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  • 3
    May
    2013
    3:37am, EDT

    Husband kills wife with a pickaxe, police say

    Investigators say a Pittsburgh man killed his wife with a pickaxe after the couple had an argument.
     
    Bruce Cook, 62, was charged Thursday with criminal homicide and abuse of a corpse in the death of 57-year-old Lois Cook.

    A friend called police Wednesday because Lois Cook missed work.
     
    Police said they arrived at the Cooks' home Wednesday night and found dried blood on the floor of the kitchen heading toward the basement steps. Investigators said they found Lois Cook's body under a tarp in the basement.

    More news from NBC10.com
     
    Police said Bruce Cook hit his wife with some type of blunt object before striking her in the head with a pickaxe.
     
    A neighbor described the victim as a caring woman and referred to her husband as "a ticking time bomb."

    NBC10.com

    253 comments

    Any bets that this one goes all gun/anti-gun really quickly?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, pittsburgh, featured, nbc10, crime-and-courts, nbcphiladelphia
  • 14
    Apr
    2013
    3:59pm, EDT

    Pittsburgh mall cleared after bomb threat causes evacuation

    By Andrew Rafferty and Betsy Cline, NBC News

    A Pennsylvania mall was evacuated Sunday after a bomb threat was written on a note found in a fitting room, according to police.

    The note said there were multiple bombs at the Mall at Robinson in Robinson Township, Pa., just 12 miles outside downtown Pittsburgh. After combing through stores with bomb sniffing dogs, no explosives were found. 

    The typed note, found at Sears, said the bombs would go off if not found, police told NBC's Pittsburgh affiliate WPXI. No specific time, store or reason was given.

    The scene was officially cleared by police around 5:30 p.m. and the mall will reopen on Monday.

    No arrests have been made, but investigators hope the note will provide clues as to who made the threat. Police have received an anonymous tip about a possible suspect, WPXI reports.

    62 comments

    I think it was a Sear's marketing idea to sell underwear.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: bomb, mall, pittsburgh
  • 30
    Mar
    2013
    10:03pm, EDT

    Police: 3 shot at Pennsylvania shopping plaza

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Police say three people were shot Saturday in a shopping plaza near Pittsburgh, Pa., NBC affiliate WPXI reported. Police are still searching for the gunmen.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The Foot Locker, Villa and Dollar Tree stores at the Edgewood Towne Center shopping plaza were shot up, police said. 

    Police told WPXI the two shooters knew each other. One of the shooters was inside a store, while the other one was outside. Police said the two made eye contact and began shooting, hitting bystanders, according to WPXI.

    The victims were taken to UPMC Presbyterian Hospital. One of the victims was shot in the torso and is in critical condition, KDKA reported, while the other two sustained less serious wounds.

    A SWAT team established a perimeter in search of the two gunmen.

    483 comments

    "...made eye contact.." is the key. This was gang-related, same-o-samo we have in almost every metro area nowadays. Think background checks mighta' helped here?

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    Explore related topics: shooting, crime, pittsburgh, edgewood
  • 23
    Mar
    2013
    2:42am, EDT

    Ex-Pittsburgh police chief to plead guilty to stealing funds

    Keith Srakocic / AP

    Pittsburgh Police Chief Nate Harper, seen in May 2011.

    By Joe Mandak, Associated Press

    PITTSBURGH - Former city police Chief Nate Harper will plead guilty to charges that he conspired to steal city police funds deposited into unauthorized police credit union accounts and failed to file federal tax returns from 2008 to 2011, his attorneys said Friday.

    Harper's lawyers made the announcement at a news conference on a day of fast-moving developments in the federal investigation after prosecutors announced the grand jury indictment, Harper pleaded not guilty to the charges at an arraignment, and the judge said the former chief could remain free.

    U.S. Attorney David Hickton called Harper's actions "the worst kind of public corruption," and said it was "a sad day" for authorities who had worked closely with the soft-spoken, generally well-liked and seemingly humble man on issues ranging from gang violence and security for the G-20 economic summit in 2009.

    "This is puzzling and baffling behavior," Hickton said.


