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  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    3:01pm, EST

    Conn. massacre: Lessons from Israel, where guns are a way of life

    By Paul Goldman, NBC News

    NEWS ANALYSIS

    TEL AVIV -- The Connecticut school massacre has raised the issue of gun control not only in the United States but also in Israel, where self-defense is not so much a point of law as a way of life.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In Israel, schools are protected by armed guards, and everyone is on some sort of an alert for suspicious objects or people.

    Cars and personal belongings are checked at cafés, movies theaters, public buildings and malls.

    Although security guards here are not your typical ex-Navy SEALS, they do act as a first barrier – a line of defense that could have saved the lives of the innocent children at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

    Young men carrying M16 rifles – soldiers either on their way back or coming home from their military base – are a common sight on main streets in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv.

    However, it is very difficult for any Israeli civilian to purchase and own a gun, and all must have a license to do so. The ownership of  assault rifles by a private person is forbidden, and pistols are limited to one per person.

    In a country with a population of almost 8 million there are only about 300,000 weapons, of which just over half - 170,000 - belong to private individuals. The rest belong to security institutions. 

    The license process, which must be completed every year, includes mental and physical health checkups as well as a firing-range exercise. Most importantly, it is a crime with harsh penalty to carry a weapon in Israel without a license.

    Security guards must meet regulations before they are granted the license to carry a gun; they must be at least 27 years old, unless they served in the army, in which case they can apply at the age of 21. They also need to be a resident of Israel for at least three years and sign a waiver that gives the health ministry and the police the right to check their health and criminal records.

    Yariv, owner of the Lahav weapon shop in Tel Aviv, told Israeli Army radio: "A very little amount of people buy private guns, since the Israeli citizen knows in advance that his chances to buy and own a gun amounts to zero.

    “Most of the buyers are men who are demanded by their work to carry a weapon.”

    There are only a few tens of thousands of legal guns in Israel, most owned by settlers living in the West Bank who are granted dispensation because of the need for self-defense while traveling to and from the West Bank.

    Such measures mean that, despite a backdrop of violence committed with illegal weapons, there are hardly any random killings at all. It is impossible for a 20-year-old to buy and own a gun openly.

    Paul Goldman is an NBC journalist based in Tel Aviv.

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    209 comments

    Im a gun owner, an ex-Marine and im still a very good shot, and I don't see the point in a civilian owning an assault weapon. The 30.6 is fine for deer hunting and any pistol will stop an intruder, so assault weapons must be to make you feel like your dick is bigger. This problem is a problem with m …

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    Explore related topics: israel, world, law, gun, nbc, featured, nra, newtown, paul-goldman, connecticut-school-shooting
  • 31
    Aug
    2012
    7:22am, EDT

    Employee shoots 2 dead at NJ supermarket before killing himself, police say

    Police report at least three people are dead after a gunman opened fire at a Pathmark grocery store in Old Bridge, New Jersey. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 5 p.m. ET: Three people are dead after an employee shot to death two coworkers before killing himself at a New Jersey supermarket Friday morning, authorities said.

    Police said the shooting happened just before 4 a.m. inside a Pathmark grocery store on Route 9 in Old Bridge, N.J., about 25 miles from New York.

    Rich Schultz / AP

    Police investigate a shooting at a Pathmark grocery store on Route 9 in Old Bridge, N.J., on Friday.



    The victims were 18-year-old Christine Lo Brutto and 24-year-old Bryan Breen, both from Old Bridge. The gunman, Terence S. Tyler, was 23 years old, police said.

    All three were working the night shift at the Pathmark with 12 other employees. The store was closed at the time, scheduled to open at 6 a.m.

    Get the latest on the supermarket shooting from BreakingNews.com

    Police believe Tyler may have gotten into an argument with a coworker at the Pathmark before he allegedly left the store around 3:30 a.m. Police say he then went to his car, drove away and returned to the store about 20 minutes later, dressed in camouflage clothing and with a weapon similar to an AK-47 assault rifle.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Police say Tyler opened fired on an employee standing outside the store, then went inside and fired at least 16 shots from the rifle at five employees, killing two people. He then killed himself with a handgun.

