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  • 28
    Apr
    2013
    3:35pm, EDT

    Congressman: Boston bombing suspects may have had foreign help

     

    Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., joins MSNBC's Alex Witt to respond to his colleague Rep. Mike Rogers' claim that more arrests will be made in the Boston Bombing investigation.  Rep. Schiff explains the role of the CIA and Russian intelligence in the investigation of the Tsarnaev family.

    By Craig Giammona, NBC News

    The chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee said Sunday that federal authorities are investigating whether the suspects in the Boston marathon bombing received training that helped them carry out the deadly attack.

    Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) said during an appearance on Fox News Sunday that it was too soon to dismiss a possible connection between the suspects and foreign terrorists.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "Right out-of-the-box, U.S. officials unanimously are saying there's not foreign connection to this case when in fact the FBI just began its investigation into the case," McCaul said on Fox News Sunday. "They just got the computer. They just sent a U.S. team over to (the) Chechen region, and to Dagestan, to interview witnesses."

    He added: "I think given the level of sophistication of this device, the fact that the pressure cooker is a signature device, goes back to Pakistan or Afghanistan, leads to believe — and the way they handled these devices and the trade craft leads me to believe that there was a trainer. And the question is, where is that trainer or trainers? Are they overseas in the Chechen region or are they in the United States?"

    Publicly, U.S. officials investigating the bombing said there is no evidence of a wider plot, including training, direction or funding for the attacks.

    And on CBS' Sunday morning show, Face the Nation, Sen. Claire MCaskill (D-Missouri) said there was no evidence the suspects were "part of a larger organization."

    Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 19, is charged with joining his older brother, Tamerlan, who's now dead, in setting off the bombs near the marathon finish line. The attacks killed three and wounded 264. The brothers are ethnic Chechens who came to the United States about a decade ago with their parents. Both parents now live in Russia.

    McCaul said Sunday that the suspects' mother had contributed to their "radicalization" and would be detained for questioning if she returned to the United States.

    Meanwhile, Reuters reported Sunday that the parents of the bombing suspects had scrapped plans to the travel to the United States.

    During an interview from an undisclosed location in Russian, the suspects' father, Anzor Tsarnaev, told the wire service that he believed he would not be allowed to see his surviving son Dzohkhar, who was captured and has been charged in connection with the April 15 bomb blasts that killed three people and wounded 264.

    "I am not going back to the United States. For now I am here. I am ill," Tsarnaev said. "Unfortunately I can't help my child in any way. I am in touch with Dzhokhar's and my own lawyers. They told me they would let me know (what to do)," he said.

    Tsarnaev had said Thursday that he planned to travel to the United States to see Dzkhokhar and bury his elder son, Tamerlan, who was shot dead by police in a firefight four days after the bombings.

    Reuters said Tsarnaev agreed to the face-to-face interview on condition that the village's location not be disclosed.

    476 comments

    Michael4yahAsk yourself how a persons clothing can be totally shredded and not one drop of blood? How does a person have both his legs blown off and no blood. The Boston Marathon Bombing was a hoax using crisis actors. Go to YOU TUBE and type in:*BOSTON BOMB BUSTED* Amputee Drops Fake Leg In Str …

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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
    6:34am, EST

    Cops believe estranged father took 7 missing California kids

    Fresno Police Department

    Five of the seven children missing from Fresno, Calif.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Police believe the seven children who vanished from their Fresno, Calif., home on Saturday were taken by their estranged father.

    Ranging in age from 5 to 12, the kids were left at home while their mother and stepfather went to a grocery store, according to the Fresno Police Department.

    Police believe that their biological father "picked up all of the children." He was identified as Xa Yang and is thought to live in Sacramento, about 170 miles north of Fresno.

    Neither authorities nor the children's mother had been able to contact the father, who had not been involved in the children's lives "for at least three years," according to a police statement.

    Because the seven children, along with their belongings, were removed from an apartment complex in the early evening without any
    apparent commotion, investigators do not suspect foul play.

    There was no immediate concern for the children's safety, police said.

    While they have not issued an "Amber Alert," which are normally issued in suspected abductions, police are seeking the
    public's help.

    Anyone with information can call Detective Josh Mendizabal at (559) 621-2499 or (559) 621-7000.

    285 comments

    It is possible to divorce and get along with an ex. Maybe for the sake of the children more people should try it.

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    Explore related topics: father, california, kidnapping, abduction, fresno, featured, sacramento, 7-children
  • 29
    Sep
    2012
    8:27am, EDT

    Masked Conn. teen slain by dad seemed 'perfectly fine' just hours before, friend says

    By The Associated Press

    NEW FAIRFIELD, Conn. -- Tyler Giuliano had no trouble with the law. The teenager loved flying small planes as a Civil Air Patrol cadet and seemed happy as he played an online game with friends Wednesday night.

