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  • Violent holiday weekend claims at least 10 lives in Chicago

    More than 40 people were shot in Chicago over the holiday weekend, and at least 10 of them were killed, NBCChicago.com reported.

    The latest shooting happened around 1:30 a.m. in Albany Park, a Chicago neighborhood, where police said a man was shot in the face. It followed dozens of shootings across the city since Friday.


    "It's been a real rough weekend, a lot of gun violence," community activist Pastor Corey Brooks told ABC News.

    Most of the victims were in stable or good condition, but as of Monday morning several remained in serious or critical condition, including the Albany Park victim.

    "Very clearly, we have a gang problem in the city of Chicago," Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said at a press conference Tuesday, according to Chicago Web publication Gapers Block.

    McCarthy said the strategy will include monitoring social media, including Twitter and Facebook, which he said are used as means of communication by gangs.

    Mayor Rahm Emanuel mentioned the city's crackdown on liquor stores as another successful measure in curbing gang violence. Liquor stores, he said, are like a "cancer on the community."

    Four liquor stores have already been shut down, Gapers Block said, and dozens may have their licenses revoked.

    According to the Chicago Tribune, homicides have increased 49 percent so far this year, with 200 people killed in 2012 compared with 134 during the same period in 2011. Shootings are also up nearly 14 percent over last year, the paper reported.

    Some experts believe warmer weather could be causing violent crime to spike.

    "For us, when the weather's warm, the first thing we think, we're going to get some gunshots in here because we know people are out in the street," Dr. Larry Mitchell of Chicago's Roseland Community Hospital told NPR 

    The 66-degree average temperature in May is the warmest of any Chicago May over the past 35 years, the Chicago Weather Center reported. And Monday's 95-degree high is Chicago's warmest Memorial Day temperature since they started keeping records 142 years ago, according to the weather center.

    But police superintendent Gary McCarthy is not ready to blame the weather for the city's spike in the murder rate.

    "I'm not willing to chalk it up to the weather, the tides, the moons, voodoo, you name it," he told NPR. Instead, he blames Chicago's gang culture.

    The weekend's most violent period was an hour-and-a-half stretch early Sunday morning, when 13 people were shot. The youngest victim is a 7-year-old girl shot Saturday afternoon in the arm as she was playing outside her home. She is expected to recover.

    At least four teenagers were also killed in separate shootings this weekend.

    Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and police officials are expected to address the public Tuesday on new strategies aimed at reducing crime, ABC News reported. According to the mayor's office, they will announce "coordinated gang-reduction and neighborhood safety strategies."

    NBCChicago.com contributed to this report.

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  • NYC officials examine sanitation records in search for Etan Patz's remains

    Garbage disposal records from 1979 may help investigators find the remains of Etan Patz. WNBC's Gus Rosendale reports.

    Investigators are trying to determine whether they can track the remains of 6-year-old Etan Patz now that a suspect has made claims about where he tossed the boy's body in Manhattan in 1979.

    Police contacted sanitation officials last week, when Pedro Hernandez was arrested, asking if the department has records dating back that far showing which trucks might have collected trash from buildings in the area, the Department of Sanitation told NBC 4 New York on Monday. Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said Hernandez has told police that he put the boy's body in a trash bag and left it in an alley a few blocks from the SoHo bodega where he claimed to have strangled the boy.

    It was the first day Patz had ever been allowed to walk alone to the school bus stop. He never made it, and his disappearance mystified the city for decades.

    Sanitation spokesman Vito Turso told NBC 4 New York that the city does have handwritten log books about which trucks picked up trash in certain locations, and records of where those loads were dumped.

    Turso said if city trucks collected the bag with Patz's body, it could have been taken by barge to the former Fresh Kills landfill on Staten Island. It also could have been transported to an incinerator that used to burn trash near Gansevoort Street on the west side of Manhattan.

    Turso said there was also the possibility that the bag would have been collected as commercial refuse by a private hauler. In that case, NYPD would have to identify the store and trace the hauler. That trash, Turso said, could have gone to Fresh Kills, the former Fountain Avenue landfill in Brooklyn, or some other private landfill.

    "We await further word from NYPD," Turso said.

    The Department of Sanitation also has records that show where in its landfills trash was dumped, by date and location. That could help narrow a potential dig for remains, if police decided to pursue one.

    Read more about Etan Patz's disappearance on NBCNewYork.com
    Timeline: The Etan Patz case
    Previously on this story: Suspect on suicide watch

    Hernandez, 51, was a stock clerk at the bodega at the time the boy disappeared. Police said he told them he lured Patz to the store with the promise of a soda, and then killed him in the basement.

    He was charged Friday with second-degree murder and has not entered a plea.

    His lawyer, Harvey Fishbein, told the court that Hernandez is a schizophrenic and has had both auditory and visual hallucinations. He has requested a hearing to determine his client's mental fitness.

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  • What caused naked face-chewing attack: Bath salts, LSD?

    A man was shot to death in Miami after eating the face of his still-living victim. WTVJ-TV's Diana Gonzalez reports.

    MIAMI -- Authorities in Miami are looking for more witnesses after a police officer fatally shot a naked man who refused to stop chewing on the face of another naked man on a busy downtown highway ramp.

    Detective William Moreno said police are looking for people to fill in the blanks on what led to the grisly scene in which a witness reported that a man — later identified by authorities as Rudy Eugene, 31 — savagely chewed on the other man's face and growled when a police officer told him to stop.

    Miami police have released few details about the weekend attack, other than confirming that there was a fatal officer-involved shooting. One officer told Miami television station WSVN the attacker had likely taken a new potent form of LSD. An emergency room doctor theorized bath salts, a drug with amphetamine-like chemicals nicknamed after the product it resembles, may have induced the violent behavior, reported NBCMiami.com.

    The victim, who has not been identified, has been hospitalized in critical condition. Miami's local10.com reported he was a homeless man who frequents the neighborhood where he was attacked.

    Read the latest on the face attack on NBCMiami.com

    Witness Larry Vega was riding his bicycle Saturday afternoon off the MacArthur Causeway that connects downtown Miami with Miami Beach when he saw the savage attack.

    "The guy was, like, tearing him to pieces with his mouth, so I told him, 'Get off!'" Vega told Miami television station WSVN. "The guy just kept eating the other guy away, like, ripping his skin."

    Vega flagged down a Miami police officer, who he said repeatedly ordered the attacker to get off the victim. The attacker just picked his head up and growled at the officer, Vega said.

    As the attack continued, Vega said the officer shot the attacker, who continued chewing the victim's face. The officer fired again, killing the attacker.

    Emergency personnel rushed the victim to Jackson Memorial Hospital with 75 percent of his face missing, reported WSVN. An eye, his ears, and his lips were gone, the station said.

    "It was just a blob of blood," Vega said. "You couldn't really see, it was just blood all over the place."

    A surveillance video camera from The Miami Herald building nearby captured images of the men's naked legs lying side by side after the shooting.

    “We’re hoping that he pulls through, for his well-being, but also so he can tell us what happened,” Sgt. Javier Ortiz, vice president of the Miami police union, told The Miami Herald. “Only he knows.”

    Drug-induced excited delirium?
    Armando Aguilar of the Miami Fraternal Order of Police told WSVN he believed the attacker was likely overdosing on LSD.

    "What's happening is whenever we see that a person has taken all of his clothes off and has become violent, it's indicative of this excited delirium that's caused by overdose of drugs," he said. "What's happening is, inside their body their organs are burning up alive."

    Excited delirium, a condition that's usually drug-related, can incite violence, unexpected strength, and sometimes hypothermia, NBCMiami.com reported.

    Paul Adams, an ER doctor at Jackson Memorial Hospital, told NBCMiami.com the designer drug nicknamed "bath salts" could have led to the attack.

    “Cocaine and new LSDs, they cause delirium, which (means) you don't make sense when you take them," Adams said. "And when you don't make sense and you don't control your emotions, you don’t control your actions, you find yourself in circumstances that you just don't want to be in.”

    Bath salts were banned in Florida in 2011, said NBCMiami.com. But new formulations have become popular, Adams said.

    “We've had several deaths. Earlier last year we probably saw our first deaths from bath salts, where people (were) running onto MacArthur Causeway, under MacArthur Causeway, being chased by the police and then all of the sudden just collapsing," Adams said.

    Eugene, the suspect, has just one arrest suggesting violent tendencies: Miami Beach police arrested him on a battery charge when he was 16, which was later dropped, reported The Miami Herald.

