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  • 25
    Feb
    2013
    6:34am, EST

    Firefighters stop meat-cleaver attack in New York street

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

    By Ida Siegal, NBCNewYork.com

    NEW YORK -- Firefighters subdued a man they witnessed attacking a woman with a meat cleaver on the street Sunday, police said.

    Members of the FDNY company known as the Chinatown Dragon Fighters saw the man attacking the woman across the street from their station house on Canal Street and intervened, according to police.

    "I heard a commotion in the street and I look over, its a man dragging this woman, grabbing her by the arm, dragging her, she's crying and she's screaming," said firefighter Jose Ortiz.

    Ortiz rushed over to help the woman, when suddenly he saw the man pull out the meat cleaver.

    "I see the cleaver go up and he swings down and he hit her in the head," Ortiz said. "Now I'm thinking I gotta grab this guy."

    But before Ortiz could get to him, the man was able to strike the woman with the meat cleaver several times.

    More news from NBCNewYork.com

    Shane Clarke, another firefighter, came to Ortiz's aid and together they were able to stop the attack and subdue the man.

    The woman was taken to Bellevue Hospital with cuts to her neck, back and face. Police said her injuries were not considered life-threatening.

    The man was taken into police custody.

    "I'm happy that we were there to help," Ortiz said. "I'm sorry we weren't there early enough to just stop the whole thing altogether."

    429 comments

    Brave men. Thank you for your service to the public.

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  • 25
    Feb
    2013
    3:10am, EST

    'Why would anyone harm him?' 79-year-old shot dead in Brooklyn

    By Gus Rosendale, NBCNewYork.com

    NEW YORK -- A 79-year-old man was shot and killed in Brooklyn early Sunday morning, police said.

    Police responded to a call of an unconscious man inside his apartment on Gates Avenue in Bushwick at around 2:30 a.m. and discovered James Jackson with a gunshot wound to the neck.

    Police sources say Jackson's wife, who is blind, realized he was unresponsive and called 911.

    Jackson was taken to Woodhull Hospital where he was later pronounced dead.

    There were no signs that someone broke into the apartment, so police are considering the possibility that Jackson was the victim of a stray bullet.

    More news from NBCNewYork.com

    Shocked residents of the building where Jackson lived said they didn't believe he had any enemies.

    "Why would anyone harm him? It would take him 20 minutes to walk down the block," said Jackson's neighbor, Vaughn Grandy.

    No arrests have been made and an investigation is ongoing.

    276 comments

    Wait just a damn minute, I thought guns were illegal in NYC, this can't happen where guns are outlawed. Oh, wait, maybe a legal weapon in the hands of a law enforcement officer accidentally discharged killing this poor woman's husband; yeah, that's got to be it! (TIC)

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  • 4
    Jan
    2013
    11:49am, EST

    Court: Flipping the bird at a cop doesn't warrant arrest

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A New York man arrested after he gave the finger to a police officer can sue police for malicious prosecution, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday, overturning a lower-court decision that deemed the officer's response reasonable.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In its decision, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said that giving someone the finger is an "ancient gesture of insult" and "is not the basis for a reasonable suspicion of a traffic violation or impending criminal activity."

    The incident took place in May 2006, court documents say, when John Swartz and his wife, Judy Mayton-Swartz, were driving through the upstate village of St. Johnsville, N.Y., to the home of Judy’s son.

    Swartz was in the passenger seat when he noticed a local officer, Richard Insogna, in a police car using a radar device. Expressing his displeasure, Swartz reached "his right arm outside the passenger side window and extending his middle finger over the car’s roof," according to court documents.

    The couple continued their drive. They were not speeding or committing other traffic violations, but upon reaching their destination and getting out of the car, they saw an approaching police car with its lights flashing.

    Ordering them to get back into the vehicle, Insogna told the couple this was a traffic stop and requested their documents. Swartz told his wife not to show the officer anything, prompting Insogna to say, "Shut your mouth, your ass is in enough trouble." Then, after checking the woman's license and registration, Insogna called for backup, according to court documents. Three other officers soon appeared.

    After being told he and his wife were free to go, Swartz tried to speak with Insogna, but the other officers stepped in front of him.

