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  • Wreckage found in Alaska glacier ID'd as 1952 military plane crash that killed 52

    Dod-Cpt. Jamie D. Dobson / U.S. Army via Reuters

    A specialized eight-person recovery team, with team members from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command and Northern Warfare Training Center, searches for aircraft wreckage, remains, or other personal effects while conducting recovery operations on Knik Glacier on June 20.

    ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The wreckage of a military plane found near Knik Glacier earlier this month has been identified as a Korean War-era Air Force cargo plane that crashed in the 1950s, killing all 52 people on board, NBC station KTUU of Anchorage reported Wednesday.

    The identification brings closure to victims' families after nearly 60 years, KTUU said.

    Joint POW-MIA Accounting Command spokesperson Capt. Jamie Dobson said the wreckage, discovered June 10 on Colony Glacier, about 45 miles east of Anchorage, by a UH-60 Blackhawk crew with the Alaska Army National Guard-- is that of a Douglas C-124A Globemaster II that crashed on Nov. 22, 1952.

    See the original story at NBC station KTUU

    While evidence collected by the eight-man team is en route to JPAC’s Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii for further analysis, Dobson told KTUU the plane was identifiable by materials found at the scene.

    "Some of the evidence has already been positively correlated with this crash," Dobson told KTUU.

    Harsh weather prevented a recovery at the time and later searchers could not locate it.

    U.S. Air Force via AP, file

    An undated photo of a C-124A Globemaster cargo aircraft similar to the plane that went down on the Colony Glacier in Alaska in 1952, killing all 52 people on board.

    The Globemaster II entered Air Force service in 1950 as the world’s largest transport plane. Its forward loading ramp and aft cargo elevator, as well as its ability to carry 68,500 pounds of cargo or 200 passengers on two decks of seating, made it the Air Force's primary heavy-lift transport into the early 1960s, KTUU reported.

    The four-propeller transport was eventually replaced by the C-141 Starlifter jet, but its name lives on in Alaska skies with the C-17 Globemaster III, operated by the 517th Airlift Squadron at Anchorage’s Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.

    Crash researcher Tonja Anderson, whose grandfather Airman Isaac Anderson died in the crash, told KTUU the cargo plane was on a flight from McChord Air Force Base in Washington to Elmendorf Air Force Base in Anchorage when it crashed near the 8,000-foot level of Mount Gannett.

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  • Nonprofit groups announce $30 million campaign to help veterans

    A group of nonprofits and charities dedicated to helping veterans announced Wednesday a campaign to raise $30 million to assist former service members. 

    Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, a nonprofit with 200,000 members nationwide, unveiled a Veteran Support Fund that will direct donations to itself and four other organizations. The initiative was staked by six entrepreneurs and philanthropists whose founding gifts totaled $1.1 million.


    The partner organizations are Operation Mend, which gives medical support to critically injured veterans; Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, which provides coping and trauma resources to survivors of deceased service members; Operation Homefront, which offers emergency financial aid to wounded warriors and families of service members; and the National Military Family Association, which advocates for benefits and programs to support military families.

     

    "Supporting veterans isn’t charity, it’s an absolute necessity and an investment in our country’s future," Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of IAVA, said in a statement. "After ten years of war, our nation’s military families are strained, nonprofit services are maxed out and our veterans’ community is severely under-resourced."

    Jim Knotts, president and CEO of Operation Homefront, told msnbc.com that the increased funding will help the organization provide emergency assistance, like food, transitional housing and money for car repairs, to more families. Last year, Operation Homefront met more than 5,000 emergency requests and provided transitional housing for 80 families.

    Knotts said that while the organization's fundraising has been strong in recent years, he is concerned that donations will dwindle as service members return from Afghanistan.

    "A lot of people are thinking that we’re out of Iraq and we’ll be out of Afghanistan so our need to support the military will end soon," he said. "But it will be a 50-year campaign to support this generation of wounded warriors ... Even military families who remain will have ongoing needs as a result of 10 years worth of war."

    IAVA said the initiative will be a "centralized platform where Americans can support and donate to a consortium of effective and trusted best-in-class veterans’ organizations."

    Charity Navigator, which evaluates select charities and nonprofits, has awarded three- and four-star ratings to Operation Homefront, National Military Family Association and Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors.

    Sandra Miniutti, vice president of marketing and chief financial officer for Charity Navigator, said that donating to a veterans organization or charity can be an emotional decision.

    "Supporting our troops, their families and the veterans are issues that tug at everyone’s heart strings," Miniutti told msnbc.com. "Oftentimes, donors give to these types of charities solely with their heart. They fail to stop and use their head too and vet the charities to ensure that they are financially healthy, accountable and transparent and produce real results."

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  • Marijuana found in face-chewer's body, but no other drugs, medical examiner says

    Handout / Reuters

    Rudy Eugene, left, was shot after he refused to stop chewing the face of Ronald Poppo, right.

    The Miami-Dade Medical Examiner found only marijuana in the body of the man who was fatally shot while chewing a homeless man's face over Memorial Day weekend.

    The medical examiner's office said on Wednesday that 31-year-old Rudy Eugene's toxicology was complete.


    "The department's toxicology laboratory has identified the active components of marijuana," the medical examiner said in a statement. "The laboratory has tested for but not detected any other street drugs, alcohol or prescription drugs, or any adulterants found in street drugs."

    The department also ruled out common drugs found in the street drugs called bath salts, which authorities had initially speculated were the cause of the brutal attack on Ronald Poppo. 

    Read more on this story on NBCMiami.com

    He has been recovering at Jackson Memorial Hospital's Ryder Trauma Center since the May 26 attack along the MacArthur Causeway.
    Poppo was rushed to the hospital after he was attacked by Eugene, who tore off and chewed most of the 65-year-old's face, authorities said. He also suffered trauma to his brain, doctors said.

    Poppo also had a couple puncture wounds in his left chest area.

    About 50 percent of his face, including his forehead and cheek, was affected and he has an infection, brain injury and a puncture wound to his chest.

    Report: Miami face-chewing attacker had no flesh in stomach

    Eugene was fatally shot by an officer after he refused to stop the savage attack on Poppo, police said. Witnesses said a naked Eugene was throwing his clothes into traffic and swinging from a light pole shortly before the attack.

    The medical examiner's department also got assistance from an outside forensic toxicology lab, which confirmed that there were no bath salts, synthetic marijuana or LSD in Eugene's system.

    New tourist stop: Miami site where naked man chewed off victim's face

    "Within the limits of current technology by both laboratories, marijuana is the only drug identified in the body of Mr. Rudy Eugene," the statement said.

    The attack sparked a statewide crackdown on synthetic drugs and bath salts, with many South Florida counties and cities moving forward with ordinances to ban and restrict their sale.

    Also on Tuesday, Gov. Rick Scott and Attorney General Pam Bondi held a ceremonial signing of House Bill 1175, which outlaws more than 90 new forms of synthetic drugs.

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  • 4-year-old twins drown in grandmother's pool in north Texas

    Police believe the drowning deaths of twin 4-year-old boys in a north Texas swimming pool were accidental, Arlington Police spokeswoman Cheryel Carpenter told msnbc.com.

    The father of Mark and Luke Nguyen called Arlington police around 10:30 p.m. after finding his boys face-down in the pool behind their grandmother’s home. It was still warm outside from a day that had reached triple digits.


    The boys’ mother, Huong Nguyen, told wfaa.com that her husband and sons were checking in on her mother-in-law because she has diabetes.

    Carpenter said the father's brother-in-law was also at the home.

    Within minutes, the boys apparently slipped away to the pool, Carpenter said, managing to breach a black iron fence around the perimeter of the pool. She said police do not know if the gate was latched.

    The father found the boys unconscious in the pool. He jumped in, pulled them out and administered CPR while waiting for paramedics. The boys died en route to the hospital.  

    The parents, who also have a 1-year-old child, face no charges. 

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  • Falun Gong members in San Francisco say they're targets of assaults, hate crimes

    Updated at 6:20 p.m. ET: Practitioners of the Falun Gong spiritual movement in San Francisco claim they have been the targets of a series of assaults orchestrated by the Chinese consulate, and they’re urging police and prosecutors to investigate the incidents as hate crimes.

    Falun Gong practitioners have been harassed and assaulted at least nine times in past eight months -- seven times in Chinatown alone, said Sherry Zhang, spokeswoman for the Falun Gong in San Francisco. Police reports were filed in at least three cases, she said.


    “We definitely want them to take this very seriously. It definitely is not an isolated incident anymore,” Zhang told msnbc.com on Wednesday.

    San Francisco police said there's no indication to date that Chinese authorities are behind the attacks.

    Falun Gong is outlawed in China, where the Communist Party leadership in 1999 declared it a “heretical organization” and views it as a destructive cult. Falun Gong leaders claim their adherents are persecuted and tortured in China, and that followers in the U.S. and other countries are harassed by people loyal to the Chinese government.

    Falun Gong followers in San Francisco last week showed a video of an alleged assault to the Board of Supervisors and also held a demonstration outside City Hall.

    The video was of a June 10 incident on a street corner in San Francisco's Chinatown where a group of Falun Gong practitioners had gathered, holding signs and handing out literature detailing what they said was the persecution and torture of followers in China. 

    In the video, which Zhang said was a compilation of shots by Falun Gong practitioners and bystanders, an older Chinese man in a hat allegedly curses at a Falun Gong member and then punches him in the face. As police arrive, another Chinese-speaking man in the crowd gestures toward a person filming the incident and, according to the videomaker’s translation, yells, “Don’t stare at me. If I in mainland China I would break your leg.” A 72-year-old man is being investigated for alleged battery in the case, according to the police report.

    In another case on June 16, a Falun Gong member told police a Chinese man struck her wrist with a protest sign. The man was cited by police and released.

    “These are hate crimes. The only reason for them is because people influenced by the Chinese Consulate want to attack Falun Gong,” Zhang told The Epoch Times, a newspaper founded by followers and supporters of Falun Gong.

