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  • 11
    Jun
    2013
    8:59am, EDT

    Ambassador responds to allegations of misconduct from State Department memo

    The State Department is responding to claims that officials may have covered up alleged illegal and inappropriate behavior by department personnel, while an ambassador is accused of "routinely" soliciting sexual favors. NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A U.S. ambassador who allegedly became the target of an internal State Department investigation after being accused of prostitution and pedophilia denied any misconduct in a statement.

    “I am angered and saddened by the baseless allegations that have appeared in the press,” the ambassador said, adding that to see his time in the country where he served “smeared is devastating.”


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The ambassador, who has not been charged or convicted of a crime, is not being identified by NBC News.

    The ambassador wrote that he lives “on a beautiful park” in the country “that you walk through to get to many locations and at no point have I ever engaged in any improper activity.”

    The ambassador who came under investigation “routinely ditched his protective security detail in order to solicit sexual favors from both prostitutes and minor children,” according to documents obtained by NBC News.

    The alleged misconduct took place during former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s tenure, according to the documents, which also say those activities may not have been properly looked into.

    Top state department officials directed investigators to “cease the investigation” into the ambassador’s conduct, according to the memo.

    A state department spokesperson would not confirm the specific investigations, but told NBC News “the notion that we would not vigorously pursue criminal misconduct in a case, in any case, is preposterous.”

    Former State Department investigator Aurelia Fedenisn has said that investigators dropped the ball in the case, and that a final report published in March of this year was “watered down,” according to her attorney.

    “She felt it was important that Congress get this information,” Fedenisn’s lawyer Cary Schulman told NBC News.

    State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said that the department “would never condone” improper influence on its investigators. “Any case we would take seriously and we would investigate, and that’s exactly what we’re doing.”

    A senior State Department official also disputed the notion that any investigations had been squashed, saying: "You know there's a lot of conflated information on cases occasionally. I can tell you that not everybody walking in Central Park is out there looking for prostitutes or hook ups."

    Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee Rep. Ed Royce meanwhile said that he would ask his staff to look into the allege misconduct.

    "I am appalled not only at the reported misconduct itself, but at the reported interference in the investigations of the misconduct," Royce said. "The notion that any or all of the cases contained in news reports would not be investigated thoroughly by the department is unthinkable."

    NBC News’ Chuck Todd, Shawna Thomas, Catherine Chomiak, Natalie Cucchiara, and John Bailey contributed to this report.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: washington, hillary-clinton, state-department, john-kerry, ambassador, misconduct
  • Updated
    7
    Jun
    2013
    10:30pm, EDT

    Flash floods, storm surges menace East Coast as Andrea meanders north

    Weather Channel meteorologist Chris Warren details the forecast along the East Coast as Andrea dumps rain on the region.

    By John Newland and M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    No longer a tropical storm, the weather system called Andrea was making its way up the East Coast, threatening flash floods and dangerous storm surges into Saturday as far north as Maine.

    Andrea was wandering up the coast at about 35 mph Friday night, the National Weather Service said. That should give it plenty of time to drop heavy rain on New York and New England overnight and into Saturday afternoon before it scrapes Canada's Atlantic coast and trickles off into the Atlantic Ocean sometime Sunday.

    In the wake of the first named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, residents of the Southeast faced a weekend of cleaning up from severe flooding caused by torrents of rain — as much as 13.9 inches in North Miami Beach, Fla., on Friday alone.

    In South Carolina, a 19-year-old man went missing as he was surfing with his brother, NBC affiliate WMBF reported. A search team was spread out along the beach Friday night, but it had been able to recover only a surfboard.

    More from weather.com

    Paul Stephen / The Star-News via AP

    A man checks out the high surf Friday, June 7, along Wrightsville Beach, N.C.

    Flood watches were in effect over a huge part of the East Coast, from Maine to Georgia, and Northeasterners who lived through Hurricane Sandy were on alert Friday.

    Hoboken, N.J., resident Brian Smalleys, who spent hundreds of thousands of dollars repairing his home after Sandy, told NBCNewYork.com that he has trouble sleeping when it rains heavily now.

    "I just get nervous. I don't want it to happen again," he said.

    New York  activated its flash flood plan — ready to send alerts to cellphones — and issued a hazardous travel advisory as moderate to heavy rain was expected through early Saturday.

    In Florida, Andrea left behind considerable damage. 

    The weather service recorded eight tornado reports in the state, with damage to houses and trees and downed power lines.

    Waves crash along the shore of Wrightsville Beach in Wilmington, N.C., as Andrea makes it way up the East Coast, bringing heavy rains and high winds.

