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  • 13
    Feb
    2013
    9:13am, EST

    Judge to hear arguments on Whitey Bulger's immunity claim

    WBUR 90.9 via AP

    Reputed Boston mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger.

    A judge is set to hear arguments on reputed Boston gangster James "Whitey" Bulger's claim that he was given immunity to commit crimes while he was an FBI informant.

    Bulger, the former leader of the Winter Hill Gang, is awaiting trial in a sweeping racketeering indictment accusing him of participating in 19 murders. He claims a federal prosecutor gave him immunity for his crimes while he was providing the FBI information on local leaders of the Mafia, his gang's main rivals.

    Bulger's lawyers want to use his immunity claim as a defense at his trial. Bulger contends former federal prosecutor Jeremiah O'Sullivan, who led the New England Organized Crime Strike Force, gave him immunity while he was an FBI informant in the 1970s and '80s. O'Sullivan, who died in 2009, denied ever making an immunity deal with Bulger during his testimony before Congress in 2002.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Federal prosecutors have called Bulger's claim "absurd" and have asked U.S. District Judge Richard Stearns to decide the issue before trial.

    Stearns has scheduled a hearing Wednesday.

    Bulger, 83, fled Boston in 1994 and was one of the FBI's most wanted fugitives until his capture in Santa Monica, Calif., in 2011.

    James 'Whitey' Bulger and his girlfriend Catherine Greig survived capture not by globe-trotting, but by living a simple life among other sun-seeking East Coast transplants in Santa Monica. NBC's Lee Cowan reports.

    -The Associated Press

    20 comments

    I am guessing that IF he has any proof of immunity the following scenario will ensue:.....

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    Explore related topics: santa-monica, james-whitey-bulger, whitey-bulger, winter-hill-gang, fbi-informant, jeremiah-osullivan, boston-gangster, boston-mobster
  • 19
    Nov
    2012
    5:41pm, EST

    Santa Monica can block popular Nativity scene in park, judge rules

    Frederic J. Brown / AFP - Getty Images file

    In this file photo taken on Dec. 17, 2011, pedestrians walk past a Christmas display in Santa Monica, California.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Efforts to force Santa Monica, Calif., to reopen spaces in a city park for Christmas Nativity scenes were denied by a federal judge on Monday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The decision by U.S. District Court Judge Audrey B. Collins allows the city of Santa Monica to bar seasonal displays in public, the Los Angeles Times reported.

    A controversy erupted after Santa Monica officials stopped a long-standing holiday tradition for groups to set up private, unattended displays in Palisades Park, including a life-size Nativity display that has been a Santa Monica fixture for decades, according to The Associated Press. Atheists have previously protested alongside the displays with anti-God messages in the park. Santa Monica's city council voted to ban all private unattended displays back in June, according to the LA Times.

    Previous story: Churches sue California city to bring back nativity scene


    The Santa Monica Nativity Scene Committee sued for freedom of speech violations, arguing that while atheists have the right to protest, that freedom doesn't trump the Christians' right to free speech, the AP reported.

    "This amounts to an erosion of First Amendment liberty for religious speech in this country," an attorney for the Nativity Scene committee, William Becker, told NBCLosAngeles.com. "It's just one more step in the slippery slope."

    The city is reportedly "very pleased" with the ruling, Santa Monica's attorney Barry A. Rosenbaum told the LA Times.

    "(The judge) understood the government interests and that (groups wanting to put up displays) have a number of alternatives to erect displays," Rosenbaum told the newspaper.

    Last year, Santa Monica held a lottery to determine which groups could have displays in city's Palisades Park, according to NBCLosAngeles.com. The atheists won 18 of the 21 available spaces, while the Nativity scene was limited to only two spaces.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    Churches are still allowed to go caroling in the park, hand out literature or stage plays about the birth of Jesus there, Santa Monica Deputy City Attorney Jeanette Schachtner told the AP in an email. Displays on private land are of course permitted.

    The parties in this case are all due back in court Dec. 3 for additional arguments, the LA Times reported.

    The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution guarantees freedom of speech and religion, but also states that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." According to the AP, that has been interpreted by courts as providing for separation of church and state, barring government bodies from promoting, endorsing or funding religion or religious institutions.

    The Associated Press, as well as NBCLosAngeles.com's Patrick Healy and Jonathan Lloyd contributed to this report.

