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  • 3
    May
    2013
    4:24am, EDT

    'Messiah of sex': John Williamson, sexual revolutionary behind bohemian retreat, dies at 80

    Courtesy of Barbara Williamson

    Undated photo of John Williamson at the Sandstone Retreat in California.

    By John Rogers, The Associated Press

    John Williamson, a pioneer of the 1960s sexual revolution as co-founder of Topanga Canyon's Sandstone Retreat, where nudity and free love once took place with abandon, has died. He was 80.

    Williamson died of cancer March 24 at a hospital in in Reno, Nev., according to his wife, Barbara Williamson. The pair had lived on a Northern Nevada ranch for the past 18 years, taking in abandoned lions, tigers, cougars and other big cats.

    They were a young newlywed couple in 1968 when they bought a cluster of rundown buildings on 15 acres overlooking the Pacific Ocean and turned it into the Sandstone Foundation for Community Systems Research.

    It offered seminars on human bonding, relationships and sexuality, but its Sandstone Retreat, where as many as 500 people would gather on weekends to frolic in the nude, swap spouses and engage in group sex, quickly made its existence in the bohemian canyon notorious.

    "We actually had open sexuality and nudity, but it was optional. Everything was optional," Barbara Williamson told The Associated Press on Thursday. "We provided a wonderful, wonderful environment in a natural setting, and that natural setting just sort of gave people permission."

    As the retreat's frontman, Williamson became known as the "messiah of sex" — a title his wife said he always carried proudly.

    Many celebrities were said to have paid quiet visits to Sandstone over the years, and Williamson joked Thursday that she probably "saw more naked Hollywood stars than any other woman."

    Author Gay Talese has said he spent a substantial amount of time there, much of it naked, when he researched his 1981 book, "Thy Neighbor's Wife" on the sexual revolution. Sandstone was also the subject of a 1975 documentary.

    It was reading Ayn Rand's book "Atlas Shrugged" that John Williamson said prompted him to quit a defense-industry job in electronics and move to California in the early 1960s. The book portrays a society in which people, fed up with government and industry controlling their lives, walk away from their jobs.

    But Williamson continued to work in a mainstream job, running an electronics company, until he met his wife when she came by his office one day in 1966 to try to sell him insurance. A few weeks later they were married, and soon after they were planning Sandstone.

    Although membership flourished, Barbara Williamson said, the retreat never took in enough money to pay the bills. They sold the property in 1972, and Sandstone closed a couple years later.

    After an effort to build a tribal community in Montana foundered, the couple moved to the San Francisco Bay area, then to Nevada. There they began to take in big cats whose owners wanted to get rid of them.

    At the time of his death, Williamson was attempting to turn their property into a wild animal sanctuary and educational center.

     

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

    199 comments

    We need more people like this in the world. I truly don't understand how we can allow kids to watch movies that depict close ups of gunshots to the head with brains splattering about, yet we get all upset if someone sees a naked body. As a society, we have our priorities all twisted around.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: california, nevada, obituary, featured, reno, ayn-rand, sexual-revolution, 1960s, gay-talese, john-williamson, topanga-canyon, messiah-of-sex, barbara-williamson, sandstone-foundation
  • 7
    Apr
    2013
    2:16pm, EDT

    Body of Nevada official found in river, four suspects arrested

    Authorities say a body believed to be Nevada's missing chief insurance examiner was found wrapped in a blanket and bound with duct tape in a river, and four suspects were arrested in the case. KRNV's Ashley Cullins reports.

    By Sofia Perpetua, NBC News

    The body of Nevada's missing chief insurance examiner was found wrapped in a blanket and bound with duct tape in a river in Carson City on Saturday. Four suspects in their 20s were arrested and charged with murder in connection to the case, according to the Carson City Sheriff’s Department.

    Sheriff Deputies were called to the apartment of William McCune, 62, after he failed to board a flight with a co-worker and other employees on Thursday.

    Carson City Sheriff's Dept. / AP

    This photo released by the Carson City Sheriff's Office shows William McCune. A sheriff says a body believed to be that of Nevada's chief insurance examiner, McCune, was found Saturday April 6, 2013, in a river in Carson City, and four suspects were arrested in connection with his disappearance.

    At the residence, where McCune lived alone, authorities found evidence of a bloody and violent struggle, but no sign of McCune or any signs of forced entry.

    Four people were quickly arrested but any motive or relationship to the victim is still unknown, Carson City Sheriff Ken Furlong told The Associated Press. Furlong added that McCune’s death might be related to “personal” matters and not be work-related.

    The victim had no known family in Carson City but the police is trying to locate his relatives in another city.