    “This attack targets a group of people because of their belief. In the United States, if you attack an individual or their belongings because of their belief, it’s regarded as a hate crime,” Ye Ning, a New York-based human rights attorney, told New Tang Dynasty Television, a broadcaster based in New York. “This incident in San Francisco does not appear to be a simple act of violence. There was no motive aside from hate."

    The Chinese Consulate-General in San Francisco did not respond to a telephone call and email from msnbc.com for comment on Wednesday.

    Police Officer Carlos Manfredi said Wednesday there's no indication in the police reports that the June 10 and June 16 incidents were the work of the Chinese consulate. 

    "As of right now the two separate incidents were simple battery. The suspects were charged and have court dates," he said.

    Manfredi said, however, that police are still collecting information on all the incidents.

    San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr told New Dynasty Television that authorities take allegations of hate crimes seriously.

    “If the investigation shows that the folks were attacked based on their religion, then absolutely that would be the motivation and that would be a hate crime,” he said.

    He said he couldn’t comment on allegations the attacks were coordinated until the investigation is completed, the TV station reported.

    Claims of abuse of Falun Gong practitioners by government authorities in China are not new. Amnesty International recently issued an appeal on its website calling for international action to free two Falun Gong practitioners it said were detained and “at risk of torture.”

    In 2005, Chen Yonglin, a diplomat at the Chinese Consulate-General in Sydney, defected to Australia and later said his job entailed collecting names and reporting on Falun Gong practitioners.

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  • Exxon's CEO: Climate, energy fears overblown

    ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson says fears about climate change, drilling, and energy dependence are overblown.

    In a speech Wednesday, Tillerson acknowledged that burning of fossil fuels is warming the planet, but said society will be able to adapt. The risks of oil and gas drilling are well understood and can be mitigated, he said. And dependence on other nations for oil is not a concern as long as access to supply is certain, he said.

    Tillerson blamed a public that is "illiterate" in science and math, a "lazy" press, and advocacy groups that "manufacture fear" for energy misconceptions in a speech at the Council on Foreign Relations.

    He highlighted that huge discoveries of oil and gas in North America have reversed a 20-year decline in U.S. oil production in recent years. He also trumpeted the global oil industry's ability to deliver fuels during a two-year period of dramatic uncertainty in the Middle East, the world's most important oil and gas-producing region.

    "No one, anywhere, any place in the world has not been able to get crude oil to fuel their economies," he said.

    In his speech and during a question-and-answer session after, he addressed three major energy issues: Climate change, oil and gas drilling pollution, and energy dependence.

    Tillerson, in a break with predecessor Lee Raymond, has acknowledged that global temperatures are rising. "Clearly there is going to be an impact," he said Wednesday.

    But he questioned the ability of climate models to predict the magnitude of the impact. He said that people would be able to adapt to rising sea levels and changing climates that may force agricultural production to shift.

    "We have spent our entire existence adapting. We'll adapt," he said. "It's an engineering problem and there will be an engineering solution."

    Andrew Weaver, chairman of climate modeling and analysis at the University of Victoria in Canada, disagreed with Tillerson's characterization of climate modeling. He said modeling can give a very good sense of the type of climate changes that are likely. And he said adapting to those changes will be much more difficult and disruptive than Tillerson seems to be acknowledging.

    Steve Coll, author of the recent book "Private Empire: ExxonMobil and American Power," said he was surprised Exxon would already be talking about ways society could adapt to climate change when there is still time to try to avoid its worst effects. Also, he said, research suggests that adapting to climate change could be far more expensive than reducing emissions now. "Moving entire cities would be very expensive," he said.

    Legislation or regulation that would help slow the emissions of global warming gases would likely lead to lower demand for oil and gasoline, and could reduce Exxon's profit.

    Tillerson expressed frustration at the level of public concern over new drilling techniques that tap natural gas and oil in shale formations under several states. He said environmental advocacy groups that "manufacture fear" have alarmed a public that doesn't understand drilling practices — or math, science or engineering in general. He blamed "lazy" journalists for producing stories that scare the public but don't investigate the claims of advocacy groups.

    Drilling for oil and gas will always involve risks of spills and accidents, he said. But those risks are manageable and worth taking because they are small given the amount of energy they produce.

    Drilling in shale formations, he said, only poses a small risk to those living nearby. It is neither life threatening nor long lasting and can be controlled in the event of an accident.

    Drillers force millions of gallons of water mixed with sand and some hazardous chemicals into shale formations. The technique breaks up rock and creates escape routes for oil and gas. If the drilling wastewater is not treated properly or if it seeps through cracked drilling pipes, it could contaminate drinking water.

    The industry's biggest challenge, he said, is "taking an illiterate public and try to help them understand why we can manage these risks."

    Tillerson made a distinction between energy security and energy dependence. He said that energy security — making sure that the economy has access to energy — is crucial.

    But he said access to energy is not in peril. "Some of the fears around energy security are not well founded," he said.

    The quest for energy independence, though, is misguided, he said. It doesn't matter where the U.S. gets oil because crude is priced globally. Even if the U.S. used only oil from North America, a disruption in the Middle East would increase global prices, hurt the U.S. and global economies, and force Americans to pay more at the pump.

    Even if the U.S. no longer needed Middle Eastern oil, it would likely want to play a major role in helping maintain the region's security, Tillerson said. 

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  • Parents of Rutgers student who committed suicide change view of homosexuality

    By Marianne O'Donnell
    Rock Center

    The family of a Rutgers University student who killed himself after discovering his roommate, Dharun Ravi, had spied on him is speaking out for the first time since Ravi’s conviction of hate crimes earlier this year.

    ROCK CENTER EXCLUSIVE

    Tyler Clementi’s parents, Jane and Joe Clementi, and his older brother James told Rock Center exclusively that Tyler was struggling with many issues before his death.  But they believe Ravi’s decision to spy on Tyler during a sexual encounter with another man in his dorm room played a role in the suicide. They also say they have changed their views on homosexuality in the wake of their son’s death.

    ‘Whatever underlying depressions or pains that were going on with [Tyler], that was straw that broke the camel’s back and that was the thing that pushed him to the breaking point,” James Clementi told NBC’s Lester Holt in an interview broadcast Thursday on Rock Center.

    Tyler Clementi, 18, had just begun his freshman year at Rutgers University’s Busch Campus in September 2010 when he asked Ravi, 20, if he could have their room for the evening. Ravi says he later went to a dorm mate’s room and remotely activated a computer webcam.  Ravi says the webcam briefly streamed live video of Clementi in an embrace with his date. 


    Ravi then tweeted the following: “Roommate asked for the room till midnight. I went into molly’s room and turned on my webcam. I saw him making out with a dude. Yay.”

    Clementi later told a dorm advisor that he had read that tweet, and another by Ravi that indicated he planned to spy on Clementi and his date again.  A day later Clementi committed suicide.

    “I think it was – it was the humiliation that his roommates and his dorm mates were watching him in a very intimate act and that they were laughing behind his back,” said Jane Clementi. “The last thing that Tyler looked at before he left the dorm room for the bridge was the Twitter page, where Ravi was announcing Tyler's activities.”

    The Clementis have remained largely silent about Ravi’s actions since he was named in a 15-count indictment last year that included invasion of privacy and hate crimes.  He was not charged in connection with their son’s death.  A jury later found Ravi guilty on all counts, putting him at risk of years in prison.  Instead, Ravi was sentenced to just 30 days in jail, 300 hours of community service and three years of probation.  The Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office, which tried the case, is appealing the sentence.

    Last week, Ravi walked out of a county jail after having served just 20 days. To the Clementis, the punishment was far too lenient.

    “I think the judge sent a clear message to other prosecutors,” said Jane Clementi.  “This isn't worthwhile.  There are no consequences for these actions.”

    But the Clementis also say they realize their son was wrestling with demons unrelated to the spying incident.  Just weeks before he left home to attend Rutgers he told his mother he was gay.  She says the news “shocked” her, in part because of her strong Christian faith.  Since then she says she’s gone from “point A” in her beliefs “to point B.”

    “Was that point A, the point of "homosexuality is a sin?" asked Holt.

    “Well, yes,” Mrs. Clementi answered. “And of trying to just accept it.”

    She said she also realizes that Tyler may have misread her reaction during their conversation.  He later texted a friend that his mother had rejected him after he came out to her.

    “It just was like a dagger,” Mrs. Clementi said.  “And that took me a long time to process.  Because I did not think I had rejected him.”

    Now, Jane Clementi says she and her family are trying to help gay teens win greater acceptance through the foundation they’ve started in Tyler’s honor.  Clementi’s parents say they hope The Tyler Clementi Foundation will discourage cyber bullying and the notion that they themselves once held that homosexuality is a sin.

    “Sin needs to be taken out of homosexuality,” said Joe Clementi.  “Our children need to understand – and adults need to understand – that they're not broken.”

    Rock Center's Carlo Dellaverson contributed to this report.

    Editor's note: Click here to watch Lester Holt's full report on Tyler Clementi from NBC's Rock Center with Brian Williams.

  • Man was cleared under 'Stand Your Ground,' then shot to death on Miami street

    Miami-Dade Corrections

    Greyston Garcia was cleared by a judge in March using Florida's Stand Your Ground law after chasing down a suspected burglar and stabbing him to death

    A man who avoided a murder charge just months ago thanks to Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law was one of two men shot to death in Miami Tuesday night.

    The shooting happened around 9:30 p.m., Miami police spokesman Sgt. Freddie Cruz said.

    Cruz said officers responded to the area and found a young black male lying on a side street shot and unconscious. A second victim, another black male, was found shot inside a black pickup truck just feet away.


    The man found in the street was pronounced dead at the scene by Miami Fire Rescue. The second victim was taken to a hospital but died on the way, Cruz said.

    According to the Miami Herald, the man shot in the truck was Greyston Garcia, who was granted immunity in March under the controversial self-defense law following a stabbing.

