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  • Superman roller coaster strands riders for 2 hours at Six Flags

    A dozen riders were rescued from a roller coaster at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in California after the ride stalled. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    A new roller coaster stalled 150 feet above the ground Sunday afternoon, stranding a dozen riders for almost two hours at a Northern California amusement park, according to local reports.

    Twelve passengers on the Superman Ultimate Flight roller coaster at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in Vallejo, Calif., became stranded atop the park’s newest ride when it stopped at its crest around 2:30 p.m., Six Flags spokeswoman Nancy Chan told the Vallejo Times-Herald.

    Vallejo fire rescue crews were dispatched to the scene at about 3 p.m. after receiving an emergency call.


    Park engineers prepared a large crane equipped with a big personnel bucket to reach the riders, and firefighters took up water and sunblock.

    Park officials said crews had trained for this type of mission.

    “We arrived; we put the crane that’s on site into place,” Vallejo Fire Department Batt. Chief Raymond Jackson said. “We’ve actually done some training in this in case this situation arose.”

    Jackson said firefighters were prepared to take riders down individually in the crane if the coaster couldn’t be restarted, however, a mechanic managed to get the ride going again and riders were lowered safely to the ground.

    Craig Cannon / NBC Bay Area

    A dozen riders were stuck on top of Six Flags Discovery Kingdom's Superman Ultimate Flight roller coaster this afternoon in Vallejo, Calif., for about two hours after it stalled near the top.

    Vallejo fire crews said no one needed medical attention and all 12 passengers walked away safely.

    It was unclear what caused the two-car train to stop, the Vallejo Times-Herald reported. Chan said the ride will be closed for a “thorough safety inspection.” She added that the ride will reopen when the inspection is completed at a time to be determined.

    “If (a ride) stops, it usually detects something and it stops for safety reasons,” Chan said.

    The ride, which opened at the park on June 30, holds two cars with six riders each and reaches a maximum speed of 62 miles per hour. According to the park's website, it features a launch coaster using electromagnetic propulsion, two upside-down twists and two vertical rolls. At 15 stories high, the coaster is ranked alongside rides with the tallest inversions in the world. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Florida airboat captain who lost hand to gator charged with unlawful feeding

     

    A Florida airboat captain who lost his hand to a 9-foot alligator last month now faces charges of unlawful feeding of a gator.

    Wallace Weatherholt, 63, was arrested and charged with the misdemeanor Friday, the Fort Myers News-Press reported. The Everglades City airboat captain posted a $1,000 bond and is set to appear in court Aug. 22.

    According to the News-Press, Weatherholt was leading a family on a tour of the Everglades on June 12 when the alligator bit his hand off at the wrist.

    Alligator killed after biting off hand of Everglades airboat captain

    The family on the tour said Weatherholt hung a fish over the side of the boat, The Associated Press reported, and had his hand just above the water when the alligator attacked.


    "I was kind of freaked out about that because that's kind of weird," Everglades City resident Sarah Goff told NBC affiliate WBBH at the time. "You don't feed them. They can get used to that and get aggressive."

    The gator was captured and killed after the attack so the man's hand could be retrieved from the animal's stomach, Florida Fish and Wildlife officers told WBBH. The hand was found, but it could not be reattached.

    A Florida airboat captain loses his lower arm while allegedly attempting to feed an alligator by hand for tourists. WBBH's Julian Johnson reports.

    Feeding gators is illegal, and those who feed an alligator face a second-degree misdemeanor, with a fine of up to $500 and possible jail time, the News-Press reported.

    David Weathers, an alligator trapper and owner of several alligators, told the News-Press gators have a natural fear of humans, but once they are fed by humans, they lose that fear.

    “If they see us, they take off. They see us as these giants hovering over them. They’re not going to attack unless they’ve been fed," Weathers told the newspaper.

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  • Woman who snatched newborn from hospital sentenced to 12 years in prison

    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    This May 24, 2010, file photo provided by the Wake County (N.C.) Bureau of Identification shows Ann Pettway, who snatched a newborn baby from a New York hospital more than two decades ago.

    Updated 4:35 p.m. ET: A woman who snatched a newborn baby from a New York City hospital more than two decades ago and raised her as her own was sentenced in a Manhattan federal courtroom to 12 years in prison Monday.

    Ann Pettway, 51, received less than the life sentence she was facing and the 23 years the mother of the kidnapped girl requested.

    White’s father, Carl Tyson, expressed his disappointment, saying, “I’m not really satisfied with the sentencing.” He added that Pettway “put a scar on me.”


    Pettway pleaded guilty to a kidnapping charge in February.

    For more, visit NBCNewYork.com

    During her court appearance then, she offered few details of the 1987 kidnapping. She said she took a train from her Connecticut home to Harlem Hospital, where she scooped up 3-week-old Carlina White, who had been brought to the emergency room by her parents.

    "I went to the hospital. I took a child. It was wrong," she told the court.

    But she offered no explanation for her action.

    As part of Pettway's plea bargain, prosecutors recommended that she be sentenced to between 10 and 12½ years in prison. 

    Carlina's birth mother, Joy White, wept during the February proceedings. "I've lost 23 years of being with my daughter," she said, adding that those decades were filled with pain and heartache.

    White said she encountered Pettway at the hospital on the day her daughter disappeared, dressed like a nurse. "She came up to me and said to me, 'Don't cry. Your daughter is going to be OK.'"

    The case was solved by Carlina herself.

    Woman pleads guilty in 1987 newborn kidnapping case

    As she grew up in Connecticut under another name, the girl became increasingly suspicious of her own identity. Pettway told her she had been given away by a drug addict.

    Carlina White said she browsed the website of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children for clues to her identity. After matching a photo of herself with one on the site, she tracked down her true mother and they reunited in January of 2011. A DNA test confirmed they were mother and child.

    Today, they speak every day, Joy White said.

    "I love my daughter. She's a beautiful girl," she said, adding that she had kept a picture of her missing baby at her bedside for 23 years.      

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  • Storm drain drama: 2 rescued after passerby hears screams

    Tucson firefighters rescued a man and woman who were trapped in a storm drain just hours before torrential rains flooded the city and surrounding areas. 

    The fire department responded just after 10:30 a.m local time Saturday after a passerby heard the screaming from the drain and called emergency services, NBC News station KVOA reported.


    The pair, who showed signs of heat-related illness, had entered the drain willingly and became disoriented, officials told KVOA.

    They spent more than eight hours in the drain, azcentral.com quoted Tucson Fire Capt. Barrett Baker as saying.

    The situation was even more serious because of storms that were heading towards Tucson later in the weekend, Baker added.

    "Being caught in a storm drain during a monsoon would've made this a body recovery rather than a rescue," Baker told azcentral.com. "Storm drains are just that -- storm drains. They are not people drains."

    Heavy rain flooded roads throughout Tuscon on Sunday, KVOA reported in a separate story, leaving many motorists stranded. 

    Firefighters had to rescue three elderly people who had tried to cross a wash, KVOA reported. A 93-year-old woman had to be carried out of the torrential waters in a stretcher. 

    "You don't know what it looks like underneath that running water so when in doubt do not drown, turn around," Northwest Fire Captain Adam Goldberg told KVOA. "Somebody is not getting the message and the message is quite simple: If there is running water don't try to cross it."