    All four of the suspects -- Michael Evans, 23; Anthony Elliot, 20; Raul Garcia, 22; and Makyla Blackmore, 20 -- were charged with murder.

    Evans was arrested in Carson City and the other three suspects were arrested on the Las Vegas strip on Saturday morning.

    “This crime is very bizarre because of three reasons: the age difference between the suspects and the victim, the number of offenders and the fact that one of offenders is a woman,” Furlong told NBC News.

    “The motive was theft and we believe at least two of the suspects knew the victim," he added.

    An autopsy on the body is being performed by the Washoe County medical examiner’s office to confirm identification and rule on the cause of death.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    It is not yet known what weapon or weapons were involved in the crime, authorities said.

    The victim’s pick-up truck wasn’t found but its license plates were located on Friday night at a residence that suspect Evans frequented, Sheriff Furlong said.

    McCune was working as a chief insurance examiner since December 2009, said the Nevada Division of Insurance spokesman Jake Sunderland to The Associated Press.

    Carson City is the capital of Nevada and has a population of 50,000.

    The Associated Press contributed to this story

    224 comments

    But they were such good kids............USA, you better start taking out the trash. Death penalty may not deter crime, but it damn sure stops repeat offenders !

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nevada, carson-city, william-mccune
  • 31
    Mar
    2013
    11:15am, EDT

    Teen driver arrested after Nevada crash kills five family members

    Nevada Highway Patrol / AP

    Jean Soriano, 18, has been arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence in a southern Nevada crash that killed five members of a California family and injured the suspect and three other people.

     

    By Martin Griffith, The Associated Press

    Five members of a Southern California family were killed in southern Nevada when their van was rear-ended by an 18-year-old driver who was later arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence, authorities said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The five dead were among seven family members who were in the van, authorities said. The other two — the 40-year-old female driver and a 15-year-old boy — were hospitalized in critical condition.

    The van was carrying a couple, their children and some aunts and uncles, he said. Killed were three men in their 40s, a teenage female and an adult female.   

    Jean Soriano of California was booked into the Clark County Detention Center after he was treated and released at University Medical Center in Las Vegas, Nevada Highway Patrol Trooper Loy Hixson said.

    The crash happened at about 3 a.m. Saturday on Interstate 15 near the Utah line. Soriano's sport utility vehicle struck the van from behind, causing both vehicles to spin out of control and roll near Mesquite, some 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas, investigators said.

    A 23-year-old passenger in Soriano's SUV was treated at the hospital and released.

    Authorities believe Soriano was returning from a visit with family in Utah to his home in California at the time of the wreck, Hixson said. They didn't immediately release his hometown or the names or hometowns of the victims.

    Beer bottles were found in the SUV, Hixson said, and troopers performed a blood-alcohol test on Soriano at the hospital. The results won't be known for a couple of weeks, he said.

    Hixson said only two of the seven people in the van were wearing seat belts. The five who were not buckled in were ejected, but one survived.

    "Unfortunately, so many in the van weren't wearing seat belts, and some might have survived had they been wearing them," Hixson said. "We see it so many times where people can survive simply by having a seat belt on."

     

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

    226 comments

    How about a dammed citizenship test?

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    Explore related topics: crash, california, dui, nevada, suv
  • 29
    Mar
    2013
    12:33pm, EDT

    'How dare they?' Hours after being kicked out of Nevada Legislature, ex-lawmaker arrested

    By Ken Ritter, The Associated Press

    Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Dept. via AP

    Nevada state Assembly member Steven Brooks is seen in a booking photo Feb. 10, 2013 after he was arrested on charges that he physically attacked a family member and grabbed for a police officer's weapon over the weekend.

    Former Nevada Assemblyman Steven Brooks has been arrested in California on charges including resisting arrest and throwing objects, just hours after he became the first lawmaker ever expelled from the Nevada Legislature. 

    Jail records show Barstow police arrested Brooks, 41, at about 7 p.m. Thursday on Interstate 15 at Stoddard Wells. 

    "We had started to discuss possible next steps," Mitchell Posin, Brooks' attorney, told The Associated Press Friday. "Next thing I know, I heard about this." 

    Posin said he had no details about the arrest, or about why Brooks was on the interstate in Barstow. 

    Records show the North Las Vegas Democrat was taken to a San Bernardino County jail in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., on $100,000 bail. 

    The Nevada Assembly voted Thursday morning to oust Brooks, after Assembly Majority Leader William Horne, D-Las Vegas, called him "potentially dangerous" and said lawmakers didn't feel safe with him in the building. 

    "This really saddens me," Horne said Friday, after learning of the arrest. "I hope they get Steven the help he clearly needs before he or someone else is hurt or worse." 

