Jump to August 2012 archive page: 1 ... 3 4 5 6 7 ... 21
  • Dozens of earthquakes rattle Southern California

    Updated at 11:58 p.m. ET: A rash of up to 70 moderate earthquakes rattled Southern California on Sunday, shaking an area from rural Imperial County to the San Diego coast and north into the Coachella Valley.

    According to the USGS, the largest quake was 5.5-magnitude that rattled Brawley, Calif., small Imperial County farming town, just before 2 p.m.

    A 5.3 magnitude quake struck at 12:31 p.m. about three miles north-northwest of Brawley, according to Paul Caruso, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey. It was followed minutes later by a 4.9 magnitude quake.

    The epicenters of the bigger earthquakes were 11 to 12 miles from Imperial, Calif., and 15 to 16 miles from El Centro, Calif., the USGS reported.


    Read the story at NBC 7 San Diego

    Several glasses and a bottle of wine crashed to the floor and shattered at Assaggio, an Italian restaurant in Brawley, said owner Jerry Ma. The shaking was short-lived but intense, he said.   

    "It felt like there was quake every 15 minutes. One after another. My kids are small and they're scared and don't want to come back inside," said Mike Patel, who manages Townhouse Inn & Suites in Brawley. A TV came crashing down and a few light fixtures broke inside the motel, Patel said.   

    A Brawley Police Department dispatcher said several downtown buildings sustained minor damage. No injuries were reported.

    The USGS said more than 100 aftershocks struck the same approximate epicenter, about 16 miles north of El Centro. Some shaking was felt along the San Diego County coast in Del Mar, some 120 miles from the epicenter, as well as in the Coachella Valley, southern Orange County and parts of northern Mexico.

    Some shaking was felt on the coast in Del Mar, some 120 miles from the epicenter, as well as in southern Orange County and parts of northern Mexico.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    The quakes pushed 20 mobile homes at a trailer park off their foundations, displacing the families that lived in them, said Maria Peinado, a spokeswoman for the Imperial County Emergency Operations Center.

    Sporadic power outages affecting 2,500 Imperial Irrigation District customers also prompted authorities to evacuate some patients from one of the county's two hospitals.

    No injuries were reported.

    Residents across San Diego County reported feeling the quakes in places including downtown San Diego, Mission Valley, Santee and Chula Vista. No injuries were reported.

    San Diego State University geology expert Pat Abbott told NBC 7 San Diego that Sunday’s earthquakes were in the middle of the Brawley Seismic Zone, famous for swarms of quakes. He said he expected aftershocks.

    “[The Brawley Seismic Zone] is a broad zone with lots of little faults,” Abbott explained.

    “This area has clearly activated. We will likely experience swarms of 3, 4 and 5-magnitude [earthquakes] but they are not likely to increase in intensity. Of course, there are no guarantees on this, but history says they likely won’t get bigger – that we will experience more of the same or smaller quakes,” he added. 

    NBCSanDiego.com and The Associated Press contributed to this story.

    Show more
  • Police: Empire State shooter was losing his apartment

    Louis Lanzano / AP

    Police lean over a sheet-covered body as they investigate a shooting outside the Empire State Building on Friday.

    NEW YORK -- The man who shot and killed a former co-worker before being killed by police near the Empire State Building was being booted out of his apartment, a law enforcement official says.

    Jeffrey Johnson, 58, an out-of-work accessories designer, killed Steve Ercolino, with whom he had been feuding, on Friday in midtown Manhattan. Nine bystanders were wounded as the result of police gunfire, three hit by bullets and six injured by ricocheted fragments.

    A law enforcement official told NBC New York on Sunday that Johnson was subletting the Upper East Side apartment where he lived. The owner wanted to do renovations and asked Johnson to move out.   Johnson had a couple of weeks left until he had to go.  That added pressure may have helped put him over the edge, the source said.


    A police source told Reuters that Johnson left his keys with his landlord on Friday to allow renovation of his apartment and apparently intended to never return.

    “He left the keys in an envelope for the landlord with no intention of ever coming back,'' said the source.

    Detectives searching Johnson's apartment found books on training and fighting skills such as "Techniques and Equipment of the Deadly Marksmen Snipers'' and `"Attack Proof - the Ultimate Guide to Personal Protection,'' the source told Reuters.

    They also found a plastic case with 15 rounds of .45 caliber ammunition, the same kind he used to shoot Ercolino, and police planned to examine the contents of Johnson's home computer for more clues to his motive, the source said.

    NBCNewYork.com: Construction worker followed shooter

    Johnson had been laid off a year ago from Hazan Imports, across the street from the Empire State Building, where he was locked in a dispute with the victim, police said. Johnson claimed Ercolino had failed to sell enough of his creations and held a grudge, police said.

    Johnson and Ercolino filed complaints about each other with police in April 2011, police said.

    Louis Lanzano / AP

    A disgruntled ex-employee opened fire Friday morning near his old workplace in New York City, killing one. The gunman was then shot and killed at the scene.

    NYT: After police bullets hit bystanders, questions about protocol 

    Ercolino, 41, was a salesman at Hazan. He lived with his girlfriend in Hoboken, N.J.

    Ercolino died of multiple gunshot wounds to the head.  He was shot five times in the head and face, according to the medical examiner. He also had a superficial wound to chest that may have been result of a ricochet of one of the shots to the head.

    NBCNewYork.com’s Jonathan Dienst and Reuters contributed to this story.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

  • Family of Reagan shooter John Hinckley Jr. overwhelmed by legal bills

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

    DALLAS -- The family of the man who shot President Ronald Reagan tells NBC DFW they can no longer afford his legal bills.

    On Friday John Hinckley Jr.'s lawyers filed a motion in federal court asking to withdraw from Hinckley's case. They said there were signficant outstanding legal bills from the ongoing court battle over whether Hinckley can spend more time away from the hospital he was committed to after the shooting.


    Hinckley attended Highland Park High School and some of his family members still live in North Texas.  

    See original story, video on NBCDFW.com

    On Saturday, the family told NBC 5 Investigates Reporter Scott Friedman:

     "The Hinckley family would like to express their continued love and support for John. We thank Dickstein Shapiro for their many years of legal service...  The past three decades have been very difficult for all who have been affected by John's illness.  Regrettably, however, thirty years of legal battles have exhausted the financial resources available to pay the fees and expenses associated with John's ongoing legal proceedings.  We will continue to support John in every way possible."

    A federal judge is expected to rule this fall on Hinckley's request for more visitation with his mother who lives in Virginia.

    Hinckley has been in a psychiatric hospital since being found not guilty by reason of insanity in the shooting of Reagan and three other men in 1981.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


  • Gulf oil platforms evacuating workers due to Isaac storm threat

    The Florida Keys know what to expect from a big storm, and they're getting ready. Tourists have been warned to get out of town. Officials are taking no chances with just hours left to prepare before the storm makes landfall.

    Major oil producers, including BP, Shell and Chevron, said Sunday they would be evacuating workers from Gulf of Mexico platforms in the face of an imminent threat of high surf and winds from Tropical Storm Isaac.

    The storm could affect an area that produces 23 percent of total daily U.S. oil production and 7 percent of its natural gas output.

    BP Plc said it will shut production at all of its Gulf of Mexico oil and gas platforms and evacuate all workers on Sunday in light of Isaac's westerly shift and forecasts that it could strengthen into a hurricane. BP has already shut and evacuated four platforms, including Thunder Horse, the world's largest. The company said Sunday it will shut its other three platforms. 

    Chevron, second to BP in Gulf oil production, said it would be evacuating some workers directly involved in oil and gas production from some of its platforms. "Chevron continues to closely monitor the projected path of Tropical Storm Isaac and has begun to evacuate some essential personnel from some offshore facilities in the Gulf of Mexico. Production has not been affected," the company said.

    Anadarko Petroleum followed suit. "To ensure the safety of our workers and the protection of the environment, we are shutting in production and removing all personnel from our operated facilities in the eastern and central Gulf of Mexico," it said in a statement. Among the platforms it is shutting are: the Independence Hub, Constitution, Marco Polo, Red Hawk, Neptune and Gunnison.

    Reuters said Murphy Oil was evacuating its Thunder Hawk platform Sunday and would do the same with two other platforms on Monday. Royal Dutch Shell said it will shut down production and fully evacuate its platforms on Monday, according to the news agency. Others who are evacuating workers include Marathon Oil and BHP Billiton.

    The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement said the storm threat has so far shut down about a quarter of daily oil production in the Gulf and over 8 percent of its natural gas production.

    Isaac is heading for the Gulf Coast, say forecasters, who predict the storm is likely to build into a Category 2 hurricane capable of sustained winds between 96 to 100 miles per hour. It could make landfall on the northern Gulf Coast by late Tuesday. The storm picked up strength as it passed over the warm waters of the Florida Straits after it lashed Cuba and left seven dead in Haiti.

    Related story: Isaac strengthens, set to hit Gulf Coast as Category 2 storm

    Memories are still fresh on the Gulf Coast over the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010, which killed 11 platform workers and spewed millions of gallons of crude over three months into the environmentally sensitive Gulf of Mexico. The disaster, which was the largest marine oil spill ever, occurred after an explosion on the platform. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More money and business news:

    Follow NBCNews.com business on Twitter and Facebook

  • McCain: Further delays to GOP convention 'could be harmful'

    Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., says Republican presidential candidate has been outspent by the Obama campaign and Romney needs to turn the tide and focus on women and minorities with the message

     

    TAMPA, Fla. – Arizona Sen. John McCain expressed concern Sunday that further weather-related cancellations of the Republican National Convention here could deprive the GOP of an opportunity to make its case to voters.

    Speaking Sunday on “Meet the Press,” the 2008 Republican presidential nominee said that the decision by convention organizers to effectively cancel Monday’s session due to the effects of the impending Hurricane Isaac wouldn’t have much harm on Republicans.

    Jacquelyn Martin / AP

    Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. attends a news conference about the Convention of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Thursday, July 12, 2012, on Capitol Hill.

