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  • Updated
    16
    May
    2013
    8:36pm, EDT

    New Orleans police arrest second suspect in Mother's Day parade shooting

    New Orleans Police Department Superintendent Ronal Serpas says that two suspects are in custody for the Mother's Day parade shooting that left 19 people wounded.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    New Orleans police said Thursday that they had arrested a second suspect in a shooting rampage that left 19 people injured at a Mother’s Day parade.

    Police identified the suspect as Shawn Scott, 24. His brother, Akein, was arrested late Wednesday and ordered held Thursday on $10 million bond. Each faces 20 counts of attempted murder, police said.

    Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office via AFP - Getty Images

    Akein Scott, the first suspect arrested by New Orleans police in a shooting at a parade Sunday.

    Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas said four other people were arrested and charged with harboring the brothers. Those four suspects were identified as Justin Alexander, Bionca Hickerson, Nekia Youngblood and Brandy George.

    The wounded at the parade included two 10-year-old children, a boy and a girl. Surveillance footage captured a man stepping into the street, opening fire on the crowd and running away.

    On Monday, Serpas named Akein Scott as a suspect, flashed a photo of him and warned: “We know more about you than you think.” He said Scott had previous arrests on gun and drug charges and was free on $15,000 bail.

    The victims were marching in what is known as a second line parade, common in New Orleans: A brass band plays while marching in the streets, while a “second line” of people follows the band, celebrating.

    The parade was two blocks long and included about 400 people. The crime scene was a mile and a half from the heart of the French Quarter and near the Treme neighborhood, the centerpiece for the HBO series of the same name.

    This story was originally published on Thu May 16, 2013 11:58 AM EDT

    120 comments

    Glad this punk was found!

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  • 16
    May
    2013
    12:21am, EDT

    Suspect in New Orleans Mother's Day parade shootings arrested, police say

    New Orleans Police via AP

    19-year-old Akein Scott was identified as a suspect in the New Orleans Mother's Day parade shooting that left 19 people wounded.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    New Orleans police and federal agents say they have taken the suspect in a Mother's Day parade shooting that left 19 people wounded into custody, NBC affiliate WDSU in New Orleans reported early Thursday.

    Authorities said they arrested 19-year-old Akein Scott between 10 p.m. and 10:20 p.m. Wednesday night in the Little Woods section of eastern New Orleans, WDSU reported.

    Scott was wanted in connection with the shootings of 19 people, two whom were children, at a Mother's Day parade in the city last Sunday. 

    Surveillance cameras of the scene captured images of a man stepping into the street, opening fire on the crowd, and then running away. On Monday, police identified the shooter as Scott and obtained an arrest warrant, WDSU reported.

    Police department spokeswoman Remi Braden told the Associated Press no additional details were available and would not be until Thursday morning.

    567 comments

    I hope they have the right guy. If he is guilty, just hang him. They won't though.

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  • 14
    May
    2013
    9:16am, EDT

    'We know more about you than you think': New Orleans hunts for Mother's Day shooting suspect

    New Orleans Police via AP

    19-year-old Akein Scott has been named a suspect in the New Orleans Mother's Day parade shooting that left 19 people wounded.

    By Chevel Johnson, The Associated Press

    New Orleans police and federal authorities were searching early Tuesday for a young man who is suspected of opening fire at a Mother's Day parade in New Orleans, wounding 19.

    Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas identified the suspect late Monday as Akein Scott, 19, of New Orleans. Referring to blurry surveillance camera images of the mass shooting, Serpas said police have "multiple identifications of Akein Scott as the shooter" seen in the film.

    Serpas said officers would be searching all night and into Tuesday for Scott, whom he called "no stranger to the criminal justice system." He urged the teen, who has previous arrests on firearms and drug charges, to give himself up.

    "We would like to remind the community and Akein Scott that the time has come for him to turn himself in," Serpas said at a news conference outside police headquarters.

    A photo of Scott hung from a podium in front of the police chief. "We know more about you than you think we know," he said.

    Serpas said it was too early to say whether he was the only shooter.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The mass shooting showed again how far the city has to go to shake a persistent culture of violence that belies the city's festive image. Earlier, police announced a $10,000 reward and released the surveillance camera images, which led to several tips from the community.

