibbard's reversal may not be isolated. Another AMVETS service officer in Cleveland, Ohio, reported several unusual reversals as well. Agg said, however, that the small number of reports don't indicate a widespread practice in the context of the organization's overall caseload; AMVETS handled 93,000 claims on behalf of veterans in 2011.

    David Autry, a spokesman for Disabled American Veterans, which has 250 service officers nationwide filing claims on behalf of former service members, said the organization has noted recent anecdotal instances in which cases were re-evaluated and some veterans received a new diagnosis or different disability rating. "It certainly does concern us," he said. "If it looks like it's becoming more widespread, we’ll certainly have to take a hard look at it." Veterans of Foreign Wars, which has 1,200-plus service officers around the country, has yet to see such cases.

    AMVETS' concern comes in the wake of the Army's announcement last week that it will conduct a comprehensive, independent review of how it evaluates soldiers with possible PTSD. The latest reviews were triggered by revelations that the forensic psychiatry unit at Madigan Army Medical Center at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state may have reversed more than 290 PTSD diagnoses based on the expense of providing care and benefits to members of the military.

    In addition to the review, the Army announced in April new guidelines for diagnosing and treating PTSD, advising clinicians that fraudulent or exaggerated claims are "rare" and "unlikely." The guidelines also cautioned against attributing current symptoms associated with PTSD to certain diagnoses like personality disorder and adjustment disorder.

    When Hibbard was first diagnosed with PTSD in early 2010 at a Veterans Affairs clinic in El Paso, Texas, he was awarded a 30 percent disability entitlement. After relocating to Louisville, he received a second PTSD diagnosis in December 2011, which led to an increased rate of 50 percent, or $969 a month.

    Surprised by the VA's decision to overturn the previous two diagnoses, Hibbard called the VA and says he was told that his case was sent for review for a medical opinion. The letter, Hibbard said, described his PTSD as in remission, but he does not feel that is the case.

    "I don’t know what a good day is like," Hibbard said. "I guess a good day would be where I’m not hyper-vigilant, where I’m not trying to protect myself where there’s not a reason to. I’ve never really had a so-called good day."

    Hibbard's treatment has included counseling, anger-management courses and anti-depressant medication. Hibbard currently works as a dispatch manager for a national moving and storage company. When he has difficulty dealing with the PTSD symptoms, he takes a long drive with his 13-month-old chocolate lab, Sam.

    Since receiving the letter from the VA, Hibbard said his "stress has been through the roof." The case will have a hearing, which he expects to be held in about a year.

    What most upsets Hibbard is the idea of recounting his story yet again. "I’ve already had to talk about that stuff in detail twice," he said. "It’s the stress of having to go back and relive all that stuff over again."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Are you a veteran whose PTSD diagnosis has been recently changed or reversed? Tell us your story at firstperson@msnbc.com.

    Rebecca Ruiz is a reporter at msnbc.com and a 2011-2012 Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Journalism Fellow. Follow her on Twitter here.

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  • NBC/WSJ poll: Obama's gay-marriage announcement a 'draw'

     

     

    Two weeks after President Obama announced he supports gay marriage, a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll shows that his announcement -- politically -- looks to be a wash.

    Larry Downing / Reuters

    President Barack Obama gestures upon arriving at Joplin Regional Airport aboard Air Force One in Missouri.

    In the poll, a combined 17 percent say it makes them "much more likely" or "somewhat more likely" they will vote for him. That's compared with a combined 20 percent who say the announcement will make them more likely to vote for Mitt Romney, who opposes gay marriage.

    Perhaps more importantly, 62 percent say the president's support for gay marriage doesn't make a difference in their vote -- including 75 percent of independents, 76 percent of moderates, 81 percent of African Americans, and 65 percent of residents in the Midwest.

    "From my distance, it looks more like a voting draw than anything else," says Democratic pollster Peter D. Hart, who conducted the survey with Republican pollster Bill McInturff.

    In addition, the NBC/WSJ poll finds that a majority -- 54 percent -- would support a law in their state making same-sex marriage legal. Twenty four percent would actively support such a law, while 30 percent would favor it but not actively support it.

    By comparison, a combined 40 percent say they would oppose such a law.

    Asked to reconcile this majority supporting gay marriage in their states with North Carolina recently voting to for an amendment defining marriage as only between a man and a woman, McInturff says the respondents in this poll are different than the types of people who would vote in that kind of election.

    The full NBC/WSJ poll -- conducted May 16-20 of 1,000 adults, with an overall margin of error of plus-minus 3.1 percentage points -- will be released at 6:30 pm ET.

  • 'Lucky' teen plucked from waterfall's brink credits rescuers, Pendragon book

    Video footage shows the amazing rescue of a 13-year-old boy who spent hours clinging to slippery rocks on the edge of a 265-foot waterfall in Washington state. KING-TV's Allen Schauffler reports.

    A 13-year-old boy rescued from a rock atop a 265-foot waterfall in Washington state says he is alive thanks to luck, brave rescuers and a lesson from a fantasy character.

    “The worst waiting game ever," William Hickman of Burien joked to NBC station KING of Seattle after the ordeal. "I'm sitting there freezing cold, on rocks for eight hours straight. I was scared they were going to have to chop off my toes from hypothermia or something!"


    Hickman was hiking Saturday with his father, 9-year-old brother and friends above Wallace Middle Falls, near the town of Gold Bar about 45 miles northeast of Seattle. He wanted to cool off.

    "I wanted to go in ... just to wade a little bit," Hickman said at a Monday news conference, where he was joined by the people who staged a dramatic, middle-of the night operation.

    But he slipped and the whitewater swept him over a 10-foot drop into a deep pool above the waterfall.

    In the water, the teen quickly thought of advice from a fantasy-novel character Bobby Pendragon of the Pendragon Adventure books by D.J. MacHale: "Go feet first, stay to the sides and kick off the rocks," the Seattle Times reported.

    He managed to scramble onto a narrow rock shelf just before the main falls.

    He stayed there, cold and wet, for the next eight and a half hours, Hickman and rescuers said. His father shouted encouragement, telling him he was going to be OK. Rescue crews later tossed him blankets, energy bars and fruit snacks.

    KING-TV

    William Hickman, 13, almost went over a 265-foot waterfall Sunday.

    "He was in a very, very dangerous spot," Snohomish County sheriff's Sgt. Danny Wickstrom, who oversees the agency's search-and-rescue operations, said at the news conference, the Times reported. Almost all rescue operations that close to Wallace Falls involved a fatality, he said.

    "I feel lucky I got through it all," Hickman said. "I think the rescuers should feel like heroes; they saved me. I'm lucky to be alive."

    Hickman said that once he finished coughing up the water he had swallowed, he realized how precarious his situation was.

    "I wasn't really scared until after I got on top of the rock," the boy said. "I was shocked that I landed there, that I was not going to go down and die."

    A video shot by a volunteer rescuer shows Hickman huddled on a narrow, sloping rock shelf with his back to the water just above the popular hiking attraction.

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    Rescuers first tried to reach Hickman by helicopter, but an overhanging rock shelf prevented them from dropping straight down. Instead, a helicopter crew dropped two rescuers 200 yards below him.

    The rescuers climbed above the rock overhang, and then worked as a team — one rappelling down, the other belaying. Their goal was just to reach the boy and place him in a harness that would keep him safe until others arrived, said Deputy Bill Quistorf, chief pilot for the Snohomish County sheriff's air support unit.

