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  • 26
    Jul
    2012
    8:54am, EDT

    Shotgun pellet's 'miracle' path spared Aurora victim's life

    Petra Anderson, one of the 58 people injured in the movie theater shooting in Aurora, Colo., is undergoing a 'miraculous' recovery, said her sister, Chloe, and her mother, Kim.  While her recovery has been remarkable, the family is struggling to pay their mounting medical bills. Kate Snow's full report on how Petra Anderson's family and other Aurora survivors are struggling with their growing medical bills airs Thursday, July 26 at 10pm/9c on NBC's Rock Center with Brian Williams.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    AURORA, Colo. -- Petra Anderson, one of 58 people injured in the Aurora movie theater attack, is lucky to be alive.

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    Anderson, a 22-year-old aspiring music professor, was hit by a shotgun blast during the assault that killed 12 people. Three pellets struck her arm and one rocketed through her head, but it missed the brain's many blood vessels and key sections controlling vital functions, according to her doctor.

    “If the pellet had wavered a millimeter, really in any direction from what it actually took, then she would have likely either died or been severely injured,” said Dr. Michael Rauzzino, a neurosurgeon at The Medical Center of Aurora who operated on Anderson to remove the pellet. “I would say this is definitely a miracle,” he said, while showing an MRI of Anderson’s brain.

    The MRI reveals a faint trace of the pellet’s path after it entered the left side of Petra's nose, broke through the front of her skull, and passed through her brain, before lodging in the back of her head.


    In New York City, a bell was rung in honor of the victims, and in Aurora, Colo., there were more memorials for those who could not escape the gunman's shooting rampage. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    “It would be hard to create a path similar to this where it goes all the way from the front to the back and misses every single blood vessel, doesn't bother any of the major structures, and leaves her able to talk and move everything and not be paralyzed or dead,” he added. “Never in my entire career have I seen a case where a bullet has traversed the entire brain like this and not caused severe damage or death.”

    Among the dozens hurt in the attack on a midnight premiere of the latest Batman movie, “The Dark Knight Rises,” injuries vary widely. Some were treated for their wounds and could walk out of the hospital. Others are still fighting for their lives. And yet others, like Anderson, who plays violin and piano, are dealing with a range of injuries that could require long-term treatment, and perhaps, totally alter their futures.

    Doctors performed two procedures on Anderson: one to remove the pellet from her brain and the other to close the hole in her skull where the pellet entered her head. A large hole was left behind that had to be fixed or it could have led to complications in the future, such as leakage of brain tissue or liquid, Rauzzino said.

    Miranda Leitsinger / NBC News

    Dr. Michael Rauzzino, a neurosurgeon at The Medical Center of Aurora, talks about the path of the shotgun pellet through Petra Anderson's brain, noting how it missed many blood vessels and centers that control key functions.

    The pellet crossed the left hemisphere – the dominant one -- of her brain, which generally controls speech, language and memory. Though Anderson now has deficits in those areas, Rauzzino said, they “could be much more severe than what they are.”

    “Her life is definitely going to be different. She's been shot in the head and nothing's going to change that,” he said.  “The hope is that with time and therapy and patience that she'll get a lot of things back. And, you know, who knows, maybe she'll get it all back.”

    Rauzzino denied news reports stemming from a pastor’s blog that Anderson had a congenital defect in her brain creating a void, or hole, the pellet shuttled along to save her life.

    “Her brain was no different than anyone else's,” he said. “What made her so fortunate was the trajectory of the bullet as it passed through.”

    Escaping death a ‘source of hope’
    Since last Friday, Anderson’s family experienced the ups and downs of dealing with major trauma to a loved one.

    “Everything changed, and I could not get past this idea that she had gotten shot in the head. I know that the first big fear I had wasn’t actually her dying, but her losing things in her life that have been really important,” such as her music, said her boyfriend, Austin Hogan, 23, as he broke down into tears.

    (For more on the treatment of the injured in Aurora, watch Kate Snow’s interview with Dr. Rauzzino on tonight’s Rock Center at 10 p.m. ET/9 p.m. Central.)

    But the fact she escaped death “was such a source of hope for moving forward, I think, for all of us, and we really rallied around that,” he said.

    Anderson was planning to enter the University of Maryland this fall for graduate studies along with Hogan. The middle child of three siblings, she had come home to Aurora to spend time with her mother, Kim, who was diagnosed with terminal breast cancer in May and is to begin experimental treatments in a few days.

    “This has been hard on her,” Anderson’s sister, Chloe, 25, said of her mom. “She's already not got the best energy levels, and I think the first couple of days just really tanked her energy. But she is a fighter, just like my sister, and so she is there all the time.”