     

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  • Neighbors: Batman shooting suspect James Eagan Holmes likely faced eviction

    Formal charges are expected to be filed in court on Monday against alleged Colorado movie theater shooter James Holmes.

    AURORA, Colo. - Colorado shooting suspect James Eagan Holmes was likely facing eviction from the Aurora apartment that authorities say he booby-trapped with explosives, neighbors said.

    Holmes, a former University of Colorado graduate student, is accused of killing 12 people and wounding 58 others in a shooting rampage at a midnight movie premiere of "A Dark Knight Rises" on July 20, and wiring his apartment with enough explosives to have leveled the building if they had detonated.

    Colorado prosecutors were due to file formal charges Monday against Holmes.


    Neighbors and students in the North Aurora neighborhood where Holmes lived said his withdrawal from the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus a month before the shooting would likely have triggered his eviction from the building, which is reserved for people affiliated with the school.

    Wounded mom of youngest Aurora victim suffers miscarriage, family says

    Officials at the University of Colorado have said Holmes was enrolled in the school's Ph.D. neuroscience program, but he withdrew last month.

    Nine days before the shooting, Holmes was seen on Paris Street, asking landlords and neighbors if anyone was aware of a vacant apartment in the area, several neighbors told Reuters.

    Ted S. Warren / AP

    As many as 12 people were killed and 50 injured at a shooting at the Century 16 movie theatre in Aurora, Colo. early Friday during the showing of the latest Batman movie.

    Holmes was arrested in the movie theater parking lot shortly after the shooting, and told officers his apartment contained explosives, police said.

    Law enforcement officials told Reuters the third-floor Paris Street apartment was rigged with 30 homemade explosives, chemicals designed to accelerate a fire sparked by the bombs, and trip wires to trigger the blast as soon as a person attempted to enter the booby-trapped apartment.

    Billboard compares Obama to Colo. shooting suspect

    The building was evacuated. But the explosives were later safely dismantled and removed by authorities, and Holmes' neighbors returned to their homes.

    'Eyes kept fluttering'
    On July 11, at around 3:30 p.m, Holmes approached neighbor Carl Pedro Allen, 54, who was sitting in front of 1733 Paris Street -- about a block away from Holmes' apartment building. Holmes asked Allen, and others gathered there, if they knew of any vacant one-bedroom apartments.

    "We let him know there were no vacancies, but we told him about where he might be able to find an open apartment," Allen said.

    Holmes was wearing jeans and sneakers and described himself as a local student, Allen said. But Allen also said he noticed something strange about Holmes' eyes.

    Law enforcement officials have said that alleged gunman James Holmes sent the package to the University of Colorado medical center in Aurora. It was said to contain detailed writings about 'killing people' and it was Holmes himself who told police where to find it. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    "His eyes were fluttering and blinking," Allen said. "It was really weird. I didn't know if he was high or what, but those eyes kept fluttering."

    Two others who witnessed the incident, Ashley Jones, 25, and Rosando "JR" Causus, a maintenance man at 1733 Paris Street, independently confirmed Allen's story.

    At Holmes' initial court appearance last week, observers said his eyes fluttered wildly and he blinked repeatedly. He is due back in court on Monday.

    Joan Holley of Holley Realty, which manages the building at 1690 Paris Street where Holmes lived, could not be reached for comment. She had previously told Reuters that she would not comment on matters related to the building.

    Theater shooting suspect James Eagan Holmes appeared in court for the first time Monday where a judge explained why he was being held on no bond. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

    Kylina Washington, 14, said she and her friend Asia Quinn spoke with Holmes around the same time Allen said he did, behind a 7-Eleven where clerks recognized Holmes as a regular customer.

    "He said he was moving," Washington said.

    Colo. theater lacked security

    Tori Everhart, 27, a resident in Holmes' building, said Holley Realty representatives told her the building was reserved for University of Colorado students, faculty and staff.

    A second student resident, who was moving his belongings out of a second-floor apartment and into a U-Haul truck on Saturday afternoon and declined to give his name, confirmed the policy.

    "Only residents and faculty can live here," he said. The student said withdrawal from the school would require a resident to leave within a month.

    Report: Doctor treating Aurora suspect had medical reprimand

    A third student exiting the complex, who also declined to allow her name to be used, confirmed the policy.

    Friends in Southern California, where Holmes grew up, describe him as a smart, sometimes awkward youth fascinated by science. He came to Colorado's competitive neuroscience doctoral program in June 2011. A year later, he dropped out shortly after taking his year-end exam.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Fiery collision between truck, van kills 7 near Phoenix

    Seven are dead when a truck crashes into a van in Arizona, forcing the two vehicles down an embankment and catching fire. NBCNews.com's Dara brown reports.

    Updated at 11:18 a.m. ET: PHOENIX - Seven people died in a crash on Interstate 10 near Phoenix after a semitrailer truck crossed the median and struck a van, officials said.

    AZCentral.com quoted Department of Public Safety spokesman Carrick Cook as saying both vehicles plunged down a 6-foot embankment and burst into flames.


    Cook said the van was registered to a person from western Arizona. AZCentral.com reported that the seven victims are believed to be family members. The youngest were believed to be teenagers, Cook added.

    The crash occurred about 60 miles west of Phoenix at around 11 a.m. on Sunday.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

     

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  • Kidnapped Arkansas girl found safe; older brother suspected of killing parents

    AP

    Amber Whitlow

    A 33-year-old man suspected of murdering his parents in Little Rock, Ark., and kidnapping their 12-year-old adopted daughter was in custody Sunday, police said.

    The girl, Amber Whitlow, was with older brother Antonio Whitlow when police arrested him Saturday in Memphis, KARK 4 News in Little Rock reported. Amber was returned to Central Arkansas and is now in state custody, Little Rock police spokeswoman Sgt. Cassandra Davis said in a statement, according to KLRT. She appeared unharmed.


    Police issued an Amber Alert on Saturday after discovering the bodies of Bobby and Annette Whitlow, who were in their mid-60s. Amber Whitlow was missing. They asked people to look for a dark, 1997 Lincoln Town car being driven by Antonio Whitlow.

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    According to KLRT, a member of the Whitlow's church peered inside their home and saw Annette Whitlow on the living room floor by the fire place. Bobby Whitlow was later found in the kitchen. The police report, KLRT said, indicated that a knife or cutting instrument was the weapon that killed the couple.

    AP

    Antonio Whitlow

    Records show that Antonio Whitlow claimed to be mentally ill in 2007 before he pleaded guilty to assaulting a family or household member, The Associated Press reported. He was found fit to stand trial after a psychiatric evaluation and changed his plea to guilty. He was sentenced to a five-year probation ending in October.

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    KARK reported that he was also arrested in 2000 for shoplifting and forgery and in 1999 on a drug charge.

    According to his Twitter page, Bobby Lawrence Whitlow was a Vietnam veteran and “overseer of the Warriors for Christ ministries” with his wife, Annette Whitlow. He described her as a prophetess.

    He last tweeted Thursday: “The rod and reproof give wisdom, but a child who gets his own way brings shame to his mother. Proverbs 29:15.”

     

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  • Ex-climate change skeptic: Humans cause global warming

    Dan Tuffs / Getty Images file

    Richard Muller, physics professor, is chair of the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature project.

    Global warming not only is real, but "humans are almost entirely the cause," a self-described former climate change skeptic has declared.