    “It's Wednesday, Thursday night that are the big moments,” he said. “It's not that we don't want that first night, but I don't think it will be harmful if we lose the first night.”

    But, the veteran senator added: “It could be harmful if we lose more than that.”

    Recommended: Hurricane impending, Republicans cancel first day of convention

    Republicans announced on Saturday that they had decided to delay the beginning of the convention until Tuesday; the impending storm threatens logistics and safety problems that made it unfeasible to convene for Monday’s activities.

    But convention organizers haven’t yet released the revised schedule, and haven’t officially foreclosed the possibility of further weather-related changes to the schedule bleeding into Tuesday.

    Related: GOP elders describe high stakes for Romney in Tampa

    As things stand, Ann Romney and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie are scheduled to be featured speakers on Tuesday evening. Mitt Romney won’t speak until Thursday, though the formal roll call vote to nominate him for president is currently scheduled for Tuesday.

  • Tropical Storm Isaac lashes Florida Keys with wind, rain; New Orleans preps

    Tropical storm Isaac passed through the warm waters of the Florida Straits to slam the Keys with intense winds and heavy rain. In Haiti, at least seven were killed. NBC's Al Roker reports.

    Updated at 11:27 p.m. ET: As Isaac lashed south Florida on Sunday, the tropical storm threatened to make landfall later this week as a hurricane in New Orleans on the seventh anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s near destruction of that historic city.

    Although the worst seems to have passed in Florida – a relief to Republicans planning their national convention – officials in Key West ordered visitors and residents to remain indoors as the storm moved through the island chain.

    “You’ve chosen to remain in the Keys during this storm and the only safe place for you to be is indoors,” said Monroe County Emergency Management Director Irene Toner. “Stay off roads and don’t go outside.”

    300-mile stretch of Gulf Coast on alert after 'huge storm' Isaac drenches Florida

    As of 11 p.m. ET, the storm had maximum sustained winds of 65 miles per hour, was about 75 miles west, southwest of Key West, moving west, northwest at 14 miles per hour, the National Hurricane Center in Miami, Fla. said.


    Isaac caused weekend havoc in Cuba, where it downed trees and power lines. Before that, Isaac was blamed for seven deaths in Haiti.

    Forecasters warned that Isaac could be upgraded to a Category 2 hurricane – capable of sustained winds of 96-100 mph – as it hits the northern Gulf Coast somewhere between Florida and Louisiana later this week.

    The governors of Mississippi and Louisiana declared a state of emergency as officials prepared for Isaac.

    Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal urged residents in low-lying areas of several southeastern parishes to voluntarily leave ahead of the storm. He said mandatory evacuations would likely be ordered on Monday. The governor also activated 4,000 National Guard troops and informed other states that Louisiana might need assistance if hit by Isaac.

    "We’re all going to err on the side of being overprepared," Jindal said. He added that he may skip his speaking engagement at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., this week if his state is still threatened by the storm.

    In the city of New Orleans, which was ravaged by Hurricane Katrina seven years ago, Mayor Mitch Landrieu also declared a state of emergency. "I'll remind everybody that we thought Katrina would be a wind and rain event," Landrieu said.

    New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu declared a state of emergency in his city, warning residents to be prepared as the storm hurled toward hurricane status. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

    "Residents should be frightened because we have issued a State of Emergency," Mississippi Gov. Bryant said. "However, I urge individuals and families to finalize their personal preparedness efforts. Review your family communication plan, make sure your emergency supply kit is fully stocked and know where you will go if you need to evacuate."

    The National Hurricane Center on Sunday evening discontinued a hurricane warning for the Florida Keys and west coast of Florida, but issued a hurricane warning hurricane for the northern Gulf of Mexico coast from the New Orleans area to the Florida Panhandle.

    In South Florida, three people were killed in two separate crashes due to wet roads, reported NBC News affiliate NBCMiami.com. The first crash involved a head-on collision, which killed both drivers, and in the second, the car plunged into a canal and the driver drowned, officials said.

    Some minor flooding and power outages were reported in the Florida Keys but with the worst seemingly over, South Florida officials were relieved as Isaac shifted west. "We prepared for the worst and for us it's a relief," Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez  said, according to NBCMiami.com.

    This storm will encounter a different New Orleans -- many homeless because of Hurricane Katrina. The storm will also test new gates and levees. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Related: Follow Isaac's path with our storm tracker
    Related: Live updates and analysis from weather.com

    Dr. Rick Knabb, director of the National Hurricane Center, said forecast models “can drive us nuts sometimes” but they play an important role for guidance.

    “It’s still very uncertain where the center of Isaac will come ashore in its final landfall in the northern Gulf,” Knabb told the Weather Channel on Sunday, “and that can make all the difference as to who gets the strongest winds, who gets the strongest storm surge.

    “Gradually, we’re seeing (Isaac’s) inner core develop. We’re certain it’s going to be a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico,” Knabb said.

    Cancellations and shutdowns
    The Republican Party said it would recess its national convention in Tampa for a day out of safety concerns as the storm bore down. Republicans, who will formally nominate Mitt Romney as their presidential candidate for the November election, will briefly convene their four-day meeting on Monday, then recess until Tuesday. 

    “When she storm passes and the sun comes out it’s going to be great to be in Tampa,” Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn said.

    Isaac's path – whether west toward the Florida Panhandle or east toward New Orleans – is disputed by European and U.S. weather forecasting models. The Weather Channel's Bryan Norcross has more.

    Related: Republicans effectively cancel first day of convention 

    Gulf of Mexico oil operators braced for the first hurricane to affect the U.S. oil patch in 2012. Officials said the storm could shut down more than half of U.S. offshore oil output. Isaac's more westerly expected track brings it closer to the heart of the U.S. offshore oil patch, which produces about 23 percent of U.S. oil output and 7 percent of its natural gas output

    Airlines are preparing for Isaac’s impact on Florida by waiving fees for changes and refunds for flights into and out of south Florida. Additionally, airlines on Sunday canceled most of south Florida operations.

    Key West airports were closing Sunday night and most operations in and out of Miami and Fort Lauderdale were canceled until noon Monday, according to FlightAware.com. Airlines are not expecting long-term impact in Florida from the storm and should be operating normally by late Monday once airplanes, crew and staff are back in position. 

    More than 740 flights to, from and within the United States were canceled Sunday in preparation for Isaac, with the bulk of the cancellations at Miami and Fort Lauderdale.

    Meanwhile, the Sunday night performance of classic rock legends Lynyrd Skynyrd at Tampa’s American Action Network Pavilion at Liberty Plaza was canceled over safety concerns.

    Old hat for locals
    Key West locals followed time-worn storm preparedness rituals while awaiting the storm.

    On Saturday, a steady line of cars moved north along the Overseas Highway, the only road linking the Florida Keys. Residents boarded up windows, laid down sandbags and shuttered businesses ahead of the approaching storm. Even Duval Street, Key West's storied main drag, was subdued for a weekend, though not enough to stop music from playing or drinks from being poured.

    Alan Diaz / AP

    Tropical Storm Isaac rakes the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Cuba as it makes its way toward Florida.

    "We'll just catch every place that's open," said Ted Lamarche, a 48-year-old pizzeria owner visiting Key West to celebrate his anniversary with his wife, Deanna. They walked along on Duval Street, where a smattering of people still wandered even as many storefronts were boarded up and tourists sported ponchos and yellow slickers.

    "Category None!" one man shouted in a show of optimism.

    Related: Weather Channel slideshow: The Wrath of Isaac

    The Keys were bracing for storm surges of up to four feet, strong winds and the possibility of tornadoes. The island chain's two airports closed Saturday night, and volunteers and some residents began filing into shelters.

    "This is a huge inconvenience," said Dale Shelton, a 57-year-old retiree in Key West who was staying in a shelter.

    The Associated Press, Reuters and NBC's Isolde Raftery contributed to this report.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


     

  • 6 dead, at least a dozen wounded in less than 24 hours in Chicago

    Devlin Brown / Zuma Press

    Aug. 23, 2012 - Chicago, IL, USA - United States - Paramedics treat multiple gunshot victims in the 7800 block of south Essex Avenue, August 23, 2012, in Chicago, Illinois. (Credit Image: © Devlin Brown/Chicago Tribune/MCT/ZUMAPRESS.com)

    Six people were killed and at least a dozen wounded in shootings that started Friday afternoon in Chicago and continued Saturday, police say.

    The Chicago Tribune reported that on Saturday afternoon two masked assailants opened fire in the Chatham neighborhood on the city’s south side.

    A 20-year-old man died at the scene and an 18-year-old man shot in the leg and lower arm died later at a hospital, officials said. A teen girl wounded in the shooting was in serious condition, they said.


    The gunman ran off and got into a car after the shooting, police said.

    About 2:30 a.m. Saturday, according to the Chicago Sun-Times, a man later identified as Stephin Wilkins was fatally wounded during a robbery in the South Side Kenwood neighborhood. Wilkins, who is in his 20s, was sitting in a vehicle with his girlfriend when two men with a handgun tried to rob them, police said. Wilkins was shot trying to fight the robbers, police said.

    Late Friday night, also in the Chatham neighborhood, Phillip McCall, 34, was shot twice in the back and died later at a hospital, officials said.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Late Friday afternoon, The Associated Press reported, 17-year-old Lucian Dreux was fatally shot and a 42-year-old woman nearby was wounded in the thigh by a mountain bike rider in the city’s South Side Grand Crossing neighborhood, police said. Motives were unclear and witnesses were not cooperating.

    Also late Friday afternoon, 30-year-old Noah Cruz was shot in the chest and was pronounced dead after being taken to a hospital, the AP said.

    Early Saturday morning a man was shot on a South Side street by a passenger in a passing SUV; a woman and two men outside a North Side engagement party were wounded in a drive-by shooting; a man was wounded in a North Side alley; and a man in the West Side was shot by one for four assailants, all of whom fled on foot afterward.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Other shootings Friday included a South side drive-by that left a man with a head wound, an attack by a gunman that injured two 19-year-old men; and a South Side shooting that left a man and woman, both in their 30s, injured. A 15-year-old girl smoking pot in the Roseland neighborhood was shot and critically wounded accidentally, police told the Chicago Sun-Times.