    Some employees ran out of the back of the store to escape, while police safely removed other employees after making entry into the store. No shots were fired by police.

    Authorities said the victims were not necessarily targeted, but the motive is under investigation. Officials recovered the rifle, several ammunition magazines and a 45 caliber handgun from the scene.

    See more coverage from NBCNewYork.com

    Tyler was a former Marine, who earned several medals for his service between March 2008 and February 2010. At the time of his discharge, he achieved the rank of Lance Corporal. He was an Old Bridge resident and had been working at the Pathmark since Aug. 20. Police said Tyler may have had a history of depression and mental illness.

    The family of victim Lo Brutto, a recent high school grad, has asked for privacy. However, neighbor Carolyn Anders said Lo Brutto had a "heart of gold, always smile on her face."

    "Why does an 18-year-old have to lose her life? She just [began] it," Anders said.

    A vigil for Lo Brutto and Breen was planned for Friday night.

    NBC News

    An aerial view of the Pathmark supermarket in Old Bridge, N.J., where a shooting that occurred at about 4 a.m. Friday left three people, including the gunman, dead.

    Employees who were in the store at the time of the shooting congregated later in the morning outside a TGI Friday's restaurant in the shopping center where the supermarket is located.

    New Jersey Transit closed its nearby park-and-ride lot, The Associated Press reported.

    Aerial news video showed heavily armed police on the ground outside the supermarket and several windows broken. 

    The store was closed Friday. Pathmark officials had no immediate comment on the shooting.

    NBC News' Jonathan Dienst, Brynn Gingras, Brian Thompson and Katherine Creag contributed to this report.

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    1456 comments

    Oh Lord, please stop the madness!

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    Explore related topics: new-york, shooting, new-jersey, gun, supermarket, nbc, featured, crime-courts
  • 11
    Jul
    2012
    6:18am, EDT

    Freight train derailment, explosion in Ohio prompts mile-wide evacuation

    Fire officials in Columbus, Ohio, battle a massive blaze after a train derailed, with residents within a mile of the accident evacuated. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

    By NBC4 in Columbus, Ohio

    A mile-wide area was evacuated after a freight train derailed in Columbus, Ohio, early Wednesday, causing an explosion and fire.

    Two people who were close by when the train derailed were injured. The victims drove themselves to the hospital but their conditions are unknown.

    The train crew was able to safely move the locomotives and three freight cars from the scene. There were no injuries to train personnel.

    Teams trained to deal with hazardous materials are on the scene of the blaze, near the Ohio State Fairgrounds in north Columbus.


    According to Mike McNutt with Columbus Public Health, several of the train cars contained styrene which, if ignited, can emanate a gas that affects the nervous system if inhaled.

    It would become a "nerve agent," McNutt said, adding that those cars were the biggest concern in calling for the evacuation. HAZMAT crews had moved those cars away from the fire.

    Andrew Spear / AP

    Lt. Terry Bush said the accident happened at about 2 a.m. Wednesday in a mixed-use part of the city.

    McNutt toldNBC4, "It doesn't look like the situation is escalating."

    Officials say a southbound train with two locomotives and 98 cars of mixed freight derailed between E. 11th and E. 5th avenues at about 2 a.m. ET.

    Read the full story at NBC 4 in Columbus, Ohio

    Eleven cars derailed but it is not known just how many caught fire. At least two were still burning at 7:30 a.m. Officials said they will allow the alcohol to burn for the next six to eight hours.

    Rail company Norfolk Southern is working with emergency personnel to determine what cargo is on fire.

    Residents in the area are being asked to evacuate between E. 11th to E. 5th avenues, and N. Grant Avenue to Interstate 71. Police say the evacuees have been taken to the Rhodes Building at the fairgrounds.

    The cause of the incident was under investigation.