    This is the third time Brooks has been arrested since January. 

    He's accused of making threats toward his colleagues, including Assembly Speaker Marilyn Kirkpatrick. Police said Brooks had a gun and ammunition in his car. No charges have been filed. 

    He was arrested again Feb. 10 at his estranged wife's home in Las Vegas after police say he threw punches and grabbed for the gun of an officer who responded to a domestic dispute. He faces a court hearing in May in Las Vegas on one felony and three lesser charges. 

    Brooks also was denied the purchase of a gun in Sparks last month after he was banished from the chambers. Posin said there's been a misunderstanding and Brooks poses no real threat to anyone. 

    Horne said Brooks' unpredictable behavior — which included missing meetings, calling news conferences he never showed up for, and posing shirtless for a Las Vegas newspaper — had made the session look "more like a circus and daytime drama than a serious legislative body." 

    Cathleen Allison / AP

    Nevada Assembly Majority Leader William Horne, D-Las Vegas, hugs Assemblywoman Dina Neal, D-North Las Vegas, following an emotional and historic vote to expel fellow Assemblyman Steven Brooks, D-North Las Vegas, during the Assembly floor session at the Legislative Building in Carson City, Nev., on March 27.

    It led to hours of closed meetings and a Select Committee hearing Tuesday night in which a panel voted 6-1 to recommend to expel Brooks. 

    The committee said a 900-page investigative report that members reviewed was not made public because of the private nature of the findings. 

    Assemblywoman Dina Neal, D-North Las Vegas, was the lone dissenter on the committee, saying she preferred a less harsh penalty like suspension. 

    Neal choked on emotion before the Assembly Thursday, often pausing to gain composure during her remarks. 

    "I understand that expulsion is the highest form of discipline," Neal said. "I also understand that the action is the equivalent of political death on all levels, whether it be suspension or expulsion." 

    But, she added, "I believe in the human form in all its frailties and all of its faults. 

    "I also believe in the power of human recovery." 

    After the somber 32-minute floor session, Neal was consoled by Horne, who chaired the Select Committee that recommended Brooks' ouster. 

    "We did not feel safe having Assemblyman Brooks in this building," Horne said. "We wanted to protect people in this building and go about our business." 

    Reached immediately after the vote, Brooks was aghast. 

    "How dare they?" Brooks told the AP in a brief telephone interview. "I've been convicted of nothing." 

    Brooks alleged during the interview that unspecified opponents have tried to kill him. He didn't take questions. 

    Brooks won re-election in November by a 2-1 margin over an unknown challenger. 

    It was the first time the Legislature initiated the expulsion of a member since a lawmaker was accused of libeling other members in 1867. However, that case never came to a formal vote. 

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

    248 comments

    Sounds like this guy is having a major meltdown. Glad he was denied the purchase of a gun. This guys most likely would not have used it for anything other than evil the way his track record has recently been going.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crime, nevada, las-vegas, steven-brooks
  • 20
    Mar
    2013
    11:03pm, EDT

    7 young Marines killed in tragic accident identified

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The names of seven Marines -- the youngest just 19, the oldest 26 years old -- who were killed when a mortar exploded during a live-fire training exercise at an Army munitions depot in the Nevada desert were released Wednesday by Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.

    USMC

    Pfc. Josh Martino

    "We send our prayers and condolences to the families of the Marines and sailors who have been killed and injured in this tragic accident," said Brig. Gen. Jim Lukeman. "Our first priority is to provide them with the support they need during this very difficult time, and we're doing that right now."

    They were all in the 1st Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division.

    The youngest to be killed when a 60-millimeter mortar shell exploded in a tube as Marines were preparing to fire it is Pfc. Josh Martino, 19, of Clearfield, Pa. Although he had only joined the Marine Corps in July 2012, he had dreamed about it most of his life, his mother told The Associated Press.

    USMC

    Lance Cpl. Joshua C. Taylor

    "Since he was probably 8 years old he wanted to be a Marine," Karen Perry said. "That's all he wanted to do."

    Although only 20 years old, Lance Cpl. David P. Fenn II, of Polk City, Fla., had been a Marine for almost three years, most recently deployed to Afghanistan. Lance Cpl. Roger W. Muchnick Jr., 23, of Fairfield, Conn., had also done a tour in Afghanistan and was thinking about returning to college, his grandfather told the AP.

    "He was a fabulous kid. Just fabulous," his grandfather, Jerome Muchnick, said. "He was at the top of his game when this happened. ... You can't imagine losing a very handsome, 23-year-old grandson who was vital and loving."