    Chicago has seen a rise in homicides this month.

    Nineteen people were shot late Thursday and early Friday, NBCChicago.com reported. Thirteen of those were shot over a 30-minute period.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

  • Hamburger-throwing incident: School official who quit gets salary through February

    A Connecticut assistant principal who allegedly threw a hamburger at a student resigned two weeks ago but will still be paid through February.

    Patricia Whitney submitted her letter of resignation from West Haven High School to the School Board and Superintendent Neil Cavallaro on August 13.

    In May, Whitney allegedly got into an altercation with a female student in the school cafeteria. That student allegedly threw a hamburger at Whitney, who then threw it back at the student.


    Also on NBCConnecticut.com: Pet owners fall victim to lost pet scam

    The board voted on Monday to accept the resignation. Whitney signed the letter and the agreement presented to her by the board   The agreement states that Whitney will be paid through Feb. 28 or until she obtains comparable employment. If she finds another job that pays less, the school district will pay the difference.

    The school district will also provide Whitney with health insurance.

    According to the New Haven Register, Whitney‘s salary was between $118,000 and $120,000.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

  • NYPD confirms: All bystanders in Empire State attack hit by police bullets

    Officials in New York City defend police officers use of deadly force, as seen on graphic video, to stop gunman Jeffrey Johnson outside the Empire State Building. Nine bystanders were injured. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

     

    All nine people wounded during a dramatic confrontation between police and a gunman outside the Empire State Building were struck by bullets fired by the two officers, police said Saturday, citing ballistics evidence.

    The veteran patrolmen who opened fire on the suit-wearing gunman, Jeffrey Johnson, had only an instant to react when he whirled and pointed a .45-caliber pistol as they approached him from behind on a busy sidewalk.

    Officer Craig Matthews shot seven times. Officer Robert Sinishtaj fired nine times, police said. Neither had ever fired their weapons before on a patrol.


    More from NBCNewYork.com

    The volley of gunfire felled Johnson in just a few seconds and left nine other people bleeding on the sidewalk.

    In the initial chaos Friday, it wasn't clear whether Johnson or the officers were responsible for the trail of wounded, but based on ballistic and other evidence, "it appears that all nine of the victims were struck either by fragments or by bullets fired by police," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly told reporters on Saturday at a community event in Harlem.

    Surveillance video shows what transpired Friday when gunman Jeffrey Johnson drew his weapon and opened fire on police on a street packed with pedestrians in midtown Manhattan. Who was Johnson and what possibly caused him to become violent?

    He reiterated that the officers appeared to have no choice but to shoot Johnson, whose body had 10 bullet wounds in the chest, arms and legs.

    "I believe it was handled well," Kelly said.

    The officers confronted Johnson as he walked, casually, down the street after gunning down a former co-worker on the sidewalk outside the office they once shared. The shooting happened at 9 a.m., as the neighborhood bustled with people arriving for work.

    'Look of death': Co-workers tell of office feud

    The gunman and his victim, Steve Ercolino, had a history of workplace squabbles before Johnson was laid off from their company, Hazan Import Corp., a year ago. At one point, the two men had grappled physically in an elevator.

    John Koch, the property manager at the office building where the men worked, said security camera footage showed the two pushing and shoving. The tussle ended when Ercolino, a much larger man, pinned Johnson against the wall of the elevator by the throat, Koch said. Ercolino let him go after a few moments, and the two men went their separate ways.

    "They didn't like each other," Koch said.

    On Friday, Johnson shot Ercolino five times in the head and face, a medical examiner's spokeswoman said. After the shooting, Johnson, an eccentric T-shirt designer and avid bird-watcher who wore a suit every day, even when photographing hawks in Central Park, walked away as if nothing had happened.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com 

    Alerted by a construction worker, Officers Matthews and Sinishtaj gave chase as Johnson rounded a corner and walked along Fifth Avenue, in front of the landmark skyscraper.

    A security videotape from the scene shows several civilians — including three sitting on a bench only a few feet away — scattering as the officers opened fire.

    Police have determined that three people were struck by whole bullets — two of which were removed from victims at the hospital — and the rest were grazed "by fragments of some sort," Kelly said.

    Three people remained hospitalized, all in stable condition, police said.

    Both Matthews, 39, and Sinishtaj, 40, joined the nation's largest police department 15 years ago.

    Matthews had drawn attention earlier this year by filing a lawsuit against the New York Police Department that accused his superiors of unfairly punishing him for not meeting arrest quotas. A judge threw out the complaint.

    There was no immediate response to a message left with the union representing the two officers.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter 

    The shooting didn't deter tourists from flocking to the Empire State Building as usual on Saturday.

    Patricia Flynn, 57, a retired schoolteacher, visited the building's peak with her elderly mother, who once worked in the skyscraper as a secretary.

    "But I didn't tell her what happened," said Flynn, adding that her mother was unaware of Friday's shooting. "And she really enjoyed the view."

    A group of 31 tourists from all over France held a meeting Friday night at their nearby hotel to decide whether to cancel their planned Empire State Building visit.

    "We were scared, and we thought it was a risk," said Catherine Krukar, 38, a teacher.

    But in the end, they went ahead with the visit, she said after descending from the observation tower,

    "We know it can happen anywhere, and we wanted to see the Empire State Building," Krukar said. "It was beautiful!

    WNBC's Jonathan Dienst contributed to this report.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

  • Grizzly mauls hiker to death at Denali National Park; bear shot

    Updated at 11:05 p.m. ET: A backpacker hiking inside Denali National Park was killed by a grizzly bear after a violent struggle, the park said in a statement Saturday. The death was the first fatal bear mauling inside the huge park in Alaska.

    Rangers discovered the body after three dayhikers found a backpack, as well as torn clothing and blood, along the Toklat River on Friday afternoon, the park stated.

    The rangers arrived at the site Friday night but were unable to immediately recover the remains due to the presence of at least one bear in the area and the approaching darkness.

    Reuters reported that Denali park Superintendent Paul Anderson said the bear suspected of attacking the man on Friday afternoon, a large male grizzly, was found near the body and was shot from a helicopter Saturday afternoon.


    Reuters said officials hoped to recover the man's body Saturday evening and were trying to contact his family.

    Pete Webster, chief ranger for the park, told Reuters that investigators will try to confirm that the dead grizzly was to blame by examining its stomach contents, analyzing bear scat and conducting a DNA analysis.

    There also may be photographic clues. Reuters reports:

    A camera found near the backpack showed that the hiker had photographed the bear for more than eight minutes and appeared to have come within 50 yards of the animal before he was attacked, Anderson said.

    The photographs do not show the attack, Anderson said. "They show the bear grazing in the willows and not acting aggressive in any form or manner during that period of time," he said.

    Park rules require people to stay a quarter-mile away from bears and to immediately back away at a slow pace if they find themselves to be closer.

    All hiking in the area was banned until further notice. 

    The park estimates that some 12 grizzlies have been residing in the area this summer.

    Denali in June saw the tragic deaths of four Japanese climbers swept up by an avalanche on Mount McKinley.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

  • Astronaut Neil Armstrong, first man to walk on moon, dies at age 82

    Astronaut Neil Armstrong awed the entire planet when he became the first man to step foot on the moon in 1969. He died Saturday at age 82. NBC's Tom Costello reports on Armstrong's life and legacy.


    First moonwalker Neil Armstrong's death at the age of 82 marks the passing of a "reluctant American hero," as well as the dimming of the Space Age's brightest moment.

    His death followed complications from heart-bypass surgery he underwent this month, Armstrong's family said today in a statement released by NASA. The first public report of Armstrong's death came via NBC News' Cape Canaveral correspondent, Jay Barbree, a longtime friend. 

    Armstrong has been immortalized in human history as the first human to set foot on a celestial body beyond Earth. "That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind," he radioed back to Earth from the moon on July 20, 1969.


    NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said that "as long as there are history books, Neil Armstrong will be included in them."

    Armstrong's fellow moonwalker on the Apollo 11 mission, Buzz Aldrin, was among the legions mourning his passage. "We are missing a great spokesman and leader in the space program," Aldrin said in a BBC interview. He said he'd remember Armstrong "as being a very capable commander and leader of an achievement that will be recognized until man sets foot on the planet Mars."

    Michael Collins, the crewmate who circled the moon in the Apollo 11 command module while Armstrong and Aldrin took that first trip to the lunar surface, also paid tribute to his commander in a NASA statement: "He was the best, and I will miss him terribly."

    President Barack Obama said that Armstrong and his crew "carried with them the aspirations of an entire nation," and that the first steps on the moon "delivered a moment of human achievement that will never be forgotten."

    NBC's Jay Barbree, who has covered every manned space mission in U.S. history, was first to break the news that Neil Armstrong had died. He discusses the astronaut's life with NBC's Lester Holt.

    "Today, Neil's spirit of discovery lives on in all the men and women who have devoted their lives to exploring the unknown — including those who are ensuring that we reach higher and go further in space," Obama said in a White House statement. "That legacy will endure — sparked by a man who taught us the enormous power of one small step."

    The "one small step" served as the climax of a superpower space race with the Soviet Union, and arguably established the United States' primacy in outer space for decades to come. But Apollo 11 also set a precedent for peaceful cooperation in space. "We came in peace for all mankind," the plaque left behind on the moon read. At one point during Armstrong's first moonwalk, he stopped for what he called a "tender moment" and set down a patch to commemorate NASA astronauts and Soviet cosmonauts who died in the course of their duties.

    Before and after the moon
    The Ohio-born Armstrong began his career in aerospace as a Navy fighter pilot who served with distinction in the Korean War. During the 1950s, he was a test pilot with experience flying more than 200 kinds of aircraft. He was accepted into NASA's second astronaut class in 1962, and during his mission as Gemini 8 commander in 1966, he tamed his wildly spinning capsule and brought it in for an emergency landing.