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    136 comments

    Pretty much what Jake said. The railroad has a whole department devoted to hazmat and enviornmental emergencies. They go through rigourous training, as does every employee that works on the railroad. How often do you hear about train wrecks? Now how often do you hear about semis wrecking? They haul  …

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    Explore related topics: ohio, fire, accident, train, columbus, derailment, nbc, railroad, us-news, featured
  • 31
    May
    2012
    4:43am, EDT

    Truck runs into students at high school; 9 hospitalized

    Nine people were hospitalized after a truck veered into a crowd outside of a California high school. KNBC-TV's Beverly White reports.

    By NBC4 and msnbc.com news services

    HEMET, Calif. - A high school student in a pickup truck ran into a group of teenagers who were crossing a street outside a California high school Wednesday, leaving nine people injured and backpacks and clothing strewn across an intersection, officials said.

    The accident occurred shortly after school ended for the day at Hemet High School, Riverside County fire officials said in a statement.


    Eight out of the nine people hospitalized were students, officials said.

    The driver, a student at the school, named by police a David Carrillo,18, ran into a group of people who were in an intersection headed toward the student parking lot and the school's football stadium, principal Emily Shaw said.

    "The kids were in the crosswalk doing everything right," Shaw said.

    Three of those victims were in critical condition, including 15-year-old Helen Richardson, who was in a "conscious coma" and intubated, according to her mother Trisha Telezinski.

    Read more at NBC4 Southern California

    Witnesses reported hearing Carrillo yell out, "My brakes have gone out," Telezinski said.

    Early reports indicated eight pedestrians were taken to the hospital, and at least five of the victims were students, according to CAL FIRE. California Highway Patrol later clarified that nine people were hospitalized, eight of them students at the high school, which had just let out at the time of the crash, according to NBCLosAngeles.com.

    NBC4 News said highway patrol officials believe the truck may have had a mechanical problem and has been impounded for inspection.

    Drugs and alcohol have been ruled out as a factor, officials said, adding that criminal charges against the driver, if any, will be determined after the evidence has been examined.

    A statement released by California Highway Patrol Officer Darren Meyer said the truck was travelling "at a speed greater than the 25 MPH school zone speed limit.”

    "The driver stopped immediately after the collision to assist the victims," Meyer said.

    Parent Rick Chavez witnessed the accident while waiting at the red light just after picking up his son, the Riverside Press-Enterprise reported.

    “The guy went through the red light. …I saw the truck and started screaming out ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa!’” Chavez told the newspaper. “He plowed right into the kids. Two girls were really bad. I thought they were gone. I was in shock.”

    NBC4's Olsen Ebright, Samantha Tata and Beverly White, msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    187 comments

    He couldn't stop because his brakes went out but then he stopped to help after he hit them? Did his brakes suddenly start working again? It doesn't make sense...

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  • 29
    May
    2012
    4:26am, EDT

    Dallas standoff ends as man falls to death from crane

    Tim Sharp / Reuters

    Police cruisers block an intersection leading to the scene of the construction crane standoff in Dallas, Texas, Monday.

    By NBCDFW.com

    DALLAS -- The standoff between Dallas police and a man that climbed to the top of a construction crane on the campus of Southern Methodist University ended early Tuesday morning, when the man fell to his death.

    At about 1 a.m. Dallas police used bright lights, loud directional sirens and the police helicopter to distract the man, while four SWAT officers climbed the crane to storm the cab believed to be 100 to 150 feet above the ground.


    Police say the man sprayed a WD-40-like substance at officers as they entered the cab. He then climbed out the smashed windshield of the cab.

    "He retreated to a position in the crane where he had one leg in a window and one leg outside the window, from there he went over the edge, and clung to the edge for a moment before he fell to his death," said Dallas Deputy Chief Randy Blankenbaker.

    The man fell just before 2 a.m. Tuesday morning, ending a roughly 14-hour standoff.

    "We at SMU are relieved this situation has been resolved and the campus is secure. We all regret the loss of life," said SMU spokesman Brad Cheves.

