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  • 27
    Mar
    2013
    3:33pm, EDT

    Loughner's parents hid shotgun from him, slew of new documents show

    AFP - Getty Images, file

    Jared Loughner, 24.

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Jared Loughner hadn't been the same since he got fired from a job at a mall in Tucson, his parents said. He had been expelled from college. After a visit from campus police, his parents decided to hide a shotgun that Loughner owned in the trunk of their car in the garage so he didn't have access to it in the house.

    A slew of details about Loughner, 24 -- who has pleaded guilty to killing six people and wounding former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and a dozen others in a Jan. 8, 2011, shooting spree in Tucson -- emerged as authorities investigating the rampage released more than 2,700 pages of documents that they have compiled.

    Among the thousands of interviews, police reports and survivors' statements released Wednesday, one theme was constant about Loughner, who has since been diagnosed with schizophrenia: As his father, Randy Loughner, told investigators at the time, he "just doesn't seem right lately."

    Loughner was fired more than a year before the shooting, his father told investigators after the shooting, according to the documents. Trying to have a rational conversation with his son became more and more difficult after that, he said.

    "Lost, lost and just didn't want to communicate with me," Randy Loughner said.

    After Loughner was expelled, things got worse: Randy Loughner said his son felt harassed by campus police, who came to the Loughner home and asked if there were any firearms in the house. Loughner had bought a 12-gauge shotgun in 2008; at the recommendation of Pima Community College campus police, who recommended any firearms be taken away, they hid the shotgun and an antique weapon they owned.

    "He had a shotgun. And I took it away," Randy Loughner told police. "They suggested that if I had any firearms, to take them away. And I did."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    A former friend of Loughner's, Zachary Osler, was an employee at a store where Loughner later purchased a Glock handgun used in the Tucson rampage. Osler described the awkward encounter he had with Loughner.

    "His response is nothing. Just a mute facial expression. And just like, he, he didn't care," Osler told investigators. He said the change in Loughner's personality made him uncomfortable to be around. 

    "He would say he could dream and then control what he was doing while he was dreaming," Osler said, adding Loughner never mentioned Giffords in conversation to him.

    Loughner's mother, Amy, felt her son's behavior was so odd that she tested him for drugs. Loughner kept a journal that was written in illegible script, his father said. Despite their concerns, Loughner's parents said they never sent him to get help and he had never been diagnosed as mentally ill.

    On the morning of the shooting, Loughner's father said his son had been "acting strange." Loughner had taken his father's car early in the morning, returned home briefly, left again, then returned home once more before leaving on foot with a backpack.

    Pima County Sheriff's Deputy T. Audetat Jr. wrote in his police report that when he arrived at the scene, he saw a man being held down by "two or three people". He handcuffed the shooter; in the shooter's pocket, in addition to two Glock magazines, fully loaded, he found a folding knife and a credit card and ID card, he said. 

    He described what the shooter was wearing: black beanie, black hooded sweatshirt, khaki pants. Another deputy noticed he was wearing earplugs, he wrote in his report.

    One of the victims of the shooting outside the Safeway supermarket, Ronald Barber, told police of the rampage, "I was laying on my right side and I could see the blood coming out. You know, and, uh, and all I remember is seeing the congresswoman with her back to me, on her side. On her right side, uh, with her head up against the window, you know, of the Safeway. And Daniel, um, who is our intern, saying, 'Stay with me, congresswoman, stay with me.'"

    Once in the patrol car, Loughner pleaded the Fifth Amendment repeatedly, Deputy Audetat wrote. At the police station, Loughner said very little besides, "I just want you to know that I'm the only person that knew about this," according to the deputy.

    In his four-hour interview with authorities following the morning rampage, Loughner sat in restraints and was polite and cooperative with authorities, documents show. He asked to use the restroom at one point, saying thank you when he was permitted to. Although after a while he complained, "I'm about ready to fall over."

    Loughner will spend the rest of his life behind bars but is not eligible for the death penalty because of his plea deal in the case. Giffords retired from her position in Congress a year after the shooting to focus on her recovery.