    Miranda Leitsinger / NBC News

    An MRI shows the faint upward track of the shotgun pellet through the middle of Petra Anderson's brain.

    Adding to the family’s worries are the medical bills: Petra’s insurance won’t likely cover all of her expenses and her mom’s insurance won’t pay for her alternative cancer treatments, Chloe Anderson said. So, working with friends, she and Hogan set up a fundraising campaign to raise money for them.

    “My mother’s recovery is going to be integral to my sister’s recovery and vice versa,” she said. “I know that both of their recoveries are … intertwined.”

    But the campaign won’t just raise funds for mother and daughter: part of it will also go to other victims. The money will be funneled to the Colorado Organization for Victims Assistance. Also, three of the hospitals in the area that treated victims announced Wednesday they will forgive some or all of the medical costs associated with the attack.

    “If you have a blessing, it’s great to have it, but it’s even better to be able to share,” Chloe Anderson said.

    “We're not the only ones suffering and going through this,” Hogan said. “A lot of other people in this tragedy have a story like this, too, and are suffering … nobody walked in that theater with a perfect life, with no other worries, no baggage.”

    In the days since Anderson was shot, she has been eating, smiling, and telling the cerebral jokes she is known for, her sister said. She also took a stroll around the intensive care unit but has been in pain, a bit groggy from the medicine, and her loved one have noticed some deficiencies, such as it taking her “a little while to come to whatever it is that she is saying,” Chloe Anderson said.

    Marc Piscotty for NBC News

    Chloe Anderson, left, of Aurora, Colo., and Petra Anderson's boyfriend, Austin Hogan of Marin County, Ca., talked about some of her injuries as she recovered in a nearby hospital.

    She hasn’t asked about what happened at the theater, where she had gone with two friends (one survived being shot several times; the other was uninjured), and her family didn’t want to cause her any additional stress by bringing it up.

    Her long-term prognosis is good, seeing that she has survived the injuries so far, Rauzzino said, noting that “given the fact that there's not more permanent damage on this study (MRI), we're very hopeful that she's going to make a very good recovery from this.”

    Shooter not going to have ‘last say’
    As Anderson’s family spends their days immersed in her recovery, which they update on an increasingly popular Facebook page that has in turn provided them emotional support, Chloe Anderson said she doesn’t think much about the alleged gunman.

    “I’ve been so consumed with focusing on how to make this a better situation,” she said. “It doesn’t serve anybody for me to be really angry at him … I need to focus on helping who I can help, and right now, I can help my sister and my family, and maybe help some of the other families, as well.”

    The shooter also was not going to have the “last say,” Hogan said. “From the moment this happened, that hasn’t been the story … the story has been about the victims and the survivors and the families and the incredible communities of support.”

    There was a lot of gratitude “for all of these people that have held up these families in this incredible time of suffering,” he added. “Knowing that we can make an impact … that we have an ability to get a voice out there of hope, a message of hope to everybody, to as large an audience as we can, to show that, you know, there is something incredible that can come from something so terrible.”

    NBC News' JoNel Aleccia contributed to this report.

    NBC News' Kate Snow presents a photo montage of powerful images captured throughout the weekend tragedy as the city of Aurora, Colo., begins to heal from a shooting massacre that claimed 12 lives.

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    564 comments

    I hope she recovers completely. May the Lord's healing hand touch those that were injured.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: theater, movie, shooting, friday, colorado, night, premiere, batman, aurora
  • 20
    Jul
    2012
    11:53am, EDT

    Woman who died in Colo. movie rampage narrowly escaped being shot last month

    Jordan Ghawi, whose sister, Jessica, was killed in the shooting at an Aurora, Colo., movie theater recounts how he learned of his sister's death through a phone call from his mother at 2 a.m. and describes her as "tenacious" and "vivacious."

    By Miranda Leitsinger and Elizabeth Chuck, NBC News

    A woman who died in the movie theater shooting in Denver escaped a shooting at a mall in Toronto last month, saying an “odd feeling” compelled her to leave the shopping center.

    Jessica Ghawi, 24, had recently moved from San Antonio to Denver, kens5.com reported. An aspiring sportscaster, she had gone to see the movie “Batman: The Dark Knight Rises,” with a friend from Texas who was injured in the shooting, the television station reported.

    Ghawi, who wrote under the name Jessica Redfield, said on her blog that she was visiting Toronto in June and stopped by a popular shopping mall to get something to eat when she got an “odd feeling” in her chest.

    “This empty, almost sickening feeling won’t go away. I noticed this feeling when I was in the Eaton Center in Toronto just seconds before someone opened fire in the food court,” she wrote in her blog. “An odd feeling which led me to go outside and unknowingly out of harm‘s way. It’s hard for me to wrap my mind around how a weird feeling saved me from being in the middle of a deadly shooting.”