    Read the full story at NBCDFW.com

    Throughout the day, the suspect dropped items from the crane cab, including his shirt and shoes, some cans, a fire extinguisher, and other items that may have been inside the cab.

    Tim Sharp / Reuters

    A robbery suspect sits in the cab of a construction crane on the SMU campus, Monday.

    Sources tell NBC 5 the man may have become ill during the standoff and vomited, perhaps due to the heat.

    As night fell, Dallas police used a spotlight to shine light into the crane. Police also used noise machines to keep the man awake and talking.

    Man is suspect in armed robbery
    Police did confirmed Tuesday the man is the suspect connected to an overnight robbery about 2:30 a.m. Monday and that police dogs tracked the man's scent to the construction site.

    David Cantu said he was putting sound and lighting equipment into the truck outside the Adolphus Hotel when a man jumped in and tried to stab him with something sharp, possibly a nail.

    "I said, What are you doing?'" Cantu said. "He swung his arm at me with a sharp object and for the most part, I just backed off and let him do his thing."

    Cantu said the man sped away, hitting several cars parked along Main Street.

    "You hear a big bang multiple times," he said. "He's hitting multiple cars at that point."

    The stolen truck was later found not far from the crane, according to police.

    Chris Ghanbari, a freelance photographer who lives in a building overlooking the scene, got out his video camera and started rolling.

    "I just started shooting a minute -- a minute-and-a-half -- of video of the crime scene," Ghanbari said. "About 30 minutes later, we had 10 to 15 police cars out there."

    Here is his video:

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    285 comments

    I hope he didn't land on anything important.

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  • 16
    May
    2012
    8:41am, EDT

    Stimulus dollars funded erectile dysfunction study in California

    By NBCBayArea.com

    This may not have been the type of "stimulus" feds intended.

    Two grants totaling nearly $1.5 million were distributed to the University of California San Francisco, NBCBayArea.com has discovered. The money was part of the federal stimulus program and went to studies into the erectile dysfunction of overweight middle aged men and the accurate reporting of someone's sexual history.

    This is part of our ongoing series of investigations by the NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit into who got federal stimulus dollars, and why some projects did not break ground more than two years after receiving the grant.

    The Investigative Unit looked closely at the federal government's decision to spend nearly $1.5 million of taxpayer money, money that came here to California. Grant number 1R01HD056950-01A2 was among the thousands of grants funded, receiving $1.2 million. This grant studied how to improve the accuracy of how people responded to questions about their sexual history.

    Read original stimulus investigation on NBCBayArea.com


    Follow @msnbc_us

    "If you honestly report on your sexual activity and number of partners?" Scott Amey asked with a sigh. "That's a good one."

    Amey is the general council for  POGO, the Project on Government Oversight, a Washington D.C. nonpartisan non-profit government watchdog group. During our interview with an NBC crew he tried to explain why the government used that many tax dollars to improve self reports about high risk sexual behavior.

    "I don't think most tax payers would think that would be a justified spending of stimulus money to conduct a sex study over fixing bridges and roads that are crumbling every day," Amey added.

    NBC Bay Area talked to the University of California San Francisco, the institution that received the grant. "Does it make you wonder a little bit, stimulus money for a study like this?" Kovaleski asked Jeff Sheehy, who works at the UCSF Aids Research Center. "No it doesn't," he answered. "Because to my mind we save money if we get better health outcomes."

    According to the grant, a good portion of the study will "Improve the accuracy of responses to questions," specifically questions about a person's sexual behavior. "Playing devil's advocate," Kovaleski said to Sheehy, "Do taxpayers need to spend $1.2 million to figure this out?""The judgment wasn't one that I was asked," Sheehy replied.

    The NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit discovered that for $1.2 million, taxpayers funded a study that included 200 videotaped interviews at $6000 per interview. Kovaleski asked Sheehy to justify the spending. "I think the average person is going to look at $1.2 million dollars to interview 200 people and say Wow!" Sheehy defended the study. "I understand people could look at it and have issues but this is research," he said.