    USMC

    Lance Cpl. David P. Fenn II

    Lance Cpl. Joshua C. Taylor, 21, of Marietta, Ohio, was planning to marry his fiancee in May, the AP said.

    USMC

    Lance Cpl. Roger W. Muchnick Jr.

    What caused the deadly explosion is still under investigation. Military officials announced a blanket suspension of the 60mm mortars and tubes until a review of the incident is complete. Eight men were also injured in the blast.

    The accident happened just before 10 p.m. Monday at Hawthorne Army Depot, a 230-square-mile ammunition storage and training facility just east of the California line.

    “The Marines and Sailors of 1/9 performed superbly throughout the training at both locations,” said Commanding Officer Lt. Col. Andrew J. McNulty. “We expected to complete the exercise upon the conclusion of the night live fire training, which we were in the process of executing on that fateful evening.”

    USMC

    Lance Cpl. Mason J. Vanderwork

    Lance Cpl. Mason J. Vanderwork, 21, of Hickory, N.C., had served overseas twice. He was married less than a year, and his wife, Taylor, 19, told The Charlotte Observer they planned to start a family.

    “I’ve lost my husband and part of my military family and I just turned 19 years old," she told the newspaper. “I really want to be dreaming.”

    Lance Cpl. William T. Wild IV, 21, of Anne Arundel, Md., became a Marine after graduating from high school. He had already been deployed twice to Afghanistan and once to Kuwait, his mother told the AP.

    USMC

    Lance Cpl. William Taylor Wild IV

    Cpl. Aaron J. Ripperda, 26, of Madison, Ill., joined the service after graduating from a St. Louis culinary school, his father, Kent Ripperda, told the AP.

    "He told us he always felt like he had a calling to join the Marines," Kent Ripperda told the AP. "I guess maybe it was a prestige thing."

    Kent Ripperda also said his son was eager to go back to college and "get on with his life."

    The injured were transported to Renown Regional Medical Center in Reno, Nev., for treatment and further evaluation. The Navy corpsman is considered very seriously injured; five others are seriously injured and two Marines have been treated for minor injuries and released, the Camp Lejeune statement read.

    USMC

    Cpl. Aaron J. Ripperda

    85 comments

    Condolences to the families of these young men.

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    Explore related topics: marines, hawthorne, nevada, camp-lejeune
  • Updated
    19
    Mar
    2013
    10:38pm, EDT

    7 Marines killed in explosion during training exercise at Army depot in Nevada

    It's still unclear what happened on Monday night when an explosion at an army depot in western Nevada killed seven U.S. Marines and injured many more. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    By Jim Miklaszewski and Erin McClam, NBC News

    Seven U.S. Marines were killed and eight wounded when a mortar exploded during a live-fire training exercise overnight at an Army munitions depot in the Nevada desert, military officials told NBC News.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    A 60-millimeter mortar shell exploded in a tube as Marines were preparing to fire it, Brigadier Gen. Jim Lukeman told reporters at a press conference late Tuesday. What cause the explosion is still under investigation.

    Military officials announced a blanket suspension of the 60mm mortars and tubes until a review of the incident is complete. 

    The accident happened just before 10 p.m. Monday at Hawthorne Army Depot, a 230-square-mile ammunition storage and training facility just east of the California line.

    The injured were taken to two hospitals. Stacy Kendall, a spokeswoman for Renown Regional Medical Center, a trauma center about 100 miles away in Reno, said the injuries included traumas and fractures.

    The Marines were part of the 2nd Marine Division, a ground combat force based at Camp Lejeune, N.C.

    The depot’s website says it is a training facility for the Army, Navy and Marines, including Special Operations forces preparing to deploy to the Middle East. The site says that the facility offers a “realistic simulation of the situation in Afghanistan” because of the mountainous desert terrain.

    A Marines spokesman said that the dead would be identified publicly 24 hours after their next of kin were notified.

    “We send our prayers and condolences to the families of Marines involved in this tragic incident. We remain focused on ensuring that they are supported through this difficult time,” said Maj. Gen. Raymond C. Fox, commanding general of the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force, which includes the 2nd Division. “We mourn their loss, and it is with heavy hearts we remember their courage and sacrifice.”

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who represents Nevada, offered condolences on the Senate floor. Nevada Sen. Dean Heller, a Republican, said on Twitter that “thoughts and prayers are with the families who lost a loved one in the Hawthorne Army Depot explosion. Grateful for their service.”

    Matthew B. Brown / Nevada Magazine

    Hawthorne Army Depot in Nevada

    This story was originally published on Tue Mar 19, 2013 8:13 AM EDT

    572 comments

    Oh lord, explosives handling is a dangerous business.