    He has been arrested seven other times over five years, mostly for marijuana-related charges, the paper said. He was briefly married to a woman he met in high school at North Miami Beach Senior High, court records revealed, according to local10.com. The two divorced in 2007 after he reportedly became violent toward her.

    "That's why I left," his ex-wife told local10.com, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    Other homeless people who camp near the scene of the attack told local10.com they knew the suspect.

    Police asked for the public's assistance in piecing together the attack.

    "We know that there were many people on the MacArthur Causeway and we're hoping they come forward," Moreno told The Miami Herald on Monday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Analysis: John Edwards jury speaks with its silence

    The judge in the John Edwards trial calls a closed door meeting with jurors on Friday. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

    ANALYSIS

    It’s official: Jurors in the John Edwards trial do not think they are deciding a simple case.

    If all 12 of the North Carolinians judging the former U.S. senator thought it was clear Edwards broke the law when billionaire buddies Fred Baron and Rachel “Bunny” Mellon supported his mistress and his former political-aide-turned-faux-father of the Edwards-Rielle Hunter baby, they would not be starting a seventh day of deliberations. And it is not just the duration of deliberations that suggests uncertainty; during nearly every courtroom entrance for the past week, jurors have worn furrowed brows and grim visages. They have made specific requests for dozen of exhibits and readily accepted the presiding judge’s offer to have every exhibit – hundreds in all -- brought into the jury room. 


    Even if the final answer is “guilty,” the time and trouble the jurors are taking to render a verdict suggests that one or more of them will describe the decision of whether to find Edwards guilty of violating the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA) as a close call.  Which raises the question: Should a jury be making such a call at all, given that the two arms of the federal government that are expert in campaign finance violations – the Federal Election Commission and the Justice Department’s Public Integrity Section – appear to disagree on whether Edwards’ conduct was unlawful?

     

     

    The FEC-DoJ split was highlighted in motions filed just before testimony ended. The defense requested the opportunity to play for the jury a tape recording of the FEC’s July 2011 audit hearing where it closed the books on John Edwards for President, Inc. despite the DoJ’s pending indictment of the candidate. The six FEC Commissioners voted unanimously in favor of closing the books after Commissioner Donald McGahn stated that “I can say it. (The Mellon and Baron money) it’s  … my view it’s not reportable (as a campaign contribution).”


    Hampton Dellinger

    Hampton Dellinger, a litigation partner with Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson of Charlotte and Chapel Hill, N.C., is former deputy attorney general of North Carolina and has taught election law at Duke University Law School. In 2008, he sought the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor of North Carolina.


    Edwards also sought to introduce a 2009 Justice Department letter stating that, as a general rule, DoJ would only bring criminal charges in limited situations: “The application of the law to the facts of a matter must at the very least be clear, and there must be no doubt that the (Federal Election) commission considers that the underlying conduct presents a FECA offense.”

    Government attorneys opposed Edwards’ motions and Judge Catherine Eagles ruled in prosecutors’ favor.  Eagles also denied defense efforts to present two former FEC chairs prepared to testify that in their expert opinions, Edwards’s conduct did not rise to the level of a civil infraction, much less criminal wrongdoing.

    Even without the former FEC chairs and the 2011 FEC audit hearing tape, the continuing deliberations are evidence that the “application of the law to the facts” of the Edwards matter is not as far as the jury is concerned.  And because the arguments over what evidence would be admitted took place outside the jury’s presence, jurors don’t know what they don’t know about the FEC’s and DoJ’s varying views. 

    Full trial coverage from NBC News and msnbc.com

    Meanwhile, critics of the prosecution continue to suggest that if the federal government is going to throw the book at someone, particularly when the criminal statute at issue requires a “knowing and willful” violation, it seems more fair to hit the person in the face rather than in the back of the head. 

    Of course, the only view that matters is that of the jury. The verdict, and any descriptions jurors are willing to give on how they reached it, will offer a measure of finality (at least pending the outcome of an appeal if the decision is “guilty”) if not clarity.

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  • Dallas standoff ends as man falls to death from crane

    Tim Sharp / Reuters

    Police cruisers block an intersection leading to the scene of the construction crane standoff in Dallas, Texas, Monday.

    DALLAS -- The standoff between Dallas police and a man that climbed to the top of a construction crane on the campus of Southern Methodist University ended early Tuesday morning, when the man fell to his death.

    At about 1 a.m. Dallas police used bright lights, loud directional sirens and the police helicopter to distract the man, while four SWAT officers climbed the crane to storm the cab believed to be 100 to 150 feet above the ground.


    Police say the man sprayed a WD-40-like substance at officers as they entered the cab. He then climbed out the smashed windshield of the cab.

    "He retreated to a position in the crane where he had one leg in a window and one leg outside the window, from there he went over the edge, and clung to the edge for a moment before he fell to his death," said Dallas Deputy Chief Randy Blankenbaker.

    The man fell just before 2 a.m. Tuesday morning, ending a roughly 14-hour standoff.

    "We at SMU are relieved this situation has been resolved and the campus is secure. We all regret the loss of life," said SMU spokesman Brad Cheves.

    Read the full story at NBCDFW.com

    Throughout the day, the suspect dropped items from the crane cab, including his shirt and shoes, some cans, a fire extinguisher, and other items that may have been inside the cab.

    Tim Sharp / Reuters

    A robbery suspect sits in the cab of a construction crane on the SMU campus, Monday.

    Sources tell NBC 5 the man may have become ill during the standoff and vomited, perhaps due to the heat.

    As night fell, Dallas police used a spotlight to shine light into the crane. Police also used noise machines to keep the man awake and talking.

    Man is suspect in armed robbery
    Police did confirmed Tuesday the man is the suspect connected to an overnight robbery about 2:30 a.m. Monday and that police dogs tracked the man's scent to the construction site.

    David Cantu said he was putting sound and lighting equipment into the truck outside the Adolphus Hotel when a man jumped in and tried to stab him with something sharp, possibly a nail.

    "I said, What are you doing?'" Cantu said. "He swung his arm at me with a sharp object and for the most part, I just backed off and let him do his thing."

    Cantu said the man sped away, hitting several cars parked along Main Street.

    "You hear a big bang multiple times," he said. "He's hitting multiple cars at that point."

    The stolen truck was later found not far from the crane, according to police.

    Chris Ghanbari, a freelance photographer who lives in a building overlooking the scene, got out his video camera and started rolling.

    "I just started shooting a minute -- a minute-and-a-half -- of video of the crime scene," Ghanbari said. "About 30 minutes later, we had 10 to 15 police cars out there."

    Here is his video:

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  • Witness to naked attack: 'The guy just kept eating the other guy away'

    A naked man chewing on the face of another naked man on a Miami highway ramp growled at a police officer who tried to make him stop, a witness to the grisly attack said.

    Larry Vega told WSVN-TV in Miami he was riding his bicycle off the MacArthur Causeway on Saturday when he saw one man biting the face of another.

    “He was ripping into his face with his teeth, he was ripping his skin, his neck," Larry Vega told WSVN-TV in Miami. "He had him held down, the guy couldn’t move and he was tearing into his flesh.”

    “The guy was like tearing him to pieces with his mouth, so I told him, 'Get off!'"  "You know, it's like the guy just kept eating the other guy away, like ripping his skin."

    Vega said he quickly flagged down a police officer and watched in horror.


    “It’s one of the most gruesome things I’ve ever seen in my life in person,” he told WSVN-TV.

    The officer, who was not identified, ordered the naked man to back away, but when the man continued the assault, the officer shot him, according to the Miami Herald. Other witnesses told the Herald the wounded attacker continued to eat his victim, so the officer continued firing.

    Report: Miami police shoot naked man chewing on victim's face

    "Police officer came over, told him several times to get off and a police officer climbed over the divider and got in front of him and said, 'Get off!' And told him several times and the guy just stood his head up like that with a piece of flesh in his mouth and growled," Vega said.

    The officer fired several more times, eventually killing the attacker, the Herald reported.

    A Miami Herald surveillance camera captured the aftermath as the attacker and the victim lay side by side on the ground with their bare legs visible.

    The victim, believed to be a homeless man, was in critical condition on Sunday at Jackson Memorial Hospital, the Herald said. 

    According to WSVN-TV, the victim lost 75 percent of his face.

    Authorities have not released the identity of either man.