    Garcia had chased down and stabbed a thief who had broken into his truck after the thief swung a bag filled with heavy car radios at him,
    according to the Herald.

    Police believe Garcia was an innocent bystander in Tuesday's shooting, the Herald reported.

    Watch US News crime videos on msnbc.com

    Family members identified the man found shot in the street as 16-year-old Ronald Jones.

    "You know, seeing my baby brother laying out here and you know, that's just an image that I'll never forget," sister Ronchel Jones said. "Everybody loved him, he was loving, caring, funny."

    Cruz said police are still investigating the circumstances surrounding the shooting.

    "This is like a big puzzle we're trying to put together," Cruz said. "We're not sure if these gentlemen were shooting at each other or if we have a third party that's at large that is responsible for the shooting."

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  • Double amputee soldier takes command of Fort Belvoir

    EPA

    Col. Gregory Gadson, right, attends a ceremony where he assumes command of U.S. Army Fort Belvoir. He is sitting next to outgoing commander Col. John Strycula, left, and Lt. Gen. Michael Ferriter, center, at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, outside Washington, D.C. on Monday.

    A soldier injured by an improvised explosive device in Iraq in 2007 became the first double amputee to take command of a major military installation, the Army reported on its home page on Wednesday.

    Col. Gregory Gadson officially assumed command of 47,000-troop-strong Fort Belvoir, Va., on Monday.

    The West Point graduate lost both his legs above the knees and suffered a severe injury to his right arm when his vehicle hit an IED on May 7, 2007, as he returned from a memorial service for fellow soldiers in Baghdad, according to the army report.


    Gadson, who wears two prosthetics with what the military calls "next-generation powered knees," requested to stay on active duty after his injuries rather than take medical retirement, it said. He spent two years heading up the Army Wounded Warrior program.

    "He was able to reassure personally those newly wounded who are looking down a long road to recovery and to motivate soldiers and civilians alike," said Lt. Gen. Michael Ferriter, who presented Gadson his command colors at the fort, just outside Washington, D.C.

    "He has shown that it isn't about what you cannot do, it's about what you can do," Ferriter said, according to the army report. "He's able to lead and get right to things that need to happen."

    Gadson served in the Army for more than 20 years as a field artillery officer, according to a profile on the Fort Belvoir web site. His military career has included deployments to Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm in Kuwait, Operation Joint Forge in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan and Operation Iraqi Freedom. Prior to his injuries in Iraq in 2007, he was commanding a new unit as part of the surge to secure Baghdad.

    The Fort Belvoir web site said outgoing commander Col. John Strycula, who headed up the installation for two years, was heading to Afghanistan for his next assignment.

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  • Chicago to issue tickets for possessing small amounts of pot

    CHICAGO -- The Chicago City Council Wednesday voted 43-3 to approve a new city pot policy. 
    The ordinance gives police the option to issue a ticket for possession of 15 grams of marijuana or less. Arrests would still be mandated for anyone caught smoking pot in public or possessing marijuana in or near a school or in or near a park. The new rules go into effect Aug. 4. 

    Ald. Danny Solis (25th), who introduced the proposal last fall, called it a "monumental ordinance" that will have "a definite impact."  


    "I don't have any problem with people arresting somebody as far as a crime," Solis said, "but when this arrest basically turns out to be where nothing happens ... I have to seriously look at what we're doing."

    Supporters of the ordinance, including Mayor Rahm Emanuel, said issuing tickets frees up cops for more serious crime and ultimately will save the police department about $1 million.

    See the original story at NBCChicago.com

    "This is about being efficient and realistic," said Ald. John Pope (10th).

    "This isn't decriminalization, Mr. President," said Ald. Ed Burke (14th). "It is re-criminalization ... a more intelligent and effective way of addressing a problem."

    Opponents of the plan said it does nothing to prevent Chicago's drug and gangs problems.

    Ald. Nick Sposato (36th) told the council he thinks 15 grams is too high of a threshold, calling it a "significant amount of marijuana." Sposato said it sends the wrong message to children.

    Ald. Roberto Maldonado (26th) said that as the father of three young children, he fears the ordinance will spike marijuana use. He said he doesn't want his kids growing up thinking marijuana use is as bad as running a stop sign.

    Under the plan, anyone caught with pot under the age of 17 or without proper identification would still be arrested. Tickets would range from $250 to $500. A portion of that money, Emanuel said, would be earmarked for an anti-drug campaign aimed at kids.

    The mayor's office noted 45,000-plus police hours were used last year in 18,298 arrests for possession of less than 10 grams of cannabis. Each case needed four officers to arrest and transport offenders, according to police statistics.

    Emanuel said since fewer cops are needed to issue a ticket than make an arrest, decriminalizing possession of small amounts of pot puts more officers on the streets.

    Ald. Bob Fioretti (2nd) offered tepid support and said he wants the ordinace revisited in 90 days, six months and one year to measure its effectiveness in reducing violent crime.

    "We need more police on the streets," Fioretti said. "We need them now. Let's find the revenue." 

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  • Mother of missing Florida tycoon says she won't give up

    Ellen Aguiar

    The mother of missing Fort Lauderdale, Fla., millionaire Guma Aguiar says that he was having marital problems before he disappeared.

    Ellen Aguiar also told NBCMiami.com that she is the kind of mother who never gives up hope.

    “I never gave up hope on Guma in his life and I don’t intend to now,” she said in the first, exclusive interview she has given since her 33-year-old son vanished a week ago.


    Ellen Aguiar said she last spoke to her son just hours before his fateful boat trip. The last known image of him is steering his boat into rough seas shortly after leaving his Fort Lauderdale home. The vessel later washed ashore.

    Tara Todras-Whitehill / AP file

    Oil tycoon Guma Aguiar disappeared during a boat trip in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. His fishing boat washed ashore with the engine running June 19. His wallet and phone were on the boat, but Aguiar was nowhere to be found.

    Guma Aguiar called his mother last Tuesday.

    "He wasn't really agitated but he was definitely preoccupied,” she recalled.

    See the original story at NBCMiami.com

    She said her son had had a lot on his mind lately, from stress at work to problems at home.

    “He did mention that Jamie was going to be filing for divorce and he believed that it would be ready the next day,” she said.

    Guma Aguiar made a fortune in 2006 when the Texas-based energy company he ran with his uncle was sold for a reported $2.5 billion, but he has been locked in a contentious legal battle with his uncle over money.

    Earlier: Missing Florida tycoon's wife reportedly asked for divorce hours before he disappeared

    Ellen Aguiar filed for control of her son’s estate last week, saying that she believed her son might have been in a delusional state or suffering from psychosis, according to court records. She amended that petition Monday, instead asking that a bank, a neutral third party, take control.

    Jamie Aguiar has declined interview requests. She and Guma Aguiar have four children.

    “There was an outcry from I guess Jamie and her attorney that I was trying to take over,” Ellen Aguiar said. “I would love to believe and I choose to believe that my daughter in law is going to act out of the purest motives, and that in grief we can make decisions that we then look at and can regret.”

    She said she hopes that her son is still alive, and that when he is ready he will come back home.

    “I am prepared to see him at my door. And I am prepared to hear that he didn't make it,” she said.

    Guma Aguiar, a 35-year-old multi-millionaire and philanthropist, disappeared in Florida on Tuesday. Yesterday, his boat was found beached with the engine still running, but he was nowhere to be found.

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  • After health care ruling, what happens to the money?

    With the Supreme Court decision on the Affordable Care Act expected Thursday, NBC's Tom Costello explains the benefits of the law and the costs to small business to insure their employees.

    Doctors, patients, politicians and legal scholars are eagerly awaiting the Supreme Court's decision on President Barack Obama's health care program on Thursday. But there's one group that is really on pins and needles: accountants and other number crunchers.

    Brian Mooar of NBC News contributed to this report by M. Alex Johnson of msnbc.com. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    If the court overturns the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, they're the ones who'll have to figure out what's going to happen to the $1 billion the federal government has already handed out to states and territories to establish state-regulated health care plans to help find public or private insurance for Americans eligible for federal subsidies.


    The court has three main options — it can uphold the entire law, strike down the entire law or strike down parts of it.

    Insurance exchange grants

    The federal government has already disbursed more than $1 billion to all but one state and three territories to start setting up health insurance exchanges:

    Alabama: $9,709,451
    Alaska: Did not apply
    Arizona: $30,877,097
    Arkansas: $8,866,411
    California: $40,421,383
    Colorado: $19,198,599
    Connecticut: $7,684,783
    Delaware: $4,400,096
    D.C.: $9,200,716
    * Florida: $1,000,000
    * Georgia: $1,000,000
    Hawaii: $15,440,144
    Idaho: $21,376,556
    Illinois: $38,917,831
    Indiana: $7,895,126
    Iowa: $8,753,662
    * Kansas: $1,000,000
    Kentucky: $66,567,613
    * Louisiana: $998,416
    Maine: $6,877,676
    Maryland: $34,413,430
    Massachusetts: $21,539,967
    Michigan: $10,849,077
    Minnesota: $27,148,929
    Mississippi: $21,143,618
    Missouri: $21,865,716
    * Montana: $1,000,000
    Nebraska: $6,481,838
    Nevada: $24,738,273
    * New Hampshire: $1,000,000
    New Jersey: $8,897,316
    New Mexico: $35,279,483
    New York: $87,681,149
    North Carolina: $13,396,019
    * North Dakota: $1,000,000
    * Ohio: $1,000,000
    * Oklahoma: $1,000,000
    Oregon: $16,652,301
    Pennsylvania: $34,832,212
    Rhode Island: $64,756,539
    * South Carolina: $1,000,000
    South Dakota: $6,879,569
    Tennessee: $9,110,165
    * Texas: $1,000,000
    * Utah: $1,000,000
    Vermont: $19,090,369
    * Virginia: $1,000,000
    Washington: $151,791,012
    West Virginia: $10,667,694
    Wisconsin: $38,757,139
    * Wyoming: $800,000
    American Samoa: $1,000,000
    Federated States of Micronesia: Did not apply
    Guam: $1,000,000
    Marshall Islands: Did not apply
    Northern Mariana Islands: Did not apply
    Palau: Did not apply
    Puerto Rico: $917,205
    U.S. Virgin Islands: $1,000,000
    Multistate Grant
    University of Massachusetts Medical School: $35,591,333

    Total: $1,015,465,913

    * Planning grant only

    Source: Msnbc.com research; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

    Some justices appeared to signal during arguments in March that they were skeptical of the law, especially the so-called individual mandate, the provision requiring people to buy insurance or pay a fine. Because of the mandate, the Obama administration insisted on provisions directing the states to set up the insurance plans, called health insurance exchanges, to find discounted coverage for uninsured or hard-to-insure people.

