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  • Recommended: Oklahoma combs through wreckage after 'storm of storms' leaves 24 dead
  • Recommended: More 'devastating' tornadoes possible on Tuesday, forecasters warn
  • Recommended: Army general suspended from duties amid adultery investigation
  • Recommended: Jodi Arias pleads for jury to spare her life, says, 'I want everyone's pain to stop'

NBC News reporters bring you compelling stories from across the nation. For more US news, follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • Updated
    33
    minutes
    ago

    Oklahoma combs through wreckage after 'storm of storms' leaves 24 dead

    Slideshow: Tornadoes ravage Plains

    Destroyed vehicles lie in the rubble outside the Plaza Towers Elementary school in Moore, Okla., on Tuesday.

    Launch slideshow

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Emergency crews and National Guard troops in Oklahoma picked through neighborhoods without recognizable streets Tuesday in a grim, house-by-house search of the blasted-out husk of a city left behind by a ferocious tornado.

    Authorities lowered the death toll to 24, less than half the figure they gave in the initial chaos after the twister, but there was still no full accounting of those missing. Nine of the confirmed dead were children, including seven in a flattened elementary school.

    Working with search dogs and under menacing skies, the crews meticulously combed the rubble in the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore, which took a direct hit when the tornado cut a 17-mile path of destruction on Monday afternoon.

    Dozens of people were pulled from the wreckage in the initial hours after the storm, but there were no reports of additional survivors found Tuesday — only scraps of wood, shreds of clothing, shards of glass and metal and cars crumpled into each other and into buildings. Entire stretches of Moore looked as if they had been put through a blender.

    “I mean, there’s nothing,” said Robert Foster, whose family home was destroyed. “People are walking up and down the streets. It’s really upsetting to look at. We grew up there. That’s our whole childhood. And it’s all flattened now.”

    Gov. Mary Fallin said there were 237 injured, but authorities cautioned that figure and the death toll could still rise. Even with the benefit of a full day’s light, people were only beginning to grasp the scope of the destruction in Moore and parts of Oklahoma City.

    The National Weather Service said survey crews had found at least one area of Category EF5 damage — the highest classification for tornadoes, meaning winds had exceeded 200 mph.

    Frank Keating, a former Oklahoma governor, said on MSNBC that as many as 20,000 families could be displaced.

    “This was the storm of storms,” Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett said.

    The first of the victims was publicly identified — Ja’Nae Hornsby, a third-grader who was killed when the tornado demolished Plaza Towers Elementary School. She was remembered by her family Tuesday as full of joy and fond of playing dress-up. Her relatives gathered at a Baptist church in Oklahoma City to console each other.

    Tannen Maury / EPA

    Firefighters examine the rubble of a home in a destroyed neighborhood in Moore.

    As they took the measure of what they had lost, people in Moore also marveled that they were alive, and began to share stories of survival and of how they protected each other when the twister struck, announcing itself with roaring wind.

    Children from Plaza Towers Elementary School, where seven children were reported drowned in a pool of water, told of hearing sirens and running into a hall for cover, some still carrying their math books.

    A teacher, Rhonda Crosswhite, said she huddled with students in a bathroom stall and draped herself over them for cover as the storm hit.

    “One of my little boys, he just kept saying, ‘I love you, I love you, please don’t die with me, please don’t die with me,’” she told TODAY. “But we’re OK. And we made it out, and it finally stopped.”

    She said all her students were accounted for.

    Damian Britton, a fourth-grader, credited “Miss Crosswhite” with saving his life. He estimated it took about five minutes for the twister to pass through before the students emerged from cover to survey the damage and check on their classmates.

    “It was just a disaster,’’ he said. “There was just a bunch of stuff thrown around and the cars were tipped over, and it smelled like gas.”

    At an afternoon news conference, Gary Bird, the Moore fire chief, said that search dogs were no longer “making any hits” at the school. He said no one had been found there Tuesday but cautioned that the search was still active.

    “They will not declare that structure clear until they are down to the ground and have been through every piece of rubble in that building,” he said.

    One child was killed at Briarwood Elementary School, elsewhere in Moore, said police Sgt. Jeremy Lewis. There was no word on how the ninth child died. Besides the 19 deaths in Moore, five were killed in southern neighborhoods of Oklahoma City.

    Charlie Riedel / AP

    Zac Woodcock salvages items from the rubble of a tornado-ravaged rental home in Moore.

    Authorities said they hoped to have every home, business and car in Moore searched by nightfall. They worked under the threat of still more severe weather. Forecasters said parts of Oklahoma and Texas, including Dallas, were at risk for more tornadoes.

    The tornado Monday spent 40 minutes on the ground, said Rick Smith of the National Weather Service.

    “We’ve seen numerous structures that are wiped clean to the foundation,” he said.

    Smith said that the first severe thunderstorm warning had gone out 44 minutes before the tornado touched down, and the first tornado warning 16 minutes ahead. The weather service said the storm, at its widest, stretched 1.3 miles.

    President Barack Obama called it “one of the most destructive tornadoes in history.” Speaking from the White House, he pledged the full help of the federal government and said there was no time to waste.