    373 comments

    +1 to the parents for taking the guns away from him. -3 for not taking him to a mental health professional for screening/assistance/medication. That contact with mental health should have led to him being added to the list and denied a gun purchase.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: arizona, shooting, tucson, gabrielle-giffords, gabby-giffords, jared-loughner
  • 26
    Mar
    2013
    9:30am, EDT

    Gun store owner cancels Mark Kelly's AR-15 purchase

    Former astronaut Mark Kelly discusses the steps he and wife Gabrielle Giffords are touting for gun control reform, including the passage of a universal background check law.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    An Arizona gun store owner says he will not sell Mark Kelly the AR-15 rifle that the vocal advocate for tighter gun control bought earlier this month.

    The manager of the Tucson, Ariz., store where Kelly, husband of former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, bought the firearm has said that he will not complete the March 5 transaction, according to a statement posted on Facebook.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “While I support and respect Mark Kelly’s 2nd Amendment rights to purchase, possess, and use firearms in a safe and responsible manner, his recent statements to the media made it clear that his intent in purchasing the Sig Sauer M400 5.56mm rifle from us was for reasons other then [sic] for his personal use,” Douglas MacKinlay, owner of Diamondback Police Supply, said in the post.

    The store was required to hold the rifle purchased by Kelly for 20 days, MacKinlay told the Associated Press after Kelly purchased the firearm.

    “He is a U.S. citizen, an Arizona citizen expressing his Second Amendment rights to purchase and own a firearm,” MacKinlay told the AP at the time.

    The gun store owner said in his statement posted on Monday that he had reconsidered the sale. MacKinlay did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday morning.

    “In light of this fact, I determined that it was in my company’s best interest to terminate this transaction prior to his returning to my store to complete the Federal Form 4473 and NICS [National Instant Criminal Background Check System] background check required of Mr. Kelly before he could take possession of this firearm,” MacKinlay said in the statement.

    The store sent Kelly a refund last Thursday, according to the statement. Kelly, an astronaut, has promoted tighter gun control since his wife, Giffords, was shot in the head at point-blank range by Jared Loughner in 2011.

    The couple launched a new national campaign in January to combat gun violence. Americans for Responsible Solutions was launched “to encourage elected officials to stand up for solutions to prevent gun violence and protect responsible gun ownership.”

    Kelly, who is a gun owner, has said his purchase was meant to demonstrate how easy it is to buy a semi-automatic rifle.

    Related:

    • Gabby Giffords launches group to counter gun lobby 
    • Gabby Giffords group airs gun-control ads in Ariz., Iowa
    • Gabby Giffords stars in new gun-control TV ad
    • Video shows dog belonging to Mark Kelly's daughter attack sea lion

    2304 comments

    Simple solution post this sign.... "IF YOU VOTED FOR OBAMA, WE DO NOT WANT YOUR BUSINESS, YOU’RE TOO DAMN STUPID TO HAVE A FIREARM ! "

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  • 25
    Feb
    2013
    7:00pm, EST

    Arizona woman accused of lover's death sent flowers to family after killing

    AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Tom Tingle, Pool

    Prosecutor Juan Martinez asks defendant Jodi Arias a question about her diary during cross examination testimony in Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix.

    By Tim Gaynor, Reuters

    PHOENIX — A woman charged with capital murder in Arizona testified on Monday that she sent flowers to her former boyfriend's grandmother days after killing him, which prosecutors said showed the lengths to which she went to cover her tracks.

    Jodi Arias, 32, could face the death penalty if convicted of murdering 30-year-old Travis Alexander, whose body was found in the shower of his Phoenix area home in June 2008. He was shot in the face, stabbed 27 times and had his throat slit.

    In graphic testimony about her relationship with Alexander, Arias has admitted to killing him but said it was in self defense after he attacked her when she dropped his camera while taking pictures of him in the shower.

    The prosecution contents Arias killed Alexander in a jealous rage.


    Prosecutor Juan Martinez told an Arizona court on Monday how, several days after the killing, Arias sent 20 irises to Alexander's grandmother, who had helped to raise him in southern California.

    "You went out of your way to contact Mr. Alexander's family, didn't you?" Martinez asked Arias. "You actually sent ... her irises ... and in addition to that you attached a note, right?" he added, saying the note indicated the grandmother was in her prayers.