    But the rescue nearly met with disaster. A rope a rescuer was using to rappel down the overhanging rope snapped, and he plunged into the whitewater. Only his secondary rope saved him from going over the big falls, and he made it to shore with minor injuries.

    Ten rescuers eventually camped with Hickman overnight, and a sheriff's office helicopter flew them down off the mountain at 6 a.m. Sunday. There was no place for the helicopter to land to pick them up, so the boy and the rescuers rode on a platform hanging from a cable 80 feet below the helicopter.

    The teen's mother, Heather Hickman, got a phone call from the teen’s dad Sunday morning.

    "Their dad said, 'I got something to tell you about last night, we almost lost William.' I told him he will never take my sons to a river again," Heather Hickman said. "He could've died. We could be having a totally different conversation right now."

    This story includes reporting by The Associated Press.

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  • In Calif. redistricting experiment, how much better off will Democrats be?

    In two weeks, California voters will take part in an intriguing electoral experiment –and while House Democrats are likely to emerge better off from it, the question is how much better off? Will they see a net gain of two or three House seats? Or perhaps a five, six, or seven seat score?

    When Californians cast their ballots in the June 5 primary, they’ll be in new congressional districts drawn not by political insiders, as was done in the past (and as is still done in most states), but by a citizen panel.

    Map of California's redrawn congressional districts.

    For decades, House members and their allies in the state legislature used gerrymandering to protect incumbents of both parties. That changed when voters adopted citizen redistricting in 2008.

    As governor, Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger “pushed redistricting reform for the purpose of creating competitive seats” and “Republicans had dreamed that the whole state would become competitive as a result of this process,” said Bruce Cain, professor of political science at the University of California, Berkeley, and an expert on redistricting in the state.

    Three other ingredients are being added to that redistricting experiment: the retirement of seven incumbents (four Republicans and three Democrats) from the California delegation, a 28 percent increase in the state’s Latino population since 2000 (although the increase in actual Latino voters doesn’t necessarily match the increase in the overall Latino population), and a new top-two balloting system under which only the leading vote-getters in each congressional primary advance to the November ballot.

    Decision 2012 and the myth of the 'Catholic vote'

    Only one seat in California changed hands in the last ten years, but according to the latest ratings from the non-partisan Cook Political Report, there are now four Democratic and five GOP House incumbents in competitive districts. At this same point after redistricting in 2001, Cook rated only two California House races as competitive.

    “The redistricting definitely favored the Democrats and nobody who has analyzed it thinks differently,” said Cain. “It would be shocking if the Democrats don’t pick up some congressional seats,” he said, but added, “I’d be surprised if the Democrats do better than (a net gain of) four or five.”

    “California has been a fairly stable market for congressional races over last decade,” said Dan Conston, the communications director for the Congressional Leadership Fund, a Republican Super PAC that had more than $5 million in cash as of April 15 to spend on House races.

    “Under the new maps, the entire field has been shaken up and California will now be one of the key battlegrounds for control of the House for the next decade,” he said.

    Roll Call's Nathan Gonzales and Cook Political Report's David Wasserman talk about redistricting and whether Democrats can win back the House.

    Conston added, “When you consider the national battlefields, it is clear that if we perform well in California, it is very difficult for Democrats to have any shot of reclaiming the majority.”

    Thanks to the Citizens United decision in the U.S. Supreme Court, and other federal court rulings, mega-donors in California and elsewhere can give unlimited money to Super PACs (both Democratic and Republican) bypassing donation caps to candidates or party committees.

    Conston said that the number of newly competitive seats in California has “piqued donor interest. That is why we set up a separate fund within the Congressional Leadership Fund where all resources raised go to our California efforts.”

    Among the Democrats at whom Republican groups will be aiming their ads are Rep. Lois Capps and Rep. John Garamendi, both of whom will now be competing on less Democratic-leaning turf than their present districts.

    Leaders of the Democratic Super PAC, which works on House races, are also making California their focus.

    In its fund raising pitch to donors, the House Majority PAC said, “Democrats have the opportunity to go from a 34-19 majority in California to a 41-12 majority – a net gain of seven seats, nearly a third of what we need to retake the majority in the U.S. House of Representatives ... This may well be a once-in-a-generation opportunity.”

    But without a competitive presidential or Senate race in California, there will be no pull for Democratic voters from the top of the ticket. “This is particularly important in the Hispanic community – the presidential election will not be focused on communicating with these voters in California,” the fund-raising pitch said.

    All the more enticing for Democratic mega-donors to give to the House Majority PAC, which had nearly $1.7 million in cash on hand as of March 31.

    Like its Republican rival, it too has a California-specific fund and appeals to home-state pride in its pitch: “For a long time, California donors have dutifully contributed to Democratic efforts and that money has been spent everywhere but California. In 2012, California donors have the opportunity to fund critically important races right here in the Golden State.”

    First Thoughts: Obama unloads on Romney

    Initially, some Democrats – including President Barack Obama – denounced Super PACs and non-profit groups called 501c4s, which were given a new birth of fundraising freedom under the Citizens United decision.

    But “I don’t hear that (objection) as much (from Democratic donors) anymore,” said Ali Lapp, executive director of the House Majority PAC. “More and more, there are a lot of Democratic donors out there that totally understand that if we try to fight this fight with one hand tied behind our back, the country is not going to get any better.”

    Lapp said, “The way I think about, there are nine competitive seats in California ... Of those nine, I think we will win five or six – if we’re really lucky, seven. If we won only two, it would not be a happy day; we would have had a horrible election if we won only two of those nine.”

    One place where House Majority PAC had been spending money in recent weeks is in the new 26th Congressional District in Ventura County, where four Democrats and one Republican, state Sen. Tony Strickland, are running. So far, Strickland has outraised all other contenders by a wide margin.

    Also on the June 5 ballot is a former-Republican-turned-independent, county supervisor Linda Parks, who won a glowing endorsement from The Los Angeles Times which sees her as exactly the type of centrist pragmatist that reformers had hoped citizen-driven redistricting would promote.

    If Parks and Strickland are the top two finishers on June 5, Democrats will start the November campaign already one seat behind.

    “This is a lean-Democratic district that in November has a better chance of going for a Democrat than for a Republican,” said Lapp.

    “But because of the dynamics of the top-two primary system where you have an independent with very high name ID and you have a bunch of Democrats on the ballot, there was a very real chance we could be squandering this opportunity if we didn’t get involved and make sure that voters knew who Julia Brownley is, what she stands for, and that she is the leading Democrat in the race.”

    But that race is only one of the places where the House Majority PAC is likely to invest money.  “On June 6, we’ll see what the match-ups are and – knock on wood – we’ll get the strong candidates we’re expecting to get from all these districts,” Lapp said.

  • Dog bite liability payouts rise to $479 million in 2011

    /

    Eleasha Gall, director of behavior and training at Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Los Angeles, interacts with Tux, a one-year-old Pit bull, in an effort to promote behavior to avoid dog bites.

    Dog bites cost insurance companies about $479 million in 2011, accounting for an increasingly large chunk of payouts under homeowner’s liability policies, according to a recent study.

    While there was a slight decline in the number of dog bite claims, the price tag per case has risen 54 percent since 2003 — to an average of $29,400 in 2011 — making up more than one-third of total liability claims paid out by homeowners, according to the Insurance Information Institute, which conducted the study. 