    “In an instant, neighborhoods were destroyed, dozens of people lost their lives, many more were injured, and among the victims were young children trying to take shelter in the safest place they knew, their school,” he said. “So our prayers are with the people of Oklahoma today.”

    Fallin, after a helicopter tour that traced the tornado’s path, said searchers were having trouble because “the streets are just gone. The signs are just gone.”

    Expressions of grief and support came from across the world. Pope Francis said on Twitter: “I am close to the families of all who died in the Oklahoma tornado, especially those who lost young children. Join me in praying for them.”

    Queen Elizabeth II extended her deepest sympathies, and House Speaker John Boehner ordered flags at the Capitol to half-staff.

    Relief efforts sprang up. The NBA’s Oklahoma City Thunder and its star player, Kevin Durant, each pledged $1 million. Others helped as they could: Miles from Moore, people went on Facebook to post family photos that had landed in their yards, hoping to match them with their owners.

    Aerial pictures of the destruction brought to mind Joplin, the Missouri town virtually wiped off the map two years ago when an EF5 tornado killed 158 people and caused $2.8 billion in damage.

    The twister cut a path similar to a tornado outbreak that ravaged Oklahoma and Kansas on May 3, 1999, killing 46 people and damaging or destroying more than 8,000 homes. Wind in that outbreak was clocked at 318 mph, the fastest ever recorded on earth.

    Officials in Moore complained earlier this year about foot-dragging by the federal government over $2 million in federal grants for “safe rooms” in 800 homes to protect them from severe weather.

    A spokesman for the Federal Emergency Management Agency told NBC News the agency was looking into the claim.

    The city’s website also said, however, that Moore faced only a 1 to 2 percent chance of a tornado on any spring day, and that if a tornado did strike, there was less than a 1 percent chance that it would be as strong as the 1999 tornado.

    Monday’s storm beat those odds. Alfredo Corrales and Viviana Lune rode it out in a shelter beneath their house. Corrales told TODAY that they had hunkered down there and heard voices above, and popped open the door to find several neighbors asking to come in.

    The wind was so strong, Corrales said, that he and a neighbor had to hold the cellar door shut. When they emerged, they found a rewritten landscape.

    “I saw basically nothing,” Luna said. “There were no fences there anymore, trees were snapped in half, roofs of houses were gone. Everything from people’s houses and even from neighborhoods across the street was laying in our yards. Half of the roof is torn off, the garage is caved in — it's just a total mess.”

    More on the Oklahoma tornado:

    How to help Oklahoma tornado victims

    ‘The school started coming apart’: Trapped students had nowhere to hide

    ‘Bless you for posting’: Facebook group reunites tornado victims with photos, documents

    Curse or coincidence? Scientists study Tornado Alley's past and future

    NBC News' Jeff Black, Tracy Connor and Kristen Welker contributed to this report, as did NBC News contributor Alex Hannaford and The Associated Press.

    This story was originally published on Tue May 21, 2013 6:14 AM EDT

    1416 comments

    The loss of a child is a parents worse nightmare, the loss of a parent is a childs worse nightmare. May our love wrap you in our arms and give you some comfort and rest....

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    Explore related topics: us-news, weather, featured, children, school, updated, oklahoma-city, storms, moore, ok, joplin, oklahoma-tornadoes, park-plaza
  • 8
    May
    2013
    10:18pm, EDT

    DC pediatrician, 73, charged with possessing child porn

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

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    A Washington, D.C., pediatrician widely respected for treating children in the city's poorest neighborhoods for decades was arrested Wednesday and charged with downloading child pornography, according to federal court documents.

    The man, Dr. Robert Paul Dickey, 73, was charged with two federal counts of receiving and possessing visual depictions of minors "engaging in sexually explicit conduct."

    The doctor was even allegedly viewing a child porn site on his desktop computer when police and FBI agents showed up to search his home, according to a complaint filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Washington.


    The complaint, which NBC News isn't publishing because of its sexually explicit nature, said Dickey acknowledged "that he visits child pornography sites, downloads child pornography and stores it on an external hard drive."

    For at least 44 years, Dickey was considered a pillar of the community, treating children in Washington's poor neighborhoods south of the Anacostia River. As long ago as 1973, he was recognized in a profile in The Washington Post for serving "as an old-fashioned small town doctor" for hundreds of impoverished children a week.

    NBC Washington: D.C. pediatrician charged with possession of child pornography

    Dickey was busted through a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children based on information provided by Microsoft Corp., the complaint said. It said that on April 3, an Outlook user uploaded approximately 14 pictures of child pornography from an account with the username "Robert Dickey."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Investigators traced the computer's IP address to Dickey's home in Southeast Washington, the complaint said. It said they found explicit images of prepubescent girls in sex acts with adults on the hard drive.

    Dickey's grandsons, one of them 9 years old and the other an infant less than a year old, live with him in the same house, the complaint said. Their whereabouts weren't made public Wednesday.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    68 comments

    I hope all pedophiles and pedopornophiles are this stupid when it comes to trying to cover their tracks.

