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  • 30
    Oct
    2012
    5:17pm, EDT

    Sandy leaves trail of destruction, disbelief in its path

    As New York slowly comes back to life, it's electrical power that divides the haves and have-nots. Gridlock also remains a concern, but subway service is slowly beginning to resume and the New York Marathon is still slated to go forward. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    From the devastated New Jersey shore to eerily empty lower Manhattan, tens of millions of Americans lived through Sandy's fury and were trying to come to grips with its destruction as the storm waters slowly receded.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The impact of the storm was virtually without parallel in the densely populated tristate region of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, with its destructive winds, heavy flooding and raging fires. Farther afield, powerful gusts felled trees and knocked out power for up to 8.2 million residents across the eastern United States, while heavy snow made travel treacherous at higher elevations. Nationwide at least 47 were confirmed dead of storm-related causes.

    "This was literally the storm of our lifetime," said Longport, N.J., Mayor Nick Russo, as he surveyed the damage on debris-littered streets of his Atlantic coast town Tuesday. "No one has seen this type of damage, not even in the 1962 storm. The amount of sand, wood and concrete that has actually come up from the streets — it's not a good scene."

    Slideshow: Sandy slams into East Coast

    Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

    Launch slideshow

    Two hundred miles to the north in Mastic Beach, N.Y., Donna Vollaro, 53, covered her face with her hands and sobbed as she walked through her ranch-style home, which had been inundated by several feet of water.


    The water had receded by Tuesday afternoon but left the Long Island house filled with mud. Everything inside destroyed.

    "My bed was floating around in three feet of water. The floors are buckled. The walls are caved in. Everything I own is gone," she said.

    Vollaro, who is disabled and unemployed, has no homeowner's insurance and said she recently spent her savings on renovating the home. Inside, the refrigerator lay on its side, the couch was soaked and the boiler was destroyed.

    "Now I have nowhere to go. Just the clothes on my back. That's what I have," she said.

    TODAY's Natalie Morales reports from Mantoloking, N.J., where an aerial view of the region shows fires burning and sand completely overtaking neighborhoods.

    'Like a tsunami'
    On New York's Coney Island, Mordechai Deutscher recalled watching floodwaters burst through the glass front doors of the Mermaid Manor Home for Adults, about two blocks from the famed boardwalk. Residents had been evacuated to upper floors.

    "Everything was fine and dandy yesterday until high tide," said Deutscher, 58, administrator of the home. "All of a sudden within five minutes it was like a tsunami."

    Sal and Lori Novello rode out the storm in their Long Island home, with candles providing the only light and a wind-up radio their connection to the outside world. Sal Novello, 50, said when water started rushing into their 5,000-square-foot Dutch colonial, "it sounded like Niagara Falls." They ended up with seven feet of water in the basement.

    NBC's Lester Holt reports from New Jersey, where the eye of Superstorm Sandy came ashore, ripping apart the coastline and leaving millions without power. President Obama is expected to tour the area Wednesday with Governor Christie.

    "They kind of warned us, and everybody knew it was coming," said Novello, a construction executive who lives in n Lindenhurst, N.Y. "Unfortunately it was everything they said it was."

    Ken Pagliarulo, a 34-year-old computer consultant in Lindenhurst, watched from his window Monday night as a house burned to the ground. Water filled his living room and totaled his car in the garage. He shut down the power, shut down the gas and ran generators for electricity.

    "Insane," he said.

    In Washington, D.C., as Sandy made landfall, Russ Kelley had two bad options: stay inside after a giant oak fell on his roof or dash outside where massive winds whipped three downed — and live — power lines not far from his front door.

    TODAY's Al Roker tours Atlantic City, N.J., with Mayor Lorenzo Langford, who re-addressed his feud about hurricane preparedness with Governor Chris Christie and laid out a plan to rebuild the city's iconic boardwalk that was torn apart by the storm.

    Jason Decrow / AP

    Firefighters work at the scene of a house fire in in Lindenhurst, New York, Monday.

    "Here's the thing — the fire department advised us all to come out of our row houses because of this tree lying on top. But then there's this hurricane outside with 60 mile-per-hour gusts, still pouring rain, a couple of live wires down in the street and another live wire out in my yard," said Kelley.

    "It seemed just safer to be in my house, tree and all," he said.

    So Kelley brushed aside the wet oak limbs and took his dog, Clinton, back into the living room — just below the fallen, 60-foot tree — as his TV screen continued to flash images of the historic storm that had just crashed into his life.

    Dangling crane
    In Manhattan, the experience was sometimes more surreal than perilous, after subways and businesses shut down and power outages afflicted much of the city.

    In the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, retired local newspaper publisher Robert Trentlyon and his wife planned to stay in their darkened apartment Tuesday, although their son lives in a nearby complex that generates its own power. The Trentlyons had phone service and running water, and they routinely use the stairs to their brownstone apartment.

    Robert is 83, but, he said: "I'm a good 83," as he planned to grab a flashlight and check whether the building's basement had flooded.

    Timothy A. Clary / AFP - Getty Images

    An apartment building sits damaged in New York City's Chelsea neighborhood Monday.