    "These increases can be attributed to increased medical costs as well as the size of settlements, judgments and jury awards given to plaintiffs, which have risen well above the rate of inflation in recent years," the institute said in a release.

    According to the Centers for Disease Control, 4.7 million people are bitten by dogs each year and about 800,000 of them seek medical attention. Of those injured, 386,000 require treatment in an emergency room and 16 die, according to the CDC.


    Kevin M. Phillips, a Beverly Hills based attorney who specializes in representing dog bite victims around the country, told msnbc.com  that studies suggest that the popularity of pit bulls in the United States are likely a contributing factor in the rising cost of claims paid out by insurance companies. 

    "Attacks by pit bulls are associated with higher morbidity rates, higher hospital charges, and a higher risk of death than are attacks by other breeds of dogs," concluded a study published in the Annals of Surgery in April 2011.

    In some places, the law now provides different consideration for dog breeds like pit bulls, said Phillips. For instance, in Maryland, pit bulls are now deemed inherently dangerous, unlike most other breeds, said Phillips.

    "If you own a pit bull and the pit bull hurts someone, no one has to prove it’s dangerous. It is presumed to be so," he said.

    Traditionally, a homeowner liability policy covers dog bites, but some insurance companies are modifying how they write policies.

    A CDC report on dogs involved in fatal human attacks between 1979 and 1998 — which the center specifies is not intended for policy making decisions — is nevertheless used as a guide for some insurers, according to a report in the Des Moines Register. At the top of that list are pit bulls, Rottweilers, German shepherds, huskies, Alaskan malamutes, Doberman pinschers and chow chows.

    "Insurance companies started experimenting with cutting out the coverage for dog bites. Homeowners have got to confirm they have the coverage," said Phillips.

    For some breeds of dogs associated with attacks, you may actually need a special canine liability insurance, he said. Without it, a serious dog attack can run up medical bills and compensation worth hundreds of thousands of dollars in costs to the pet owner.

    "If your dog bites a child on the face, which is where a dog bites a child, it can wipe you out," he added.

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  • Vial of Ronald Reagan's blood up for sale, UK auction house claims

    If you’ve ever wanted a vial of Ronald Reagan’s blood, now’s your chance -- although this sale is being called unethical.

    A vial supposedly containing the late president’s blood is up for auction on PFCauctions.com, which is based in the United Kingdom. 

    The website claims the blood was taken from Reagan following the assassination attempt against him in 1981.


    See the original report at NBCWashington.com

    The vial is pictured on the website with a label of the president’s name. An included letter from the seller says his late mother worked at the lab that tested the blood for the George Washington University Hospital after Reagan was shot.

    The most recent bid on the site is a little more than $9,900.

    Some are outraged over the auction, calling it unethical.

    "If indeed this story is true, it's a craven act and we will use every legal means to stop its sale or purchase," John Heubusch, executive director of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation, said in a statement.

    Dr. Joseph Giordano, who was head of the GW Hospital's trauma team in 1981, said the auction is outrageous.

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    “You don’t go selling people’s specimens or bodily fluids,” said Giordano. “You have no permission to do that. It’s unethical.”

    “Any individual, including a President of the United States, should feel confident that once they enter into the care of a medical system their privacy and rights are held inviolable,” Heubusch said.

    Reuters gives this account of the vial's origin:

    The seller wrote that the vial came from his or her late mother, who took it from her workplace at Maryland-based Bio-Science Laboratories, where blood work and testing were done for George Washington Hospital.

    The seller said he or she had contacted the California-based Ronald Reagan Library and Museum, which is run by the late president's foundation, months ago and had been told that Reagan's family would like to have the vial given to them.

    "I told him that I didn't think that was something that I was going to consider ... and that I was a real fan of Reaganomics and felt that President Reagan himself would rather see me sell it rather than donating it," the statement said.

    A spokeswoman for the foundation declined to comment on the seller's claim to have spoken to the library.

    Msnbc.com staff contributed to this report from Natalie Lopez of NBCWashington.com.

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  • Motorcycle deaths stay at same level despite overall safer roads

    Alan Spearman / The Commercial Appeal file

    While vehicle fatalities are down, progress in reducing the number of motorcycle deaths nationally is proving difficult. Fortunately, this March 26, accident in Memphis, Tenn., was not fatal.

    A report released Tuesday by the Governors Highway Safety Association finds that no progress was made in reducing motorcyclist deaths in 2011, even as overall highway traffic deaths declined.


    Follow Open Channel on Twitter and Facebook.


    Based upon preliminary data for the first nine months of the year, from 50 states and the District of Columbia, GHSA projects that motorcycle fatalities remained at about 4,500 in 2011, the same level as 2010.

    Meanwhile, earlier this month, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration projected that overall motor vehicle fatalities declined 1.7 percent in 2011, reaching their lowest level since 1949.


    Motorcycle deaths remain one of the few areas in highway safety where progress is not being made.

    "It is disappointing that we are not making progress in motorcycle safety," said GHSA Chairman Troy Costales in a statement, "particularly as fatalities involving other motorists continue to decline. As the study notes, the strengthening economy, high gas prices, and the lack of all-rider helmet laws leave me concerned about the final numbers for 2011 and 2012. Every motorcyclist deserves to arrive at their destination safely. These fatality figures represent real people – they’re family, friends and neighbors."

    Comparing the first nine months of 2010 with 2011, motorcyclist fatalities decreased in 23 states, with notable declines in many.

    On the other hand, 26 states and the District Columbia showed an increase in motorcyclist deaths.

    The economy influences motorcycle travel in several ways. With the economy improving in 2011 and furthering strengthening in 2012, more people will have disposable income for purchasing and riding motorcycles. At the same time, rising gas prices may cause more people to choose motorcycles for transportation because of their fuel efficiency.

    The Governors Highway Safety Association is a nonprofit association representing the highway safety offices of states, territories, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.

    The full report is available here.

  • DEA agents investigated for hiring prostitutes in Colombia

    Three U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents are under investigation after a Secret Service agent said the trio had hired prostitutes in Colombia, Justice Department officials confirmed to NBC News.

    But the allegation of their activity was said to be separate from the incident involving Secret Service personnel, who also were in Cartagena, Colombia, for President Barack Obama's visit in mid-April and hired prostitutes, according to NBC News.


    "The Drug Enforcement Administration was provided information from the Secret Service unrelated to the Cartagena hotel Secret Service incident, which DEA immediately followed up on, making DEA employees available to be interviewed by the Department of Justice's Office of Inspector General," a DEA spokesman said. "DEA takes allegations of misconduct very seriously and will take appropriate personnel action, if warranted, upon the conclusion of the OIG investigation."

    Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, the top Republican on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said in a statement that she had been briefed about the involvement of two or more DEA agents on May 4 but was asked to withhold public comment until the agents could be taken out of Colombia and questioned.

    "It's disturbing that we may be uncovering a troubling culture that spans more than one law enforcement agency," Collins said.

    Rep. King says he won't meet with Colombian prostitute at center of Secret Service scandal

    According to CBS, the Justice Department is working with the DEA, the U.S. Secret Service, the inspector general for the Department of Homeland Security and the State Department's Diplomatic Security Service on the investigation.

    Unlike the Secret Service, the DEA has permanent offices in Colombia.

    Prostitution is legal in Colombia.

    The Associated Press and NBC's Pete Williams contributed to this report.

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  • Woman stabs, kills two tourists in Atlantic City, police say

    Authorities say a Pennsylvania woman fatally stabbed two Canadian tourists during a botched robbery in Atlantic City. WCAU's Ted Greenberg reports.

