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  • 17
    Apr
    2013
    8:20am, EDT

    Philadelphia dad accused of beating 3-month-old son to death

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

    By David Chang, NBC10.com

    A Philadelphia father has been accused of beating his 3-month-old son to death.

    Samuel Cabrera, 27, was arrested and charged with murder.

    Cabrera’s neighbor, Rashawn Reddick, didn’t hold back her disgust when she learned of the accusations.

     “It makes me sick to my stomach,” she said. “A 3-month-old innocent baby. It makes me want to cry.”

    Last Tuesday, 3-month-old Samuel Cabrera Jr., of the 600 block of North 63rd Street, was rushed to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia in critical condition.

    Doctors say the baby had suffered two broken bones, a ruptured spleen and liver and that all of his abdominal organs had been crushed. The child later died from his injuries.

    When Cabrera and the child’s mother were questioned, sources close to the investigation say the couple gave conflicting stories.

    The mother allegedly told detectives they found the baby pale and unconscious. She claimed that the baby became bruised after she and Cabrera pounded on his chest while performing CPR.

    More news from NBC10.com

    Cabrera allegedly told police however that he was trying to knock the family dog off the bed and accidentally hit the baby.

    Sources told NBC10's Nefertiti Jaquez that Cabrera eventually confessed to killing his own child. He was arrested and charged with murder.

    Cabrera's 15-month-old daughter as well as three other children his partner had from a previous relationship also lived with the couple, according to sources close to the investigation. All of the children are currently living with relatives.

    Officials also say they spotted bruises on the 15-month-old girl and are trying to determine whether Cabrera also abused her.

    The mother has not been charged. Cabrera is scheduled for a preliminary hearing on May 1.

    441 comments

    There are no words to express what I feel about this. If this man is found guilty of his babies murder I WILL offer to inject the lethal injection, 6weeks after his conviction. He deserves no more than that. I don't understand the mother at all. Why was she not charged? You can't tell me she didn't  …

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    Explore related topics: child, father, philadelphia, beat, us-news, featured, crime-courts, nbcphiladelphia, samuel-cabrera
  • 28
    Feb
    2013
    9:09pm, EST

    Hoping for a 'fresh start,' mother abandons child in woods

    By Andrew Rafferty, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A 24-year-old Pennsylvania woman abandoned her 8-month-old daughter in the woods with the hopes of getting “a fresh start,” according to police.

    Jennifer Cutruzzula was spotted by a neighbor walking into the woods with her child, only to emerge alone. The neighbor called police and went into the woods and found the baby girl on a muddy hillside next to a bottle of milk.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “She walked into this area with the intention of abandoning the child,” said Alleghany County District Attorney Stephen Zappala.

    Cutruzzula told police she left her child because she wanted “a fresh start,” according to a criminal complaint.

    Authorities say the infant is fine after being treated and released from a local hospital. The baby is currently in the custody of Child and Youth Services, according to WPXI-TV Pittsburgh.

    Cutruzzula is charged with endangering the welfare of children and recklessly endangering. She is being held on $50,000 bail.

    Zappala said the Pittsburgh-area woman will undergo a mental evaluation.

    “I have never see anything like this. I don’t know how anyone could leave a child in the woods and walk away,” said Zappala.

    468 comments

    Some one needs to beat the crap out of this woman. Get her head straight for her.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: child, pittsburgh, mother
  • 18
    Oct
    2012
    12:41pm, EDT

    Child sex abuse survivor on release of Boy Scouts' files: This 'empowers us'

    Courtesy of John Mark Buckland

    John Mark Buckland, 42, of Huntington, W. Va., said he was sexually abused by a Boy Scout leader at Travis Air Force Base when he was 12 years old in 1982. The Boy Scouts' secret file documenting that abuse will be made public under a court order on Thursday, along with more than 14,500 pages of previously confidential documents detailing accusations of child sex abuse within the organization.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Updated at 2:35 pm ET to reflect release of the report:
    John Buckland was 12 years old when an assistant Scoutmaster sexually abused him on an Air Force base in California. He has been waiting years for the day when a secret Boy Scouts file documenting that abuse three decades ago would be made public.

    That day came Thursday, when more than 14,500 pages of previously confidential documents created by the Boy Scouts of America detailing accusations of child sex abuse within the organization were released under an Oregon Supreme Court order.