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    Explore related topics: army, explosion, military, marine-corps, nevada, updated, hawthorne-army-depot
  • 23
    Dec
    2012
    7:53am, EST

    Report: Female Las Vegas blackjack dealer stabs another

    By Melissa Pamer, NBCLosAngeles.com

    An alleged fight between two female blackjack dealers at the Bellagio hotel-casino in Las Vegas sent one of the women to the hospital and the other to jail.

    NBC Las Vegas affiliate KSNV reported that the Friday night incident landed 50-year-old Brenda Stokes behind bars after an unnamed victim was left with deep cuts to her face.

    The reported altercation took place in one of the high-profile luxury casino's pits, a spokeswoman for the Bellagio told the station.

    It was the second violent incident inside a Las Vegas Strip casino in recent days. Last week, an Illinois man shot and killed his ex-girlfriend and then himself in the lobby of the Excalibur resort. The woman was an employee of the resort.

    Read more at NBCLosAngeles.com

    Stokes was charged with burglary, two counts of battery with a deadly weapon and mayhem, according to Clark County online inmate records. She was due in court Dec. 26.

    Stokes allegedly had an "edged blade," a spokesman for the Metropolitan Police Department told the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

    The victim's condition was unknown, and police could not confirm whether the two dealers were working at the time.

     

    130 comments

    So more gun control? Or do we just ban all sharp pointy objects as well?

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    Explore related topics: hotel, casino, nevada, las-vegas, us-news, featured, crime-courts, nbclosangeles
  • 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.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • 2012 warmest year in US? Odds rise to 99.7 percent
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    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    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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    Explore related topics: rescue, california, nevada, featured, kcra
  • 2
    Dec
    2012
    6:36am, EST

    Soggy Northern California weathers third rain storm, awaits a fourth

    As storms battered Northern California, homeowners in Truckee were on alert that their city's namesake river threatened to flood. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Updated at 5 p.m. ET: Heavy rain storms dumping on central and north California Saturday night and Sunday knocked out power to thousands in San Francisco, Sacramento and elsewhere and caused moderate flooding in a number of communities.

    The area, which had been saturated by two major weather systems in the last five days, is expected to receive a short reprieve from the rain before another storm comes through on Tuesday evening, The Weather Channel reported.

    The inundation has caused a number of mud and rock slides, mostly during the period of heaviest rain, which then moved eastward across Fresno and Merced, Calif.


    There were also reports of road flooding during and just after the heaviest rain, but that threat appeared to lessen as the rain moved into regions that haven't had as much recent rain. All flash flood warnings have expired.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The Truckee River, which wends its way from Lake Tahoe in California to Pyramid Lake in Nevada, 120 miles to the northeast, was rising more slowly than expected, and most flood predictions along the way were scaled back.

    In Truckee, Calif., the river was expected to cause minor flooding Sunday afternoon and evening and moderate flooding east of Reno near Vista, Nev. as it crests at a predicted 18.7 feet.

    The threat of flooding prompted officials in Truckee, a town of about 16,000, to set up an evacuation center. 

    Just across the border in Nevada, a state of emergency was declared in Washoe County, including the cities of Reno and Sparks, due to the expected flooding. In Reno, several casinos announced cut-rate rooms to accommodate those displaced, while the City of Sparks opened an evacuation center in a high school.

    San Francisco area gets set for third storm system — and flight delays, traffic mess 

    Minor flooding was also reported on the Napa River near St. Helena Calif., along the Navarro River near the town of Navarro, and on the Mad River near Arcata. Moderate flooding was still predicted for elsewhere on the Navarro river and parts of the Eel, Russian and Napa rivers.

    The Napa River overwhelmed downtown Napa in 2005, flooding or destroying about 1,000 homes and forcing thousands of residents to leave the area.

    There, residents worked to fill 700 bags with 10 tons of sand, city official Danny Lerma said. 

    Cathleen Allison / AP

    Eric Engles, with Carson City Public Works, clears a storm drain in Carson City, Nev, as a heavy, wet storm hits Northern Nevada on Sunday.

    "When you see it happen, you always remember, and you say, 'I'm going to be better prepared,'" Lerma told KGO-TV. "And that's what they're doing right now."

    Click here for more weather headlines 

    The latest storm, which came ashore Saturday night, knocked out power for about 5,000 customers in the Sacramento. It was restored for all but 2,000 customers by 1 p.m. PT. according to the Sacramento Municipal Utility District. Another 6,000 lost power in Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, and 8,000 in San Francisco, according to The Weather Channel.

    The Napa River was expected to flood near St. Helena and Napa around noon on Sunday, while the Russian River was expected to flood near Guerneville early Monday morning. 