    Related:

    • Tropical Storm Andrea drenches Florida
    • Andrea lifts curtain on hurricane season
    • More weather coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Fri Jun 7, 2013 5:34 AM EDT

    72 comments

    Poured all night long and we have a 100% chance of rain all day today here on the Chesapeake in MD with the worst yet to come. All good thoughts going out to those who are/will be affected by this storm system; may you and yours be safe.

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    Explore related topics: weather, featured, florida, washington, new-york, georgia, north-carolina, south-carolina, boston, philadelphia, updated, floods, tornadoes, tropical-storm, andrea
  • Updated
    5
    Jun
    2013
    5:59am, EDT

    Michelle Obama confronts gay-rights heckler at fundraiser

    Saul Loeb / AFP - Getty Images, file

    First lady Michelle Obama didn't take well to being shouted down by a protester Tuesday.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Michelle Obama confronted a gay-rights protester who heckled her at a Democratic fundraiser in Washington on Tuesday, offering to give her the microphone and leave, before the crowd cheered for the first lady to stay.

    Obama was 12 minutes into a planned 20-minute speech at a couple’s home when a woman standing at the front of the small crowd interrupted, demanding that President Barack Obama sign an executive order on gay rights.

    “One of the things I don’t do well is this,” the first lady said before walking down from the lectern and approaching the protester, according to a pool reporter covering the event.

    Obama told the woman that people gathered in the backyard tent could "listen to me or you can take the mic, but I'm leaving,” before telling the crowd, “You all decide. You have one choice.”

    At that, the crowd began chanting for Obama to stay as one woman told the protester, “You need to leave.”

    The woman was escorted out, shouting that she was a “lesbian looking for federal equality before I die.”

    Obama then returned to the lectern and finished her speech, getting loud applause as she did.

    Those in attendance, apparently including the protester, had paid $500 to $10,000 for tickets to the event, which was held at the home of power couple Karen Dixon and Nan Schaffer.

    The heckler was identified as Ellen Sturtz, an activist with the GetEQUAL campaign group, which campaigns for lesbian and gay rights, by several media.

    Sturtz told The Washington Post that she was surprised by the first lady's actions.

    “She came right down in my face,” Sturtz said. “I was taken aback.”

    Related:

    • Michelle Obama: Focus on what unites us
    • Boy Scouts' historic vote won't end debate
    • More NBC News coverage of Michelle Obama

    This story was originally published on Wed Jun 5, 2013 5:09 AM EDT

    2564 comments

    Good for you, Ms. Obama. This country needs to learn respect for others.

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    Explore related topics: featured, washington, michelle-obama, gay-rights, updated, dnc, first-lady, heckler, democratic-fundraiser, karen-dixon, nan-schaffer
  • Updated
    24
    May
    2013
    7:07pm, EDT

    'Like a Hollywood movie': Driver survives I-5 bridge collapse into Wash. river

    AP / Francisco Rodriguez

    A man is seen sitting atop a car that fell into the Skagit River after the collapse of the Interstate 5, Thursday.

    By Alastair Jamieson and Bill Dedman, NBC News

    A driver said he thought he was about to die when an Interstate 5 bridge span collapsed in Washington state, plunging his pickup and another car into the Skagit River below.

    Dan Sligh, his wife and another motorist found themselves waist-deep in water when the freeway crumbled moments after the bridge was clipped by an oversized truck, he told NBC affiliate KING5 of Seattle.

    State officials said the rescue had been “amazing” and warned of major traffic disruption following the complete closure of the section of the road, near Mount Vernon.

    A large portion of the 57-year-old Skagit River Bridge north of Seattle fell into the rushing river below Thursday evening, sending two vehicles into the frigid waters. KING TV's Chris Daniels reports.

    Sligh, a Command Master Chief Petty Officer with the U.S. Navy, said the accident was “like a Hollywood movie unfolding in front of your eyes - up close and personal.”

    He said he managed to release his seat belt and climb out of his mangled truck to shallower water, despite fearing he had dislocated his shoulder.

    His wife also escaped, and was being kept in the Skagit Valley hospital where she was being treated for internal bleeding.

    "I thought we were done," Sligh told KING5 outside the hospital late Thursday. “When I look at all the carnage, all the metal, I assumed that was it at that point. But here we stand."

    The couple waited 90 minutes on the roof of pickup awaiting rescue, he said, adding that the other driver was not seriously injured.

    “I’m OK. I’m beat up. I feel like I rode a rodeo bull or something.”

    I-5 is the main freeway that runs up and down the West Coast between the Canadian and Mexican borders, and traffic was significantly backed up in both directions overnight.