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    “It unveils all the secrecy, or at least a good portion of it, and the secrecy is the biggest demon there is when it comes to things like this, because it’s by being hidden that it basically just eats people away like a cancer,” Buckland, 42, of Huntington, W. Va., told NBC News.

    “I think the release of the files will be instrumental as far as victims are concerned in being able to see that the dialogue is out there, and what I’m hoping to see is that there will be some really good self discovery of other people who haven’t come forward, people who will get a chance to see the files and actually being able to start processing it and getting their experience out in the open. But as long as the files were hidden that would never happen," he added.

    The court ordered the Boy Scouts to release the “ineligible volunteer” files from 1965 to 1985 that chronicle suspected or confirmed instances of child sex abuse. Media organizations had sued for the release of the files, part of a 2010 case in which a jury decided that the Scouts were negligent in allowing a former assistant Scoutmaster to associate with the organization's youth after he admitted molesting 17 boys in 1983.

    Lawyers for victims of the abuse say that the files, which they have dubbed the “perversion files,” represent reports of Scouts allegedly abused by more than 1,200 different Scoutmasters and other adult volunteers. The files, which includes Buckland’s abuser, were released Thursday on www.kellyclarkattorney.com.

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

    A report by the Boy Scouts in September said that 829 of the files from Jan. 1, 1965, to June 30, 1984, involved suspicions or confirmations of inappropriate sexual behavior with 1,622 youth. The report was done for the organization by Dr. Janet Warren, a professor of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences at the University of Virginia.

    At the time, the Boy Scouts said in a letter that they would review their files created from 1965 to the present “and ensure that all good-faith suspicion of abuse has been reported to law enforcement.” They also said that there “have been instances where people misused their positions in Scouting to abuse children, and in certain cases, our response to these incidents and our efforts to protect youth were plainly insufficient, inappropriate, or wrong.”

    Boy Scouts admit response to sex abuse was 'insufficient' 

    On Thursday morning, the organization also noted: “Where those involved in Scouting failed to protect, or worse, inflicted harm on children, we extend our deepest and sincere apologies to victims and their families.”

    “While it is difficult to understand or explain individuals’ actions from many decades ago, today Scouting is a leader among youth-serving organizations in preventing child abuse,” the statement added.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In an interview with NBC DFW, National President Wayne Perry said: "I would ask parents to look at the programs we have and then judge us versus, maybe not the past, but judge where we are today and certainly judge us against any other youth service organization in the world and they will see that your kids are very, very safe."

    Buckland said his life spiraled downward after Air Force officials came to his parents’ house on Travis Air Force Base in Vacaville, Calif., with photos depicting his abuse by a Scout leader. He dropped out of high school, got into drugs, attempted suicide twice, had many failed romantic relationships and eventually ended up in prison for two robberies that he confessed to doing.

    His abuser was court-martialed and sentenced to hard labor, Buckland said, but it took him decades to figure out the source of what was troubling him since he, like the Boy Scouts, had buried the abuse. He said his life turned around when he got his dream job as a firefighter and then landed a two-year post in Iraq in 2009, where, while online, he came across stories similar to his own.

    “That was the first time that I understood the dynamics of what was going on inside of me that flawed my decision-making, that flawed my emotions, that flawed everything and really propelled me in that direction,” he said. “The light bulb goes off and that’s decades later.”

    For Buckland, the Boy Scouts’ apologies are insincere and forced. He said they never contacted him since he was abused in 1982 to see if he was okay.

    “These files had to be ripped from their hands,” he said, noting that the lawyers who fought the 2010 case, Kelly Clark and Paul Mones, had “taken us from being a piece of paper to being a person that was offended, and that’s a huge difference.”

    “This whole thing empowers us,” he said. “We’ve been powerless up to now. We’ve been at the whims of a multibillion-dollar organization that … has all the money to keep us under a desk in a box. And for now, they can’t do it anymore.”

     

    178 comments

    Explain again why Atheists aren't moral enough for this group.

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  • 12
    Oct
    2012
    3:55am, EDT

    Boy, 4, hurt but alive after fall from ninth floor in Silver Spring, Maryland

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

    By NBCWashington.com

    A child fell out a window on the ninth floor of an apartment building in Silver Spring, Md., Thursday afternoon, according to Montgomery County police.

    A tree helped break the four-year-old boy's fall, which occurred at about 3:15 p.m., NBCWashington.com reported.