    "The people today chose to be on the side of the young innocent children who were shot and not on the side of a coward who shot into the crowd," Serpas said.

    The superintendent said SWAT team members and U.S. marshals served a searched warrant at one location looking for Scott, but didn't locate him.

    Angry residents said gun violence — which has flared at two other city celebrations this year — goes hand-in-hand with the city's other deeply rooted problems such as poverty and urban blight. The investigators tasked with solving Sunday's shooting work within an agency that's had its own troubles rebounding from years of corruption while trying to halt violent crime.

    "The old people are scared to walk the streets. The children can't even play outside," Ronald Lewis, 61, said Monday as he sat on the front stoop of his house, about a half-block from the shooting site. His window sill has a hole from a bullet that hit it last year. Across the street sits a house marked by bullets he said were fired two weeks ago.

    "The youngsters are doing all this," said Jones, who was away from home when the latest shooting broke out.

    Video released early Monday shows a crowd gathered for a parade suddenly scattering in all directions, with some falling to the ground. They appear to be running from a man in a white T-shirt and dark pants who turns and runs out of the picture. Two children were among those wounded.

    Police were working to determine whether there was more than one gunman, though they initially said three people were spotted fleeing from the scene. Whoever was responsible escaped despite the presence of officers who were interspersed through the crowd as part of routine precautions for such an event.

    A police news release says Scott has previously been arrested for illegal carrying of a weapon, illegal possession of a stolen firearm, resisting an officer, contraband to jail, illegal carrying of a weapon while in possession of a controlled dangerous substance and possession of heroin.

    It was not immediately clear whether Scott, who was arrested this past March, had been convicted on any of those charges.

    Serpas said ballistic evidence gathered at the scene was giving them "very good leads to work on."

    Witness Jarrat Pytell said he was walking with friends near the parade route when the crowd suddenly began to break up.

    "I saw the guy on the corner, his arm extended, firing into the crowd," said Pytell, a medical student.

    "He was obviously pointing in a specific direction; he wasn't swinging the gun wildly," Pytell said.

    Pytell said he tended to one woman with a severe arm fracture — he wasn't sure if it was from a bullet or a fall — and to others including an apparent shooting victim who was bleeding badly.

    Three victims still in critical condition
    Three gunshot victims remained in critical condition Monday, though their wounds didn't appear to be life-threatening. Most of the wounded had been released from the hospital.

    It's not the first time gunfire has shattered a festive mood in the city this year. Five people were wounded in a drive-by shooting in January after a Martin Luther King Jr. Day parade, and four were wounded in a shooting after an argument in the French Quarter in the days leading up to Mardi Gras. Two teens were arrested in connection with the MLK Day shootings; three men were arrested and charged in the Mardi Gras shootings.

    The shootings are bloody reminders of the persistence of violence in the city, despite some recent progress.

    Last week, law enforcement officials touted the indictment of 15 people in gang-related crimes, including the death of a 5-year-old girl killed by stray gunfire at a birthday party a year ago.

    The city's 193 homicides in 2012 are seven fewer than the previous year, while the first three months of 2013 represented an even slower pace of killing.

    On Monday night, 100 to 150 people gathered for a unity rally and peace vigil in the wake of Sunday's shootings. Some residents stood in their doorways or on their steps. At one point, trumpeter Kenneth Terry played, "O For a Closer Walk With Thee."

    Robin Bevins, president of the ladies group of the Original Four Social Aid and Pleasure Club, said she and members of her organization came to the rally to show solidarity.

    "This code of silence has to end," said Bevins, who's also a member of the city's Social Aid Task Force. "If we stand up and speak out, maybe this kind of thing will stop."

    New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu walked into the area, greeting people, shaking hands and stopping to talk with some residents before addressing the crowd.

    "We came back out here as a community to stand on what we call sacred ground," Landrieu said. "We came here to reclaim this spot. This shooting doesn't reflect who we are as a community or what we're about."

    Leading efforts to lower the homicide rate is a police force that's faced its own internal problems and staffing issues. At about 1,200 members, the department is 300 short of its peak level.

    Serpas, who has been chief since 2010, has been working to overcome the effects of decades of scandal and community mistrust arising from what the U.S. Justice Department says has been questionable use of force and biased policing.