    Swartz was arrested after he either muttered or shouted, depending on whose account one reads, that he felt "like an ass."
    At the station, he was told he had been arrested for disorderly conduct, a charge that was later dismissed.

    Swartz's lawyer, Elmer Robert Keach III, praised the court's decision, The Associated Press reported.

    "It reaffirms that just because you insult a police officer [it] doesn't give that police officer the right to detain you or arrest you and take away your liberty," Keach told The AP, calling the decision an "important victory for civil rights."

    A lower-court in Albany had previously dismissed the couple's claim because police insisted they had stopped the couple out of concern for the woman's safety.

    In his deposition, Insogna said Swartz's gesture made him "concerned for the female driver, if there was a domestic dispute.”

    But the appeals court deemed his conclusion unreasonable. "Indeed, such a gesture alone cannot establish probable cause to believe a disorderly conduct violation has occurred," court documents read.

    The court added, however, that the merits of Swartz's lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages, still must be litigated at a separate trial.

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    491 comments

    I seen this before in another state where the woman won in court. The judge actually held up one finger at a time at the prosecutor and said, "What does this mean" during each one. It was funny because the judge said, there is no meaning when holding up a finger. It's only a suggestion that can be t …

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  • 31
    Dec
    2012
    6:44pm, EST

    Mourners lay to rest firefighter ambushed by gunman

    Carlo Allegri / Reuters

    The casket of slain firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka is brought out of St. Stanislaus Church following his funeral service in Rochester, N.Y., on Dec. 31. Kaczowka was killed along with firefighter Michael Chiapperini while responding to a fire in Webster, New York on Dec. 24, where William Spengler shot at first responders. Two other firefighters were injured while seven house burned.

    Jamie Germano / Democrat and Chronicle Pool via AP

    West Webster firefighters walk in procession with the casket of fellow firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka during his funeral at St. Stanislaus Church in Rochester, N.Y., on Monday.

    Jamie Germano / Democrat and Chronicle Pool via AP

    Janina and Marian Kaczowka, right, leave the church at the end of a funeral for their son, West Webster firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka, at St. Stanislaus Church in Rochester, N.Y., on Monday.

    Carlo Allegri / Reuters

    Kimberly Ciapperini attends the funeral of slain firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka at St. Stanislaus Church after his funeral service in Rochester, N.Y., on Monday. Kimberly is the widow of Michael Ciapperini, who was laid to rest yesterday.

    West Webster firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka, 19, was laid to rest on Monday, after he and fellow firefighter Michael Chiapperini were ambushed and killed while responding to a fire on Dec. 24, according to the Democrat and Chronicle. Two other firefighters were also injured. Chiapperini's funeral was held on Sunday, the Associated Press reports.

    Jamie Germano / Democrat and Chronicle Pool via AP

    A West Webster firefighter carries a program during the funeral for fellow West Webster firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka at St. Stanislaus Church in Rochester, N.Y., on Monday.

    Carlo Allegri / Reuters

    Firefighters wait for the casket of slain firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka to be brought outside of St. Stanislaus Church following his funeral service in Rochester, N.Y., on Monday.

    Carlo Allegri / Reuters

    A sign at the Holy Sepulchre Cemetery is seen during the burial of slain firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka following his funeral service in Rochester, N.Y., on Monday.

     

    3 comments

    The killer murdered his own grandmother with a hammer. He should have been given the death penalty for that. Had that happened this tragedy would never have happened.

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  • 20
    Nov
    2012
    6:41am, EST

    NY cop denies plan to cook, eat women

    Jane Rosenberg / Reuters

    Gilberto Valle III, 28, is seen in this courtroom sketch with his attorney Julia Gatto (center) when he pleaded not guilty to criminal charges before Judge Henry Pitman (left) in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan, New York October 25.

    By Reuters

    NEW YORK - New York City police officer Gilberto Valle pleaded not guilty on Monday to conspiring to kidnap, torture, cook and eat women. 


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    The 28-year-old, of Forest Hills, Queens, was charged and arrested in October with conspiring to cross state lines to kidnap the women and with illegally accessing a federal database.