    The woman who found the child said he was crying in a bush. She did not know who his family was, and so called 911, Stone reported.

    Student survives 11-story fall from dorm room at Washington State University

    He suffered head injuries and a broken femur and was taken to Children’s Hospital in a serious condition, according to Montgomery County Fire and Rescue.

    Family members were in the apartment when the boy fell, Stone reported.

    Police and Child Protective Services staff are investigating the circumstances of the fall.

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    68 comments

    So, How did the kid fall out of the window? And since the baby was found crying in the bushes, the family, or whoever was SUPPOSED to be watching him.. didn't even know he fell out! So. just exactly WHAT is more important than watching the kids???!!! Head injury...hope he makes out OK.

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  • 28
    Aug
    2012
    6:58am, EDT

    Cops: Two teens charged after Isabella Tennant, 5, found dead in trash can

    A 16-year-old teen, described as a "family friend," is accused of killing a five-year-old girl left in his care. Police say his friend helped dispose of the body. WGRZ's Claudine Ewing reports from New York.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. -- Two teenagers charged in connection with the death of a five-year-old New York girl whose body was dumped in a trash can were expected to make their first court appearance since their arrests.

    Five-year-old Isabella Tennant was found dead after going missing from her home in Niagara Falls, N.Y.

    Authorities said 16-year-old John Freeman and 18-year-old Tyler Best were scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday morning in Niagara Falls City Court.  An autopsy of the body of Isabella Tennant was also scheduled.


    The arrests came after Best went to police Monday morning and led them to a garbage can containing a trash bag holding Isabella's body. Best told them he had helped the younger teen dispose of the body after Freeman killed her, police said.

    'Bare hands'
    Isabella's family called police Monday morning to say she was missing from her great-grandmother's Niagara Falls home, where she'd been staying overnight.

    “The great grandmother, Sharon Lascelle, said she went to bed just after 11:00 p.m. and Isabella was playing with" the 16-year-old, according to a press release issued to NBC station WGRZ by the Niagara Falls Police Department.

    “At this time we believe Freeman killed Isabella with his bare hands (no weapons involved) and that Best was only involved after she was deceased and assisted with moving her remains,” it said.

    Freeman "was described by family members of the victim as a ‘close’ and ‘trusted’ family friend. They also said it was also not uncommon for him to be in the home and around Isabella unsupervised. Best and Freeman are described as close friends,” it added.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Read more news from NBC station WGRZ

    Police charged Freeman as an adult with second-degree murder.  

    Best is charged with tampering with evidence. Best and Freeman were in custody and couldn't be reached for comment. 

    At a news conference Monday afternoon, Niagara Falls Chief Detective William Thompson said there were signs of injuries but no indication of sexual abuse.

    "It's a terrible crime. It tears at your heart," Thompson said.

    Of Best going to police, Thompson said, "I imagine it was his conscience."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    484 comments

    I am so sorry for the families loss, but I have to ask why a 5 year old was playing with a 16 year old at 11pm and the grandmother went to bed? She should have been put to bed way earlier, the boy sent home or to his bed if he was staying with them too. I'll never understand the actions of some peo …

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  • 25
    Aug
    2012
    6:55am, EDT

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

    By NBCConnecticut.com

    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.

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    279 comments

    Don't show off your gun to the kid next door.

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  • 3
    Aug
    2012
    5:28am, EDT

    Childhood abuse killed 36-year-old Texas woman, police say

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    AUSTIN, Texas -- Linda Gatica survived head injuries caused by child abuse when she was a baby, but more than three decades later they killed her in what Texas police are now calling a murder.

    Yet investigators said on Thursday they aren't hunting for a suspect in the murder of Gatica, who was 36 when she died in May at an Austin care facility for people with mental disabilities.



    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    That's because they believe the killer to be Gatica's long-dead grandmother, Martha Gatica, who abused her when she was four months old.

    "Investigators learned that Linda was brought to a hospital by her mother in 1976 with head injuries that appeared suspicious," Austin police said in a statement.

    Police weren't notified at the time, but Child Protective Services investigated and baby Linda was removed from her family and placed in foster care, the statement said.

    'Out of the norm'
    Retracing the CPS' probe, police found that the Linda Gatica's mother, Mary Jane Gatica, who was 20 at the time, had given a caseworkers differing accounts of how her daughter may have been hurt, including that she may have fallen off the bed or slipped on a toy, Austin's statesman.com reported.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    Mary Jane Gatica and her three children lived with her mother at the time, the newspaper reported. 