    But hours later, authorities say, Tyler was outside wearing a black ski mask and wielding a knife when he was shot by his father, who thought he was a prowler.

    No immediate charges were brought against Jeffrey Giuliano, a popular fifth-grade teacher, in the slaying of 15-year-old Tyler, who was gunned down in his aunt's driveway next door to his own home in New Fairfield around 1 a.m. Thursday.

    Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "It's something out of a Hollywood script," said John Hodge, the first selectman, or top elected official, in the town of nearly 14,000 people about 50 miles from New York City. He said he couldn't recall another killing in his eight years on the job.

    State police spokesman Lt. J. Paul Vance said the boy had never been in trouble with the law, and some of those who knew him described him as a good kid with an easygoing personality. Investigators and acquaintances said they were at a loss to explain what he was doing outside dressed all in black and carrying a weapon.

    "Certainly, that is the major question we are trying to answer at this point," Vance said.

    State police said the shooting happened after Jeffrey Giuliano got a call from his sister next door saying that someone might be trying to break into her home in their neighborhood of attractive colonial-style houses. Giuliano grabbed a handgun and went outside to investigate, troopers said.

    Police: Connecticut man kills suspected burglar, then learns it's his teenage son

    He confronted someone in a ski mask and opened fire when the person came at him with something shiny in his hand, police said.

    When police officers arrived, Tyler was lying dead in the driveway with a knife in his hand, and his father, in a T-shirt and shorts, was sitting on the grass. Detectives informed the elder Giuliano several hours later that he had shot his son, Vance said.

    "All in all, it's a tragedy," Vance said.

    Police were investigating whether the father's gun was registered.

    Classmates baffled
    No one answered the door at Giuliano's home or his sister's.

    Tyler was a student at New Fairfield High School and a Civil Air Patrol cadet. Some of those who knew him said he enjoyed spending time with family and flying gliders and small planes. He was adopted by Giuliano and his wife a few years ago, friends said.

    One classmate said many students were baffled by what happened.

    "I just thought it was so weird when I heard because I knew Tyler, not very well, but he was just a sweet person and he always made everyone laugh. I met him in the chorus room, actually, and he just wasn't the type to do what happened," said Erin Pallas, 16. "So it didn't make sense to us. It doesn't make sense to the student body."

    Brett Rasile, a 14-year-old friend, said he and Tyler were playing an online game called Minecraft while talking and laughing together via Skype until about 10 p.m. Wednesday, when Tyler said he had to go to bed. Brett said Tyler wasn't in any trouble that he knew of, and nothing seemed out of the ordinary.

    "Same old Tyler. He was perfectly fine," Brett said. "He didn't really leave any evidence, any hints towards what he would do."

    Alicia Roy, New Fairfield superintendent of schools, said the elder Giuliano grew up in the town, holds summer music and zoology camps for his students and plays guitar in a local rock band that raises money for charity. He is affectionately known as "Mr. G" around Meeting House Hill School.

    "He was the teacher you requested in the fifth grade. He was a great teacher. All the kids loved him," said Rosemary Rasile, Brett's mother.

    Brian Wyckoff, 17, said Mr. G "was always walking around with a smile on his face. He always says hi to everyone."

    The high school stayed open late to provide grief counseling for students and parents.

    "The community is deeply saddened, and our hearts go out to all the family members," Roy said.

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

    554 comments

    There is something funny going on with the teen. 1.AM he's out with his face covered. What was he doing?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: connecticut, shooting, father, son, featured, new-fairfield
  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    5:59am, EDT

    Police: Connecticut man kills suspected burglar, then learns it's his teenage son

    A Connecticut man shoots and kills his teenage son after mistaking him for a burglar. WVIT's Doug Greene reports.

    By NBCConnecticut.com and wire reports

    NEW FAIRFIELD, Conn. --  A popular fifth-grade teacher fatally shot a masked, knife-wielding prowler outside his house during what appeared to be a late-night burglary attempt, only to discover he had killed his 15-year-old son, police say.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Police said 15-year-old Tyler Giuliano was shot at about 1 a.m. Thursday in New Fairfield, a town just north of Danbury.

    The teacher's sister was alone in her house next door to his when she believed someone was breaking in. She called her brother, and he grabbed a gun and went outside to investigate, police said.


    The father confronted someone wearing a black ski mask and black clothing and fired his gun when the person went at him with a shiny weapon in his hand, police said.