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    265 comments

    I totally agree with the judge, why should the city have to spend money and resources stepping into this fight? Both groups are totally free to put up whatever displays they want on their own property. There is no "right" to government provided nativity space. Thats just made up.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: christmas, santa-monica, freedom-of-speech, nativity-scene, atheists
  • 19
    Nov
    2012
    9:23am, EST

    Churches sue California city to bring back nativity scene

    This Dec. 4, 2011 photo shows avowed atheist Damon Vix in front of the display he set among other, traditional holiday displays in Palisades Park in Santa Monica, Calif.

    By Gillian Flaccus, The Associated Press

    Damon Vix didn't have to go to court to push Christmas out of the city of Santa Monica. He just joined the festivities.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The atheist's anti-God message alongside a life-sized nativity display in a park overlooking the beach ignited a debate that burned brighter than any Christmas candle.

    Santa Monica officials snuffed the city's holiday tradition this year rather than referee the religious rumble, prompting churches that have set up a 14-scene Christian diorama for decades to sue over freedom of speech violations. Their attorney will ask a federal judge Monday to resurrect the depiction of Jesus' birth, while the city aims to eject the case.

    "It's a sad, sad commentary on the attitudes of the day that a nearly 60-year-old Christmas tradition is now having to hunt for a home, something like our savior had to hunt for a place to be born because the world was not interested," said Hunter Jameson, head of the nonprofit Santa Monica Nativity Scene Committee that is suing.

    Missing from the courtroom drama will be Vix and his fellow atheists, who are not parties to the case. Their role outside court highlights a tactical shift as atheists evolve into a vocal minority eager to get their non-beliefs into the public square as never before.

    National atheist groups earlier this year took out full-page newspaper ads and hundreds of TV spots in response to the Catholic bishops' activism around women's health care issues and are gearing up to battle for their own space alongside public Christmas displays in small towns across America this season.


    "In recent years, the tactic of many in the atheist community has been, if you can't beat them, join them," said Charles Haynes, a senior scholar at the First Amendment Center and director of the Newseum's Religious Freedom Education Project in Washington. "If these church groups insist that these public spaces are going to be dominated by a Christian message, we'll just get in the game — and that changes everything."

    In the past, atheists primarily fought to uphold the separation of church and state through the courts. The change underscores the conviction held by many nonbelievers that their views are gaining a foothold, especially among young adults.

    The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life released a study last month that found 20 percent of Americans say they have no religious affiliation, an increase from 15 percent in the last five years. Atheists took heart from the report, although Pew researchers stressed that the category also encompassed majorities of people who said they believed in God but had no ties with organized religion and people who consider themselves "spiritual" but not "religious."

    "We're at the bottom of the totem pole socially, but we have muscle and we're flexing it," said Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Wisconsin-based Freedom from Religion Foundation. "Ignore our numbers at your peril."

    The trouble in Santa Monica began three years ago, when Vix applied for and was granted a booth in Palisades Park alongside the story of Jesus Christ's birth, from Mary's visit from the Angel Gabriel to the traditional crèche.

    Vix hung a simple sign that quoted Thomas Jefferson: "Religions are all alike -- founded on fables and mythologies." The other side read "Happy Solstice." He repeated the display the following year but then upped the stakes significantly.

    In 2011, Vix recruited 10 others to inundate the city with applications for tongue-in-cheek displays such as a homage to the "Pastafarian religion," which would include an artistic representation of the great Flying Spaghetti Monster.

    The secular coalition won 18 of 21 spaces. The two others went to the traditional Christmas displays and one to a Hanukkah display.

    The atheists used half their spaces, displaying signs such as one that showed pictures of Poseidon, Jesus, Santa Claus and the devil and said: "37 million Americans know myths when they see them. What myths do you see?"

    Most of the signs were vandalized and in the ensuing uproar, the city effectively ended a tradition that began in 1953 and earned Santa Monica one of its nicknames, the City of the Christmas Story.

    The Santa Monica Nativity Scenes Committee argues in its lawsuit that atheists have the right to protest, but that freedom doesn't trump the Christians' right to free speech.

    "If they want to hold an opposing viewpoint about the celebration of Christmas, they're free to do that — but they can't interfere with our right to engage in religious speech in a traditional public forum," said William Becker, attorney for the committee. "Our goal is to preserve the tradition in Santa Monica and to keep Christmas alive."