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    Explore related topics: featured, crime, children, medicine, washington-dc, porn, child-pornography, robert-paul-dickey
  • 3
    May
    2013
    3:30am, EDT

    Guns made for kids: How young is too young to shoot?

    www.crickett.com

    Young target shooters and hunters pose with their guns on the "Kids Corner" web page of Crickett, a line of rifles made for kids.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The gun was small and light, the training wheels of firearms. The .22-caliber, single-shot Crickett rifle turned deadly on Tuesday, officials in Kentucky said, when a 5-year-old Cumberland County boy shot and killed his 2-year-old sister in what the coroner described to a local paper as “just one of those crazy accidents.”

    The toddler was shot when the boy was playing with the rifle, as Kentucky state police said in a statement. The gun, a type of rifle made specifically for kids, had been given to the boy as a gift last year and kept in a corner, and the family did not realize a shell was in the chamber, Cumberland County Coroner Gary White told the Lexington Herald-Leader.

    The Crickett is one of two lines of .22-caliber rifles for kids manufactured by the Pennsylvania-based Keystone Sporting Arms. The company acquired the maker of the similar Chipmunk rifle in 2007, a purchase that positioned the company as “the leading rifle supplier in the youth market,” according to the company’s website.

    On the site’s “Kids Corner,” young target shooters and hunters pose with their guns, and videos on the company’s YouTube channel promote the gun as fun for the whole family.

    Keystone Sporting Arms, which says on its website that it made 60,000 rifles in 2008, did not return requests for comment from NBC News.

    Firearms made for minors represent a new market for gun makers, said Josh Sugarmann, executive director of the Violence Policy Center. As the gun market has been saturated, Sugarmann said, gun makers have followed a “path trailblazed by a wide range of other industries, particularly the tobacco industry, and focused its efforts on women and children.”

    Keystone Sporting Arms

    Pennsylvania-based Keystone Sporting Arms manufactures and markets rifles for children. They are "the leading rifle supplier in the youth market," according to the company's website.

    Yet despite the availability of triggers for tiny fingers, gun makers and marketers are hesitant to actually spell out what age a child should be before handling his or her first firearm, said Sugarmann. Crickett's website, for instance, makes no references to appropriate age ranges for their child-sized weapons.

    “There’s a recognition that the majority of the American public has concerns about putting guns in the hands of children,” he said.

    Through studies and promotional materials, some sporting associations encourage young people to take up hunting and shooting as recreational activities, and point to potential benefits -- both for avid gun-owners and youths themselves -- of young people handling firearms.

    A study conducted on behalf of the Hunting Heritage Trust and the National Shooting Sports Foundation in January 2012 asked young people ages 8 to 17 about how they viewed hunting and target shooting. A 385-page report on the telephone survey said the results were clear: Young people who were exposed to hunting and shooting were more likely to have a positive view of those activities.

    “The focus groups also revealed substantial willingness among youths to introduce their friends and peers to activities that they themselves participate in and enjoy,” the report concluded. “This tendency must be encouraged among youth hunting and shooting ambassadors, as introduction through direct involvement and experience represents the most effective recruitment strategy.”

    “Junior Shooters” covers the recreational use of firearms by young people, publishing about two or three issues a year since 2007. Available for download online, the magazine features articles written by adults as well as shooters as young as 10, alongside ads from firearms makers including Glock and Heckler & Koch.

    “The perspective is you can be involved in the shooting sports, you can have a gun, you can have a career, you can go to the Olympics, you can represent the United States, and you can still do it safely,” said editor-in-chief Andy Fink.

    The magazine prints about 30,000 copies per issue, Fink said.

    “Each person who is introduced to the shooting sports and has a positive experience is another vote in favor of keeping our American heritage and freedom alive,” Fink wrote in the winter 2012 issue of "Junior Shooters," above a warning that the sale, possession, or transport of gun products shown in the magazine may be regulated. “They may not be old enough to vote now, but they will be in the future.”

    Under federal law, children under 18 cannot buy guns themselves. Regulations on how children access firearms and who can be held negligent for a child’s use of a gun is left to the states, said Lindsay Nichols, attorney at the Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

    “Kentucky has certain laws to prevent children from gaining access to handguns, but those laws don’t apply to rifles or shotguns,” Nichols said.

    The mother of the two young Kentucky children was home when the shooting happened and had stepped outside for a minute when she heard the soft pop of the fatal gunshot, said Kentucky State Police spokesman TFC Billy Gregory.

    “Federal law prohibits the sale of a gun to anyone under 18, so that means that the child couldn’t be the actual purchaser, but you could, and it’s completely legal, for an adult to buy a gun for a child as a gift,” said Nichols. The adult purchaser would undergo a background check if the gun is bought from a federally licensed firearms dealer, such as at a gun store.

    In its spring 2012 edition, “Junior Shooter” ran a separate NSSF-backed report that claimed that “hunting with firearms is one of the safest recreational activities in America.” The report said that a person is 11 times more likely to be injured playing volleyball and 34 times more likely to be injured skateboarding than hunting.

    Almost 1,500 children under the age of 18 die every year as a result of shootings, according to the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.

    National statistics on how many young people are shot a year are often unreliable, said Daniel Webster of the John Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research, due to state-by-state differences in how shooting incidents are reported.