    Two Canadian women staying at an Atlantic City casino were stabbed and killed Monday in what appears to be a random attack in broad daylight, Atlantic County prosecutors told NBC10.

    Police tell NBC10's Ted Greenberg the deadly stabbing happened outside of the AtlantiCare Regional Medical Center, City Campus, across from Bally's Casino on Michigan and Pacific Aves around 10 a.m. as the women walked towards The Walk outlet stores.

    For more, visit NBC10.com

    Witnesses told investigators that a woman who was later identified as 44-year-old Antoinette Pelzer was trying to rob one of the victims: a 47-year-old and an 80-year-old both from Canada.


     

    Bail is set at $2 million for Pelzer, who was taken to the Atlantic County Jail on Tuesday morning, according to The Press of Atlantic City.

    Police Officer Jacob Abbruscato was patrolling the area and saw the attack in progress. Investigators say he ordered Pelzer to drop the knife and then arrested her.

    The victims were rushed into nearby AtlantiCare Regional Medical Center with stab wounds to the upper body. Both women died Monday afternoon, according to prosecutors.

    Police say Antoinette Pelzer, 44, stabbed and killed two Canadian tourists in Atlantic City.

    Police say the attack appeared to be random and unprovoked.

    Pelzer was being held on $250,000 charged with two counts of aggravated assault, robbery and weapons charges. She has a Pennsylvania license and police were trying to figure out how long she has been staying in A.C.

    Police say homicide charges are expected to be added. Police are not releasing the names of the victims at this time.

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  • Small plane crash lands upside down, pilot survives

    Robyn Beck/AFP – Getty Images

    An investigator shines a flashlight on a single-engine plane that crashed in the front yard of a home in Glendale, Calif., home.

    A Cessna 210 crashed in front of a Glendale, Calif., home Monday night, tearing down power lines and cutting electricity to surrounding homes, authorities said.

    The fixed wing single-engine plane, registered to a man in Moreno Valley, landed upside down on the sidewalk in the 1200 block of Glenwood Road near Grandview Avenue about 8:30 p.m.

    As of 11 p.m. Monday, about 1,600 homes in the area were without power.

    The pilot, a 55-year-old man, was treated on the scene complaining of shoulder pain and was transported to the hospital with minor injuries, according to aerial communications.

    For more, visit NBCLosAngeles.com

    No other injuries or victims were reported.

    The pilot, who was the only person on board, told air traffic controllers that he would try to land at Van Nuys Airport after noticing engine trouble, according to Ian Gregor, with the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) Pacific Division.

    The FAA and National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) are investigating the incident.

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  • Could you be sued for texting with a driver? Experts say, 'maybe'

    Could you be blamed for a car crash because you sent a text message? 

    A New Jersey judge will decide later this week if the sender of a text message might be partially liable for a horrific auto accident that occurred because the driver was reading that message on his cell phone and drifted into oncoming traffic.

    With nearly half a million U.S. drivers injured in distracted driving-related accidents every year, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the judge’s decision could have wide-ranging impact in both the legal and digital realms.

    While it might seem absurd to blame someone who isn't even in the car -- or anywhere near it -- for causing an accident, some legal experts say the plaintiff is on firmer ground than you might think.


    Skippy Weinstein, a Morristown-based lawyer, is using similar logic to press the case he filed on behalf of David and Linda Kuber. Both Kubers lost their legs during a 2009 crash in Mine Hill, N.J., after 19-year-old Kyle Best sideswiped their car when driving while texting. Weinstein said Shannon Colonna, who was texting with Best, should also be held responsible for the Kubers’ injuries.

    "She was not physically in the vehicle but she was electronically present," Weinstein told msnbc.com. "She and he were assisting each other in a violation of the law."

    That word "assisting" is at the crux of Weinstein's novel legal argument. 

    Most readers will be familiar with the notion of "aiding and abetting" a criminal act and the guilt it brings: the man who knowingly holds the door for the gang is just likely to be convicted of bank robbery as the safe cracker.

    More recently, this notion of aiding and abetting has been extended to civil liability cases, too, creating a basis for what's sometimes called "secondary" or "vicarious" liability. For the past two decades, most civil aiding and abetting cases have been limited to investment and securities fraud: An aggrieved investor might not only sue Bernie Madoff for stealing his money, for example, but also go after a third-party broker who repeatedly executed trades for Madoff. Even if the trader wasn't profiting from the scheme or part of a "joint enterprise,“ a court might find the trader provided assistance to Madoff, and should have known that someone was likely be injured by his actions.

    The aiding and abetting argument in injuries that give rise to lawsuits, known as "torts," is only beginning to find its way into other kinds of civil cases.

    There's a simple three-pronged test to prove someone is partly to blame for causing an injury by aiding and abetting someone else. It is set out in the Restatement of Torts published by the American Law Institute, which guides most civil courtrooms:

    1) The party the defendant assists must do a wrongful act;

    2) The party must be generally aware of his or her role in the illegal or "tortuous" act;

    3) The party must "substantially assist" in the principal violation.

    Weinstein think his argument is easy to make. The driver violated the law by texting while driving. Colonna, the text sender, should have known that Best was driving home from work and had to know texting while driving was a violation, he said. Therefore, it's hard to argue that a text sender isn't substantially assisting in the creation of a text message conversation that violates New Jersey's driving laws.

    "That very comfortably satisfies the third prong of the legal test," he said.

    Colonna’s lawyer, Joseph McGlone, doesn't think the argument has any merit, and has asked Morris County Superior Court Judge David Rand to dismiss the case. Rand is scheduled to rule this week on McGlone’s motion to dismiss the case.

    The sender of a text message has no way to control or predict when the recipient will read it, McGlone argues.

    "The sender of the text has the right to assume the recipient will read it at a safe time,” McGlone told the local Daily Record  newspaper. “It’s not fair. It’s not reasonable. Shannon Colonna has no way to control when Kyle Best is going to read that message."

    He added that there is no precedent for heaping liability on a person on the other side of a text message conversation that causes injury.

    Of course, there's no precedent for a lot of legal areas in the Digital Age. In situations like this, judges usually turn to analogies. In driving injury cases, the judge has a bushel full to choose from.

    For starters, it's hard to tag liability on anyone who isn't holding the steering wheel of the car while an accident occurs. Lawyers around the nation have repeatedly tried and failed to make passengers partly responsible for accidents caused by drunken drivers when passengers knowingly get into a car with an intoxicated driver.

    There are exceptions, however. A South Carolina court has said a passenger could be judged a "proximate cause" of an injury if the driver and passenger were in some kind of "joint enterprise," such as the passenger steering the car while the driver presses the gas pedal.

    Passengers who have directly encouraged drivers to break the law -- by urging them to speed excessively or to drive in the oncoming lane as part of a game, for example -- have also been found liable, Weinstein says.

    But to find a passenger liable, the South Carolina court said, "The passenger must have an equal right to control the direction and management of the vehicle." It seems hard to argue that a text message sender has equal ability to control the vehicle as the driver does.

    But there are plenty of other situations where someone other than the driver has to pay after an injury accident, an extension of liability called “imputed negligence.” The most common is when the driver is "an agent" of someone else -- when a pizza delivery man driving for work causes an accident, his employer is liable.  Parents are often liable for accidents their children cause if they kids are directly under their care. 