    See images from the career of astronaut and American hero Neil Armstrong.

    That quiet cool served him well during Apollo 11, when he had to take manual control of the lunar module, nicknamed Eagle, during the landing. When the craft touched down in the moon's Sea of Tranquility, about 30 seconds' worth of fuel remained.

    "Houston, Tranquility Base here," Armstrong reported to Mission Control. "The Eagle has landed."

    Armstrong and Aldrin spent more than 21 hours on the lunar surface, including two and a half hours' worth of moonwalking. They were amazed to come back to Earth and see how millions of people across the planet had followed their exploits. "Neil, look up there," Aldrin told him as he pointed at a TV screen. "We missed the whole thing."

    After his moon mission, Armstrong took a low profile, becoming what his family called a "reluctant American hero who always believed he was just doing his job." He left NASA in 1971, and took on executive positions in the aerospace industry as well as a teaching position in the University of Cincinnati's engineering department.  Armstrong served on several policy commissions, including the presidential panel that investigated the 1986 Challenger explosion.

    Concerned about future spaceflight
    In his latter years, Armstrong became increasingly concerned about America's continuing leadership in space. He was a strong proponent of efforts to send American astronauts back to the moon, and feared that NASA's cancellation of its return-to-the-moon program would cede America's position as a leader in space exploration to other nations. 

    "Some question why America should return to the moon," Armstrong told a House committee in 2010. "'After all,' they say, 'we have already been there.' I find that mystifying. It would be as if 16th-century monarchs proclaimed that 'we need not go to the New World, we have already been there.'"

    When NBC's Jay Barbree asked Armstrong last month to reflect on the future of spaceflight, for the 43rd anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing, the former astronaut pointed to remarks in which he said the lunar environment was "an exceptional location to learn about traveling to more distant places."

    "I am persuaded that a return to the moon would be the most productive path to expanding the human presence in the solar system," he wrote.

    Armstrong was famous for staying out of fame's spotlight as much as he could. Some outsiders may have faulted him for his reticence, but not his fellow astronauts.

    "Most of our group in those days could have accomplished the challenge of the mission," Apollo 7 astronaut Walt Cunningham told NBC News' James Oberg in an email, "but I do not know a one that could have handled the resulting notoriety as well as Neil did." 

    Over the past year, Armstrong was a bit more in the public eye. Last November, he and other space pioneers — including Aldrin, Collins and John Glenn, the first American in orbit — were awarded the Congressional Gold Medal during a ceremony at the U.S. Capitol.

    In February, Armstrong spoke at Ohio State University during a February event honoring the 50th anniversary of Glenn's history-making spaceflight. In May, Armstrong joined Apollo 17 commander Gene Cernan, the last man to walk on the moon, at Pensacola Naval Air Station in Florida to support the opening of the National Flight Academy, which aims to teach math and science to kids through an aviation-oriented camp.

    On Aug. 7, just two days after his 82nd birthday, Armstrong underwent quadruple-bypass heart surgery after flunking a medical stress test. At the time, his wife, Carol, reported that her husband was "doing great" — but today the family said complications from that surgery led to his death.

    Neil Armstrong's first step on the moon and his now famous first words.

    "While we mourn the loss of a very good man, we also celebrate his remarkable life and hope that it serves as an example to young people around the world to work hard to make their dreams come true, to be willing to explore and push the limits, and to selflessly serve a cause greater than themselves," the family said in today's statement. "For those who may ask what they can do to honor Neil, we have a simple request. Honor his example of service, accomplishment and modesty, and the next time you walk outside on a clear night and see the moon smiling down at you, think of Neil Armstrong and give him a wink."

    Armstrong is survived by his wife, two sons, a stepson and stepdaughter, 10 grandchildren, a brother and a sister, NASA said. A website, NeilArmstrongInfo.com, has been created to provide more information about Armstrong's life and legacy.

    Quick bites about Neil Armstrong:

    • Armstrong's interest in flight began in childhood: He earned his student pilot's certificate on his 16th birthday, before he got an automobile driver's license. "He never had a girl. He didn't need a car. All he had to do was get out to that airport," Armstrong's father was quoted as saying in the astronaut's biography, "First Man."
    • Armstrong's pulse was measured at 150 beats per minute as he guided the lunar lander to the moon's surface, NASA said. "I believe every human has a finite number of heartbeats," Armstrong once said. "I don't intend to waste any of mine."
    • Asked about his experience on the moon, he told CBS: "It's an interesting place to be. I recommend it."
    • A crater on the moon is named for Armstrong. It is located about 30 miles (50 kilometers) from the site of the landing.
    • In 2005 Armstrong was upset to learn that his barber had sold clippings of his hair to a collector for $3,000. The man who bought the hair refused to return it, saying he was adding it to his collection of locks from Abraham Lincoln, Napoleon, Marilyn Monroe, Albert Einstein and others.
    • Although he was famously reticent, Armstrong once appeared in a TV commercial for Chrysler. He said he made the ad because of Chrysler's engineering history and his desire to help the company out of financial troubles.

    More about Neil Armstrong's life and legacy:


    Editor's note: An early headline on this story briefly misstated Neil Armstrong's name.

    This report was last updated at 12:30 a.m. ET Aug. 26 and includes reporting by Reuters and The Associated Press.

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

  • Tropical Storm Isaac hugs Cuba coast, expected to be Cat 2 hurricane in Gulf

    Florida's governor declares a state of emergency as residents and tourists flee Key West. Storm preparations are under way all along the Gulf Coast. NBC's Thanh Truong reports.

    Updated at 6 p.m. ET: Tropical Storm Isaac was hugging the northern coastline of eastern Cuba on Saturday after claiming at least four lives in Haiti. Isaac should become a Category 1 hurricane on Sunday just as it nears the Florida Keys, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said, and then grow into an even stronger Category 2 storm with 100 mph winds.

    Isaac "could be significantly stronger than currently forecast" once it enters the Gulf of Mexico, the center said in an advisory.

    It will first sweep past southwest Florida and the Florida Keys, where "hurricane conditions are expected ... Sunday," it said in a separate update.


    Republicans effectively cancel first day of convention

    Isaac is a massive storm, with tropical storm-force winds extending 230 miles from the center. Key West International Airport was halting all flights at 7 p.m. Saturday until the storm had passed.

    Tropical Storm Isaac is picking up steam as it barrels through the Caribbean. The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reports on the storm's effects.

    In Haiti, a woman and a child in the town of Souvenance were killed in the storm, a local official reported. A woman in the southern coastal city of Jacmel was crushed to death when a tree fell on her house, government officials said.

    In the capital Port-au-Prince -- where some 350,000 people are still living in tents or shelters after the 2010 Haiti earthquake -- a girl, 10, was killed when a wall fell on her.

    Power outages and flooding were reported as Isaac moved across the hilly and severely deforested Caribbean country.

    "There's a lot of rain, a lot of wind," said Magdala Jean-Baptiste, who huddled with her frightened children in their home in the southern coastal city of Jacmel. "We haven't had any power since the storm started yesterday. We passed the night with no sleep." 

    Tropical Storm Isaac lashes the island of Hispaniola, killing at least three people in Haiti, where thousands still live in tents after an earthquake over two years ago. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

    In neighboring Dominican Republic, Isaac felled power and phone lines and left at least a dozen towns cut off by flood waters. The most severe damage was reported along the south coast, including the capital Santo Domingo, where more than half the city was without power.

    Cuba prepared by closing beaches and evacuating tourists in vulnerable areas, NBC's Mary Murray and The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reported from Havana. Flights across Cuba were also suspended. 

    In Baracoa, a city on Cuba's eastern side, high seas began topping the seawall Friday night, Radio Baracoa reported. 

    Now with 60-mph winds, Isaac should exit Cuba on Sunday and then move south of the Florida Keys and into the Gulf.

    Dieu Nalio Chery / AP

    Residents wade through a flooded street in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Saturday.

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott on Saturday declared a state of emergency to make sure local and state agencies would be ready. Republicans effectively canceled the first day of their national convention in Tampa, on Florida's central Gulf Coast, deciding to gavel it open on Monday, then immediately recess to some time on Tuesday.

    Gulf of Mexico operators began shutting down offshore oil and gas rigs on Friday ahead of the storm. 

    Follow Isaac's path with our storm tracker
    Live updates and analysis from weather.com

    Tampa's weather forecast includes rain and high winds Sunday night and into Monday, The Weather Channel reported. The winds could gust up to 60 mph.

    The Weather Channel's Bryan Norcross tracks Tropical Storm Isaac's movement and predictions about where it is headed.

    Monday and Tuesday include a risk of tornadoes across south Florida. 

    Officials were handing out sandbags to residents in the Tampa area, which often floods when heavy rainstorms hit. Sandbags also were being handed out in Homestead, 20 years after Hurricane Andrew devastated the community there. Otherwise, however, convention preparations were moving ahead as usual.

    Isaac's exact path is still unclear, but the hurricane center said models suggest it will make landfall somewhere between the Florida Panhandle and New Orleans on Tuesday night.

    The storm's anticipated path did shift closer to the Keys than previously forecast and emergency managers urged tourists to leave the islands if they could do so safely. A single road links the chain of islands to the Florida Peninsula. 

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Walter Michot / AP

    Tropical Storm Isaac rakes the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Cuba as it makes its way toward Florida, where Tampa will be hosting the Republican National Convention.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

     

  • Migration in the Americas: Iraqis in US, safer but struggling

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Samad and Dina Jabbo dance at a banquet organized for the Iraqi community in El Cajon, Calif. Samad, 40, his wife Dina, 37, and their daughters Monica, 16, and Milano, 12, and son Antonio, 7 months, arrived in the United States in June 2010 after living in Damascus, Syria, for four years. They are Christians from Baghdad and have green cards. They felt their lives were in danger when they lived in Iraq.

    Photojournalist Kadir van Lohuizen traveled from the southern tip of South America to the far reaches of Alaska on the North American continent to explore migration in the Americas. What he found both supported and defied stereotypes, which he reported on a website and an app for iPad called Via Panam.