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “My receipt shows my purchase was made at 6:20 pm. After that purchase I said I felt funny. It wasn’t the kind of funny you feel after spending money you know you shouldn’t have spent. It was almost a panicky feeling that left my chest feeling like something was missing. A feeling that was overwhelming enough to lead me to head outside in the rain to get fresh air instead of continuing back into the food court to go shopping at SportChek. The gunshots rung out at 6:23. Had I not gone outside, I would’ve been in the midst of gunfire.”

    Two men were killed in that shooting. Ghawi described seeing emergency responders arrive to the scene. 

    “I feel like I am overreacting about what I experienced. But I can’t help but be thankful for whatever caused me to make the choices that I made that day. My mind keeps replaying what I saw over in my head. I hope the victims make a full recovery. I wish I could shake this odd feeling from my chest. The feeling that’s reminding me how blessed I am. The same feeling that made me leave the Eaton Center. The feeling that may have potentially saved my life.”

    NBC News confirmed Friday from Ghawi's family that she had died of injuries sustained in the overnight rampage. Her brother was flying to Denver Friday morning, her father, Nick Ghawi, told NBC.

    Ghawi's brother Jordan described his sister "tenacious, vivacious," to NBC's TODAY show. "You could add almost any moniker to my sister and she would fit it."

    "She was sharp, funny, enthusiastic and had the kind of passion for sports and journalism that makes people succeed," sportswriter Jesse Spector wrote on the Sporting News  website.

    Spector said he exchanged tweets with Ghawi just minutes before the movie started.

    Sports radio station 104.3 tweeted "We're sad to report @JessicaRedfield, an intern for The Fan, was 1 of those killed in the theater shooting. Our prayers are w/her family."

    On his blog, Jessica's brother Jordan wrote about the moment he heard the news.

    "At approximately 0215 CST, I received an hysterical, and almost unintelligible, phone call from my mother stating that my sister, Jessica Ghawi, had been shot while attending the midnight showing of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Denver, CO. I was able to contact the man that was with my sister, mutual friend Brent Lowak, who stated that they were in the theatre when an incendiary device was fired into the crowd and that shots rang out immediately afterwards. Brent further stated that he took two rounds and that my sister took one round followed by an additional round which appeared to strike her in the head. At this time, I do not have confirmation that she is alive or dead."

    Around 12:30 p.m., Jordan posted a grim update. "Have received word from the coroner's office that Jessica has indeed died of injuries sustained in the shooting." 

    He also said he had visited Lowak, the friend Jessica had been with, in the hospital. Lowak was "medically stable," he tweeted.

    Jessica Ghawi had exchanged tweets with friends before the midnight showing of the new Batman movie began, teasing one friend for not going to the early screening like she was.

    "Of course we're seeing Dark Knight. Redheaded Texan spitfire, people should never argue with me. Maybe I should get in on those NHL talks..." she tweeted from her Twitter handle, @JessicaRedfield.

    A friend of Ghawi's, Mike Lavender, told MSNBC-TV that she "moved to Denver to pursue her dream. One of the things that she had been working on with all the fires in Colorado was she had asked everybody to donate sports equipment for people because she knows how sports brings such joy."

    After hearing the news Lavender had spoken with Ghawi's mother, who was planning on visiting her daughter in Colorado next week. 

    "It was surreal," he said. "When somebody you know is involved, when somebody you know is murdered, it hits you in a place that I wish on nobody. It's devastating." 

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    353 comments

    While not funny, it almost like the movie Final Destination. She was able to avoid death but it came back to find her. I wish her family and friends well during the trying times to come. Enjoy the extra time you got to talk and spend with her. Cherish them forever. Esprit De Corps.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: movie, shooting, colorado, batman, jessica-ghawi
  • 21
    May
    2012
    6:57pm, EDT

    Porn actress pleads guilty in slaying of tattoo parlor owner after sex party

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Amanda Logue and her boyfriend, Jason Andrews, are charged in the death Dennis

    NEW PORT RICHEY, Fla. – A porn actress accused with her lover of killing a tattoo parlor owner after a sex party pleaded guilty on Monday to a reduced charge that will get her 40 years in prison.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The Tampa Bay Times reports that Amanda Logue, 30, entered the plea in Pasco County. Logue, who performed in adult films under the name Sunny Dae, was originally charged with first-degree murder but was allowed to plead guilty to second-degree murder in a plea deal, according to the newspaper.

    Dennis “Scooter” Abrahamsen of Tampa was found stabbed and bludgeoned to death on a massage table in his New Port Richey home in May 2010. Court records show that Logue had been paid to attend a sex party Abrahamsen hosted at his home the night before he was killed.