    The bridge collapse was caused by an oversize truck, which had a permit, that hit an overhead span, officials said. The driver of the truck was cooperating with investigators, police said.

    At an afternoon briefing, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee called for patience while officials work on a plan to reopen the I-5 corridor.

    He said an investigation into who is at fault is underway, but "we want to discourage drivers from crashing their trucks into state bridges."

    The 1,112-foot steel truss bridge, built in 1955, was described by the Washington State Department of Transportation, after an inspection in August 2010, as "somewhat better than minimum adequacy to tolerate being left in place as is."

    Diversions have been set up and plans are already underway to install a replacement span, said Bart Treece, a spokesman for the department, describing the lack of more serous injuries as “amazing."

    Officials are trying to find a pre-fabricated structure they could use as a temporary replacement for the bridge before they decide how to repair or replace it.

    The section of the freeway carries 71,000 vehicles a day, Treece said, warning significant delays were likely over the Memorial Weekend.

    “If you can reduce trips or take another route, that would help,” he said.

    The minimum vertical clearance on the bridge (distance from the road to something a truck can bump into) is 14.5 feet. The standard height is 16 feet.

    Inslee's statement added: "We will be involved in a vigorous and diligent effort to get traffic flowing again through the Skagit bridge corridor and I will issue an emergency proclamation [Friday] to make sure we have the resources to do so as quickly as possible."

    One study reports that 11.5 percent of the nation's bridges are "structurally deficient," but politics often get in the way of funding infrastructure projects. NBC's Tom Costello reports.

    State officials stressed that the bridge was not one of the 66,000 nationwide that are considered "structurally deficient.'

    “This is just bad luck of where it hit and how it hit,” said Washington Transportation Secretary Lynn Peterson. “Based on our inspections, the bridge is not structurally deficient.”

    State inspection reports submitted to the Federal Highway Administration were reviewed by NBC News. That overall evaluation of the structural condition on the bridge corresponds to a score of 5 on a scale from 0 (worst) to 9 (best).

    The bridge received identical scores on inspections in 2010, 2008 and 2006, and is on a schedule for inspection every 24 months, as generally required by federal regulations. State officials said Thursday evening they were working to make public a copy of the latest inspection report, presumably from 2012.

    The bridge was of a "fracture critical" design, as are 18,000 bridges nationwide, meaning it could collapse if even one part failed. Even after the bridge collapse that killed 13 people in Minneapolis in 2007, a haphazard system of inspections continued, with federal authorities choosing not to require re-inspection of all the fracture-critical bridges.

    In a survey of every state by msnbc.com in 2008, only six states and the District of Columbia said they began to recheck all their fracture-critical bridges. Officials in Washington state, like in most states, said they performed special inspections of only their few dozen bridges of the particular deck-truss design used in Minneapolis.

    The bridge that fell Thursday did go on to receive its regular inspections in 2008 and 2010, according to the federal records, called the National Bridge Inventory.

    NBC News' Andrew Rafferty and Justin Kirschner contributed to this report.

    This story was originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 7:15 AM EDT

    771 comments

    When is Congress going to wake up and fund these type of projects?

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    Explore related topics: us-news, featured, washington, collapse, updated, bridge, freeway, i-5, king5, skagit-river, bill-dedman
  • Updated
    24
    May
    2013
    4:58am, EDT

    Cars, drivers plunge into river after Wash. I-5 bridge collapse

    Taylor Linden

    Cars and people are in the Skagit River at the scene of an I-5 bridge collapse near Mt. Veron, Wash.

    By Andrew Rafferty and Justin Kirschner, NBC News

    Three people were rescued from water after a bridge along Interstate-5 in Washington State collapsed on Thursday evening, plunging cars into Skagit River below, according to Washington State Patrol.

    MSNBC's Milissa Rehberger reports that people and cars were in the water after an I-5 bridge collapsed over the Skagit River in Washington state.

    The extent of the injuries for the three is unclear, but all were evaluated on scene and were transported to area hospitals, according to Marcus Deyerin of the Washington Incident Management Team. Authorities say they have no reason to believe any others are still in the river.

    “I’m thankful there were no fatalities,” said Wash. Governor Jay Inslee in a statement. “Witnesses say a truck hit the bridge and caused it to collapse, but an investigation has been launched to confirm that."

    I-5 is the main freeway that runs along the West Coast, and NBC Seattle affiliate KING5 reported that traffic was significantly backed up in both directions.

    Two vehicles were submerged in the after the bridge fell around 7 p.m. local time (10 p.m. EDT), and traffic has been closed in both directions.