    "Yes," Arias replied, before Martinez shot back that she lied about feeling sympathy for Alexander's grandmother as "just a way to assuage your guilt."

    "That wasn't my thought," Arias replied.

    The testimony came on the second day of cross examination by the prosecution during which Martinez sought to depict Arias as a jealous schemer who tried to cover her tracks by lying to friends, family and police after killing Alexander.

    The court heard on Monday how, after Arias was arrested in July 2008, she gave a contradictory story to a detective investigating the killing, telling him that she was not present at Alexander's home on the day of his death.

    Martinez confronted Arias with how she subsequently changed her story a day later after learning that her fingerprints and a photograph retrieved from Alexander's camera placed her at the scene of her lover's killing.

    "You changed your story to comport with the forensic evidence that he was telling you about. ... You did not want any consequences regarding the killing of Travis Alexander, right?"

    Arias said she was not "concerned about consequences."

    During aggressive cross examination, Martinez also questioned Arias about an alleged attempt she had made to kill herself with a razor in jail, following her arrest, in which she stopped after she "nicked" herself.

    "You stopped because it stung. Can you imagine how much it must have hurt Mr. Alexander when you stuck that knife right into his chest, that really must have hurt right?"

    Arias' attorney objected. Her eyes brimmed with tears, although she did not respond.

    19 comments

    this is one really scary psycopath and she needs to be locked up for life.

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  • 25
    Feb
    2013
    9:34am, EST

    Jodi Arias set to be grilled on stand in murder trial

    Tom Tingle / The Arizona Republic via AP

    Prosecutor Juan Martinez asks defendant Jodi Arias a question about her diary during cross examination testimony in Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix.

    By Brian Skoloff, The Associated Press

    Jodi Arias resumes testimony Monday in her Arizona murder trial after the start of a withering cross-examination last week by a prosecutor working to poke holes in her numerous stories.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    She is charged in the June 2008 stabbing and shooting death of her lover in his suburban Phoenix home. Arias claims self-defense, while authorities say she planned the attack on Travis Alexander in a jealous rage. Testimony has been ongoing since early January.


    Arias, 32, lost a bid last week aimed at getting a reprieve from a potential death sentence if convicted of first-degree murder after the Arizona Supreme Court swiftly denied her motion that claimed a detective committed perjury in the case. Her attorneys have filed multiple motions for mistrials, all of which have been denied.

    She was set to resume testimony Monday for her 10th day on the witness stand.

    Last week, prosecutor Juan Martinez hammered Arias with intense questioning about her inability to recall crucial details in the case, yet noted it was puzzling that she can remember "what kind of coffee you bought at Starbucks sometime back in 2008."

    Arias smirked at times while Martinez stammered in frustration, and the judge admonished both to stop talking over each other as the questioning grew heated and the two traded barbs.

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    Martinez resumes his cross-examination Monday likely continuing to focus on Arias' repeated lies.

    Arias first told authorities she knew nothing about Alexander's death, then later blamed it on masked intruders before eventually settling on self-defense.

    She said she was scared of being arrested, had been contemplating suicide and didn't want to sully Alexander's name with accounts of his violent behavior and lurid details of their sexual relationship, given his public persona as a devout Mormon who was saving himself for marriage.

    Of the day she killed Alexander, Arias says she remembers him in a rage, body slamming her and chasing her around his home.

    She said she grabbed a gun from his closet, and fired it as they tussled, but didn't know if she hit him. She had no explanation for the 27 stab and slash wounds he suffered, or his slit throat, or how he ended up stuffed in his shower.

    According to court records, however, she previously told police before her trial began that Alexander was unconscious after she shot him, but then "crawled around and was stabbed."

    She says she remembers putting a knife in the dishwasher and disposing of the gun in the desert as she drove from Arizona on her way to Utah. And she immediately began planning an alibi.

    Arias' grandparents reported a .25 caliber handgun stolen from their Northern California house about a week before the killing — the same caliber used to shoot Alexander — but Arias claims to know nothing about the burglary. She says she brought no weapons to Alexander's home on the day she killed him, undercutting the prosecution's theory of premeditation.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    88 comments

    The woman is flat out killer. The unemotional woman thinks she will get away with it like Casey Anthony.