    Some 900 guests were forced to evacuate Manhattan's Le Parker Meridien hotel because a storm-damaged crane dangled dangerously from a high-rise apartment building under construction nearby.

    Authorities said they were worried the wilted crane above would tumble down, perhaps pinball into neighboring buildings and crush everything in its path on the ground.

    The skyscraper, near Carnegie Hall, is officially called One57 but has been dubbed a "global billionaires' club" because its upper floors will include nine enormous, posh apartments — all sold to billionaires.

    "So all of our hurricane food is upstairs in our hotel, we're on a quest to find another hotel, and technically, I'm homeless," said Al Lewis, a guest from Denver who had been staying in the hotel with his wife and two children. "I'm homeless because of these billionaires next door. But, everyone's going to get displaced by a billionaire someday — it's just my time, I guess."

    Baking in the cold
    Several states to the south, freezing bands of the same gargantuan storm began dumping snow onto tiny Belington, W.Va., (population 1,900). By 3 a.m. Tuesday, when Charlotte Cummings arrived to work at the Goody Basket, her bakery, there was already six inches of snow on the ground.

    "Six inches is nothing for around here," Cummings said. "So I just started my day, started baking. Then, at about 8 a.m. the power went out because the snow is so wet and so many branches are coming down. Thankfully, I have gas so I could just keep going."

    Bebeto Matthews / AP

    The tail end of an SUV is perched on top of a mailbox in New York's Coney Island Monday.

    By morning, a foot of snow had fallen — and another foot or more was expected before the slow-moving storm lumbered on. After daylight, three young men walked past the Goody Basket and told Cummings: "This is the first open sign we've seen!"

    "They had some pepperoni rolls and some chocolate chip cookies," Cummings said. "I stayed open till about 2 o'clock (p.m.). In fact, before I came home, I just pulled the last pan out of the oven — three dozen pepperoni rolls."

    Kelvin Redmond, an accountant and associate minister at the Shiloh Baptist Church in Rockville Centre on Long Island, lives two blocks from the water in a three-story split level, but hadn't been able to get back to check on damage because the streets were still impassable.

    Ahead of the storm, he shut off all the power and moved his belongings, computers and irreplaceable items like photos to the third floor.

    "It looks like it may be a total loss," he said Tuesday. "But I still have my health and strength. I'm also a minister, so I still — it's going to be a good word on Sunday."

    NBC's Kari Huus, contributor Bill Briggs and The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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    322 comments

    During Katrina I stayed in our house alone less than a mile from the water. The house is on a slight hill about 16ft above sea level. Its a nice sturdy brick house. I ended up in about 2 feet of water inside the house and about 5 feet outside. Not sure how that happened to this day.

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  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    1:01pm, EDT

    Abducted Pennsylvania baby found dead; suspect in custody

    Police photo of Raghunandan Yandamuri

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Police in Pennsylvania have arrested a suspect in the kidnapping and killing of a 10-month old girl and the slaying of her grandmother who was taking care of her in a Philadelphia suburb. According to the affadavit for his arrest, Raghunandan Yandamuri, after telling police he committed the crime, asked police to say his wife turned him so she could claim a cash reward being offered for the child's return.

    The body of the baby, Saanvi Venna, was discovered overnight, police said Friday. Her grandmother Satyavathi Venna, 61, was found slain on Monday in the family's apartment in King of Prussia, about 15 miles north of Philadelphia and it was then that the baby was discovered missing.  


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    Yandamuri, 26, an acquaintance of the family who lives in the same apartment complex, faces charges of first and second degree murder, kidnapping and burglary in what police say appears to have been a kidnapping for ransom that went awry.


    Near the body of the grandmother, who died from stab wounds to her neck and chest, investigators found a ransom note demanding $50,000 for the return of Saavni, investigators revealed on Friday.

    "If you want your daughter alive and safe, follow our instructions carefully," said the message, which is attached as an exhibit to the criminal complaint provided by police. It called for the baby's mother to deliver the $50,000 by 8 p.m. the same day, and warned, "Any cunning act from anyone of you will lead to your daughter's death."

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Investigators issued an Amber Alert just before 5 p.m. Monday after the child's father and slain victim's son, Venkata Konda Siva Venna, found the woman's body and realized his daughter was missing.

    Police say Venna left work to check on the pair after receiving a call from a worried relative who was unable to reach them.

    The baby’s mother, Chenchu Latha Punuru, was at work when Venna was killed and the child was taken, police said.

    Pennsylvania State Police via AP

    Saanvi Venna, 10 months old, in an undated photo provided by police. Police issued an Amber Alert for her on Monday after her grandmother, who had been babysitting, was found slain and the baby missing.

    In the ransom note, the writer used the nicknames "Shiva" and "Lata" for Saanvi's parents, which were known only to a handful of people, all of whom were in the community of Asian Indian Americans, according to an affidavit for Yandamuri's arrest.

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    One of the people who knew those names was Yandamuri, who first told detectives he had no idea who had killed Satyavathi or taken Saanvi. He had attended a vigil held for the child and helped create and distribute missing child posters of the girl, it said.