    The site of the Sunday shooting — about 1.5 miles from the heart of the French Quarter — showcases other problems facing the city. Stubborn poverty and blight are evident in the area of middle-class and low-income homes. Like other areas hit hard by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the area has been slower to repopulate than wealthier areas. And Landrieu's stepped-up efforts to demolish or renovate blighted properties — a pre-Katrina problem made worse by the storm — remain too slow for some.

    Frank Jones, 71, whose house is a few doors down from the shooting site, said the house across from him has been abandoned since Katrina. Squatters and drug dealers sometimes take shelter there, he said.

    A city code inspector, who declined to be interviewed, was there Monday.

    "It's too late," Jones said. "Should have fixed it from the very beginning. A lot of people are getting fed up with the system." 

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

    540 comments

    Guaranteed the suspect is not an NRA member. The libs will come forth and spew their nonsense, blaming the NRA for this attack which is baseless and stupid! And, no amount of gun control legislation would have prevented a thug from doing this. De'nile is not a river in Egypt!!

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  • 13
    May
    2013
    10:32pm, EDT

    Police ID suspect in New Orleans Mother's Day parade shooting

    New Orleans Police Department

    New Orleans Police released this photo of 19-year-old Akein Scott late Monday. Scott is a suspect in the Mother's Day shooting that wounded 19 people in New Orleans.

    By Andrew Rafferty and Daniel Arkin, NBC News

    New Orleans police have identified a 19-year-old man as a suspect in the  Mother’s Day shooting that wounded 19 people marching in a parade.

    New Orleans Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas said at a press conference late Monday that an arrest warrant has been issued for Akein Scott. He was positively identified by more than one person, Serpas said.

    Authorities searched three different addresses Monday night but were unable to find Scott, NBC New Orleans affiliate WDSU reported.

    “We will be looking for Akein Scott for the rest of the night and tomorrow until we find him, and I would strongly recommend that Akein turn himself in,” said Serpas.

    Scott has a criminal background which includes charges of resisting arrest and possession of a fire arm, Serpas said.

    Earlier in the day, New Orleans police had released dramatic images early that show what authorities believe is the moment a buoyant Mother’s Day celebration was brought to a halt by a barrage of bullets.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Surveillance images recorded on North Villere Street in the 7th Ward neighborhood show a man police consider a potential suspect appearing to open fire on a crush of people gathered for a festive holiday parade. An adult male can be seen charging with raised hands, sending parade-goers scrambling in all directions of the surveillance camera’s frame.

    See the chilling video stills at WDSU.com

    On Sunday, Serpas said there may have been as many as three shooters in Sunday’s attack, which left 19 people injured – including two young children.

    And at a press conference earlier Monday, Serpas asked that anyone who may have photos, videos or witnessed the possible shooter to contact law enforcement, stressing a $10,000 award for information leading to an arrest.

    "I want to remind you that two children were struck in this incident," he said. "And if you choose not to tell the police what you know, then you're choosing to stand with those who shot those children."

    At least three people were spotted running away from the scene after the gunfire erupted at 1:45 p.m.

    New images show one suspect believed to have been behind yesterday's shooting a Mother's Day parade in New Orleans. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Police said 10 adult men, seven adult women, a 10-year-old boy and a 10-year-old girl were struck by bullets. The injured children were grazed by the bullets and were in good condition Sunday evening, New Orleans Police spokesman Garry Flot said in a statement. A woman and a man were reportedly in surgery Sunday evening, but there were no fatalities and most wounds were not life-threatening, police said.

    The victims were marching in what is known as a second line parade, a buoyant New Orleans tradition inspired by the city’s iconic jazz funerals: A brass band plays as it marches in the streets, while a lively “second line” of people follows the band, celebrating and dancing.

    Officials said the parade was two blocks long and included about 400 people, though only half that number were close to the gunfire. The crime scene was about 1.5 miles from the heart of the French Quarter and near the Treme neighborhood, which has been the centerpiece of the HBO TV series "Treme."

    “These are unusual circumstances. We have second lines which occur in the city of New Orleans virtually every weekend at this time of the year,” Serpas said.  “We had a full complement of police officers. It appears that these two or three people just for a reason unknown to us, started shooting at, towards, or in the crowd. It was over in just a couple seconds.”