    Among them was Chief Justice John Roberts, who questioned whether the government can compel people to buy any product.

    "Can the government require you to buy a cell phone because that would facilitate responding when you need emergency services?" he asked.

    Justice Antonin Scalia drew a similar analogy.

    "Everybody has to buy food sooner or later. So you define the market as food, therefore everybody is in the market," he said during the March arguments. "Therefore, you can make people buy broccoli."

    Conservative justices expressed skepticism about the health care law during Supreme Court arguments. NBC News' Brian Mooar reports.

    What's worrying for supporters of the law is that it appears likely that Roberts will personally craft the ruling, said Tom Goldstein, the publisher of SCOTUSblog— SCOTUS is shorthand for Supreme Court of the United States.

    "John Roberts hasn't done anything, really, in major cases in March and April, at the end of the term, which means it's very likely that he assigned that decision to himself," Goldstein told NBC News.

    If that part of the law is upheld, the insurance plans must be in operation by 2014. But what if it isn't?

    No one really knows.

    That includes the White House, which has consistently said it expects the law to be upheld and is moving ahead accordingly.

    "Once that decision is rendered, we will make decisions about what to say about it," press secretary Jay Carney said Tuesday.

    If the law is overturned, there's nothing to stop the federal government from trying to recoup the money it has already distributed for the exchanges — a total of $1.015 billion to 49 states and a multistate planning project, according to an msnbc.com analysis of state disbursement figures provided by the Department of Health and Human Services.

    "If the whole thing really is unconstitutional, that has to mean that it is illegal to spend the money that way under current law," Joseph Antos, a health care analyst with the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative Washington policy institute, told Kaiser Health News.

    Kaiser adds:

    Retrieving unspent funds might be possible, but collecting money that's already been spent could prove problematic, especially for cash-strapped states still dealing with a weak economy.

    "My sense would be they would not recover the money. How do you recover the money? If it's spent, what do you do?" said Steven Lieberman, the president of Lieberman Consulting Inc. and the former deputy executive director for policy at the National Governors Association.

    Nor is it clear what the states would do. Nineteen states have put their plans on hold pending the Supreme Court ruling, according to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities(.pdf), but others — among them New York, Massachusetts and California — have signaled that they'll try to implement exchanges anyway.

    Another is Utah, where 30 percent of the people getting insurance under the exchange are doing so for the first time, said Patty Conner, director of the insurance exchange in Utah.

    That makes the plan "a good value to the state," Conner said, as reported by the Deseret News of Salt Lake City.

    And private insurers have indicated that they'll also go ahead with some of the law's provisions if it's struck down.

    Three of the nation's largest carriers — United Healthcare, Aetna and Humana — said this month that they would continue to let parents keep their children on their policies up to age 26, one of the most popular provisions of the entire plan, and would continue offering preventive services without copayments.

    United Healthcare and Humana (but not Aetna) also promised not to reinstate lifetime limits on coverage or cancel policies retroactively, two other provisions widely welcomed by analysts and patients' advocates.

    Even so, the picture is complicated by the fact that there's nothing to stop lawmakers from trying again to reform the health-care system if the law falls.

    "If this goes away, we still have to start dealing with the problem," Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., a member of the Ways and Means Committee, said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press."

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  • Man charged with hiring hitman to kill hitman who killed his wife

    The husband of a Detroit area woman who was strangled in January has been charged with plotting to have the man charged in her death killed. WDIV's Marc Santia reports.

    Police say a Detroit-area man was caught on tape trying to hire someone to kill the hitman who killed his wife, according to media reports.

    Authorities arrested Bob Bashara of Grosse Pointe Park on Monday and charged him with solicitation of murder, prosecutors said in a news conference, NBC station WDIV reported. The Detroit Free Press reported that he was arrested at a property he owned that police said had a sex dungeon in the basement.

    Officials allege Bashara offered to pay someone to murder Joseph Gentz, the man charged with first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the death of Jane Bashara, the Detroit Free Press reported. 


    Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy told reporters that Bashara had several meetings with someone between June 8 and June 25 with the intention of hiring the person to kill Gentz in the detention facility where he's being held before his July 23 court date. 

    "We are alleging that this defendant, Mr. Bashara, met with another person, not a law enforcement official, on several occasions for the purpose of hatching a plan to kill Mr. Gentz in jail," Worthy said.

    WDIV reported that the man whom Bashara is accused of soliciting to carry out the murder was cooperating with police and was wired for audio.

    Worth said Bashara also met with a second person whom he wanted to kill Gentz, the paper reported. 

    Watch US News crime videos on msnbc.com

    The Free Press reported that Bashara was a person of interest in his wife's death after he failed a polygraph examination, but he hasn't been charged. 

    Jane Bashara was strangled in her SUV in January. 

    The station reported that sources said Gentz, who had been Bashara's handyman on several real estate deals, killed Jane Bashara on her husband's order. 

    David Griem, Bashara's attorney, told the paper that his client believes he was being set up. 

    "He was shocked, he was surprised, he didn't know why he had been arrested," Griem told the paper.

    He said Bashara told him before being transferred to a county jail, "David, this is a setup."

    Griem told the paper that Bashara said he believes the person trying to set him up is someone he knows, but not well. Griem said Bashara thinks it's someone who sold furniture and appliances to him. 

    Griem said a man approached Bashara several times about the idea of killing Gentz, but turned him down each time. 

    Gentz's attorney, Susan Reed, told the paper she alerted officials that her client was in danger when someone told her about the plot against him. She didn't suspect Bashara of being involved until he was arrested.

    "It makes sense," she told the newspaper. 

    Gentz has been moved into segregation in jail for his own safety, the Free Press reported. WDIV reported that Bashara is on suicide watch in a county jail.

    At Bashara's arraignment Wednesday, bail was set at $15 million, the Free Press reported.

    If convicted, both Bashara and Gentz could each face up to life in prison.

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  • In Montana, small changes spur nation's biggest jump in college graduates

    Montana State University

    Bozeman and Montana State University are shown in an aerial photo taken in July 2010.

    BOZEMAN, Mont.—Inside the student union at Montana State University, freshmen and sophomores dig into pizza and espresso brownies and listen to motivational speeches while the marching band belts out the fight song (“We’ve got the vim, we’re here to win!”).

    It’s just what it looks and sounds like: a pep rally. But not the conventional kind.

    The students in this room are on academic probation, have poor grades or are struggling to adjust to college. All are at risk of dropping out. They’re being exhorted to keep trying, lured here by dinner, entertainment, prizes, even $50 apiece in cash, for coaching in time management, study skills and test-taking.

    Thanks to this event, along with a relentless barrage of free tutoring, “success advising” and other support, an estimated three-quarters of these potential dropouts will buck the odds and stay in school, up from barely half who once did.

    They’re accomplishing something else, too: helping Montana increase the proportion of its population with college degrees faster than any other state, three years after doing so became a goal of the Obama administration.


    While policymakers and university officials in other states continue to haggle over such things as making it easier for students to transfer their academic credits from one school to another, Montana has simply and quietly done them. In the process, it has raised the proportion of its 25- to 64-year-olds who have finished college by more than 6 percent over the last three years, the biggest improvement in the nation, during a time when the rest of the country barely edged up on this measure by 1 percent. Fifteen states actually lost ground.

    Related story: Nevada suffering a higher-education brain drain

    The economic stakes of this are huge. The United States has fallen from first to 16th in the world in the proportion of the population with college degrees, and the Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce projects a shortfall of three million college-educated educated workers by 2018. That gap could grow to 24 million by 2025, with a cost to the U.S. economy of $600 billion a year in lost wages and income taxes, according to the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems.

    There’s even greater urgency in Montana, where per-capita income is 41st among the 50 states and the number of jobs in agriculture, forestry and mining is declining while there’s been a surge in demand in higher-skill fields such as engineering. Yet Montana’s population is the fourth oldest in the country, with huge numbers of baby boomers nearing retirement and needing to be replaced by younger workers. Unless it can increase its ranks of college graduates, Montana will be short 96,000 of them by 2018—in a state with a population of about 1 million people—according to projections by Georgetown researchers.

    “This is about making sure we have a generation that is knowledgeable, that will contribute to the workforce,” said Carina Beck, Montana State’s director of career, internship and student employment services. “Because if we don’t do that, we’re in trouble.”

    So are many other states. But they’ve been paralyzed by budget cuts and mired in arguments over how to fix the problem. Nationwide, barely half of four-year college students graduate within six years, and fewer than one in five at two-year community colleges finish in three years. Only 38 percent of Americans have college degrees, when about 60 percent of jobs are expected to require them by 2018.

    'Let's get 'er done'
    Montana’s success in closing this gap hasn’t resulted from some secret formula, said Judy Heiman, who has worked with Montana officials as an outside consultant on this issue. It’s come from a willingness in this no-nonsense state simply to adopt the ideas that education advocates have been urging for years — but that policymakers, university administrators and faculty elsewhere continue to debate.

    By comparison, after she laid out some suggestions to the governor’s education adviser, Heiman recalled, she was taken aback at his abrupt response.

    “Let’s get ’er done,” he said, as if preparing to herd cattle on a ranch.

    “There really is that sort of approach there,” she said — “that this is what we need to do, so let’s just do it.”