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    Later, Harper begged off appearing at the news conference at the last minute because he was "embarrassed and distraught," defense attorney Robert DelGreco said. The 36-year police veteran has lost 20 pounds since Mayor Luke Ravenstahl demanded his resignation Feb. 20 after meeting with the FBI about the investigation, Harper's attorneys said. 

    But the former chief, who came up through the ranks of Pittsburgh's roughly 800-officer force and was chief since 2006, takes "full responsibility" for his actions, said Robert Leight, another Harper attorney.

    "I think we're prepared to plead to that indictment without modification," DelGreco said.

    The indictment alleges the 60-year-old Harper conspired with unnamed others to divert more than $70,000 from a city account into two unauthorized credit union accounts, then spent nearly $32,000 of that himself. It includes a single charge of conspiracy and four counts of willfully failing to file income tax returns.

    Although the federal crimes carry a maximum combined penalty of nine years in prison, Harper's attorneys said guidelines dictate a likely sentence of 10 to 16 months - low enough for them to argue for probation or alternative incarceration, like house arrest.

    Hickton wouldn't comment Friday on a likely sentence. He said the investigation is continuing, although he wouldn't say whether the mayor or other city personnel are targeted.

    Ravenstahl denies any wrongdoing or being a target of the probe, although he's acknowledged two bodyguards, also city officers, used debit cards from the same credit union accounts. The 33-year-old mayor has decided not to run for re-election, citing the toll on his family from the scandal.

    In statements Friday, Ravenstahl and interim police Chief Regina McDonald said the indictment against Harper was "sad." They said they are working to bolster confidence in the police bureau.

    The investigation centers on a $3.85 hourly fee that bars, restaurants and other businesses pay the city when they hire off-duty officers to work security details. The money is collected on top of whatever hourly wage the officers are paid and, by law, must be kept in city-controlled accounts and spent only on certain types of police business.

    Instead, Harper helped open the credit union accounts from which he spent $31,987 - mostly at restaurants, bars and department stores - using two Visa debit cards to make automatic teller machine withdrawals and purchases, Hickton said.

    Harper's attorneys said the former chief was somewhat "naive" and may have believed at first that it was OK to open the unauthorized accounts because the money was still being spent on police-related business, including a massive Gatorade purchase to quench the thirst of officers brought in to handle the G-20 protests, for example.

    At some point, however, Harper began spending the money on himself, which DelGreco said Harper understands was "unambiguously and indefensibly" wrong.

    The attorneys hinted that Harper, who has three daughters and five grandchildren, exhausted his wages on his family and became tempted by the credit union funds.

    "I think the lure of the unmonitored accessibility of that account proved to be an irresistible temptation," DelGreco said.

    The attorneys said Harper didn't fail to file his tax returns to hide the money, but simply because of "procrastination" and "personal issues" that took precedence. Among other things, three city police officers were fatally gunned down in April 2009 - when the first of Harper's delinquent tax returns would have been due - and Harper never got back on track in handling his personal affairs, the attorneys said.

    The indictment grew out of another federal investigation in which a former city employee has already pleaded guilty to taking $6,000 in bribes to help a business owned by a man Harper has described as a former friend land a $327,000 contract to install computers and radios in squad cars in 2007.

    Harper continues to deny taking bribes or making money from that contract, Leight said. But as investigators poked into Harper's finances to see if he had any unexplained income from that scheme, Harper told investigators about money he stole from the police fees fund, Leight said.

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

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

    45 comments

    He stole money from those under him. He passed the Republican initiation test. He is now a full fledged Republican.

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    Explore related topics: fbi, taxes, irs, pittsburgh, usnews, nate-harper
  • 28
    Feb
    2013
    9:09pm, EST

    Hoping for a 'fresh start,' mother abandons child in woods

    By Andrew Rafferty, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A 24-year-old Pennsylvania woman abandoned her 8-month-old daughter in the woods with the hopes of getting “a fresh start,” according to police.

    Jennifer Cutruzzula was spotted by a neighbor walking into the woods with her child, only to emerge alone. The neighbor called police and went into the woods and found the baby girl on a muddy hillside next to a bottle of milk.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “She walked into this area with the intention of abandoning the child,” said Alleghany County District Attorney Stephen Zappala.