    Miami police were still trying to determine what prompted the macabre act, but theorized that the attacker had suffered from a drug-induced craze, the Herald reported.

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  • Michigan wildfire destroys nearly three dozen homes

    One of the blazes, in upper Michigan, was started by a lightning strike, authorities say. NBC's Savannah Guthrie reports.

    NEWBERRY, Mich. -- Homes and cabins make up a third of the nearly 100 structures destroyed by a wildfire burning across more than 30 square miles of Michigan's Upper Peninsula, officials said Monday.

    The lost property includes Pike Lake Resort near Pike Lake in Luce County.


    "I was still hoping that they would stop it," owner Diane Ricketts said of the fire. "With my husband gone, I'm not going to rebuild. We're just going to go on and take it day by day and see what's going to happen."

    The Duck Lake Fire began with a lightning strike last week and burned more than 21,000 acres, or 34 square miles, by Monday, according to the Department of Natural Resources.

    Michigan Department of Natural Resources via AP

    The wildfire in Michigan's Upper Peninsula included this stretch of forest.

    Parts of Michigan are extremely dry and thirsty for rain. Fireworks and outdoor burning are banned in 49 of the state's 83 counties, especially in northern Michigan.

    The DNR said 95 structures have been destroyed, including 34 homes or cabins, one store and one motel. No injuries have been reported.

    Fire managers explained the firefighting effort to about 200 people Sunday in Newberry, a community closest to the fire, 75 miles northwest of the Mackinac Bridge. The strategy includes aircraft dumping water.

    "I didn't know what to expect," said Dennis Nezich, a DNR spokesman. "People were very polite, they listened."

    DNR crews continued to battle the blaze from the ground and in the air.

    NBC's Nadine Comerford contributed to this report from The Associated Press.

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  • Dallas cops in standoff with man in crane at SMU

    Tim Sharp / Reuters

    A robbery suspect sits in the cab of a construction crane on the SMU campus after climbing the crane in a standoff with police in Dallas, Texas May 28.

    DALLAS -- Police were in a standoff Monday with a robbery suspect who climbed up a construction crane about 150 feet above Southern Methodist University’s campus and threatened to shoot officers trying to talk him down.

    Officials with the Dallas Police Department said they received a call from Southern Methodist University about a man on a crane who said he had a gun.


    Police SWAT units were called in to establish communication with the man. Police have not confirmed whether the man was armed.

    Witnesses told NBCDFW.com they saw a man wearing a red shirt perched inside the control box of the crane, located on the south side of the campus.

    The man has not moved the crane, which is powerless. The machinery was being used to build student housing.

    View NBCDFW.com's story on SWAT called to SMU campus

    Dallas Police Department spokesperson Melinda Gutierrez said since the crane doesn’t have any power, it means the cab doesn’t have air conditioning. “That would help in our favor,” Gutierrez told the Dallas Morning News.

    Witnesses said they were evacuated from campus buildings on the SMU campus. A nearby gym was also evacuated.

    University officials told NBC News classes were not in session on Monday because of the federal holiday. School is also between its May and June sessions. 

    Streets from U.S. 75 toward the SMU campus on Mockingbird Lane were shut down.

    Police said the man was a suspect in an overnight aggravated robbery of a vehicle in the area just before 2:30 a.m. Monday.

    NBCDFW.com contributed to this report.

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  • 1 dead, 4 hurt in Minnesota paper mill explosion, fire

    Updated at 6:55 p.m. ET: SARTELL, Minn. -- An explosion and fire on Monday at the Verso paper mill in Sartell killed one person and injured at least four others, authorities said.

    The fire sent heavy black smoke pouring out of the center of mill.


    A full shift had been working inside the mill when an air compressor exploded about noon, Verso spokesman Pat Gibney told the St. Cloud Times.

    The fire was in an area where wood products are located. Fire officials were not worried about chemicals, and the local neighborhood was not evacuated, according to the St. Could Times.

    Officials did not release the name of the person killed. The four injured people were taken to area hospitals, the newspaper reported.

    According to KARE 11 TV in St. Paul, Minn., Dan McClure, who lives near the plant, was mowing his grass when he heard a sound that sounded like thunder. He said smoke was black and thick, but appeared to later thin out a bit.

    Matt Dahl, another resident in the area, said there was one huge explosion that shook his whole house. He told KARE11 TV he ran outside and saw black smoke and flames shooting up into the sky.

    The city of Sartell has nearly 16,000 residents. The mill in Sartell, established in 1905, produces lightweight coated papers for printing, according to the Verso website.

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  • Obama honors fallen troops, families on Memorial Day

    Standing in front of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, President Barack Obama commemorates the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War.

    Updated at 3:38 p.m. ET: WASHINGTON -- Speaking at a hallowed site for fallen warriors on Memorial Day, President Barack Obama hailed the winding down of two wars, adding that the country needs to honor its returning veterans as well as those friends and family for whom trips to military graves are a bittersweet routine. 

    "These 600 acres are home to Americans from every part of the country who gave their lives in every part of the globe," the president said at Arlington National Cemetery, after taking part in the traditional laying of a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns.

    “Whenever revolution needed to be waged and a union needed to be saved, they left their homes and took up arms for the sake of an idea," Obama said. “They rest here together side by side, row by row, because each of them loved this country and everything it stands for, more than life itself."


    In Washington, President Barack Obama honors those who fought in the Vietnam War. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports. 

    The president added that it is his obligation and that of all commanders in chief to send soldiers into harm’s way only with a clear mission.

    Addressing families of the fallen at the cemetery’s amphitheater, the president said, “After a decade under the dark cloud of war, we can see the light of a new day on the horizon,” a line he has used recently to tout the end of combat missions in Iraq and a gradual drawdown in Afghanistan.

    But, he continued, “especially for those who lost a loved one, this chapter will remain open long after the guns have fallen silent.”

    He said that Americans should remember the individual stories of heroes who reflect the collective experience and sacrifice of the armed forces.

    “One thing we can do is remember these heroes as you remember them: not just as a rank or a number or a name on a headstone, but as Americans, often far too young, who are guided by a deep and abiding love for their families, for each other and for this country,” the president said.

    He recalled an Air Force pilot who met his wife on an aircraft carrier, an accountant who joined the military to do something “more meaningful with his life,” and a young man who just days before he was killed in action told his father how formidable his fellow Marines were.

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    The president said that to honor these soldiers and their loved ones “who carry a special weight” on their hearts, America can “strive to be a nation worthy of your sacrifice; a nation that is fair and equal, peaceful and free.” 

    He suggested that part of that goal is the responsible deployment of troops only when necessary, which he said he takes to heart.

    “As Commander in Chief, I can tell you that sending our troops into harm's way is the most wrenching decision that I have to make. I can promise you I will never do so unless it's absolutely necessary,” he said.

    “And that when we do, we must give our troops a clear mission and the full support of a grateful nation,” he continued.

    Pete Marovich / EPA

    Brittany Jacobs of Hereford, N.C., hugs her 17-month old son Christian at her husband, Marine SGT Christopher Jacobs' gravesite in Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day at in Arlington, Va.

    'Serving your country with valor'
    Later Monday, the president commemorated the 50th anniversary of the start of the Vietnam War with a visit to that conflict’s memorial on the National Mall.

    More than 2,000 Vietnam veterans and family members of soldiers who died were invited to Monday's ceremony marking the beginning of a 13-year program to honor those who served in the Vietnam War and educate later generations about the war.

    Standing in front of the veterans and families in the sweltering heat, Obama said that the ungrateful reception given to many returning Vietnam veterans was a “national shame, a disgrace that should have never happened.”

    “You were often blamed for a war you didn't start when you should have been commended for serving your country with valor,” he said.

     He cited some of the policies his administration is pursuing, including disability benefits, more job opportunities and increased mental health resources as steps the country can take to ensure veterans are always given the respect and appreciation they deserve.

     “Let's resolve to take care of our veterans as well as they've taken care of us. Not just talk but action. Not just in the first five years after a war but the first five decades,” he said.

    After he spoke, the president laid a wreath at the memorial along with Rose Marie Sabo-Brown, the widow of Army Specialist Leslie Sabo, who recently received the Medal of Honor for his valor during the Vietnam War.

    Military aircraft flew overhead as Obama walked back from laying the wreath, holding Sabo-Brown’s hand, and the ceremony came to a close.