    “Little Baghdad” is the nickname for El Cajon, a suburb of San Diego that is home to a high concentration of the 116,000 Iraqis living in the United States. The Kurds came in the late 1980s, followed later by Sunnis, Shiites and Christians. They live together peacefully, far away from the violence in Iraq, but life is far from easy. Many lost their social status and networks of family and friends when they emigrated, and they often struggle to find work. Xenophobia is also an ever-present obstacle.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Monica Jabbo opens her locker at school in El Cajon. She and her sister Milano love being in the U.S. but it's still a struggle for the family -- they have to finance day-to-day life and pay their rent, which is $1,200. Because Monica's father Samad is unemployed, the family has to rely heavily on government assistance -- $760 per month.

    The United States admits thousands of Iraqis each year as refugees -- although that is only a fraction of the number that Iraq's Middle Eastern neighbors and some European countries have absorbed. Nonetheless, their numbers in the San Diego area rose rapidly after the American invasion of Iraq. El Cajon, around 15 miles northeast of San Diego, has almost 7,000 Iraqi-born residents out of a total population of 100,000. A further 3,000 have Iraqi ancestry, according to the 2010 U.S. Census.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    The Baghdad cafe in El Cajon, above, is a popular tea house frequented by many Iraqis in the community.

    In recent years, Iraqi stores and restaurants have been cropping up across the city, the Arabic script signs above their doors quickly becoming part of the city's scene. But the growing Iraqi presence has also brought some unsavory characters: According to authorities, members of Iraqi criminal organizations from Detroit are now active in El Cajon. In late 2011, police raided an Iraqi club in search of drugs and weapons.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Mohammed Mustafa, 68, in his store in El Cajon. Mustafa and his wife Nasrin, 58, have eight children, two of whom live at home. They are from Dohok in Iraqi Kurdistan. In August 1988 they fled to Diyarbakir in Turkish Kurdistan, and in September 1991 they arrived in New York. They made their way to El Cajon in June 1993. Mustafa feels he has made a mistake by coming to the U.S. and not returning to Kurdistan, where the economy nowadays is growing. The family recently opened this 'Community Fashion' store but business is very slow, he says.

    Many Iraqis in El Cajon say xenophobia is common, and some fear being the victim of a hate crime. It is not an unfounded worry -- a 32-year-old Iraqi woman was murdered in El Cajon in what appeared to be a racially motivated attack in March. Next to her body police found a note threatening her family. "Go back to your own country, you're a terrorist," it read.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Breakfast at home. Khattab Aljubori, 37, and his wife Suhad, 31, frequently speak to their family in Iraq through Skype. The computer is parked near the table so that they can have breakfast 'together'. The family, including children Ibrahim, 4, Awos, 3, and twins Mustafa and Fatima, 6 months, as well as Khattab's mother Nhanaa, 61, came to San Diego in November 2010 from Babylon, Iraq. Khattab worked for the U.S. in Iraq as a computer and info system administrator and was often threatened for being a U.S. agent. In the end it became so dangerous for him and his family that they sought asylum in the U.S. and were granted visas.

    Iraqis in El Cajon make an effort to support their fellow immigrants. Each year the Iraqi community organizes a large celebration that brings everyone together. Local businessmen meet one another and newly arrived immigrants learn about life in America from their established countrymen.

    Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

    Khattab with his family in a park in San Diego. While they lived comfortably in Iraq, they find it much harder to be successful in the U.S. and they say they feel they've lost their dignity. Khattab likes the U.S. but his wife wants to go back to Iraq. She says she feels locked up and misses her family. Finances are also an issue -- Khattab earns some money repairing people's computers but they depend on government support and sometimes find it difficult to pay the rent.

    K. van Lohuizen / NOOR

    From Colombians fleeing war to North Americans retirees moving to Nicaragua, a photographer's journey from Chile to Alaska explores both the expected and unexpected patterns of migration in the Americas

    Experience the entire journey, from Chile to Alaska, by exploring the slideshow at right, the Via Panam website or by downloading the app for iPad.

    More Photoblogs from the Migration in the Americas series:
    Mom works in US while family stays in El Salvador
    US retirees flock to Nicaragua

    On the run from water in Panama

    Bolivia hopes for windfall from producing lithium

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

  • Election observers True the Vote accused of intimidating minority voters

    From a continuing  series of articles, Who Can Vote? , a News21 investigation of voting rights in America. The series began with the article, New database of voter fraud finds no evidence that photo ID laws are needed.

    By AJ Vicens and Natasha Khan
    News21


    Discuss this series of stories on the Facebook page for Open Channel, the NBC News investigative blog.


    As Jamila Gatlin waited in line at a northside Milwaukee elementary school gym to cast her ballot June 5 in the proposed recall of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, she noticed three people in the back of the room. They were watching, taking notes.

    Officially called “election observers,” they were white. Gatlin, and almost everyone in line, was black.

    “That’s pretty harassing right there, if you ask me,” Gatlin said in the hall outside the gym. “Why do we have to be watched while we vote?”

    Two of the observers were from a group based more than 1,000 miles away, in Houston, Texas, called True the Vote, an initiative that grew out of the Houston branch of the Tea Party known as the King Street Patriots. The stated goal of True the Vote is to prevent voter fraud, which the group and founder Catherine Engelbrecht claim is preventing “free and fair” elections.

    Back in April, at True the Vote’s second national summit in Houston, more than 300 people from 32 states were transfixed by Engelbrecht and an array of conservative speakers.

    “You have all been chosen because you are all warriors,” the 42-year-old mother of two said to cheers at the Sheraton Houston Brookhollow Hotel.



    Who can vote? A national News21 investigation of voting rights in America.
    Is voting fraud a serious problem in American elections? Will new identification requirements at the polls disenfranchise prospective voters among minorities, college students or the elderly? Should ex-felons who've served their sentences be allowed to vote? Are voting machines reliable?

    To report this series of articles, two dozen top student journalists from 11 universities are investigating the impact on American voters of recent changes in election laws and voting procedures in many of the 50 states.

    The series is published by NBCNews.com.


    A few people wore $20 True the Vote T-shirts showing Martin Luther King Jr.'s image over the quote, "Peace if possible, truth at all costs." The quotation is widely credited online to 16th century theologian Martin Luther, not the civil rights icon. However, Mark Edwards, senior adviser to the dean of the Harvard Divinity School, told News21 he could not be sure the quote was Martin Luther's.

    Few minorities heard Engelbrecht say “the time has come for a national call for election integrity,” but about 100 minority protesters were outside, protesting True the Vote and a national trend of tougher voting regulations.

    The protesters, mainly blacks and Hispanics from a coalition of Texas minority rights groups, came to the Not In My Houston protest with their mouths covered in bright blue tape and holding signs that read, “We will not be silenced" and "Stop voter suppression!"

    Natasha Khan/News21

    A protester from the "Not in My Houston" campaign, a coalition of civil rights groups, stands outside the Sheraton Brookhollow Hotel in Houston where True the Vote held its second national summit in April. The groups accused True the Vote of trying to silence minority voters by sending observers across the nation to minority polling places.

    In just three years, True the Vote has moved beyond Texas and established itself as one of the political right's fastest growing and most controversial groups.

    With its model of poll-watcher training and voter-roll analysis used in at least 20 states, True the Vote is part of a national movement to tighten regulations on early voting and voter registration and to require that voters show ID at the polls in the name of fighting voter fraud.

    Since 2010, 37 state legislatures have passed or considered such laws, championed by conservative activists, including True the Vote. Critics claim these new restrictions could suppress the votes of millions of people, especially minorities, across the country.

    Engelbrecht testified in favor of the photo ID law in the Texas Legislature in 2011. The U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division blocked the measure in March, claiming it could disproportionately suppress Hispanic votes. A three-judge district court panel in Washington heard arguments in the Texas case in July.


    Follow Open Channel from NBC News on Twitter and Facebook.


    “For every fraudulent vote that is cast, a valid vote is disenfranchised,” Engelbrecht told News21, saying that the only way to trust elections is to make sure “only legitimate votes are counted to begin with.”

    While Engelbrecht says her group is about fighting election fraud, Democrats and civil rights activists say True the Vote and related organizations target black and Hispanic polling places to hold down minority votes.

    “You don’t have to beat up people up or chain them to keep them from voting,” said Terry O’Rourke, an attorney in the Harris County, Texas, Attorney’s Office in response to the King Street Patriots and True the Vote’s 2010 activities.

    Engelbrecht and her supporters can point to little evidence of voter fraud prosecutions, relying on anecdotes and news reports alleging fraud.

    Still, she says True the Vote will train 1 million poll watchers nationwide, leaving “no polling place unmanned” to stand guard against election fraud in November.

    Labor, civil rights and voting rights groups, including the AFL-CIO, NAACP, National Council of La Raza, also are coordinating poll watchers.

    Others, including Demos and the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, plan to educate election officials on what poll watchers can do.

    With President Barack Obama’s re-election campaign and civil rights groups expected to mobilize their own armies of lawyers and poll watchers, and True the Vote’s efforts, thousands of poll watchers could face off in November.

    “We are concerned about groups that exaggerate claims of voter impersonation in order to organize efforts that can lead to intimidation of eligible voters,” said Eddie Hailes, managing director at the Advancement Project, a Washington D.C., civil rights group.

    True the Vote was active in Wisconsin for weeks before Walker and five Republican officials faced a labor-backed recall after the state limited the collective bargaining rights of public employees. True the Vote trained about 500 poll watchers, mainly through Web sessions, and recruited volunteers from across the country.

    A week after Walker beat back a labor challenge to keep his office — which True the Vote called “a victory” — the group joined with conservative government watchdog Judicial Watch to sue Indiana elections officials over the state’s alleged failure to maintain accurate voter rolls according to federal law.

    News21 is a program of the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation that is helping to change the way journalism is taught in the U.S. and train a new generation of journalists capable of reshaping the news industry. It is headquartered at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University. Since 2006, nearly 500 top journalism students in the U.S. have participated in the landmark national initiative.