    "Call me a converted skeptic," Richard A. Muller, University of California, Berkeley physics professor said in an opinion piece posted online Saturday in The New York Times.


    Muller in October released results from the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature (BEST) project, set up for global warming skeptics, that showed that since the mid-1950s, global average temperatures over land have risen by 0.9 degrees Celsius (1.6 degrees Fahrenheit).

    In his new statement, Muller said, "Last year, following an intensive research effort involving a dozen scientists, I concluded that global warming was real and that the prior estimates of the rate of warming were correct. I’m now going a step further: Humans are almost entirely the cause."

    He credited his turnaround to "careful and objective analysis" by BEST, explaining:

    “Our results show that the average temperature of the earth’s land has risen by two and a half degrees Fahrenheit over the past 250 years, including an increase of one and a half degrees over the most recent 50 years. Moreover, it appears likely that essentially all of this increase results from the human emission of greenhouse gases. These findings are stronger than those of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the United Nations group that defines the scientific and diplomatic consensus on global warming. ... ”

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    Money for the BEST study came from five foundations, including one established by Microsoft founder Bill Gates and another from the Charles Koch Charitable Foundation, set up by the billionaire coal magnate and widely seen as a source of money for conservative organizations and initiatives that have fought efforts to curb greenhouse-gas emissions.

    Muller's website says the BEST findings will be released Monday.

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    Muller said in his opinion piece he remains skeptical of some climate-change claims.

    "Hurricane Katrina cannot be attributed to global warming. The number of hurricanes hitting the United States has been going down, not up; likewise for intense tornadoes. Polar bears aren’t dying from receding ice, and the Himalayan glaciers aren’t going to melt by 2035."

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  • Miami cops search for man who shot 3

    WTVJ

    Erin Cash

    Updated at 4:15 p.m. ET: Authorities continue searching for a gunman who shot three people in Northwest Miami on Sunday. 

    Miami Police issued a lookout alert for 23-year-old Erin Cash around noon, for a "suspect randomly driving around shooting at victims," according to a police statement.


    The incident began as a domestic dispute when Cash and a woman riding in his car got into an argument, police said. The woman threw herself out of the car, but a toddler remained inside the vehicle, Miami Police said.

    See the original story at NBCMiami.com

    Cash then went to the home of the woman's relatives for revenge, shooting three, police said. Two of the victims were relatives of the woman, they said.

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    The baby was found safe inside the home of a grandparent, police said.

    Police said the injuries suffered by the victims were non-life-threatening.

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    Cash is wanted for attempted murder. Anyone with information can call (305) 603-6350.

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  • Report: Doctor treating Aurora shooting suspect had medical reprimand

    Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office

    This booking photo released by the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office shows James Eagan Holmes.

    The psychiatrist who James Eagan Holmes' lawyers say was treating the Colorado theater shooting suspect was reprimanded in February 2005 by a state medical board, a Denver television station reported on its website.

    According to documents that thedenverchannel.com said it had obtained, Dr. Lynne Fenton was reprimanded for prescribing medication, including Vicodin, Xanax, Lorazepam and Ambien, to herself, her husband and an employee.

    The final order by the State Board of Medical Examiners said the prescriptions were made on several occasions between 1997 and 1999. According to the order, the incidents came to light in an investigation after Fenton told the Drug Enforcement Administration that a former employee was fraudulently attempting to fill prescriptions.


    Fenton is an assistant professor at the University of Colorado's Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora and medical director of the campus Student Mental Health Service. The report by thedenverchannel.com said her biographical material was removed from the university's website on Friday.

    According to the board's order, Fenton:

    • Prescribed Claritin to herself and her husband. At the time, it was a prescription drug; now it is sold over the counter.
    • Prescribed Lorazepam and Vicodin for an employee suffering chronic headaches and anxiety.
    • Provided four Xanax tablets to an employee for anxiety over an airline flight.
    • Took three Xanax tablets during her mother's terminal illness.
    • Prescribed Ambien to her husband for insomnia.
    • Did not maintain medical charts for the prescriptions.

    The order said Fenton completed remedial training and received an official admonition.

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    Fenton was named in court records as the psychiatrist that Holmes was seeing before the shooting rampage in a Colorado movie theater that killed 12 people and wounded dozens of others.

    The disclosure came Friday in a motion seeking a hearing on what Holmes' lawyers called inappropriate leaks to the news media. The hearing is scheduled for Monday.

    Family: Mom wounded in Aurora suffers miscarriage

    The motion noted media reports this week that Holmes had sent a "package" to a psychiatrist at the University of Colorado-Denver medical school, where he was a first-year graduate student studying neuroscience and psychiatric disorders.

    Holmes' court-appointed attorneys disclosed that the package contained a notebook and they argued that because it was a communication with Fenton, its contents should be protected from release under Colorado doctor-patient confidentiality laws. 

    More victims of last week's Aurora movie theater shootings were laid to rest Saturday. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

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  • Wounded mom of youngest Aurora victim suffers miscarriage, family says

    Courtesy the family via KUSA

    Veronica Moser-Sullivan, 6, was the youngest victim of the rampage.

    Updated at 5 p.m., Sunday ET: A woman who was shot in the Aurora, Colo., theater shooting rampage has suffered a miscarriage, her family said.

    Ashley Moser, the mother of the youngest victim killed in the shooting, was pregnant and was shot in the neck and stomach during the attack July 20. The family said the trauma that Moser sustained caused a miscarriage and that she underwent more surgery on Saturday morning. 

    Moser, 25, is being treated at Aurora Medical Center. 


    The family released the following statement:

    Ashley Moser is recovering from an additional surgery she had this morning. Tragically, the extreme trauma she sustained also caused a miscarriage.

    We want to send a special thank you to the courageous heroes of law enforcement, other first responders, paramedics, and doctors and nurses who have all gone beyond the call-of-duty in caring for our daughter, granddaughter and all of the other victims of this tragic event.

    Our sincere appreciation goes out to all of those who have been sending well-wishes, prayers and good thoughts to Ashley. Her lifetime of care will be a long road. For those who wish to donate, please go to any Wells Fargo Bank and request the "Donation Account for Ashley and Veronica Moser." This is the only official donation account for the family.

    Funeral arrangements for Moser's daughter, Veronica Moser-Sullivan, 6, are still pending.

    Until recently, Moser and her daughter had lived with Moser's father -- Veronica's grandfather -- David Moser. But two months ago, David Moser, 65, died after a 10-month battle with leukemia.

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    Defense attorney Karen Steinhauser, a former prosecutor and current adjunct professor at the University of Denver, told The Associated Press that suspected gunman James Holmes, 24, will not face an additional charge as result of the miscarriage. She said charges in Colorado apply onto to those "who had been born and alive." 

    Holmes, a former doctoral student studying neuroscience, is accused of opening fire in the theater, killing Veronica and 11 others, and wounding 58. He is due to be formally charged Monday in Colorado. 

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  • NYPD to unveil terrorist tracking system, Commissioner Kelly says

    The New York Police Department will officially unveil its sophisticated surveillance system to track criminals and potential terrorists as soon as next week, Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said Saturday.

    Kelly said the city developed the software with Microsoft, The Associated Press reported.

    Kelly said the "domestic awareness system" combines citywide video surveillance with law enforcement databases.


    He said the tracking system will be officially unveiled by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg as soon as next week. Kelly spoke Saturday before an audience at the Aspen Security Forum.