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  • A baby made in India: a couple's dream comes true

    By Ian Williams and Rory Kress
    Anand, India

    Robyn and Jason Wright are learning the dusty streets of their son's birthplace, where spluttering rickshaws weave around abandoned cows with bright painted faces, piles of trash smoldering on the sidewalk.

    This is Anand, half a world away from their American home, where amid all the chaos, passersby strain to catch a glimpse of the tiny bundle Robyn is cradling in her arms.

    Baby Jake Wright, seven weeks old and weighing just four pounds is the baby they thought they would never have, as Robyn was unable to carry a child after a hysterectomy.

    “We’d written it off, thought we’d never have kids,” Robyn told us. “Someone had mentioned doing surrogacy in India. I thought they were crazy.”


    Crazy as it seemed, the Wrights flew from their home in Wyoming to the Akanksha Infertility Clinic here in Anand: the reproductive tourist hub for an international baby boom. They supplied the egg and sperm for baby Jake and he was carried in the womb of an Indian surrogate mother called Usha, who gave birth to him in December.

    NBC News

    Robyn and Jason Wright with their son Jake, walking through Ananad, India.

    “We’ve traveled half way round the world to have him,” Robyn said. “He was very much wanted, very much loved - by Usha too.”

    But Robyn and Jason are not such a strange sight in Anand.

    Locals spot Americans on the street and know they're here for the Akanksha Clinic. So far, the clinic has produced more than 500 surrogate babies and their biggest overseas market is the United States. Most would-be parents are drawn by the price. In India, a surrogate baby costs around US$25,000. In the US, the cost can exceed US$100,000.

    “We knew we couldn’t afford it in the US,” Robyn told us.

    “Sixty, sixty-five surrogates are pregnant at any time, carrying babies for couples from all over the world,” says Dr. Nayna Patel, the director of the Akanksha Infertility Clinic.

    Dr. Patel showed us around the hostel where the surrogates live for most of their pregnancy. There, the clinic monitors their health and nutrition around the clock.

    “So many American citizens growing here,” she said, pointing to a group of heavily pregnant women in saris sitting in the shade, sewing. Ten of the women are carrying babies for American couples, including one set of twins. To Dr. Patel, the ever-expanding business is a win-win for all involved - a childless couple goes home with a baby, an impoverished surrogate earns US$7,000 to build a house and a new life.

    “These surrogates are coming to us because they have no other way of earning--apart from labor--so we want to groom them and change their lives,” said Patel.

    The Wrights' surrogate, Usha is already mother to three boys of her own. The clinic carefully screens potential surrogates, selecting only women with children of their own. Dr. Patel says it gives the clinic security, choosing a woman she knows can carry to term and one who may be less likely to become emotionally attached to the child that will one day fly thousands of miles away.

    Once Usha was pregnant with Jake, the Wrights returned to their home in Hoback Junction, Wyoming, where Jason works as a tour guide and Robyn runs a beauty salon.

    Baby Jake with his mom, Robyn Wright (left) and his surrogate mother, Usha.

    “You are very removed,” Jason told us. It was a very strange feeling to go through a pregnancy and not be involved in it, so to speak.”

    The Wrights quickly learned they had twins, and waited with excitement for the regularly emailed reports and scans from Anand. But on Thanksgiving last year they learned that Usha had gotten sick. One of the twins had died and Jake came early at twenty seven weeks.

    In early December they rushed back to Anand.

    “He was so small and frail that I was afraid to touch him,” Jason recalls. “I didn’t want to do any damage.”

    “He was so tiny,” said Robyn. “He almost didn’t seem real.”

    For a while, both Jake and surrogate Usha clung to life--an experience that the Wrights say makes them only more grateful to Usha's sacrifice. For Robyn and Jason, their relationship with their surrogate was vital. Some clinics discourage the biological parents from even meeting the surrogate mother, wanting to keep it all business. To Robyn and Jason, that was inconceivable.

    “She’s ultimately his mother too. I truly feel that way: that he has two moms," says Robyn. "My goal is to get him to understand that she cares for him as much as we do.”

    While the Akanksha Clinic has pioneered surrogacy in India, the business of babies has exploded across the country. Surrogacy is now estimated to be a $2 billion dollar industry with one thousand clinics across India offering the service.

    Type in “surrogacy India” to Google and you’ll face countless ads from clinics offering to “make babies possible” for couples like the Wrights, but also increasingly same sex couples.

    The explosive growth in the industry has raised serious concerns about abuse and exploitation of the surrogates, and new legislation is slowly making its way through parliament to register and better regulate the industry.

    The new law would give legal muscle to current voluntary regulations limiting such factors as the recruitment and age of surrogates and the number of times they can volunteer.

    Among the fiercest critics of the industry is Dr. Ashok Mehta, a family doctor, whom we met in one of Mumbai's biggest slums, where he was doing his rounds.

    “The crooks, the middlemen, the brokers, at times they cheat these people and deprive them of money,” he says. The slums are a prime recruiting ground for that city’s surrogacy clinics.

    At the Indian Council of Medical Research in New Delhi, medical experts are drawing up the new law.

    “There are doctors who are not following the (old) guidelines properly, and that’s where the problem comes,” explains Dr. R.S. Shah who is working on the legislation. “Until there is a law we cannot take any action. That’s why its very important this bill gets passed as early as possible.”

    At Akanksha Clinic, Dr. Patel largely welcomes the new law as giving protection to legitimate clinics and clients, but she’s fiercely critical of those who want to curtail the business.

    “All they want to do is just criticize and stop this, and let the poor suffer and let the infertile couple suffer,” she says.

    After seven weeks in Anand, the Wrights take baby Jake for a final check-up at a crowded public hospital. There, he gets the all clear to fly home. And it can't come soon enough: after so much time and extra care for the premature child, the expense and time away from work has strained their finances. But they don't regret their choices. In the US, Jake's same medical problems would have cost ten times more.

    “He’s doing really, really well,” said Robyn, before pointing out the neonatal intensive care unit where Jake spent the first four weeks of his fragile life.

    “He was right there,” said Robyn, pointing to the incubators that now contain two tiny new babies - both surrogates.

    But before they can leave, there's one thing left that they must do: it's time to say goodbye to Usha. She travelled all morning by train from her village. With her husband by her side, she cradles the baby she'd carried for nine months, and might never see again. The language barrier between the two mothers belies the bond they share, as Robyn watches Usha holding the baby in silence for hours.

    When it's time to go, Usha has only one request: that Robyn and Jason should not forget her. The Wrights vow to return with Jake when he's older.

    “It makes you appreciate Jake so much more,” says Jason. “It really seems such a miracle. I mean I really appreciate life a whole lot more, just seeing him battling through and making it.” They leave: passing the smoldering rubbish, the foraging cows, and those same curious passersby.

    The proud parents firmly grip the final piece of paperwork, a pristine new American passport and exit permit for US Citizen Jake Wright. Born in India.

  • Moments before Utah plane crash were captured on video, official says

    Samantha Clemens / The Spectrum

    Emergency officials respond to a fatal plane crash near the St. George Municipal Airport on Saturday.

    Security video captured a small plane taking off from a southern Utah airport just before it crashed about 300 yards from the runway, killing all four men aboard, a federal investigator said Sunday.

    Zoe Keliher of the National Transportation Safety Board said the video shows the single-engine Cessna 172 flying at a low level early Saturday morning at St. George Municipal Airport.

    "The airplane continued down the runway and made a rapid ascent," Keli­her told the Salt Lake Tribune. "Shortly after that, you see a descent of a few flickers of light but not the plane."


    She added that it's too early to say whether the airport's camera video will offer clues into the cause of the crash.

    Marc Mortensen, assistant to the St. George city manager, said officials believe the four men aboard the plane were killed upon impact. The wreckage wasn't discovered until more than four hours later because the airport is not staffed at night, he added.

    The victims were identified Sunday as Colby Hafen, 28, and Christopher Chapman, 20, both of Santa Clara; Tanner Holt, 23, of Washington City; and Alexander Metzger, 22, of St. George.

    Keliher and Mortensen said they were unsure where the plane was headed at the time. Keliher said only one of the four men had a pilot's license, but neither she nor Mortensen would identify the plane's pilot.

    Holt's friend, Paul Hogue, told the Deseret News that Holt was a trained pilot who had flown commercially.

    "The future can be taken from you so quickly and they had so much for their future," Hogue said. "They had future families and future wives and kids."