    “Unfortunately national estimates on how many children accidentally kill one another with firearms are unreliable, as states vary in how they code these deaths,” Webster said in an email. “State A may code an incident as a homicide, whereas State B will code the same type of incident as an accidental shooting.”

    It is “a little premature” to say whether charges will be pressed in the death of the young Kentucky girl, state police spokesman Gregory said. The investigation remains open.

     Related:

    • Five-year-old boy accidentally shoots, kills sister
    • Toomey: Background check plan failed because of Republican politics
    • Support soars for tougher gun laws, surveys show

    2443 comments

    All those kids look old enough. The Kentucky thing was a tragedy but people are only outraged because a " Gun " was involved. The parents are going to have to live with thier mistake for the rest of thier lives and so is the poor kid who shot his sister.

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    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, children, guns, kentucky, featured, rifles, crickett, keystone-sporting-arms
  • 1
    May
    2013
    10:22am, EDT

    Five-year-old boy accidentally shoots, kills sister

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A 5-year-old Kentucky boy who received a .22-caliber rifle as a gift accidentally shot and killed his 2-year-old sister on Tuesday, according to state police.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The toddler was shot at just after 1 p.m. local time on Lawson’s Bottom Road in Cumberland County, police said. The girl was taken to Cumberland County Hospital and later pronounced dead.

    The mother of the two children was at home at the time of the shooting, Cumberland County Coroner Gary White told the local newspaper, the Lexington Herald-Leader. He said that the family did not realize that there was a shell inside the gun. The firearm was kept in a corner, he said.

    “It’s a Crickett,” Cumberland County Coroner Gary White told the paper. “It’s a little rifle for a kid.”

    “The little boy’s used to shooting the little gun,” White said.

    The shooting occurred while the boy was playing with the rifle, police said. It was “just one of those crazy accidents,” White told the Herald-Leader.

    Related:

    • Gun vote stirs passion at Ayotte town hall meetings
    • Pro-gun billboard featuring Native Americans causing controversy in Colorado
    • NRA threatens to punish lawmakers on gun control vote despite deal

    1835 comments

    “It’s a little rifle for a kid.” DOES. NOT. COMPUTE.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: police, children, shooting, guns, kentucky
  • 26
    Apr
    2013
    4:26am, EDT

    Painting for peace: Boston children turn to art to heal

    Scott Oxhorn

    Children and their parents gathered in Dorchester, Mass., last weekend to paint a 100-foot-long banner in memory of Martin Richard, the 8-year-old boy killed in last week's bombings at the Boston Marathon.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    BOSTON -- With song, brushes and buckets of paint, children in Boston are using the arts to try to express feelings about last week's marathon bombings for which even their parents do not have words.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Painting for Peace” was inspired by 8-year-old Martin Richard, the youngest person killed in the attack near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Parents and their children turned out last weekend in Dorchester, Mass., the Richard family's home, to paint a 100-foot-long roll of wallpaper with swirls of color and the message held up on an art project by the gap-toothed boy in a picture that went around the world last week: "No more hurting people. Peace."

    "It was just the most obvious message that was on everybody's minds," said Liz Carney, who organized the project with her group Dot Art. "We were seeing that image and that message everywhere. A message about peace had a really important place in our response, in our community."

    The sign now greets drivers passing under the Savin Hill Bridge over Interstate 93 heading into Boston. About 25 to 50 volunteers of all ages showed up to help create the banner, cards and other paintings and drawings over the weekend, Carney said.

    "It was really a very heartfelt expression of peace and solidarity by our neighborhood," Carney said. "I had a lot of parents say how grateful they were to bring their kids to be a part of it, that the children in our community sometimes need a place to express things that are beyond words, and using their hands and having a place to tangibly put their energy is really important."

    Boston-area children have turned to art projects like this one in Dorchester to help heal the wounds left by last week's marathon bombings.

    Martin Richard’s sister Jane, 7, is among the 425 children from across the city who take singing lessons with the Boston City Singers. Not all of the youngest singers know all the details about the deadly blasts, but they know Jane was among the more than 260 people injured in the attack. Jane Richard lost a leg in the explosions; the children's mother, Denise, was seriously injured.

    When a group of 4-to-6-year-old singers went back to Boston City Singers on Wednesday, parents were invited to stay if they wanted, managing director Melissa Graham said. Everything went well even when one little boy had a question about their missing classmate she said.

    "One little boy said, 'Janie got hurt, is she going to be OK?'" Graham said. "And the conductor said, 'Yes, Janie is going to be OK. That was just an accident. Janie got hurt, she is going to be OK.'"

    Boston City Singers charges tuition but does not turn away children on a financial basis, and makes up for costs with fundraising and grants, Graham said. The same way the children forget about whose parents have more money while making a song together, she said, maybe they will forget about the bombings for a little while when the youth choral group performs at "Children Sing for Peace" on Saturday at St. Mark Church in Dorchester.

    The concert, which includes the Cambridge Children's Chorus and other local singing groups, will be about community and not about the bombs allegedly set off by brothers Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. Other singers will come from the local Neighborhood House Charter School, which Jane and Martin attended and where their mother works.

    "Song is one of those things that unites people," Graham said. "It gives the community a chance to feel like they are doing something."

