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  • 29
    Apr
    2013
    12:48pm, EDT

    Man shot inside Utah police station

    By Craig Giammona, NBC News

    A man was shot multiple times by police Monday morning after pulling a gun in the lobby of a police station in Utah.


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    Police in West Valley City, a suburb of Salt Lake City, said one if its officers shot a man who was acting suspiciously in the lobby of the police station and pulled a gun after asking an officer to come out from behind a partition around 8:30 a.m. this morning, KSL.com reported.

    Police Sgt. Jason Hauer told the station the male suspect was in his 20s or 30s. He did know not if the suspect fired his gun, KSL.com reported.

    The man was taken to an area hospital, but his condition was not released, KSL.com said.

    More from KSL.com

    235 comments

    Not enough details on this, but I have a feeling there's more to the story. "Acting suspicious" is a disingenuous statement -- people have been detained for "acting suspicious" before when they were walking down the street, or stopped to tie their shoe, or heaven forbid decided to take a photograph  …

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    Explore related topics: salt-lake-city, police-shooting, west-valley-city
  • 18
    Mar
    2013
    10:19am, EDT

    Luck of the draw: Utah town pulls its mayor’s name from wicker basket

    By Craig Giammona, NBC News

    Sometimes a little luck goes a long way in politics. The new mayor of a small town in Utah was sworn in last week after his name was drawn from a wicker basket.


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    Ed Chavez Jr. took over as mayor of Helper, a town of 2,000 about 110 miles southeast of Salt Lake City, after his name was picked in a blind draw.

    "I was kind of shocked that I was the one whose name was drawn," Chavez told NBC affiliate KSL.

    Helper's current mayor, Dean Armstrong, resigned from office Feb. 23 after he was arrested in his second drunken driving offense during his term, KSL reported.

    Helper's City Council tried to pick a mayor to complete Armstrong's current term Thursday night, but with Chavez and City Councilman Kirk Mascaro deadlocked at two votes each, the wicker basket came out.

    KSL reported that each candidate's name was written on a slip of paper and placed in the basket. Helper's municipal attorney then made the pick, with Chavez coming out the winner.

    KSL said he'll serve out the remainder of Armstrong's term, which runs until January 2014. Chavez retired from the Carbon County Sheriff's office recently after 25 years. He previously served on the City Council in nearby Wellington for 15 years and was chairman of the Carbon County Democratic Party for five years, KSL said.

     

     

    15 comments

    It's kinda like how we pick our President. The only difference is that we have to reach into a toilet bowl instead of a wicker basket.

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    Explore related topics: mayor, politics, salt-lake-city
  • 12
    Feb
    2013
    11:56am, EST

    Three dead in Utah home shooting; police hunt for 'person of interest'

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Three people are dead near Salt Lake City after a shooting on Tuesday morning, police told local NBC affiliate KSL.

    A fourth individual was taken to the hospital and considered to be in critical condition after the shooting. Police hunted for David Fresques, 25, after the shooting at a home in the city of Midvale.

    The shootings were reported at 8:06 a.m., according to Salt Lake City's Deseret News.

    Police have not released details on the circumstances surrounding the shooting. They told KSL that they are searching for Fresques’s white Nissan Maxima. The Deseret News reported that Fresques is being considered a "person of interest" in the shootings.

    KSL reported that Fresques was sentenced to one to fifteen years in prison in 2007on robbery and simple assault charges, citing state court records. The man was also recently charged with disorderly conduct and public intoxication.

    “We don’t know if there are other suspects out there as well or who was involved,” Unified Police Lt. Justin Hoyal told KSL.

    Schools in the area went into lockdown, and police officers were stationed at Midvale Elementary, Midvale Middle School, Copper View Elementary, and Midvalley Elementary while more than 70 officers went door-to-door seeking Fresques. The lockdowns were lifted by 10am local time, KSL reported.

    Hoyal said the lockdowns were “precautionary.”

    “I think it’s very important to note that the children are very safe right now,” Canyons School District spokeswoman Jennifer Toomer-Cook said.

    208 comments

    Gun control=now!

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    Explore related topics: shooting, utah, salt-lake-city
  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    9:06am, EST

    Missing 13-year-old Utah girl found unharmed

    Kristin Murphy / AP

    The disappearance of 13-year-old Brooklyn Gittins prompted a massive search.

    A 13-year-old girl whose disappearance this week without shoes or a coat in the chilly Salt Lake City area caused widespread concern was found unharmed, police said early Friday. 


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    Brooklyn Gittins telephoned her grandmother late Thursday night from a Wal-Mart store in South Jordan, Unified Police spokesman Lt. Justin Hoyal said. The woman then contacted police and officers located the child. 

    "Brooklyn was not injured and is fine," Hoyal said. "She was still wearing the grey T-shirt and black pajama pants. She did not have on shoes, a coat." 