    According to Federal Aviation Administration records, the Cessna 172 was built in 1999 and owned by Diamond Flying LLC of St. George.

    Keliher said a cursory check of the plane's maintenance records turned up no major problems. She and representatives of Cessna and the company that built its engine inspected the aircraft after it was moved Sunday to a nearby hangar, she said.

    Trio rescued more than 15 hours after Idaho plane crash

    It will take months for her agency to examine the plane and pilot, and issue a final report, she said. The NTSB will issue a preliminary report on the crash in five days.

    "I'm now trying to get ahold of family members (of the four), and will finish the inspection of the aircraft Monday," Keliher said Sunday evening. "I hope to wrap up the on-scene investigation and leave Tuesday."

    'Wonderful son'
    According to the National Weather Service, there were no severe weather conditions at the airport during the early on Saturday.

    The airport, which has been in operation at its current site for about 1 1/2 years, does not have a control tower. Pilots use an automated system to communicate with one another when landing or taking off.

    Hafen's family issued a statement describing him as a "wonderful son, brother and uncle" who loved to travel and who served a Mormon church mission to Oregon. He worked in the insurance business with his father.

    "The community is grieving together," Mortensen told the AP. "St. George is a tight-knit community, and some of the families involved have been in the area over 100 years. If you live in this area, you know someone who knows one of these men."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Beryl soaks Florida, Georgia coasts; thousands lose power

    Tropical depression Beryl is drenching parts of Florida and Georgia. The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reports.

    Updated at 1:39 p.m. ET: The remains of Tropical Storm Beryl soaked beach vacations and some Memorial Day remembrance services in southern Georgia and northern Florida on Monday and knocked out power to tens of thousands, though emergency officials said it hasn't brought any major damage.

    The storm made landfall just after midnight Monday near Jacksonville Beach in Florida with near-hurricane-strength winds of 70 mph (113 kph), according to the National Hurricane Center. Sustained winds had died down to about 35 mph (55 kph), leading forecasters to downgrade the storm to a tropical depression and cancel all warnings and watches less than 11 hours after it made land.

    Joyce Connolly, of Hurricane, W.Va., a doctor of theology, came to Jacksonville Beach for the holiday and the Jacksonville Theological Seminary's graduation. Connolly said she and her daughters had watched the weather forecasts about Beryl, but thought they would be OK.

    "It definitely changed our vacation to unfortunate circumstances that we're not happy with, but you just have to live with it," Connolly said. On Sunday, she said they "actually walked over here on the little walkway, the boardwalk, and the wind was just too bad."

    Jacksonville Mayor Alvin Brown asked people to stay indoors and safe. "We don't want anyone going out, riding around, because it's still dangerous out there," Brown said at a Monday morning briefing, according to News4Jax.com. "This is going to be with us for a while."

    Though high winds were no longer a factor by late Monday morning, steady rain was expected to continue through Monday night along the I-75 corridor, Weather Channel meteorologist Tom Moore said. Strong thunderstorms were expected to develop in central Florida and continue back into southeast Georgia. Localized flooding will continue, Moore said.

    Seven hundred people were treated for heat symptom's at Sunday's Indianapolis 500. The Weather Channel's Mike Cantore reports.

    Bands of rain sprayed Georgia's 100-mile coast, where veterans groups braved the weather as they marched ahead with traditional graveside observances for Memorial Day. At Savannah's historic Bonaventure Cemetery, where a plot reserved for veterans had small American flags at each tombstone, the downpour paused just as a crowd of about 100 starting arriving.

    "When we were setting up, I had a different shirt on and I got soaked to the skin. My socks and my underwear probably are, too," said Jim Grismer, commander of American Legion Post 135 in Savannah. "I had so many people trying to talk me into moving it inside. But I said then you can't have the live firing salute and the flag raising."

    Robert Schulz, an 80-year-old former Marine who served in the Korean War, held a folded umbrella in one hand as he saluted with the other during the service. Schulz said he and his wife briefly considered skipping the ceremony for the first time in 10 years.

    "I said it would be terrible if nobody showed up," Barbara Schulz said. "We had to come for our veterans."

    Except for ruining holiday plans, the rain was welcome on the Georgia coast, which has been parched by persistent drought. In McIntosh County south of Savannah, emergency management chief Ray Parker said a few roadways had been flooded for a brief time but the ground was quickly soaking up the 1 to 2 inches of rainfall that had fallen so far.

    "We've needed it for a long time," said Parker, who said the worst damage in his county had been caused by trees falling on two homes overnight. "We were lucky that we didn't get 3 to 4 inches in 30 minutes. Most of it soaked right in before it had a chance to run off. It fell on an empty sponge."

    A frontal system coming south from the Great Lakes is expected to push weakened Beryl into the Atlantic Ocean later in the week. Georgia Power reported about 2,900 people were without power Monday morning. Jacksonville city officials say 20,000 were without power and bus service was canceled because of so many flooded roads, downed power lines and trees.

    Streets in Jacksonville Beach were unusually vacant. Bands of blinding rain alternated with dry conditions.

    Taylor Anderson, captain of Jacksonville Beaches' American Red Cross Volunteer Lifesaving Corps, said he was coordinating safety procedures with local government officials. The beach was closed, but before it was on Sunday, lifeguards over and over again had to warn people to get out of the water, he said.

    "Now that the storm's finally onshore and people can see that it's so dangerous and the winds and the current are up, people are lot more hesitant to go in, more so than yesterday," Anderson said.

    The weather system also would likely complicate things for returning holiday travelers, some of whom had to scrap their beach and camping trips early because of the weather. Cumberland Island National Seashore off the Georgia coast will be closed at least through Tuesday and park Superintendent Fred Boyles said campers were asked to leave the area Sunday. He said the park does not seem to have serious damage.

    In northeast Florida, several Memorial Day events were canceled, including one honoring veterans at the St. Augustine National Cemetery and a parade in Palatka.

    "I don't mean to sound mushy, but today is Memorial Day and I hate that it ruined some plans," said Glynn County, Ga., emergency management director Jay Wiggins. "But that's just the nature of the weather." His county between Savannah and Jacksonville also had some downed trees and power outages, but there the rain is also welcome.

    "I know it had a lot of folks worried, but it certainly will help us," he said.

    Beryl was expected to bring 4 to 8 inches of rain to parts, with some areas getting as much as a foot. Forecasters said the storm surge and high tide could bring 2 to 4 feet of flooding in northeastern Florida and Georgia, and 1 to 2 feet in southern South Carolina.

    Officials reported no serious injuries, but the Coast Guard said crews in Charleston Harbor in South Carolina rescued three people and a dog from a sinking recreational vessel late Sunday morning.

    This story includes information from The Associated Press, NBC News, News4Jax.com and msnbc.com staff.

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  • Trio rescued more than 15 hours after Idaho plane crash

    Kenny Hoagland / AP

    This photo provided by the Owyhee County Sheriff's office shows the site where a small plane crashed in southwest Idaho on Sunday.

    Updated at 1 a.m. ET: BOISE, Idaho -- Idaho National Guard rescuers plucked a California fireman, his wife and their adult daughter from a snow-covered mountainside Sunday afternoon, more than 15 hours after the trio survived a nighttime plane crash onto a steep, forested slope in a remote part of the state.

    Authorities said the group was flying in a Cessna 172 from California to Mountain Home, Idaho, when the plane went down at about 9 p.m. MDT Saturday (11 p.m. ET). One of the three used a cellphone just after midnight to report that they had survived the crash but had suffered head and back injuries.


    A medical helicopter was the first to spot the wreckage Sunday morning, but white-out conditions didn't allow for an immediate rescue, said Col. Tim Marsano of the Idaho National Guard.

    Officials said ground rescuers traveling through 6-foot snow drifts and on 60-degree slopes reached the crash site first. They wrapped the family members in blankets and built a fire until a military helicopter could lift them out with a hoist.

    "It was inhospitable for a landing," Marsano said. "The use of the helicopter was indispensable for this type of rescue operation."

    Kenny Hoagland / AP

    Ground rescuers traveled through 6-foot snow drifts to reach the crash site.

    The three were flown one at a time to a landing area about a half-mile from War Eagle Mountain in southwest Idaho's Owyhee County.

    The first person came out about noon and the last at about 2 p.m., and each was transferred to a medical helicopter and flown to Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center in Boise where they were listed in stable condition.

    It's unclear what caused the Cessna to go down. Photos taken by rescuers showed significant damage, including a broken front windshield.