    The same need for expression was clear to Margery Buckingham when children came into the Dorchester Arts Collaborative on Tuesday. She said the week of arts and crafts she had planned for the 8-to-12-year-olds would not continue as though nothing had happened.

    In a press conference a victim of the Boston Marathon bombing shares the story that left her with an amputated leg.

    "One little girl said how she didn't sleep all night because she was so frightened," said Buckingham, education director at the collaborative, which fosters the arts in Dorchester.

    Heidi Katz, an arts therapist from nearby Roxbury, Mass., came in on Thursday, Buckingham said. She did drawings and spoke with the children, and brought rhythm instruments for them to play. She asked the children where they felt safe.

    "With most of our children it was at home and in church," Buckingham said. "And one little girl said, 'In my heart.'"

    Buckingham called parents to let them known beforehand that the arts therapist would be coming, in case they did not want their children to participate. All the children showed up, and parents sent two more.

    "It's something we have to do again," Buckingham said. "These feelings aren't going to go away."

    Related stories:

    • Source: Bombing suspect showed no fear or remorse during hospital hearing
    • Mother of Boston suspects insists sons not responsible
    • Family connections can be key in journey down terrorism path
    • Full coverage of the Boston Marathon tragedy from NBC News

    13 comments

    The Muslim terrorist cockroach members of the patently evil paramilitary Satanic cult of death, destruction, and hate called "Islam" will continue to rape, pillage, plunder, and slaughter the innocent men, women, children, youth, and elders of our great nation in the names of their fecal deity "Alla …

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  • Updated
    11
    Apr
    2013
    7:33pm, EDT

    2-year-old who lost feet to dad's lawn mower will walk again, mom says

    Florida toddler's pastor and her mother give a status update on the tragic lawn mower accident that severed both of her legs.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The parents of a 2-year-old Florida girl whose feet were severed when her father backed over her with a lawn mower said she will walk again.

    Ireland Nugent was in serious condition in the intensive-care unit a day after the tragic accident in her family’s yard. She underwent two surgeries and will have two more.


    Family photo via WFLA.com

    Ireland Nugent, age 2, lost her feet in a riding mower accident, but her mom vows she'll run again.

    Doctors at Tampa General Hospital told her parents they will be stunned at how quickly she will bounce back from the horrific injuries.

    “She will continue to succeed. She will do great things in her life,” her mother, Nicole, told reporters as her husband, Jeremiah, stood silent behind her.

    “This will not stop Ireland.”

    The pre-schooler ran into her Palm Harbor yard on Wednesday evening while her father was cutting the grass on his red riding mower.

    Her mother yelled at her to stop and waved at her husband to alert him. But he thought she was warning him about something in front of the mower and put it in reverse.

    Ireland was behind him, out of sight, and the mower ran over her, the blades slicing through her legs below the knee.

    “Never in my life did I think this would happen to my child,” Nicole Nugent said, adding that she is very safety-conscious and had child-proofed her house.

    WFLA.com

    The lawn mower that severed 2-year-old Ireland Nugent's feet outside her home in Palm Harbor, Fla.

    The mom said the nightmare unfolded in just 15 seconds. A neighbor who is a nurse applied pressure to the child’s wounds, saving her life, the mom said.

    Other neighbors set up a fund for the family, and a group called 50legs.org pledged to provide Ireland with prosthetics for the rest of her life.

    “It lifted a weight off our shoulders,” she said.

    Nicole Nugent said she was trying to stay strong for her daughter, who was under sedation. “She clearly does not know what's happening right now,” she said.

    For more on this story, go to WFLA.com

    The American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons said a quarter of a million people are treated for lawn mower injuries a year; less than 10 percent of them are children.

    "The energy transferred by a typical lawn mower blade is equivalent to being shot in the hand with a .357 Magnum pistol," the society said on its website.

     

     

     

    This story was originally published on Thu Apr 11, 2013 11:49 AM EDT

    519 comments

    My heart goes out to this little Angel.. Poor thing.. I feel bad for the Dad too, it can't be easy knowing you are responsible for your childs missing legs, even in the event its an accident, which in this case it was.. Prayers to the family..

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    Explore related topics: florida, children, accidents, updated, child-safety, lawnmower, ireland-nugent
  • Updated
    8
    Apr
    2013
    11:39am, EDT

    Bodies of two kids recovered after dirt wall collapses

    Scene near Charlotte, N.C., where two young cousins were buried in the collapse of a construction site.

    By Daniel Arkin, Andrew Rafferty and John Newland, NBC News

    Authorities have recovered the bodies of two children who became trapped underneath dirt at a residential construction site near Charlotte, N.C., The Associated Press reported.

    The children – a 6-year-old girl and a 7-year-old boy – were reportedly playing around an excavated basement Sunday under construction near their grandparents’ home when a wall collapsed, trapping them below ground, according to NBC affiliate WCNC.

    Charlotte firefighters, police, a structural engineer and rescuers from surrounding counties all aided in the initial effort to rescue the children.

    The names of the children have not yet been released.

    WCNC reported that their father was with them and made the initial call to 911 around 6 p.m. Sunday.