    Hoyal said authorities suspect that she was harbored by someone and police are trying to find out who. 

    She disappeared Tuesday evening wearing only pajamas and shirt. A major snowstorm Thursday prompted some 1,000 volunteers to join police in searching 17 square miles in the area near Gittins' home in Herriman, a Salt Lake City suburb about 18 miles southwest of downtown. 

    A key concern had been the frigid winter weather. "Investigators believed she could have been a victim of the elements; it's been extremely cold," he said. 

    The storm was expected to dump as much as 7 inches of snow and bring freezing temperatures. 

    Police have been interviewing the child, trying to determine where she was. 

    There were no signs of forced entry at the Herriman home where Brooklyn was last seen at bedtime Tuesday. 

    "We believe she left her home through her bedroom window and was picked up and harbored by a person or persons," Hoyal told The Associated Press in an interview. 

    Indiana boy abducted in 1994 found in Minnesota

    Salt Lake County Sheriff Jim Winder said Thursday before she was found that the circumstances surrounding the case concerned authorities, especially because it appeared her departure was unplanned. 

    Gittins' grandfather Craig Hiller made a plea at the news conference that for her to come back. He said she's a typical teenage girl who is very outgoing in some cases and very subdued in others. 

    The first time she ran away, she came back a short while later, Hiller said. 

    "This was a successful investigation and we appreciate all the efforts by the community, public safety personnel, and the media in response to Brooklyn's disappearance," Hoyal said.

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

    82 comments

    Nice to hear some good news now and then.

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    Explore related topics: police, crime, utah, salt-lake-city, missing-person
  • 9
    Aug
    2012
    5:44pm, EDT

    Officer helps free moose tangled in swing set

    A Utah deputy came face to face with a moose in an effort to help free the animal from from an awkward entanglement Sunday, The Denver Post reported.


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    Sgt. Lane Findlay was called to residential community 40 miles outside Salt Lake City after a moose's antlers got caught up in the metal chains of a backyard swing set.


    Worried about his safety, Findlay handed his mobile phone to an onlooker and asked him to shoot video.

    "If something happens to me, give this to my wife," he said.

    Told it would take state wildlife officials some time to get to the scene, Findlay decided to try to free the moose himself.

    The moose had been twisting in an attempt to free itself, so Findlay had to approach cautiously. Its antlers were freed from the chains with the help of a pair of cutters. 

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    Once free, the moose walked over to a bucket of water and began drinking and then collapsed on the ground, Findlay told the Post. 

    He proceeded to hose the moose down while waiting for wildlife officials to arrive and assess the moose's health.

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    49 comments

    Thanks to the deputy who freed this animal. You did a great job. Hopefully no long-term problems for the moose.

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    Explore related topics: moose, utah, salt-lake-city, exhaustion
  • 18
    Jul
    2012
    11:11am, EDT

    Man writes his own obituary, comes clean about not really having Ph.D., stealing safe

    Courtesy KSL/Deseret News

    Val Patterson, left, who wrote his own obituary before he died, is seen next to his wife Mary Jane, of Utah.

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Dr. Val Patterson, Ph.D., used his self-penned obituary as an opportunity to tell the world some surprising facts about himself, including: He didn't actually have a Ph.D., and yes, he's the guy who stole that company safe a few decades ago.

    The Utah man, who died at age 59 of throat cancer on July 10, prepared in advance a light-hearted summary of his life that was published in The Salt Lake Tribune's obituary section on Sunday. In it, he described growing up in Salt Lake City, meeting the love of his life, traveling, and spending time with good friends.

    But then, it was time to clear his conscience. "I have confessions and things I should now say," Patterson wrote.

    "I really am NOT a PhD. What happened was that the day I went to pay off my college student loan at the [University of Utah], the girl working there put my receipt into the wrong stack, and two weeks later, a PhD diploma came in the mail. I didn't even graduate, I only had about 3 years of college credit," he wrote. "I never did even learn what the letters 'PhD' even stood for."

    To the engineers he worked with who had no idea he didn't really have a doctorate, Patterson said, "I'm sorry, but you have to admit my designs always worked very well."

    Patterson also came clean about stealing a safe from an inn in 1971.

    "I could have left that unsaid, but I wanted to get it off my chest," he wrote.

    While much of the obituary is written in a playful tone -- Patterson even told Disneyland it can "throw away that 'Banned for Life' file you have on me, I'm not a problem anymore" -- when addressing his "remarkable" wife Mary Jane, there are no jokes.

    "My regret is that I felt invincible when young and smoked cigarettes when I knew they were bad for me," he wrote. "I have robbed my beloved Mary Jane of a decade or more of the two of us growing old together and laughing at all the thousands of simple things that we have come to enjoy."