    The city doesn't prohibit churches from caroling in the park, handing out literature or even staging a play about the birth of Jesus and churches can always set up a nativity on private land, Deputy City Attorney Jeanette Schachtner said in an email.

    The decision to ban the displays also saves the city, which had administered the cumbersome lottery process used to award booths, both time and money while preserving the park's aesthetics, she said.

    For his part, Vix is surprised — and slightly amused — at the legal battle spawned by his solitary act but doesn't plan anything further.

    "That was such a unique and blatant example of the violation of the First Amendment that I felt I had to act," said the 44-year-old set builder. "If I had another goal, it would be to remove the 'under God' phrase from the Pledge of Allegiance — but that's a little too big for me to take on for right now."

    The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution guarantees freedom of speech and religion, but also states that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." That has been interpreted by courts as providing for separation of church and state, barring government bodies from promoting, endorsing or funding religion or religious institutions. 

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    1350 comments

    Atheist's non beliefs don't trump Christian beliefs.

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    Explore related topics: religion, california, christmas, santa-monica, atheist, damon-vix
  • 3
    Oct
    2012
    12:36pm, EDT

    Pedestrians, bicyclists beware: You're a bigger percentage of traffic deaths in New York, Los Angeles

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

    By Angie Crouch and Samantha Tata, NBCLosAngeles.com and NBC News staff

    Santa Monica, Calif., police in October vowed to crack down on pedestrians and motorists who disobey right-of-way laws in an attempt to curb a rash of traffic incidents involving vehicles and Angelenos on foot.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The stepped-up enforcement began just days before a study from the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute revealed that Los Angeles was one of the most dangerous cities for pedestrians.

    The study released last month investigated crash patterns in the megacities of New York and Los Angeles in comparison with crash patterns for the entire U.S. Data from eight years (2002-2009) were included in the analysis.


    For more visit NBCLosAngeles.com

    New York and Los Angeles see far more pedestrian and bicyclist fatalities as a percentage of traffic deaths than the national average. In New York, pedestrian fatalities accounted for 49.6 percent of crash deaths, more than four times the national average of 11.4 percent, according to the study. In LA, pedestrian fatalities made up 32.4 percent of all traffic-related deaths.

    Fatal crashes involving bicyclists also made up a higher proportion of traffic deaths in the two cities. In New York, that number is 6.1 percent, more than three times the national average of 1.7 percent. In LA, 2.8 percent of fatal crashes involved bicyclists. 

    According to the study, more crashes and more fatal crashes also occur at night in New York and Los Angeles than on average in the United States. Particularly in New York, more fatal crashes happen at intersections and on roads with a speed limit of 35 mph or less.

    When NBC4 visited Santa Monica on Tuesday, cameras captured several close calls in the coastal city’s intersections.

    In one incident, a driver honked his horn to warn pedestrians stepping into the crosswalk that he's not giving them the right of way. They take it in stride and keep walking, but before they can make it to the other side, two more cars race by within inches of them.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    In 2012 alone, 88 pedestrians in Santa Monica were struck by vehicles. Three of them were killed.

    "It's distracted driving, not knowing where you're going, being in a rush, and alcohol is always a negative," said Sgt. Richard Lewis.

    October sting operations aimed at cracking down on those in cars and on foot who ignore pedestrian laws are an effort to prevent tragedies such as the death of Claire Rose. She was killed by a hit-and-run driver on July 16, her 30th birthday, while in the crosswalk at 21st Street and Wilshire Boulevard.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Despite offering a reward, police have been unable to find the black Toyota Corolla that fatally struck Rose.

    Rose’s death left her boyfriend, Sasha Rasmussen, devastated.

    "My life's been turned upside down," he said. "My insides have been crushed. Claire was everything to me."

    Also on NBCLosAngeles.com: Sex offenders sue to overturn Halloween restrictions

    Enforcing laws to make streets safer for pedestrians, Rasmussen said, is a step in the right direction, but he’d like to see structural changes, like better lighting for crosswalks and more traffic cameras.

    "I would say to drivers be cautious. Be aware. Pay attention to what's going on, because Claire was an amazing person," Rasmussen said.