    Later in the interview on Thursday, Yandamuri said he was responsible for both deaths. He said he targeted the family because he believed they had money, and said his intention was to hide the child until the ransom was paid, the affidavit said. 

    According to the document, he told police he had stabbed the grandmother with a kitchen knife in a tussle for the child, stuffed a handkerchief into the child's mouth to stop her from crying, and then put her in a blue suitcase, which he later abandoned in a sauna at the apartment complex gym.

    Following Yandamuri's description, investigators went to the sauna, the affidavit said.

    "Hidden inside a dark wooden sauna under a deep bench, they found the lifeless body of Saanvi Venna. There was apparent blood on her white dress."

    The grandmother had been visiting from India since July, authorities said, and was planning to return in January.

    A reward for information leading to the safe return of the child had jumped from $30,000 to $50,000 on Thursday.

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    192 comments

    How sad, rest in peace little angel. My condolances to the family of this tragedy for the loss of 2 loved ones.

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  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    4:45pm, EDT

    Texas man electrocuted in power station break-in

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    An autopsy showed that a man found dead at an electrical substation in Texas was electrocuted, apparently as he tried to steal copper from the facility, the sheriff’s office in Montgomery County, Texas, said Thursday.

    Harold Gene Schneider, 37, was discovered by workers at the facility owned by CenterPoint Energy Inc. late Wednesday, the Houston Chronicle reported.

    "Investigators will follow up leads," said sheriff's Lt. Dan Norris. "They believe someone else could have been there."


    Detectives believe Schneider, from nearby Houston, was trying to steal the metal based on the tools found near his body, KTRK-TV reported. He apparently gained access to the facility by cutting through a wire fence.

    Detective John Schmitt earlier told the station that a second person is believed to have been involved because some copper was missing.

    Across the country, the theft of copper, which is sold for cash to salvage operations, is a "constant problem, a consistent problem," said Norris.

    "If it’s not tied down and sometimes even if it is, it’s stolen,” he said. "Brass pots out of cemeteries, (copper from) vacant homes, even homes that are occupied, mobile homes, air conditioners. You name it — if there’s metal, its subject to being stolen."

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    16 comments

    That was some quick justice

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  • 24
    Oct
    2012
    1:07pm, EDT

    Kennedy nephew Michael Skakel denied parole in 1975 murder

    Pool via AP

    Michael Skakel in court in Middletown, Conn., on Jan. 24, 2012.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    Updated at 2:30 p.m. ET: A parole board in Connecticut denied freedom Wednesday to Robert F. Kennedy's nephew, Michael Skakel, who was convicted 10 years ago for the 1975 murder of his neighbor when they were both teenagers.

    After a two-hour hearing, a three-person parole board read a unanimous decision: He will next be eligible for parole in 2017.

    This was Skakel's first opportunity to seek parole from his sentence of 20 years to life since his 2002 conviction of the beating death of Martha Moxley, who was killed when they were both 15 years old in an exclusive neighborhood of Greenwich, Conn.

    The murder occurred after Moxley and friends attended a Halloween party at the nearby Skakel home where Michael and his then-17-year old brother lived. The next day, Moxley was found underneath a tree in her family’s backyard. An autopsy indicated she had been beaten and stabbed with a golf club, which was found in pieces nearby. The club was traced to the Skakel home.


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    Due to a lack of witnesses and alleged bungling by investigators, the case went cold for many years after her death. A grand jury investigation reopened the case after the publication of books in the late 1990s on the unsolved crime, leading to the conviction of Skakel.


    The victim's mother, Dorothy Moxley, spoke at Wednesday's hearing, saying that Skakel should serve at least 20 years in prison.

    "Martha, my baby, will never have a life," she said, her voice breaking, according to The Associated Press. 

    Skakel has continued to claim he is innocent, and did so again during Wednesday's hearing at a McDougall-Walker Correctional Institution in Suffield, Conn.

    "If I could ease Mrs. Moxley's pain in any way, shape or form I would take responsibility all day long for this crime," Skakel said, the AP reported. But, he added, "I cannot bear false witness against myself."

    His lawyers say he has been a model prisoner.

    "There has never been a person more deserving of parole than Michael Skakel," attorney Hope Seeley said in a statement to CNN on Tuesday. "His track record during the past 10 years shows the person we all know him to be — caring, generous, and committed to his faith, family and friends."

    At very least, Skakel's attorneys have argued, he should have been tried and sentenced as a juvenile because he was only 15 when the crime was committed.

    AP also reported that the chair of the parole board, Erika Tindill, said it was odd for Skakel to ask for early release while proclaiming his innocence.

    Ten years into a 20-years-to-life sentence, Michael Skakel, the Kennedy cousin convicted for the 1975 killing of neighbor Martha Moxley will be asking a parole board to set him free. He continues to say he is innocent of any wrongdoing. NBC's Katy Tur reports.

    A legal expert who spoke to NBC's Today Show earlier said that Skakel's release was unlikely in part because of Skakel's continued insistence that he is innocent.