    Father sitting on grass
    When police officers arrived, the teen was lying in the driveway of the woman's home with gunshot wounds and the father was sitting on the grass. The teen was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.

    "All in all it's a tragedy," state police spokesman Lt. J. Paul Vance said.

    The Associated Press said the teen's father, Jeffrey Giuliano, a fifth-grade teacher in town, had not returned a message seeking comment on what happened.

    Read more from NBCConnecticut.com

    NBCConnecticut.com spoke to members of the community about what happened.

    "The fact that it was a father and son involved in the shooting and the way that it all happened, I think people quite frankly are devastated. This is a teacher who is very loved," one man told the station.

    One of Giuliano's students described him as "one of the best teachers I ever had."

    Read more U.S. stories from NBC News

    The teenager, Giuliano's adopted son, was a student at New Fairfield High School, a short walk from the neighborhood where he was killed.

    Superintendent of Schools Alicia Roy sent parents an email about what happened, The News-Times of Danbury reported.

    "Our district has experienced a tragedy that has affected us deeply," she wrote, adding that students weren't told of the killing because all the facts weren't clear.

    No charges have been filed. State police are investigating. An autopsy on the boy is planned.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Carol Kaliff / AP

    A blue tent protects the scene of a fatal shooting in New Fairfield, Conn., on Thursday.

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    1143 comments

    Cue the "guns don't kill people. People kill people" morons in 3...2...1...

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  • 20
    Jun
    2012
    5:49am, EDT

    No charges for Texas father who killed daughter's alleged molester

    Carolina Astrain / Victoria Advocate via AP

    File photo from June 16 showing a building near Shiner, Texas, where authorities say a father beat to death with his fists a man molesting his 5-year-old daughter on June 9.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    SHINER, Texas -- Hearing his 5-year-old daughter crying from behind a barn, a father ran and discovered the unthinkable: A man molesting her. The father pulled the man off his daughter, authorities say, and started pummeling him to death with his fists.

    With his daughter finally safe, the father frantically called 911, begging a dispatcher to find his rural ranch and send an ambulance. "Come on! This guy is going to die on me!" the man is heard screaming on the 911 call. "I don't know what to do!"

    A recording of the tape was played during a news conference Tuesday where the Lavaca County district attorney and sheriff announced that the father will not face charges.


    In declining to indict the 23-year-old father in the June 9 killing of Jesus Mora Flores, a Lavaca County grand jury reached the same conclusion as investigators and many of the father's neighbors: He was authorized to use deadly force to protect his daughter.

    "It's sad a man had to die," said Michael James Veit, 48, who lives across the street from where the attack happened in this small community run on ranching and the Shiner beer brewery. "But I think anybody would have done that."

    Father's desperate 911 call
    The family ranch is so remote that on the 911 tape, the father is heard screaming at a dispatcher who couldn't locate the property. At one point, he tells the dispatcher he's going to put the man in his truck and drive him to a hospital.

    "He's going to die!" the father screams, swearing at the dispatcher. "He's going to f------ die!"

    The tense, nearly five-minute call begins with the father saying he "beat up" a man found raping his daughter. The father grows increasingly frazzled, shouting into the phone so loudly at times that the call often becomes inaudible.

    The Associated Press is not identifying the father in order to protect the daughter's identity. The AP generally does not identify victims of sexual assault.

    "He's a peaceable soul," V'Anne Huser, the father's attorney, told reporters at the Lavaca County Courthouse.

    The San Antonio Express reported that Huser said the father “had no intention to kill anyone on that day.”

    “In our opinion, the story is over. You will not get an interview from (the father) or his family,” she said, according to the paper, asking for the family to be left alone.

    The attack happened on the family's ranch off a quiet, two-lane county road between the farming towns of Shiner and Yoakum.

    Ran toward his child's screams
    A statement released by the district attorney said a witness who saw Flores "forcibly carrying" the girl into a secluded area scrambled to find the father.

    Running toward his daughter's screams, the father pulled Flores off his child and "inflicted several blows to the man's head and neck area," investigators said.

    Emergency crews responding to the father's 911 call found Flores' pants and underwear pulled down on his lifeless body. The girl was examined at a hospital, and Lavaca County District Attorney Heather McMinn said forensic evidence and witness accounts corroborated the father's story that his daughter was being sexually molested.

    The father was never arrested, but the killing was investigated as a homicide.

    Philip Hilder, a Houston criminal defense attorney and former federal prosecutor, said he would have been surprised if the grand jury had decided to indict the father. Hilder said Texas law provides several justifications for the use of deadly force, including if someone commits a sexual assault.