    Keith Bedford / Reuters file

    New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly is shown at a July 20 news conference.

    NYPD officials in New York told NBC News Saturday evening they had no information about Kelly's comments.

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    The NYPD has been under fire for surveillance of Muslim communities and partnering with the CIA to track potential terrorism suspects. Muslim groups have sued to shut down the NYPD programs.

    Kelly defended the policies as key to thwarting 14 terrorist plots against the city since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

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    The NYPD has been reported to have been working on a domain awareness system for years. A 2009 NYPD counterterrorism document describing the system's use says:

    The Domain Awareness System is a counterterrorism tool designed to:

    • Facilitate the observation of pre-operational activity by terrorist organizations or their agents
    • Aid in the detection of preparations to conduct terrorist attacks
    • Deter terrorist attacks
    • Provide a degree of common domain awareness for all Stakeholders
    • Reduce incident response times
    • Create a common technological infrastructure to support the integration of new security technology.

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  • 97-year-old woman missing for four days is found alive in creek bed

    Vinton County Sheriff

    Edna Clay is seen in a photo handed out by the Sheriff's Office in Vinton County, Ohio.

    McARTHUR, Ohio -- A 97-year-old woman who was missing for four days was found alive Saturday in a dried-up creek bed, authorities said.

    Edna Clay was flown to a Columbus hospital for treatment late Saturday afternoon, NBC4i.com reported. She had last been seen at her home near McArthur on Wednesday evening.


    Vinton County authorities said she was found in a wooded area not far from her home, NBC4i.com reported. They said she may have suffered broken bones but spoke to rescuers.

    Earlier in the week, Clay's family told NBC station WSAZ of Charleston, W.Va., that she had some early signs of dementia, but was very healthy.

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    “She raised 12 children and is tougher than a pine knot. As far as her vitals, she was very healthy and took no medication. We can't even get her to take a vitamin,” Bonnie Faulkner, Clay’s daughter, told WSAZ.

     

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  • Kidnapping victim found tied up in NYPD detective's garage, sources say

    NEW YORK -- An NYPD detective has been suspended without pay after a kidnapping victim was found tied up in his Queens garage, sources tell NBC 4 New York.

    Sources say Ondre Johnson, a 17-year veteran of the Brooklyn North gang unit, was being questioned by internal affairs about his involvement in the kidnapping of a 25-year-old victim off the street early Friday morning.

    Sources say a demand for a $75,000 ransom was made.


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    Police tracked the victim to the house in St. Albans off the victim's cell phone pings.

    When police arrived Friday night, they found the victim tied up in the garage.

    Johnson denied any involvement with the kidnapping, but his cousin, Hakeem Clark -- who lives in the other half of the detective's two-family home -- has been charged with kidnapping, along with three other men.

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    Sources say police found a safe and equipment used to make fake credit cards inside the home.

    Law enforcement sources told NBC 4 New York that Johnson is not expected to be charged with kidnapping at this point, but he has been suspended and stripped of his badge and his gun as the investigation continues.

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  • 'Feathers and blood': Bird hits boy in face on high-speed rollercoaster

    View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.

    A 12-year-old Monmouth County boy was struck by a bird while riding a rollercoaster at Six Flags in Jackson Township, N.J.

    Shane Matus, of Howell Township, told Philadelphia's NBC10.com that he was riding in the front car with his friend on the Kingda Ka rollercoaster around 5 p.m. Thursday  when something slammed into his face.

    “When it hit me I was like, ‘What the-? Did somebody throw a ball or something?’ When I started spitting out feathers, I was like, that was a bird,” said Shane.


    See the original report  |  More from NBC10.com

    Shane showed NBC10 the bruises and scratches on his neck and face from where the bird struck him. Shane believes the bird was a pigeon.

    “They say the bird exploded,” said Shane. “It hurt a lot for like three seconds. People behind us had feathers and blood all over them.”

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    The coaster was returning to the station when Shane collided with the bird. He tells NBC10 he turned his head towards the parking lot when he heard a car alarm seconds before impact.

    “If that car alarm didn’t go off, it would’ve hit me dead in the eye,” said Shane.

    The 45-story Kingda Ka coaster, the world's tallest, reaches speeds of up to 128 mph. It was shut down for 30 minutes after the incident.

    An ambulance rushed Shane, who was at the theme park with his aunt, to the hospital. His father, Adam Matus, soon arrived.

    “I couldn’t believe it,” said Adam. “I mean what kind of freak accident is this?”

    A Great Adventure spokesperson told NBC10 that something like this had never happened before at the theme park.

    NBC10 asked Shane if he would ever go on the roller coaster again. “Yeah,” Shane replied. “But not in the front.”

    NBC News staff contributed to this report.

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  • 2 US climbers found dead on Peruvian peak

    Peru Police via AP

    A Peru police photo shows a yellow tent believed by authorities to belong to U.S. climbers Gil Weiss and Ben Horne near Palcaraju Peak in Huaraz, Peru.

    Searchers on Saturday found the bodies of two U.S. mountaineers who apparently plunged 1,000 feet to their deaths on their way down from the summit of a glacier-capped Peruvian peak.

    Gil Weiss, 29, and Ben Horne, 32, fell off a ridge after reaching the west summit of 20,584-foot Palcaraju in the Cordillera Blanca range in mid-July, search coordinator Ted Alexander told The Associated Press.

    Their bodies will be recovered Sunday, he said.

    More at NBCSanDiego.com: Climber remembered by father, friend


    Both Weiss, of Queens, N.Y., and Horne, of Annandale, Va., were experienced climbers. Weiss was a repeat visitor to the Cordillera Blanca while this trip was Horne's first.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    Both belong to the pullharder.org climbers' collective, and Horne wrote about the first, six-day leg of their trip on its blog, saying they had been buffeted by hurricane-force winds when the two reached the top of the 20,216-foot Ranrapalca.

    After a rest in Huaraz, the two set out again July 11 for an excursion of seven to 10 days. Their families contacted Alexander after 13 days passed with no word from them.

    Weiss's sister, Galit, said the two were not carrying a satellite phone.

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    Horne was a graduate student in economics at the University of California, San Diego. Weiss was founder of a business a Boulder, Colo., business called Beyond Adventure Productions that specialized in organizing and photographing events in remote and spectacular locations.

    The Cordillera Blanca climbing season runs from June to September, and the deaths of Weiss and Horne bring to eight the number of mountaineers who have lost their lives in the range so far this year, the AP said.

    This article includes reporting by The Associated Press.

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  • Man stops alleged iPhone thief, makes a video

    View more videos at: http://nbcnewyork.com.

    Brian Hester was taking a smoke break on Barclay Street when he witnessed a man steal an iPhone straight out of a woman's hands Thursday.

    Hester, a real estate broker and avid photographer, wasn't going to just stand by and do nothing, so he gave chase.

    "All I was thinking was, 'Catch this guy,'" Hester said Friday.

    Joined by other New Yorkers, Hester and the band of strangers caught up to the alleged thief on Broadway. They held him on the ground and Hester began taking video with his camera.

    As they waited for police, the alleged thief decided to make a run for it, but Hester wasn't about to let him get away. He chased the man a second time and tackled the alleged crook right in the middle of Broadway.

    Police came and arrested the man and the band of good Samaritans returned the iPhone to its owner.