    Through multiple email blasts, True the Vote urged support for Republican Florida Gov. Rick Scott’s effort to remove thousands of suspected non-citizens from the state’s voter rolls. What has become known as the “purge” faced several lawsuits that claimed Florida tried to strip eligible voters, predominantly minorities, of the right to vote. The group also joined Judicial Watch in a federal suit backing Florida against the federal government.

    The activities of the King Street Patriots and True the Vote have attracted two lawsuits and a state ethics complaint in Texas since 2009. In a lawsuit brought by the Texas Democratic Party, a judge ruled in March that True the Vote was acting as a political action committee, violating state campaign finance law by providing illegal contributions to the Republican Party in the form of trained poll watchers and Republican-only candidate forums.

    Texas Democratic Party general counsel Chad Dunn said he doesn’t buy the group’s grassroots image.

    “Nobody gets to know what they are doing. They are the one and only political operation in Texas that isn't disclosing its donors,” he told News21.

    Engelbrecht said her groups raise most of their money by passing around an old felt cowboy hat at weekly meetings at King Street’s headquarters.

    The group raised $64,687 in 2010, according to federal tax documents, reporting it all as gifts, contributions and grants. After initially offering to provide its 2011 tax records to News21, Engelbrecht later declined.

    Engelbrecht ran a small oil-field services company with her husband Brian, out of public view, until 2009, when she got into politics after hearing CNBC personality Rick Santelli’s call for a Chicago tea party.

    Wanting to do more direct action than other Houston-area tea party groups, Engelbrecht formed King Street Patriots in 2009, naming it for the Boston site of a bloody confrontation between British troops and American colonists in 1770. True the Vote, formed next, is the poll-watcher training and voter-roll purging effort.

    Engelbrecht, who has called poll watchers the “eyes and ears of the republic” who “preserve a free and fair process,” has been working hard: True the Vote already has hosted two national summits and drawn thousands into its work.

    Natasha Khan/News21

    True the Vote grew out of the Houston Tea Party, also known as the King Street Patriots. The organization sold $20 T-shirts with images of Elvis Presley, Ronald Reagan and Martin Luther King Jr., promoting the group's mission of "free and fair" elections during a national summit in Houston in April.

    She has surrounded herself with influential conservative advisers including former Justice Department lawyer J. Christian Adams, who accused his agency of bias against whites for failing to pursue voter intimidation criminal charges against the New Black Panthers in 2008. Another adviser is the conservative think tank Heritage Foundation’s Hans von Spakovsky, one of the right’s leading voter ID advocates.

    Lawyer James Bopp -- who successfully argued the Citizens United case, in which the U.S. Supreme Court allowed unlimited spending on campaigns by corporations — is one of the attorneys representing the King Street Patriots and True the Vote in the Texas Democratic Party lawsuit.

    Engelbrecht and True the Vote volunteers, in interviews at the group’s summit in April 2012 in Houston and in Wisconsin, describe themselves as the front line in a war against voter fraud.

    Engelbrecht’s poll watchers claimed to witness election workers telling voters how to vote in Houston in 2010, and submitted 800 reports of irregularities to the Harris County Clerk’s office in Houston. Nothing came of the complaints.

    “Just being in the poll and having a presence in the polling place is a deterrent,” said Cathy Kelleher, a Maryland real estate agent who started poll watching and voter-roll inspection efforts after getting involved with True the Vote in 2011. “We’re there so people don’t try to do anything fishy.”

    Kelleher also takes part in True the Vote’s other initiative, which allows volunteers to scour voter registration records for irregularities. True the Vote provides volunteers with a database to compare voter rolls with other public records, and any potential problems are forwarded to local election officials for investigation.

    True the Vote won’t discuss the quality of its database, and volunteers have to sign a confidentiality agreement.

    Kelleher said she’s used the database extensively in Maryland with her group, Election Integrity Maryland. In a little more than a year, she claims to have found thousands of cases of people who’ve left the state but still are on voter rolls, and dead people listed as active voters.

    “We’ve made no assertions thus far that voter fraud has been committed,” Kelleher told News21. “All we’re saying is that there has been nothing done to prevent it.”

    Alisha Alexander, the elections director in Prince George’s County, Maryland, said Kelleher could be helpful if she understood legal requirements for removing people from voter rolls.

    “I’m not sure that this group does understand the state law,” Alexander said. “Because a group comes out and says these individuals (should be off the rolls) based on research from Facebook and LinkedIn, that’s just not an acceptable source.”

    Kelleher said some of her volunteers have used social media, but only after using other public records and websites such as whitepages.com, veromi.net and peoplefinders.com.

    “Certainly, based on (Facebook and LinkedIn), we don’t expect someone to be taken off the voter rolls,” Kelleher said. “But we do expect the Board of Elections to do more than they’re doing now.”

    Texas Democrats accused Engelbrecht’s poll watchers of intimidating minority voters during the 2010 election in Harris County. The county attorney's office and the U.S. Department of Justice looked into the allegations,but no charges were brought, according to O'Rourke and Douglas Ray, another attorney in the office.

    The U.S. Department of Justice won’t discuss specifics but a department official told News21 that federal monitors were present during the 2010 election and the May 2012 Texas presidential primary.

    Engelbrecht, who said True the Vote has not harassed or intimidated anyone, insists it is nonpartisan and does not target minority voting areas.

    “When you look at where there is need for people to go and work at the polls,” she told News21 in a phone interview, “the fact of the matter is, there are fewer volunteers working in minority locations.”

    True the Vote claims its volunteers are diverse. However Engelbrecht denied News21 requests for a demographic breakdown of her volunteers.

    Voting rights groups say white poll watchers in minority areas can have a disenfranchising impact even if there’s no direct interaction.

    “In a community where voter participation is not very high and where folks are not as politically active, any barrier that prevents you from getting to the polls or that discourages you from getting to the polls is potentially a problem,” said Nic Riley of NYU's Brennan Center.

    Chandler Davidson, a professor for nearly 40 years at Houston’s Rice University and an expert on minority voting rights in Texas, sees the King Street Patriots and True the Vote’s activities in a historical context.

    “We have a long and sad history of efforts by the white majority in the state of Texas to prevent or cut down on the ability of minorities to vote and to elect candidates of their choice,” Davidson told News21.

    If it isn’t racism, Davidson said, the goal is to suppress Democratic votes.

    Ray, of the Harris County Attorney’s Office, has talked with the King Street Patriots about rules governing poll watchers, and has heard complaints about them from the community. He said there’s no problem if Engelbrecht and her groups follow the law and respect people’s right to vote.

    But, Ray said, the way True the Vote goes about its mission creates tension.

    “The problem is not the actual act, but what the act is representing,” Ray said, citing that the group’s advisers, speakers at its summits and language on its website.

    “If you listen to all their rhetoric, it's clear what their intent is,” Ray said. “Their intent is to try to act out on this belief ... they have that the only reason Barack Obama got elected is because a bunch of ‘those’ people cheated on their ballot.”

    Echoing the reaction to True the Vote at the northside Milwaukee polling place and the Houston protest, Ray said, “If you have people standing around and falsely accusing you of doing things that are innocent, then you quickly come to the conclusion that there’s one reason that they’re doing that.

    "I mean why aren’t they going to" a white part of town "and doing the same thing over there?”

    AJ Vicens and Tasha Khan were Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation Fellows this summer at News21.

    Discuss this series of stories on the Facebook page for Open Channel, the NBC News investigative blog.

    Or send feedback to News21.

  • Officials: Seven-year-old accidentally shoots 'loved' Conn. trash man

    Connecticut State Police are investigating after a child accidentally shot an adult inside a home in Prospect, officials told NBCConnecticut.com.

    The victim, Anthony J. Delucia, was shot in the chest by a seven-year-old neighbor. The young boy accidentally shot Delucia with a small caliber handgun. The gun is legally registered to Delucia, said police.


    Delucia was taken to St. Mary's Hospital where he is listed in stable condition.

    Read more news stories from NBCConnecticut.com

    According to Mayor Robert J. Chatfield, Delucia is the town's local trash man.

    "He is loved by everyone in town," said Chatfield.

    State Police spokesman Lt. J. Paul Vance said he believes no charges will be filed and the investigation is still ongoing.

    Police and detectives from the Connecticut State Police Central Major Crime Squad responded to the scene.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

     

  • Dallas Sunday school teacher had taken insomnia drug before killing self

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

    DALLAS -- A successful Dallas businessman who tried to stab his sleeping wife before fatally stabbing himself last month was found to have traces of a drug used to treat insomnia in his bloodstream, police told NBCDFW.com.

    The autopsy report from the Dallas County Medical Examiner's Office shows that 50-year-old John "Rod" Steele had .05 milligrams of zolpidem in his system.


    According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, zolpidem, which is sold under several different names, is used in adults for short-term treatment of insomnia.

    Read more from NBC Dallas-Fort Worth

    Possible serious side effects can include “more outgoing or aggressive behavior than normal, confusion, agitation, hallucinations, worsening of depression, and suicidal thoughts or actions.”

    In the aftermath of Steele’s July 11 death, friends and neighbors told NBC 5 he was taking prescription pills because he had trouble sleeping.

    He had no prior history of violence. He taught Sunday school and Bible study at Highland Park United Methodist Church.

    The husband and father of two also sat on the boards of two Dallas area banks.

    Steele's family had a note on the door of their Highland Park home asking for privacy.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

  • Sandusky victim sues Penn State for 'shameful' handling of complaints

    A young man known as "Victim 1" and who testified against former Penn State coach Jerry Sandusky is suing the university claiming it cared more for its reputation than it did about child safety. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    HARRISBURG, Pa. -- A young man who testified against Jerry Sandusky sued Penn State on Friday for its "deliberate and shameful" handling of complaints that the former assistant football coach behaved inappropriately and sexually toward boys.

    The suit filed by the person known as Victim 1 at Sandusky's trial said university officials made deliberate decisions not to report Sandusky to authorities.