    There's also concept called "negligent entrustment": if you knowingly let an unlicensed driver take your auto out for a spin, you will probably be liable for an accident he or she causes. 

    Neither of those cases fit this situation well, however. So Weinstein has settled on a simpler analogy.

    "If she was in the vehicle and put her hands over his eyes so he couldn't see, she would be liable," he said. "(Texting with him) is as if she put her hands over his eyes."

    Is texting the digital equivalent of willfully rendering someone blind? To even make that argument, and to press on with the aiding and abetting claim, Weinstein has to persuade the judge that Colonna knew that Best was texting while driving. Colonna's lawyers are contesting that point, but Weinstein says the pattern of texts between boyfriend and girlfriend make clear that she must have known he was on his way home from work.

    But even if he fails on that argument, it's easy to imagine other lawsuits where evidence of knowledge by the sender could be hard to deny. A driver might directly text, "Hey, I'm driving home," for example.

    That would make a big difference in a case like this, said Robert Mitchell, a Utah-based lawyer and author of a recent article on aiding and abetting claims.

    "If there is conclusive evidence that the person sending the text messages to the driver knew the driver was texting while driving, we see no reason why a claim for aiding and abetting the driver’s negligent or reckless conduct could not be made. The case is probably weaker if there is no evidence of actual knowledge, but only evidence of ‘constructive knowledge,’" said Mitchell, referring to a concept that the sender "should have known" the recipient was driving. "Courts disagree over whether constructive knowledge is sufficient to give rise to aiding and abetting liability."

    Courts have found that the contribution by this third party in aiding and abetting cases can't be slight – it must be “significant.” For example, giving directions to the bank robber probably wouldn’t be substantial enough to get you prosecuted, but telling him what time security guard shifts change could be. And, as with most civil liability cases, the harm caused by the action doesn't have to be intentional.

    Mitchell said this is the critical phrase in the American Law Institute's guidelines.

    "If the encouragement or assistance is a substantial factor in causing the resulting tort, the one giving it is himself a tortfeasor and is responsible for the consequences of the other’s act. This is true both when the act done is (intentional) and when it is merely (negligent)," Mitchell wrote in his review, quoting the guidelines with added parenthesis. In fact, liability exists even if the third-party has no idea he or she is doing something illegal or negligent.

    So in Mitchell’s view, it's a relatively easy to argue that the texter "substantially assisted" the driver in causing the accident. 

    "The third prong, substantial assistance, would be an easier hurdle to clear (than knowledge) since sending somebody a text message while driving distracts the driver and that distraction may ultimately cause the accident," he said.  "Of course defenses may include superseding or intervening causes to the underlying tort (the first prong), like bad weather, poor road conditions or visibility, avoiding someone or something on the road."

    Not all experts agree, however. Maryland-based lawyer Bradley Shear, an expert in digital law, openly fretted about how far liability might extend if Weinstein is successful in his novel legal argument.

    "What if someone is hopping on a boat, and they look down at a text, slip and drown? What if a doctor gets a text before a surgery that upsets him and he makes a mistake? Is the sender responsible?" he said. "If you start going down that route where are you going to draw the line?"

    Mark Rasch, for head of the Justice Department’s Computer Crimes Unit, said he thinks the case will boil down simply into this question: Can anyone really prove that the sender of the text, Colonna, knew that Best would read it while driving? Absent such proof, there is no case, he says.

    But he was concerned with the larger issue of extending liability through digital means.

    “The real question here is, do we as a society want to impose a duty on the non-driving texter for accidents that happen when a recipient is driving?” he said. “For now, it seems a reasonable place to draw the line at this: The person driving has a duty not to text. And the person on other end of line has no duty unless there are special circumstances.”

    One special circumstance he envisioned: A boss or other person in a position of power who received a message from an employee saying, “I can’t text, I’m driving,” but continued to send demanding texts with an implied threat if they weren’t answered quickly.

    “The person in the position of authority might have liability then,” said Rasch, now a cybersecurity consultant with Virginia-based CSC Inc.

    Complicating matters, juries can apportion liability, and theoretically could find a driver 90 percent responsible and the sender of a text 10 percent responsible. Damages can be similarly apportioned, although the realities of collections means the party with the deepest pockets usually pays the most in damages.

    It’s also possible that Congress or state legislatures might create a chain of liability, as states have done with dram shop laws, which make bars liable for injuries and damages caused by patron who are served after they’re drunk.

    For his part, Weinstein demurs when asked if he's trying to set an important legal precedent or make law. He's just trying to win a case for his client, he said.

    "The defense ... wants to make this into a cause celebre, but this is not complicated," he said. "A jury may find I'm wrong and thrown me out on my duff. ... All I'm saying is don't (text) while driving, and don't assist someone else in texting while driving."

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  • Grandmother charged with murder after allegedly shooting grandson eight times

    A 74-year-old Michigan woman has been charged with fatally shooting her teenage grandson. WDIV-TV's Hank Winchester reports.

    A 74-year-old woman has been charged with murder after allegedly shooting her grandson in the chest eight times as he called 911.

    Jonathan Hoffman, 17, was shot Friday evening at the family's condo in West Bloomfield Township, an upscale Detroit suburb, police said. His grandmother, Sandra Layne, a retired teacher, was charged with open murder and is being held without bond.


    During Layne's arraignment Monday, a police detective testified that Hoffman frantically told a 911 dispatcher he had been shot in the chest by his grandmother and that he was going to die.

    By the time officers arrived at the property, at least four more shots from a .40-caliber handgun had been pumped into the high school senior.

    Read report on ClickOnDetroit.com

    A West Bloomfield Township detective told a judge that eight entry and exit wounds were found in Hoffman's body and two bullets were in his body after the shooting.

    "At approximately the three-minute mark of the 911 call, the subject screamed and exclaimed that he had just been shot again," Detective Brad Boulet said, according to The Detroit News. "Responding officers heard several gunshots inside the house."

    Layne stood mute in court when the charge was read, and a not guilty plea was entered on her behalf.

    An open murder charge allows a jury to decide on whether a first- or second-degree charge applies after hearing evidence.

    Ira Kaufman Chapel via AP

    Jonathan Hoffman, seen in an undated family photo released by the Ira Kaufman Chapel in Southfield, Mich., was fatally shot at his grandparents' home in West Bloomfield Township, Mich.

    Hoffman had been attending an alternative high school in nearby Farmington and living with his maternal grandparents so he could complete his senior year while his divorced parents settled in Arizona, according to his father, Michael Hoffman of Scottsdale, Ariz.

    Drug paraphernalia
    Layne's attorneys have said there were problems at the condo, and Layne was afraid of her grandson. One of her attorneys, Mitchell Ribitwer, told reporters Monday that drugs and drug paraphernalia apparently belonging to the teen were found at the condo after Hoffman was killed.

    Michael Hoffman said that regardless of his son's behavior, the teen was unarmed and didn't deserve to be shot to death.

    "I'm not saying he was aggressive, but if he was, I don't understand how being aggressive but unarmed would justify her using deadly force," Hoffman said according to ClickOnDetroit.com.

    Detective Brad Boulet testified about Hoffman's 911 call and said when officers arrived at the condo, Layne was inside, behind a screened door.

    "She put the gun on the floor after being ordered so by officers," Boulet said. "She exclaimed she had just murdered her grandson."

    Another of Layne's attorneys told ClickOnDetroit.com that he thought Layne was "not in control of her emotions" at the time of the incident.

