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  • 28
    Apr
    2013
    1:43pm, EDT

    Calif. cops describe intruder suspected of fatally stabbing 9-year-old

    By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Police in the Northern California town of Valley Springs on Sunday released information about the man they suspect fatally stabbed a 9-year-old girl at her home over the weekend.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The Calaveras County Sheriff’s office in a statement described the intruder as a “muscular” white or Hispanic male approximately six feet tall.

    Authorities warned residents in the area to lock their doors as the suspect is considered armed and dangerous.

    The victim’s 12-year-old brother reportedly encountered an intruder in his home and witnessed the man flee the residence. The boy then checked on his sister and found she had been stabbed, according to NBC’s Sacramento affiliate KCRA.

    The girl was later pronounced dead at a local hospital.

    The Sheriff’s office has declined to disclose details of the murder, but they plan to release more information Sunday afternoon.

    Sheriff’s investigators are scouring Valley Springs and interviewing several people of interest, according to the police statement.

    85 comments

    A 12-year old should never have to find a dead sibling and live with that pain and loss from that moment forward. It's just too sad for words beyond this. Wishing healing to the family members and friends.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: calaveras-county, kcra, valley-springs, 9-year-old-stabbed
  • 16
    Dec
    2012
    4:47pm, EST

    In churches and stadiums, Americans mourn school shooting victims

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    Jessica Rinaldi / Reuters

    New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady wears a decal on his helmet Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012, in tribute to the victims at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

    Updated at 8:26 p.m. ET: Americans came together in the thousands Sunday to honor the memories of the 26 victims of the shootings at a Connecticut elementary school.

    This Sunday was Gaudete Sunday, the Advent observance of joy and celebration, but in churches and cathedrals across the country, the message was one of reassurance and comfort for the distressed and the afflicted.

    Hundreds of people signed a book of condolences and prayed special prayers Sunday morning at Our Lady of the Cross Parish in Holyoke, Mass.

    "I lost a little child once, just a matter of days old, and that's still with me although it's 50 years later," Paula Brunault of Holyoke told NBC station WWLP of Springfield, Mass.

    "I just know that prayers surround the people, really and truly. It's the best thing we can do for them," she said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The Rev. Scott Kubinski, pastor of Christ the Redeemer Parish in the Elmira, N.Y., area, denied that the shootings were the will of God. Instead, he told parishioners at St. Casimir's Catholic Church, it was the fruit of the free will that God allows people to have, NBC station WETM of Elmira reported.

    Full coverage: Tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary

    "God isn't happy about it, but God is with us through it all, giving us strength," he said. "That's why people do turn to faith in times of sadness and why they turn to prayer."

    Lanza was student at school where he killed 26, shot mom multiple times

    More than 150 chaplains of the Law Enforcement Chaplaincy of Sacramento, Calif., dressed in full police uniform Sunday and visited churches, restaurants and shopping malls to offer hope.

    A twin, talented teachers, a jazzman's daughter: Portraits of the victims

    At Bayside Church, an Evangelical Covenant megachurch in Roseville, Calif., Senior Chaplain Mindi Russell told thousands of families who packed inside to pray for the victims and families of Friday's massacre.


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    Russell said it was understandable that children were asking why the shooting happened and why so many people were killed. 

    As families hugged one another and prayed for the violence to end, Russell reassured the congregation that while there are bad people in the world, there are many more good people, NBC station KCRA of Sacramento reported.

    NFL teams also honored the shooting victims, lowering flags to half-staff  and observing a moment of silence before all of Sunday's games. Some teams brought young children onto the field, and players — many of them visibly moved — stood hand in hand with them.

    The New England Patriots — whose owner, Robert Kraft, also owns a box company that has a factory less than a mile from Sandy Hook Elementary School — were wearing black-ribbon logos on their helmets for Sunday night's game against the San Francisco 49ers. 