    It described their actions as "a function of (Penn State's) purposeful, deliberate and shameful subordination of the safety of children to its economic self-interests, and to its interest in maintaining and perpetuating its reputation."

    Craig Houtz / Reuters

    Second Mile founder and assistant Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky attends a Second Mile Easter egg hunt in State College, Pennsylvania, in this April 8, 1990 file photo.

    The complaint was filed electronically in Philadelphia state court Friday night, Slade McLaughlin, a lawyer for Victim 1, told The Associated Press. The young man's initial accusations sparked the investigation that led to criminal charges against Sandusky and two university officials.

    Sandusky, 68, was convicted in June of 45 criminal counts for sexual abuse of boys, both on and off campus. He awaits sentencing that will likely send him to prison for the rest of his life.

    Penn State ex-president Graham Spanier: Freeh report on sex scandal is wrong

    Victim 1 and his mother reported Sandusky to the boy's high school and the Clinton County child protective agency in November 2009. Their complaint triggered the state investigation that last year resulted in the criminal charges.

    Former Penn State administrator Gary Schultz and athletic director Tim Curley, who is on leave, were charged with perjury and failure to report suspected child abuse. Both deny the allegations and are expected to go on trial in January.

    Famed football coach Joe Paterno was fired. He died last January.

    The suit draws heavily from court testimony, grand jury investigations and Penn State's own investigative report, conducted by former FBI director Louis Freeh. The report details how university officials handled the claims against Sandusky and Sandusky's behavior. Victim 1 is known as "John Doe C" in the complaint. The suit names no other defendants than the State College university.

    Related content:

    University spokesman Dave La Torre said the school has no comment on the pending litigation.

    "The university takes these cases very seriously," La Torre said, adding that the current president and board "have publicly emphasized that their goal is to find solutions that rest on the principle of justice for the victims."

    The suit claimed that a "special relationship" between Penn State and The Second Mile, a Sandusky-founded charity for youth, gave Sandusky a respectable public image and connections that enabled him to perform criminal acts.

    The young man known as "Victim 2" in the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse case spoke out for the first time through his attorneys about how the former Penn State coach abused him and stalked him with phone messages. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    It alleged "(Penn State) believed its reputation and economic interests would be adversely impacted if the public learned that a man closely associated with the school's football program was, in fact, a pedophile."

    The Second Mile's future remains uncertain, subject to a legal dispute.

    'Numerous victims'
    According to the lawsuit, Victim 1 met Sandusky about eight years ago, when the boy was 11 and a first-year participant in a camp sponsored by The Second Mile. In his second year, the boy drew Sandusky's attention and accepted invitations to spend nights at the coach's State College home and to attend professional sports events, the suit said.

    Over a three-year period ending in 2008, the suit said, Sandusky assaulted the boy more than 100 times, including fondling and oral sex. The lawsuit claims Sandusky attacked "numerous victims over a span of 30 years," but noted that his criminal trial was limited to a 15-year period and 10 victims.

    Following Victim 1's testimony, Sandusky was convicted of all six counts that related to him, including involuntary deviate sexual intercourse for instances of oral sex.

    The suit alleged negligence, fraudulent concealment, intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil conspiracy. It said Victim 1 has suffered physical and emotional injuries and will likely need medical and psychological help well into his future. The suit seeks compensatory and punitive damages.

    Another Sandusky accuser has filed a federal lawsuit related to the scandal and a second victim has filed a court notice that he will file complaint. Lawyers have suggested others may take legal action.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

  • Court document: Aurora shooting suspect James Holmes discussed 'killing people' with classmate

    Rj Sangosti / Pool via Reuters file

    Colorado shooting suspect James Eagan Holmes makes his first court appearance in Aurora, Colo. on July 23, 2012.

    James Holmes, the alleged shooter in the July 12 Aurora theater rampage, told a classmate in March that he wanted to kill people, according to court documents released by the court on Friday.

    The newly unsealed document, filed on Aug. 14 by District Attorney Carol Chambers, states that evidence gathered so far indicates that "the defendant had conversations with a classmate about wanting to kill people in March, 2012, and that he would do so when his life was over."


    Holmes, a former graduate student in neurology at the University of Colorado, is charged with 142 criminal counts, including 24 counts of first-degree murder, in the attack at a midnight premiere of the Batman movie "The Dark Knight Rises" and possession of explosives. After arresting Holmes, police found his apartment was booby-trapped with a jumble of explosives and incendiary devices set to be triggered by trip wires. It took experts several days to disarm the devices.

    Twelve people were killed and 58 others were injured in the rampage.

    The document unsealed Friday argues that Holmes' school records, which are generally protected by the Family Educational Records Privacy Act, should be turned over because they "are relevant to the investigation of these crimes, his planning and motive."

    The document begins to construct a possible motive by citing existing evidence — that Holmes failed his graduate school oral boards in June and made threats to a professor at the school, and that after he was denied access to the university's Denver-Anschutz campus "he began a detailed and complex plan to obtain firearms" and other equipment deployed in the theater rampage.

    Earlier the defense filed a motion to prevent opening the educational records, arguing that confidentiality should be maintained because "the prosecution is seeking these materials as a mere fishing expedition and not for any proper purpose."

    At hearings earlier this month, Holmes defense team made repeated references to their client’s mental illness, signaling that they are likely to pursue a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity.

    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

  • 2 charged in St. Louis slaying of visiting Illinois woman

    Hundreds of friends and family remember a former college volleyball star killed during apparent robbery in St. Louis. WMAQ's Michelle Relerford reports.

    Two 18-year-old St. Louis-area men were charged with murder Friday in the killing of Megan Boken, a 23-year-old Wheaton, Ill., woman who was in town last weekend for a job interview and college reunion volleyball game.

    nbcchicago.com

    Keith Esters and Johnathan Perkins

    Keith Esters of Bel-Ridge was charged with first-degree murder, two counts of armed criminal action and attempted first-degree robbery. Johnathon T. Perkins of St. Louis was charged with second-degree murder, two counts of armed criminal action, and attempted second-degree robbery.


    St. Louis prosecutor Jennifer M. Joyce first announced the charges and identified the suspects on Twitter Friday, a day after police said they had two suspects in custody.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Police in a probable cause statement said Boken, a former St. Louis University volleyball player who graduated in 2011, was sitting in her car when she was shot two times in the neck and chest by Esters, who they say admitted to them he planned to rob Boken after he saw her talking on a cellphone Saturday afternoon in the city’s Central West End. The reunion game was scheduled two hours later, area media outlets reported.

    Perkins, police said, drove Esters to and from the crime scene.

    See the story at NBCChicago.com

    Saint Louis University volleyball player Megan Boken warms up before a match in 2010.

    Perkins also told investigators that Esters had told him he shot Boken, police said.

    A cellphone stolen in an armed robbery days before the Boken killing aided police in their investigation, they said. The cellphone theft investigation, police said, led to Esters’ girlfriend, who told officers that Esters admitted the killing to her.

    She said Esters and Perkins are cousins, police said.

    Police also said a witness identified Esters running from the scene.

    A funeral for Boken was held Thursday in Wheaton.

    "She was everything, she was one of my best friends, she was always happy, always in a great mood, always willing to help me out. She'll be missed dearly," David Bruckner, outside the funeral home, told NBCChicago.com.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Megan's father, Paul Boken, released the following statement Thursday:

    "I understand that the St Louis Police Department apprehended several suspects in this case. We are gratified with the progress in this case and with the efforts of the St Louis Police Department. We also are very appreciative of the efforts of several people in the Central West End who came to our daughter Megan's aid after the incident. I would like to thank the St Louis Police Department for their hard work and those individuals who have come forward to assist in this case.

    "I would like to thank the communities of St Michael's Catholic Church, St Francis High School and Saint Louis University who have been so supportive of our family over the last several days. The services for our daughter took place simultaneously in Wheaton, Illinois at St Michael's and at Saint Louis University, and were of great comfort to our family."

    This article includes reporting by NBC News' Jim Gold.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

  • Military study finds training concussions for some troops

    A study conducted by the military has found that nearly 6 percent of soldiers experienced concussions during combat-training courses at Fort Hood, according to a report from ProPublica and NPR.

    The study raises questions about the safety of standard training classes and whether or not soldiers had deployed to combat without realizing they suffered a mild traumatic brain injury.

    The results are preliminary and rely on data gathered from hand-to-hand combat classes taken by nearly 2,000 soldiers at the Texas base. The post is one of the Army's main centers for basic training where soldiers spend more than 20 hours learning fighting techniques that include boxing, wrestling and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, according to the report.


    Experts told ProPublica and NPR that they were concerned that brain injuries suffered prior to combat could have made soldiers more vulnerable to the long-term consequences of additional concussions, including frequent headaches and memory loss.

    “Even 1 percent of soldiers would concern me,” Col. Carl Castro, the director of the Military Operational Medicine Research Program, told ProPublica and NPR. “I’d say we need to do something. We don’t want soldiers getting injured while training, if we can prevent it.”

    There have been at least 244,000 traumatic brain injuries as a result of explosions and accidents since 2000, but previous reports from ProPublica and NPR found that number may be much higher due to underreporting and missed diagnoses.

    Reporters who were permitted to observe advanced students learn how to teach combat-training classes in Fort Benning in Georgia witnessed one student get kicked in the head during a sparring match. That student appeared dazed, was evaluated by a medic and did not participate in the remainder of the class. He was later sent to a clinic for evaluation.

    The ProPublica/NPR report said that hundreds of thousands of soldiers had taken the combat courses at bases nationwide in the past decade before deploying.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

  • US ranchers struggle to keep cattle alive

    Rancher Gary Wollert feeds hay to his cattle near Eads, Colo., Aug. 23, 2012. Like many ranchers who's grasslands have dried up due to the drought, Wollert has to supplement his cattle's diet with hay, now at record prices, to keep them alive.