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    Explore related topics: ap, arizona, associated-press, murder-trial, arias, jodi-arias, arias-murder
  • 6
    Feb
    2013
    4:48am, EST

    Fraudster targets 'America's toughest sheriff'

    Laura Segall / Reuters, file

    Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, shown in January, says he has been the victim of credit card fraud.

    By Tim Gaynor, Reuters

    Published at 4:20 a.m. ET: PHOENIX -- Controversial Arizona lawman Joe Arpaio, who styles himself "America's toughest sheriff" for his relentless pursuit of criminals, said on Tuesday that he had himself become a victim of credit card fraud.

    Maricopa County's sheriff said his credit card information had been used to buy $291 in groceries in Chicago -- a city Arpaio said he had not visited in years.

    Arpaio, who has achieved headlines for housing county detainees in a "Tent City" jail and for sweeps targeting illegal immigrants across metropolitan Phoenix, said fraudsters used his Discover card last week to shop at a Jewel supermarket.

    A controversial plan from Arizona's Sheriff Joe Arpaio will send armed members of his volunteer posse to some Phoenix schools to provide security. Oralia Ortega, of KPNX-TV reports.

    "I haven't been to Chicago since I was a young federal narcotics agent in 1957 ... so I sure couldn't have been buying groceries in that supermarket," Arpaio told Reuters. "This seems to be a widespread problem across our nation."

    He said he was alerted to the scam by Discover and that no arrests had been made.

    Arpaio was swept to a sixth term in office in November by supporters of his hard-line stance on crime and illegal immigration in the Phoenix area. He is also fighting lawsuits from the government and Hispanic drivers who accuse him of civil rights violations and racial profiling, which he denies.

    Related:

    Arizona sheriff orders armed 'posse' to patrol schools

    Feds end probe of 'America's toughest sheriff'; no charges

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    167 comments

    Sheriff Joe Please ride off into the sunset.

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  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    12:45pm, EST

    Second victim of Phoenix workplace shooting dies

    Markow-Kent Photography, Beth Entringer via AP

    Mark Hummels was representing Steve Singer in litigation with Arthur Douglas Harmon of Phoenix. Harmon was found dead Thursday of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    A prominent Arizona lawyer has become the second victim to die in this week's workplace shooting in Phoenix, his law firm said Friday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Mark Hummels, 43, president of the Phoenix chapter of the Federal Bar Association, died Thursday night, according to the law firm, Osborn Maledon PA.

    Hummels had been on life support since he was shot Wednesday following a settlement conference between his client, who was also killed, and the gunman, identified as Arthur Douglas Harmon, 70, of Phoenix.

    Hummels was representing Steve Singer, 48, chief executive of Fusion Contact Centers, whom Harmon was suing. Singer died shortly after the shootings Wednesday, and Harmon was found dead of an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound early Thursday in Mesa, Ariz.

    A 32-year-old woman was also shot, but her injuries weren't life-threatening.


    Fusion, which operates call centers for businesses, had hired Harmon to do refurbishing work at two of its centers in California. In April, Harmon sued the company for allegedly having failed to pay him in full. The company countersued, demanding that he repay what he had already been paid because the work couldn't be completed.

    Documents in the lawsuit include threatening letters from Harmon to Hummels, who wanted to depose Harmon and eventually got a subpoena compelling him to testify under oath, a prospect Harmon said in an email message made him "ill."

    "Stop sending your harassing and intimidating e-mails," Harmon said in one email message.

    In a letter Dec. 15, Harmon told Hummels: "I will expose you for what you are, depriving me and my family of requested documents to prove my case."

    The last communication from Harmon in the case threatened to pursue criminal charges against both Hummels and Singer. Harmon did file a complaint with the Arizona Bar, which dismissed it as being without merit.

    Hummels began his career as a reporter for the Santa Fe New Mexican before entering the University of Arizona law school. He graduated first in his class and later was a clerk for 9th Circuit U.S. Appeals Judge Andrew Hurwitz when Hurwitz was an Arizona Supreme Court justice in 2004, NBC station KPNX of Phoenix reported.