    "They're going to look at the impact on the victim and the victim's family," said David Schwartz. "They are going to look at whether Michael Skakel is remorseful and they are going to look at acceptance of responsibility. And he has none of that going for him."

    Skakel filed an appeal of his conviction in 2010, arguing that his trial attorney, Michael Sherman, was incompetent, among other allegations.

    The appeal hearing is slated to start April 15.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    230 comments

    Justice for the Moxley family! Martha died a horrific death and her family was left grieving for years of not knowing why or who. Throw away the key and keep this criminal where he belongs.

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  • 23
    Oct
    2012
    3:54pm, EDT

    'No-fly' American battles his way home to New York

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

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    A New York City man prevented from returning home from overseas by the federal government’s security apparatus has landed in the United States after a three-week delay, rights advocates say.  


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Samir Suljovic, 26, entered the United States on Friday night in Philadelphia, where he was questioned at length by Customs and Border Protection agents, causing him to miss his connecting flight to New York. He boarded a train, arriving in New York late Monday night.

    Suljovic, who was born and raised in Queens, told NBC New York he believes he was banned from flying because he's Muslim.

    "I wear a cap, I have a beard, I roll my pants up," Suljovic he told the NBC station. "They discriminated against me because I'm Muslim. What else could it be?"


    "They made me feel like I'm some kind of terrorist, some kind of criminal for no damn reason," he said. "I'm an American citizen. I'm being played here."

    Suljovic, who has worked as a security guard in New York, had been visiting relatives in Montenegro and was attempting to come home on Oct. 1 when he was denied boarding his U.S.-bound flight from Vienna, Austria. 

    His story echoes those of dozens of other Americans, many of them Muslims, who have been stranded overseas by their apparent inclusion on the U.S. "no-fly" list, prompting legal challenges to the government.

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    U.S. security watch lists currently have about 50,000 names, of which about 20,000 are on the 'no-fly' list of people who are "known and reasonably suspected terrorists," and among those are about 500 Americans, according to an official at the FBI Terrorist Screening Center, who asked not to be named.

    The official would not say whether Suljovic’s name was on the no-fly list.

    "Government policy is not to disclose that for security reasons," said the official. As an example, the official said, an aspiring terrorist who learned he or she was listed might change his or her identity.

    Airline ticket agents in Vienna handed Suljovic a note from the Department of Homeland Security and instructed him to apply for a redress number for people who think they may be mistakenly on the "no-fly list."

    The Department of Homeland Security redress procedure, which goes by the acronym TRIP for Travel Redress Inquiry Program, is set up to weed out people who are on the list because of mistaken identity. The TRIPS process does not provide a way for people who think they are wrongly placed on the list for other reasons to challenge those reasons.

    Also from NBC New York: Barney's super skinny Minnie Mouse sparks protests

    The U.S. Embassy in Vienna told Suljovic he was cleared for a flight back to the United States from Munich, Germany.

    But after traveling by train to Munich, he was again denied boarding and instructed to go to the U.S. consulate there, where he did not get resolution. He says that he was instead interrogated by embassy personnel who also searched his cellphone without his permission.

    The Council on American Islamic Relations, a nonprofit Muslim advocacy and civil rights group, wrote letters to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano and the U.S. Embassy in Munich seeking an explanation of obstacles to his return home.

    Suljovic told NBC New York on Monday he had to eat the cost of two flights that he was prohibited from boarding, and spent about $2,000 in Vienna and Munich while trying to get clearance to go home.

    "I was like a mouse in a maze. I didn't know where to go, and I was wondering when I'd come home," he said. "I had nowhere to stay. I slept at the airport for the first few days." 

    Suljovic said he's frustrated that government officials haven't been able to tell him why he couldn't come home, and that they haven't been able to tell him if he is on the no-fly list at all.

    After a number of tries over the course 22 days, Suljovic was finally allowed to board the flight to Philadelphia on Friday. No explanation was given for his delays, or for his ultimate ability to fly home.

    The opaqueness of U.S. security policy has prompted a a number of challenges to the use of the no-fly list. The most significant case, working its way through courts in Oregon, was brought by the ACLU in 2010 on behalf of 17 plaintiffs against the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI Terrorist Screening Center. That case challenges the constitutionality of the no-fly list, arguing that it deprives individuals of due process.

    A separate lawsuit filed in April by the Michigan chapter of CAIR alleges invasive questioning of American Muslims by CPB officials at land borders.

    "Samir is back in the United States because it is his right to be here,” said Muneer Awad, executive director for the New York chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations. "It is his right today, and it was his right twenty-two days ago when our government prevented him from boarding any return flight home."

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    362 comments

    I feel for the guy, but the issue of muslim terrorists remains. So what are we to do? Let anyone fly and risk losing hundreds of American lives? I understand that "show me your papers" smacks of 'brown shirts', but this is not 1940's Europe and this country has already been under fire, and continues …

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  • 22
    Oct
    2012
    7:10pm, EDT

    Beard issue again delays military trial in Fort Hood shootings

    Reuters file

    U.S. Army Maj. Nidal Hasan in an undated handout photo.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    The man charged in the 2009 Fort Hood, Texas, shootings, that killed 13 and wounded more than two dozen has been granted a stay of his court-martial proceedings to appeal a ruling that he must appear in court clean-shaven, Fort Hood announced on Monday.


