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  • 21
    Jan
    2013
    2:50am, EST

    Dad kills estranged wife, then self at daughter's 16th birthday party

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

    By Mark Schnyder, NBCDFW.com

    A father shot his estranged wife to death and then killed himself during his daughter's 16th birthday party, police said. 

    The shootings happened outside the front door of the teen’s grandparents’ house in Grapevine, Texas, late Saturday.

    Kristi Suckla, 44, had moved to her parents’ house with her teenage son and daughter after the couple separated.

    Grapevine police said her husband Kelly Suckla, 43, came over to the house Saturday night for the birthday party.

    An argument broke out and investigators said Suckla then shot and killed his estranged wife with a handgun before taking his own life.

    The children and grandparents were inside the home and were not physically hurt.

    The couple previously lived in Euless, Texas. Neighbor Donell Arseneau took the news with tears.

    "They would just come over and we'd visit and I'd been over there a few times," Arseneau said.  "They'd have little parties on the weekends.  They had just recently separated.  Kristi hadn't been staying over there (at her parents) but for just a few weeks."

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    Arseneau said they had recently celebrated their 20th wedding anniversary.  

    "They just got along so well so even when she moved to her parents, I just figured she'd be back in a little while,” she added.

    Grapevine police detectives said they were continuing their investigation but called the deaths a murder-suicide.

    800 comments

    Could Mrs. Suckla have known that he was capable of this kind of violence and this is why she left the marriage for her parent's home??? This selfish jerk obviously never once thought about his children or his in-laws and what this would do to them. Condolences to the family and friends.

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    Explore related topics: shooting, parents, party, birthday, featured, murder-suicide, nbcdfw
  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    10:33am, EST

    More money from parents = lower college grades, study finds

    By Justin Pope, The Associated Press

    Parents who are footing more of the college tuition bill for their children give them a better chance of graduating. But a surprising new study finds they may not be doing them any favors in another area — generous financial support appears to lead to lower grades.


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    The study, published in this month's American Sociological Review, suggests students with some of their own "skin in the game" may work harder, and that students with parents picking up more of the tab are free to take on a more active social and extracurricular life. That may be fun and even worthwhile, but comes at a cost to GPA. 

    "It allows for a lot of other activities in college that aren't academic," said author Laura Hamilton of the University of California, Merced. "Participation in the social scene is expensive — money to hang out, drink." But "the more you have all these extras, the more you can get dragged into the party scene, and that will drag down your GPA." 

    The study is based on figures from three large federal data sets that allow parental contributions and grades to be compared. Hamilton controlled for family socio-economic status, allowing a comparison of similar students whose families make different choices about how much of the cost of college to pick up. 

    The effect on GPA is relatively small, Hamilton said. "The reason it was so shocking, however, is that all the research on parental investments from pre-school through (college) assumes you give something to your kids, particularly money, it leads to good things. This is one case where it not only doesn't have the expected good effect, it has a small negative effect." 

    When parents pick up greater absolute amounts and shares of college costs, it affects GPA across the income distribution, though the effect is steepest at families earning over $90,000. At that level, and controlling for other factors, parents not giving their children any aid predicts a GPA of 3.15. At $16,000 in aid, GPA drops under 3.0. At $40,000, it hits 2.95. 

    While rich families obviously find it easier to contribute, poorer families help as well, at greater sacrifice. But Hamilton says the damage may be greater for those families, because lower GPAs don't hurt better-off students as much in the job market. Wealthier students can rely on connections and further help from parents. 

    Students without those connections "have to have the 3.0 in order to pass the initial resume glance," she said. 

    Hamilton found grants, scholarships, work-study, student employment and veterans benefits don't have similar negative effects on GPA, though loans do, along with direct parental aid. She suggests that's because loans and unconditional parental grants have no immediate strings attached, whereas scholarships and grants often carry GPA requirements. There may also be a psychological effect. With grants, "students feel like they've earned them in some way" and want to justify them. 

    Hamilton said the findings don't suggest parents should stop supporting students financially, especially considering there is a larger positive effect on graduation rates than the negative effect on GPA. But they should lay out standards and expectations. And even if parents can afford the whole bill, it may be worthwhile to make students put up some of their own funds, or work part-time, so they feel invested. 