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    47 comments

    I can understand the bicyclists being in that group if they ride the same there as here in my town. They have a death wish. They ride on the wrong side of the street, don't, stop at top signs, ride on the side walk, day and night, and do not stop at the street when they enter. they ride in dark clo …

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    Explore related topics: new-york, los-angeles, traffic, santa-monica, university-of-michigan-transportation-research-institute
  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    12:06pm, EDT

    Millions in stolen art recovered in LA area; Porsche, other items still missing

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

    By Samantha Tata, NBCLosAngeles.com

    Millions of dollars in contemporary art was recovered Wednesday after a tipster led Santa Monica police to an automotive electronics store in Pasadena and then to at least two residences, police said Thursday.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The art belongs to bond-fund manager Jeff Gundlach, whose Santa Monica home was burglarized earlier this month.

    Most of the paintings were found during a search of Al & Ed’s Autosound located at 30 S. Rosemead Boulevard in Pasadena, according to Santa Monica police. The store’s manager, 45-year-old Jay Jeffrey, of Canyon Country, was arrested on suspicion of possessing stolen property.


    Detectives were then led to a San Gabriel residence, where investigators found four of the stolen paintings. There, Wilmer Bolosan Cadiz, 40, was arrested on suspicion of possessing stolen property.

    The last painting was found at a Glendale residence, police said. The person who had that painting has been interviewed by police and is cooperating with investigators.

    Gundlach, the founder of DoubleLine Capital, said the recovery marked a "great day for the art world and all those who seek order and justice in our society."

    "My gratitude goes out to Detective David Haro and the entire Santa Monica Police Department for their skillful, tireless and respectful attention to apprehending the criminals and recovering all of the artwork stolen," he said in a statement. "I would also like to thank the many well wishers who offered support and whose optimism over the last two weeks proved accurate."

    Also on NBCLosAngeles.com: 'Anarchy' actor was in jail days before rampage

    On Monday, Gundlach offered $1.7 million for information leading to the successful return of the artwork undamaged. It was not immediately known who would receive the reward.

    The bulk of the reward – $1 million of it – is dedicated solely to the safe return of “Composition (A) En Rouge Et Blanc,” an oil-on-canvas piece by Piet Mondrian circa 1936. Another $500,000 is for a 1956 Jasper John’s collage titled “Green Target.”

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    "If the people that turn in the tip were part of the burglary they will not receive a single penny," according to Gundlach. "However, if they were righteous people, they will receive every penny."

    Still, not all of the stolen property has been recovered, police said.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Sometime between 3 p.m. on Sept. 12 and 8 p.m. on Sept. 14, burglars made off with loot estimated to be worth $10 million, including a 2012 Porsche Carrera 4S, wine and expensive watches, investigators said.

    Gundlach returned to his home in the 500 block of 12th Street on Sept. 14 to find it’d been burglarized while he was away on a trip, investigators said.

    Anyone with information is asked to contact Detective David Haro at (310) 458-8432 or Sergeant Henry Ramirez at (310) 458-8453 or the Santa Monica Police Department (24 hours) at (310) 458-8495.

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    51 comments

    Stop stealing.....the government hates competition!

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    Explore related topics: art, crime, los-angeles, paintings, santa-monica
  • 20
    Sep
    2012
    7:13am, EDT

    $10M burglary: Thieves steal paintings, wine and a Porsche from Santa Monica home

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

    By NbcLosAngeles.com

    A $100,000 reward is being offered after a haul of art, vehicles and jewelry worth an estimated $10 million was stolen in a burglary in Santa Monica, Calif.

    Several "high-end paintings," a red 2010 Porsche Carrera 4S, several expensive watches, wine and a "small amount" of cash were taken in the heist, police said.

    The victim returned home from a trip on Sept. 14 to find that their home had been raided, according to Santa Monica police.


    Read the full story at NBCLosAngeles.com

    "We're looking for the public's help," said Sgt. Richard Lewis of the Santa Monica Police Department. "If they know anything about the crime, anybody trying to fence art, investigators are working any leads they can get while they work the leads they currently have."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Investigators say the alleged crime occurred in the 500 block of 12th Street sometime between 3 p.m. on Sept. 12 and 8 p.m. on Sept. 14.

    Photographs of the stolen artwork along with the victim’s vehicle and descriptions of the watches are available on the Santa Monica Police Department's website.

    The victim is offering the $100,000 reward. 