    Cutruzzula told police she left her child because she wanted “a fresh start,” according to a criminal complaint.

    Authorities say the infant is fine after being treated and released from a local hospital. The baby is currently in the custody of Child and Youth Services, according to WPXI-TV Pittsburgh.

    Cutruzzula is charged with endangering the welfare of children and recklessly endangering. She is being held on $50,000 bail.

    Zappala said the Pittsburgh-area woman will undergo a mental evaluation.

    “I have never see anything like this. I don’t know how anyone could leave a child in the woods and walk away,” said Zappala.

    468 comments

    Some one needs to beat the crap out of this woman. Get her head straight for her.

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    Explore related topics: child, pittsburgh, mother
  • 23
    Jan
    2013
    2:05pm, EST

    Mother looking for stolen drugs charged in death of twin toddlers in fire

    Trib Total Media

    A house fire in North Braddock, Pa., on Jan. 4, 2013, claimed the lives of 3-year-old twins Ky'Heir (left) and Dy'Heir Arthur.

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A Pittsburgh mother whose 3-year-old twins died in a fire -- after she left them home alone to hunt for stolen marijuana --  has been charged with involuntary manslaughter in the toddlers’ deaths.

    Dalawna Berran-Lett, 32, was also charged with endangering the welfare of children and reckless endangerment by Allegheny County Police after her two boys, Ky'heir and Dy'heir Arthur were killed in the Jan. 4 fire.

    Police believe Berran-Lett left the boys unattended for at least 45 minutes while she tried to retrieve the bag of weed that had been stolen by her teenage daughter.

    Investigators believe the twins started the fire trying to cook something.

    It wasn't the first time the boys had used the stove – or the first time pot was involved.

    In late December, Berran-Lett came home to find smoke in the kitchen as the twins attempted to cook ribs, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reported. In that instance, police said she had left the children unattended for about 20 minutes while she went shopping -- for rolling papers to smoke marijuana. 

    On Jan. 4, Berran-Lett told police she had left the boys watching television, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

    "It was too cold outside" to take them with her, she reportedly told police.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    After locking the front door, she went looking for her daughter, Mariah, 15, who she believed had taken the marijuana from her purse. Police believe the woman left the house around 2:45 p.m.

    While she was gone, investigators believe the boys turned on the stove, then, as the grease caught fire, the flames engulfed the wood-frame rental house.

    The first call to the firefighters went out at 3:33 p.m., police said, from a contractor working on a neighboring house.

    Berran-Lett returned to find her home on fire and surrounded by firefighters. Her daughter was also standing outside.

    According to the Post-Gazette, one of the twins died of burns and smoke inhalation, while the other died of smoke inhalation and carbon monoxide poisoning.

    Berran-Lett surrendered to police Tuesday afternoon. Her attorney, R. Blaine Jones II told the Tribune-Review the woman was distraught. 

    "She is in the state of complete shock. She just buried her babies on Saturday,” Jones said.

    Her daughter is currently staying with relatives, police said.

    324 comments

    Three year old's cooking alone? What a bad parent. RIP.

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    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, crime, pittsburgh, dalawna-berran-lett
  • 7
    Nov
    2012
    9:10am, EST

    Zoo officials: Toddler's death in Pittsburgh shows no zoo is 100 percent safe

    Keith Srakocic / AP

    The overlook platform where a boy fell into the exhibit home to African painted dogs is seen at the Pittsburgh Zoo on Nov. 5, 2012.

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The fatal mauling of a toddler by African wild dogs at the Pittsburgh Zoo highlights an uncomfortable truth for all zoos: No exhibit is fail-proof.


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    Follow @andrewjmach

    Striking a balance between providing a safe and yet authentic experience is an evolving science on its own, with the ultimate goal being to protect both animals and visitors, said Doug Warmolts, Director of Animal Care at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium. 