    Authorities identified the trio as Brian Brown of Wilton, Calif., his wife Jayann Brown and their 26-year-old daughter Heather, the Idaho Statesman reported.

    'Surprisingly good condition'
    Brian Brown is a captain at the Cosumnes Community Services District Fire Department in Elk Grove, Calif. He is also deputy chief of operation and training with the nearby volunteer Wilton Fire Protection District.

    Owyhee County Sheriff Daryl Crandall told KTVB that the three relatives were "surprisingly good condition."

    Wilton Fire Chief Tom Dark said the couple was flying with their youngest daughter to Mountain Home to visit their oldest daughter. He was relieved they were in stable condition.

    "That was our first concern, how he and the family were doing," said Dark. "Knowing what a good pilot he is, something had to have happened."

    Dark said it was probably an unusual experience for Brown, a firefighter for more than two decades, to be on the other end of a rescue.

    "When the shoe is on the other foot it's kind of strange," he said.

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

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  • National Weather Service chief steps down after probe finds agency misappropriated money

    Editor's Note: This story has been updated to clarify that there were two separate reports - an internal inquiry into alleged misappropriation of funds at the National Weather Service and an external inspector general's report into alleged misappropriation at NOAA.

    Updated at 12:49.m. ET Monday: The director of the National Weather Service has stepped down after an internal investigation concluded that the federal agency misappropriated millions in taxpayer dollars.

    Jack Hayes retired on Friday, a day after the head of the weather service’s parent agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, issued a memo spelling out the results of an investigation into allegations of mismanagement of funds.


    This follows on the heels of a separate external investigation into NOAA that says the administration misappropriated $43.8 million by giving bonuses and extensions to contractors without proper justification.

    In the weather service inquiry, the memo by NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco said investigators found evidence that weather service employees at its headquarters inappropriately “reprogrammed” funds in 2010 and 2011 by moving millions of dollars in program accounts and redirecting them to 122 weather service offices across the country.

    According to the memo:

    “The Investigative Team found that NWS employees engaged in the reprogramming of NWS funds without Congressional notification during the years in question. These actions may be a violation of the Anti-Deficiency Act. The Team also found failure of management and oversight by NWS leadership. In addition, the Team found significant problems with budget and financial controls at the National Weather Service and that Departmental financial and management controls were ineffective at detecting or preventing this inappropriate reprogramming.

    Importantly, the Team did not find any evidence that any NWS employee committed fraud or received personal financial gain through their actions. This fact does not excuse, or reduce the seriousness of the employees’ actions.”

    NOAA announced on Friday that Hayes was retiring and that Laura Furgione has been named acting assistant administrator of the weather service.

    The investigative report recommends that weather offices be fully funded, that supervisory structure of NWS be restructured to provide additional oversight, and that the budget process be reformed to allow staff to raise substantive concerns about prioritization and long-term planning.

    “The deeply troubling revelation that senior staff at the National Weather Service, which provides indispensable storm and weather forecasting, have been conducting improper and potentially illegal transfers of taxpayers’ money is unacceptable,” Sen. Olympia Snowe, the ranking member of Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries and Coast Guard subcommittee, said in a statement Friday.

    “I am further alarmed that the investigative report raises fundamental concerns that the core operations of the National Weather Service are underfunded, and that the current process in the Department of Commerce is broken, as it ‘did not encourage questioning or provide independent channels for reporting dubious budget decisions,’” Snowe stated.

    NOAA spokesman Scott Smullen said in a statement:

    “NOAA and department leadership will continue to work with the Inspector General’s office and members of Congress to ensure that processes are put in place to restore proper oversight, that funds are properly reprogrammed, and that all individuals responsible for these unauthorized transactions are held accountable.

    “In addition, Commerce leadership is initiating department-wide actions to bring more rigor and transparency to the budget formulation and execution process at the sub-bureau level, as well as provide more training to managers on how to address complaints in a timely and appropriate manner."

    Separately, an Office of the Inspector General report released May 18 said NOAA paid nearly $44 million in award fees or contract extensions without proper justification.

    NOAA officials could not, for example, provide written explanation for why they paid $303,000 in awards on a $10 million contract to upgrade personnel and equipment for a satellite operations control center, the report says.

    An $80 million contract for the National Weather Service's river, flood and drought forecasting specified that the contract, which consisted of a base period of five years, had to be evaluated annually. But the board assigned to evaluate the contract never met, the report says, nor had a chairperson been assigned.

    Even so, auditors found that all five of the one-year extensions, totaling $40 million, were approved.

    Of the nine contractors, NOAA gave eight high ratings, which allowed contractors to reap "substantial award fees," the report says. As a result, auditors concluded that NOAA's pay system "provided little incentive for contractors to excel in executing their contracts."

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  • Standing ovation greets Pastor Charles Worley, who made anti-gay statements

    Although gay rights and anti-hate groups responded with outrage when a North Carolina pastor called for gays and lesbians to be fenced in so they eventually die off, he was greeted with a standing ovation by his church members when he approached the pulpit, the Hickory Record reported.

    “I appreciate all the support,” Pastor Charles Worley told the 100 or so congregants at Providence Road Baptist Church near Maiden, N.C., on Sunday, according to the Record. Several members stood and spoke out; others threw up their hands in support of their pastor.

    “I’ve got a King James Bible,” Worley said, according to the Record. “I’ve been a preacher for 53 years. Do you think I’m going to bail out on this?”


    Demonstrators wanted him to do just that.

    More than 1,000 people gathered in front of the Justice Center in nearby Newton waving signs with messages such as "Will God judge me for loving or hating?" and "Don't Fence Me In," Reuters reported. Some people dressed in rainbow colors, and entire families chanted "Preach Love Not Hate."

    The protest was in response to a sermon the 71-year-old Worley delivered on May 13, Mother’s Day, 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’s speech went viral after the Catawba Valley Citizens Against Hate grabbed a clip from the church’s web site and posted it on YouTube, Reuters reported.

    But Worley may have hindered the efforts of those who champion his cause, Jay Michaelson, author of “Gay vs. God? The Religious Case for Equality” wrote on Huffington Post. He said that Worley’s comments are “undermining the efforts of more moderate gay-bashers like the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins to disguise anti-gay bias as something other than hatred.”

    Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United, also condemned Pastor Worley’s statements.

    “Pastor Worley's vicious and mean-spirited assault on gays and lesbians is bad enough,” Lynn said. “His pulpit command that people not vote for President Obama is a violation of federal tax law. I urge the IRS to act swiftly to investigate this matter."

    A religious watchdog group has filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service, asking that it investigate the church’s tax-exempt status. Federal law prohibits non-profit groups from endorsing candidates.

    David Freidman, the regional director for the Anti-Defamation League, which fights hate speech, said Worley owed the gay and lesbian community a “swift and unequivocal apology.”

    Another Baptist church with a similar name was targeted by people angered by Worley’s sermon. The Providence Baptist Church in Charlotte, N.C., distanced itself from Worley, calling his words “hateful and violent.”

    The church web site specifies that it is a “moderate” cooperative Baptist Fellowship congregation of approximately 2,000 members.

    “Jesus is our model for living and His presence is our source of strength for life,” said a statement on the church’s web site. “Jesus preached a Gospel of love. So do we. Jesus preached that we love our neighbor, whether that neighbor is like us or not.”

    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.

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  • Marry you? Portland man choreographs an elaborate proposal

    Isaac Lamb of Portland, Ore. asked 60 friends and family to participate as he proposed to his girlfriend Amy Frankel.

    Isaac Lamb may have just won the award for best-ever marriage proposal. (Or perhaps the award for most-viewed proposal.)

    On Wednesday, Lamb, 31, asked his girlfriend Amy Frankel to meet him at his parents’ home for dinner. On arrival, Lamb's brother asked Frankel, 33, to sit in the open back of a Honda and to put on headphones -- he said he wanted to play her a song.

    As the song, “Marry You,” by Bruno Mars started playing, friends and family emerged to perform in an elaborately planned lip-dub dance.


    As the song plays, Frankel is clearly delighted and surprised, letting out small shrieks of joy as each new group of dancers joins in. By the end of the five-minute video, more than 60 dancers are in the frame. As for what happens next, well, you’ll have to watch the video, which had 1.5 million views on YouTube by Sunday afternoon.

