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  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    10:20am, EST

    Ex-wife arrested after Florida man dragged behind truck

    Jeanette Morris, Harold Anderson, Joan Hobart

    By Brian Hamacher, NBCMiami.com

    Two women and a man are facing attempted murder charges after authorities say they shocked a Florida man with a stun gun and beat him before tying him to a truck's bumper and dragging him a half-mile down a road.

    Jeannette Morris, 61, her brother, 63-year-old Harold Anderson, and 46-year-old Joan Hobart are also charged with aggravated battery and conspiracy to commit murder in the Tuesday incident in Samsula, Volusia County Sheriff's Office officials said.


     

    Authorities say Morris, Anderson and Hobart were drinking vodka with Morris' ex-husband in the home she shares with him when the three attacked the ex-husband.

    The 54-year-old ex-husband was shocked several times with the stun gun and repeatedly punched in the face and had a gun put to his head. He then had his hands tied behind his back and he was dragged outside, where his ankles were tied and the rope was attached to the rear bumper of a pickup truck, authorities said.

    The man was dragged down the road before the truck stopped and he was tossed in the back. The trio cut off some of his hair and talked about scalping him and finding a hole in which to bury him, authorities said.

    Miami police car bullet hole mystery

    At one point, the man was able to break free and jump from the moving truck and ran to a nearby home to get help. Authorities say he showed up at the home beaten and bloody wearing only his torn underwear and ropes around his neck and wrist.

    He was treated at the scene and later taken to a Daytona hospital's intensive surgical care unit with a broken pelvis, broken facial bones and bleeding in his brain.

    Deputies found Morris who had dried blood on her clothes and hand but denied her involvement in the attack and said the blood came from breaking up a fight between dogs, authorities said.

    Anderson was also found with a swollen right hand with cut and bloody knuckles, authorities said. He had a gun and a shovel and showed no remorse, authorities said, saying it wouldn't have bothered him if the victim had died.

    Hobart, of New Smyrna Beach, was arrested Wednesday night. All three remained in custody early Friday and it was unknown whether they have attorneys.

    199 comments

    I would be hard pressed to find an uglier looking trio than these three scum buckets.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: truck, vodka, stun-gun, nbcmiami
  • 10
    Oct
    2012
    1:30pm, EDT

    Vodka by a veteran, for veterans (and other cocktail lovers)

    Courtesy of Travis McVey

    Travis McVey, a Marine veteran, has won several spirit-industry awards for his new Heroes Vodka.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Between sampling and selling his first batch of Heroes Vodka, Marine veteran Travis McVey concocted a catchy marketing slogan.

    “Some people drink to forget. We drink to remember,” McVey said in a phone interview this week, referring partly to two friends, Marine buddies killed in the line of duty.

    “I was sitting at the VFW on (a recent) Memorial Day with some other veterans. I was looking at the bar,” McVey said. “I was thinking: No one has ever really marketed a veteran-owned spirit company. And what better name than ‘Heroes?’ Everybody has served, but the guys who didn’t come back are true heroes to me. I wanted to create a product that would be in honor of their service, something that people could raise their glass to and give a toast.”


    The first vodka made by a veteran for veterans hit stores last February in Tennessee, where McVey lives. For distribution, he partnered with Nashville-based Lipman Brothers. This fall, Heroes became available in six more states, including New York and Georgia, and the company plans to expand into New England and the Pacific Northwest. A portion of the profits will be used to help ex-service members, McVey said.

    In addition to winning several spirit-industry taste awards for its self-described “slightly toasty and roasted” flavor, Heroes offers an intriguing business test case. Veteran entrepreneurs – McVey calls them “vetrepreneurs” – aim to tap an ultra-loyal, 22 million-member veteran community to shop their services or push their products, including: wild salmon, a "defensive driving" school, appliance repair, a barber shop and, now, vodka.


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    Veterans buy from veterans: That’s the hot saying in ex-military financial circles, particularly with hundreds of thousands of former service members unable to land jobs. That patriotic consumer base has convinced more than 3 million men and women who have served the country to launch small businesses, reports the National Veteran-Owned Business Association. The group uses a two-word logo and mantra: “Buy veteran.”

    “Veterans are going to give me a first look” for their next vodka purchase, said McVey, 42. “But that’s also because veterans are known for their quality of service. It’s who we are, and how we’re trained. So, yeah, veterans will give another veteran a shot. That’s just what we do.”

    Ex-soldiers enlist Afghans to craft 'Combat Flip Flops'

    McVey’s personal tale also seems to resonate, he said, with some of the store owners who stock his spirit. He served as a member of the presidential honor guard from 1989 to 1992, providing support to President George H.W. Bush. Two fellow Marines with whom he trained and served have since died in the line of duty – one in Afghanistan, one while working as an Indiana state trooper.