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    Former Army psychiatrist Maj. Nidal Hasan, 42, was clean-shaven when he was serving in the military. Since he has been in jail, he has grown a beard. He has said that as a Muslim shaving his beard now would be a sin, because he believes he is close to death, the Los Angeles Times reported.


    If convicted of the Nov. 5, 2009, attack, Hasan faces the death penalty or life in prison without parole.

    Military court requires that defendants be clean-shaven, and the court has found Hasan to be in contempt and fined him $1,000 each time he has appeared in court with the beard.

    A military appeals court in Virginia on Thursday upheld a judge’s ruling that Hasan can be forcibly shaved for the court-martial.

    But on Monday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces issued another stay to accommodate an appeal. The court did not say how long the stay would remain in place.

    Hasan's court-martial was initially scheduled for August.

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    637 comments

    the way "the Greatest Generation" would have handled this is, the sergeant would go up to HQ to check on paperwork "for maybe a couple hours, dammit", and the other guys in the barracks would pin him down and shave him bald as a billiard ball with the back of a rusty rake.

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    Explore related topics: security, military, terrorism, shooting, features, fort-hood, kari-huus, beard, nidal-hasan
  • 22
    Oct
    2012
    5:28pm, EDT

    Judge rules no jail time in first FAMU hazing death sentencing

    Red Huber / Orlando Sentinel

    Brian Jones looks to the court gallery before being sentenced in an Orlando courtroom for his role in the hazing death of a Florida A&M University band member on Monday.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    The first of 12 defendants in the deadly hazing case of Florida A&M drum major Robert Champion was sentenced by an Orlando court on Monday.

    Brian Jones, 23, avoided a jail term, but was sentenced to six months of community supervision — a strict monitoring arragement that requires an ankle monitor and frequent check-ins with probation officials — followed by two years of probation. He is also required to do 200 hours of community service, The Associated Press reported.

    The band had traveled to Orlando from Tallahassee to perform at a football game when the fellow band members subjected Champion to a severe beating on the bus — in a ritual called "crossing Bus C" — which caused him to fall unconscious, and then die, on Nov. 19, 2011.


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    Jones, a percussionist, faced up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine. But the judge said Jones’ role had been relatively limited.

    "This young man's part in this horrible act ... as compared with many others from what I've seen is minimal," said Judge Marc Lubet, ruling in Orange County Court. "It was an isolated incident in this man's life for which he's shown remorse."

    Lubet quoted Abraham Lincoln as he announced the sentence, saying that "mercy bears richer fruit than strict justice," the Orlando Sentinel reported.

    After initially pleading not guilty, Jones entered a no-contest plea Oct. 9 to a third-degree felony hazing charge.

    Champion’s parents attended Monday's court proceedings. Prior to the sentencing, his mother challenged the idea that Jones’ role had been minor:

    "You and I know that's not true," said Pam Champion, addressing Jones, and carrying a picture of her son. "You played a critical role."

    "You won't be able to put it out if your mind...It will haunt you," she told Jones.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    115 comments

    hopefully somebodys punishment will be more than picking up litter.

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  • 19
    Oct
    2012
    7:30pm, EDT

    California model's accused killer was used as hired 'enforcer,' say prosecutors

    TODAY show

    Kelly Soo Park, a real estate agent in her 40s who is held in the murder of Juliana Redding, a model and aspiring actress. Court documents allege that Park and her boyfriend had previously been hired to intimidate others on behalf of physician/businessman Munir Uwaydah.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    A woman being prosecuted in the brutal 2008 murder of a model in Southern California had a history working as "muscle" to enforce the will of a wealthy doctor and businessman, newly released court documents allege.


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    Kelly Soo Park, who is accused of stalking and killing Juliana Redding, 21, in her Santa Monica apartment, "has a history of threatening and intimidating individuals who have an ongoing dispute with" Munir Uwaydah, according to documents cited by the Los Angeles Times reported Friday.


    The documents detail two cases in which Park and her boyfriend, Ronnie Case, were accused of working as "debt collectors" for Uwaydah, sending them to intimidate one man for payment on a $350,000 judgment and another, a bank manager, for withdrawing from a business deal.

    TODAY Show

    Juliana Redding, a model and aspiring actress originally from Tucson, who was murdered in her upscale Santa Monica apartment in 2008.

    Uwaydah, a surgeon from Marina Del Rey, has not been charged in Redding's death.

    Prosecutors said he had dated Redding, a model and aspiring actress from Tucson, the Times reported. He had also been in talks with Redding’s father to launch a pharmaceutical business, but the deal fell apart days before her death, according to the report.

    Redding was found beaten and strangled in her upscale Santa Monica apartment on March 18, 2008. Earlier reports said Redding had been calling 9-1-1 for help when the killer grabbed the phone and hung it up.