    A witnesses told KING5 that an oversized truck hit the upper right side of the bridge before the collapse.

    The minimum vertical clearance on the bridge (distance from the road to something a truck can bump into) is 14.5 feet. The standard height is 16 feet.

    This I-5 bridge over the Skagit River at Mount Vernon was described by the Washington State Department of Transportation, after an inspection in August 2010, as "somewhat better than minimum adequacy to tolerate being left in place as is."

    Inslee's statement added: "We will be involved in a vigorous and diligent effort to get traffic flowing again through the Skagit bridge corridor and I will issue an emergency proclamation [Friday] to make sure we have the resources to do so as quickly as possible.

    "This is an opportunity for us to pull together to show strength of character and patience and good citizenship as we deal with this disruption."

    State inspection reports submitted to the Federal Highway Administration were reviewed by NBC News. That overall evaluation of the structural condition on the bridge corresponds to a score of 5 on a scale from 0 (worst) to 9 (best).

    The bridge received identical scores on inspections in 2010, 2008 and 2006, and is on a schedule for inspection every 24 months, as generally required by federal regulations. State officials said Thursday evening they were working to make public a copy of the latest inspection report, presumably from 2012.

    Looking at specific areas of the bridge, the substructure (piers, abutments, footings, piles, etc.) was described as in satisfactory condition, with the superstructure (beams, girders, stringers, trusses, cables, pins, hangers, etc.) in somewhat worse condition, listed as fair, according to the inspection data online from the Federal Highway Administration. "Fair" meant that all primary structural elements were sound but may have minor defects.

    The 1,112-foot steel truss bridge was built in 1955, and was carrying an average daily traffic of 71,000 vehicles.

    The bridge was of a "fracture critical" design, as are 18,000 bridges nationwide, meaning it could collapse if even one part failed.

    Even after the bridge collapse that killed 13 people in Minneapolis in 2007, a haphazard system of inspections continued, with federal authorities choosing not to require re-inspection of all the fracture-critical bridges.

    In a survey of every state by msnbc.com in 2008, only six states and the District of Columbia said they began to recheck all their fracture-critical bridges.

    Gina Cole / Skagit Valley Herald

    North end of the I-5 bridge over Skagit River collapsed Thursday night.

    Officials in Washington state, like in most states, said they performed special inspections of only their few dozen bridges of the particular deck-truss design used in Minneapolis.

    The bridge that fell Thursday did go on to receive its regular inspections in 2008 and 2010, according to the federal records, called the National Bridge Inventory.

    Bill Dedman of NBC News contributed to this report.

     

    This story was originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 12:12 AM EDT

    687 comments

    I guess Obama wasn't too far off when he said we should invest in our infrastructure.

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  • 22
    May
    2013
    9:18pm, EDT

    Washington state man arrested over ricin letters

    Colin Mulvany / AP

    During the execution of a search warrant, members of the Joint Federal Haz-Mat Team, FBI and local law enforcement gather in front of the Osmun Apartments near the intersection of First Avenue and Oak Street in the Browne's Addition neighborhood of Spokane, Wash., on Saturday, May 18, 2013

     

    By Nicholas K. Geranios, Associated Press

    SPOKANE, Wash. -- A 37-year-old man was arrested Wednesday after a pair of letters containing the deadly poison ricin were discovered in Washington state last week.


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    A grand jury indictment accuses Matthew Ryan Buquet of mailing a threatening communication to U.S. District Judge Fred Van Sickle at the federal courthouse on May 14.

    The indictment did not say anything about ricin. However, the U.S. Postal Service said last week that two letters were discovered — one addressed to the courthouse and the other to the downtown post office — and they contained ricin in a crude form that did not immediately pose a threat to workers.

    Buquet appeared in federal court in Spokane after the FBI said agents arrested him Wednesday afternoon. He pleaded not guilty.

    If convicted of mailing a threatening communication, he could face up to 10 years in prison.

    Ricin is a highly toxic substance made from castor beans. As little as 500 micrograms, the size of the head of a pin, can kill an adult if inhaled or ingested.

    There were no reports of illness connected to the Spokane letters.

    Investigators in hazardous materials suits spent most of Saturday executing a search warrant at a three-story apartment building in downtown Spokane. Witnesses reported that agents escorted a man from the building.

    The Spokane investigation comes a month after letters containing ricin were addressed to President Barack Obama, a U.S. senator and a Mississippi judge. A Mississippi man was arrested in that case.

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

    8 comments

    The state of Washington, the bastion of liberty and free thinking liberals, and some nut lives there. Go figure.