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    “The retailers just open up to me when I tell my story. I think my closing rate is 95 or 96 percent,” McVey said. His friends who inspired the spirit "were great men and great Marines.”

    But at a time when the Defense Department has been told that a major drinking problem exists within its ranks, McVey must carefully craft his message, which is accompanied by bottle labels adorned with red-and-white stripes, a blue background and a silver star. His web site plays a military-esque musical score with a marching beat.

    A study requested by the department, and issued last month by the Washington, D.C.-based Institute of Medicine, found that the rate of binge drinking in the military increased from 35 percent in 1998 to 47 percent in 2008, the latest year for which data is available.

    “So there is a culture (of alcohol) – it’s young people and it’s high stress,” said Dennis McCarty, a member of the committee that authored the report and a professor in the Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland. “That’s the challenge for (the Defense Department) – to deal with a culture that tolerates those levels of use and, in some ways, tacitly supports it with less-expensive alcohol being provided on bases,” McCarty said. “I can’t speak to the (Heroes Vodka) product.”

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    Said McVey: “This is being marketed in a responsible and a classy way. It’s not about getting hammered. It’s about toasting our heroes and their service to our country. For the people who drink responsibly, we want them to raise their glasses with Heroes.”

    His vodka, made only with Iowa corn, retails for $13 to $16 for a 750-milliliter bottle, $18 to $20 for a liter bottle and $21.99 to $27.99 for a 1.75-liter bottle.

    Courtesy of Travis McVey

    As a Marine, Travis McVey helped protect President George H.W. Bush. Two buddies from that unit later were killed, one in Afghanistan, one while working in law enforcement in the US.

    McVey declined to say what percentage of his proceeds will ultimately go to veterans groups, explaining: “We didn’t put an exact percentage on there because people critique it, whatever you do.

    “The veterans get paid first. I’m in business to make money for my family, and my family are veterans. So they’re equal partners and it’s a split between myself, the veterans, and Robert (Lipman, president and CEO of Lipman Brothers).

    "My goal is they make just as much money as I do off this. Because my two friends that died are guys I went out and had a few drinks with and trained with. That’s the reason I created this brand so that’s the reason why I want this portion to go back to veterans."

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    36 comments

    This seems to be a hair bit exploitive. Really, really overdoing it with the military branding. As a vet, I'm not interested.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, military, marines, vodka, veterans, featured, department-of-defense, president-george-h-w-bush, unemployed-veterans, national-veteran-owned-business-association, military-binge-drinking, buy-veteran, veteran-consumers, lipman-brothers
  • 23
    Nov
    2011
    11:30am, EST

    Company pulls billboard blasted as anti-Semitic

    NBC New York

    An ad agency faced backlash over a controversial billboard over the West Side Highway.

    NEW YORK -- A controversial billboard over the West Side Highway advertising Wodka brand vodka was taken down after NBC New York's inquiries to the company about its questionable messaging.

    The billboard showed a Chihuahua dog in a Santa hat and a Russian wolfhound dog in a yarmulke. "Christmas Quality, Hanukkah Pricing," the text read.

    An NBC New York viewer emailed the newsroom about the ad, saying she was "appalled" and that she wanted what she considered the anti-Semitic ad removed.

    The Anti-Defamation League weighed in on its website Tuesday after hearing about the billboard, labeling it "cruel and offensive," and said it reinforced anti-Semitic stereotypes.

    Representatives of Wodka Vodka told NBC New York the billboards were made specifically for New York City. "We were celebrating Hanukkah as a great value," said James Dale, explaining the holiday has eight days while Christmas has just one.

    Shu D-Jong, a second company representative who met with NBC New York in the Midtown offices of its distributor, said some of the company partners are Jewish and that the ad is "consistent with previous marketing."

    See video, read the original story at NBCNewYork.com

    Earlier billboards touted similarly pointed messages, reading, "Hamptons quality, Newark pricing," "Movie star quality, reality star pricing," and "Escort quality, hooker pricing."

    The two company representatives insisted there has been no backlash until now.

    But some New Yorkers pointed out that the company has never made religious comparisons before.

    "That's no way to sell vodka in New York," said Joel Liberson.

    Dale told NBC New York, "We don't want to offend anyone," and that the company was in the process of taking down the controversial vodka ads.

    10 comments

    To those people who find it "honest" or "don't get it", you simply lack the perception and ability to see the prejudice in the ad.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: billboard, vodka, jewish, hanukkah, anti-semitic

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