    "She was afraid. She's not a big, strong woman," Jerome Sabbota said.

    'Derogatory to his grandmother'
    Wearing an orange jumpsuit in court, Layne smiled and nodded to her husband and other family members.

    Ribitwer said Layne had lived in the West Bloomfield area for 30 years. His requests for a reasonable bond and electronic tether monitor for Layne were denied. A pre-examination conference for Layne was set for Thursday morning.

    Prosecutors had no comment after the hearing. Layne's husband and other relatives attended the hearing but also didn't comment.

    Police had responded in March to a domestic disturbance at Layne's home.

    "I spoke to the officer who responded, and he indicated this young man was totally out of control in the street," Ribitwer told reporters Monday. "He was derogatory to his grandmother. He was yelling and shouting and almost got into it with the police."

    Jonathan Hoffman's funeral is set for 11 a.m. Tuesday.

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

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  • Man survives plunge over Niagara Falls

    Harry Rossetani / AP

    Niagara Falls emergency officials rescue a man who plunged over the falls in an apparent suicide attempt on May 21, 2012.

    Reuters reports — A man survived a 174-foot plunge over Niagara's Horseshoe Falls on Monday but sustained life-threatening injuries, Canadian police said.

    The man, whose name has not been released, became only the third person known to have lived through a fall over the massive cataract without safety devices.

    Canada's Niagara Parks Police said witnesses reported seeing the man climb over a retaining wall about 20 feet above the brink of the falls at mid-morning and deliberately jump into the swift waters.

    He surfaced a few seconds later in the lower Niagara River Basin below, near an observation platform, police said.

    He "was located by a Niagara Parks Police officer along the rocky shoreline as he collapsed in waters that were up to the subject's waist," police said in a statement. Read the full story.

    Harry Rossetani / AP

    In a rescue that lasted about 30 minutes, staff from several agencies extricated the man, thought to be about 40 years old.
    He was flown by an air ambulance to a hospital in Hamilton, Ontario, for treatment

     

  • Sierra LaMar's parents hold out hope even as cops arrest murder suspect

    Police arrested a suspect in connection with the disappearance of California teen Sierra LaMar, who went missing two months ago. The suspect, Antolin Garcia-Torres, has been booked into the Santa Clara County Jail on suspicion of murder and kidnapping. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    Updated 12:16 p.m. -- The parents of missing California teenager Sierra LaMar said they are not giving up hope of finding their daughter, even as police booked a 21-year-old man late Monday for her murder and kidnapping.

    "Our search still is not going to end," Sierra's mother Marlene LaMar said at a press conference Tuesday. "As a mother, I’m hopeful because her body has not been found."

    Antolin Garcia-Torres, from Morgan Hill, was booked into jail Monday evening after being taken into custody at a Safeway in Morgan Hill, according to the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office.


    Santa Clara County Sheriff Laurie Smith said the suspect had been under surveillance since the investigators received the lab reports of his DNA found on LaMar's discarded clothes.

    "We were hoping that he would lead us to where Sierra was,” Smith said Tuesday, adding that the decision to book Garcia-Torres came out of concern for public safety.

    The Santa Clara County Sheriff's office holds a news conference regarding the arrest of 21-year-old Antolin Garcia-Torres in connection with the kidnapping and suspected murder of 15-year-old Sierra LaMar. The teen's parents also speak out at the press conference.

    "We wanted to make sure that this doesn’t happen again,” she said.

    LaMar, 15, also from Morgan Hill, has been missing for more than two months.

    Read more stories from NBCBayArea.com

    Garcia-Torres' arrest Monday marked the first time detectives have said what the community has feared since LaMar vanished on her way to school on March 16: That they think LaMar was murdered.

    While LaMar's body has not been found, the sheriff said there is strong evidence pointing to homicide. Smith said investigators have not found any blood, and she refused to say any more on the nature of the physical evidence found on LaMar's clothes and in the suspect's vehicle.

    "These are very very difficult cases, to prosecute a homicide when you haven’t found the victim,” she said.

    Smith also said there is no indication LaMar had run away from home and no information indicating the victim knew Garcia-Torres.

    "It’s my belief this was purely random," she added.

    Search for missing teen Sierra LaMar intensifies in California

    Garcia-Torres' record shows a prior conviction for interfering with an officer, which qualifies as a misdemeanor, and a felony arrest for assault for which he was not prosecuted, the sheriff said.

    Interviews with the suspect haven't yet revealed anything "substantive" about LaMar's whereabouts, Smith said.

    Facebook.com/help.find.sierra

    Police suspect Sierra LaMar -- seen in images posted on Facebook.com/help.find.sierra -- has been murdered.

    LaMar's mother pleaded with Garcia-Torres to cooperate with the investigators.

    “Please, please give the information that you have to lead us to Sierra,” she said. "I would like you to come forward and say where she is and end this nightmare.”

    Volunteers, officials searched
    Volunteers and sheriff's officials have continuously searched the fields, open spaces and reservoirs near Morgan Hill since her disappearance, The Associated Press reported.

    A Facebook page was set up to try to help find her. Both the sheriff and the LaMar family acknowledged the community's support throughout the investigation.

    "We still need your support," Sierra's father Steve LaMar said Tuesday. "We need to bring Sierra home.”

    The KlaasKids Foundation, founded by Marc Klaas, whose 12-year-old daughter Polly was kidnapped from her Petaluma home and murdered in 1993, has been organizing volunteer searches on Wednesdays and Saturdays, the AP added. 

    Investigators found Sierra's handbag with clothing and a cellphone along the side of the road near her home on March 17, the day after Sierra's mother reported her missing. 

    Earlier this month, investigators located a red Volkswagen Jetta they said may have been connected to Sierra's abduction given that surveillance cameras and witnesses put the car near the area where authorities believe she disappeared. 

    Sheriff's officials have released few details about leads in the case, including what, if any, evidence they found in the car.

    The Associated Press and msnbc.com's Becky Bratu contributed to this report.

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  • President Obama's commencement address to Joplin High School, May 21, 2012

     

    Remarks of President Barack Obama - As Prepared for Delivery

    Joplin High School Commencement Address

    Missouri Southern State University

    Monday, May 21, 2012

    Joplin, Missouri

     

    Good evening Superintendent Huff, Principal Sachetta, faculty, parents, family, friends, the people of Joplin, and the class of 2012. Congratulations on your graduation, and thank you for allowing me the honor of playing a small part in this special day.

    The job of a commencement speaker - aside from keeping it short and sweet - is to inspire. But as I look out at this class, and across this city, what's clear is that you're the source of inspiration today. To me. To this state. To this country. And to people all over the world.

    Last year, the road that led you here took a turn that no one could've imagined. Just hours after the class of 2011 walked across this stage, the most powerful tornado in six decades tore a path of devastation through Joplin that was nearly a mile wide and thirteen long. In only 32 minutes, it took thousands of homes, hundreds of businesses, and 161 of your neighbors, your friends, and your family members. It took Will Norton, who had just left this auditorium with a diploma in his hand. It took Lantz Hare, who should've received his diploma next year.

    By now, most of you have probably relived those 32 minutes again and again. Where you were. What you saw. When you knew for sure that it was over. The first contact you had with someone you love. The first day you woke up in a world that would never be the same.

    And yet, the story of Joplin is the story of what happened the next day. And the day after that. And all the days and weeks that followed. As your city manager, Mark Rohr, has said, the people here chose to define the tragedy "not by what happened to us, but by how we responded."