    This story was originally published on Sun Apr 7, 2013 10:36 PM EDT

    237 comments

    I really find it difficult to understand why so many of the contributors here are such complete arseholes. This is a terrible thing to happen to someone.

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    Explore related topics: children, charlotte, north-carolina, trapped, updated, construction-site
  • Updated
    7
    Apr
    2013
    10:58am, EDT

    Officials: 'Anti-government' couple may be at sea with kidnapped children

    Authorities are searching the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday for a 25-foot sailboat. Onboard is a father who police say has kidnapped his two young sons and may have fled to the open waters. NBC's Charles Hadlock reports.

    By Ian Johnston and Matthew DeLuca, NBC News

    An “anti-government” man alleged to have kidnapped his two young sons from their grandmother’s house may be trying to escape in a sailboat, according to officials.

    Police say that Joshua Hakken, 35, apparently broke into his mother-in-law’s Tampa home after 6 a.m. on Wednesday, tied up his mother-in-law and then fled with the boys, Cole, 4, and Chase, 2.

    Cole Hakken, 4, left, and his two-year-old brother, Chase.

    The Florida Department of Law Enforcement said that Joshua Hakken and his wife Sharyn, 34, may be traveling together in a 25-foot, 1972 Morgan sailboat, NBCMiami.com reported Friday.

    The vessel is blue and has the name “salty” with a picture of a paw near the back of the hull on each side. It has a white sail with blue trim and its registration number is FL3717BK, the FDLE added.

    The United States Coast Guard scoured a swath of sea spreading from Key West to Mobile, Ala. with helicopters and boats on Saturday in an ongoing search, said Petty Officer First Class Crystalynn Kneen, a USCG spokeswoman in St. Petersburg, Fla. The Coast Guard issued an “urgent marine information broadcast” on Friday, Kneen said.

    Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office told NBC station WLFA.com that Hakken had recently bought the boat.

    Deputies told the station a witness saw the boat going under the Johns Pass bridge a couple of hours after the abduction Wednesday.

    "We've said all along, making irrational decisions doesn't always make you unintelligent. We know he's a very intelligent individual. He's an engineer," Hillsborough County Sheriffs spokesperson, Larry McKinnon, told WFLA.com.

    "Wouldn't put it past them to be able to pull into one of these coves or one of these inlets and then board a vehicle. So we're not gonna eliminate our land search, we're still maintaining the Amber alert. We're now expanding it into the Gulf of Mexico, " McKinnon said.

    "Hopefully, we're going to find them soon. As we've mentioned before, our goal is to reach out to them in a peaceful manner and to allow them to open an exchange of communication and dialogue so we can get this resolved without anyone getting hurt. "

    Craig Johnson, an experience boater and volunteer search and rescue participant, said, "If I was him, he's probably heading towards Cancun or Cuba. If he's going to Cuba, he's gotta go around Key West. That wouldn't be too smart."

    In a previous release, the sheriff’s department said that "both suspects are anti-government and have attempted a previous abduction at gun point in Louisiana.” 

    Joshua Hakken was arrested in St. Tammany Parish, La. on June 17, 2012 after attending an “anti-government rally,” the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s department said in a press release. He was charged with the unlawful sale of narcotics in the presence of minors and possession of marijuana and spent one day in jail before making bond, said Officer Ben Sciambra of the Slidell city jail.

    The couple was acting “in a bizarre manner that alarmed officers” during the arrest, according to press release issued by the Slidell Police Department on April 4. With both children present, the couple told officers that they were “completing their ultimate journey” and planned to “take a journey to the Armageddon,” according to the release.

    The Louisiana Office of Child Services determined that the two young children needed to be placed in foster care after the arrest, according to the Slidell Police Department release. Officers also took several weapons at the time of the arrest.

    NBC News' Craig Giammona contributed to this report.

    Tampa Bay news, weather forecast, radar, and sports from

    Related:

    Pickup found in suspected Florida double kidnapping

     Authorities: Man kidnaps his 2 young sons in Fla.

     Amber alert issued for Tampa siblings


    This story was originally published on Sat Apr 6, 2013 8:29 AM EDT

    503 comments

    So what does anti-government have to do with anything? I mean, they've "kidnapped" his own kids. That's the story. Why bring up their political views?

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    Explore related topics: featured, florida, children, updated, kidnap, amber-alert, joshua-hakken
  • 6
    Apr
    2013
    7:31am, EDT

    Police: 3-year-old girl killed by garage door

    NBC Washington

    A garage door killed a three-year-old in Maryland on Friday, police said.

    By NBCWashington.com

    A three-year-old girl was killed by a garage door in Charles County, Md., Friday afternoon, police confirmed.

    It happened around 4 p.m. in the 2900 block of Eutaw Forest Drive in Waldorf.

    Authorities said the little girl might have been playing with some sort of remote or device when she was fatally injured by the door.

    The child's mother discovered her pinned under it.

    Police were investigating the case as an accidental death.

    NBCWashington.com

    253 comments

    Tragic...don't know why a local accident would garner national news...but still tragic...Poor kid ..RIP little one.