    After her death decades later, authorities concluded that the injuries suffered when she was a baby ultimately killed Linda Gatica. Further details on the injuries were not available. Police detectives decided to clear the case since the person who abused Gatica -- her grandmother -- is no longer alive.

    "It's out of the norm," Austin Police Corporal Anthony Hipolito said of the case.

    Reuters and NBC News staff contributed to this report. 

     

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    112 comments

    Grandma who did it is dead..but her mother who knew it about it and tried to hide the real facts is still alive..so if they investigated it why not charge the mother with a crime. She fell out of bed or slipped on a toy..if you don't know what really happen..why say anything then..what's to hide?

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  • 20
    Jul
    2012
    8:28pm, EDT

    3-year-old boy dies after being left in van outside Dallas day care

    Family Photo via NBC 5

    Benjamin Price, 3, is shown in a family photo.

    By Elvira Sakmari and Amanda Guerra, NBCDFW.com

    Updated at 11:45 p.m. ET: Dallas Fire-Rescue and Dallas Police are investigating the death of a child left in a van outside a day care in Dallas.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Dallas Fire-Rescue said it received the call to just before 5:15 p.m. Friday.

    Dallas police say the call came from Little T's Tiny Tot Daycare in the 2200 block of South Buckner Boulevard which is near Cordell Drive.


    See the original report at NBCDFW.com

    The child was given CPR as he was transported to Baylor Hospital, Dallas police said, but doctors there pronounced him dead.

    Family members have gathered at the hospital and identified the child as 3-year-old Benjamin Price. A grieving family member originally told NBC 5 Price was 4.

    Dallas police Lt. Scott Walton said the little boy was left in the van outside the day care after a field trip. The high at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport was 105 degrees Friday.

    Family members tell NBC 5 the day care didn't realize Price was still asleep in the van until his grandmother came to pick him up.

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    "There was no place you wouldn't know he was there. He made his presence known wherever he was. So for them to not know Benjamin was there – I just don't see how," said Benjamin’s God Mother Kawanea Hines.

    Family member Kisha Allen said she wants answers from the day care where Price had been going for more than a year.

    "You know, a kid lost his life because of stupidity. This isn't even a matter of negligence. It's stupidity," said Allen. "It could have been as simple as counting the children as they left the room and counting the children when they got off the bus. Something as simple as counting. You were taught that in kindergarten."

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    One of Benjamin's grandmothers said she knows the woman who owns the day care and although she has burning questions, she is choosing to forgive the employees.

    "Well I can't hold her responsible because God has got this thing in control. It's God’s will, God's will," said Louria Washington. "The time that he gave us, the three years he gave us Benjamin, we just appreciate and thank God just for the three years."

    When NBC 5 called the day care, the person who answered said "no comment" and hung up.

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    582 comments

    How hard is it to make sure the children you're transporting are all out of the vehicle? This is inexcusable.

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  • 14
    Jul
    2012
    8:57am, EDT

    Penn State to renovate showers, locker room where Sandusky abused boys

    By NBC News and msnbc.com news services

    STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Penn State plans to renovate the building where Jerry Sandusky sexually molested boys, a university spokesman said Friday.

    David La Torre said that Penn State plans to remodel the football shower and locker room area as a direct result of Sandusky's crimes.


    The former defensive coordinator was convicted last month of 45 counts of sexual molestation involving 10 boys. Some of the assaults took place in the football showers.

    Read the full story on NBC station WGAL here

    La Torre said renovation plans to the Lasch Football Building were drawn up shortly after Sandusky's arrest in November. But he said Penn State can't move forward until all legal proceedings in the case are over.


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    Penn State President Rodney Erickson said there have been discussions about Lasch building renovations between Athletic Director David Joyner and new Penn State football coach Bill O'Brien.

    Expert: Freeh report ups legal risk for former Penn State president

    The Lasch building was the scene of a 2001 incident in which graduate assistant coach Mike McQueary said he saw Sandusky abuse a boy in the shower.

    An internal investigation released on Thursday said that Penn State leaders including late football coach Joe Paterno covered up Sandusky's sexual abuse for years to protect the high-profile football program. 

    NBC News station WGAL and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    376 comments

    wow, penn state's priorities could not be more backwards. when are they going to give back to the victims they ignored for so many years?