    Shermaine Tyler, 32, was celebrating Mother’s Day just a block away from the barrage of bullets.

    “Me and mom were going to the second line. I told her I didn’t want to go because there are always shots at a second line,” Tyler told The Times-Picayune. “And the second I heard shots, I heard shots fired, we ran outside and one man fell in my lap who had been shot.”

    She told the newspaper that the man who tumbled into her lap had been shot in his groin area and in his hand.

    “This is all ridiculous. We all bleed the same blood. We all come from the same God,” Tyler told the newspaper. “Everyone is getting shot, and for what?”

    Leonard Temple, who waited outside New Orlean’s Interim LSU Public Hospital on Sunday evening while a friend was in surgery after being shot three times during the parade, described the scene before shots rang out.

    “People were just hanging out. We were just chilling,” Temple told The Associated Press.

    Mayor Mitch Landrieu said Sunday that the shooting was part of "the relentless drum beat of violence" on the streets of New Orleans.

    "It’s a shame and it’s got to stop," Landrieu told The Times-Picayune from outside the hospital. "You see it cascading across the country but we have more of it than anyone else."

    Second lines have been targets for violence in New Orleans in recent years. In the past, shooters have targeted a specific person in the crowd, which authorities say may have been the case Sunday as well.  But Landrieu dismissed the notion of outlawing the Louisiana tradition.

    “It’s not the second line that did the shooting,” he said. “The cultural events are very important to us, it’s like calling for an end to Mardi Gras because someone takes an opportunity to shoot someone during one of our parades.” 

    Landrieu called for residents to gather at the site of the shooting Monday evening as a show of solidarity and commitment to stopping gun violence in the city.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Gunfire erupted at a parade to celebrate Mother's Day, injuring 19, including two 10-year-old kids. Police are searching for three people seen running from the scene. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

    1014 comments

    WOW...a black person with a gun...and shooting into a crowd....then running away...i'm shocked

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  • Updated
    13
    May
    2013
    10:15am, EDT

    At least 19 injured in New Orleans Mother's Day shooting

    Gunfire erupted at a parade to celebrate Mother's Day, injuring 19, including two 10-year-old kids. Police are searching for three people seen running from the scene. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

     

    By Andrew Rafferty, Staff Writer, NBC News

    At least 19 people were injured on Sunday when multiple gunmen opened fire on a Mother’s Day parade in New Orleans, police said.

    A 10-year-old boy and 10-year-old girl were grazed by bullets but were in good condition, New Orleans Police spokesman Garry Flot said in a statement. A woman and a man were in surgery Sunday evening, but there were no fatalities and most wounds were not life threatening, police said.

    At least three people were spotted running away from the scene after the shooting on North Villere Street in the 7th Ward neighborhood at 1:45 p.m. At least one suspect was described as a man between the ages of 18 and 22.

    New Orleans Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas said there may have been as many as three shooters, and that two different types of weapons were likely used.

    The victims were marching in what is known as a second line parade, which are common in New Orleans: A brass band plays while marching in the streets, while a “second line” of people follows the band, celebrating.

    Officials said the parade was two blocks long and included about 400 people. The crime scene was about 1.5 miles from the heart of the French Quarter and near the Treme neighborhood, which has been the centerpiece for the HBO TV series "Treme."

    “These are unusual circumstances. We have second lines which occur in the city of New Orleans virtually every weekend at this time of the year,” Serpas said.  “We had a full complement of police officers. It appears that these two or three people just for a reason unknown to us, started shooting at towards, or in the crowd. It was over in just a couple seconds.”

    Lauren Mcgaughy / The Times-Picayune / Landov

    Bystanders comfort a shooting victim after gunfire injured 19 people during a Mother's Day in New Orleans on Sunday.

    Mayor Mitch Landrieu said the shooting was part of "the relentless drum beat of violence" on the streets of New Orleans.

    "It’s a shame and its got to stop," he told The Times-Picayune from outside New Orleans' Interim LSU Public Hospital. "You see it cascading across the country but we have more of it than anyone else."

    Detectives were conducting interviews and retrieving surveillance video from around the scene.  Landrieu urged anyone with information about the shooting to come forward.