    Prosecutors said some of the women were acquaintances of Valle but it was not clear if he knew or had met all of them.

    Valle, who an official said had no prior criminal record, was not charged with carrying out any of his suspected plans. 

    NYC cannibal case tests lines of fantasy, threat

    At a brief hearing Monday in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, Valle's attorney, Julia Gatto, told the judge she would again seek to have her client freed on bail after two other judges previously denied her request. 

    Investigators uncovered a file on Valle's computer containing the names and pictures of at least 100 women, and the addresses and physical descriptions of some of them, according to the criminal complaint. 

    The complaint said he had undertaken surveillance of some of the women at their places of employment and their homes.

    Gatto argued that Valle, a 6-1/2 year NYPD veteran, was all talk and should be released on bail.

    The charges carry a maximum sentence of life in prison. 

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    76 comments

    This article is so badly written it's actually laughable...

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  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    3:59pm, EST

    In storm-hit states, some locations changed for balloting on Election Day

    By Tom Curry, NBC News national affairs writer

    Updated 7:48pm ET In the storm-ravaged states of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, officials have moved some Election Day voting locations, although many remain unchanged.

    As of noon Monday, Connecticut Secretary of State Denise Merrill said that utility companies in her state have reported that electricity has been restored to all but two of 773 voting precincts in the state.

    Gov. Cuomo signed an order allowing any voter to vote at any polling place on Tuesday – and in New Jersey, it's possible to vote via email or fax. NBC's Ron Allen reports.

    Her Web site posted the two voting place changes:

    · Bridgeport’s Longfellow School polling place has been relocated to Aquaculture School, 60 St. Stephens Road, Bridgeport.

    · New London’s Ocean Beach polling place has been relocated to Harbor School, 432 Montauk, Ave, New London.

    Recommended: Romney, Obama hit must-win states in 'barnburner' campaign day

    In New Jersey, storm-displaced voters who are temporarily staying in a part of the state where they are not registered, are permitted to go to any polling place in New Jersey on Election Day and vote by using a provisional ballot. The ballot will be forwarded to the county of the voter’s residence.

    Tim Aubry / Reuters

    Utility trucks and first responders navigate flood waters on the main stretch of road in Peahala Park, N.J., in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, in this photograph taken on October 30, 2012 and released on Oct. 31.

    Displaced New Jersey voters also have until 5 p.m. ET on Election Day to fax or e-mail a request for a mail ballot to their county clerk.

    More information is available at the New Jersey Division of Elections website, on voting by fax or e-mail.  The voter must transmit the ballot to the county board of elections no later than 8 p.m. ET on Election Day.

    Some counties in New Jersey have posted changes in voting locations or have alerted voters about the status of voting locations in their area.

    Here are a few:

    · Union County: County officials have posted an announcement that “almost all polling places are expected to be open on Election Day, Tuesday November 6. An updated list will be available later today.”

    ·   Ocean County: The county has posted a list of changes in voting locations here.

    ·  Atlantic County: The elections board has posted a list of changes in voting locations here.

    ·  Monmouth County: The county has posted a list of locations here.

    The county also says: “Provisions have been made for residents in two of the most severely storm-ravaged boroughs to vote in neighboring communities. Sea Bright residents will vote at the Fair Haven Fire House on 645 River Road in Fair Haven. Loch Arbour residents will be voting at the Allenhurst Fire House on 311 Hume Street in Allenhurst. All other residents will vote in their own community.”

    Recommended: Romney adds Election Day stops in Ohio, Pennsylvania

    In New York, as of Monday morning, some counties were still in the process of finding new voting locations but had not yet posted them on their Web sites.

    Suburban Nassau County, which was hit especially hard by last week’s storm surge and flooding, has posted a list of the voting locations that have been moved or consolidated, here.

    In addition, Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed an executive order on Monday that will allow displaced voters from one of the federally-declared disaster counties, such as Nassau, who may temporarily be in a county other than where they live to vote by affidavit ballot.

    The affidavit ballot will be sent to the board of elections where the voter is registered. According to Cuomo’s press office, these votes by affidavit ballot will count for the office of president and United States senator “and for any other candidate and ballot initiative that appears on the official ballot where the voter is registered.”