    How many jobs did this actually create?
    Kovaleski then asked about jobs. "How many jobs did this $1.26 million create?" "Well I can't really say," Sheehy said. "There were eleven researchers hired on the job, two consultants. Well I can't say. This has not been evaluated for job creation."

    The number Sheehy quoted during an interview with NBC Bay Area did not match information on recovery.gov, the government's website for stimulus funds. According to the site, the grant produced 0.85 jobs. "It does make you scratch your head and wonder," Amey said, "Wait a second taxpayer dollars went to a sex study that barely funded less than one person."

    Amey was also left questioning another UCSF grant. When asked by an NBC reporter about a study into erectile dysfunction involving overweight middle aged men he replied, "Oh boy."

    The grant totaled more than a quarter million dollars. Although UCSF was willing to discuss our questions about the sexual history grant, the University declined to provide an expert to talk with the NBC Investigative Unit about the erectile dysfunction grant. In a written statement provided they said in part, "Obesity related health issues currently cost $147 billion per year in direct medical costs in the United States..... Health providers therefore continue to search for incentives to encourage people to live a healthier lifestyle, to benefit both indviduals and society.... Preliminary analysis indicates that is is feasible to enroll men in this type of research, they successfully lose the expected weight over a 12-week period, and they see an improvement in ED symptoms." You can read the entire statement by clicking here.

    Click here to see the high risk sexual behavior grant

    Click here to see the erectile dysfunction grant

    If you have any other examples of questionable stimulus spending, we want to know. Call us at 1-888-996-TIPS (8477) or email theunit@nbcbayarea.com.

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    192 comments

    Is this a "pork" project???

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  • 15
    May
    2012
    4:23am, EDT

    Missing Ariz. girl Isabel Celis: Police release 911 calls

    The father of a 6-year-old Isabel Celis, who vanished just over three weeks ago, has now been barred from having  contact with his two other children. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    By KVOA.com, NBC News affiliate in Tuscon, and msnbc.com news services

    PHOENIX - Tucson police on Monday released recordings of 911 calls reporting the disappearance of Arizona 6-year-old Isabel Celis, who authorities said may have been snatched from her bed last month.

    The high-profile search for hazel-eyed Isabel, who was reported missing on April 21 from the home she shared with her older brothers and both parents, drew national media attention as volunteers and police combed streets in her middle class Tucson neighborhood looking for her.


    In the audio recording, Isabel's father, Sergio Celis, calmly tells the operator he wants to "to report a missing person. My little girl who's 6-years-old. I believe she was abducted from our house."

    Dad asked to stay away from missing Tucson girl's brothers

    The second 911 was placed by Isabel's mother, Rebecca. The audio of the call and a transcript were posted by NBC News affiliate in Tuscon, KVOA.com.

    Rebecca: Hello?
    Dispatcher: Hello ma'am are you the mom?
    Rebecca: Yes.
    Dispatcher: Okay, what is your name?
    Rebecca: My name is Rebecca Celis. C-E-L-I-S
    Dispatcher: Okay, anything else you remember she was wearing and her hair?
    Rebecca: Her hair is in braids. It's in little ponytails. I made little ponytails on her head last night before she went to bed.

    Dispatcher: So who, noticed her gone, your husband?

    Rebecca: My husband, I went to work this morning at seven and um, I just, and I didn't even come and check on her, I should have come and checked on her.

    Dispatcher: Okay, now you looked everywhere, under the beds, the closets, everything?
    Rebecca: Yeah, I looked everywhere, I even looked _______— (inaudible) the windows out of our house. Somebody took the window out of our house.

    Earlier on Monday, police said Isabel's two elder brothers had been placed in the sole care of their mother over concerns for their welfare.

    More recordings at NBC News affiliate in Tuscon, KVOA.com

    Tucson Police Chief Roberto Villasenor said the girl's father, Sergio Celis, had agreed not to have any contact with his sons, who are now in the care of their mother, Rebecca Celis.