    “Short of putting everything behind glass and solid barriers, it’s hard to make everything absolutely safe,” Warmolts said. “People’s expectations when they come to a zoo or aquarium are to have a meaningful experience where they have that connection with the animals, and it’s hard to do that if they’re looking through a chain-link fence.”


    Gene J. Puskar / AP file

    An African Painted Dog yawns at the Pittsburgh Zoo and Aquarium in Pittsburgh as he lays in a pile of hay Thursday, March 12, 2009.

    Maddock Derkosh, 2, fell into an African painted dog exhibit late Sunday morning at the Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium. The boy’s mother had put him on a wooden railing at the edge of a viewing deck to see the animals, officials said, and the boy fell into the exhibit. He initially landed on the netting below the deck but bounced several times before dropping about 11 feet into the dog’s enclosure.  

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    Witnesses said at least three dogs surrounded quickly, attacking him at his head, neck and legs. An autopsy revealed Monday that the boy was killed by the animals, not by the fall.

    The exhibit housing the wild dogs remained closed Tuesday pending an investigation by police, who said it was still too early to determine whether criminal charges will be brought against the zoo or the boy’s mother. The zoo opened for visitors Tuesday.

    Accredited by the Association of Zoos & Aquariums in September – the gold standard for zoos in the U.S. – the zoo met or exceeded all safety standards for animals and visitors, Mary Baker, the zoo’s president and CEO, said Monday.

    Warmolts said exhibits at accredited zoos are designed by architecture, engineering and design firms that understand zoo animals’ behavior, from their abilities to jump, climb and dig to how to properly care and set standards for them in a zoo setting.

    “We have to blend those together to create an exhibit that’s not only a suitable and enriching environment for the animals and a safe experience for people to feel immersed into that environment,” Warmolts said.

    “We have fences and barriers and moats and signs and even zoo staff that can keep visitors at a certain distance from the animals. That’s why what happened is very rare. But we can’t always monitor them," he said.

    In San Diego, officials said the incident in Pittsburgh is likely to prompt larger, industry-wide reassessments.

    “The way humans interact with animals has changed drastically over the last hundred years, so certainly one of the things that zoos have had to be is highly adaptive, especially in these situations when tragic accidents happen,” Christina Simmons, a spokesperson for the San Diego Zoo, told NBC News.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com 

    In Chicago, officials at the Brookfield Zoo said Monday that the events at the Pittsburgh Zoo have so far not prompted the change of any of their practices or protocols.

    "We have, like all other accredited institutions, procedures and policies that we follow in the event of an accident -- even a person having a heart attack -- and we also drill on those events too," said Bill Zeigler, the Brookfield Zoo's Senior Vice President of Collections and Animal Programs. 

    Even with safety standards enforced, Wamolts said, the zoo industry is constantly dealing with "human error" by its visitors. 

    "What happened is very rare," Warmolts said. "We’re always in the process of evaluating and reviewing and making adjustments as needed, and it’s an art to try and determine how to do that. What’s more common is people exhibiting inappropriate behavior. It’s just unfortunate."

    Medical examiners say a 2-year-old boy who fell into a Pennsylvania zoo exhibit was killed by the dogs and not by the fall. WPXI's Cara Sapida reports.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

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    427 comments

    "Accredited by the Association of Zoos & Aquariums in September – the gold standard for zoos in the U.S. – the zoo met or exceeded all safety standards for animals and visitors, Mary Baker, the zoo’s president and CEO, said Monday" To bad there isn't a way to screen visitors an …

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    Explore related topics: death, zoo, pittsburgh, dogs, featured, african-painted-dogs
  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    3:42pm, EST

    Zoo mauling: Boy killed by dogs, not fall, autopsy shows

    Medical examiners say a 2-year-old boy who fell into a Pennsylvania zoo exhibit was killed by the dogs and not by the fall. WPXI's Cara Sapida reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    A medical examiner has ruled that a 2-year-old boy who tumbled into an African painted dog exhibit at a Pittsburgh zoo was killed by the animals and not by the fall, a zoo official said Monday.

    "What we understand from the medical examiner's report, the child did not die from the fall. The child was mauled by the dogs," said Barbara Baker, CEO and president of the Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium, WPIX-TV reported.