    Listed below are links to the polling place search tools that each state offers, but be aware that in some cases changes in polling locations might not be reflected in the voter lookup tool databases.

    · Search tool for New Jersey voters here.

    · Search tool for New York state voters here.

    · Search tool for New York City voters here.

    · Search tool for Connecticut voters here.

    For voters who want to use early voting or an absentee ballot, here’s some information:

    · In New York, a voter needs a specific reason to vote by absentee ballot, such as being out of the state on Election Day, having a disability, or being in prison due to having been convicted of a non-felony offense. The State Board of Elections has announced that the deadline for applying in person for an absentee ballot is Monday. Absentee ballots must be postmarked no later than Monday, Nov. 5. Those mailed ballots have until Nov. 19 to arrive at the local Board of Elections.

    · In New Jersey, any voter can vote by mail. A voter may apply in person to the County Clerk until 3:00 p.m. ET Monday. Vote by mail ballot must be received by the County Board of Elections no later than 8 p.m. ET on Election Day.

    · In Connecticut, voting by absentee ballot is limited  to the sick and disabled, those in active service in the armed forces, and those absent from their town for all of Election Day. The deadline to apply for an absentee ballot is Monday and the deadline for returning the absentee ballot is 8 p.m. ET on Election Day.

    113 comments

    And we were singin'.... "Bye, bye, Mr. It's All My Pie, Drive your Caddies to the levee, let the Tea party die, And good old boys will drink their whiskey and rye, Singin' 'Grover Norquist, we spit in your eye'".

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  • 29
    Sep
    2012
    10:38am, EDT

    Ex-NY Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger dies

    By The Associated Press

    Anthony Camerano / AP

    New York Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger in his office in New York in 1973. Sulzberger has died at age 86.

    Former New York Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, who led the newspaper to new levels of influence and profit amid some of the most significant moments in 20th-century journalism, died Saturday. He was 86.

    Sulzberger, father of current Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., died at his home in Southampton, N.Y., after a long illness, his family announced to the newspaper.

    During his three-decade-long tenure, the newspaper won 31 Pulitzer prizes, published the Pentagon Papers and won a libel case victory in New York Times vs. Sullivan that established important First Amendment protections for the press.


    In an era of declining newspaper readership, the Times' weekday circulation climbed from 714,000 when Sulzberger became publisher in 1963 to 1.1 million upon his retirement as publisher in 1992. Over the same period, the annual revenues of the Times' corporate parent rose from $100 million to $1.7 billion.

    "Above all, he took the quality of the product up to an entirely new level," the late Katharine Graham, chairwoman of The Washington Post Co., said at the time Sulzberger relinquished the publisher's title. When she died in 2001, he returned the praise, saying she "used her intelligence, her courage and her wit to transform the landscape of American journalism."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "Punch" Sulzberger was the only grandson of Adolph S. Ochs (pronounced ox), the son of Bavarian immigrants who took over the Times in 1896 and built it into the nation's most influential newspaper. The family retains a controlling interest to this day, holding a separate block of Class B shares that have more powerful voting rights than the company's publicly traded shares.

    Power was thrust on Sulzberger at the age of 37 after the sudden death of his brother-in-law in 1963. He had been in the Times executive suite for eight years in a role he later described as "vice president in charge of nothing."

    But Sulzberger directed the Times' evolution from an encyclopedic paper of record to a more reader-friendly product that reached into the suburbs and across the nation.

    During his tenure, the Times started a national edition, bought its first color presses, and introduced popular as well as lucrative new sections covering topics such as science, food and entertainment.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com 

    A key figure in the transformation was A.M. Rosenthal, executive editor from 1977 to 1986. Rosenthal, who died in 2006, called Sulzberger "probably the best publisher in modern American history."

    Sulzberger also improved the paper's bottom line, pulling it and its parent company out of a tailspin in the mid-1970s and lifting both to unprecedented profitability a decade later.

    In 1992, Sulzberger relinquished the publisher's job to his 40-year-old son, Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr., but remained chairman of The New York Times Co.

    Sulzberger retired as chairman and chief executive of the company in 1997. His son then was named chairman. Sulzberger stayed on the Times Co. board of directors until 2002.