    The Napa River overwhelmed downtown Napa in 2005, flooding or destroying about 1,000 homes and forcing thousands of residents to leave the area.

    The Weather Channel's Chris Warren reports from California where residents are expecting a string of heavy storms.

    Holiday cancellations
    The weather prompted cancellations of holiday parades and tree lightings in Sparks and Truckee. 

    Officials also warned people to be careful along beaches. 

    A high surf advisory was issued by the Weather Service, with swells expected to be 14 to 16 feet along the Northern California coast.

    In Southern California, high surf was predicted in Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties. 

    The stormy weather may be behind a crash involving multiple cars on Interstate 280 outside of San Francisco on Saturday morning, as well as the death of a Pacific Gas & Electric worker in West Sacramento who died after his truck crashed into a traffic signal pole during the stormy weather Friday. 

    NBC News' Kari Huus and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    95 comments

    Robert stop the FRACKING

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    Explore related topics: weather, flood, nevada, northern-california, featured, napa
  • 27
    Oct
    2012
    4:18am, EDT

    Suspects who allegedly stole $1 million from casinos indicted

    By Tony Shin, NBCSanDiego.com

    SAN DIEGO -- A total of 14 suspects have been indicted on accusations they stole about a million dollars from casinos in California and Nevada.


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    The suspects were allegedly able to confuse the banking system, according to officials. Investigators said the suspects took advantage of a loophole in the Citibank system.

    Officials said the suspects would open accounts at various Citibanks in Southern California, including San Diego. They would then go to a casino cash advance kiosk and withdraw money.

    Because of that loophole, a suspect could make multiple withdrawals for the same amount of money, as long as it happened within 60 seconds and all those withdrawals would count as duplicate transactions.

    Cash used to gamble
    The suspect could then overdraw the account by tens of thousands of dollars.

    The suspect would then take the cash receipts to a cashier and collect all the money.

    Read more from NBCSanDiego.com

    "Some of that cash appears to have been used to gamble at casinos where the fraud was conducted or nearby casinos, such was the volume of the gambling that they were comped free rooms at the casinos,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Sean Coyle said.

    Prosecutors said the suspects allegedly withdrew about $1 million during an eight-month period.

    Authorities are still looking to arrest one person, the other 13 have already been apprehended.

    FBI agents said the loophole in the Citibank system has now been closed.

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    94 comments

    When regular people find loopholes it's called criminal but when billionaires find loopholes it's called the tax code. I'm not suggesting these guys were fine upstanding citizens but the garbage Wall Street has been getting away with for years is much worse.

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    Explore related topics: bank, california, theft, casino, nevada, san-diego, featured, citibank
  • 20
    Sep
    2012
    2:51pm, EDT

    With dramatic plan, Nevada asks battered universities to solve its economic crisis

    Courtesy R. Marsh Starks / UNLV Photo Services

    The campus at the University of Nevada Las Vegas, which would be affected by a dramatic proposed change in the way the state's public universities are funded.

    By Jon Marcus, The Hechinger Report

    LAS VEGAS — Just off the graveyard shift, Aaron Starks refuels with coffee in the early-morning quiet of the student union at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, steeling himself for his classes in electrical engineering.


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    Starks, who’s 27 and raising a 19-month-old daughter, is in his third year at UNLV, persevering in the face of not only sleeplessness but deep state budget cuts that have forced courses to be canceled, programs eliminated, faculty furloughed and services exasperatingly scaled back — all while tuition has soared.

    Many other students in Nevada, however, are giving up. In this world-famous gaming capital, the odds are stacked against them. Just 36 percent earn their four-year degrees within even six years, a smaller proportion than in any state except Alaska. And as tuition rises, enrollment has been falling. That, accompanied by an exodus of college-educated workers, has further shrunk the proportion of 25- to 34-year-olds in this state with degrees, already the lowest in the country.

    When Starks is finished, he intends to leave, too.

    “I don’t anticipate staying in Nevada,” he says. “If I find the right job, sure. But what I would like to do isn’t here.”


    Can colleges lead the state?
    A poster child for the financial predicament in which public colleges and universities find themselves — and the degree to which education is connected to economic vitality in 21st-century America — Nevada is now proposing a dramatic turnaround under which it hopes this same battered public higher-education system will help lead it out of economic crisis.

    By changing the formula under which colleges and universities are funded, policymakers plan to reward institutions for turning out graduates and research that can build new industries in a state that has proven far too vulnerable to downturns in the dominant areas of gaming and construction.