    "The grand jury was not about to indict this father for protecting his daughter," he said.

    Authorities said the family had hired Flores before to help with horses on the ranch. He was not born in the U.S., but was here legally with a green card. Attempts to locate Flores' relatives through public records were unsuccessful.

    On Tuesday, a new "No Trespassing" sign was freshly tacked onto a gate barring entrance down a gravelly, shrub-canopied path leading to the barn and chicken coop on the ranch, which belonged to the father's dad.

    At the father's house, the front yard could pass for a children's playground: Blue pinwheels sunk into patchy grass, an above-ground swimming pool, a swing set, a trampoline and a couple of ropes dangling from a tree for swinging. A partial privacy fence is painted powder blue.

    No one answered at the father's home. A few miles away, at a home listed as belonging to the father's sister, a woman shouted through the front door that the family had nothing to say. Huser, the father's attorney, told reporters that neither the father nor anyone else in the family would ever give interviews and asked that they be left alone.

    Veit, who lives near the ranch, described the father as easygoing and polite — down to always first asking permission to search Veit's property for animals that had wandered off the ranch, even though the families have long known each other.

    Veit's son was a classmate of the father's at Shiner High School in a graduating class of about two dozen. Veit, 48, said the young father was never known to be in trouble.

    "Just like a regular kid, went to dances, drank beer like the rest of the kids around here," Veit said.

    'Traumatized for life'
    Shiner, a town of about 2,000 people about 80 miles east of San Antonio, revolves around the Spoetzl Brewery that makes Shiner, one of the nation's best-selling independent beers. Even gas stations here sell it on tap.

    Flores' death is only the sixth homicide the Lavaca County Sheriff's Office has investigated in the last eight years. Shiner residents boast their squeaky-clean image on a highway welcome sign: "The Cleanest Little City in Texas."

    At Werner's Restaurant, customer Gail Allen said she didn't want to speak for the whole town, though her comments echoed what others said.

    "The father has gone through enough," said Allen, 59, who has nine grandchildren. "The little girl is going to be traumatized for life, and the father, too, for what happened. He was protecting his family. Any parent would do that."

    Patrons at Howard's Convenience Store told the San Antonio Express that they also backed the father.

    “I think it's great, they should have given him a medal for what he did, defending his daughter,” Leroy Wagner, 79, told the paper.

    “He was being a responsible father, any responsible father would have done the same thing,” added Joe Marek, 59, a local electrician.

    And Victor Casper, 65, a retired county worker, told the Epxress, “If it was my kids, I would have done the same thing. I would have defended them, too.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    718 comments

    Open and Shut case.

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  • 7
    Apr
    2012
    6:33am, EDT

    Cops: Dad dies after shielding son, 8, from barrage of bullets

    By Samantha Tata, NBC Los Angeles

    Follow @msnbc_us

    Police are asking the public to help identify suspects involved in an Inglewood shooting that left a 28-year-old father dead after he shielded his 8-year-old son from the barrage of bullets.

    Fredrick Martin and his son, Tre, were in front of their garage Tuesday night when gunfire broke out, police said.


    When he heard the shots, the man pushed his son to the ground and covered him with his body. Martin suffered gunshot wounds to his abdomen and upper torso and later died at the hospital.

    'Ultimate sacrifice'
    "The investigation is not going well," Lt. James Madia with Inglewood police said, adding that detectives are working on a few conflicting descriptions of the possible suspects and their cars.

    Martin’s son, who shared a home with his father, mother and grandmother, suffered only a minor graze wound, Madia said.

    Martin's wife Amanda is five months pregnant, according to a family friend.

    About two dozen friends and family mourned Martin near his home Friday night.

    "We know that there was an ultimate sacrifice made on the other night," one said during a prayer.

    Read original story on NBCLosAngeles.com

    On Tuesday, another man, 29-year-old Joseph Hickman, sustained minor injuries when he was shot in the ankle.

    The shooting that killed Martin was one of three unrelated instances in the area that night, police said. Shortly after 10 p.m., officers arrived to find a car crash and a shooting victim in the 3500 block of Victoria Street.

    About one hour later, a 31-year-old man was shot in both legs in the 500 block of N. Marlborough.

    Police do not have suspect descriptions for any of these shootings.

    Detectives are urging anyone with information on these incidents to contact the Inglewood Police Homicide Section at 310-412-5246, or anonymously at 888-412-7463.

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    442 comments

    Speak up folks! Fredrick Martin was brave enough to throw himself in the line of fire to save his child witnesses need to come forward and help the Police. Stop the Violence.

    Show more
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