    Hurwitz called Hummels "the most decent and humble man I have ever met."

    In a statement, Hummels' law firm said it was "devastated at this news about our beloved friend" and offered sympathy and support for his wife and two children.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    51 comments

    And we go again !!!! Do you think your 2nd amendment rights worth all these deaths ??? this is the question all of you have to ask yourselves. This is insane !!! What a @!$%#ing messed up society !

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    Explore related topics: arizona, shooting, phoenix, arthur-douglas-harmon, mark-hummels
  • 31
    Jan
    2013
    12:15pm, EST

    Phoenix office shooting suspect found dead

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The suspect in Wednesday’s Arizona office shooting has been found dead, according to Phoenix police.

    A body matching the description of suspect Arthur Douglas Harmon, 70, was located near a Mesa, Ariz. parking lot on Thursday, Mesa police reported. A Kia Optima authorities say Harmon may have been driving was also found in the parking lot.


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    The person found on Thursday died of a gunshot wound, apparently self-inflicted, police said earlier on Thursday.

    Police went on the hunt for Harmon on Wednesday after a gunman, later identified by authorities as Harmon, opened fire in an Arizona office building, killing one person and wounding two more.

    Harmon had been involved in a legal mediation session at the office building before the shooting, police said on Wednesday.

    “He was involved in some type of litigation meeting,” Phoenix Police Sergeant Tommy Thompson said at a news conference on Wednesday. “After that meeting, he got into an altercation with some of the individuals and actually shot two of those individuals.”

    The man killed Wednesday has been identified by police as Steve Singer, 48. A 43-year-old man was injured and remains in critical condition. A 32-year-old woman was also shot, but her injuries were not life threatening, authorities said.

    21 comments

    See what nuts do with guns in their hands? As long as Americans think that it's all right to kill, because: the guy pissed you off, because you dislike his face, he stepped on your lawn, looked at you wrongly - then they're doomed. Need I go on? Every single incident that has occurred since December …

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  • 4
    Jan
    2013
    6:47pm, EST

    Gabby Giffords visiting Sandy Hook school massacre town

    Michelle Mcloughlin / Reuters

    U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and her husband, former astronaut Mark Kelly, leave the Newtown Municipal Building on Friday before heading to visit with families of the victims of last month's Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who has campaigned for stricter gun laws since being shot in Arizona two years ago, is visiting the Connecticut town where a gunman with a semi-automatic rifle massacred 20 children and and six school staffers.


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    Giffords, who was left partially blind by the 2011 attack at a campaign event, met with local officials at the municipal building in Newtown, Conn.,  Friday afternoon and was to see victims' families at a private home later in the day.

    "What drew her was the shared experience — our 26 victims and survivors, and what she experienced in Arizona," Newtown First Selectman Pat Llodra told the Newtown Bee.

    Sen. Richard Blumenthal, Lt. Gov. Nancy Wyman, and other local officials spoke with the ex-congresswoman about "what we as a society feel, what difference can we make given the horrific things that have happened," Llodra said.


    "We talked about gun control, mental health, and society's desensitization to violence," she said.

    "We need to use our voice to make a change ... We have to leverage that experience, and the world will listen to us, but we have to move quickly."

    Giffords was accompanied by her husband, astronaut Mark Kelly, who tweeted about the need for more gun control the day Adam Lanza carried out his bloodbath at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

    “20 - 5 year olds gunned down in their own classroom. When will we address this problem as a nation? The time is now,” he wrote.

    State worker accused of showing Adam Lanza's body to husband

    On Wednesday, Kelly and Giffords met with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, founder of a group called Mayors Against Illegal Guns.

    Giffords was greeting constituents outside a Tucson grocery store on Jan. 8, 2011, when Jared Loughner opened fire, killing Arizona's chief federal judge and five others, including a 9-year-old girl. Twelve people, including Giffords, were wounded.

    Loughner, who used a 9mm Glock, has since pleaded guilty and been sentenced to life in prison. Giffords, who can't use her right arm and has trouble walking, resigned her House seat a year ago.