    DNA evidence from the crime scene was traced to Park, according to testimony in secret grand jury proceedings reported on by the Times. Park has pleaded not guilty to one count of murder.

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    71 comments

    This is utterly disgusting that a woman with the help of her boyfriend can find it ok to murder a young woman.She has to be a psychopath to do the things that she did for this so called surgeon.My deepest and sincerest condolences to this young woman's family.This is yet another good reason to keep  …

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  • 19
    Oct
    2012
    2:22pm, EDT

    Judge rules Zimmerman lawyers can access Trayvon Martin's school records

    The parents of Trayvon Martin responded to George Zimmerman's defense team's request to release their son's school records, saying they "shouldn't make dead children seem as though they are the perpetrator."

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

     

    Updated at 3:40 p.m. ET: A judge ruled on Friday that attorneys for George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch leader charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, can have access to the dead teen's school records and social media accounts.


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    Circuit Judge Debra Nelson, who is the new presiding judge in this highly publicized and emotional case, said that Zimmerman's attorneys can subpoena Trayvon Martin's schools for his discipline records but must keep anything they obtain private.

    "I think that you're entitled to those records," Nelson said during the hearing at the Seminole County Courthouse in Sanford, Fla.

    The judge also granted Zimmerman's request to subpoena Trayvon's social media records, which were removed from the Internet after his death, as well as those of a girl who says she was on the phone with him before the shooting.


     

    Before the proceedings started, Martin's family held a news conference that took a preemptive strike against the subpoena of those records.

    "We think it’s a terrible precedent to set," said attorney Ben Crump, who held a press conference with Trayvon Martin’s parents, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton. "Why is it relevant about his school records or his Facebook page? George Zimmerman knew none of that on Feb. 26 when he claimed Trayvon's life."

    The shooting took place when Zimmerman encountered Martin, 17, who was unarmed and walking through the Sanford neighborhood where his father lives.

    Zimmerman, 29, has pleaded not guilty and is set to face trial June 10, 2013. He remains out on bail and is in seclusion.

    Zimmerman appeared in court wearing a suit and tie, and he sat quietly while his attorney Mark O’Mara made his case for access to the records.

    O’Mara said the defense wants the Twitter and Facebook accounts "in their entirety" of Martin as well as a witness — a girl who was on the phone with him when he encountered Zimmerman. The girl was not named because she is a juvenile.

    O’Mara conceded that it "sounds horrible" to evaluate the reputation of the shooting victim, but he said that the records were crucial to showing that his client did not act with "ill will or hatred" of Martin.

    "The issue in this case is who did what during those couple of minutes that we don’t know what happened," O'Mara said. 

    Zimmerman maintains that Martin attacked him and beat him.

    O’Mara told the judge that although the Facebook and Twitter accounts had been removed from the Internet, he has been able to access — though not authenticate — enough of the social media accounts to demonstrate that "that information could be very, very relevant to my defense."

    Benjamin Crump, attorney for Trayvon Martin's parents, speaks to reporters prior to a hearing on whether the court will allow the teen's school records to be included in a trial of his shooter George Zimmerman. Crump is flanked by Trayvon's father Tracy Martin, left, and his mother Sybrina Fulton.

    Crump, the attorney for Martin's family, said that if the court calls for the release of Martin's school records and social media postings, the family would demand the release of Zimmerman’s medical records, which he argued were far more relevant to finding out what happened on the night of Martin's killing.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    "If this was your child who was shot and killed, wouldn't you want to know … if there were drugs that influenced (the shooter’s) judgment or decision making?" he said.

    On Friday, Judge Nelson did grant a prosecution request for Zimmerman's medical records, though she said she will review the medical records first to decide whether anything should be withheld.

    This was the first hearing in the highly publicized case to come before Nelson, who replaced the previous judge, Kenneth Lester, in August after a judicial panel found that Lester had begun to form opinions about Zimmerman that could affect his impartiality.

    Martin's family also announced the establishment of a Change for Trayvon committee that will press for a change in Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law, which could be used in Zimmerman’s defense. That law allows use of force in self-defense when there is a reasonable belief of an unlawful threat.

    Martin's parents said they want the wording of the law to state that someone cannot instigate a fight and then claim self-defense.

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    1652 comments

    The judge should see all of the records from both sides, in private chambers, and decided what is relevant to the mindset of both parties involved.

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  • 18
    Oct
    2012
    3:28pm, EDT

    Texas cheerleaders can keep Christian banners, for now, judge rules

    Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott vows to fight for cheerleaders banned from using Bible verses on football banners. KXAN's Ignacio Garcia reports.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    A judge ruled Thursday that a group of cheerleaders fighting for the right to display biblical-themed banners during high school football games in their small Texas community could continue to do so, at least until the battle goes to court next June.


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    The cheerleaders in Kountze prompted a complaint to the school district in September when they rolled out banners with scriptural references, such as "I can do all things through Christ which strengthens me," and "But thanks be to God which gives us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ."