    Villasenor told reporters at a news conference that Sergio Celis had entered a voluntary agreement with Child Protective Services to stay away from the children, but declined to elaborate.

    "Child Protective Services said that this would be the best scenario at this point," he said. The police chief did not give the boys' ages or names.

    The girl's parents have told police Isabel was last seen when she was put to bed on the night of April 20. The family awoke the next morning to find her bed empty. Authorities said a window to the girl's ground-floor room was open, and a screen was missing.

    Police have said they are treating the girl's disappearance as a "possible abduction," but have yet to rule anyone out as a suspect.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    1,000 tips from the public
    In a news release on Friday, Tucson police said they had been in contact with Child Protective Services after becoming aware of "information regarding the welfare of the older Celis children," but did not elaborate.

    Several days after Isabel vanished, Sergio and Rebecca Celis made a tearful public appeal for her safe return, pleading with their daughter's presumed abductors to "tell us what you want."

    After making their brief, anguished appeal, they hugged volunteers who helped in a search for their missing daughter, then walked away without fielding questions from the media.

    During the search in recent weeks, Villasenor said police have received more than 1,000 tips from the public. Police have also canvassed homes in a 3-mile radius of the girl's home and searched the Celis house using sniffer dogs. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    92 comments

    I hope Isabel is found safe soon and returned to her parents. Having a daughter myself I can't imagine what they are going through.

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  • 2
    Mar
    2012
    6:27pm, EST

    Follow NBC stations' television coverage of tornadoes in Midwest, South

    By msnbc.com staff

    Deadly tornadoes and high winds tore across Indiana, Alabama, Kentucky and Tennessee on Friday, leaving behind a path of death and destruction. Here some of the NBC affiliate stations that are covering the latest developments on the storms.

    WSMV-TV Channel 4 in Nashville, Tenn.

    WBIR-TV in Knoxville, Tenn.

    WAVE 3 News in Louisville, Ky.

    WTHR-TV Channel 13 in Indianapolis

    Alabama's 13 in Birmingham, Ala.

    WSFA.com in Montgomery, Ala.

    You can also find more at The Weather Channel and on the US News blog.

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    Comment

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  • 7
    Feb
    2012
    12:52pm, EST

    Brooklyn teacher's aide arrested on sex abuse charges

    By Jonathan Dienst and Shimon Prokupecz, NBCNewYork.com

    A teacher's aide in Brooklyn who was arrested last month on charges of distributing child pornography has been arrested by the FBI again for allegedly sexually abusing children in the school where he worked, NBC New York has learned.

    Taleek Brooks was a teacher's aide at PS 243 in Crown Heights.

    After his first arrest, FBI officials said they searched Brooks' home. Officials said they discovered videos that allegedly showed him in the school molesting children.


    Last month, Brooks was arrested for allegedly possessing and distributing more than 1,000 images of child pornography. 

    Read original story on NBCNewYork.com

    Prosecutors did not immediately say how many children in the school may have been affected. The videos allegedly show children being spanked and having their private areas touched, officials said.

    A spokesman for U.S. attorney Loretta Lynch said Brooks is expected to be in Brooklyn federal court later Tuesday on the child abuse-related charges. 

    An attempt to reach Brooks' attorney for comment was not immediately successful.

    Investigators are looking to see if there are any additional victims.  Anyone with information is asked to call the FBI at 212-384-5000.

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    4 comments

    It's pretty sad when you're scared to send your children to school because of these animals.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: child, porn, abuse, brooks, video, nbc, tape, brooklyn, taleek
  • 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
  • 10
    Jul
    2011
    5:55pm, EDT

    The miserable postscript for a Casey Anthony juror

    By Kerry Sanders, NBC News

    Her name remains a secret. She’s known simply as juror number 12. And while she has a certificate from Florida’s 9th Circuit, embossed with calligraphy thanking her for her duty as a member of the Casey Anthony jury, her life since being released from that duty has been one of cat and mouse.