    Florida investigators say Logue and her boyfriend, Jason Andrews, traded dozens of text messages in May about their plans to kill the man before he was bludgeoned him to death with a sledgehammer.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

    Authorities said that while Logue was inside "servicing" the 41-year-old Abrahamsen, Andrews waited outside, waiting for word to attack, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

    "I'm so glad you're really commited (sic) to this take. Keep eyes for a knife, etc for me!" Andrews said in a text message to Logue, according to records obtained by the Tampa Bay Times.

    Logue texted back, saying she wanted to have sex with Andrews "after we kill" Abrahamsen, the Times reported.

    "Just get him on his face either bash or tell me to get in and where to go," Andrews texted, according to the Tampa Bay Tribune.

    Andrews, 28, pleaded guilty to a first-degree murder in January and agreed to spend the rest of his life in prison without the possibility of parole, the Times reported.

    Logue is being held at the Pasco County Jail.

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    34 comments

    Wow, for a bisexual female porn star this sentence was basically a free Club Med vacation for 40 years. Free room and board, ... and an unending stream of sex partners, both inmates and guards. Sometimes justice works out OK for the peeps! HA! ;-)

    Show more
    Explore related topics: movie, porn, sex, party, actors, star, tampa, adult
  • 13
    Mar
    2012
    3:47pm, EDT

    If they build it, will you go?

    Dave Kettering / Debuque Telegraph Herald file via AP

    People enjoy the "Field of Dreams" baseball field in rural Dyersville, Iowa.

    By Robert Hood

    “Field of Dreams” is one of the few movies that actually moved me to tears when I saw it in the theater. I know it’s corny, but it still does. I can’t stop myself from watching whenever I run across it while channel surfing late-night television. Who can resist ghosts, baseball and believing in the impossible?

    It appears that the town where the movie was shot continues to wrestle with one of the central questions of the movie. Dyersville, Iowa is considering a $38 million plan to turn the farmland around the famous cornfield diamond into a marquee destination for traveling youth baseball teams. While the plan could provide an economic lift to the region, it also has unleashed an emotional battle as the town of 4,000 tries to decide if they should build it.

    From the City of Dyersville website:

    In 1982, screenwriter Phil Robinson became interested in the novel "Shoeless Joe."  He recognized the potential for this heartwarming story and looked for a setting for the film.  In the early months of 1988, Robinson came upon the Lansing farm near Dyersville and said, "That's it!  That's my farm!"  The movie produced was called "The Field of Dreams," starring Kevin Costner and James Earl Jones.  Today the site is well maintained and visited by many baseball enthusiasts.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    7 comments

    We live about 2 hours from this as well as that farm that got blown to bits by that tornado in the movie, Twister.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: entertainment, sports, iowa, movie, baseball, us-news, featured, dyersville
  • 26
    Jan
    2012
    1:19pm, EST

    'Wasn't the best thing I had ever done': Ex-traffic cop in porn flick fights for job

    A California traffic cop who was fired after appearing in a porn film while on duty and in uniform is trying to get his job back. KNBC-TV's Joel Grover reports.

    By NBC News and msnbc.com staff

    A former Los Angeles traffic officer said he was “totally unaware” when he was asked to appear in a porn movie while on duty and in uniform last year and now wants his job back.

    “I was caught totally unaware, by surprise,” John Dancler said during his appeal to the Los Angeles Civil Service Commission on Wednesday.

    Dancler was fired in July 2011 in the wake of an NBC4 investigation, which showed him and another traffic officer in a porn movie while on duty and in uniform, NBCLosAngeles.com reported.

    View NBCLosAngeles.com's video of commission proceedings

    “I could not believe what was going on, it was really surreal,” Dancler said during the hearing.

    The NBC4 porn investigation went viral around the world last spring. The NBC4 team also uncovered a longstanding pattern of traffic officers who were convicted of crimes on the job, including soliciting prostitutes and shoplifting, but none had ever been disciplined, as recommended by city policy.

    Read original investigation by NBCLosAngeles.com

    Dancler said he was responding to a call for backup help in 2008 when a porn actress and her crew approached him, asking him to engage in lewd acts with the blonde woman.

    Dancler admitted under questioning he had made a mistake.

    "It wasn’t the best thing that I had ever done," Dancler said.

    When asked if he informed others about the exchange on the streets, Dancler said “No.”

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    111 comments

    Once again the weak minded media cant seem to gather basic facts on a story. This person has never been a "cop", policeman or Law Enforcement of any kind as the story states.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: la, movie, porn, cops, news, nbc, featured, nbc4

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