    He added: "These kinds of incidents will not go unanswered. Somebody knows something. The way to stop this violence is for you all to help."

    Second lines have been targets for violence in New Orleans in recent years. In the past, shooters have targeted a specific person in the crowd, which authorities say may have been the case Sunday as well.  But Landrieu dismissed the notion of outlawing the Louisiana tradition.

    “It’s not the second line that did the shooting,” he said. “The cultural events are very important to us, it’s like calling for an end to Mardi Gras because someone takes an opportunity to shoot someone during one of our parades.”  

    “Second lines have been with us for a long, long time,” Landrieu added. “They are an important part of our culture and our heritage.”

    Mary Beth Romig, a spokeswoman for the FBI in New Orleans, told The Associated Press that federal investigators have no indication that the shooting was an act of terrorism.

    "It's strictly an act of street violence in New Orleans," she said. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

     

    This story was originally published on Mon May 13, 2013 10:26 AM EDT

    2759 comments

    Let the anti gun rants begin in, 5,4,3,2.......

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  • Updated
    25
    Apr
    2013
    8:22am, EDT

    Twister leaves two-mile path of damage near New Orleans

    TODAY's Al Roker gets us up to the minute with the latest weather updates, including a mulch fire in Prince George's County, Md., and damage to homes near New Orleans after two tornadoes touched down there Wednesday.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    A tornado tore through the New Orleans area Wednesday, damaging homes and ripping trees out of the ground, as intense storms lashed the area with rain.

    The National Weather Service (NWS) said the twister was one of two that caused damage in Kenner, Louisiana, near New Orleans International Airport.

    No injuries were reported, according to the Times Picayune’s website NOLA.com, but about 5,000 Entergy Louisiana customers lost electrical service.

    The first tornado's path stretched two miles and 75 yards wide and packed winds of 75 mph. The second's path was a half a mile long and 50 yards wide and recorded winds of 90 mph.

    Residents posted pictures on social media of torn roofs, fallen trees and flash floods caused by torrential rains, weather.com reported.

    PRELIMINARY INFO: Survey team found 2nd tornado in Kenner, EF0 Wind 75 mph @ Veterans & Transcontental. 2 miles long & 75 yards wide

    — NWSNewOrleans (@NWSNewOrleans) April 24, 2013

    Witness Adine Humphrey told NOLA.com: "The wind picked up. The rain picked up. You kind of heard that noise like a train a little bit. I looked next door. I seen the debris going in circles. I ripped my mother inside."

    The NWS said the airport tower lost power during the storms, which struck during the middle of the day on Wednesday.

    Uptown #NOLA flooding. Photo credit: Arynne Fannin cc @margaretorr #lawx twitter.com/Conductor222/s�¢ï¿½�¦

    — Caroline Carson (@Conductor222) April 24, 2013

     

    This story was originally published on Thu Apr 25, 2013 4:21 AM EDT

    61 comments

    At 90 mph sounds like an F1. just a breezy day here in Kansas :). These things have been happening for a very long time, with instant connectivity the media makes it sound like this is all new. Years ago this would never have made national news.

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  • Updated
    10
    Apr
    2013
    9:35pm, EDT

    Storm system to bring more snow from South Dakota to Minnesota

    Freezing rains and high winds are expected to push deeper into the South on Thursday. Meanwhile, South Dakota and nearby states are prepping for more snow. The Weather Channel's Chris Warren reports.

    By Erin McClam, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A vast storm system Wednesday night may bring snow from eastern South Dakota into northeast Nebraska, northwest Iowa, and central and southern Minnesota, to include the Twin Cities, The Weather Channel reported. Four to eight inches of snow could fall Wednesday night alone in the Sioux Falls to Minneapolis corridor.

    Light snow could reach as far east as northern Wisconsin, The Weather Channel reported.

    Farther east, in upstate New York, Buffalo could see a brief period of freezing rain Thursday morning.

    Earlier Wednesday, the storm pounded the Dakotas with snow, coated Oklahoma with rare spring ice and took aim at parts of the Mid-Atlantic and South.



    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Snow, freezing rain and strong winds snapped trees, broke power poles and left cars sheathed in ice in South Dakota, and the city of Sioux Falls declared a state of emergency.