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  • 10
    Jul
    2012
    4:30pm, EDT

    Report on Penn State's response to Sandusky accusation due Thursday

    Gary Cameron / Reuters file

    Former FBI Director Louis Freeh was hired in November to determine whether Penn State University officials knew about child sex abuse allegations against former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky.

    By Mike Brunker, msnbc.com

    The results of an internal investigation of Pennsylvania State University’s response to child sexual abuse allegations against former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky will be made public on Thursday.

    An announcement Tuesday indicated a report on the investigation led by former FBI chief Louis Freeh would be posted online Thursday at 9 a.m. ET. It said Freeh would hold a news conference an hour later to discuss its findings and recommendations.


    Follow Mike Brunker on Twitter and Facebook.


    “We look forward to seeing the report on Thursday and reviewing Judge Freeh's recommendations,” said Penn State spokesman David La Torre. “The university will provide a response in Scranton on Thursday at a time and location to be announced.”


    Sandusky, 68, was found guilty of 45 counts of child sexual abuse last month and is currently in prison awaiting sentencing. He faces a maximum sentence of more than 400 years in prison.

    Freeh was hired by the university in November to review of the university's dealings with Sandusky and its response to a 2001 report that he sexually abused of a boy in a Penn State shower room, an incident witnessed by football assistant Michael McQueary.

    Former Penn State President Graham Spanier has come under particular scrutiny in recent weeks amid news reports suggesting that he was made aware of suspicious activity involving Sandusky in 2001 and that no report of the incident was made to authorities.

    Citing emails obtained by Freeh’s investigators, CNN reported last week that Spanier and two other university officials — Gary Schultz, the former senior vice president of finance and business, and Tim Curley, the athletic director on administrative leave — agreed to take a "humane" approach in dealing with  Sandusky following his alleged sexual encounter with a boy.

    Instead of reporting the incident to police, according to the report, administrators instead planned to ask Sandusky to seek counseling and said they would tell officials at the Second Mile, the charity he founded and where he met many of the children he would later abuse, about their concerns.

    Related stories

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    Attorneys for Spanier fired back earlier Tuesday, saying their client was never informed about the shower room incident involving Sandusky.

    "At no time in the more than 16 years of his presidency at Penn State was Dr. Spanier told of an incident involving Jerry Sandusky that described child abuse, sexual misconduct or criminality of any kind, and he reiterated that during his interview with Louis Freeh and his colleagues,'' Spanier's attorneys, Peter Vaira and Elizabeth Ainslie, said in a written statement.

    In addition, Freeh’s report is expected to include information about the actions of former head football coach Joe Paterno in the wake of McQueary’s allegations. Paterno, a legend in college football, died of lung cancer in January at 85.

    In a statement Tuesday, Paterno's family also pushed back against the leak of emails to CNN, including one in which Curley stated, "After giving it more thought, and talking it over with Joe yesterday - I am uncomfortable with what we agreed were the next steps."

    "The media spin that this is proof of some sort of cover up is completely false," the statment said. "When the facts come out, it will be clear that Joe Paterno never gave Tim Curley any instructions to protect Sandusky or limit any investigation of his actions.

    "Joe Paterno did not cover up for Jerry Sandusky.  Joe Paterno did not know that Jerry Sandusky was a pedophile.  Joe Paterno did not act in any way to prevent a proper investigation of Jerry Sandusky.  To claim otherwise is a distortion of the truth.

    The Sandusky scandal led to the ouster of Spanier and Paterno and charges against Curley, who is on leave from the university, and Schultz, who has since retired.  The latter two are accused of perjury for their grand jury testimony and failing to properly report suspected child abuse.

    Spanier hasn't been charged.

    Chip Bell, Tom Winter and Julmary Zambrano of NBC News and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    32 comments

    It will be interesting to see if the report protects the upper echelon or not. Personally, I can't see how ANY Penn State can claim ignorance, not when there was an eye-witness. And McQueary told plenty of people, he did enough.

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  • 24
    Jun
    2012
    4:53am, EDT

    Girl, 5, killed, sister and mother critical in Santa Ana hit and run

    By Melissa Pamer and Antonio Castelano, NBC4 Los Angeles

    A young girl died and her mother and sister were injured in a hit-and-run collision in Santa Ana, California, police said Saturday.