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    Explore related topics: featured, children, garage, door, remote, nbcwashington, accidental-death
  • 5
    Apr
    2013
    7:37pm, EDT

    All in the ADHD family: Diagnosis in kids can spotlight parents' own condition

    By Linda Carroll, Kate Snow and Meghan Frank, NBC News

    As a little girl, Bonnie Ihme had big plans. Bright and artistically talented, she dreamed of becoming an architect.

    But the older she got, the more distant that dream seemed. By third grade, school had become a struggle. She felt easily distracted and found it impossible to focus in class. Eventually she abandoned her plan to be an architect. Ihme got married, had two kids and began cleaning houses and helping her husband with his business.

    But even that simpler life felt impossibly difficult. The Michigan mom had trouble keeping track of all the threads of her life. She’d send her kids to school without sneakers on gym day. She’d forget to bring library books back. She felt more overwhelmed than ever before.

    “I really would try hard to pull it all together,” Ihme told NBC’s Kate Snow in an interview airing on Rock Center Friday. “But when … you’re late for a Christmas concert that your daughter was really looking forward to going to and we get there and her class is walking back to the classroom and the tears in her eyes… you try harder.”

    Ihme saw history repeating itself in her 10-year-old son, Jacob, who began struggling with school, just as she had. Jacob would spend hours doing his homework, only to forget to bring it to school the next morning. Ihme’s heart ached for her son.

    Click here for more on ADHD symptoms

    She decided to do something for him that no one had thought to do for her. She brought Jacob to a specialist in search of answers. After a battery of tests, the specialist diagnosed her son with ADHD – attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. He then told Ihme that the disorder was often inherited. That was when she began to wonder if ADHD had been her problem, too.

    “I knew I was bright,” she told Snow. “And on some things that they were teaching I was higher than the rest of the class. But then I’d struggle with a lot of the other things and wonder what was wrong with me.”

    Ihme went through the same testing her son did, and at age 42, was diagnosed with ADHD.


    While many people think of ADHD as a childhood disorder -- something that kids eventually grow out of – long term studies have shown that ADHD sometimes lasts a lifetime. In fact, a report published in the April edition of Pediatrics found that nearly 30 percent of kids diagnosed with ADHD still suffered severe symptoms well into adulthood.

    In the prospective study, researchers from the Boston Children’s Hospital and the Mayo Clinic tracked 5,718 children born between 1976 and 1982 for several decades. Among the children were 367 who’d been given a diagnosis of ADHD. Out of that number, 232 agreed to participate in the study.

    As it turned out, life was a lot harder for ADHD sufferers than it was for their peers. They were at higher risk for death and suicide, with nearly 60 percent suffering from an additional psychiatric disorder.

    In a similar longitudinal study, researchers from New York University started out following 207 boys who’d been diagnosed with ADHD between ages 6 and 12 and 178 boys without ADHD. By the time the boys had reached their 40s and 50s, there were big differences between the two groups, according to the report published in December in the Archives of General Psychiatry.

    Clinical psychologist Rachel Klein, lead author of the New York University study and a pioneer in the field of ADHD, put it this way.

    “Compared to the kids without ADHD, these children had more often died,” said Klein, Director of the Anita Saltz Institute for Anxiety and Mood at the NYU Child Study Center. “Many more had been in jail. Many more had been hospitalized for psychiatric reasons, mostly drug abuse.”

    But the bad news didn’t stop there.

    Almost a third of the ADHD boys had dropped out of high school and, on average, they made less money and experienced a higher divorce rate than their peers who didn’t have the disorder.

    Much of that resonates with Frank South, who, at 49, discovered he had ADHD.

    Professionally successful, South wrote for such hit TV shows as Hill Street Blues, Cagney & Lacey, and Melrose Place. But over the years he’s struggled in his personal life. He’s been married three times and can find the details of daily life challenging.

    In fact, he says he’s so easily distracted that a simple trip to pick up a 12-pack of paper towels for his daughter’s basketball team can turn into Mission Impossible.

    “You end up in the Costco going through things that you’re not even going to buy and the time goes right by because you find it so interesting,” he told Snow.

    From freeze-dried granola to flat screen TVs, anything and everything becomes so alluring that hours later, the basketball team is still without paper towels.

    “It’s debilitating,” he told Snow. “But the thing is, before your diagnosis, before you understand these things, you think, ‘I’m a jerk.’ And you feel like, ‘I’m also not very bright if I can’t just go and get a 12 pack of paper towels and bring them to the basketball coach without being two hours late."

    After years of berating himself for such mishaps, and drinking hard to shut out the negative thoughts, South, like Ihme, finally spoke with a psychiatrist after his son Harry was diagnosed with ADHD and he started thinking he too might have the disorder.

    Going undiagnosed as an adult is not that unusual.

     “I think … that there are still many people walking around who have ADHD who are being impaired by it, and they don’t even know it,” said study co-author Dr. Xavier Castellanos, director of the Center for Neurodevelopmental Disorders at the New York University Child Study Center.

    Despite this, Castellanos acknowledges that some doctors may be over diagnosing ADHD. In fact, a New York Times story published last week concluded that over the last decade there’s been a 53 percent jump in the number of kids diagnosed with the disorder. Experts quoted in the story said they feared that the powerful stimulants used to treat ADHD might harm kids who don’t really need them.

    But for those who do have ADHD, taking medication can be life changing.

