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  • 19
    Feb
    2013
    10:46am, EST

    Hold the pepperoni -- and a gun -- at Virginia pizzeria

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A Virginia Beach pizzeria is serving up pies with a big slice of politics, offering a 15 percent discount to anyone who walks in with a firearm or shows a concealed weapon permit.

    Amanda Lucier / The Virginian-Pilot via AP

    Lee Lazernick, right, asked his mother Thelma Lazernick, left, to pose with a customer's Ruger Mini-14 .223 semi-automatic rifle on Feb. 18, at All Around Pizza and Deli in Virginia Beach, Va.

    The owner of All Around Pizzas and Deli says it's his way of showing that the gun-control movement turns his stomach.

    "I've always been a supporter of the right to carry," Jay Laze told NBC affiliate WAVY. "You're either on one side or the other and it seems like more politicians are against us rather than for us.

    "I want to show them they really aren't representing the people or the constitution they are sworn in under."

    Laze said the gimmick is a hit and that 80 percent of his customers are coming in packing heat. One brought an AK-47, according to the Virginian-Pilot.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Christopher Cody was strapped when he came in to eat.

    "Not everyone who owns a gun is dangerous," he told WAVY. "All the laws that are coming out are trying to protect the children. I've been sitting here with a gun for the last 45 minutes and it hasn't caused any kind of problem."

    Laze, who says he has been robbed four times in the past, got the idea from a Utah ice-cream shop that offered a similar discount and said the price-cut is so popular he may make it permanent.

    Related:

    NRA exec accuses Obama of gun 'charade' at State of the Union

    Amanda Lucier / The Virginian-Pilot via AP

    Jay Laze, center talks with customers including Andy Elliott, left, who brought his 9 mm handgun to All Around Pizza and Deli in Virginia Beach, Va., on Feb. 8, where anyone who carries a gun or brings a concealed handgun permit is offered a discount.

     

    500 comments

    Free security. bet no one would even dare consider robbing this guy.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: gun-control, virginia-beach, pizzeria, jay-laze
  • 9
    Apr
    2012
    1:38pm, EDT

    Navy makes initial $2,300 payment to residents left homeless by jet crash in Virginia Beach

    After eyewitnesses came forward with accounts of an explosion and loss of power just prior to the crash of an F-18 fighter jet into an apartment building in Virginia, the Navy said a "catastrophic" system failure was the likely cause of the accident that injured four people. NBC's Thanh Truong and Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The people left homeless when an 12-ton F/A 18 Navy fighter jet crashed into their Virginia Beach apartment complex began receiving emergency relief money on Monday.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Navy officials earlier said in a statement that initial payments to the residents would begin at $2,300. Some residents told NBC affiliate WAVY-TV that they provided the Navy with banking information so money could be directly deposited into their bank accounts.

    Five residents were injured when the jet from nearby Naval Air Station Oceana crashed into the Mayfair Mews Apartments on Friday. No one died in what Virginia Beach Mayor Will Sessions and Navy Adm. John Harvey Jr., head called a Good Friday "miracle." Several buildings were destroyed and others partially damaged.


    The Navy pilots safely ejected before the crash but also suffered injuries.

    Fire officials have said that some 60 residents were without homes due to the crash. The Navy is paying for the residents to stay in hotels while they make arrangements to find a new place to say, WAVY reported on its website.

    Over the weekend, residents were given limited access to safe areas of the apartment complex to retrieve their belongings. They were allowed to pick their vehicles on Monday morning.

    "We are committed to doing the right thing to address the needs of these families, who through no fault of their own have endured an incredible hardship," Reuters quoted Rear Adm. Tim Alexander, commander of the Navy's Mid-Atlantic region, as saying.

    Read WAVY.com for more news on the Navy jet crash

    The Navy has also established a call center to assist residents affected by the crash.

    According to the Navy, the F/A 18 sustained a "catastrophic mechanical malfunction" during a training flight. The case is still under investigation.