    Throughout the ordeal Hester continued to shoot video with his camera. He hopes that the video he took will serve as a warning to potential thieves.

    "I wanted to put the video out there to show anybody else who's thinking of coming to New York and snatching somebody's iPhone that you're not going to get away with that," said Hester.

    via NBCNewYork.com

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  • Funerals held for 3 Colorado shooting victims

    More victims of last week's Aurora movie theater shootings were laid to rest Saturday. NBC's Mike Taibbi reports.

    Funerals were held Saturday for three of the Colorado shooting victims -- Matt McQuinn, who shielded his girlfriend, aspiring sportscaster Jessica Ghawi and Navy Intelligence Officer John Larimer. 

    Mourners packed a church in McQuinn's hometown of Springfield, Ohio, the same morning that others came together in San Antonio to remember Ghawi. Other victims' funerals were held earlier this week, and more are set for next week.

    When gunfire broke out in the Aurora, Colo., theater, McQuinn, 27, dove in front of his girlfriend, Samantha Yowler, and was shot three times.

    Yowler, who was shot in the knee and survived, arrived at McQuinn's funeral on crutches and wept quietly with his parents and other family during the funeral. Neither she nor his parents addressed Maiden Lane Church of God.


    Pastor Herb Shaffer, who is also McQuinn's uncle, said his nephew had been a gift to his family since he was born and that his actions in Colorado were just one example of his selflessness.

    Marshall Gorby / Springfield News-Sun via AP

    Samantha Yowler, second from right, is comforted at the casket of Matt McQuinn on Saturday at the Maiden Lane Church of God in Springfield, Ohio.

    He spoke of how McQuinn called his mother three times the day before she had surgery because he was upset that he couldn't be there in person and wanted to make sure she was OK.

    Then he talked about McQuinn's greatest sacrifice of all, saving Yowler, whom Shaffer described as his nephew's best friend and the love of his life.

    "In moments of crisis, true character comes out," he said. "His immediate response was to protect the woman he loved."

    The Springfield News-Sun reported Shaffer at one point noted that, as a young man, his nephew sometimes dressed in a way that "made you want to cross to the other side of the street. But then he opened up his mouth, and he couldn’t betray who he was."

    There was "never any malice," he added, only "a contagious enjoyment of life". 

    Mourners at Ghawi's funeral also touched briefly on the massacre.

    "If this coward could have done this with this much hate, imagine what we can do with this much love," her brother told mourners.

    But most of the service focused on the life and energy of the aspiring sports journalist.

    "What we will not do today is focus on how she left us," said Peter Burns, a friend from Colorado, reading a statement from Ghawi's mother, Sandy. "Jess was a force to be reckoned with. She was a jolt of lightning. A whirlwind. A Labrador puppy running clumsily with innocent joy."

    NBC News' Kate Snow profiles Jessica Ghawi.

    Ghawi's boyfriend, Jay Meloff, note that others described her as "a tough, redheaded spitfire," and she was, but that he also saw "a beautiful, warm-hearted and passionate woman with a capacity for love. ... She was as mushy as they come."

    Large screens in the church played a video that has gone viral in the past week showing Ghawi repeatedly falling down as she walked onto an ice rink wearing high heels to interview a hockey player as an intern for San Antonio sportsradio station KTKR.

    Formal charges are expected to be filed in court on Monday against alleged Colorado movie theater shooter James Holmes.

    Ghawi, 24, had survived a June 2 shooting at a Toronto mall that left two dead and several wounded. She blogged about the experience, writing that it reminded her "how fragile life was."

    A private funeral was held for Larimer, 27, whose body returned home from Colorado Thursday. Members of the Illinois Old Guard, the Warriors' Watch Riders and the Illinois Patriot Guard escorted hearses from O'Hare International Airport to Davenport Family Funeral Home. On Saturday flags lined the funeral home's sidewalks and entrance where friends and family hugged each other and wiped away tears, the Chicago Sun-Times reported.

    The Crystal Lake South High School alum joined the Navy eight years after high school graduation and was stationed in Colorado.

    Larimer was at the Century 16 movie theater in Aurora Friday with his shipmates and girlfriend, Algonquin native Julia Vojtsek.

    James Holmes, a 24-year-old former doctoral student studying neuroscience, is accused of opening fire on the theater, killing McQuinn, Ghawi and 10 others, and wounding 58. He is due to be formally charged Monday in Colorado. 

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

  • The M1 Abrams: The Army tank that could not be stopped

    Saurabh Das / AP file

    U.S. M1 Abrams tanks withdraw to a safe position after mortar rounds landed nearby in Kufa, Iraq, on April 29, 2004.

    Editor's note: This article was corrected after publication. An earlier version incorrectly said the Pentagon spends $3 billion every 82 minutes. The Pentagon actually spends $3 billion in a little more than a day. Also, the earlier version said that members of the House Armed Services Committee got $31,500 from General Dynamics during a two-week period in September last year. The correct figure is $30,500.

    The M1 Abrams tank has survived the Cold War, two conflicts in Iraq and a decade of war in Afghanistan. No wonder – it weighs as much as nine elephants and is fitted with a cannon capable of turning a building to rubble from two and a half miles away.


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    But now the machine finds itself a target in an unusual battle between the Defense Department and lawmakers who are the beneficiaries of large donations by its manufacturer.


    The Pentagon, facing smaller budgets and looking towards a new global strategy, has decided it wants to save as much as $3 billion by freezing refurbishment of the M1 from 2014 to 2017, so it can redesign the hulking, clanking vehicle from top to bottom.

    Its proposal would idle a large factory in Lima, Ohio, as well as halt work at dozens of subcontractors in Pennsylvania, Michigan and other states.

    Opposing the Pentagon’s plans is Abrams manufacturer General Dynamics, a nationwide employer that has pumped millions of dollars into congressional elections over the last decade. The tank’s supporters on Capitol Hill say they are desperate to save jobs in their districts and concerned about undermining America’s military capability.

    So far, the contractor is winning the battle, after a well-organized campaign of lobbying and political donations involving the lawmakers on four key committees that will decide the tanks’ fate, according to an analysis of spending and lobbying records by the Center for Public Integrity.

    Sharp spikes in the company’s donations – including a two-week period in 2011 when its employees and political action committee sent the lawmakers checks for their campaigns totaling nearly $50,000 – roughly coincided with five legislative milestones for the Abrams, including committee hearings and votes and the defense bill’s final passage last year.

    After putting the tank money back in the budget then, both the House and Senate Armed Services Committees have again authorized it this year — $181 million in the House and $91 million in the Senate. If the company and its supporters prevail, the Army will refurbish what Army Chief of Staff Ray Odierno described in a February hearing as “280 tanks that we simply do not need.” 

    The Center for Public Integrity

    The cash and the tank. Click to enlarge image.

    It already has more than 2,300 M1’s deployed with U.S. forces around the world and roughly 3,000 more sitting idle in long rows outdoors at a remote military base in California’s Sierra mountains.

    The $3 billion at stake in this fight is not a large sum in Pentagon terms – it’s roughly what the building spends in a little more than a day. But the fight over the Abrams’ future, still unfolding, illuminates the major pressures that drive the current defense spending debate.

    These include a Pentagon looking to free itself from legacy projects and modernize some of its combat strategy, a Congress looking to defend pet projects and a well-financed and politically savvy defense industry with deep ties to both, fighting tooth-and-nail to fend off even small reductions in the budget now devoted to the military – a total figure that presently composes about half of all discretionary spending.