    Significant free-press and free-speech precedents were established during Sulzberger's years as publisher, most notably the Times vs. Sullivan case. It resulted in a landmark 1964 Supreme Court ruling that shielded the press from libel lawsuits by public officials unless they could prove actual malice.

    In 1971 the Times led the First Amendment fight to keep the government from suppressing the Pentagon Papers, a series of classified reports on the Vietnam War. Asked by a reporter who at the Times made the decision to publish the papers, Sulzberger gestured toward his chest and silently mouthed the word "Me."

    Sulzberger read the more than 7,000 pages of the Pentagon Papers before deciding to publish them. After Sulzberger read the papers, he was asked what he thought. "Oh, I would think about 20 years to life," he responded.

    But in a landmark decision, the U.S. Supreme Court eventually sided with the Times and The Washington Post, which had begun publishing the papers a few days after the Times.

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    Gay Talese, who worked at the Times as a reporter when Sulzberger took over and chronicled the paper's history in his book "The Kingdom and the Power," called him "a brilliant publisher. He far exceeded the achievements of his father in both making the paper better and more profitable at a time when papers are not as good as they used to be."

    In their book "The Trust," a history of the Ochs-Sulzberger family and its stewardship of the paper, Susan E. Tifft and Alex S. Jones cited Sulzberger's "common sense and unerring instincts."

    In an interview in 1990 with New York magazine, Sulzberger was typically candid about the paper's readership.

    "We're not New York's hometown newspaper," he said. "We're read on Park Avenue, but we don't do well in Chinatown or the east Bronx. We have to approach journalism differently than, say, the Sarasota Herald Tribune, where you try to blanket the community."

    In the mid-1980s Sulzberger authorized the building of a $450 million color printing and distribution plant across the Hudson River in Edison, N.J., part of a plan to get all printing out of cramped facilities in the Times building in Manhattan.

    Sulzberger was born in New York City on Feb. 5, 1926, the only son of Arthur Hays Sulzberger and his wife, Iphigene Ochs Sulzberger, Adolph's only child. One of his three sisters was named Judy, and from early on he was known as "Punch," from the puppet characters Punch and Judy.

    Sulzberger's grandfather led the paper until his death in 1935, when he was followed by Sulzberger's father, who remained at the helm until he retired in 1961.

    Meanwhile, Arthur served in the Marines during World War II and, briefly, in Korea. He later observed, in a typically self-deprecating remark, that "My family didn't worry about me for a minute. They knew that if I got shot in the head it wouldn't do any harm."

    Except for a year at The Milwaukee Journal, 1953-54, the younger Sulzberger spent his entire career at the family paper. He joined after graduating from Columbia College in 1951. He worked in European bureaus for a time and was he was back in New York by 1955, but found he had little to do.

    Sulzberger had not been expected to assume power at the paper for years. His father passed control to Orvil E. Dryfoos, his oldest daughter's husband, in 1961. But two years later Dryfoos died suddenly of heart disease at 50. Punch Sulzberger's parents named him publisher, the fourth family member to hold the title.

    "We had all hoped that Punch would have many years more training before having to take over," said his mother, Iphigene. Sulzberger relied on senior editors and managers for advice, and quickly developed a reputation as a solid leader.

    At various times, Sulzberger was a director or chairman of the Newspaper Advertising Bureau, American Newspaper Publishers Association and American Press Institute. He was a director of The Associated Press from 1975 to 1984.

    Sulzberger married Barbara Grant in 1948, and the couple had two children, Arthur Jr. and Karen. After a divorce in 1956, Sulzberger married Carol Fox. The couple had a daughter, Cynthia, and Sulzberger adopted Fox's daughter from a previous marriage, Cathy.

    Carol Sulzberger died in 1995. The following year, Sulzberger married Allison Cowles, the widow of William H. Cowles 3rd, who was the president and publisher of The Spokesman-Review and Spokane Chronicle of Spokane, Wash.