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    290 comments

    WOW. People keep that kind of stuff in their homes? Just boggles my mind. People have that much laying around inside of their home? And the burglers stopped to take the time to steal wine? How about if information leads to an arrest that person gets their home paid off, a free cruise, meal at their  …

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    Explore related topics: us, art, police, heist, theft, burglary, crime, weird, santa-monica, featured
  • 23
    May
    2012
    5:42pm, EDT

    Police investigate why mountain lion was shot in office courtyard

    Santa Monica Police Department / Reuters

    A mountain lion is seen as it is cornered in Santa Monica, Calif., on Tuesday.

    By Kari Huus and Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    Santa Monica police are conducting an internal investigation into the shooting death of a mountain lion that appeared in an office building courtyard in the city’s downtown, police Sgt. Richard Lewis told msnbc.com.


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    The cat, a 3-year-old male weighing about 90 pounds, had apparently wandered into the city overnight from the Santa Monica Mountains and jumped over an eight-foot wall into the building courtyard, Lewis said. At 5:45 a.m. on Tuesday morning, a maintenance worker called police, who then called in the fire department, California Fish and Game Department and a wildlife biologist from the National Parks Service.

    This was an unfamiliar situation, Lewis said -- the first time in the memories of veteran Santa Monica police officers that a mountain lion had ventured into the city.


    The officials decided a member of Fish and Game would shoot the mountain lion with a heavy dosage tranquilizer dart, hoping he would slump into a corner and officials could then transport him back to the mountains.

    Mountain lion shot, killed

    “That would cause one of two reactions,” Lewis said. “The animal could become aggressive, or it could become docile and lay down. It chose to do what mountain lions do and it tried to escape.”

    The officers acted quickly and shot pepper balls in hopes that the animal would slink back into the corner of the courtyard. They sprayed mist at the glass doors framing the courtyard so the cat wouldn’t try to go through them.

    But it did anyway, lunging at the two-inch glass doors, shattering them.

    “At that point, the animal circled around, realized where it had jumped in from and started to jump over,” Lewis said. “That’s when the order was given to use lethal force.”

    Allowing the cat to jump back over the wall, near the popular Promenade by the beach, was not an option, Lewis said. The cat, injured, angry and able to run 40 to 50 miles per hour, would have encountered humans within seconds. Santa Monica, which houses about 90,000 residents, has a daytime population between 200,000 and 400,000.

    Some questioned why a second dart wasn’t used, Lewis said, but that wasn’t possible either. A second dart would have killed the cat, he said, and anyway, it would have taken 15 minutes to take effect. The cat would have jumped over the wall by then.

    The incident, from call to the cat’s death, lasted three hours. The internal investigation will focus on the shooting, the performance of the officers and whether they could have used different training, Lewis said.

    The Fish and Game Department took its carcass and will perform a necropsy, conducting a chemical and DNA analysis to determine what it had eaten.

    They will then cremate the mountain lion and a game warden or biologist will spread the ashes in a peaceful spot in the mountains.

    "I call it the circle of life," Andrew Hughan of the Fish and Game Department told msnbc.com.

    The mountain lion population is under severe stress due to habitat loss and poaching, scientists say.

    For a decade, the National Park Service has been tracking mountain lions in Southern California, including the 275 square miles of the Santa Monica range, which is hemmed in by highways, urban areas, the ocean and agricultural land.

    That island of habitat is large enough to support 10 to 15 mountain lions, according to Jeff Sikich, a biologist with the project. Young adult males are forced to set out to establish their own territory or reckon with a dominant male in the area, he said.

    "Most young adult males we have followed in the Santa Monica mountains have ended up getting killed on a freeway or by an adult male in that territory," Sikich said.

    Wanted: Poacher who cut off cougar's paws

    The park service is conducting genetic tests to determine whether the mountain lion killed on Tuesday is a part of the tiny Santa Monica population, which Sikich says is likely.

    "This is regrettable," said Tim Dunbar, executive director of the nonprofit conservation group Mountain Lion Foundation. "By having this poor lion die now … that will put even more pressure on the survivability of the species down there."

    Dunbar said the Sacramento-based foundation had dispatched staff to Santa Monica to investigate the animal’s death.

    "Though we tried to get information from the local police they were not forthcoming," Dunbar said. "We are presently requesting a copy of (the California Fish and Game Department's) incident report."