    More coverage from weather.com

    Farther south — and much more unusually — ice coated roads in Oklahoma, all the way down to the Red River border with Texas.

    “For April, that is really amazing,” said Tom Niziol, a meteorologist and winter weather expert for The Weather Channel.

    It all made for a messy day of travel in the Great Plains and the Midwest. Chicago O’Hare, a hub airport for the central United States, reported almost 500 flight cancellations.

    Dirk Lammers / AP

    Icy branches partially block a city street and fall amid parked cars in Sioux Falls, S.D.

    As the storm system lumbers eastward, powerful thunderstorms are expected later Wednesday and overnight in Pennsylvania and Maryland, including Philadelphia and its suburbs.

    It has been unusually cold this week in the West and unseasonably warm in the East, including temperatures pushing 90 degrees Wednesday in Washington. That warm air makes the weather system more dangerous.

    “There will be more than enough fuel for these storms,” said Carl Parker, another meteorologist for The Weather Channel.

    A line of late-day storms was expected to sweep across Arkansas on Wednesday afternoon, threatening to dump damaging hail and perhaps spawn tornadoes before pushing out of the state in the evening.

    The same storm system has already produced bizarre weather elsewhere in the country.

    Earlier this week, the temperature fell 55 degrees in Denver in less than 24 hours. Gusty wind nudged 21 cars of a freight train off the tracks in Nebraska. And snowflakes the size of cotton balls fall in Marshall, Minn., NBC affiliate KARE in Minneapolis reported.

    This story was originally published on Wed Apr 10, 2013 6:32 AM EDT

    210 comments

    I hate those damn tornados and hail. Stay safe everyone.

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  • 2
    Apr
    2013
    9:21pm, EDT

    Video shows inmates with beer, drugs, guns in New Orleans prison

    WDSU

    A gun is seen in a still from the video shown in court in New Orleans

     

    By Sofia Perpetua, NBCNews.com

    A New Orleans parish released a shocking video on Tuesday that shows inmates doing drugs, gambling, waving a hand gun and drinking beer.

    It was the second day of a federal hearing on the Orleans Parish Prison spending money to fix and refurbish jails. It is not clear when the video was recorded.

    Manny Romero, a prison consultant who testified, said he had never seen such a dysfunction in a jail and that the amount and nature of some of the contraband suggests prisoners may have had help from jail staff in obtaining it, New Orleans NBC affiliate WDSU reported.

    Fights, sexual assaults and drug use among inmates have been going on at the prison for years, according to WDSU. But Tuesday's video was the first time footage of these allegations was seen. The federal investigators said these problems are widespread at the prison.

    Sheriff Marlin Gusman issued a statement saying the prison was “in a state of disrepair and abhorrent lack of proper security measures” and that was why he closed it last year.

    133 comments

    ATTN IDIOTS: The NRA is an organization that advocates the 2nd amendment and all it entails in the Bill of Rights. Why don't you put blame squarely where it belongs?......on the shoulders of the local and state government officials and organizations that oversee facilities like these. The NRA??? Ser …

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  • 26
    Mar
    2013
    4:17am, EDT

    Joggers quizzed in hunt for teacher who vanished in New Orleans

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

    By By Jason Kandel and Tena Ezzeddine, NBCLosAngeles.com

    Police are reviewing surveillance video showing a Long Beach, Calif., teacher who went missing in New Orleans more than three weeks ago and interviewing joggers with the hope of learning her whereabouts, police said Monday.

    Surveillance video shows Terrilyn Monette in her car and near a park in New Orleans on the morning of her disappearance on March 2, police said.

    She was last seen at a bar in a neighborhood in New Orleans, where she recently moved to participate in a teaching program.

    Eight days after the disappearance, family and friends held a prayer vigil for the former "Teacher of the Year."

    More news from NBCLosAngeles.com

    Family members had also traveled to New Orleans to search a park while deputies from the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office searched Bayou St. John in boats for four hours trying to locate Monette's vehicle, but nothing turned up.

    Investigators searched these areas because Monette would have possibly driven home the route, police said. 

    Deputies also used a helicopter to scan areas of City Park, the Lakefront, and Lakeview, but nothing was found, officials said.