     

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

    101 comments

    Really, who cares that this man has died???? Is it really a "Breaking News" item? Liberal Bias is running all over your "Profession", the media in this country is a JOKE, and now it's "Breaking News" that one of your leading Libs has passed,,what arrogance! You people are sooooooo busy kissing Obama …

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  • 16
    Mar
    2012
    9:55am, EDT

    Flush with green pride! New York City to recycle its old toilets

    By NBCNewYork.com and msnbc.com staff

    NEW YORK -- As it steps up its program to replace its toilets with water-conserving models, New York City has begun to seek bids from companies to recycle nearly a million old toilet fixtures over the next six years.      


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The city’s Department of Environmental Protection told the New York Post that it's counterintuitive to have a program to conserve water that increases trash at landfills.


    Old toilets, which use about five gallons per flush compared with 1.28 gallons for newer fixtures, could be crushed for reuse in building foundations.     

    The DEP also said it would give apartment building residents a $125 rebate to replace old fixtures.

    The toilet-replacement program will drop the city’s daily water use by 30 million gallons a day, DEP spokesman Farrell Sklerov told the Post. City residents now use 1 billion gallons of water, so that’s a 3 percent reduction, he said.

    Garbage problem
    A similar replacement in the 1990s replaced 1.3 million toilets, the paper reported. But those units were not recycled, and ended up taking space in garbage dumps.

    “We want to see if there are companies that will take toilets off our hands and provide value for the public,” Skelrov told the Post. “We’ll see what the response is.”

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    15 comments

    Speaking from experience the new low volume toilets truly suck ass. They often fail to flush fully, forcing you to flush 2-3 times after each pooh, thus negating the supposed water savings you get. Also they clog up more often than the high volume versions. So i just use high volume toilets in the h …

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  • 24
    Feb
    2012
    11:09pm, EST

    RFK son arrested in NY hospital maternity unit clash, police say

    WNBC's Jonathan Dienst reports on the incident, and the likely lawsuit to result.

    By Jonathan Dienst and Shimon Prokupecz, NBCNewYork.com

    The son of Robert F. Kennedy has been charged with harassment and endangering the welfare of a child for allegedly clashing with two nurses who tried to stop him from taking his 2-day-old baby boy from a Westchester maternity unit, NBC New York has learned.

    According to a Mount Kisco, N.Y. police report obtained by NBC New York, Douglas Kennedy, 44, took his baby from the newborn unit of Northern Westchester Hospital on Jan. 7, against the instructions of hospital staff who told him the infant needed to stay there. He faces misdemeanor charges.


    Kennedy and his wife, Molly, who was in the hospital to recover from a cesarean section, disputed the accusations in a statement to NBC New York, saying "these allegations are absurd."

    The nurse in charge of the unit, Anna Margaret Lane, said in a deposition that Kennedy wanted to take the child "to get fresh air" that evening. As he tried to leave, he was accompanied by a doctor from the hospital's emergency room, identified in court papers as "Dr. Haydock," later determined to be Dr. Timothy Haydock, a longtime family friend.

    Read the original story and see security video at NBCNewYork.com

    While the nursing staff sought to get Kennedy to return the baby to his bassinet, Haydock reportedly encouraged Kennedy to walk with the baby by telling nurses that he was with him, according to Lane's deposition.

    Kennedy ignored the pleas of the nursing staff and carried the newborn -- identified in court papers as "B.K." -- to the elevator, police said.  As the nursing staff tried to calm him and dissuade him from leaving the hospital, Kennedy turned and walked toward a stairwell leading to the outside of the hospital. 

    Lane blocked the doorway, "placing both hands on the doorknob" to prevent Kennedy from leaving, police said. Kennedy grabbed the nurse by her left wrist and twisted it to that he could pass into the stairwell, police said.

    The baby's head "began to move from side to side, and in an attempt to stabilize the baby's head, nurse Cari Maleman Luciano reached toward the infant's head," police said. 

    "Instinctively as a nurse, I raised both my arms toward the neck of the baby to steady the violent shaking of the baby's head and neck," Luciano told investigators in a deposition.

    While holding the child in his right arm, Kennedy kicked Luciano in the pelvis with his right foot, knocking her backward onto the floor, police said.

    As he did this, Kennedy fell onto the floor with the baby in his arms. Kennedy then got up and ran "down the stairs with the infant until he was stopped by security and escorted back to the infant's room," the police report said.