    The Patriots also planned to fire 26 white flares — one for each of the victims — at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.

    The New York Giants wore decals bearing the letters SHES — standing for Sandy Hook Elementary School — on their helmets Sunday for their game in Atlanta against the Falcons. Coach Tom Coughlin told NFL.com that his team had been "very, very much affected" by the shootings.

    The New York Jets were to wear the same decal Monday night for their game against the Tennessee Titans.

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    77 comments

    From Center for American Progess July 2012

    Show more
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  • 7
    Dec
    2012
    12:01pm, EST

    Woman suffers only minor frostbite in six-day ordeal in snowy California mountains

    A woman who was trapped in the Sierra Mountains for nearly a week survived by seeking shelter inside a hollowed-out tree and eating tomatoes and snow. KCRA-TV's Sharokina Shams reports.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    A Nevada woman was found by her brother shivering in a hollow tree this week after having survived for six days on tomatoes and snow in the wintry Sierra Nevada in California, relatives and authorities said. Her boyfriend died during the ordeal.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    The woman, Paula Lane, 46, of Gardnerville, Nev., was described Friday as in stable condition with only minor frostbite at Carson-Tahoe Hospital in Carson City, Nev. Her doctor said she could go home as soon as Sunday.

    "She was one very lucky person," said Dr. Vijay Maiya, who treated Lane after she was found Wednesday night by her brother, who had set out in the snow to look for her against his family's advice.


    Lane and her boyfriend, Roderick Clifton, 44, of Citrus Heights, Calif., had diverted from their trip home to go four-wheeling in Clifton's Jeep on Nov. 29 when they got stuck in a snowdrift in Hope Valley, south of Lake Tahoe, according to Lane's family and Alpine County, Calif., sheriff's deputies.

    Clifton left to seek help, they said, while Lane stayed put. But he never returned.

    After a few days, Lane decided that she was on her own and set out on foot. As she hiked toward the highway, she found Clifton's body in the snow. She later took shelter in the well of a hollowed-out tree as another snowstorm moved through the area. 

    Lane's brother, Gary, found her off State Route 88 in Hope Valley. Their sister, Linda Hathaway, said she'd advised him not to risk it, "but he's going to do what he's going to do," she told NBC station KCRA of Sacramento, Calif. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Reunited at the hospital Thursday, "I gave her the biggest kiss I could without hurting her," Hathaway told reporters through tears Thursday.

    "It's so hard as a family to sit there at home, waiting to hear news if they're gone or if they went over a cliff or somebody abducted them," Hathaway said. "You don’t know. Your mind plays so many things." 

    Clifton's daughter, Mariah Clifton, said she still couldn't quite believe her father hadn't made it.

    "I kept thinking he was going to call and be like, 'Hey, call off all these news reporters and police officers. We have the car covered in leaves because I don't want another speeding ticket,'" she told NBC station KCRA of Sacramento, Calif.

    KCRA: Woman saved by brother; man dies in Sierra

    Rescuers said they had to use snowmobiles to get to Clifton's body. When they found the Jeep, it was buried under new snow.

    Lane, however, had been remarkably lucky, having gotten out of the vehicle just in time, and with just enough supplies.

    Octogenarian survives 5 days on windshield wiper fluid

    "Before they went on their excursion, they had stopped by some family members' houses and apparently, they had gotten some tomatoes. She sustained herself on tomatoes and snow," Maiya said Thursday at the news conference at the hospital.

    "Her toes were a little on the bluish side for lack of oxygen," but "they've re-warmed nicely, and she's doing well," he said, adding that Lane could be home with her 11-year-old twin children by the end of the weekend.

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    78 comments

    I do a lot of traveling, and a lot of solo 4-wheeling. It can be dangerous. I don't recommend it for everyone. If you want to, however, follow some simple rules: 1. Tell someone where you are going and when you expect to return. Even if you stray from your planned path, they will have a general ide …

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