    Monette, who received her teaching degree from Cal State San Bernardino, had been teaching children in impoverished areas as part of the "Teach NOLA" program.

    39 comments

    Well, my goodness, I guess no good deed goes unpunished! She is a teacher of the year who decides to go help out in New Orleans and then disappears? I hope she is found safe and sound, but considering how long they have been looking for her, the odds are not good.

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  • Updated
    13
    Mar
    2013
    2:39pm, EDT

    Fire rages after tugboat, barge strike Louisiana gas pipeline

    Gerald Herbert / AP

    A fire still burns on Wednesday after a tugboat and barge hit a gas pipeline Tuesday evening in Perot Bay in Lafourche Parish, La., about 30 miles south of New Orleans.

    By Kevin McGill, The Associated Press

    NEW ORLEANS -- A gas pipeline burned Wednesday morning in a bayou south of New Orleans hours after it was hit by a tug boat pushing an oil barge, but authorities say no oil appeared to be leaking from the barge.


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    Coast Guard Cmdr. Russ Bowen said it appears the barge is intact and none of its cargo of crude oil was leaking, though there were patches of oily sheen in the area. The Coast Guard was investigating whether those sheens were related to the accident.

    A plume of smoke rising from the site could be seen from downtown New Orleans Wednesday morning. Bowen said authorities planned to allow the gas to burn itself out before approaching for a closer inspection. The area is thinly populated and no evacuations had been ordered.

    Four people aboard the 47-foot tug Shanon E. Settoon were injured, one severely, in the collision Tuesday at about 6 p.m. CDT. Water at the collision site is very shallow.

    The 19-mile section of pipeline was carrying liquefied petroleum gas. It had been isolated from other conduits by its owner, San Ramon, Calif.-based Chevron, so only what was inside could burn.

    "All crew members were able to exit the tug; the captain reportedly suffered second to third-degree degree burns," the Coast Guard said in a news release early Wednesday.

    The barge was holding 92,000 gallons of crude oil, the Coast Guard said. The tug boat had 1,000 gallons of diesel fuel. Settoon Towing of Pierre Part, La., lists the tug among its vessels on its website.

    Bowen said it was believed that the diesel fuel aboard the tug had burned up.

    WWL-TV reported that the tug's captain was transferred to the burn center at Baton Rouge General Hospital.

    It was not immediately known who owns the 154-foot oil barge.

    The area is along the northern reaches of Barataria Bay, which was heavily affected by oil from the BP spill in 2010. It is mostly small communities where people often make their living from the sea, either working in the oil and gas industry or as fishermen.

    The 92,000 gallons the Coast Guard says was being carried by the barge is a fraction of the millions of gallons that spewed into the Gulf of Mexico during the 2010 spill.

    The region where the fire was burning is crisscrossed by pipelines and wellheads are a common sight in the shallow waters of the bayou and bay shoreline.

    Bowen said it's not unusual for tugs to operate in shallow areas. "That's just the nature of coastal Louisiana," he said.

    Beyond that, he said he couldn't comment on why the accident happened.

    Bayou Perot was the scene of an explosion and fire on a specialized oil rig in December 2010 in which three men were injured. The explosion happened while the men were welding and there was no pollution, the Coast Guard reported.

    Related:

    BP to pay $4.5 billion, plead guilty to manslaughter in spill

    3,675 gas wells OK'd by US -- and environmentalists

    This story was originally published on Wed Mar 13, 2013 5:19 AM EDT

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

    47 comments

    I'm a bit horrified by the lack of empathy, selfishness, and ugliness of most of the comments. Really? "The tug driver must have been hand picked by Nobama." The tug driver has burns over 75% of his body and is fighting for his life.

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    Explore related topics: new-orleans, chevron, natural-gas, fire, pipeline, gas, louisiana, featured, updated, bayou-perot
  • 20
    Feb
    2013
    5:00pm, EST

    Former New Orleans mayor pleads not guilty to federal corruption charges

    Matthew Hinton / AP

    Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin arrives at the Hale Boggs Federal Building and U.S. District Courthouse to appear in federal court for an arraignment on public corruption charges in New Orleans.