    In a phone conversation with NBC News on Wednesday, Mary Jane Patterson, 50, laughed while talking about her husband of 33 years, whom she described as a smart man who excelled in woodworking, art, electronics -- and making people smile.

    "There's only one Val," she said."He had a great sense of humor. If you knew him, you would just be in hysterics."

    The couple spent eight years working for an oil company in Saudi Arabia, then returned to their hometown of Salt Lake City in 1988. Over the years, Val worked as a circuit board designer, an an electronics engineer and a consultant. While Val enjoyed the Ph.D. error from his college, he never used it to his advantage, Mary Jane said.

    "He didn't even graduate from college because he wanted to quit just to prove to himself that he didn't need a degree to open any doors for him," she said. Nonetheless, his college continued to send him alumni correspondences over the years addressed to "Dr. Val Patterson, Ph.D."

    "We just laughed at that. And it's true what he said: He didn't even know what it stood for," she said. "He didn't ever use it to any advantage at all for getting jobs or anything. In fact, he was proud of that fact that his talent with electronics was so good that he didn't need one."

    Val had told her about his plans to write his own obituary before he died. Mary Jane agreed with it, and he made her promise she wouldn't change a word of it.

    "I didn't mind at all. He was so organized," she said. "He never asked favors from people. He just always did everything himself. He never wanted to burden anyone."

    Starks Funeral Parlor, where a "celebration of life" is being held for Patterson (casual dress is encouraged, he told readers), has been inundated with emails, phone calls and Facebook messages since the obituary was published.

    "It's just been unreal. It's a wonderful thing. We've never had anything like this before," Brady Gamble, funeral director at Starks, located in Salt Lake City, told NBC News on Wednesday morning.

    While Patterson went so far as to write his own obituary, he didn't plan his service, Gamble said. Mary Jane came in recently to discuss specifics.

    "Once in a while we get families where the person who passed away writes their own obituary, but it's very rare for somebody to write one like this and for it to be so inspiring and so interesting," he said.

    On the Starks Funeral Parlor Facebook page, which commenters turned to after the funeral home's website crashed from getting so many hits, condolences poured in. "To his widow, and remaining family... I can tell he was a blast to be around!" wrote one person. "I personally did not know him, but from his self-penned obituary, he sounds like just the type of person I would have liked to have as a friend. Mary Jane, you obviously were the joy of his life and must be a wonderful, caring and loving person," commented another.

    Gamble believes Patterson's honesty while knowing his death was imminent is what touched so many people.

    "He wanted to convey his love to his wife and his remorse for not being able to spend many more years with her," Gamble said. "I haven't spoken with [Mary Jane] directly, but I've heard this is very overwhelming for her. I don't think she was expecting this type of response."

    Mary Jane said she felt bad for other people who recently lost loved ones who are trying to access Starks' website.

    "Val, what did you do?" she joked.

    Patterson is survived by his mother and brother, in addition to his wife. In his obituary, Patterson had one final message to his readers: "If you want to live forever, then don't stop breathing, like I did."

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    203 comments

    Patterson is survived by his mother and brother, in addition to his wife. In his obituary, Patterson had one final message to his readers: "If you want to live forever, then don't stop breathing, like I did." sound advice from one engineer i wish i had met........

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    Explore related topics: utah, salt-lake-city, obituary, confessions, val-patterson
  • 12
    Feb
    2012
    6:00pm, EST

    Utah man who threatened to kill governor charged

    By The Associated Press

    A Utah man who police say threatened to assassinate Gov. Gary Herbert now faces multiple felony charges.

    Brian Biff Baker was charged Friday in Salt Lake City's 3rd District Court with felony counts of drug and weapons possession, along with a misdemeanor count of threatening elected officials.

    Court records show no hearings are set in the case. The 52-year-old Baker is being held in the Salt Lake County jail. Bail is set at $25,007. It was not immediately clear whether Baker had an attorney.


    Court documents say Baker was conducting surveillance on the governor's mansion in Salt Lake City.

    According to the court documents, on Feb. 2, Baker had sent text messages to a friend stating that he was lying in the bushes and intended to kill the governor. The recipient of the texts reported the messages to police and Baker was arrested the same day, court papers say.

    In his messages, Baker said he had been casing the place and that authorities would utter an expletive "when the explosions start ... should be funny as hell, it's a dangerous mission," according to a police affidavit filed in support of the charges.

    The texts also included a threat to kill a police officer who had driven by the mansion more than once while Baker surveilled, the affidavit states.

    Police also say that Herbert was at home during the time Baker was conducting surveillance and was removed from the premises for safety reasons.

    Investigators enlisted the help of the text message recipient to beckon Baker to a nearby gas station, where he was arrested. Police found containers of ammunition, a large knife, explosives, illegal fireworks and small plastic bags of methamphetamine in Baker's truck, court papers say.

    Security camera video from the area around the mansion also showed Baker conducting his surveillance, court documents state.