    The police report did not say whether the infant was harmed but Kennedy's lawyer told NBC New York the baby was not injured and slept during the altercation.

    The statement to NBC New York from Kennedy and his wife said there was no crime committed.

    "The nurse had no right to attempt to grab our child out of his father's arms and I, Douglas, was shocked and appalled when she did so," the statement said.

    Haydock said in a statement to NBC New York that Kennedy, whom he has known for more than 40 years, was not putting his healthy baby at risk by seeking to take him for a walk outside.

    "I witnessed the incident and I can state unequivocally that the nurses were the only aggressors," he said. "To charge Mr. Kennedy with a crime is simply incomprehensible to me."

    Kennedy attorney Robert Gottlieb criticized the nurses' handling of the case.

    "What happened to that baby and any danger to that baby was the fault not of Douglas Kennedy but the nurses involved in this case," Gottlieb said. "There is no question about it during the entire incident, Mr. Kennedy was acting very politely, calmly, politely."

    Elliot Taub, the two nurses' attorney, said Lane and Luciano "called a ‘code pink,’ that is, it looks like its someone trying to abscond from the hospital with a newborn. That alerts the security staff and when it escalated, they hit what's called a 'code purple,' which means there is someone who is acting inappropriately, highly offensive, is a danger in the hospital."

    Kennedy is the 10th child of Robert F. and Ethel Kennedy. He and Molly have four children.

    A Brown University graduate, Kennedy started his journalism career with The New York Post and most recently worked as a general assignment reporter and bi-monthly news program host for Fox News.

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    780 comments

    Not sure that fighting with nurses while holding a 2-day old sounds like a good idea.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ny, westchester, robert-f-kennedy, douglas-kennedy, mount-kisco
  • 17
    Dec
    2011
    3:27pm, EST

    Cops: Remains identified as missing NJ woman

    By NBCNewYork.com

    Police have identified the remains found on Monday in a Long Island marsh as those of Shannan Gilbert, a New Jersey woman who went missing in May 2010.

    The cause of death has not yet been determined.  

    The set of skeletal remains were found in the oceanfront marsh where police believed Gilbert, a prostitute, got lost and drowned in the middle of the night after fleeing a client's home in a nearby gated community.

    Complete coverage from NBCNewYork.com

    The remains were discovered about one-fourth of a mile from where several of Gilbert's belongings were located two weeks ago.

    Police believed that the location of her belongings in relation to the remains indicate she may have been trying to run towards the lights on Ocean Parkway, a nearby road, but could not find her way out of the marsh.

    The search for Gilbert more than a year ago led to police finding the bodies of several others in the deserted beachfront, who they believe to be sex workers like Gilbert.

    Suffolk County police have said they believe a single serial killer is responsible for the 10 victims, but theorize that Gilbert drowned and was not slain by the killer.

    Suffolk County DA Thomas Spota, though, said Thursday that he disputes the theory that only one person is involved in the death of the 10 victims.

    He insisted there is no evidence all the victims are associated with the "sex trade," as the police commissioner has suggested.   The Suffolk County Police Department Homicide Squad is continuing the investigation. 

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    37 comments

    What a sad and terrifying end to a life. I'm glad they found her remains, hopefully she can rest in peace. Poor woman.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: death, ny, nj, long-island, jukker, serukes, shannon-gilbert
  • 4
    Dec
    2011
    12:15am, EST

    Portland, Ore., police dismantle new Occupy camp

    By msnbc.com staff and news service reports

    Updated 2:00 a.m. EST Sunday

    About 50 police officers in riot gear moved in on Occupy Portland, Ore., protesters Saturday night, clearing sidewalks and dismantling defiantly set-up tents after announcing the park was closing early on an emergency basis.

    The Associated Press reported that police were detaining protesters with flex cuffs and hauling away those who refused to leave, but no detailed numbers of arrests were available late Saturday.

    Protesters regrouped in front of City Hall, while riot police gathered near the building, before beginning a march with heavy police presence after 10 p.m. PST.

    Evicted protesters chanted, "Whose streets, our streets." Police reduced their presence as the marchers wandered through downtown streets.  