    Montana started its push to churn out more degree-holders by bolstering its system of two-year colleges. Like other states, it had to overcome perceptions that two-year colleges are little more than trade schools for students whose grades aren’t good enough to go to four-year universities — a matter made worse in Montana, where many of them were, in fact, vocational high schools before being transformed, in the mid-1990s, into so-called “colleges of technology.”

    The two-year colleges were “the red-headed stepchildren” of the higher-education system, said Daniel Bingham, dean of the one in the state capital, Helena.

    Some of that reputation was deserved, said Bingham, who once taught prison inmates. “This felt like the state penitentiary when I walked in the door,” he said, gesturing around at the college’s main building, which has since been renovated.

    The state Legislature allocated enough money so that the two-year colleges could freeze tuition, even as the cost of public higher education nationwide skyrocketed. Today they’re about half the price of four-year universities, which makes them attractive places to earn the first two years’ worth of credits needed for a bachelor’s degree.

    More from The Hechinger Report

    But unlike at other institutions, where students often aren’t sure what their degrees will get them, the biggest draw is a sharply focused bright light at the end of the tunnel.

    Those who want to learn practical skills that require training and for which there are good jobs in Montana, such as welding and advanced machining, are given information about workplace demand and how much money they’re likely to make when they graduate. Those who want to move on to a four-year university and get that bachelor’s degree can see their futures plainly, too, since the state has standardized the names and numbers of 90 percent of the undergraduate courses at its public colleges and universities, making credits easy to transfer.

    “Having a clear path is very motivating,” said Heiman, a principal analyst in the California Legislative Analyst’s Office. “Students are much more likely to get lost in the system if they start taking something and find out it’s not going to transfer. It’s just so easy to get discouraged and just give up.”

    Same name for the same class
    The inability to transfer credits is a huge reason why many students in other states never graduate, education experts agree. Yet faculty often resist accepting credits from other institutions, even within the same university system, because of concerns about quality control.

    Montana is one of only seven states that have taken the seemingly simple step of giving identical courses the same names and numbers system-wide. And there was resistance even there.

    “It took some fist-banging,” said Tyler Trevor, associate commissioner for planning and analysis in the Montana University System. “It pisses off some old-school faculty. It’s about control, and it’s about faculty control.”

    Yet before they were brought into comprehensible alignment, Montana’s various public colleges and universities had 11 different names and numbers for an identical introductory English course, and 22 for introductory algebra, said Trevor. “And they were all the same class.”

    All of these changes have helped to double the number of students enrolling in Montana’s two-year colleges— an increase so great that the college of technology in Missoula had to put carpentry students to work adding modular offices and classrooms. And a much higher proportion of them are making it to graduation than before.

    “I wish I could roll out some 10-step program with a long name in academic terminology” to account for this, said Bingham. “But, no. We concentrate on the one person. And we cut out the extras.”

    A focus on the practical
    That’s another ironic advantage Montana has going for it: not a lot of extras. The state has historically invested comparatively little in higher education. It’s 43rd in per-capita support for colleges and universities, with some of the nation’s lowest salaries for faculty and staff. Montana’s entire public higher-education system has fewer students than some individual university campuses in other states — 47,500 in all, even after a 13 percent increase in enrollment over the last three years. (The Ohio State University, by contrast, has more than 64,000 students.) And, unlike other states, for better or worse, Montana has few obscure, low-enrollment programs, focusing instead on practical disciplines like engineering.

    “We never strayed from the basics,” said Donald Blackketter, chancellor of Montana Tech.

    Blackketter’s university, which sits on a hill overlooking the onetime copper-mining hub of Butte, with a statue of the copper baron Marcus Daly at the entrance, specializes in such disciplines as natural-resource engineering, restoration and ecology, and health care. It has an enviable 97 percent employment rate among recent graduates.

    “We don’t offer degrees in which you can’t get a job,” Blackketter said.

    That’s an outgrowth of the no-nonsense nature of this frontier state, said Gov. Brian Schweitzer, a Democrat, who has a bumper sticker on his office door that reads, “Montana is for engineers.”

    “I understand that we need a certain number of philosophers, and I understand that it’s important to have a certain number of people who study history. But we’re not currently creating a lot of jobs in those areas. So we have to look at what curriculums we really need,” said Schweitzer, a soil scientist by training. “People who are getting degrees in philosophy and history, God bless them, it’s wonderful that they’re critical thinkers. But now they’re going back to a college of technology to get a life skill to get a job.”

    The state has taken other steps to increase the proportion of its population with degrees. It lets some students get college credits out of the way while still in high school, having cut through red tape that would have barred university faculty from teaching them because of public-school teacher-certification requirements. It has expanded distance learning to reach far-flung rural residents, with more than 700 courses and 90 degrees available online. Twenty percent of Montana’s college students are enrolled online.

    Surrounding students with support
    There are still significant challenges. High-paying jobs in the booming eastern Montana oil fields threaten to divert potential students, slowing the enrollment surge. Only 3 percent of adults over 25 take college courses, the lowest rate in the West. And while it may be doing better at increasing the number of college graduates than every other state, Montana is still projected to fall short of the number it needs by 2018 — but not for lack of trying.

    Montana State University, surrounded by breathtaking views of the snow-capped Bridger Mountains and Hyalite Peak in the Rocky Mountains, provided 6,500 hours of free tutoring in the 2011-12 year, and fields an army of “success advisers.” It has changed the name of its Office of Student Services to the “Office of Student Success,” whose walls are plastered with inspirational messages and photos of successful alumni. With research showing that many freshmen drop out of college because they feel isolated or homesick, students who participate in the greatest number of extracurricular activities are rewarded with T-shirts, TVs and a grand prize of $1,000 toward tuition.

    “It’s focus, focus on why we’re here and what are some of the things we can start doing now,” said the university’s president, Waded Cruzado. “What we have to do is to surround our students with a network of support, the tools to succeed.”

    That seems surprisingly simple, conceded Matthew Caires, dean of students. “You would think so,” Caires said. “You would think a notion that we’re here to serve students would be sort of obvious.”

    In many other states, however, budget cuts have eliminated precisely those forms of support, making colleges and universities increasingly impersonal and difficult to navigate. Seeing an adviser, for example, can be an exercise in frustration. Academic advisers at community colleges may be responsible for more than 1,000 students apiece. At some California institutions, there are 1,700 students per counselor.

    Montana State has even added webinars for hovering parents, enlisting them in the campaign to watch for warning signs that their children might be contemplating dropping out. (“If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em,” Caires said.) It counsels faculty to spot problems, too — something Caires said few are trained to do in doctoral programs that focus on their disciplines, not their teaching.

    “I get this all the time” from faculty he encourages to report repeat absences or other problems among their students, Caires said: “ ‘Can I do that?’ Well, what are they going to do—sue you for caring too much?”

    Last year, this “early alert” system reported 1,100 students, who were invited to see a dean or an advisor to help sort things out. Half took up the offer.

    Montana’s notable friendliness helps, too. This is a state where a student’s mother once knitted a sweater for a statue of Montana State’s mascot, a bobcat.

    “Can we quantify the effect of that kind of support from the community?” asked Caires. “No. But I think it has to help.”

    What seems to be making a difference in Montana, in fact, is the combination of small changes that are adding up to big improvements.

    “It didn’t surprise us that these were the results,” said Schweitzer, the governor. “We just decided that it was going to happen.”

    This story, "In Montana, small changes spur nation’s biggest jump in college graduates,"was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University. 

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  • Company accused of deception turns GIBill.com over to Veterans Affairs

    The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs will receive a website, GIBill.com, from a marketing company accused of deceiving veterans by steering them to for-profit colleges while it masqueraded as an unbiased source of information.

    QuinStreet, a publicly held Foster City, Calif.-based company, on Wednesday announced that it has entered into an agreement with the attorneys general from 15 states who were investigating the company for potential violations of consumer protection laws.


    The company disclosed the settlement in an SEC filing

    The states involved in the settlement alleged that the company duped users by implying that military education benefits could only be used at schools listed on its website, when in fact it the list of schools was incomplete.

    GIBill.com also allegedly said its information was unbiased and comprehensive when in fact only clients of the company were listed on the site.

    Related: Pentagon, Congress eye new payday loan rules

    "This company preyed on our veterans who received educational benefits as a result of their military service to our country," Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway said in a news release after the settlement. "The actions were unconscionable and purposefully drove veterans to for-profit colleges who were perhaps more interested in getting their hands on the federal benefits than in educating our soldiers and their families."

    While it admits no wrongdoing, QuinStreet is donating the website’s address to Veterans Affairs and is paying $2.5 million to reimburse states for investigation costs, according to the SEC filing on the case.

    Related: Feds move to help out underwater military homeowners

    QuinStreet runs hundreds of websites that collect a fee by driving users to educational institutions.

    Current disclaimers on GIBIll.com point out there is no affiliation with the government. However, a year ago the disclaimers were absent from the site, ArmyTimes.com reported. 

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  • NYC, automats created lunch as we know it

    Whether it's a power lunch, a working lunch, a three martini lunch or ladies who lunch, a new exhibit at the New York Public Library looks at the history of the midday meal and what can arguably be called the first fast food lunch at the automat.

    By Marcus Harun
    NBC News

    Between noon and 2 p.m. Americans nationwide have their midday meal: lunch. But years ago it used to be a much bigger meal called dinner.

    New York City changed that.

    In the 1900s, New York was industrializing very quickly and the work culture was changing. Bosses were stricter with work schedules and workers only had a half-hour to eat at midday. Employees no longer had the time to go home to eat their family meal, so dinner was pushed to the evening. As a result, a high-speed midday meal called “quick lunch” was born.


    In a new exhibit, the New York Public Library tracks the evolution of lunch over the past 150 years. “Lunch Hour NYC,” on display now through February 2013, is complete with a restored version of an automat, an automatic restaurant that serves fresh food vending machine-style.  Workers would rush to the automat and grab anything they could afford and ran back to work.