    Officials say the child's mother had placed the boy on a wooden rail above the exhibit so he could get a better look at the animals. There is a net below the rail, but Baker says the boy bounced off it and into the enclosure.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

     


    "The child initially was caught by the netting. From witness accounts the child was so small that he bounced, then he bounced twice and then bounced into the exhibit," Baker said.

    Gene J. Puskar / AP file

    An African Painted Dog at the Pittsburgh Zoo and Aquarium in Pittsburgh in 2009.

    Baker fought back tears as she discussed the incident during a press conference at the zoo on Monday.

    "The zoo feels terrible about this tragic accident that happened. It's your worst nightmare as a zoo professional," Baker said, according to WPIX-TV.

    The animals attacked so quickly that by the time a veterinarian and other zoo staffers arrived, they determined it would have been futile to try to rescue the child, Baker said.

    Boy falls into Pittsburgh zoo exhibit, mauled to death by African painted dogs

    'Someone help!'
    Authorities said that zoo staff and then police responded "within minutes." Visitors described that time as being filled with screams for help.

    "The screams just kept coming and coming: 'Someone help! Someone has to do something',” Angela Cinti, a witness, told The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on Sunday.  

    Zookeepers called off some of the dogs, and seven of them immediately went to a back building. Three more eventually were drawn away from the child, but the last dog was aggressive and police had to shoot the animal.

    "There were three dogs, one at his head, one on the left side of his neck and another one down by his leg, " Cinti told The Post-Gazette. ”A [zoo employee] got there and hopped over a fence with a rake and he was banging ... trying to distract the dogs, but they wouldn't move."

    Experts said the death is highly unusual.

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    Steve Feldman, a spokesman for the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, told The Associated Press no one he's spoken to can recall any deaths of children at an accredited zoo over the last 40 years or more. Feldman said the Pittsburgh Zoo successfully completed its five-year review in September, which means it meets or exceeds all safety standards.

    Authorities didn't release the name of the boy but relatives identified him as Maddock Derkosh, according to the Post-Gazette. Authorities said his mother is 34 years old and lives in Pleasant Hills, just outside Pittsburgh. The boy's father was identified by the Post-Gazette as Jason Derkosh, a building designer at the architectural firm L. Robert Kimball & Associates.

    The zoo was immediately closed, and it was not clear when it will reopen, authorities said.

    African painted dogs are about as big as medium-sized domestic dogs, and weight 37 to 80 pounds, according to the zoo. They have large, rounded ears and dark brown circles around their eyes and are considered endangered.

    The attack happened in a 1.5 acre exhibit called the Painted Dog Bush Camp that's part of a larger open area where elephants, lions and other animals can be seen. Visitors walk onto a deck that is glassed on the sides, but open in front where the roughly four-foot railing is located.

    In May, some of the dogs crawled under a fence and escaped into a part of the exhibit that's usually closed. The zoo was on lockdown for about an hour as a precaution and the animals were coaxed back in.

    Fatal attacks
    Past fatal attacks have prompted zoos around the nation to review safety features of their exhibits. In 2007 a tiger jumped over a wall at the San Francisco Zoo, killing one visitor and wounding two others. Authorities first said the wall was 18 feet high, but a review found it was just 12 ½ feet.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    In September a man jumped off an elevated viewing train at the Bronx Zoo in New York and was severely mauled by tigers.

    Kraus said there was nothing to prevent visitors to the Pittsburgh Zoo's painted dog exhibit from jumping into the exhibit area.

    Police and the Allegheny County medical examiner's office are investigating, and they haven't yet interviewed the mother or father, who are receiving grief counseling.

    Baker said the zoo, which has never had a visitor death, will also investigate. She said no decision has been made yet on the future of the exhibit.

    A 2-year-old Pennsylvania  boy was mauled to death by 11 African painted dogs after he slipped from a railing and fell into the exhibit. WXPI's Jodine Costanzo reports.