    Even Bruno Mars weighed in, tweeting: "Congrats to Isaac Lamb and the future Mrs. I don't think I could've made a better music video for this song. Thank you."

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  • Human remains found at Colorado campsite linked to missing Chicago man

    AP

    According the the Eagle County Sheriff's office, this photo of James Nelson was taken in October 2010 on the day Nelson headed off on his hike. He never returned.

    Updated at 1:48 p.m. ET: Human remains found near a campsite in a wilderness area in western Colorado could be those of a Chicago man who was reported missing after failing to return from a planned five-day hike in 2010, authorities say.

    A camper scouting campsites near the ghost town of Holy Cross City on Friday came upon a site that apparently was used by James Nelson, 31. He was reported missing on Oct. 3, 2010, by his fiancee, when he failed to return from a five-day, 25-mile hike of the Holy Cross Wilderness Area near Minturn, Colo.

    On Saturday, Vail Mountain Rescue and detectives from the Eagle County Sheriff’s Office hiked to the location and discovered human remains nearby.

    The remains were turned over to the Eagle County coroner for positive identification and cause of death. A call to the coroner's office on Sunday was not immediately returned.

    A journal and notebook found at the campsite indicated that Nelson may have been suffering from altitude sickness at the time of his disappearance, said Jessie Mosher, a spokeswoman for the Eagle County Sheriff's Office. "We have reason to believe that might have played a factor in his disappearance," she told msnbc.com on Sunday.

    Other items recovered at the site indicate that some of Nelson’s gear is missing. Among the missing items are a camera, GPS unit and a camp stove, the sheriff's office said.

    Since the human remains were found about 120 feet from the campsite, it's possible someone else had passed through the campsite and took those items without realizing there was a dead person nearby, Mosher said.

    Eagle County Shriff's Office

    Campsite in the Holy Cross Wilderness area believed to have been used by James Nelson of Chicago, who was reported missing in October 2010 after failing to return from a five-day hike.

    Nelson’s proposed route included the summit of 14,005-foot Mount of the Holy Cross, but he did not sign the summit register, according to the Real Vail.

    The Holy Cross Wilderness Area is made up of some the most rugged terrain in Colorado and has about 164 miles of trails. Its elevation ranges roughly between 8,000 feet to 14,000 feet.

    Nelson, an experienced hiker, worked for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America's Chicago office, the Chicago Tribune reported. He studied religion at McCormick Theological Seminary and Chicago Theological Seminary in Hyde Park and planned to teach theology at a university, his mother told the Tribune in 2010.

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  • Barbecues 'bottom of the list' for mothers of fallen troops on Memorial Day

    Tribute to Sgt. Robert Weinger, Staff Sgt. Timothy Bowles, Sgt. Christopher Abeyta and Spc. Norman Cain III.

    As a boy, Bob Weinger played soccer and was on the school wrestling team in his hometown of Round Lake, Ill., north of Chicago. He rode motorcycles and drag raced his car as a teenager -- a “crazy kid,” said his mother, Susan Weinger.

    “He always wanted to be a GI Joe,” she said.

    Courtesy Susan Weinger

    Sgt. Bob Weinger

    In 2006, Bob joined the Illinois National Guard, went to boot camp and then straight to Iraq. There, he guarded prisoners. His mother later learned that one of them was former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.


    Bob came home, but after trouble finding a job, signed up for another tour of duty, knowing he was heading to Afghanistan.

    On March 15, 2009, Sgt. Robert Weinger was killed when an improvised explosive device detonated near his vehicle in the village of Kot, in eastern Afghanistan. He was 24.

    Susan Weinger is one of thousands of mothers of fallen soldiers who each year take part in annual Memorial Day services across the country. For many Americans, the holiday marks the traditional start of summer. But for loved ones of the fallen, it's a somber day to honor the dead.

    Like Weinger, many mothers of fallen soldiers belong to a group called the American Gold Star Mothers, named for the traditional gold star put in windows of homes signifying a family of a fallen soldier.

    Killed in the same attack as Bob Weinger were Staff Sgt. Timothy Bowles, Sgt. Christopher Abeyta and Spc. Norman Cain III. Cain’s sister, Bree Otto, has posted a video on YouTube titled 'Never Forget' to remember the fallen Illinois guardsmen.

    A short time after Bob’s death, a soldier in uniform knocked on Susan Weinger’s door. “I knew if they came to the door he was dead,” she said. “If he was just hurt it would be a phone call.”

    Courtesy Susan Weinger

    From left: Bob's fiancee, Tanya Colatorti; Bob; Bob's younger brother Paul Weinger; his aunt Vicki King; and Bob's mom, Sue Weinger.

    The man asked if she was Sgt. Robert Weinger’s mother. “I just kept asking, ‘is he dead, is he dead,’ and the man kept repeating  ‘Are you Sgt. Bob Weinger’s mother?’ and he wouldn’t answer. Finally, he just bowed his head, and said, ‘he’s dead.’”

     “I was numb for almost a year,” Susan Weinger, a middle school librarian, said. “I finally went back to work just because I wasn’t any good at home anymore.”

    She became involved in the American Gold Star Mothers -- she’s now the president of the Northern Illinois chapter -- because she said she knew her son wouldn’t want her to grieve forever.

    Betsy Schultz, of Port Angeles, Wash. started a foundation to honor her son, Capt. Joseph Schultz, 36, who was killed in action in Wardak Province, Afghanistan, on May 29, 2011.

    The Captain Joseph House Foundation is meant as a living memorial, with the organization funding a retreat for service members and their families at a former bed and breakfast on the scenic Olympic Peninsula. 

    Schultz is bracing for the year anniversary of her son's death.

    Courtesy Betsy Schultz

    Capt. Joseph W. Schultz

    “The last four to five days for me is just getting to the 29th,  Betsy Schultz said. “And it’s really hard. I feel like I’m putting the breaks on. I don’t want May 29 to come. It just brings it all back very fresh.” 

    For many mothers, as time passes by, public service helps them through the sorrow. 

    “We’re not a grief organization,” national American Gold Star Mothers president Norma Luther told msnbc.com. “We are here to support each other. We do that by banding together and working for veterans in the hospitals and nursing homes and just stepping in wherever we see that they have a need. By doing that we begin to heal.”

    “At the bottom of our list are barbecues and picnics and the like,” Luther  said. “We hope everyone can try to remember what this day is for.”

    Luther lost her son Glen. P. Adams Jr., a 27-year-old West Point graduate, to a helicopter accident in Germany in 1988. She said her emphasis has been to bring home the message that all mothers who have lost a son or daughter while serving in the military are gold star mothers, not just moms who have lost their children from combat deaths.

    “Those deaths deserve as much recognition, respect and honor as someone who was killed in a war zone,” Luther said.

    This weekend, services to honor veterans are planned in nearly every city and town in the country.

    Luther will be at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial on Monday when, on the 50th anniversary of the war, President Obama and other officials will pay homage to those who served there.

    Susan Weinger will be in Chicago on Sunday for a Memorial Day parade, and on Monday will be at the cemetery to honor her son by planting a tree. 

    Betsy Schultz will spend Friday at Fort Bragg, N.C., for memorial services for Joseph, who was an Army Ranger in special forces. On Saturday, she will go to Arlington National Cemetery, where her son is buried. On Monday she will attend a breakfast at the White House for gold star families.

    "It’s an honor to have them honor Joseph in this way," Betsy Schultz said. "He believed and he gave everything. I supported his decision to do what he does. He was proud to be an American and be there for his country. How could I not feel proud." 

    On Sunday night, a national Memorial Day concert called “A Night of Remembrance” will take place on the Capitol Mall in Washington, D.C., to pay tribute to Americans who have served and their loved ones. It will be broadcast live at 8 p.m. ET on many PBS stations.

    NPR is also hosting a Virtual Wall of Remembrance, where people can post memories of their loved ones who died in war.

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  • Boy buys garage-sale camera holding photo of grandma's dead son

    Correction: In a previous version of this report, Dayne Logan's city of residence was incorrectly identified. It is Columbia, Mo.

    A Kansas boy who bought an old Polaroid camera at a garage sale brought home a special gift for his grandma: Inside was an image of her son, who was killed in a car crash 23 years ago.

    The Wichita Eagle reports that Addison Logan, 13, went with his grandmother, Lois Logan, to several garage sales in west Wichita. At one of them, he found a Polaroid camera for sale and bought it for $1.