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    181 comments

    I can't believe this cat had to be shot. I swear it sounds like a bunch of heavily armed cops with small testicles needed to fire off some rounds at something,anything. Here in Florida, alligators and crocodiles are routinely captured safely in homes and business areas and returned to the swamp. Yes …

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    Explore related topics: animals, police, california, wildlife, santa-monica
  • 22
    May
    2012
    7:25pm, EDT

    Mountain lion shot, killed after prowling Santa Monica shopping mall

    Santa Monica Police Department / Reuters

    A mountain lion cornered in an small courtyard in Santa Monica, California on Tuesday. The young male adult, presumed to be from the Santa Monica mountains ventured The Promenade outdoor mall where he was spotted by maintenance staff early in the morning. Police shot and killed the animal after failing to subdue it with tranquilizers.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    A mountain lion that scientists believe to be one of perhaps just a dozen left in the Santa Monica mountains was shot and killed by authorities after it appeared in a high-end shopping mall in Santa Monica on Tuesday morning, an official with the California Department of Fish and Game told msnbc.com.

    Authorities initially tried but failed to subdue the cat, a 3-year old male weighing about 80 pounds that apparently wandered into the city overnight.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Kari Huus


    Follow Kari Huus on Twitter and Facebook.



    "This was an unprecedented event," Fish and Game Department spokesman Andrew Hughan said of the lion’s appearance in central Santa Monica. "We do have lion in urban areas, but they are usually small towns. Never anything like this that anyone can recall."

    A maintenance worker at The Promenade spotted the large cat around 6:00 a.m. PT as cleaners were preparing the outdoor mall for opening and reported it to police, who in turn informed Fish and Game wardens.


    A warden and first responders from the police and fire departments converged on the mall and found the animal in a u-shaped courtyard," said Hughan.

    "It was trapped in a little enclosed area," he said. "What wildlife will do is lie down like they do in the woods, trying to hide."

    After setting up a perimeter, police shot the animal with a tranquilizer dart, with the intent of removing it and returning it to its natural habitat, Hughan said. Before the tranquilizer could take effect, they tried to keep the agitated animal trapped using "pepper balls" and fire hoses.

    A news release from the Santa Monica Police Department said: "The mountain lion made several attempts to escape the courtyard and enter the public area. Regrettably, police were forced to use lethal force to prevent that animal from escaping the courtyard and endangering the public."

    An officer killed the mountain lion with a single shot, a move that had the full support of Fish and Game, said Hughan.

    Watch the Top Videos on msnbc.com

    "This was an absolute last resort. No one at Fish and Game wants to destroy an animal, especially a mountain lion," he said.

    The far-ranging mountain lion population is under severe stress due to habitat loss and poaching, scientists say.

    For a decade, the National Park Service has been tracking mountain lions in southern California, including the 275-square miles of the Santa Monica range, which is hemmed in by highways, urban areas, the ocean and agricultural land.

    Wanted: Poacher who cut off cougar's paws

    That island of habitat is large enough to support 10 to 15 mountain lions, according to Jeff Sikich, a biologist with the project.

    Young adult males are forced to set out to establish their own territory, or reckon with a dominant male in the area, he said.

    "Most young adult males we have followed in the Santa Monica mountains have ended up getting killed on a freeway or by an adult male in that territory," Sikich said.

    The park service is conducting genetic tests to determine whether the mountain lion killed on Tuesday is a part of the tiny Santa Monica population, which Sikich says is likely.

    "This is regrettable," said Tim Dunbar, executive director of the nonprofit conservation group Mountain Lion Foundation. "By having this poor lion die now … that will put even more pressure on the survivability of the species down there."

    Dunbar said the Sacramento-based foundation had dispatched staff to Santa Monica to investigate the animal’s death, but did not yet have an opinion about the decision to use lethal force.

    "Part of the problem is that the tranquilizers for the animals act a little slower if the animal is agitated," said Dunbar. "From reports I’ve heard, this animal was highly agitated."

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    778 comments

    This kills me. The reality is humans have moved into so many habitats that the wildlife is being squeezed out one way or another. Some smaller animals have been able to adapt but our larger species are going to be lost, one region at a time.

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    Explore related topics: california, environment, conservation, santa-monica, mountain-lion, kari-huus
  • 6
    Apr
    2012
    5:26pm, EDT

    After pepper-spraying incident, Santa Monica College backs off fee hike

    Michael Yanow / Getty Images Contributor

    Nnaemeka Alozie is hosed off after suffering the effects of pepper spray outside the SMC Board of Trustees meeting at Santa Monica College on Tuesday in Santa Monica, Calif.