    John Moore / Getty Images — The nation's severe drought has been especially hard on cattlemen, made worse when Congress recessed for five weeks without passing disaster relief legislation. Most of the high plains areas of eastern Colorado and virtually all of Nebraska and Kansas are still in extreme or exceptional drought, despite recent lower temperatures, according to the University of Nebraska's Drought Monitor. The record-breaking drought, which has affected more than half of the continental U.S., is expected to drive up food prices by 2013 due to lower crop harvests and the adverse effect on the nation's cattle industry.

    Rancher Gary Wollert inspects a dead cow on dry grasslands near Eads, Colo., Aug. 22. Many cattle in the area have contracted respiratory infections due to the wide temperature swings in this summer's heat wave and drought. While most cases have been cured, some have been fatal.

    Cattle buyers wait to bid during a livestock auction at the Burlington Livestock Exchange in Burlington, Colo., Aug. 23.

    A message is written on a restaurant sign in Burlington, Colo., Aug. 23. The ongoing drought has devastated the area's agricultural economy, but also affected a broad spectrum of businesses across the plains.

    Drought conditions plague much of the United States after a summer of scorching temperatures and a lack of rain. The dryness is affecting America's farmland, threatening crops like soybean and corn.

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

  • Dog found with jar on head may have been 'blood bait' in fighting ring

    An injured dog found with a jar on its head is on its way to recovery at a local animal hospital. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    A black Labrador Retriever that was found with a plastic jar stuck around his head and cuts to one of his paws is doing well after surgery, according to volunteers from a North Texas animal group.

    Animal Allies of Texas

    Because the jar prevented him from eating or drinking, rescuers said Pappy was severely malnourished and underweight when they took him in.

    Rescuers suspect someone cut the animal's paw so his blood would attract other dogs being trained to fight, and the jar kept him from fighting back.

    After receiving a call from a woman who found the dog, now named "Pappy," wandering the streets of Oak Cliff, Texas, rescuers from Animal Allies of Texas were able to catch him on Monday and take him to the vet.

    Pappy had fleas and ticks and was severely dehydrated and emaciated when he was found. Rescuers said the jar prevented him from eating or drinking, and he weighed 65 lbs. when he should have weighed 90 lbs.

    In addition to the jar, rescuers said Pappy had bite marks on him, which they say are evidence he may have been used as a bait dog in a dog-fighting ring.


    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter   

    “This was deliberate. The bottom of the jar had been cut out so he would not be able to get out himself,” an Animal Allies of Texas volunteer, Melody Hamilton, told NBC News. “In my opinion, he was thrown into a situation where he was made to provoke another dog to fight.”

    Animal Allies of Texas

    After removing the jar, veterinarians had to amputate one of Pappy's toes that had been badly injured

    Rescuers removed the jar, and on Wednesday, the lab-mix had surgery at Metro Paws Animal Hospital to amputate the first toe on his left paw. Hamilton said she suspects Pappy will stay there for a few more days to recover.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Hamilton said as Pappy’s physical condition stabilizes, vets and volunteers will shift their focus to his emotional state.

    “Dog fighting is rampant in all socio-economic areas,” Hamilton said. “Lucky for him, he escaped that situation. Now it’s a matter of dealing with all of the emotional distress.”

    After Pappy has had all of his medical treatment, Animal Allies of Texas will be looking for someone to adopt him.

    They are currently accepting donations to help with Pappy’s hospital bills.

    Elvira Sakmari of NBC Dallas-Ft. Worth contributed to this report.

    Animal Allies of Texas

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

  • 'Weird week' in Lubbock: Judge's 'civil war' comments make Republicans cringe

    Stephen Spillman / Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

    Lubbock County Judge Tom Head, right, talks with Texas Governor Rick Perry in Lubbock, Tex. on May 8.

    The arid West Texas community of Lubbock found itself in the national spotlight after a county judge asserted on television that if President Barack Obama is reelected, the country will be under threat of invasion by the United Nations and should brace for a possible civil war.

    The comments, made by Lubbock County Judge Thomas Head in a bid to raise local property taxes, have prompted Democrats to call for his resignation. They’ve also generated a busy, and awkward, week for some local Republicans.

    "It’s been a weird week," said Carl Tepper, chairman of the Lubbock County Republican Party, who has been deluged by calls from around the country.

    "I don’t agree with the tax raise. I don’t agree that the U.N. is invading the U.S. I’m not a conspiracy theorist," Tepper told NBC News Friday. "The great majority of Lubbock, Texas, does not agree with Judge Head on this issue."


    The furor started on Tuesday evening when Head appeared on a local Fox television station to drum up support for a 1.7 percent tax increase to bolster the county budget. Head’s comments veered into his concerns about civil unrest in the event of Obama’s election to a second term.

    "He’s going to try to hand over the sovereignty of the United States to the U.N., and what is going to happen when that happens?" Head said. "I’m thinking the worst. Civil unrest, civil disobedience, civil war maybe. And we’re not just talking a few riots here and demonstrations. We’re talking Lexington, Concord, take up arms and get rid of the guy."

    "Now what’s going to happen if we do that, if the public decides to do that? He’s going to send in U.N. troops. I don’t want ’em in Lubbock County. OK. So I’m going to stand in front of their armored personnel carrier and say, 'You’re not coming in here'."

    On Wednesday, Head said his remarks were taken out of context, and he meant them as a worst-case scenario, according toa report in Lubbock Avalanche Journal

    He did not respond to NBC calls for comment. 

    At a news conference on Thursday, Kenny Ketner, chairman of the Lubbock County Democratic Party charged that Head’s impartiality as a judge had been violated as a result of the comments, according to the Journal report. 

    "Public officials have greater responsibility not to spout off about conspiracies and extremist fantasies," Ketner said.

    "Judge Head’s statements on the United Nations invasion raise serious questions about his mental competency to hold elected office," according to the Texas state Democratic chair Gilberto Hinojosa, cited by a report in the Houston Chronicle.

    Head’s comment is "not only ridiculous, it’s dangerous. It’s crystal clear that Judge Head should resign," Hinojosa added.

    Head's is an elected county judge; his position is not slated for a vote until 2014. 

    Tepper, of the Lubbock Republican Party, said he does not expect efforts for Head’s removal to gain any traction.

    He said that while most people disagree with Head’s comments, there are concerns about federal policies that affect Lubbock, a community 300 miles west of Dallas that relies heavily on ranching and oil.  

    "I have had a lot of people who are concerned with the Obama administration and their national environmental agendas," said Tepper. "This is an energy part of the country. When drilling is limited (by regulations) and the use of coal is limited, that is of great concern to the voters and the people of West Texas."

    But he said Lubbock, Texas, was really "Lubbock, America," a nice family oriented community that has oil, cotton and cowboys, as well as sophistication and a diverse set of views. 

    "We are very conservative, but I want to stress we have respect for the president, and for the federal government," Tepper said. "If we don’t like the president, we will try to beat him in the voting booth."

    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

  • Casey Anthony off probation; lawyer fears for her safety

    Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/Pool via AP, file

    In this file photo from July 7, 2011, Casey Anthony is pictured before the start of her sentencing hearing.

    Casey Anthony, the Florida mother found not guilty in the murder of her 2-year-old daughter, completed her probation for unrelated check-fraud charges on Friday.

    Anthony, 26, was acquitted in the highly publicized case last year, after spending three years in jail awaiting trial on a murder charge. Her daughter, Caylee Marie Anthony, disappeared in 2008, and months later, authorities found the 2-year-old's body in the woods near the Orlando-area Anthony family home.

    Anthony was ordered one-year probation for a check fraud charge, after she pleaded guilty to making purchases using a friend's checks.


    The public closely watched the murder trial through the eyes of televisions cameras and faced much public scrutiny. According to Reuters, the judge let Anthony serve her probation at a secret location.

    A Florida Department of Corrections spokeswoman told Reuters that Anthony didn't commit any violations that would have prolonged the one-year term.

    Her probation officially ended at 12:01 a.m. Friday morning, according to her civil-defense lawyer Charles Greene. Now that she's free, no one knows Anthony's next plan, but Greene told the Orlando Sentinel on Wednesday that he has "sincere concerns as to her safety."

    "Her future plans are the subject of serious deliberation and discussion," Greene said.

    The Orlando lawyer is also not sure how Anthony will support herself.

    "She is looking forward to being free to move about and make decisions for her life," Greene told Reuters. "I think she just wants to live out of the public eye and live as normal a life as she can, which will be a difficult thing to do because she's been so vilified."

    Anthony's legal woes are not over. She still faces lawsuits related to Caylee's death, Reuters reported, including a defamation case.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    Follow US News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

  • Man accused of NYC gun rampage was apparel designer, cat lover

    Two people were killed and nine injured in a shooting Friday near the Empire State Building by a disgruntled ex-employee of a nearby business, officials said.

    NEW YORK -- The man who police say shot and killed a former colleague Friday morning near the landmark Empire State Building, triggering panic in Midtown Manhattan, was described by neighbors as quiet and a bit of a loner.

    Jeffrey Johnson, 58, of Manhattan, was dismissed from his job last year as an accessories designer at a women’s apparel firm, Hazan Imports, when the company underwent downsizing, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said at a press conference.

    Kelly said Johnson opened fire at 9:03 a.m. EST on West 33rd Street in front the company where he formerly worked, shooting his former co-worker, age 41, three times, Kelly said. Johnson was later shot and killed by police, and nine others were injured.

    Two killed, several hurt in shooting near Empire State Building


    Johnson did not have a criminal record and authorities don’t know much about him, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said.

    Johnson served in the Coast Guard from 1973 to 1977 and rose to petty officer second class, a Coast Guard spokesman said. He was honorably discharged.

    One of Johnson's neighbors on the city's Upper East Side, Gisella Casella, 72, told The Wall Street Journal that he was quiet and loved his two cats. She saw him "dressed up" every morning and thought he was going to work.

    “He was the nicest guy. I think he snapped or something,” she said.

    The building superintendent, Guillermo Suarez, 72, told The New York Times that Johnson would go out to a local McDonald's every morning and come back with a bag from the fast food chain. He often would stay home for the rest of the day.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

Jump to August 2012 archive page: 1 ... 3 4 5 6 7 ... 21