    NBC News's Sevil Omer and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Pulpit politics: Pastors endorse candidates, thumbing noses at IRS
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    • Weed wars: If states legalize pot, will feds still crack down?
    • Delphi retirees say government betrayed them
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    604 comments

    The mother is an idiot for putting the child on the rail. Dumb, dumb and dumber. I'm sure the mother will sue, get a boat-load of money and then the zoo will have to raise rates for visitors. Her moment of stupidity will impact others for years to come. I'm sorry for the child, but the mother is 100 …

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    Explore related topics: death, zoo, pittsburgh, dogs, featured, african-painted-dogs
  • 4
    Nov
    2012
    2:38pm, EST

    Boy falls into Pittsburgh zoo exhibit, mauled to death by African painted dogs

    By NBC News staff and news services

    Gene J. Puskar / AP file

    An African painted dog yawns at the Pittsburgh Zoo in March 2009. Officials say a young boy was mauled to death after falling into the wild dog exhibit on Sunday.

    Updated at 9:33 p.m. ET: A 2-year-old boy fell into an African painted dog exhibit at a Pittsburgh zoo on Sunday and was mauled by the wild animals, zoo officials said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The child was with his mother visiting the  Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium. He fell about 11 feet off a railing that his mother had put him on top of to view the animals, police said.

    He was immediately attacked by several dogs, zoo President and CEO Barbara Baker said. It is unclear whether the boy died from the fall or from being attacked by the animals.


    "The screams just kept coming and coming: 'Someone help. Someone has to do something,'" Angela Cinti, 20, of Bethel Park, who was visiting the zoo with her boyfriend, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

    The zoo quickly moved visitors into buildings as animal keepers tried to coax the dogs into an off-exhibit area.  Many of the 11 dogs in the exhibit moved away immediately, and several others were scared away from the child by the zookeepers. A remaining dog would not leave the child, and a Pittsburgh police officer shot the animal.

    Baker pointed out these types of dogs typically hunt in packs, so this behavior is not considered unusual.

    No visitors on the observation deck saw the child fall into the exhibit, Baker said.

    The zoo was closed for the day while police and zoo officials investigate.

    Authorities didn't immediately release the name of the boy or his mother, but say she is 34 years old and lives in Pleasant Hills, just outside Pittsburgh. The boy's father arrived on the scene soon after the accident, police said.

    NBC News

    African painted dogs, also known as African wild dogs, Cape hunting dogs, spotted dogs, and painted wolves, are found in the open plains and sparse woodlands of sub-Saharan Africa. The long-legged canines have only four toes per foot.

    According to the zoo’s website, African painted dogs are the size of medium domestic dogs, weighing on average between 37 and 80 pounds and measuring 24 to 30 inches high.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    The dogs are classified as an endangered species.

    The dogs normally live in a 1.5-acre exhibit called the Painted Dog Bush Camp that's part of a larger open area called the African Savanna, where elephants, lions and other animals can be seen.   

    In May, some of the dogs crawled under a fence and escaped into a part of the exhibit that's usually closed. The animals were lured back in with food and no one was hurt.

    Ten African painted dogs were born at the zoo in 2009, and their mother died of a ruptured uterus shortly after delivering the litter. Five of the pups survived. The mortality rate for painted pups is 50 percent, even when born in the wild to a healthy mother.   

    It was only the second litter to be hand-raised in captivity, along with one in the United Kingdom, zoo officials said at the time.

    NBC's Betsy Cline and The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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    666 comments

    Hearts and prayers for his loved ones in this terrible loss. If no one saw it happen you have to wonder who was watching him, and how he got over railing and safety netting.

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  • 23
    Aug
    2012
    6:36pm, EDT

    Woman arrested in kidnapping of newborn baby in Pittsburgh

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    Police arrested a woman Thursday evening in connection with the kidnapping of a 3-day-old baby boy from a Pittsburgh hospital, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported.


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    The baby, named Bryce Coleman, was found late Thursday in the Investment Building in downtown Pittsburgh, according to the Post-Gazette. He was in a white shirt and diaper when he disappeared around 1 p.m. on Thursday.

    The baby and his parents were preparing to leave Magee-Womens Hospital when a woman – described as 5-foot-4, 180 pounds and around 25 years old – carried the baby out on foot. The hospital confirmed the baby was kidnapped. Authorities issued a statewide alert.