    By NBCLosAngeles.com

    Santa Monica College trustees voted Friday to postpone a fee hike that prompted a student protest and pepper-spraying incident earlier this week.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The California community colleges chancellor had requested that the school delay a program that would raise tuition for summer classes to make up for cuts in state funding that have impacted public colleges across California.


    College President Chui Tsang at an emergency meeting recommended to the Board of Trustees that the program be postponed. Students, who filled the meeting room Friday, applauded that recommendation.

    Trustees voted 8-0 to postpone the program, saying they wanted more input from college teachers and students.

    The meeting was held in a larger venue than the board normally uses to accommodate the crowd. At Tuesday’s regular meeting, about 30 students who tried to get into a packed board meeting were pepper-sprayed by campus police.

    Some students staged a protest march on campus Thursday. Tsang said at the Friday meeting that the pepper-spray incident was "regrettable" and that an internal investigation had been launched.

    On Wednesday, California Community Colleges Chancellor Jack Scott asked Tsang to put the controversial summer-course program on hold.

    Earlier this week, Tsang said the pilot program, approved in March, would offer about 50 extra "self-funded" classes this summer at the college's "actual cost" of $180 per credit unit, compared to state-subsidized classes that cost $46 per credit unit for California residents.

    “SMC's cost is far below the tuition rate at the state's other public educational systems,” Tsang said. “The college's action comes at a time when SMC is confronted with the greatest budget crisis ever to face higher education in California.”

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    7 comments

    It is about time that young people blame the universities for the high cost of education. Over paid administrators and profs are to blame.

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    Explore related topics: college, california, student-protest, santa-monica, pepper-spray, santa-monica-college
  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    6:00am, EDT

    30 people pepper-sprayed at Santa Monica College course fees protest

    Up to 30 people were pepper-sprayed Tuesday by police after students tried to storm a Santa Monica College trustee board meeting in protest over proposed higher course fees. KNBC-TV's Robert Kovacik reports.

    By NBC News and msnbc.com staff

    Up to 30 people were pepper-sprayed by police after students tried to storm a Santa Monica College trustee board meeting in protest over proposed higher course fees.

    A handful of protesters suffered minor injuries as campus police tried to prevent dozens of students chanting, "Let us in, let us in" and "No cuts, no fees, education should be free," from disrupting the meeting during a public comment period, the Los Angeles Times reported.


    Capt. Judah Mitchell of the Santa Monica Fire Department told NBC News that up to 30 people had been sprayed, five of whom sought treatment for the effects of the spray and were transported to nearby hospitals.

    Priscillia Omon, 21, claimed a police officer fired the spray into the mouths and eyes of people standing arm's length away, NBC Los Angeles reported. She said a family, including a 4 year old, were in the crowd when the officer used the pepper spray.

    PhotoBlog: Cops pepper-spray 30 as Santa Monica students protest fees

    "They were trying to silence our voices by not allowing students access to this supposedly open forum," Omon told the station.

    However, Mitchell said a mother and young child were not among those treated for the effects of pepper spray.

    'Students care about their education'
    The meeting was slated to discuss a controversial tiered payment program, which has drawn the ire of students and professors claiming that the plan would make in-demand summer classes -- such as English, math, history and biology -- more expensive.

    NBC Los Angeles said some courses would rise from $46 per unit to $180 during the summer session, meaning a high-demand 3-unit course would cost about $540.

    "The students wanted to be heard and we wanted to be in the room where we could fairly discuss this topic, and be seen by them," said Aura Chavez, 18, who was standing in the back of the crowd when the pepper spray incident happened. "We wanted to let them see how many students care about their education."

    Bruce Smith, spokesman for Santa Monica College, said the school had set up an overflow room with an audio visual feed so students could take part in the meeting, but a fairly large group of students showed up in the corridor and demanded to go into the meeting room.

    He added that the college and Santa Monica College Police Department will be investigating the incident.

    Samantha Tata and Robert Kovacik of NBC Los Angeles and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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    1562 comments

    Oh the inhumanity of it all.....a woman exposing her child to pepper spray. Perhaps it would be better if the next time she riots, she leaves her daughter at home.

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    Explore related topics: college, california, protest, santa-monica, featured, pepper-spray
  • 13
    Dec
    2011
    4:37pm, EST

    Atheists ramp up message for the holidays: Humbug!