    When he opened the camera's cartridge later back at her house, he found an old photograph and showed his grandmother, the Eagle reports.


    It was a photo of her son Scott, sitting on a sofa with a high school girlfriend about 10 years before he was killed in a car accident. 

    "It was really weird," Lois Logan told the Eagle. 

    The Logans told the Eagle that they didn't know the people having the garage sale and the man who sold it to Addison couldn't remember where he got it. The woman in the photo married and moved away long ago, the Eagle reported.

    Scott Logan was a 28-year-old divorced dad when he was killed when his car flipped during a business trip. His son, Dayne Logan, lives in Columbia, Mo., and has blogged about the discovery of the photo. Scott had been preceded in death by another brother, who also was killed in a car crash. 

    “I’m just shocked,” one of Scott’s surviving brothers, Blake Logan, told the Eagle. “The more time that passes, the more in disbelief I am. So many things have to come together for that to happen. It just seems supernatural.”

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  • Report: Miami police shoot naked man chewing on victim's face

    A Miami police officer fatally shot a naked man chewing the face of another man Saturday afternoon on a downtown causeway off-ramp, officials said.

    The Miami Herald reported that the naked man chewed off half the face of his victim, who is struggling for his life.


    The violence started at 2 p.m. on the MacArthur Causeway off-ramp, just south of the Herald’s offices, the newspaper said.

    Witnesses said that a woman saw two men fighting and flagged down a police officer, who came upon the naked man mauling the other man, the Herald reported.

    The officer, who was not identified, ordered the naked man to back away, but when the man continued the assault, the officer shot him, the Herald said. Witnesses told the Herald the wounded attacker continued to eat his victim, so the officer continued firing.

    Witnesses said they heard at least a half-dozen shots, the Herald said.

    The naked man was later seen lying face down on the pedestrian walkway just below the newspaper’s two-story parking garage, the Herald said.

    The naked man’s victim was transported to Jackson Memorial Hospital Ryder Trauma Center and had critical injuries, police told the Herald.

    Neither man was identified.

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    “Based on the information provided, our Miami police officer is a hero and saved a life,’’ Javier Ortiz, spokesman for Miami police’s Fraternal Order of Police, told the Herald.

    A police department news release about the shooting did not include many details provided by witnesses to the newspaper.

    Police requested surveillance video that had been obtained by the newspaper, the Herald reported.

    The shooting and investigation tied up causeway traffic as crowds were arriving at South Beach for an annual Urban Beach Week hip-hop festival.

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  • Students raise $10,000 for family of store clerk set on fire

    GARLAND, Texas -- High school students have raised $10,000 for the family of a convenience store clerk, known as "Grandma" to many in the Garland community, who was set on fire during a robbery attempt.

    Nancy Harris, 76, died Friday night, nearly a week after the attack at the Fina gas station where she worked in South Garland.

    On Saturday, students from South Garland High School returned to the place of the attack to hold a car wash and raise money for her family.


    Read the original report at NBCDFW.com

    "I was just devastated. Its kind of outlandish that someone would go out of their way to do this," said Dylan Stooksberry, president of the school's student council. "To have that happen to someone who you know, to a face that you know, to a friend, it's devastating." 

    "It hurts deep down and honestly if someone is going to go out of their way to do something bad like that, I am going to go out of my way to do something nice," said Stooksberry.

    The Fina gas station is just a block from their school. Many students, like DJ Valderrama, personally knew Harris.

    "I came in the gas station and she showed me so much kindness by giving me a free drink," Valderrama said. "Whenever somebody shows you that kind of kindness if affects your life, really."

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    Despite the tragedy on Sunday at the Fina gas station, many students told NBC 5 that the incident has brought the community closer together.

    Many hoped this fundraiser will help honor Harris.

    "I know Ms. Harris is looking down on us right now, I know she is happy," said Valderrama.

    Matthew Johnson is charged with attempted capital murder in connection with this case. Those charges could be upgraded because Ms. Harris has died.

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  • Sandy Dahl, wife of 9/11 United Flight 93 pilot, dies at age 52

    DENVER -- Sandy Dahl, wife of the pilot who captained United Airlines Flight 93, which crashed into a Pennsylvania field after being taken over by terrorists on Sept. 11, 2001, has died at age 52.

    A fundraising group she founded to honor her husband’s memory, the Captain Jason M. Dahl Scholarship Fund, announced on its website that Sandy Dahl died in her sleep Friday from natural causes near Denver.

    “Her guiding light will be missed,” the group said.


    Dahl, a former United flight attendant, became a public face for 9/11 families.

    She had told the Denver Post the heroism of Jason Dahl and many others aboard Flight 93 was not forgotten.

    "They did what would almost never be asked of anyone,” she had said.

    Mark Wilson / Getty Images

    Sandy Dahl looks at the image of her husband, Pilot Jason Dahl, etched on a memorial for Flight 93 crew members at the Shanksville Chapel for Flight 93 Sept. 10, 2006, in Shanksville, Penn.

    "I want to make sure history is written," she said then.

    She said she believed her husband joined passengers in fighting the terrorists who planned to crash the plane into the Capitol or White House. It went down outside Shanksville, Penn., about 75 miles southeast of Pittsburgh. A memorial dedicated to the 40 passengers and crew of Flight 93 was dedicated last September.

    Two other planes on 9/11 struck the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York; a fourth crashed into the Pentagon in Arlington, Va. The death toll from the four attacks was nearly 3,000.

    The Jason Dahl scholarship fund provided money for young pilots to receive their education.

    As of 2011, 16 students had received scholarships and some were already commercial pilots, NBC station KUSA of Denver reported.

    "Both of them were my best friends," Capt. David Dosch, president of the Jason Dahl Scholarship Fund, said of Jason and Sandy Dahl. "Unfortunately, both of them had a short period of time to enjoy their company."

    "Sandy's courage picked up where her husband's left off," Patrick White, president of Families of Flight 93, said Saturday in a statement obtained by the Post. "Her dedication to completing the Flight 93 National Memorial as a way to honor her husband's heroic actions on 9-11, and those of his fellow crew members and passengers, is a significant part of her legacy."

    Jefferson County coroner's officials have confirmed Dahl's death, but the exact cause has not been released, the Post said.

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  • TSA eases airport screening for elderly travelers

    A pilot airport screening program designed to make the security line easier for elderly fliers is going national.

    Since March, TSA workers at airports in Chicago, Denver, Orlando and Portland, Ore., have been testing modified screening practices for passengers 75 and over. Elderly travelers at select checkpoints were allowed to keep shoes and light outerwear on during screening and could take a second pass through full-body scanners to clear anomalies. The measures mirror those instituted nationwide last summer for children 12 and under.

    TSA on Friday announced an end to the pilot program and said it will roll out the rules at all U.S. airports throughout the summer. A specific implementation timetable was not released.


    The changes will reduce, but not eliminate, enhanced pat-downs for the elderly, TSA said in a statement. Travelers will be asked to remove shoes and undergo a pat-down “if anomalies are detected during security screening that cannot be resolved through other means.”

    In December, TSA was under fire after security incidents involving elderly passengers.

    In one, 85-year-old Lenore Zimmerman said she was injured and humiliated during a strip search at JFK Airport. Days later, 88-year-old Ruth Sherman said she was forced to pull down her pants and show her colostomy bag during a search.

    TSA later apologized for the way the searches were handled.

    In the past year, TSA has implemented and enhanced other initiatives designed to ease screening requirements and concerns, including PreCheck, an expedited screening program it continues to roll out at dozens of airports, and TSA Cares, a helpline for travelers with disabilities and medical conditions.

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  • Michigan wildfire grows to more than 21,000 acres

    Michigan Department of Natural Resources via AP

    A wildfire in Michigan's Upper Peninsula grew by 17 percent to more than 21,000 acres, May 26, as officials warned of tough conditions and welcomed help from water-dumping aircraft from the Michigan National Guard.

    Wind gusts were predicted at 15 m.p.h. and high temperatures were in the 60s in a dry, remote part of the state where access has been tricky because there are few roads. Tahquamenon Falls State Park, a popular destination for campers seven miles from the fire, was closed.

    The fire, known as the Duck Lake Fire, was 20% contained in Luce County, about 75 miles northeast of the Mackinac Bridge, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources said. The fire was described as long and narrow, stretching 11 miles north to Lake Superior.

    Read more.

    Michigan Department of Natural Resources via AP

    Michigan Department of Natural Resources via AP

     

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