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    11 comments

    Hey John C why don't you read the article before making lame comments. This is an initial emergency payment to the people displaced. These people wound up with no clothes etc to change into and are currently in hotel rooms paid for by the U.S. Navy. I commend the Naval Commander at that base for the …

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    Explore related topics: navy, military, jet-crash, virginia-beach
  • 7
    Apr
    2012
    7:13am, EDT

    Navy jet crash aftermath: Virginia Beach mayor says it's a 'miracle' no one died

    NBC's Thanh Truong reports.

    By NBC News and msnbc.com staff

    Updated at 2:39 p.m. ET: Officials said Saturday they were astonished that apparently no one was killed and only a few people hurt when a U.S. Navy fighter jet malfunctioned and crashed in a fireball into a Virginia Beach, Va., apartment complex.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    All residents in the complex have been accounted for, rescue officials said.

    “We are so blessed and believe a miracle has occurred here,” Virginia Beach Mayor Will Sessoms said at an afternoon press conference with Navy officials.


    “The mayor and I both agreed that if you wanted to define a miracle, this defined it for me,” added Navy Adm. John Harvey Jr., head of U.S. Fleet Forces Command based in Norfolk.

    Zooming along at 170 mph in a fighter jet carrying thousands of pounds of volatile fuel, two Navy pilots faced nothing but bad choices Friday when their aircraft malfunctioned over Virginia's most populated city.

    "Catastrophic engine system failure right after takeoff, which is always the most critical phase of flying, leaves very, very few options," aviation safety expert and decorated pilot J.F. Joseph told The Associated Press. "You literally run out of altitude, air speed and ideas all at the same time," he said.

    The Navy has launched an internal investigation to find out more about why a fighter jet crashed into an apartment complex in Virginia. As of Friday there were no reported fatalities. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    The men ejected from their F/A-18D jet moments before it slammed into the Mayfair Mews apartment complex courtyard. The pilots and five on the ground were hurt, but all had been released from the hospital.

    Some 40 apartment units were damaged or destroyed. Officials scoured the blackened shells for bodies but found none.

    Virginia Beach Fire Department Battalion Chief Tim Riley said that could change if, for instance, authorities did not know about a guest that had been staying in an apartment.

    Still, officials said they were surprised the accident had not claimed any lives.

    “We consider ourselves very fortunate," Riley told The Associated Press earlier Saturday.

    Harvey thanked citizens who rushed to the crash site and pulled the pilots to safety, dragged fire hoses into place and helped evacuate residents from the apartments.

    Frank Thorp V / NBC News

    People whose property suffered damage in the crash an F/A-18 crash in Virginia Beach speak with Navy lawyers about their claims.

    “It was a pretty amazing display in Virginia Beach of what citizenship really means,” he said.

    Riley said officials are now attending to the needs of the 60 or so residents whose apartment units were destroyed, including finding long-term housing for them

    The burned aircraft was still lodged in the apartment complex Saturday morning. Crews were working on a plan to deal with the clean-up, which could take days, The Virginian-Pilot reported.

    Harvey said an investigation into what went wrong will likely take weeks. That will include interviewing the two pilots who ejected and listening to the flight recorders onboard the plane.

    Hours after the crash Friday, Nay officials said the F-18 fighter jet crashed suffered a "catastrophic mechanical malfunction” shortly after takeoff.

    The airmen were from Naval Air Station Oceana, less than 10 miles away.

    Navy jet crash: 'My whole backyard was on fire'

    The aircraft weighs up to 50,000 pounds fully fueled and armed. The two-seat jet had dumped loads of fuel before crashing, though it wasn't clear if that was because of a malfunction or an intentional maneuver by the pilots, said Capt. Mark Weisgerber with U.S. Fleet Forces Command.

    The plane not having as much fuel on board "mitigated what could have been an absolute massive, massive fireball and fire," Virginia Beach EMS division chief Bruce Nedelka said. With all of that jet fuel dumped, it was much less than what it could have been."

    Bill Tiernan / AP

    Emergency personal gather at the scene of a jet crash Friday, April 6, 2012 in Virginia Beach, Va.