    Vulnerable to IEDs but impervious to Pentagon budgeteers
    The M1 Abrams entered service in 1980, but first saw combat during Operation Desert Storm in 1991. That episode indicated that, on the battlefield at least, the only thing that could destroy an Abrams was another Abrams; only seven of the tanks deployed in the operation were destroyed, all by friendly fire. 

    In the last decade, however, as hundreds were deployed to Iraq and later Afghanistan, a key shortcoming became apparent: Their flat bottoms made the Abrams surprisingly vulnerableto improvised explosive devices (IEDs). As a result, the Abrams in Iraq ended up being used as “pillboxes”— high-priced armored bunkers used to protect ground.

    “The M1 is an extraordinary vehicle, the best tank on the planet,” Paul D. Eaton, a retired Army major general now with the nonprofit National Security Network, said in an interview. Since the primary purpose of tanks is to kill other tanks, however, their utility in modern counterinsurgency warfare is limited, he added.

    Ashley Givens, a spokeswoman for the Army’s Program Executive Office for Ground Combat Systems, said that the Army can refurbish all 2,384 tanks it needs by the end of 2013. Freezing work after that, she said, will allow the Army to “focus its limited resources on the development of the next generation Abrams tank,” rather than building more of the same that “have exceeded their space, weight and power limits."

    Warfare has changed, Odierno explained while discussing the Army’s new strategy at the February hearing: “We don’t believe we’ll ever see a straight conventional conflict again in the future.”

    But top Army officials have so far been unable to get political traction to kill the M1. Part of the reason is that General Dynamics and its well-connected lobbyists have been carrying a large checkbook and a sheaf of pro-tank talking points around on the Hill.

    For example, when House Armed Services Committee member Hank Johnson, D-Ga., held a campaign fundraiser at a wood-panelled Capitol Hill steakhouse called the Caucus Room just before Christmas last year, someone from GD brought along a $1,500 check for his reelection campaign. Several months later, Johnson signed a letter to the Pentagon supporting funding for the tank. Johnson spokesman Andy Phelan said the congressman has consistently supported the M-1 “because he doesn't think shutting down the production line is in the national interest."

    The contribution was a tiny portion of the $5.3 million that GD’s political action committee and the company’s employees have invested in the current members of either the House and Senate Armed Services Committees or defense appropriations subcommittees since Jan. 2001, according to data on defense industry campaign contributions the Center for Public Integrity acquired from the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

    These are the committees that approve the Pentagon’s spending every year; without their support, the tank – or any other costly military program -- would be dead.

    Kendell Pease, GD’s vice president for government relations and communications, said in an interview that the company – which produces submarines and radios for the military, as well as tanks -- makes donations to those lawmakers whose views are aligned with the firm’s interests. “We target our PAC money to those folks who support national security and the national defense of our country,” says Pease. “Most of them are on the four (key defense) committees.”

    But Pease denies trying to time donations around key votes, saying that the company’s PAC typically gives money whenever members of Congress invite its representatives to fundraisers. “The timing of a donation is keyed by (members’) requests for funding,” he says, adding that personal donations by company employees are not under his control. He said the donations tend to be clumped together because lawmakers often hold fundraisers at the same time.

    More cash at key milestones
    During the current election cycle, General Dynamics’ political action committee and its employees have sent an average of about $7,000 a week to members of the four committees. But the week President Obama announced his defense budget plan in 2011, the donations spiked to more than $20,000, significantly higher than in any of the previous six weeks. A second spike of more than $20,000 in donations occurred in early March 2011, when Army budget hearings were being held.

    At a March 9 hearing of the House subcommittee dealing with land forces, Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D-Texas, railed against the Army’s decision to freeze work on the Abrams. Since the start of 2001, Reyes has received $64,650 in GD donations, including $1,000 on March 10, the day after the hearing, according to the data.  Reyes office did not return a request to comment; his overall campaign receipts in the current election cycle have been $1 million.

    Another large spike occurred the first two weeks of May 2011, a period in which the House Armed Services Committee voted 60-1 for a budget bill containing money to continue work on the Abrams through 2013. Over this period, GD’s PAC and employees donated a total of $48,100 to members of the four committees, with almost $20,000 of that going directly to members of the House Armed Services Committee as they voted.

    During another two week period in September, in which the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense handed in its conference report and Congress rushed to pass a stopgap spending bill to keep the government open, the company sent $36,500 to members of the four committees — primarily the House Armed Services Committee, whose members got $30,500.

    The final large spike in donations last year came the week of Dec. 11-17, when Congress made a final vote on the whole budget. During this week, GD’s donations to members of the four committees totaled $17,000.

    Along with its checks, the company has been carrying around a message that a cutoff of tank manufacturing work in Lima will harm the nation’s “industrial base,” using what has become a favorite expression of alarm for military contractors facing cutbacks.

    The workforce “is not like a light switch. You can’t just click it off, then walk away for three years, come back and click it on,” Pease said. Smaller suppliers who exclusively make parts for the Abrams could be shuttered if the Army’s spending stops, he said. GD has also accused the Army of underestimating the plant’s temporary shutdown costs, claiming that the government’s actual savings would be minimal.

    To help bring its corporate viewpoint to lawmakers, General Dynamics has spent at least $84 million over the past 11 years on lobbyists, according to Senate Office of Public Records lobbying data acquired from the Center for Responsive Politics. Just in the last year and a half, the firm —  which draws nearly three-quarters of its revenues from public tax dollars in the form of federal contracts —  has spent at least $13.5 million on more than 130 individual advocates, who pressed Congress to fund a variety of military and non-military programs at the firm.

    While lobbyists often do not name their causes, those working for GD that specifically listed the Abrams tank, along with other topics, reported earning at least $550,000 from 2011 to the first quarter of 2012, according to the data. Pease described the lobbying efforts as “education… Shame on us if we don’t go and tell them (Congress) our side, because the Army is doing the same thing as we’re doing, having just as many meetings as we are.”

    Relying on special contacts
    In addition to tapping its in-house team, the company also hired outside firms to help sway lawmakers’ votes, which in turn assigned the General Dynamics account to former congressional staff tightly connected to committee members — part of the “revolving door” phenomenon now common among veterans of both political parties.

    GD paid the Podesta Group nearly $1.7 million since 2009 to lobby on the defense appropriations and authorizations bills, according to lobbying disclosure forms. Among the more than 20 Podesta lobbyists assigned to the account was Josh Holly, communications director for the House Committee on Armed Services under Republican leadership for six years.

    According to Holly’s bio on the Podesta website, he worked directly with Republican Buck McKeon of California, its current chairman. McKeon is a major recipient of GD campaign donations, garnering $68,000 from GD’s PAC and employees since the start of 2001 — with $56,000 of that coming just since 2009, when he became the committee’s top Republican. Holly did not respond to emails and phone calls seeking his comment and committee spokesman Claude Chafin said McKeon has consistently argued that it is fiscally smarter to keep the Abrams work going than to stop it.

    Podesta also assigned the GD account to two former House Appropriations Committee aides.  One of them, Jim Dyer, confirmed that he lobbied on the tank this year, but directed other questions to General Dynamics. GD also hired firms that assigned its account to six other lobbyists who worked for the relevant committees and to a former Pentagon liaison to Congress. 