    Ringo H.W. Chiu / AP

    A passerby looks at a display of an Atheist message along Ocean Avenue at Palisades Park in Santa Monica, Calif. on Tuesday. Most of the Christmas nativity scenes that local churches had placed in the park during the holiday season in the past were displaced this year by non-believers. Churches were allotted two of the 21 display sites, and one went to Isaac Levitansky of Chabad Channukah Menorah.

    By msnbc.com staff and wires

    In Santa Monica’s Palisades Park this Christmas season, the baby Jesus had to make space for others at the inn — nonbelievers.

    This year, all but a few of the 21 display spaces in the park that have housed Nativity scenes for nearly six decades were claimed for atheist displays.

    Just as the winter season is a time when major religions to trumpet their beliefs, it is also a time when atheists spend extra energy pushing back against the influence of religion in public life, especially in government.


     In Leesburg, Va., an atheist display depicting a skeleton in a Santa suit nailed to a cross caused a ruckus. The nonprofit American Atheists is putting up seasonal billboards calling for atheists to go public with their beliefs. And a group in Utah is taking the message to the heart of Mormonism.

    “Religions are all alike – founded upon fables and mythologies,” reads a banner in one of the Santa Monica displays, quoting Thomas Jefferson.

    There the holiday display sites are made available through an application process run by the city. This year, applications outnumbered displays for the first time, said Barbara Stinchfield, director of community and cultural services. She said that an atheist group got nine spaces, and another group laid claim to nine for "Christmas spirit and solstice decoration."

    "For 60 years, it's almost exclusively been the point of view of Christians putting up Nativity scenes for a whole city block," said Damon Vix, who helped the nonprofits American Atheists and Freedom From Religion Foundation populate the display spaces.

    The outcome, resulting in a two-block stretch of displays that are not primarily Christian-themed for the first time, sparked a stream of email and calls from the public, said Stinchfield.

    "Most (people who inquire) are just confused about what happened, and we try to clear it up by informing of the restrictions we have, and the rights individuals have under the First Amendment," she said.

    'Coming out' as atheist
    Also this week, the American Atheists launched the second in a series of seasonal billboards that calls for atheists to go public with their beliefs during festivities with their families this holiday season: “Tell your family you don’t believe in gods… they just might agree.” The message, displayed on the New Jersey side of the Lincoln Tunnel into New York City, is accompanied by pictures of Jesus and Poseidon.

    American Atheists, born out of an early court challenge to prayer in school, advocates for the civil liberties of atheists and the absolute separation of government and religion.

    The nonprofit organization Freedom from Religion Foundation brings its holiday greetings to Mormon-dominated Salt Lake City with new billboards declaring "Reason's Greetings" to passersby and another with a stained-glass motif asking its viewers to "Imagine no Religion,"-- a reference to the John Lennon song.

    ffrf.org

    One of the messages from the Freedom from Religion Foundation in a national billboard campaign that started in 2007.

    "We want the nonreligious — freethinkers, atheists, agnostics and other skeptics — in Utah to know they are not alone,” says Dan Barker, a former evangelical minister who now co-directs FFRF on the groups' Web site.

    Another theme for the group is to remind people of "the real reason for the season — the Winter Solstice, a ‘natural holiday,’ said Annie Laurie Gaylor, FFRF co--president.

    Insulted believers
    Another atheist display, depicting a skeleton in a Santa suit nailed to a cross, msnbc.com reported last week, caused a kerfuffle in Leesburg Va., msnbc.com reported last week. The macabre Santa was one of nine displays allowed on the grounds of the Loudon County courthouse, most of them with more traditional Christmas tableaus.

    "I think that it's just extremely, extremely sad," Leesburg council member Ken Reid was quoted as saying, "that somebody in this county who would try to basically debase Christmas like this. This really crossed the line."

    The display didn't survive long. Someone tore the skeleton down by Monday night sparking renewed debate about free speech.

    In 2009, Christmas displays on the courthouse lawn were banned after the constitutionality of a Nativity scene was questioned. Last year that decision was overturned and 10 displays were allowed on the lawn based on a first-come, first-served basis.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    No-so-humble manger sets Guinness record
    To cheers and tears, blind runner finishes marathon
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    1811 comments

    But...but...but.... If there's no God, how can America be his designated representative to lead the world?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: christmas, jesus, nativity, santa-monica, atheist, hanukah

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