    A letter of complaint from the nonprofit Freedom from Religion Foundation prompted Kountze Independent School District Superintendent Keven Weldon to bar the religious banners.


    The foundation argued that when the religious sentiments are displayed by cheerleaders in school uniforms before large groups of students at official school functions, the banners violate the constitutional separation of church and state.

    "It is not a personal opinion of mine," Weldon told the Houston Chronicle after making his initial decision. "My personal convictions are that I am a Christian as well. But I'm also a state employee and Kountze (school district) representative. And I was advised that that such a practice (religious signs) would be in direct violation of United States Supreme Court decisions."

    But parents and attorneys for the girls, supported by the nonprofit law firm, the Liberty Institute, filed a lawsuit arguing that the scriptural banners should be allowed as constitutionally guaranteed free speech. The judge granted a temporary injunction on enforcement of the ban.

    On Thursday, District Judge Steve Thomas extended that injunction until a trial scheduled for June 24.

    The cheerleaders gained heavyweight support Wednesday when Texas Governor Rick Perry and State Attorney General Greg Abbot made high-profile endorsements of the religious messages.

    "We will not allow atheist groups from outside of the state of Texas to come into the state, to use menacing and misleading intimidation tactics, to try to bully schools to bow down at the altar of secular beliefs," Abbot said in a statement Wednesday.

    The Freedom from Religion Foundation, which is a national group based in Madison, Wis., said that it did not expect a favorable ruling on the case in Texas courts, and that it hoped to take the case to federal court.

    "If the school district drops this, what we would like to do is sue the school district, but we have to have a plaintiff," said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Madison, Wis.-based organization.

    But she said that finding someone to be named in the lawsuit in Kountze, a predominantly conservative Christian community with a population of about 2,100, is a challenge.

    "People who are in the community are afraid to come out of the closet," said Gaylor. "Our complainant is not able to be the plaintiff for that reason."

    A Facebook page supporting the cheerleaders had more than 48,300 members on Thursday.

    "Our little town is sticking together and standing behind our kids!!!" the introduction to the page states. "Someone has tried to prevent our cheerleaders from ...using religious scriptures on their run-through signs at the football games. This was all led by our children, and they made the decision to give the glory to God this year. We, as a community, will stand up for our kids and make sure they do not lose their voice and their rights in this."

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    1615 comments

    Poor brainwashed kids.

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    Explore related topics: texas, christianity, constitution, cheerleaders, free-speech, high-school, kari-huus
  • 10
    Oct
    2012
    12:55pm, EDT

    Diplomatic security in Libya 'weak' before attack, former leader of protection team testifies

    Two former security offers from the Benghazi consulate where four Americans were killed in a terrorist attack told the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee that they had requested security assistance but were "fighting a losing battle." NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    WASHINGTON — A Special Forces soldier who commanded the security team for U.S. diplomats in Libya until just before the fatal attack there told a congressional hearing Wednesday that there was never enough personnel to protect the consulate in Benghazi.


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    Lt. Col. Andrew Wood, who commanded a 16-member U.S. military team in Libya from Feb. 12 to Aug. 14, told the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee that U.S. security was so weak that in April, only one U.S. diplomatic security agent was stationed in Benghazi.

    "The security in Benghazi was a struggle and remained a struggle throughout my time there ... Diplomatic security remained weak,'' according to Wood's testimony. "The RSO (regional security officer) struggled to obtain additional personnel there (in Benghazi), but was never able to attain the numbers he felt comfortable with," Wood said.


    That view was echoed by Eric Nordstrom, is the former chief security officer for U.S. diplomats in Libya, who told the committee his pleas for more security were ignored.

    Nordstrom addressed the diplomatic security issue in an Oct. 1 email to a congressional investigator. He said his requests for more security were blocked by a department policy to "normalize operations and reduce security resources."

    Secretary of State Hillary Clinton did not testify on Wednesday, but sent two high level department officials to testify at the hearing.

    Darrell Issa questions State Dept. officials about the intelligence failures related to the Sept. 11 terrorist attack in Benghazi Libya. NBC's Kelly O'Donnell reports.

    Patrick Kennedy, Under Secretary of State for Management, responded to allegations that the outcome of the attack indicated lax security.

    The assault on the U.S. compound was "an unprecedented attack by dozens of heavily armed men," Kennedy said. "There was no actionable intelligence available... indicating that there was a planned massive attack."

    He said there are regular assessments of resources required to mitigate risk for employees, but that risk cannot be eliminated.

    Another state department official, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Programs Charlene Lamb, added that the state department "had the correct number of assets in Benghazi at the time," based on recent assessments.  

    The Sept. 11 attack on the consulate killed four Americans, including U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens.

    Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif, who chaired the hearing, set the tone for a contentious back-and-forth over whether the attack on Benghazi could have been averted if intelligence and security had been handled differently by the State Department.

    "We know the tragedy in Benghazi ended as it did," Issa said. “We know now that it was caused by a terrorist attack that was reasonably predictable to eventually happen somewhere in the world, especially on Sept. 11. Requests for extensions for more security in Libya appear to have often been rejected."