     

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    Pease said that when working with outside firms, he lets them pick the specific lobbyists on the account. But when picking the firms, “you always look for those people who can get the job done,” he says, referring to his approach as using a rifle rather than a shotgun. The company hires “a lot of individuals who understand our message, and how to deliver the message, so we can educate the right people, so they can understand our side of the equation.”

    The company’s efforts so far have had great success. In April, 111 House Republicans joined with 62 House Democrats in a letter to Secretary Panetta decrying the decision to freeze work on the tanks. Less than a quarter were from Ohio, Michigan and Pennsylvania — the rust belt states with small subcontractors that would be directly impacted by a halt to Abrams work.

    Of the 173 signers, 137 received contributions totaling more than $2 million from GD since 2001. Giving to Republicans and Democrats was split in half, with Republicans receiving about 51 percent of contributions, and Democrats 49 percent. More than half of the Armed Services committee and defense appropriations subcommittee members signed, effectively telgraphing the outcome of their deliberations.

    The first signature was from Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., whose district includes the Detroit suburb of Sterling Heights, the location of the headquarters for General Dynamics Land Systems. Rep. Levin’s brother is Michigan Democrat Sen. Carl Levin, the powerful head of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Sen. Levin has received $46,200 from General Dynamics since 2001; his brother has received $43,000.

    In a written statement, Rep. Levin said he wants to protect the Abrams because it is of “vital importance to more than 60 local companies” in Michigan and the difficulty of restarting tank production after a hiatus. Rep. Levin’s spokesman Josh Drobnyk says Levin has not conferred with his brother on the issue but confirms that representatives from GDLS contacted the congressman’s office about the Abrams.

    Sen. Levin’s spokeswoman Tara Andringa said that “based on information on the M1 tank program from the Army, from contractors, and from independent analysts,” the senator supported the funds for the Abrams as being in “the best interests of U.S. security and protecting taxpayers’ hard-earned dollars.”

    Both this year and last year, the funds were added to the President’s proposed budget without a specific recorded vote, in what independent experts have termed an earmark — money directed by members of Congress to a pet project that often benefits their district. Earmarks were supposed to have been banned after the 2010 election, but lawmakers have decided that when multiple members favor adding funds – rather than just one lawmaker – it is not formally an earmark.

    So far, there has been a great silence on the Abrams funding issue from congressional deficit hawks. Rep. Jim Jordan, who represents the Ohio district where the Lima plant is located and has received $31,000 for his campaigns from General Dynamics’ leadership PAC and employees, said he is now optimistic that the Abrams money will make it safely through the Senate.

    If it does, the fight still might not be over. The White House, in its May 15 responseto the House budget, objected to the “unrequested authorization” of funds for the Abrams during a “fiscally-constrained environment.”  The administration did not specifically threaten a veto over the issue but said that if too many unrequested projects impeded “the ability of the administration to execute the new defense strategy and to properly direct scarce resources,” senior advisors will recommend the president veto the bill. 

    Reporter Zach Toombs and Data Editor David Donald contributed to this report.

    The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit, independent investigative news outlet.

  • 3 killed in Pennsylvania; suspect fled with daughter, 4, triggering Amber Alert

    Pennsylvania State Police via AP

    Kevin Cleeves

    Three people were shot dead Friday night in rural Pennsylvania, state police said Saturday, and the suspect was later arrested after fleeing with his four-year-old daughter. One of the dead reportedly was the child's mother.

    Kevin Cleeves, 35, was under arrest and his daughter was safe in police custody, NBC affiliate WGAL TV reported


    During the search for Cleeves, police also initiated an Amber Alert for the child. 

    The shootings happened in Quincy Township and Cleeves was arrested some 250 miles away in Austintown, Ohio.

    Police said Cleeves had argued with the victims Friday night when he went to pick up his daughter from his wife, the Record Herald of Waynesboro, Pa., reported.

    The dead were identified as Brandi Cleeves, Vincent Santucci and Rosemary Holma, the Record Herald stated.

    Austintown, Ohio, Police Chief Bob Gavalier talks about the arrest.

    The Herald-Mail of Hagerstown, Md., reported the court documents indicate Brandi Cleeves was the child's mother and Cleeves' wife.

    Austintown Police Chief Bob Gavalier said it was his understanding that the Cleeves were separated, and that Santucci was Brandi Cleeves' boyfriend and that Holma was his mother.

    More details were expected to be released later Saturday.

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  • Suspected gunman killed by police after second Indiana cop shooting

    LAWRENCE, Ind. - A man suspected of shooting an Indiana police officer died in a shootout, police said early Saturday.

    K-9 Officer Matt Fox of Fortville, Indiana, was trying to perform a traffic stop on a male driver who refused to stop, police said according to NBC News station WTHR in Indianapolis


    A pursuit started, ending at a housing subdivision in the 7800 block of Clearview Lane.

    Police said Fox was shot through his windshield and was struck in the head and the wrist. He was taken to IU Health Methodist Hospital, where he was said to be alert and talking to officers. Fox was listed in serious but stable condition, awaiting surgery for his injuries.

    The incident follows a shooting in the Indiana town of Pendleton on Thursday, in which a bystander was killed and two police officers wounded. A police dog was also killed, and the suspected gunman was found dead early Friday, possibly by a self-inflicted gunshot.

    Read the original story at NBC station WTHR of Indianapolis

    The suspect in the shooting in Fortville, which is around 25 miles northeast of Indianapolis, then fled the scene and was again chased by police. He stopped near Fox Road and Sunset Cove and got into another shootout with police officers, positioning himself between two buildings and firing at officers as they approached.

    Police shot and killed the suspect, according to Hancock County Sheriff's Department dispatchers.

    Two officers, one from IMPD and another from Lawrence, were reportedly grazed, either by bullets or shattered glass, but were treated and released at the scene.

    The K-9 which Fox handles was not injured and remains at the scene of the shooting.

    An IMPD spokesperson tells Eyewitness News a police dog from Lawrence was shot in a patrol car at the second shooting scene. The condition of that K-9 has not yet been confirmed, but the dog was said to be undergoing surgery.

    The suspect in the shooting has not yet been identified.

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  • Police: Man pushes woman, baby out of third-floor window

    Authorities say they have arrested the man accused of attacking his ex-girlfriend at her Jersey City home and forcing her out a third-floor window while she was holding her infant in her arms Friday morning.

    The Hudson County prosecutor's office said police apprehended Frederico Bruno, 19, in Belleville, N.J. Friday evening. He was found inside a refrigerator in a vacant building near where his siblings live.

    Bruno's family members said he went to their home after the alleged attack and slept for most of the day. When he woke up, he told his teenage niece and nephews what had happened.


    See the original report  |  More from NBCNewYork.com

    He claimed his ex-girlfriend was trying to stab him while holding their baby, family members told NBC 4 New York. That's when he pushed her and the child out the window and fled, they said.

    Police say Bruno had a key to his ex-girlfriend's Jersey City apartment and had been hiding inside Friday morning, waiting for her to get home. When she returned with her baby, who is also the suspect's child, and a friend, Bruno allegedly attacked her.

    Both the 20-year-old mother and the 3-month-old baby are hospitalized in critical condition, police said.