    Court records show Baker has a criminal history dating back to 1997 that includes felony convictions for robbery, forgery and drug possession.

    On Jan. 31, Salt Lake County prosecutors charged Baker with retail theft. A hearing in that case is set for Monday.

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

    56 comments

    This guy was crazy off meth, but Governor Herbert is corrupt, giving UDOT deals to companies not actually winning bids. If you ask Me, they should report on how Herbert and his stalker son are lying in the bushes waiting to ambush Utah as it walks by.

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  • 10
    Jan
    2012
    2:46pm, EST

    Gayest US town? Surprise: It's Salt Lake City

    Getty Images

    Gay and lesbian activists protested outside the Mormon Temple in Salt Lake City, Utah, in 2009.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    Forget San Francisco (18th) or New York (not even on the list) — the gayest city in the U.S. is Salt Lake City, Utah, according to The Advocate, the gay and lesbian newsmagazine.

    Rather than rely on the U.S. Census tabulation of gay and lesbian populations, which inevitably yield San Francisco as No. 1, The Advocate used different measures to establish "per capita queerness" — including a city's number of teams entered in the Gay Softball World Series, gay bookstores, openly gay elected officials and semifinalists in the International Mr. Leather Contest, which is held every year in Chicago.

    "While those unfamiliar with the Beehive State are likely to conjure images of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, far-less-oppressive-than-it-used-to-be Salt Lake City has earned its queer cred," the magazine says.

    Among Salt Lake City's charms: the Sundance Film Festival, which brings LGBT film buffs flocking to the city.


    Read the full story at The Advocate

    "If we were having a more scientific survey, I don't know that we would choose these as indicators," Valerie Larabee, director of the Utah Pride Center in Salt Lake City, told the Salt Lake Tribune.

    Follow @MAlexJohnson

    But "all humor aside, I think that our city has come a long way," Larabee said, noting that Salt Lake City was the first municipality in the state to pass anti-discrimination ordinances based on a sexual orientation.

    "If we were to rate the cities that have made the greatest amount of progress over the last 10 years, I think we certainly would rank among the top," she said.

    Orlando, Fla., was second, thanks to annual Gay Days at Disney World and "more gay softball teams than you can shake a Louisville Slugger at."

    And Knoxville, Tenn., has managed to produce a "robust gay scene" despite being in what the magazine calls a state with a legislature that "has been an unmitigated disaster for our rights." It ranks eighth, thanks to "gay-affirming churches" and a thriving LGBT club scene.

    Here's the complete list from The Advocate:

    1. Salt Lake City, Utah
    2. Orlando, Fla.
    3. Cambridge, Mass.
    4. Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
    5. Seattle
    6. Ann Arbor, Mich.
    7. St. Paul-Minneapolis, Minn.
    8. Knoxville, Tenn.
    9. Atlanta
    10. Grand Rapids, Mich.
    11. Little Rock, Ark.
    12. Portland, Ore.
    13. Austin, Texas
    14. Long Beach, Calif.
    15. Denver
    16. Washington
    17. New Orleans
    18. San Francisco
    19. Pittsburgh
    20. Salem, Ore.
    21. Madison, Wis.
    22. Eugene, Ore.
    23. Oakland, Calif.
    24. Boston
    25. Kansas City, Mo.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook

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    858 comments

    ..now THIS is rich!!!!....the most conservative town..in the most conservative state!!!!....gotta love it!!...

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  • 6
    Jan
    2012
    10:44am, EST

    Police: Woman donned mustache, beanie to rob neighbors

    By msnbc.com staff

    A woman in Salt Lake City repeatedly stole from her neighbors, donning an oversized man's suit, a beanie and a fake mustache in an attempt to disguise herself while she entered their home, police said.

    The Salt Lake City Tribune reported that the 31-year-old woman's disguise didn't fool anyone for long, though: On Thursday, she was charged with two counts of burglary and one count of theft for allegedly stealing thousands of dollars.

    According to police, the victims had noticed several thousand dollars in cash missing from a box in their house, The Tribune reported. They checked the box a second time and found another $9,000 missing.

    None of the people involved in the case were identified. It was not clear why the victims were holding such a large amount of cash in their house.

    The victims had only given their house key to one person, a neighbor, and decided to set up a trap to see if she was the burglar, The Tribune reported. They put a small amount of cash in the box and set up security cameras, court documents state.

    The security footage captured the woman, since identified as Manar Ahmad of Salt Lake City, in a very large man's suit, a beanie cap, and a fake mustache using the key to get into the home, the documents show.

    Salt Lake City police searched her house and found her disguise inside, according to The Tribune.

    All of her charges are second-degree felonies.

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    43 comments

    Finally, someone caught the notorious Mario Brothers gang. They've been stealing my quarters for years.

    Show more
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