    South remembers when he first started taking medication for his ADHD.

    “It was like a window, a big window, opening up on my brain,” he said. “You know, sunlight coming in and being able to breathe and be calm enough to understand. And the fear and the anxiety level went down.”

    For those who still doubt that ADHD is a real brain disorder, Castellanos points to brain scans he’s done in some of the study volunteers. The scans of those who had been diagnosed with ADHD as children are thinner in areas that are known to control attention and govern emotion.

    “These are differences of less than a tenth of a millimeter,” Castellanos explained. “And yet, a tenth of a millimeter is a lot of brain cells.”

    Related stories: 

    ADHD seen in 11 percent of kids as diagnoses rise

    422 comments

    By third grade, school had become a struggle. She felt easily distracted and found it impossible to focus in class.

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    Explore related topics: children, deficit, parents, disorder, adhd, attention
  • 20
    Mar
    2013
    12:06pm, EDT

    Facebook photo of boy with gun draws police response

    Shawn Moore / AP

    This undated photo provided by Shawn Moore shows his son Josh, 10, holding a rifle his father gave him for his 11th birthday, at their home in Carneys Point, N.J.

    By Wayne Parry, The Associated Press

    The ruddy-cheeked, camouflage-clad boy in the photo smiles out from behind a pair of glasses, proudly holding a gun his father gave him as a present for his upcoming 11th birthday.

    The weapon in the photo, posted by his dad on Facebook, resembles a military-style assault rifle but, his father says, is actually just a .22-caliber copy. And that, the family believes, is why child welfare case workers and police officers visited the home in Carneys Point last Friday and asked to see his guns.

    New Jersey's Department of Children and Families declined to comment specifically on the case but says it often follows up on tips. The family and an attorney say father Shawn Moore's Second Amendment rights to bear arms were threatened in a state that already has some of the nation's strictest gun laws and is considering strengthening them after December's schoolhouse massacre in Connecticut.

    In this case, the family believes someone called New Jersey's anonymous child abuse hotline.

    Shawn Moore said he gave his son Josh the gun as a present to use on hunting trips. The elder Moore was at a friend's house when his wife called, saying state child welfare investigators, along with four local police officers, were at the house, asking to inspect the family's guns.

    Moore said he called his lawyer Evan Nappen, who specializes in Second Amendment cases, and had him on speakerphone as he arrived at his house in Carneys Point, just across the Delaware River from Wilmington, Del.

    "They said they wanted to see into my safe and see if my guns were registered," Moore said. "I said no; in New Jersey, your guns don't have to be registered with the state; it's voluntary. I knew once I opened that safe, there was no going back."

    With the lawyer listening in on the phone, Moore said he asked the investigators and police officers whether they had a warrant to search his home. When they said no, he asked them to leave. One of the child welfare officials would not identify herself when Moore asked for her name, he said.

    The agents and the police officers left, and nothing has happened since, he said.

    "I don't like what happened," he said. "You're not even safe in your own house. If they can just show up at any time and make you open safes and go through your house, that's not freedom; it's like tyranny."

    State child welfare spokeswoman Kristine Brown said that when it receives a report of suspected abuse or neglect, it assigns a caseworker to follow up. She said law enforcement officers are asked to accompany caseworkers only if the caseworkers feel their safety could be compromised.

    "It's the caseworker's call," she said. "It is important to note the way an investigation begins is through the child abuse hotline. Someone has to call to let us know there is a concern."

    Carneys Point Police Chief Robert DiGregorio did not answer a call late Tuesday to his office. 

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

    868 comments

    Good for Shawn and Josh. The LE & DYFS who set up that raid oughta be fired for stupidity. Shawn is an NRA certified instructor who obviously spends a lot of time with his son. Josh appears to be a great kid; gee, he's articulate, respectful, and no doubt in my mind understands firearms.

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    Explore related topics: children, facebook, new-jersey, guns, child-abuse, rifle
  • 15
    Mar
    2013
    10:59am, EDT

    Underage driver getting lesson from parent hits three kids, Virginia officials say

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

    By Matthew Stabley, NBCWashington.com

    A teenager getting a driving lesson from a parent struck three girls who were playing in a driveway in Ashburn, Va., Thursday afternoon, said the Virginia's Loudoun County Sheriff's Office.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The 15-year-old driver apparently accelerated by accident while turning in a cul-de-sac and jumped a curb on Morven Woods Court before striking the children, authorities said.

    The youngest victim, 7, was flown to Inova Fairfax Hospital with life-threatening injuries. She is now in stable condition.

    Read original story on NBCWashington.com

    An 8-year-old and a 10-year-old were taken to another local hospital with less severe injuries.

    "It's a pretty safe neighborhood," said neighbor Mehboob Raha. "It's a dead end. You cannot go outside from this particular area... People are very sensible here."

    The teen driver's father was in the passenger seat at the time of the crash.

    In Virginia, teenagers can apply for a learner's permit at age 15½. The minimum age to get a driver's license is 16 years and three months.

    74 comments

    Empty parking lots. That's where you train them. Not in a neighborhood where kids are outside playing.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: children, virginia, driving, usnews, nbcwashington, loudoun-county
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