    Before their sweep, officers warned that anyone who wouldn’t leave the park would be arrested, Oregonlive.com reported.

    Livestream video showed lines of officers in riot gear confronting protesters.

    Demonstarators had gathered in a portion of the South Park blocks, near the Portland Art Museum, NBC station KGW said.

    Demonstrators said they would stay through the winter and had no plans to leave. Police, however, had warned that overnight stays at parks wouldn't be allowed.

    The park where the demonstrators set up tents was scheduled to close at 9 p.m., but police closed it a half-hour early after protesters confronted park workers and prevented them from carrying out their job of enforcing park codes, police said.

    Authorities last month evicted demonstrators who had camped in two downtown parks for more than a month.

    Elsewhere:

    Death in Denton, Texas
    Officers with the University of North Texas Police Department are trying to determine the identity of a man found in an empty area of the Occupy Denton campsite, NBC Dallas Fort Worth reported Saturday. Police told the NBC station that the deceased is a white male and was found inside one of the tents.

    Police do not suspect foul play in the death, NBC Dallas-Forth Worth reported.

    The campsite is still operating, but some campers could be seen packing up and leaving late Saturday night.

    UNT senior and Occupy Denton protester Garrett Graham said the group was in mourning.

    "This is a family and this is a community here," Graham said. "We're dealing with this loss the way a family does -- lots of condolences, a lot of emotion and a lot of love."

    Assault silence in Hartford, Conn.
    A group at the Occupy Hartford campsite, including the victim, tried to keep a sex assault quiet, police told NBC Connecticut. Police received an anonymous call Thursday reporting the sex assault at the Occupy Hartford site in Turning Point Park on Broad Street.

    Investigating officers located the victim, a woman who told them a man aggressively kissed her neck and groped her breasts against her wishes. Several others at the campsite intervened and the suspect ran off, she told police.

    When asked why no one from Occupy Hartford, including the victim, reported the sex assault to police, they told officers they did not want to draw any negative attention to their cause.

    Assembly in Nashville, Tenn.
    Dozens of Occupy protesters in Nashville have been joined by groups from around the state for a weekend assembly, NBC station WSMV reported.

    Groups from Chattanooga, Clarksville and Memphis have set up teach-in's on more than a dozen topics, from Tennessee's new voter ID law, community organizing and the privately run prison system to constitutional law and the history of the gay-rights movement.

    OccupyTennessee will have three marches and a general assembly for statewide decision making each day, with the conference ending Sunday.

    Deadline in Albany, NY
    City officials losing their patience with Occupy Albany protesters sent them a letter ordering all-night camping at Academy Park to end Dec. 22 at the latest, NBC station WNYT reported.

    In that directive, the city cites "serious health and safety" code violations as the reason for ordering occupying campers to pull up stakes in twenty days.

    The bright red "cease and desist" orders attached to the outside of every tent at Academy Park, followed an inspection by the Albany Fire Department and signals a drastic change in the city's attitude toward protesters.

    "This did come by surprise," said Kathy Manley, an attorney for the Occupy Albany movement. "I don't know exactly what they're thinking. I don't know how amenable they are to negotiating."

    What the city wants now is remediation of health and safety violations -- and they want it by Dec. 6.

    Vacating in New Orleans
    A day after New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu told Occupy NOLA protesters they will no longer be allowed to stay overnight in Duncan Plaza, many of those who have been occupying the park for the past two months appeared to have left, the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported.

    About 25 percent of the protesters were gone from Duncan Plaza by Saturday evening and many others indicated they would leave soon, protesters told the newspaper. However, they said, others planned to stay and resist any attempt to clear the park.

    Protesters return in Los Angeles
    One person was arrested Saturday in Los Angeles when Occupy protesters organized a large downtown march that included demonstrators arrested last week during a police sweep of their encampment outside City Hall, The Los Angeles Times reported. About 100 police officers and private security guards trailed the marchers, according to news reports cited by the Times.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    154 comments

    I see the money Wall Street is paying to silence people is working. When the police pension funds are gone too, maybe they'll wish they were a little more hesitant with carrying out their bullsh!t orders.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: los-angeles, or, ny, occupy-wall-street, portland, albany, denton-texas

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