    "The food was really good, it was clean, it was fresh," exhibit co-curator Rebecca Federman told NBC News. "It was a different kind of environment than many of us see today and I think that you can't help but have fond memories of dining in such an environment."

    The automat, which first opened in New York City in 1912, served everything from pie to baked beans and every item costed five cents.

    In the 1900s, employers emphasized the importance of making more money, working faster, and producing efficiently, Federman said. Automats flourished in the fast-paced environment.

    "People from other countries coming to visit New York for the first time would always comment about how quickly people ate, specifically lunch," Federman said. "We realized quite quickly that lunch was a topic rich in interesting details that were somewhat specific to New York City."

    Scraping together a lunch at home

    At the turn of the 20th century immigrants poured into crowded multi-family New York City tenements. Most families did not get to sit down for a daily meal together, Shapiro said. Many women and children would do piece work for garment manufacturers or shell walnuts at home during the day while their father was at work. A mother and four children would typically have 10 cents to eat lunch daily.

    "People would work in the flat all day long, there was no room for storage, there would have been no room to keep a lot of food," Lunch Hour NYC co-curator Laura Shapiro said. "So, our whole idea of the specialness of a meal at home just didn't exist; it couldn't."

    The exhibit recounts stories of mothers who would send their children to pushcarts on the street to put a meal together for 10 cents. Examples of home lunches include a half loaf of bread, a whole loaf of stale bread or a can of salmon.

    Using cutouts of food items, children who visit the lunch exhibit have the chance to assemble their own "10-cent lunch." The activity challenges children to decide how to efficiently spend their money and feed their families.

    Evolution of the school lunch

    In the 1890s a national school lunch program did not exist in the United States. Kids were supposed to go home to eat lunch – but not all of them were able to. Many poor families couldn’t feed their children breakfast and had no food to eat at lunch.

    "They were often underfed, they were often quite thin and would fall asleep in class, and a lot of the reformers at the time noticed this and made sure to make an effort to get the food served within the school," Federman said.

    In 1908 a charity introduced the first school lunch program in New York City for three cents. By 1920, the Board of Education took over the program and offered lunch to all of the city’s school children. Twenty years later, the federal government adapted the program and schools across the nation began serving lunch, Federman said. 

    Just one more example of how New York changed lunch as we know it.

    “The conditions in New York were work, speed, time, and making money,” Shapiro said. “All those things were the kind of driving engines of life in New York and lunch emerged from that energy.”

    To learn more about the exhibit, visit the NY Public Library Website.

     

  • Father of slain lesbian teen in Texas: 'Justice will be served'

    Courtesy of Jillian Manuel

    A makeshift memorial was set up near the site in Portland, Tex., where a couple found Mollie Judith Olgin, 19, and Mary Kristene Chapa, 18, after they were shot last week.

     

    Updated at 6:45 p.m. ET: The father of a young woman who was shot along with her girlfriend last week in a South Texas park is mourning the loss of his “guardian angel,” telling a local television station that “justice will be served” in the case.

    Mario Olgin’s daughter, Mollie, 19, and her girlfriend, Mary Kristene Chapa, were found in a grassy area of the park by a couple Saturday morning with gunshot wounds to the head, Portland, Texas, Police Chief Randy Wright has said. Olgin, originally from nearby Ingleside but recently living in Corpus Christi, died; Chapa, of Sinton, was rushed to an area hospital where she is making an “amazing” recovery in the intensive care unit, her brother told NBC Latino.


    The couple had planned to spend some time in the park before going to see a movie, Olgin told kiiitv.com on Tuesday. When his daughter, a first-year college student who wanted to become a psychologist, didn’t show up for work on Saturday, Olgin said he knew something was wrong.

    “It was not like Mollie. … If she had some place to be she was going to be there,” he said. “I immediately had bad feelings (about) it.”

    Wright said police had recovered a bullet casing from a large-caliber gun at the scene, leading investigators to believe the shootings occurred where the pair was found, but they haven’t found the weapon. Two witnesses said they heard what could have been gunshots or firecrackers just before midnight last Friday but did not report it at the time, he said.

    A motive had not been established, he said in the statement.

    "Information from family and friends indicates that Mollie and Mary were engaged in a same-sex relationship. However, there is no current evidence to indicate the attacks were motivated by that relationship," he said.

    Wright told msnbc.com on Monday that: “It appears as if … this was not just a random attack but that’s something that we really have to develop over time.”

    Police are investigating the shooting of two teenage girls in a same-sex relationship in a small Texas community along the Gulf of Mexico. KRIS reporter Lindsay Curtis has the story.

    Because of her medical condition, Chapa has not been formally interviewed about what happened, he said.

    Chapa’s brother, Hilario, said that his sister was making physical progress on the right side of her body but doctors were awaiting a response from the left. She was able to communicate via sign language.

    “The doctors say it’s too early, no one is using the word ‘paralyzed,’” he told NBC Latino. “They say we should be so happy with her progress after three or four days. She’s very strong. She survived a very tough ordeal but her recovery is coming in strides and  impressing everybody.”

    He was hesitant to share many details about the search for a suspect.

    “We don’t know who did this to her, she hasn’t given us a name,” he said. “We’re under the impression she doesn’t know who did it. We don’t know if it’s a hate crime.”

    Teen lesbian couple found shot in Texas park
    Friends reel from shooting of teen lesbian couple in Texas

    The Texas Rangers have joined the investigation, which is being led by the Portland Police.

    “We offered our assistance and they accepted and we have been actively involved in the investigation since Sunday," Tom Vinger, spokesman for Texas Department of Public Safety, wrote to msnbc.com in an email.

    The park, a nature area with some parts overgrown and no lights, was often frequented by visitors during the day, but not at night. It is located along a bluff overlooking a bay, Wright said, with some homes situated nearby.

    Courtesy of Jillian Manuel

    Rainbow ribbons, messages, flowers and cut-out hearts were left near the site in Portland, Tex., where a couple found Mollie Judith Olgin, 19, and Mary Kristene Chapa, 18, after they were shot.

    “We’re not really sure how they got to the point that they were found,” he said. “It is a scenic overlook with a wooden deck and there is a place at the edge of the deck where you can actually go down a very steep incline into a grassy area that leads down to the shoreline, and that’s where they were found.”

    The crime rate is low in Portland, north of Corpus Christi on the Gulf of Mexico, Wright said. The last homicide occurred two years ago.

    The couple’s friends and well-wishers placed rainbow ribbons, goodbye messages, flowers and cut-out hearts on Sunday around the site where Olgin and Chapa were found. On Friday, a candlelight vigil and walk will be held for them.

    Frank Reyna, a 19-year-old university student, said he grew up with Chapa and met Olgin his sophomore year of high school. He described Chapa as an athlete who played softball, and said Olgin, a student at a nearby university, was focused on academics but also was a big joker. He last saw them together at a local coffee shop in May, which was the first time he saw them out as a couple.

    “It’s something that I think all of us are going to carry with us for a while,” Reyna told msnbc.com. “It’s going to take a while to get past this, the idea that there is somebody still out there that did this to these two amazing, beautiful people, and that they’re walking free right now.”

    Friends said the pair had been together since mid-February.

    The couple’s relationship “was a readily accepted thing,” Reyna added, and was not what their friends focused on.

    “We focused on their personalities and how they got along with everybody else … their kindheartedness and their ability to just make other people smile and make each other smile,” he said. “We didn’t care … what they were, it’s who they were.”

    Jillian Manuel, 20, who used to work with Olgin, said it was hard to return to the park on the weekend knowing what had happened there. She went to help create the makeshift memorial, where friends shared stories and tears, and to check the scene, where she recalled the difficulty of watching Olgin’s car get towed.

    “We’re … hoping to kind of just remember Molly, remember her and just share our memories,” Manuel said of their planned vigil. “And then … send off prayers for Christine and just celebrate them.”

    The family will hold a memorial on Friday before the candlelight vigil and walk. Olgin welcomed the outpouring of support in the wake of his daughter’s death.

    “She was happy,” he told kiiitv.com. “She didn’t need for her life to end the way it did. Justice will be served.”

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  • Adult chimp mauls baby chimp to death in front of Los Angeles Zoo visitors

    An adult male chimp mauled a baby chimp to death in front of people visiting the Los Angeles Zoo.

    An adult chimpanzee mauled a baby chimp to death Tuesday inside their exhibit at the Los Angeles Zoo in front of a crowd of visitors, zoo officials said.

    The 3-month-old chimp was the first to be born at the zoo habitat in 13 years, and she was gradually being introduced to the coed troop of 15 adults when an adult male chimpanzee fatally injured her in their habitat, zoo spokesperson Jason Jacobs said in a statement.

    Los Angeles Zoo

    Gracie, a chimp at the Los Angeles Zoo, holds her baby. The unnamed infant was mauled to death by an adult male chimp Tuesday.

    The unnamed infant was born in early March to a chimp at the zoo named Gracie, who “had proven to be a caring mother,” the zoo said. Gracie was allowed to keep the chimp overnight to grieve her loss.  

    Zoo staff didn’t witness the attack, but said it happened in front of a crowd of visitors.

    “I did talk to a couple of visitors as I was coming up here, tried to help them process what they had seen,” Director John Lewis told NBCLosAngeles.com. “We also had some other visitors help us get a better understanding.”


    Deputy Director Denis Verret said grief counseling was made available for visitors and staff.

    Zoo officials said acts of aggression among the troop of chimps were not expected.

    “Everything that we saw has been positive, all the chimps have been very interested, wanting to either be close to, or touch the baby,” Jennie Becker, the zoo’s curator of mammals, told KCAL-TV.

    Male chimpanzees are well known for violence, including the killing of the young. Scientists speculate that clashes over stomping grounds might fuel these conflicts, and the human encroachment on chimpanzee territory, such as in zoo environments, may exacerbate them.

    Studies and observations in recent years have also shown that male chimpanzees often attack the infants of rival chimps both in the wild and in captivity, especially if a desired female is involved, according to zoo officials.