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    272 comments

    WTF?? can't this woman get over it and stay the f*%# home and out of the news.!!!!

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  • 3
    Jan
    2013
    3:57pm, EST

    Arizona teens hang on to tree when frozen lake ice cracks

    Kirk Webb / Lakeside Fire District via AP

    In this photo provided by the Lakeside Fire District, two teenagers hang on to a dead tree after the ice on a lake started to crack in Show Low, Ariz., on Wednesday.

    By Vignesh Ramachandran, NBC News

    It was a daring mistake that two Arizona teens might never forget. On Wednesday, they ventured out onto a frozen lake in Show Low, Ariz. -- then the ice cracked beneath them.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Luckily, they were right by a standing dead tree," Lakeside Fire District Capt. Dennis Stern told NBC News on Thursday.

    For what officials believe was at least two hours, the teens clung onto the tree in the middle of the frozen lake.


    Authorities say a third teen was on the bank of Fool Hollow Lake, The Associated Press reported. That individual called their parents, who in turn, contacted authorities, Stern said. After the call came in around 4:45 p.m. local time, the Show Low Fire Department worked with the Lakeside Fire District's ice rescue team to recover the stranded teens.

    Related: Strangers rescue sledder who crashed through ice

    The temperature was 27 degrees when the call came in, according to Stern, and plummeted to 22 degrees by the time the rescue was completed. Show Low is in eastern Arizona at 6,400 feet elevation.

    "It's still early in our winter season," Stern said, noting that the ice in the area is only an inch or two thick.

    The teens were treated for mild hypothermia in the hospital, Show Low Fire District Capt. Brent Mix told the AP.

    "Their hands and feet got pretty cold," Mix told the AP. "It was dark by the time we got them to shore."

    The ages or identities of the teens have not been released.

    Related: Hunter, rescuers brave icy lake to save dog

    "There is no such thing as 100 percent safe ice!" the Fond du Lac County Sheriff's Office in Wisconsin states in ice safety guidelines on its website.

    "Even if ice is a foot thick in one area on a lake, it can be one inch thick just a few yards away," the guidelines warn. "It's impossible to judge the strength of ice by its appearance, thickness, daily temperature, or snow cover alone."

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    58 comments

    Tree-hugging is a valuable skill - it could save your life.

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  • 29
    Dec
    2012
    10:58am, EST

    Arizona sheriff orders armed 'posse' to patrol schools

    A controversial Arizona sheriff wants an armed group of volunteers to stand guard at his county's schools. His plan has been met with outrage from many educators who say more guns in schools will be dangerous. NBC's Diana Alvear reports.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Arizona sheriffs and the state’s attorney general are pushing controversial programs to allow school officials and volunteers to carry guns in the wake of the shootings at a Connecticut school that left 20 children dead.

    The latest proposal comes from Sheriff Joe Arpaio, the self-described toughest sheriff in America, who wants to station his “posse” of volunteers outside of about 50 schools in Maricopa County within a week, according to KPNX, a local NBC station.


     

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    “Everybody else is talking about what their ideas are. They want new laws. This is immediate. I don't need a new law to send out my posse,” he told NBC affiliate, KPNX, on Thursday. “I feel like we should do whatever we can outside of the schools.”

    Arpaio’s volunteers number about 3,000, with 300 to 400 carrying weapons. They log about 100 hours of training and undergo background checks, just like deputies, according to KPNX.

    He first sent out his posse in 1993 to guard malls over the holiday season because of violence at those venues in the past. He believed that program worked, saying there have been zero violent re-occurrences, azfamily.com reported.

    Arpaio’s plan follows similar ones released earlier this week: Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu has proposed arming willing principals, according to ABC15.com, while Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne said he wanted to arm a designated employee in every school, KPNX reported.

    “Why not use these people we trust if they are willing to protect themselves and our children?” Babeu said.

    Horne said a few counties have indicated they’d like to sign up for his program, though state law currently prohibits having firearms on public school campuses. Horne said he already has a sponsor for the necessary state legislation to implement his plan.

    A controversial plan from Arizona's Sheriff Arpaio will send armed members of his volunteer posse to some Phoenix schools to provide security. Oralia Ortega, of KPNX, reports.