    Democrats were concerned that after the attacks, a Republican member of the committee visited Libya to investigate, but no Democrats were present on that fact-finding trip.

    They accused Republicans for blocking funding requested by the State Department for beefing up security at outposts throughout the turbulent region.

    Republicans expressed frustration that the State Department put out a fairly detailed timeline on the attacks to the press the night before the hearings.

    Briefing reporters Tuesday ahead of the hearing, State Department officials were asked about the administration's initial — and since retracted — explanation linking the violence to protests over an American-made anti-Muslim video circulating on the Internet.

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

    In a departure from statement by other administration officials, the officials said the department never believed the attack was a protest gone awry over a film ridiculing the Prophet Muhammad, while "others" in the Obama administration initially drew that conclusion.

    The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

    It was a top administration diplomatic official — U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice — who gave a series of interviews five days after the attack that wrongly described the attack as spontaneous.

    She said the administration believed the violence was unplanned and that extremists with heavier weapons "hijacked" the protest against the anti-Islamic video. She did qualify her remarks to say that was the best information she had at the time. Rice since has denied trying to mislead Congress.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Handling of security and the aftermath of the attack has become an increasingly prominent theme for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and other Republican leaders who say they never believed the original explanation.

    Democrats on the committee said that they were left out of the investigation leading up to today's hearing, calling it "completely one-sided and unique."

    "Although the chairman claims that we are pursuing this investigation on a bipartisan basis, that has simply not been the case," said ranking member Elijah Cummings, D-Md. 

    Democrats on the committee said they had no access to documents that Republicans claim to have pertaining to the investigation. They also say that they had no access to one of the witnesses, Lt. Col Wood.

    Issa was "resorting to petty abuses in what should be a serious and responsible investigation of this fatal attack," Cummings said.

    An aide said they did have access to the committee's interview with Eric Nordstrom, who acts as a Regional Security Officer for the State Department, but only because Cummings, assisted with arranging the interview.

    Cummings was asked last week if he thought the hearing was political, answering "I think it's a lot politics, come on." He released a statement later saying he supports investigating the attacks in Benghazi, but in a more strategic way.

    NBC News staff, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    1347 comments

    If our government gave as much attention to details BEFORE an event as they did in these pretend investigations AFTER the event, lives would be saved. Obama was warned and ignored it. What else do we need to know?

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  • 9
    Oct
    2012
    3:29pm, EDT

    Teacher forced to resign over false 'improper touching' accusations gets $680,000

    Charlotte Observer

    Teacher Jeffrey Leardini in an undated photo.

    By Kari Huus, NBC News

    A North Carolina school district agreed to pay $680,000 to a former teacher who said he was unfairly forced to resign after several students accused him of improperly touching them.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Sixth-grade teacher Jeffrey Leardini said he had been coerced into resigning in April 2006 — despite an excellent eight-year record as a teacher — after several students came forward with complaints that he touched them in sexually suggestive ways.

    Criminal charges against Leardini brought by one student at Community House Middle School were later dismissed, and the other complaints, made by several of her friends, were discredited as an effort to punish the teacher on behalf of their friend, who was doing poorly in Leardini’s class.

    According to the Charlotte Observer, Leardini acknowledged that he squeezed shoulders, patted arms and touched students' heads as part of his teaching style.


    In his lawsuit, filed in June 2009, Leardini charged that a human resources employee for the Charlotte-Mecklenberg school district falsely claimed the district had a "no touch" rule and misled him into believing he had no choice but to resign immediately or be terminated, and that he only later learned that he had the right to an investigation of the girls' complaints before losing his job.

    In February, a jury agreed that he had been deprived of due process and awarded him damages of $1.1 million from the school district and just over $52,000 from the human resources employee, Kay Cunningham, who no longer works for the school district.

    The Charlotte-Mecklenberg school district appealed the decision, maintaining that Leardini resigned voluntarily.

    In the settlement reached Aug. 24, the school district agreed to pay Leardini $680,000.

    The school district also agreed to change Leardini’s record from "resignation in lieu of dismissal," which made him ineligible for rehire, to voluntary resignation. "Any reference to termination or suspension will be removed," it says.

    Leardini now lives in San Diego and works for Petco, according to his LinkedIn page.

    His attorney, Luke Largess, told the Charlotte Observer that the settlement averted the possibility of a new trial.

    He said Leardini’s successful claim would make school boards more cautious about their handling of complaints against teachers.

    Largess said "it has given them pause" about rushing to force accused employees to resign, the Observer reported.

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    271 comments

    Too bad the little brats weren't forced to pay some form of restituion to the teacher as well - they all got off scot-free...

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    Explore related topics: schools, students, courts, kari-huus, employment-law
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Reporter Kari Huus joined msnbc.com at launch in 1996 after 7 years reporting from China. In recent years, she has focused on domestic issues, playing a key role in msnbc.com series including The Elkhart Project, Gut Check America, and Rising from Ruin--on the recovery of two Mississippi towns after Hurricane Katrina. Huus has also covered a wide array of international stories, including China's 2008 earthquake, the Asian economic crisis, the fal …

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