    “Chimpanzee behavior can sometimes be aggressive and violent and the zoo is sorry that visitors had to be exposed to this,” Jacobs said. “This is a heartbreaking and tragic loss for the zoo and especially for the Great Ape Team who have worked diligently to care for the infant and its mother since birth.”

    Zoo officials were still investigating the circumstances behind the attack but said they may need to consider changing their approach to new arrivals.

    “We’re going to have to consider, at what age maybe we introduce babies to the group,” Becker said. “I didn’t think that this was going to be a problem. These are all experienced, social chimps.”

    The zoo in Griffith Park houses on of the nation’s largest troops of chimpanzee – 15 in all – in a North American zoo, officials said. 

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  • Nevada suffering a higher-education brain drain

    To Nevada’s unhappy distinction as the state with the nation’s highest unemployment and foreclosure rates, add this: The proportion of its population with college degrees — already one of the lowest in the country — is falling the fastest.

    At a time when it’s a national priority to increase the number of degree-holders, Nevada’s high jobless rate has sent its best-educated residents off to find work in other states, while huge tuition and fee increases have caused university enrollment to plummet. And the high concentration of workers in industries such as construction, who don’t have degrees but also can’t find jobs elsewhere, has pulled the average lower.


    “Nationwide, the recovery in the job market has favored those with more education over those with less,” said Stephen Brown, director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas. So while people with college degrees are leaving, “The less educated haven’t been able to move to find work.”

    Related story: Biggest US jump in college graduates? This state has it

    Nevada has also been slow to produce new graduates. State budget cuts have propelled a 160 percent tuition increase over 10 years at public campuses such as UNLV, even as hundreds of courses have been dropped, programs eliminated and salaries cut for faculty and staff. In the academic year that just ended, there were 10,000 fewer students enrolled in Nevada’s public universities than in the year before, an 8.2 percent drop.

    Having become the best case study for why going to college is important, Nevada is trying to reverse this slide by reinventing the way it funds higher education.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    “This depression has very cruelly brought the message home to us: We need to change our basic economy, and in order to diversify and develop our economy, we require a more skilled workforce and more educated citizenry,” said Dan Klaich, chancellor of the Nevada System of Higher Education. “That’s just the beginning and the end of it — and if we don’t do that, this economy will continue to stagnate.”

    More from The Hechinger Report

    Nevada officials plan to fund public higher education based not on enrollment, as has been the case historically, but on such things as how many students actually graduate.

    “Like everybody else in the country,” Klaich said, “we’ve realized that access without reasonable pathways to successful completion is a false promise.”

    This story, "In Nevada, a higher-education brain drain," was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University. 

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  • Chicago police to partner with anti-violence group CeaseFire to curb shootings

    Chicago police will try to reduce the city’s growing murder rate by partnering for the first-time with anti-violence group CeaseFire, which trains ex-cons to attack violence as if it were a spreading disease.

    Chicago-based CeaseFire, whose “violence interrupters” programs have been replicated and studied in several U.S. cities, as well as in Iraq, will receive $1 million from the Windy City’s Department of Public Health beginning July 13.

    CeaseFire previously received state and federal money, but not city funding, the group said.


    The partnership was proposed after Memorial Day weekend shootings left 10 dead, pushing the city’s homicide count to 200 for the year, the Chicago Sun-times reported. By June 17, the Sun Times said, the city’s murders were running 38 percent ahead of the same period in 2011.

    The new funding will boost the number of CeaseFire program workers in Chicago to about 140, up from 100, Dr. Gary Slutkin, CeaseFire founder, told msnbc.com.  

    See the NBCChicago.com story 

    Slutkin last weekend was on a U.S. Conference of Mayors panel with mayors from Baltimore, Philadelphia, New Orleans and Fresno to encourage other cities to support CeaseFire’s model, which can be seen online in PBS’ “Frontline” documentary “The Interrupters.”

    Slutkin, an internal medicine and infectious diseases specialist, said CeaseFire takes a public health approach to public safety.

    “Violence has been misunderstood,” Slutkin said. “In the absence of a correct strategy, violence will go up, down or sideways in waves. The only way to predictably reduce it is using methods that interrupt it.”

    Violence is perpetuated as people consider it the norm, he warned.

    “You get a situation where someone looks at someone’s girlfriend, now the expectation is it’s normal to shoot someone,” he said.

    He said CeaseFire tries to intervene with the people who are at highest risk for violence.

    Slutkin acknowledged a Sun-Times report that six ex-felons have been arrested while working for CeaseFire. However, he said, it's rare. The program sees just a 1 or 2 percent relapse rate, he said, with only two people out of 600 hired over 12 years having been convicted.

    Workers go through intensive training, are hired by panels and are subjected to regular drug tests, Slutkin said.

    On the street, they work like disease-control workers.

    “What we do is figure out who the people are who are spreading the disease, the people most likely to be shooters,” said Amy Ellenbogen, who directs Save Our Streets Crown Heights, a Brooklyn, N.Y., program replicating CeaseFire and serving about 20,000 residents in a 40-block area.

    From an eight-member team, four work as street-outreach counselors, trying to get the people most at risk of committing violence to change their focus, perhaps toward getting a GED or job, she told msnbc.com.

    “Street outreach is incredibly important, knowing the players and how to persuade them to make better choices,” Ellenbrogen said.

    Another four are the interrupters, who step in to mediate potentially violent situations.

    “We’ve mediated over 100 incidences” since the team was hired in February 2010, Ellenbogen said.

    Like other public health campaign, the program tries to “change the norms of the community,” which means making gun violence not acceptable.

    Merchants have signs in window that count the days since last shooting; pizza boxes at a local parlor carry the words “Stop shooting, start living”; neighborhood posters proclaim, “Don’t shoot, I want to  grow up.”

    Community meetings are held when a shooting does occur, she said. The number of shooting deaths dropped to 13 last year from 25 the year before in the area served, she said.  

    May 29: Ceasefire director and University of Illinois/Chicago epidemiologist, Gary Slutkin, featured in NBC's Kevin Tibbles' report, describes his organization's approach to reducing gang violence.

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  • Report: Stowaways in container on ship in New Jersey port

    AP Photo/Julio Cortez

    A police official stands near the entrance to a terminal at Port Newark in Newark, N.J., on Wednesday as Immigration and Customs officials investigate reports of stowaways.

      

    Updated at 7 p.m. ET: Immigration agents were called to Port Newark in New Jersey Wednesday morning amid reports that a ship docked there has multiple stowaways aboard. None were found by Wednesday evening.

    Inspectors first became suspicious when they heard knocking and other noises "consistent with the sounds of people inside" coming from a cargo container below deck while the ship was anchored in the Ambrose Channel outside the Port of New York and New Jersey, Coast Guard spokesman Charles Rowe told NBCNewYork.com.

    After hearing the noises during the routine overnight inspection, Coast Guard officials stayed aboard the Ville d'Aquarius, which had ports of call in Pakistan, Egypt, and India before its arrival, as it docked in Newark this morning, reported NorthJersey.com.

    The container is believed to have been put on the ship in one of two ports in India -- either Mundra or Nahva Sheva -- before the ship left India on June 7, Rowe told NBCNewYork.com. The ship's last port before the United States was in Egypt on June 15.

    The ship's manifest said the container was carrying machine parts to be unloaded in Norfolk, Va.

    The Ville d'Aquarius is registered in Cyprus, and its current voyage originated in the United Arab Emirates. Initial reports had stated the ship started out in Pakistan.

    NBC chopper video captured federal officials swarming around the New Jersey dock to investigate the vessel. More than a dozen ambulances also lined up in the morning, but as the day wore on with no findings other than cargo, emergency personnel started dispersing.

    Details about the number of alleged stowaways were not immediately available.

    "If there are people or other material, and we don't know what they are, we are simply covering all the bases," Rowe told New Jersey's Star-Ledger.

    An official told NBCNewYork.com "it will take a significant amount of time to reach the container." 

    Cargo containers were being brought onto the pier for examination. By midday, about 40 containers had been inspected among the approximately 2,000 on board.

    Wednesday evening, officials with the Department of Homeland Security said they had inspected about one-third of the containers and no stowaways had been found. The search was expected to continue overnight, they said.

    Officials say they get stowaways in New York harbors about six times a year, NBCNewYork.com reported.

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  • In book, Baez says cops should have realized Casey Anthony wasn't 'playing with a full deck'

    Baez's book comes out on July 3.

    ORLANDO, Fla. - The Florida mother who was acquitted last year of murdering her 2-year-old daughter had mental health issues that contributed to her habitual lying, the lead attorney in her criminal case says in a new book.

    In "Presumed Guilty, Casey Anthony: The Inside Story," Jose Baez said detectives should have realized Casey Anthony had built a "fantasy world," and her lies weren't evidence of guilt but signs of someone with "serious mental health issues."

    The 421-page book is scheduled for release July 3. The Associated Press purchased a copy Tuesday.

    Anthony is serving probation for an unrelated charge at an undisclosed location in Florida. She couldn't be reached for comment.

    Describing how Anthony led detectives on a wild goose chase, even taking them to Universal Studios where she falsely claimed she had a job, Baez writes, detectives "should have stopped and realized, 'Wait a minute, we're not dealing with someone who is playing with a full deck.'"

    Anthony originally told detectives that her daughter, Caylee, was taken by a babysitter in June 2008, and that she didn't report her missing for more than a month because she was searching for the toddler on her own. During Anthony's trial last year, Baez argued that the little girl accidentally drowned in the family swimming pool while Anthony and her father, George, were at home. Anthony panicked from the traumatic effects of being sexually abused by her father and George Anthony hid the body, according to the defense argument.

    George Anthony denied the defense's allegations that he abused Casey and helped her cover up Caylee's death.

    BenBella Books, who published Baez's book, calls the book an "all-access pass" to the trial, from the day Baez met Anthony for the first time to the weeks the defense spent in the judge's chambers.