    A Brookings Institution report last year found Nevada overly dependent on a consumption economy acutely prone to booms and busts, with “substantial” shortages of skilled workers and too little investment in innovation. Six of the top 10 employers are casinos.

    As in other places, lawmakers in Nevada have now come to see higher education as a solution to these problems. And with the nation’s worst unemployment and home-foreclosure rates, it’s an ideal laboratory to test this idea.


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    “The economy has swung more from the top to the bottom here in Nevada than in any other state,” says Steve Hill, executive director of the Governor’s Office of Economic Development. “And we think it’s important that education and research help lead Nevada back.”

    State Sen. Steven Horsford, a Democrat who chaired the committee that recommended the new funding formula, puts it more succinctly. “We have nowhere to go but up,” he says.

    Focus on credits completed
    If approved by the full Legislature and the governor, the change would mean that all taxpayer money for colleges and universities would be divided up beginning next year based not on how many students they enroll, but how many credits those students successfully complete.

    “We want to fund institutions based on student success,” Horsford says.

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    The plan would also provide financial incentives for universities to concentrate on fields that could help revive Nevada’s economy, including natural resources and conservation, engineering, biological and biomedical sciences, architecture, and nursing.

    “The performance part is to drive decision-making toward what’s important to the state,” says Assemblywoman Heidi Gansert, a Republican on Horsford’s committee. Adds Daniel Klaich, chancellor of the Nevada System of Higher Education: “We need to incentivize our institutions to produce degrees with value.”

    That’s unique among the several states that have instituted so-called “performance funding” for their public colleges and universities, says Martha Snyder, an education-policy specialist at HCM Strategists and a former U.S. Department of Education policy adviser who specializes in this topic.

    “There’s an increasing understanding by leaders that higher education is an important tool, but that there need to be readjustments within higher-education systems to help states meet their economic goals,” Snyder says. “They want to be sure that their investments are driving toward what their states need in terms of helping their economies grow. The Nevada approach is the first to tie that to specific industries.”

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    But while the plan would alter the way existing money is parceled out, it won’t necessarily add any new funding. Since the state collects no personal or corporate income tax, and sales taxes are only incrementally recovering from the economic downturn, there’s little chance that higher-education spending will soon increase.

    Rescuing the budget-cutters
    Many Nevada university administrators and faculty are in favor of the change regardless, because, among other reasons, it gives them more control over the proceeds from tuition, which now go into a central fund and are redistributed around the state — meaning students at large urban institutions end up subsidizing their counterparts at small, rural ones. But the irony is not lost on them that they’re being asked to come to the rescue of the same leaders who have deeply reduced their budgets.

    “ ‘We’ve cut the heck out of you, but, oh, guess what? Now we really need you to be the engine of the economy,’ ” says Neal Smatresk, president of UNLV, where funding is down 40 percent, or more than $73 million, since 2008, forcing the elimination of 740 faculty and staff positions, 15 academic departments and 31 degree programs. “ ‘Quick, help us build a new economy.’ There’s a little irony here, or maybe a big irony, which is that no one seems to have any long-term memory.”

    The tension between wanting more from higher education while paying less for it is not unique to his state, Smatresk says. It’s a national phenomenon. “There’s no question that policy leaders are looking to higher education to lead the way out. There’s a tacit understanding that higher education is absolutely critical.”

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    In the case of Nevada, the state needs new and different industries, and “the honey-pot that draws in those industries is people who can help them with their R&D,” says Smatresk. “The other piece they need is the workforce, so they need to know we have the capacity to generate those people for them.”

    Nevada’s worst-in-the-nation plight means the role played by its colleges and universities is particularly challenging — and crucial — making it, as Smatresk says, “the canary in the mine shaft of higher education.”

    In Nevada, that canary is already in intensive care. The state has never made higher education much of a priority. On the wall of his office, Smatresk has photos of the few buildings on the original UNLV campus of the early 1960s, then an outpost in the desert derided as “Tumbleweed Tech.” Recent cuts have made things worse.

    Sobering numbers
    Fewer than two of every five UNLV students earn bachelor’s degrees within six years, according to the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems. And just 10.8 percent of full-time community-college students in Nevada get their two-year degrees in three years, the organization Complete College America reports.

    When nearly 60 percent of jobs will require a career certificate or college education by 2020, the Census Bureau reports that only 29.5 percent of 25- to 34-year-olds in Nevada have one — the lowest proportion in the country, and falling. Yet as tuition has increased 160 percent over the last 10 years to help make up for state budget cuts, enrollment in the state’s public universities has dropped sharply. Last year, the number of students was down 7.7 percent statewide.