    That story is part of you now. You've grown up quickly over the last year. You've learned at a younger age than most that we can't always predict what life has in store for us. No matter how we might try to avoid it, life can bring heartache. Life involves struggle. Life will bring loss.

    But here in Joplin, you've also learned that we have the power to grow from these experiences. We can define our own lives not by what happens to us, but by how we respond. We can choose to carry on, and make a difference in the world. And in doing so, we can make true what's written in Scripture - that "tribulation produces perseverance, and perseverance, character, and character, hope."

    Of all that's come from this tragedy, let this be the central lesson that guides you and sustains you through whatever challenges lie ahead.

    I imagine that as you begin the next stage in your journey, you will encounter greed and selfishness; ignorance and cruelty. You will meet people who try to build themselves up by tearing others down; who believe looking after others is only for suckers.

    But you are from Joplin. So you will remember, you will know, just how many people there are who see life differently; those who are guided by kindness and generosity and quiet service.

    You'll always remember that in a town of 50,000 people, nearly 50,000 more came to help in the weeks after the tornado - perfect strangers who've never met you, and would never ask for anything in return. One of them was Mark Carr, who drove 600 miles from Rocky Ford, Colorado with a couple of chainsaws and his three little children. One man traveled all the way from Japan, because he remembered that Americans were there for his country after last year's tsunami, and he wanted the chance to pay it forward. Many were AmeriCorps volunteers who have chosen to leave their homes and stay here until Joplin is back on its feet.

    There was the day that Mizzou's football team rolled into town with an 18-wheeler full of donated supplies. Of all places, they were assigned to help out on Kansas Avenue. While they hauled away washing machines and refrigerators from the debris, they met Carol Mann, who had just lost the house she lived in for eighteen years. Carol, who works part-time at McDonald's even as she struggles with seizures, told the players that she had even lost the change purse that held her lunch money. So one of them went back to the house, dug through the rubble, and returned the purse with $5 inside.

    As Carol's sister said, "So much of the news you hear is so negative. But those boys renewed my faith that there are so many good people in the world."

    That's what you'll remember. Because you are from Joplin.

    You will remember the half million dollar donation that came from Angelina Jolie and Missouri native Brad Pitt. But you'll also remember the $360 that was delivered by a nine-year-old boy who organized his own car wash. You'll remember the school supplies donated by your neighboring towns, but also the brand new laptops that were sent from the United Arab Emirates - a small country on the other side of the world. When it came time for your prom, make-up artist Melissa Blayton organized an effort that collected over a 1,000 donated prom dresses, FedEx kicked in for the corsages, and Joplin's own Liz Easton, who lost her home and her bakery in the tornado, made 1,500 cupcakes for the occasion.

    There are so many good people in the world. There is such a decency, a bigness of spirit, in this country of ours. Remember that. Remember what people did here. And like the man from Japan who came to Joplin, make sure to pay it forward in your own life.

    Just as you have learned the goodness of people, so have you learned the power of community. As take on the roles of colleague and neighbor and citizen, you will encounter all kinds of divisions between groups - divisions of race, and religion, and ideology. You'll meet people who like to disagree just for the sake of being disagreeable; who prefer to play up their differences and instead of focusing on what they have in common, or where they can cooperate.

    But you are from Joplin. So you will know that it's always possible for a community to come together when it matters most.

    After all, a lot of you could've spent your senior year scattered throughout different schools, far from home. But Dr. Huff asked everyone to pitch in so that school started on time, right here in Joplin. He understood the power of this community, and the power of place. And so teachers worked extra hours, and coaches improvised. The mall was turned into classrooms, and the food court became a cafeteria - which sounds like a bit of an improvement. Sure, the arrangements might have been a little noisy, and a little improvised, but you hunkered down, and you made it work. Together.

    Together, you decided that this city wasn't about to spend the next year arguing over every detail of the recovery effort. At the very first town meeting, every citizen was handed a Post-It note, and asked to write down their goals and their hopes for Joplin's future. More than 1,000 notes covered an entire wall, and became the blueprint that architects are following to this day.

    Together, the businesses that were destroyed in the tornado decided that they weren't about to walk away from the community that made their success possible. Even if it would've been easier. Even if it would've been more profitable to go somewhere else. Today, more than half the stores that were damaged on the Range Line are up and running again. Eleven more are planning to join them. And every time a company re-opens its doors, people cheer the cutting of a ribbon that bears the town's new slogan: "Remember. Rejoice. Rebuild."

    I've been told that before the tornado, many of you couldn't wait to leave here once high school was finally over. Your student council president, Julia Lewis, said, "We never thought Joplin was anything special; but seeing how we responded to something that tore our community apart has brought us together. Everyone has a lot more pride in our town." It's no surprise, then, that many of you have decided to stick around, and go to colleges that aren't too far from home.

    That's the power of community. That's the power of shared effort. Some of life's strongest bonds are the ones we forge when everything around us seems broken. And even though I expect some of you will ultimately end up leaving Joplin, I'm convinced that Joplin will never leave you. The people who went through this with you; the people you once thought of as simply neighbors or acquaintances; classmates or even friends - the people in this auditorium tonight - they are family now. They are family.

    In fact, my deepest hope for all of you is that as you begin this new chapter in your life, you will bring that spirit of Joplin to every place you travel and everything you do. You can serve as a reminder that we're not meant to walk this road alone; that we're not expected to face down adversity by ourselves. We need each other. We're important to each other. We're stronger together than we are on our own.

    It is this spirit that's allowing all of you to rebuild this city. It's the same spirit we need right now to help rebuild America. And you, class of 2012, will help lead this effort. You're the ones who will help build an economy where every child can count on a good education; where everyone who is willing to put in the effort can find a job that supports a family; where we control our own energy future and we lead the world in science and technology and innovation. America will only succeed if we all pitch in and pull together - and I'm counting on you to be leaders in that effort.

    Because you are from Joplin. And you've already defied the odds.

    In a city with countless stories of unthinkable courage and resilience over the last year, there are some that still stand out - especially on this day. By now, most of you know Joplin High senior Quinton Anderson, who's probably embarrassed that someone's talking about him again. But I'm going to talk about him anyways, because in a lot of ways, Quinton's journey has been Joplin's journey.

    When the tornado struck, Quinton was thrown across the street from his house. The young man who found him couldn't imagine that Quinton would survive such injuries. Quinton woke up in a hospital bed three days later. It was then that his sister Grace told him that both their parents had been lost to the storm.

    Quinton went on to face over five weeks of treatment, including emergency surgery. But he left that hospital determined to carry on; to live his life, and to be there for his sister. Over the past year, he's been a football captain who cheered from the sidelines when he wasn't able to play. He worked that much harder so he could be ready for baseball in the spring. He won a national scholarship as a finalist for the High School Football Rudy Awards, and he plans to study molecular biology at Harding University this fall.

    Quinton has said that his motto in life is "Always take that extra step." Today, after a long and improbable journey for Quinton, for Joplin, and for the entire class of 2012, that extra step is about to take you towards whatever future you hope for; toward whatever dreams you hold in your hearts.

    Yes, you will encounter obstacles along the way. Yes, you will face setbacks and disappointments.

    But you are from Joplin. And you are from America. No matter how tough times get, you will be tougher. No matter what life throws at you, you will be ready. You will not be defined by the difficulties you face, but how you respond - with strength, and grace, and a commitment to others.