    A red-haired woman in her 60s who moved to Florida from Michigan, she told the court she worked at a Publix Grocery when she was questioned as a potential juror.

    Now, she’s in hiding.

    Juror number 12 left Florida. Her husband, fighting back tears, tells NBC News he’s not sure when she’ll return to her home in Florida.

    Why? He says she fears half of her co-workers want her head on a platter.

    The others may understand what she did, but she didn’t want to face them.


    She was due to retire in the fall, but Juror number 12, after being released from sequestration, chose to call her boss to announce she couldn’t come to work. She didn’t feel safe.

    She retired over the phone.

    The husband, who sat with two NBC News producers, glanced repeatedly at his blood pressure monitor on the coffee table and the Bible next to it.

    This God-fearing family describes the after-effects of the Anthony verdict as traumatic.

    First, for 44-days, he was separated from his wife.

    And she was separated from the quiet life they once shared. And now he remains concerned about her health.

    And now, they both face vitriol from those who are unwilling to accept a jury of peers reached a fair verdict based on the evidence presented.

    In a back room, the husband has a manila envelope filled with letters.

    Each is a request from a different news organization asking Juror number 12 for an interview.

    Her husband had packed his own bag and says he’s ready to leave if and when the court releases his wife’s name. For now, the court record of all the jurors’ names remains sealed.

    Her husband says, before she left the state to escape, she told him, “I’d rather go to jail than sit on a jury like this again.”

    • Did Jerry Springer offer Casey Anthony to $1 million to appear on his show?
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    -- Eliana Salzhauer and Debbie Huntting of NBC News contributed to this report

    2558 comments

    Although I don't agree with the verdict, I get why they made the decision they did and to have their lives in jeopardy as they do with death-threats and such is insane! These are regular, everyday folks who did their civic duty. Fellow Americans! Leave them alone!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nbc, casey-anthony, kerry-sanders
  • 28
    Sep
    2010
    7:16pm, EDT

    Mayor paid the price, says it was worth it

    AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

    District of Columbia Mayor Adrian Fenty

    By Elizabeth Chuck, msnbc.com

    A summit on improving education in America this week gave one politician a chance to talk about an issue that may have cost him his re-election.

    Washington, D.C., Mayor Adrian Fenty, who was ousted in a primary earlier this month, was a panelist at NBC's Education Nation summit, and didn't shy away from questions about his public schools chancellor, Michelle Rhee, a polarizing figure in his re-election bid.

    Hired by Fenty in 2007, Rhee was tasked with improving D.C.'s schools, the worst-performing in the nation. Her approach – dismissing hundreds of teachers and administrators who she said had performed poorly and closing 20 schools – sparked a special investigation and a political backlash.

    But it was necessary, Fenty argued on Tuesday.

    "We didn't know it was going to be politically costly," Fenty told NBC's Tom Brokaw at a panel focusing on giving all students a fair shot at succeeding in their education. "These are tough decisions, but we have got to do them; otherwise, this achievement gap is never going to be closed."


    Fenty began his term in January 2007. At that time, he said, African-American students in D.C. were 70 percentage points behind white students in math. "We've closed that by 20 percentage points, which is a huge gain, but it still leaves us 50 percentage points behind," he said. "The greatest worry is that we're just not moving fast enough. If I could do anything over, I'd have moved even faster, to be honest with you."

    Nationwide, nearly half of all black, Hispanic and Native American students do not graduate with their class at public high schools, and many drop out with less than two years of high school education.

    "What are we saying to the kids and parents that we've tolerated this for so long?" Fenty asked. "There is no way to reverse the decades of neglect.

    "It's time we did something about it," he added. "At the end of the day, politicians are going to have to make tough decisions and risk their political future because it's the right thing to do."

    32 comments

    It's about time someone was more worried about doing the right thing instead of just worrying about not pissing anybody off so they could get re-elected

    Show more
    Explore related topics: schools, education, nbc, adrian-fenty, education-nation
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