    Anti-gun advocates and former educators denounced the idea of arming school staffers. Geraldine Hills, of Arizonans for Gun Safety, called it “outrageous.”


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “Cops aren’t teachers, teachers aren’t cops,” she told KPNX. “It’s a very nice what-if scenario, this fantasy of the armed civilian hero. It doesn’t play out in real life.”

    “I don’t feel that I would want to be in a position of being responsible for either a concealed weapon or securing a weapon on campus,” Gregg Baumgarten, a former principle outside of Phoenix, told the station. “I just think it’s a recipe for disaster.”

    The Arizona officials’ stance echoed that of the National Rifle Association chief Wayne LaPierre, who said he supported putting armed guards and police in schools in response to the Newtown shootings in which the gunman, Adam Lanza, also shot six administrators dead. Police say Lanza shot his mother to death earlier at their home.

    “If it’s crazy to call for putting police in and securing our schools to protect our children, then call me crazy,” LaPierre told NBC’s David Gregory. “I think the American people think it’s crazy not to do it. It’s the one thing that would keep people safe and the NRA is going try to do that.”

    Some districts said they were preparing to take LaPierre’s recommended action, while other educators cautioned that doing so would send the wrong message about education.

    After a controversial press conference last week, NRA head Wayne LaPierre made an appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press" saying the American people would be "crazy" to not put armed guards in schools. Meanwhile, Newtown, Conn., continues coping with the death of 26 people during the tragic shooting. NBC's Ron Mott report.

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    1980 comments

    What do you think the chances of a George Zimmerman type being among this yahoo's "posse?"

    Show more
    Explore related topics: arizona, nra, arpaio, school-shootings, lapierre
  • 25
    Dec
    2012
    4:13am, EST

    Fire breaks out on US Airways jet at Phoenix airport

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    A US Airways jet briefly caught fire on Monday evening at its gate in the Phoenix airport. No injuries were reported.

    The fire started at 10:55 p.m. ET in the plane’s auxiliary power unit – a small motor that provides power to the aircraft when the engines are not running.

    Two pilots and three flights attendants were on board when they noticed a problem to the rear.  The Phoenix Fire Department was then called to investigate a fuel leak, Phoenix Fire Department public information officer Jonathan Jacobs told NBC News.

    Fire crews found a small blaze at the back of the jet and quickly sprayed the plane with foam.

    There were no passengers on board the Vancouver, Canada-bound jet at the time, Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport spokeswoman Kris Commerford told The Associated Press. The plane had arrived earlier in the day from California.

    The flight's 101 passengers were put on a different US Airways flight, scheduled to leave two hours later.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    46 comments

    Good thing no passengers were on board. Who knows, they might have had to pay extra for the foam used. I don't know how excited I would have been to get on the exact same type of plane after the fire on the other one. Yeah, I know, the odds of another problem would be like winning over half a billio …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, travel, arizona, fire, us-airways, plane, aviation, phoenix, us-news, featured
  • 12
    Dec
    2012
    4:16am, EST

    'Unique' smuggling attempt: $42,500-worth of marijuana shot into Ariz. by cannon

    US Customs and Border Protection

    Over 30 cans of marijuana were shot into Yuma via cannon, Customs and Border Protection officials said Tuesday.

    By Lauren Steussy, NBCSanDiego.com

    Over 30 cans of marijuana were shot into Yuma, Ariz., using a cannon, Customs and Border Protection officials said Tuesday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The suspicious cans were discovered near the Colorado River in Yuma on Friday.

    Border Patrol agents said the discovery was "another unique but unsuccessful attempt" to smuggle drugs into the U.S.

    An investigation of the area determined that the cans were fired from about 500 feet away with a pneumatic-powered cannon. A carbon-dioxide tank was found nearby.


    Read more news on NBCSanDiego.com

    Mexican authorities were also looking into the incident.

    The marijuana weighed 85 pounds and was valued at $42,500. It will be destroyed, according to a statement from the agency.

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    332 comments

    Oh well @ $31.25 an OZ, it prolly wasn't really worth it anyway.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mexico, arizona, marijuana, pot, cannon, featured, yuma, nbcsandiego-com
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