    Back to school and burdened with debt

    Meanwhile, many college-educated people left when the economic downturn hit Nevada hard. And soon-to-be graduates like Starks see little incentive to stay, with 53.6 percent of degree-holders under 25 unemployed or underemployed, according to a recent analysis by Northeastern and Drexel universities and the Economic Policy Institute.

    “No student in his right mind would stay in a Nevada with a 53 percent unemployment rate for grads,” says Mark Ciavola, undergraduate student body president at UNLV. Yet when educated people leave, so do the prospects for the kind of innovation that could bring new industries and create jobs. “It’s a chicken-or-the-egg scenario,” Ciavola says. “This is a circular cluster we’re sitting in right now.”

    The new performance-funding proposal seeks to use the universities to break this cycle.

    “There are those of us who believe we cannot diversify the economy into the economy of the future without a more robust public higher-education system that not only invests more over time, but aligns itself in the right way with the jobs we’re trying to create,” Horsford says.

    More from The Hechinger Report

    • Opinion: Blaming U.S. teachers for poor performance of students is not the answer
    • Colleges freeze, reduce tuition as public balks at further price hikes
    • Without high quality preschool, Mississippi's kids risk being left behind
    • Could raising salaries be the best way to attract and keep better teachers?
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    Still, a “knowledge fund” set up by the Legislature to encourage research that can be commercialized has no money in it; the state board of regents has asked for $10 million for this purpose — a tiny sum when compared to similar efforts in states including neighboring Utah, whose Utah Science Technology and Research initiative, or USTAR, got $179 million, plus $15 million in ongoing annual funding for research teams at the University of Utah and Utah State University, and $160 million toward the construction of $200 million in new research facilities at those schools.

    Some faculty also worry that, in their desire to meet the new state goals, colleges and universities will simply make it easier for students to complete their courses.

    Smatresk disagrees. “Tell a faculty member they have to cheapen their degrees and see how they respond,” he says. “You don’t game degrees.”

    “Bull,” responds Sondra Cosgrove, former faculty senate chair at the College of Southern Nevada, who teaches Nevada history. Although she says she wouldn’t lower her own standards, Cosgrove fears that other long-suffering faculty might.

    Read more education stories from The Hechinger Report on NBCNews.com

    “We haven’t had pay raises in four years,” she says. “If you say, ‘You still don’t get a raise unless we improve student success,’ there are a lot of things faculty will do. When people are facing foreclosures on their houses, there are a lot of things they’ll do.”

    Besides, she says, for all of the anticipation about it, the performance-funding plan won’t pump more money into public higher education (though her own college will benefit, to the tune of several million dollars, from the new distribution formula).

    “We’re not talking about extra funding,” Cosgrove says. “We’re talking about base funding. We have to compete now for the money we already get.”

    This story, "Nevada asks battered universities to solve its economic crisis," was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University.

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    37 comments

    OMG....the home of Harry Reid....wants to fund education based on...wait for it....RESULTS!!!!! You must be joking.

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  • 17
    Sep
    2012
    5:38pm, EDT

    $7 million in gold found in dead Nevada man's home

    The Appeal via Nevada DMV

    Walter Samaszko Jr.

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    When Walter Samaszko Jr. died at his home in Carson City, Nev., he had $200 in a bank account. But as officials later discovered, Samaszko had about $7 million stored neatly around his home, the Nevada Appeal reported.

    In late June, neighbors called authorities because of a smell emanating from Samaszko’s home. He was a recluse who had told them he hated the government and feared getting shots, but still, it had been a while since they had seen him, according to the Appeal.

    According to the coroner, Samaszko, 69, had been dead for at least a month. He died of heart problems, the Las Vegas Sun reported.


    In came the cleanup crews, which discovered boxes of gold in the garage.

    “At that point, we took the house apart,” said Carson City clerk-recorder Alan Glover.

    They found gold coins and bullion, tiny dos-pesos, $20 gold pieces, Austrian ducats, Kruggerrands and English Sovereigns dating  to the 1840s – enough gold to fill two wheelbarrows.

    Samaszko and his mother had lived in the three-bedroom home since the 1970s, which is around the time they started collecting gold. Glover told the Appeal that the two kept detailed records of the gold they had purchased.


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    As for who can lay claim to the riches -- Glover said the Internal Revenue Service will take a sizable amount in taxes -- about $750,000 -- and that the rest will likely go to a first cousin, a substitute teacher in San Rafael, Calif., who is Samaszko's only relative as far as authorities can tell.

    The Las Vegas Sun reported that Glover's office found her using a list of people who had attended Samaszko's mother's funeral.

    Samaszko's home is currently for sale for $105,000.

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    705 comments

    why should the IRS take the gold? Its not theirs

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