    The crash happened in the Hampton Roads area, which has a large concentration of military bases, including Naval Station Norfolk, the largest naval base in the world. Naval Air Station Oceana, where the F/A-18D that crashed was assigned, is located in Virginia Beach. Both pilots were from Virginia Beach, Weisgerber said.

    Neighbors rushed to the scene, and some jumped into action to help. One woman told NBC News reporter Thanh Truong that she and others pulled four people from one building just before it collapsed.

    Another witness, Colby Smith, said his house started shaking and then the power went out, as he saw a red and orange blaze outside his window. He ran outside, saw billowing black smoke and then came upon a tangled pilot as he ran to a friend's home, The Associated Press reported.

    "I saw the parachute on the house and he was still connected to it, and he was lying on the ground with his face full of blood," Smith said.

    "The pilot said, 'I'm sorry for destroying your house,'" Smith told the AP.

     NBC News, msnbc.com staff and The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    370 comments

    I'm just amazed we haven't yet been subjected to the usual "the good Lord was watching out for us" nonsense. If "the good Lord" were actually watching out for us, the plane wouldn't have gone down. Or maybe "the good Lord" caused the crash, and it was just dumb luck that no one was killed.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: navy, virginia, jet-crash, featured, virginia-beach
  • 6
    Apr
    2012
    6:58pm, EDT

    Virginia Beach Navy jet crash: 'My whole backyard was on fire'

    Emergency responders continue to search for people who may be trapped, but so far there have been no fatalities. NBC’s Thanh Truong reports.

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    About noon on Friday, residents in Virginia Beach, Virginia, witnessed a fighter jet streaking past — nothing unusual for this oceanside city surrounded by military bases. But this Navy F/A-18D was too low, trailing smoke and flames — and witnesses watched as the two pilots ejected from the aircraft, which careened into an apartment complex, exploding into flames.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Kari Huus


    Follow Kari Huus on Twitter and Facebook.



    "My whole backyard was on fire," said one resident.

    It was type of accident that some residents in this city have worried about, amid the familiar rumble of military aircraft. But four hours after the crash, only a handful of injuries and no fatalities had been reported.

    The result might have been far worse.


    Bruce Nedelka, the Virginia Beach EMS division chief, said that witnesses saw fuel spilling from the jet before it went down and that fuel was found on buildings and vehicles in the area.

    "With all of that jet fuel dumped, it was much less than what it could have been," Nedelka told The Associated Press.

    It was unclear whether the pilots dumped the fuel or whether the "catastrophic mechanical malfunction" that a Navy spokesman said the jet suffered might have contributed.

    The area, about 400 miles south of Washington on the Atlantic coast, has a large concentration of military bases, including Naval Station Norfolk, the largest naval base in the world. The F/A-18D was assigned to Naval Air Station Oceana, about four miles southwest of the Mayfair Mews Apartments, scene of the crash.

    Bill Tiernan / AP

    Emergency personnel gather at the scene of a jet crash Friday in Virginia Beach, Va. Two Navy pilots ejected from the fighter jet which then careened into an apartment complex and set buildings on fire.

    John Swain, who was exiting an interstate highway nearby, came upon the scene just seconds after the crash and said it appeared that the jet had hit a two-story apartment complex dead center.

    "The plane came right over us and was clearly in difficulty," he told msnbc cable TV. "There were flames coming off the back … The plane got lower and lower and just as I turned … it crashed."

    'My whole backyard was on fire'
    Ernie Gonzalez, who is retired military, was sitting on the front porch of his daughter-in-law’s house behind Naval Station the base where the jet had taken off. He said a few other jets had departed before the one that crashed.

    "He was flying real low like he didn’t have any power," Gonzalez told msnbc.com by telephone.

    "He was smoking really bad. Bad smoke was coming out of the engine. It kind of backfired a couple times. I heard two pops … then 15 seconds later I heard the explosion."

    Gonzalez said the other jets then started circling around the crash site.