    In her broader research on the topic, Hamilton says she's found some parents signal it's OK to take advantage of their support for a more social experience. 

    "Some parents were 100 percent complicit in this," she said. "They absolutely wanted their children to go to school and party hard. They told me explicitly it's not about grades, it's about having fun, the best years of your life." 

    "Now for some families it all works out OK," she said. "The 'best years of your life' idea has trickled down to what everybody thinks college should be. But not everybody can afford for college to be like that. And they pay for that for a long time." 

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

    129 comments

    Um, I'm going to call B.S. on this article. My parents paid for my college, and made sure I had ample spending money so as to enjoy the carefree lifestyle of college, and all I did was graduate magna cum laude, go to medical school and become a surgical subspecialist.

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  • 25
    May
    2012
    9:57am, EDT

    Beer-guzzling cows crash backyard party

    Cows on the loose in Boxford, Mass., crashed a backyard party and helped themselves to beer. WHDH-TV's Tim Caputo reports.

    By WHDH.com

    Cows on the loose in Boxford, Mass., crashed a backyard party last weekend, and went right for the beer.

    “They enjoyed it. There’s no doubt about it. They went right for the beer and then when one was done, they’d knock another one over and take care of that beer,” Lt. James Riter of the Boxford Police Department told NBC affiliate WHDH.com.


    Police said they heard reports of screams from a group of women as five or six cows stumbled into the yard, eagerly hurtling toward the beers.

    “They got up as the cows went toward the table. They stepped back and the cows took over the table, knocking over the beers with their noses, drinking the beer off the table. They went to the recycling bin to find any leftovers,” Riter told the TV station.

    A caller told the 911 dispatcher: “We thought they were deer, but they're huge, huge, huge cows. There's got to be five or six of them.”

    Andrea Poritzky also called 911 after spotting "about six cows" in her yard.

    "I don't own cows,” she said.

    “I was initially a little nervous. And then after I found it very comical and not very surprising due to the fact that we live in the country here,” Poritzky said.

    A police escort rounded up the cows and returned them to a farm about a mile away.

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    139 comments

    These ladies could have atl least put out some snacks so they don't leave stumbling drunk.

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  • 21
    May
    2012
    6:57pm, EDT

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

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

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

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


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

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


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

    Watch the most-viewed videos on msnbc.com

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

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

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

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

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

    Logue is being held at the Pasco County Jail.

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    34 comments

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

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  • 17
    Jan
    2012
    6:08am, EST

    Occupy Congress: Could it be politics as unusual?

    Gary Cameron / Reuters

    Occupy Congress protesters march to the west side of the U.S. Capitol for a rallly on Tuesday.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Thousands of Occupy protesters from across the country are expected to converge Tuesday on Capitol Hill to take their message to the halls of Congress, in what some observers say is the movement’s overdue moment to engage the American political system.

    Protesters already have set up camps in public spaces, taken over foreclosed homes and  shut down key shipping ports, but for the most part they have shunned the political system, viewing it as beyond salvation.

    The congressional protest – which falls on the movement's four-month mark and the beginning of a new session of Congress – appears to represent a strategic shift aimed at winning support of the many Americans disillusioned with the legislative branch.


    Occupy Wall Street activists along the West Coast on Monday took their protest to major ports from California to Alaska. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    “Often the complaint that I hear is that, 'you guys are targeting the wrong people.' And so we have that discussion about you know whether or not Wall Street is the source of the problem or really Congress is," said Aaron Bornstein, a 31-year-old neuroscientist and member of the Occupy Wall Street Think Tank, which will hold discussions at the event.

    “They're really two sides of the same coin,” he continued. ”You can't have the corruptive influence without both the people who are doing the corrupting and the people who are corrupted.”

    Protesters have traveled from far-flung towns and cities such as Walla Walla, Wash., Greensboro, N.C., and San Diego by plane, car, bus and train. They have made posters and information cards – some about controversial legislation, such as the National Defense Authorization Act and the online piracy bills, SOPA and PIPA; and the voting records of members of Congress as well as their net worth. Some intend to camp at one of the two Occupy sites in D.C.

    • Red Tape: Wikipedia joins anti-SOPA web blackout

    "Most of the people in our group ... are Social Security folks," said Norm Osterman, a 68-year-old retired teacher from Walla Walla. He said the important issues for him and his fellow retirees are saving Medicare, taxing the rich and ending corporate personhood. "So we’ve seen things come and go. And going to D.C. to complain seems like the only sane thing to do right now."