    By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin pleaded not guilty to a slew of federal corruption charges Wednesday afternoon, including bribery, conspiracy, and money laundering.

    Nagin, 56, who gained national prominence after Hurricane Katrina devastated his city, is accused of accepting bribes or kickbacks from three prominent city contractors while New Orleans struggled to recover from the disaster. The graft schemes included $50,000 in free granite for Nagin's family countertop business and nine wire-transfer payoffs totaling $112,500.

    U.S. Magistrate Judge Sally Shushan set Nagin's trial for April 29 at 10 a.m. The former mayor's bond was set at $100,000 during Wednesday's arraignment. His travel is confined to Louisiana and Texas, where Nagin now lives.


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    Wednesday's afternoon in court was his first public appearance since a federal grand jury delivered a 21-count public corruption indictment in January, Reuters reported.

    Two of three city contractors who allegedly bribed Nagin -- Frank Fradella and Rodney Williams -- have signed plea deals that require them to testify against Nagin at his trial this spring.

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    Williams has acknowledged a graft scheme in which he gave Nagin and his sons $72,500 in cash in exchange for the mayor's promise to direct city engineering contracts to Williams' former firm, Three Fold Consultants. Fradella has admitted to bribing Nagin with $50,000 and gifting him at least two truckloads of granite to Stone Age, LLC, Nagin's family countertop concern.

    A third contractor, technology vendor Mark St. Pierre, is currently serving out a nearly 18-year prison sentence for bribing Greg Meffert, Nagin's one-time chief technology officer, who pleaded guilty to conducting under-the-table deals with St. Pierre.

    Nagin, a former cable TV executive, emerged on the political scene in 2002, with his first successful run for the top spot at City Hall. He was a fixture of news coverage after Hurricane Katrina slammed the Gulf Coast, known for his brash and unorthodox style.

    But after Nagin was re-elected for a second term in 2006, he was criticized for what was widely seen as a slow post-Katrina recovery and fell out of favor with many of his constituents.

    Mitch Landrieu, who ran against Nagin in the 2006 election cycle, succeeded him in 2010. Term limits prevented Nagin from seeking a third stint in office.

    40 comments

    Gee, another corrupt liberal. Who will be the biggest loser? Nagin or Jesse Jackson, Jr.? .

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  • 10
    Feb
    2013
    3:33am, EST

    Police: 4 wounded in shooting on New Orleans' Bourbon Street

    By F. Brinley Bruton, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Updated at 6:35 a.m. ET: Two men and two women were shot in New Orleans' Bourbon Street after gunfire broke out while crowds gathered in the countdown to annual Mardi Gras festivities, police said on Sunday morning. 

    Three of the victims were listed in stable condition while a male victim underwent surgery and was listed in critical condition, New Orleans Police spokesman Frank Robertson said.  

    The shooting happened at around 9:30 p.m. (10:30 p.m. ET) after one of the victims got into an argument with two men, Robertson said. 

    The two men left but soon returned, according to police.  One then shot one of the victims in the abdomen, upper thigh and pelvic area, and fled the scene, Robertson said.  

    Police released video filmed by a bystander on a private camera that showed a crowded and chaotic street scene.

    According to the police, the footage shows the two men arguing with the first victim and leaving the scene.  They soon return and start shooting the first victim. 

    In addition to the first victim, one woman was shot in the buttocks and a second in the chin and right foot. As second male victim was shot in the toe, police said. 

    The Associated Press earlier reported the following: 

    Patrick Clay, 21, an LSU student, told The Times-Picayune he was standing on the corner of Bourbon Street when suddenly he saw a crowd running and people screaming that there was a shooting. 

    "Everyone immediately started running and the cops immediately started running toward where people were running from," Clay said. "I was with a group of about seven people and at that point we all just kind of grasped hands and made our way through the crowd as soon as possible."

    Afterward, police moved in to investigate. Many revelers said they stayed hunkered down in bars and other establishments until police cleared them to move freely.

    Crowds gather each year in New Orleans' French Quarter for celebrations that build to a climax on Fat Tuesday, which this year falls on February 12. 

    164 comments

    Finally, New Orleans getting back to normal after Katrina.

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    Explore related topics: new-orleans, shooting, mardi-gras, bourbon-street, featured
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