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    The 21-year-old friend threatened to call 911 and Bruno allegedly turned on her, slicing her up with a household cutting device and leaving her for dead, police said. Then he ran down the fire escape and, with a table, continued to assault the mother of his child, who was lying on the ground on top of her baby after the two plunged three stories out the window, police said.

    "I know he's always had a bad temper but I never thought he could do this," said Bruno's niece, 17-year-old Ahsley Archelus. "To a baby? How could he do this to his own baby?"

    The friend is in surgery at a nearby hospital. She's listed in critical condition.

    Police cordoned off the area surrounding the four-story building on Rutgers Avenue as they searched for Bruno, whom they called armed and dangerous.

    The mother of the child had an order of protection against him, authorities said.

    Bruno is facing three counts of aggravated assault charges. Bail was set at $300,000 for each count. It wasn't clear if he had an attorney.

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  • Divers find sunken German U-boat off Massachusetts coast

    Researchers have discovered a World War II-era German submarine nearly 70 years after it sank under a withering U.S. attack in waters off Nantucket. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    BOSTON -- Divers have discovered a World War II-era German submarine nearly 70 years after it sank under withering U.S. attack in waters off Nantucket.

    The U-550 was found Monday by a privately funded group organized by New Jersey lawyer Joe Mazraani.

    "They’ve looked for it for over 20 years,” Mazraani, a shipwreck diver, told The Boston Globe. “It’s another World War II mystery solved.”


    In the second trip in two years to the site by the team, the seven-man crew using side-scan sonar located the wreck listing to its side in deep water about 70 miles south of Nantucket.

    Sonar operator Garry Kozak said he spotted the 252-foot submarine during the second of an exhausting two days of searching. Kozak said the team asked him if they'd found it, then erupted in joy without a word from him.

    "They could see it with the grin (on my face) and the look in my eyes," Kozak said.

    The crew had searched 100 square miles of ocean, the Globe reported. Traveling at five knots, the ship scanned the vast expanse for signs of the sunken vessel, a tedious process crew members likened to “mowing the lawn.”

    Mazraani dove down to confirm the discovery with pictures, the Globe said.

    On April 16, 1944, the U-550 torpedoed the gasoline tanker SS Pan Pennsylvania, which had lagged behind its protective convoy as it set out with 140,000 barrels of gasoline for Great Britain, according to the U.S. Coast Guard website and research by Mazraani.

    AP

    This sonar image provided by GK Consulting & AWS Expeditions/Joe Mazraani, shows a World War II-era German submarine U-550, found by a team of explorers Monday on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean 70 miles south of Nantucket Island, Mass.

    The U-boat slipped under the doomed tanker to hide. But one of the tanker's three escorts, the USS Joyce, saw it on sonar and severely damaged it by dropping depth charges.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    The Germans, forced to surface, manned their deck guns while another escort vessel, the USS Gandy, returned fire and rammed the U-boat. The third escort, the USS Peterson, then hit the U-boat with two more depth charges. The crew abandoned the submarine, but not before setting off explosions to scuttle it. The submarine hadn't been seen again until Monday.

    The U-550 is one of several World War II-era German U-boats that have been discovered off the U.S. coast, but it's the only one that sank in that area, Mazraani said. He said it's been tough to find largely because military positioning of the battle was imprecise, and searchers had only a general idea where the submarine was when it sank. Kozak noted that the site is far offshore and has only limited windows of good weather.

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    The other team members were Steve Gatto, Tom Packer, Brad Sheard, Eric Takakjian and Anthony Tedsechi

    Mazraani is cagey about the vessel's precise location, saying only that it's in deep water. Mazraani's said his best estimate was that the team spent thousands of dollars of its own money on the expedition. He joked that no one on the team, whose members range in age from the mid-20s to mid-50s, stands to make money from the find unless someone writes a book.

    Mazraani said the next step is to contact any sailors or their families from the escort vessels, the tanker and the German U-boat to share the news and show the pictures. Another trip to the site is coming, he said, adding the investigation has just started.

    "The history behind it all is really what drives us," Mazraani said.

    This article includes reporting by The Associated Press.

     

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  • Jesse Jackson Jr. being evaluated for depression at Mayo Clinic

    Mitch Dumke / REUTERS

    Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. had been treated at an undisclosed location in Arizona for an undisclosed illness.

    Updated at 11:50 p.m. ET: Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., struggling with an undefined illness in an undisclosed location for nearly a month, has left treatment in Arizona and has entered the world-renowned Mayo Clinic.

    In a statement released through the Rochester, Minn. facility, Jackson said he went in for "extensive inpatient evaluation for depression and gastrointestinal issues."

    "Congressman Jackson and his family are grateful for the outpouring of support and prayers that have been received throughout his care," reads a portion of the statement.

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    Further information would be released as his evaluation proceeds, it said.

    Jackson in 2004 underwent gastric bypass surgery, though he kept the procedure a secret for several months.

    His absence began in late June with an announcement that he was being treated for exhaustion. Since then only the barest of details have been released.

    About a week later, Jackson's office issued a statement noting the congressman's condition is "more serious than we thought and initially believed." Another week went by before an email attributed to Jackson's doctor said the congressman is suffering from "mood disorder."

    The doctor noted he is responding positively to "intensive medical treatment at a residential treatment facility."

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    The congressman’s office added that rumors about Jackson Jr. being treated for alcohol or substance abuse "are not true," but a family friend told NBC News that he has severe clinical depression, a drinking problem or a problem with alcohol and was undergoing treatment in Arizona.

    Since his absence began, many have called for more information about Jackson's whereabouts and ailment.

    “I think Congressman Jackson and his office and his family would be well advised to advise his constituents of his condition," said Democratic Congressman Steny Hoyer a day before news of Jackson's mood disorder surfaced. "He’s obviously facing a health problem."

    "[Jackson’s] health is a number one priority,” Sen. Dick Durbin said. "As a public official though, there reaches a point where you have a public responsibility to tell people what you’re facing and how things are going.”

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    Gov. Pat Quinn, however, has said he would not call for more information to be released.

    "The people of Illinois have good hearts," Quinn said July 11. "I pray for Jesse Jackson Jr. every day."

    Jackson's family remains mum on the congressman's exact ailment. His father, Rev. Jesse Jackson, said he is "hopeful" for recovery.

    "As a father, I offer no medical diagnosis, only the unconditional love of his family," he said.

     

  • Pennsylvania man must pay back $69,000 windfall

    An accidental $69,000 deposit was too good to be true for a Pennsylvania man who received the money in his bank account — by mistake. Now, he has to pay it all back.

    The suburban Philadelphia man, 22-year-old Joseph Bucci, struck it rich in March after a Wells Fargo bank teller mistyped an account number for a $69,300 deposit, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported. Court records show that within a month of the error, Bucci withdrew all but $2,000 of the mistaken money from his account.


    The money was reported missing by a Wells Fargo investigator in May and Bucci was soon charged, according to the Inquirer. The funds were supposed to go from a law office to an estate account.

    Bucci's lawyer, Michael Parlow, said Friday that his client spent that money on a used car, a camera, a computer, a dog, clothes and furniture, according to the Inquirer. He has now paid back some of the money, the Inqurier reported, but still has about $50,000 left to give back. Bucci must show he can repay all of it in order to qualify for a first-time offenders program — a program that would clear his record if he were to complete it.

    Bucci faces two felony counts of theft of lost property and receiving stolen property, according to the Inquirer.

     

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