    "Like I say, if people are coming from Walla Walla, they're probably coming from everywhere," quipped Osterman, adding that many residents of his eastern Washington city are supportive of their group called Rebuild the American Dream since students had already taken the Occupy Walla Walla moniker.

    Msnbc's Richard Lui moderates a live discussion with members of both the Occupy movement and Tea Party affiliated groups.

    A Gallup poll in mid-November showed congressional job approval hovering at 13 percent and the firm noted it was "low among all Americans, regardless of their political party identification." Gallup noted that 2011 was on "track to be the lowest annual rating of Congress in Gallup's history."

    'American as apple pie'
    Vietnam veteran and retired fine arts professor James A. Davies II is part of a Greensboro group that chartered a bus for the six-hour journey to the nation’s capital. For him, it's imperative to have his "boots on the ground" to protect his children's future and the right to protest, which he said "is as American as apple pie."

    “I have to do something to let it be known that there are things in this country that are happening that are wrong and that are contrary to what I grew up believing this country represented," said Davies, 66, noting his grievances include the militarization of the police, suppression of freedom of speech and concerns about "corporate fascism."

    The Greensboro group, like others, will meet with their local members of Congress. The day will include a protest march past the three branches of government; a general assembly; teach-ins; a D.C. voting rights vigil, trainings, performances at an 'open mic' stage and a party. Some protesters plan to stay through the weekend so they can march against the landmark Supreme Court decision affirming corporate personhood and money as speech – known as Citizens United – on its second anniversary on Saturday.

    • PhotoBlog, December 6: Demonstrators from 46 states 'Take Back the Capitol'

    Dorian Warren, an assistant professor of political science at Columbia University, said the twin events will tie their core concern about what the protesters consider Wall Street greed to its impact on the political system.

    “This is actually the second prong of their (Occupy) critique," he said. "It’s kind of a smart move to now make their next big event at the site of their second core critique of our democracy, so I think a lot of people will be paying attention."

    The event has raised questions about whether Occupy is becoming politicized, especially with an event focused on politicians. But some of those helping put together the day dismiss that idea.

    “Our main message is that our elected officials are no longer representing the people and that’s largely due to corporate money running the show on the Hill,” said Mario Lozada, a 25-year-old immigration lawyer from Philadelphia. “The question as to whether or not Occupy Wall Street is becoming politicized -- the answer is ‘absolutely no.’ We’re not supporting any candidate at all."

    Embrace party politics?
    In some parts of the country, however, Occupy protesters are engaging in the political process.

    In parts of Florida, Occupy protesters want to work with Democrats to introduce legislation, according to Deana Rohlinger, an associate professor of sociology at Florida State University researching the Tea Party and Occupy. Protesters in Portland, Ore., also recently claimed credit for helping the City Council craft a resolution supporting the end of corporate personhood.

    "The movement is creeping up on this really critical moment in its history because they're going to have to decide whether or not to embrace party politics in some ways, and this is really contentious," she said. "The movement wants to maintain its strength and some activists would see this as being extraordinarily hypocritical, to work within a political system that has been corrupted by the money of corporate America."

    "But there are a lot of activists that really believe that despite the flaws of the system, the only way that you can begin to create meaningful, lasting change is to figure out ways in which you can work within the system," she added.

    Chris McKay, a 44-year-old auto glass installer in San Diego who left his job to participate in Occupy fulltime, believes the movement will begin to focus on politics over the course of the year. But he noted the changes that have already occurred.

    "We're four months old, we're learning, we're adjusting, we're growing," he said. Before Occupy, people may have said, "’I'm one person, what can I do?’ Now, I think Americans are starting to think I am one person, but I can do something."

    Courtesy of James Davies

    In this handout image, James Davies participates in Occupy Greensboro.

    "I'm excited about the occupation going and doing this," he said about Tuesday's event, before leaving on a cross-country bus trip. "I think it's needed to make a statement that 2012 is the Occupy year. This is the year the Occupy movement really will gain the credibility that it needs."

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    705 comments

    Wow...am I first??. Need directions to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Do they have RV Hook-ups??

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