    "This is NOT a 'Casey Anthony is innocent' book," BenBella said in a press release. "It is a book about the facts, beyond the headlines and off the record."

    The book is also partly autobiographical, tracking Baez's journey as a former high school dropout to a lawyer.

    During the trial, prosecutors had contended that Anthony suffocated Caylee with duct tape because she wanted to be free to hit the nightclubs and spend time with her boyfriend. Jurors acquitted Anthony of first-degree murder but convicted her of four misdemeanor counts of lying to investigators.

    Baez repeats the allegations of sexual abuse in greater detail in the book, saying it contributed to Anthony's mental health issues. Mark Lippman, an attorney for George Anthony, refused to comment on the book Tuesday because he hadn't read it.

    Why Casey Anthony didn't testify
    Anthony's defense contemplated having her testify until the very end of the trial but then decided it wasn't necessary. "We had everything to lose and very little to gain," Baez writes.

    Baez takes aim at the reporters who covered the case, detectives who investigated it, "groupies" who attached themselves to it and the case's original judge who Baez says filed a complaint against him with the Florida Bar. The complaint was later dropped. Prosecutor Jeff Ashton undergoes the harshest criticism by Baez, who calls him "a coward" for not showing up at Anthony's sentencing for the misdemeanors since he was making the talk shows round after the trial.

    Baez is critical of many of Circuit Judge Belvin Perry's rulings during the trial but praises the judge for allowing him to pick a fair jury.

    Baez doesn't say where Anthony currently is hiding but he provides a glimpse of the first few hours after she was released from jail last July, time mostly devoted to eluding the media. After escorting Anthony out of the Orange County Jail and into a waiting SUV, Baez rode with Anthony to a parking garage where five cars driven by members of the legal team were waiting. Baez and Anthony got into one car which departed the garage at the same time as the other four. Each car drove in a different direction so reporters following Baez and Anthony wouldn't know which one they were in or where they were heading.

    Baez said Anthony's first meal out of jail was a cheeseburger, fries and milkshake from Steak 'n Shake. Baez and Anthony then drove to a municipal airport where a private plane took them to the Florida Panhandle resort community of St. George Island. There, members of their legal team and their families met up with them. Anthony then went to New York until she had to return to Florida to serve her probation sentence.

    Related: Casey Anthony's attorney pens book about the case

    The three-year case took an emotional toll on Baez, according to his book. He suffered depression after the complaint was filed against him and he found it difficult to find joy in his wife's pregnancy.

    Baez also criticizes the way he was portrayed in the media as an inexperienced attorney taking on one of the highest-profile criminal cases in recent memory.

    "The public may have been convinced that I was an idiot but I let it all roll off my back," he writes.

    In an interview last month about the book, Baez explained why he thought the case attracted so much attention.

    "It's probably because Casey is the girl next door," Baez told The Palm Beach Post on May 25.

    Baez co-wrote the book with Peter Golenbock, an author who holds a law degree. Golenbock has written seven New York Times bestsellers, according to the publisher, BenBella.

    Requests for comment from BenBella were not immediately returned to msnbc.com.

    A source told RadarOnline last week that Anthony also hopes to write a book by publishing excerpts from the journal she's kept since Caylee disappeared. Shortly after her trial ended last July, book publishers started expressing interest in her story.

    "This is a story with biblical overtones — a mother and a daughter and a murder. What untold thing happened here?" Robert Gottlieb, president of the Trident Group of book agents, told USATODAY.com last July, adding Trident would be interested in publishing a manuscript from her.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • University of Virginia board reinstates ousted president after outcry

    Preston Gannaway / The Virginian-Pilot via AP

    University of Virginia President Teresa Sullivan weaves through supporters and media after she was reinstated on Tuesday.

    The University of Virginia reinstated its president Tuesday just over three weeks after ousting her amid outcry from faculty, donors and students.

    The 15-member Board of Visitors voted unanimously to reinstate President Teresa Sullivan during a brief meeting, after a motion from a former university rector, according to a university press release.

    Outside the meeting, faculty, students and others had organized a demonstration to show support for Sullivan, the university’s eighth president and first female leader.

    “I want to partner with you in bringing about what’s best for the university,” Sullivan, 62, said after reinstatement.


    University Rector Helen Dragas, who was central in the initial move to oust the president, apologized for actions that sparked the controversy and pledged that she will work with Sullivan to help the university emerge stronger than before, according to a university press release.

    “The situation became enormously dramatized and emotionally charged,” Dragas told the group before the vote was taken. “I sincerely apologize for the way this was presented and you deserve better. I believe real progress is more possible than ever now.” 

    The vote to reinstate the president came after 17 tumultuous days that began with the board’s sudden announcement June 10 that they had accepted Sullivan’s resignation midway through a five-year contract.

    U.Va officials said that Sullivan would step down in August, citing concerns for state and federal funding, declining faculty compensation and accountability for academic quality and productivity.

    “Yet in the face of these challenges, the University still lacks an updated strategic plan,” Dragas wrote in statement to the board last week. “We deserve better – the rapid development of a plan that includes goals, costs, sources of funds, timelines and individual accountability.”

    Sullivan's unexpected ouster triggered complaints about the board's explanation and brought a groundswell of support for her.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    Sullivan defended her performance at a board meeting last week, citing initiatives she had taken, including hiring a new provost and chief operating officer and adopting a new budget model that decentralizes financial planning.

    Gov. Bob McDonnell, who appointed half of the board members, had warned Friday that he would seek the resignations of all the members if the group failed to resolve the controversy. As the meeting opened Tuesday, Dragas said the decision of the board would be definitive on the matter.

    The board on Monday named McIntyre School of Commerce Dean Carl Zeithaml as interim president. Zeithaml said he agreed to take the interim post because he wanted to move the university in a “very positive way” but “did not agree with the decision to remove” Sullivan.

    After Tuesday’s meeting of the board, member W. Heywood Fralin acknowledged missteps had been made.

    “It is my opinion that everyone agrees the process was flawed,” he said. “It can never be repeated when important decisions are being made.”

    Fralin said he also disagreed with Sullivan’s resignation in the first place.

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  • Police: Man bites, and kills, dog while high on drugs

    Police say a man was high on drugs when he killed a neighbor's dog in Waco, Texas. 

    Michael Terron Daniel, 22, is charged with cruelty to a non-livestock animal, a felony because the dog died, NBC station KCEN of Waco reported.  

    KCEN reported that Daniel is accused of going  to a home on June 14 while high on the synthetic marijuana drug K-2, assaulting several people and chasing a neighbor on his hands and knees while growling like a dog. 


     

    Waco Police Dept.

    Michael Terron Daniel was high on the synthetic drug K-2 when witnesses say he bit into a family pet and killed it.

    Witnesses told police that Daniel then grabbed a medium-sized black dog and took it to the front porch, where he started beating and strangling it, the Waco Tribune-Herald reported. 

    The paper reported he began biting and ripping pieces of the animal's flesh. 

    Watch US News crime videos on msnbc.com

    KCEN reported that when police arrived, Daniel was sitting on the front porch with the dead dog on his lap. Officers told the station he was incoherent and covered in the dog's blood and fur. 

    The Tribune-Herald reported Daniel told police he was on a "bad trip" because of the drug. He was taken to a hospital, then arrested on Monday.

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  • Some offshore Arctic waters to be leased for energy drilling, US says

    Ted S. Warren / AP

    This Shell drilling rig, upgraded in Seattle, will soon head to Alaska, where Shell hopes to drill exploratory wells in Arctic waters.

    Parts of America’s Arctic waters, long a battleground between environmentalists and the energy industry, will be open for oil and natural gas drilling in four years, the Obama administration said Tuesday -- the same day Shell announced it had successfully tested a new spill containment system for its planned Arctic exploration this summer. 

    Details will be released Thursday, but Interior Secretary Ken Salazar told reporters the idea is to adopt "targeted leasing" -- opening some areas in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas for drilling while protecting others critical for native subsistence and ecosystem health.

    Shell is awaiting the final permits to explore in the region this summer, and on Tuesday said a device to cap any spill was successfully tested in waters off Seattle. "The capping stack was deployed to a depth consistent with the shallow water scenario we will encounter off the coast of Alaska," the oil giant said in a statement.


    How the industry prepares for spills has come under greater scrutiny since the 2010 BP oil spill disaster, where the containment system failed.

    Environmentalists oppose drilling in America's Arctic due to the sensitive ecosystem it provides for polar bears, walruses, whales and seals. 

    Shell

    A newly designed "capping stack" is tested by Shell in waters off Seattle, Wash., on Monday.

    "There is no viable way to clean up oil spilled into the Arctic Ocean," Kristen Miller of the Alaska Wilderness League said in a statement. "The Arctic is perhaps the most extreme region on the planet with subzero temperatures, hurricane force storms and long periods of darkness. Spill response capacity is practically nonexistent in these remote, icy waters -- the nearest Coast Guard station is more than 1,000 miles away."

    Shell is required to have a flotilla of spill response boats should its capping system fail, and Salazar said no commercial drilling would proceed if Interior concludes that spills cannot be contained.

    Shell's work "will be conducted under the closest oversight and most rigorous safety standards in the history of the United States," he said from Norway, where he and ministers of other Arctic nations were talking about the region's energy wealth.

    Salazar was confident Shell would receive the final permits for exploratory drilling this summer. 

    "It is highly likely that the permits will be issued" because Shell has been in compliance so far, he said. In past years, and before strict standards, 30 exploratory wells were drilled in Alaska's Arctic waters with no harm, and before strict standards, Salazar noted. 

    Salazar added that other Arctic nations like Canada, Russia and Norway were busy developing Arctic energy fields and that the U.S. should also be a player as long as protections are in place.

    "These resources, if developed safely, can be important components in the 'all of the above' energy strategy," he said in a speech at the Norway meeting. The strategy was crafted after Republicans accused President Barack Obama of blocking traditional energy in favor of renewables like solar and wind.

    The Arctic areas will be part of Interior's five-year offshore lease plan being sent to Congress on Thursday.

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