    The suspected driver was arrested a few blocks away when a witness driving behind blocked the car in, pinning the suspect until police could arrive, according to Santa Ana police Cpl. Anthony Bertagna. He called the witness' response a "heroic action."


    The driver, Jessica Louise Cowan of Frazier Park, was being held at Santa Ana jail on suspicion of felony hit and run, as well as driving under the influence, Bertagna said. She may also face vehicular manslaughter charges, Bertagna said.

    A preliminary field sobriety test led police to believe she was under the influence of alcohol or drugs, Bertagna said.

    More details, including video, at NBC4 News

    In video shot at the scene on Saturday morning Cowan is seen handcuffed and being placed into a patrol car. Her 2002 silver Lexus sedan had a smashed windshield and dented hood and front bumper.

    The mother, a 45-year-old Latina, and her two daughters, ages 5 and 6, were crossing in the cross walk at 17th and Spurgeon streets when a small silver car ran a red light "at a high rate of speed" and collided with all three victims, Bertagna said. The victims had the right of way.

    The victims were pushed 60 to 70 feet down the road, he added. A pair of children's shoes could be seen left in the roadway in video from the scene.

    "The suspect in this case showed no regard for the actions they did," Bertagna said. "This is horrific."

    The 5-year-old was killed, while her 6-year-old sister and mother were in critical condition with head trauma, Bertagna said.

    They live close to the scene of the collision, he said. A crowd of relatives could be seen at the collision site.

    The incident was reported to police at 11 a.m. PT/ 2 p.m. ET.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    105 comments

    In Japan, there is zero tolerance for driving while intoxicated. A driver has his or her license revoked for life after only one conviction, in addition to any fine or jail time. This should also be the case in the United States.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: accident, child, california, dui, hit-and-run, santa-ana, featured, crime-courts
  • 22
    Jun
    2012
    9:38pm, EDT

    Sandusky convicted of 45 counts, plans to appeal

    By Kimberly Kaplan, NBC News, and M. Alex Johnson, msnbc.com

    Handout / Reuters

    Jerry Sandusky is seen in a booking photo from the Centre County Correctional Facility in Bellefonte, Pa., on June 22, 2012.

    Updated at 11:37 p.m. ET: BELLEFONTE, Pa. — Jerry Sandusky was convicted of 45 counts of child sexual abuse Friday night and faces spending the rest of his life in state prison. His attorney said he would appeal the verdict.

    Sandusky's attorney, Joseph Amendola, asked Judge John Cleland to allow Sandusky to be released on house arrest, but Cleland summarily rejected the request, saying: "Bail is revoked. Mr. Sandusky is remanded to the custody of the sheriff."

    Michael Isikoff, John Yang, Ron Allen, Marianne Haggerty and Hannah Rapplye of NBC News and Jim Gold of msnbc.com contributed to this report by Kimberly Kaplan of NBC News and M. Alex Johnson of msnbc.com. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Sandusky was immediately led out of the courthouse in handcuffs as a large crowd of onlookers cheered. Sentencing was set for late September.

    Sandusky, 68, the former longtime defensive coordinator for the Penn State University football team, had denied all 48 counts alleging that he abused 10 boys over 15 years. Two grand jury reports accused him of having used his connection to one of the nation's premier college football programs to "groom" the boys, whom he met through his Second Mile charity for troubled children, for sexual relationships.


    Several of the counts are so-called mandated felonies, meaning Cleland has no discretion in sentencing. NBC News reported that he faces a minimum of 60 years in prison.

    NBC News

    Jerry Sandusky is led from the Centre County Courthouse in handcuffs Friday night.

    Cleland, who is a senior judge in McKean County, was brought to Centre County to oversee the trial after local judges recused themselves.

    Reaction to the Sandusky verdict

    Amendola, who was interrupted by hecklers outside the courthouse several times, said he had expected the outcome and respected the verdict of the jurors, who didn’t speak to reporters afterward.

    Amendola said he believed Sandusky had legitimate grounds for appeal, saying his client had "an uphill battle" because of the extensive pretrial publicity.

    "We said we were attempting to climb Mount Everest from the bottom of the mountain. Obviously, we didn't make it," he said.

    Defense attorney Joseph Amendola speaks outside the courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa., after his client, Jerry Sandusky, was found guilty of sexually abusing children.

    Pennsylvania Attorney General Linda Kelly, whose office prosecuted Sandusky, said, "A serious child predator ... has been held accountable for his crimes."