    Surveillance footage from nearby Life Uniforms showed a woman fitting the kidnapper’s description buying size large scrubs. She had been waiting for the store to open before 9 a.m. Thursday morning and told the store clerk she would start training at Magee on Monday. She paid $16.19 for the scrubs, according to the Post-Gazette, receiving a 10 percent employee discount.

    Sources told WPXI.com that the woman cut off a security bracelet on the baby’s wrist 45 minutes before leaving. The hospital’s security bracelets are so sensitive and are set off if the baby leaves a specified perimeter, according to the Post-Gazette.

    According to the hospital’s website, nearly 10,000 babies were born at Magee in 2006.  

    Bryce Coleman’s grandmother, Charmaine King, sobbed as she pleaded on WPXI for her grandson to be returned.

    “Please, God, please return my grandson,” she said.

    Emergency personnel were checking the baby and planned to return him to Magee on Thursday evening.

    Infant abductions are rare, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Of the 800,000 children reported missing every year in the U.S., 115 are in the most serious category of those who are taken by a stranger and killed, or taken by someone who intends to keep them.

    Two weeks ago, a 48-year-old California woman who had told her husband she was pregnant tried to kidnap an Orange County baby. She was charged with kidnapping.

    The Grio: NYC woman pleads guilty to 1987 kidnapping

    And Nejdra Nance, born Carlina White, was discovered in December – 23 years after being abducted from a Harlem hospital in 1987 when she was just 19 days old.

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    2 comments

    I can't even imagine how traumatic this was for the baby's family. It's good to see the baby was found safe and is being returned but the parents will be thinking about this horror for the rest of their lives. I hope the law in PA will deal very severely with the kidnapper, and I don't care if she s …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crime, kidnapping, pittsburgh
  • 4
    Aug
    2012
    1:06pm, EDT

    Swarm of thousands of bees delays Pittsburgh flight

    Stephen Repasky / AP

    Thousands of bees swarm on the wing of a Delta Air Lines flight at Pittsburgh International Airport in Pittsburgh. The flight from Pittsburgh to New York was delayed until Repasky, a beekeeper, was called in to remove them.

    Justin Merriman / AP

    A beekeeper, gathers up bees that swarmed on the wing of a Delta Air Lines flight.

    Master beekeeper Stephen Repasky tells KDKA-TV he was called out on Wednesday when the bees gathered on the wing of the plane as crews were getting ready to fuel the plane.

    Repasky says such swarms form when colonies become too large and the queen leaves half of her bees behind to find a new home. Some swarms can contain 25,000 to 30,000 bees.

    -- Reported by the Associated Press

    Read more.

     

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    Interesting. I saw the very same thing several weeks ago on a smaller scale. As an aircraft mechanic I was contacted to investigate a swarm of bees in a Piper Cheyenne (small turboprop) . Ultimately a bee removal expert removed about 3000 bees from around an air inlet duct on the plane, but even 24 …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, airport, animal, pittsburgh, bee, swarm, delta-airlines
  • 21
    Jul
    2012
    11:44pm, EDT

    So a bear wanders into a Sears store in Pittsburgh ...

    By NBC News staff

    A mall in the Pittsburgh area had an unexpected visitor Saturday night: A bear wandered into the Sears store.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The bear ran through a parking lot of the Pittsburgh Mills mall in Frazier, northeast of downtown Pittsburgh, about 9 p.m. and slipped into the Sears store using one of the automated doors, WTAE of Pittsburgh reported. (Here are photos from WTAE.)

    The bear then became stuck in the lobby area of the store, WTAE said. A photo posted by NBC station WPXI showed the bear stuck between two sets of doors. 


    Pennsylvania wildlife officials tranquilized the bear and carried it out.

    Watch the Top Videos on NBCNews.com

    Wildlife officials said the bear, which had a tracking collar on it, appeared to be about 1 1/2 years old, WTAE reported. They said they couldn't immediately determine where it came from.

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    168 comments

    He was making sure none of his relatives were hanging out it the rug department.

    Show more
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