    Langston Hughes, the poet and civil rights activist who knew some tough times, was born here in Joplin. In a poem called "Youth," he wrote,

     

    We have tomorrow

    Bright before us

    Like a flame.

    Yesterday

    A night-gone thing,

    A sun-down name.

    And dawn-today. Broad arch above the road we came.

    We march.

     

    To the people of Joplin, and the class of 2012:

    The road has been hard. The day has been long. But we have tomorrow, and so we march. We march, together, and you are leading the way. Congratulations. May God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America.

  • Obama to tornado-ravaged Joplin: 'You've grown up quickly'

    Nearly one year after the tornado that devastated Joplin, Mo., President Obama delivers the commencement speech for Joplin's high school graduation ceremony.

    A year after a deadly tornado flattened the city of Joplin, Mo., in 32 minutes, taking with it 161 residents and thousands of homes, President Barack Obama told the city's graduating high school seniors Monday night that the country can learn from their persevering spirit.  

    “That story is part of you now,” Obama said at Joplin High School's commencement ceremony at Missouri Southern State University. “You've grown up quickly over the last year. You've learned at a younger age than most that we can't always predict what life has in store for us. No matter how we might try to avoid it, life can bring heartache. Life involves struggle. Life will bring loss.”

    On May 22, 2011, an EF-5 tornado – the strongest ever measured – ripped through Joplin, claiming among its victims one graduating senior returning home from commencement and six other public school students. It also destroyed 7,500 buildings, including Joplin High School.


    When Obama last visited, one week after the tornado a year ago, the area was declared a federal disaster area. It was the deadliest tornado in six decades.

    Joplin: Before and after tornado cleanup

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Joplin High School was destroyed in a tornado a year ago Tuesday that claimed 161 residents. President Barack Obama gave the keynote address to the 428 graduating seniors on Monday night.

    "It's bittersweet," senior student Taylor Camden told Reuters after the seniors finished a commencement practice on Friday. "It's going to be a sad, emotional day for a lot of people just to be at graduation. We all lost something, and everyone here lost their high school."

    After the tornado, every high school student received a MacBook laptop, courtesy in part to a $500,000 donation from the United Arab Emirates. Singer Katy Perry sponsored the prom in part and someone else organized a prom dress drive. The girls received free makeup. One woman who lost her home and business, made 1,500 cupcakes for the prom.

    Read President Barack Obama's remarks

    “I imagine that as you begin the next stage in your journey, you will encounter greed and selfishness; ignorance and cruelty.  You will meet people who try to build themselves up by tearing others down; who believe looking after others is only for suckers," Obama said.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    President Barack Obama with Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, left, and Superintendent C.J. Huff, right, applaud the Class of 2012 at the Joplin High School commencement ceremony on Monday.

    “But you are from Joplin. So you will remember, you will know, just how many people there are who see life differently; those who are guided by kindness and generosity and quiet service.”

    PhotoBlog: Rebuilding Joplin

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    From left, Morgan Osburn, David Hoosier and Kim Hoosier spend a quiet moment together in front of a memorial built for their friend Lance Hare who was killed by a tornado that hit Joplin, Mo. a year ago.

    Rachel Berryhill, who took shelter in a bathroom with her family when the tornado tore the roof off their house, already lives that mantra. She told Reuters that she no longer stresses about the small things in life, like the style of clothes she wears.

    "I've become more caring, more attached to people," she said. "I'm trying to live my life in a better way."

    On Monday evening, Deborah Allen watched her eldest grandson graduate with a happy but also heavy heart.

    “This day is joyful," she said. "Tomorrow will probably be a time of sadness for a lot of people."

    Melissa Rogers, whose twins Devin and Danielle were graduating, said she watched Joplin grow stronger over the last year.

    “It wasn’t that we didn’t know it before, we didn’t really have the opportunity, but since the tornado we’ve just all really come together,” she said. For Rogers, too, the event stirred up emotions. She lost two loved ones in the storm.

    Teachers and students told the St. Louis Dispatch that fights and disciplinary violations declined dramatically.

    Throughout the prepared speech, Obama wove in stories of the city’s efforts to rebuild, noting that at the first town hall meeting, residents were handed Post-It notes and asked to write down their hopes for the city’s future. More than 1,000 notes covered a wall, inspiring the city’s planners today.

    In the last year, two-thirds of the destroyed homes have received building permits to rebuild, according to Reuters, and the city has rebuilt with help from thousands of volunteers.

    The president praised those volunteers, telling of a man from Japan who flew in because Americans had helped after the tsunami, of a busload of football players who drove in to dig through the rubble, and of a 9-year-old boy who donated $360 from a car wash he had organized. He praised the schools superintendent, who decided to keep students in Joplin, fashioning a school out of a vacant box store at the mall, according to the St. Louis-Dispatch. A food court doubled as the cafeteria.

    “There are so many good people in the world,” Obama said to the 428 graduating seniors. “There is such a decency, a bigness of spirit, in this country of ours. Remember that.  Remember what people did here. And like the man from Japan who came to Joplin, make sure to pay it forward in your own life.”   

    Joplin, Mo., marks the anniversary of the deadly tornado that ripped the town part. WCNC's Jinah Kim reports.

    Reuters and NBC's Ali Weinberg contributed to this report.

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  • 3 workers killed by explosion at abandoned oil well in Arkansas

    An explosion near El Dorado, Ark. on Monday afternoon killed three workers from the Long Brothers Oil Company, NBC News reported.

    The three workers were taking apart a tank battery at an abandoned oil well, according to Chad Stover of the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management. He said vapors inside the tank apparently ignited oil inside the tank.

    No roads have been closed or waterways affected, Stover said. There was a small forest fire near the tank being dealt with by the Department of Forestry.

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  • Porn actress pleads guilty in slaying of tattoo parlor owner after sex party

    Amanda Logue and her boyfriend, Jason Andrews, are charged in the death Dennis

    NEW PORT RICHEY, Fla. – A porn actress accused with her lover of killing a tattoo parlor owner after a sex party pleaded guilty on Monday to a reduced charge that will get her 40 years in prison.

    The Tampa Bay Times reports that Amanda Logue, 30, entered the plea in Pasco County. Logue, who performed in adult films under the name Sunny Dae, was originally charged with first-degree murder but was allowed to plead guilty to second-degree murder in a plea deal, according to the newspaper.

    Dennis “Scooter” Abrahamsen of Tampa was found stabbed and bludgeoned to death on a massage table in his New Port Richey home in May 2010. Court records show that Logue had been paid to attend a sex party Abrahamsen hosted at his home the night before he was killed.


    Florida investigators say Logue and her boyfriend, Jason Andrews, traded dozens of text messages in May about their plans to kill the man before he was bludgeoned him to death with a sledgehammer.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    Authorities said that while Logue was inside "servicing" the 41-year-old Abrahamsen, Andrews waited outside, waiting for word to attack, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

    "I'm so glad you're really commited (sic) to this take. Keep eyes for a knife, etc for me!" Andrews said in a text message to Logue, according to records obtained by the Tampa Bay Times.

    Logue texted back, saying she wanted to have sex with Andrews "after we kill" Abrahamsen, the Times reported.

    "Just get him on his face either bash or tell me to get in and where to go," Andrews texted, according to the Tampa Bay Tribune.

    Andrews, 28, pleaded guilty to a first-degree murder in January and agreed to spend the rest of his life in prison without the possibility of parole, the Times reported.

    Logue is being held at the Pasco County Jail.

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