    Kelly thanked the victims, who she said "came forward to bravely testify in this trial and to finally put a stop to the crimes that were committed."

    "We hope that our search for justice will help them and perhaps others looking on nearby and afar," she said.

    Grace Gordon, 49, of Bellefonte, also welcomed the verdict but lamented the damage the trial had done to Bellefonte and Centre County.

    "It's hard. It really is, to see a small town torn apart like this," said Gordon, who was outside the courthouse with her 23-year-old son and his girlfriend.

    Gordon said her father, who worked with Sandusky at Penn State, "would have just been devastated to know about this."

    "You'd never, ever have dreamed that he'd be that kind of person," Gordon said. "What he did to those kids is just horrendous."

    The university that Sandusky served for decades said in a statement late Friday that "we have tremendous respect for the men who came forward to tell their stories publicly. No verdict can undo the pain and suffering caused by Mr. Sandusky, but we do hope this judgment helps the victims and their families along their path to healing."

    The university said it would seek to "fairly ... compensate" the victims and invited them to participate in a program to "facilitate the resolution of claims against the University arising out of Mr. Sandusky's conduct."

    It said it intended to get in contact with lawyers for the victims "in the near future."

    Sandusky was acquitted on three counts: an indecent assault charge involving "Victim 6", a man who testified that Sandusky had given him a bear hug in the shower but at one point he just "blacked out"; an indecent assault charge involving "Victim 5", who said Sandusky fondled him in the shower; and an involuntary deviate sexual intercourse charge regarding "Victim 2", who former assistant coach Mike McQueary said he saw being attacked in a campus shower.

    A trial that riveted the nation
    The trial, which opened June 11, culminated months of intense attention that led to the firing of head coach Joe Paterno, who won more games than any other major college football coach in history, many of them with Sandusky at his side.

    Paterno died exactly five months ago, a few weeks after the Penn State Board of Trustees dismissed him for not having done enough to stop Sandusky's abuse.

    Jurors heard often-graphic testimony from eight of the 10 victims whose accounts were included in two grand jury reports. They told how Sandusky would first win their trust by giving them gifts and taking them on trips with the football team before progressing to hugging, kissing, increasingly sexual touching and, in some cases, oral and anal sex.

    In a rare occurrence in an abuse trial, prosecutors also presented the testimony of a corroborating eyewitness — Sandusky's former Penn State coaching colleague McQueary.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    McQueary said the boy had his hands against the wall and that Sandusky was standing up against him from behind. He said he heard a "skin-on-skin smacking sound" and that he had "no doubt" that Sandusky was engaging in anal sex with the boy.

    Because they were sequestered, without access to computers, phones or any other way to hear news coverage, the jury of seven women and five men wouldn't have heard newer, potentially damaging information from two other accusers that emerged after they began deliberations.

    Sandusky's adopted son Matt said he had been prepared to testify that he, too, was a victim of abuse by his father, according to a statement issued Thursday by attorneys who said they are representing the younger Sandusky.

    (NBC News and msnbc.com generally do not identify victims of sexual assaults, but Matt Sandusky chose to identify himself in a public statement released through his attorneys.)

    Full coverage of the Jerry Sandusky trial
    Ghosts of Sandusky's dreams haunt home where charity was born

    Legal analysis by Wes Oliver

    Matt Sandusky: From defender to possibly most damning accuser

    Amendola said Friday night that Jerry Sandusky abandoned plans to testify in his own defense because of the prospect of damaging rebuttal testimony by his son.

    Nor would they have heard the account of Travis Weaver, 30, of Ohio, who attended Second Mile camps as a youth. Weaver told NBC News in an interview that aired Thursday night that Sandusky performed oral sex on him in the upstairs bedroom of the Sanduskys' home.

    Weaver testified to one of the two grand juries but wasn't mentioned in the grand jury reports or called as a witness during the trial.

    The end of the trial doesn't mean the case is over.

    Two former top Penn State officials, former Athletic Director Timothy Curley and former vice president Gary Schultz, face perjury charges in connection with their grand jury testimony in December, in which prosecutors alleged that concealed what they knew about Sandusky's conduct.

    Law enforcement sources have told NBC News that former Penn State President Graham Spanier, who was fired in November, was under investigation for possible similar charges.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    1836 comments

    Oh boy....here we go....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: child, sex-abuse, penn-state, crime, featured, sandusky, jerry-sandusky, sandusky-trial
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