    The Navy has launched an internal investigation to find out more about why a fighter jet crashed into an apartment complex in Virginia. As of Friday there were no reported fatalities. NBC's Jim Miklaszewski reports.

    Amy Miller told The Virginian-Pilot newspaper that she was outside the cleaners where she works when she saw a plane coming down with fire on its wing.

    "I saw two parachutes eject. I saw them open up and then head toward the ground to the right of the jet," she told the newspaper.

    About two seconds later it crashed, she said.

    Joan Coleman told the Daily Press newspaper that she was on the phone in her Mayfair Mews apartment when it happened.

    "I saw this explosion," Coleman told the paper. "My whole backyard was on fire."

    Coleman said she told the person she was talking to on the phone, "Oh my God, there is a jet, it just landed in my backyard. It's exploded."

    Neighbors rushed to the scene, and some jumped into action to help. One woman told NBC reporter Thanh Truong that she and others pulled four people from one building just before it collapsed.

    Pilot: 'Sorry for destroying your house'
    Residents said that one of the pilots had to be cut free of his parachute gear after it became tangled in a burning building. Neighbors ran to the scene with a knife to free him so he could be moved to safety, the city editor of The Virginian-Pilot told msnbc cable TV.

    Colby Smith said his house started shaking and then the power went out, as he saw a red and orange blaze outside his window. He ran outside, where he saw billowing black smoke and then came upon the tangled pilot as he ran to a friend's home, The Associated Press reported.

    "I saw the parachute on the house and he was still connected to it, and he was laying on the ground with his face full of blood," Smith said.

    "The pilot said, 'I'm sorry for destroying your house,'" Smith told the AP.

    As fire crews worked to douse the flames, first responders searched for victims. Crews had searched dozens of units and were approaching the remaining few very carefully because of extreme structural damage, according to Virginia Beach Fire Department Capt. Tim Riley. He said there was a slim chance anyone could have survived in those final units.

    Up to that point, however, only eight people were injured, he said, including three who refused treatment. None, including the pilots, had serious injuries.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    152 comments

    Lucky .... Lucky .... Lucky .... Could have been so much worse .... Good Friday at work .... maybe ....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: crash, military, navy-jet-crash, featured, virginia-beach, kari-huus, naval-air-station-oceana
  • 21
    Dec
    2011
    3:17pm, EST

    Two women share first kiss at US Navy ship's return

    Brian J. Clark / Virginian Pilot via AP

    Petty Officer 2nd Class Marissa Gaeta, left, kisses her girlfriend of two years, Petty Officer 3rd Class Citlalic Snell at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek in Virginia Beach, Va., Wednesday, Dec. 22, 2011 after Gaeta's ship returned from 80 days at sea. It ís a time-honored tradition at Navy homecomings - one lucky sailor is chosen to be first off the ship for the long-awaited kiss with a loved one. On Wednesday, for the first time, the happily reunited couple was gay.

    By Rich Shulman

    I'm sure this is not going to please some Navy veterans.

    AP reports: VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — A Navy tradition caught up with the repeal of the U.S. military's "don't ask, don't tell" rule on Wednesday when two women sailors became the first to share the coveted "first kiss" on the dock after one of them returned from 80 days at sea.

    It's been one year since President Obama signed the repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell, and critics said changing the law would never work in the real world of combat. NBC's Jim Maceda takes one measure of the change, with some of America's troops on the ground in Afghanistan.

    Brian J. Clark / AP

    Petty Officer 2nd Class Marissa Gaeta, left, greets her girlfriend of two years, Petty Officer 3rd Class Citlalic Snell at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek in Virginia Beach, Va., Wednesday, Dec. 22, 2011 after Gaeta's ship returned from 80 days at sea.

    Petty Officer 2nd Class Marissa Gaeta and Petty Officer 3rd Class Citlalic Snell talk about the repeal of the U.S. military's "don't ask, don't tell" rule and becoming the first women to share the coveted "first kiss."

    5 comments

    Disgusting, unethical and very unprofessional.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: navy, virginia, us-news, virginia-beach, u-s-navy, uss-oak-hill

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