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  • 8
    May
    2013
    5:25am, EDT

    'An evil chuckle': Survivor recalls deadly shooting spree at US base in Iraq

    Russell family via Reuters

    Sgt. John M. Russell last month pleaded guilty to killing two medical staff officers and three soldiers.

    By Eric M. Johnson, Reuters

    TACOMA, Washington - A survivor of a shooting spree that killed five U.S. servicemen at a combat stress clinic in Iraq testified on Tuesday that he remembered the gunman, a fellow soldier, chuckling after he shot an unarmed man who had been trying to hide.

    U.S. Army Sergeant John Russell pleaded guilty last month to killing two medical staff officers and three soldiers at Camp Liberty, adjacent to the Baghdad airport, in a 2009 shooting the military has said could have been triggered by combat stress.

    He is facing a streamlined court martial at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington state to determine the level of his guilt, a question that will hinge largely on whether the military judge finds he acted with premeditation, as prosecutors say, or on impulse, as the defense argues.

    Army Sergeant Dominic Morales, working at the clinic at the time of the attack, recalled that he hid under a desk beside another soldier and heard shots ring out and said he could smell gunpowder.

    Morales testified that Russell shot a soldier hiding near a filing shelf one time and chuckled as he moaned "Oh God, oh God..." and then shot him again.

    "I heard Sergeant Russell chuckle ... an evil chuckle," Morales said. "To me, a frightening chuckle."

    Russell then approached his hiding place and shot the soldier next to him, Specialist Jacob Barton, whose dead body fell onto him.

    Seconds later, with Russell out of sight, Morales sprinted out of hiding but the soldier fired at least two bullets at him.

    The testimony came on the second day of a court martial that is expected to focus largely on Russell's state of mind at the time of the shooting, which marked one of the worst episodes of soldier-on-soldier violence in the Iraq war.


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    Defense attorney James Culp later established through questioning Morales that nightmares jogged his memory of Russell's laugh.

    Military prosecutors have focused this week on the more than 40 minutes Russell had to consider his actions as he drove back to the clinic with a stolen SUV and rifle and on his calm, stone-faced demeanor as he carried that rifle in a combat-ready position as he slipped into the clinic through a rear entrance.

    Russell, who agreed to plead guilty in a deal that will spare him the death penalty, faces up to life in confinement without the possibility of parole, forfeiture of pay and a dishonorable discharge.

    Defense lawyers, who had not yet made an opening statement, have said Russell suffered a host of mental ailments after several combat tours and was suicidal before the attack. With his mind damaged and unable to get the help he needed, they say, he cracked.

    An independent forensic psychiatrist, Dr. Robert Sadoff of the University of Pennsylvania, concluded that Russell suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and psychosis at the time of the shootings.

    Sadoff suggested Russell, who was attached to the 54th Engineer Battalion based in Bamberg, Germany, was provoked to violence by maltreatment at the hands of mental health personnel at Camp Liberty.

    The presiding judge, Army Colonel David Conn, ruled on Monday that when Sadoff testifies he can draw upon another doctor's findings that the soldier had "brain abnormalities" in areas that govern behavior and emotion. Sadoff used that analysis in his own broader psychiatric evaluation.

    Prosecutors also asked Staff Sergeant Derrick Flowers, who jumped out of a window to escape the attack, whether Russell's gunshots were "erratic or controlled."

    "It was controlled, sir," Flowers said. 

    Related:

    • Ten years after Iraq invasion, US troops ask: 'Was it worth it?'
    • Army deserter who fled to Canada sentenced to 10 months in prison
    • Iraq, 10 years on: Did invasion bring 'hope and progress' to millions?
    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    78 comments

    Iraq, no WMDs but plenty of American and Iraqi mental illness. Thanks for nothing George W. Bush. Now McCain and his fellow Republicans want to redo the same mess in Syria. They never learn.

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    Explore related topics: us-news, health, security, featured, washington, shooting, court-martial, combat-stress, camp-liberty, john-russell, mcchord, army-military
  • 23
    Apr
    2013
    2:30pm, EDT

    Innovative science teacher honored as National Teacher of the Year

    Council of Chief State School Officers

    Jeff Charbonneau, who teaches chemistry, physics and engineering in Zillah, Wash., is the 2013 National Teacher of the Year.

    By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A high school science teacher who starts class each day by saying, "Welcome back to another day in paradise," and who came up with a unique way for his students to graduate from their small, rural high school with college credit has been named the National Teacher of the Year.

    Jeff Charbonneau, of Zillah High School in Washington state, was honored by President Barack Obama on Tuesday afternoon, along with all of the other 2013 state teacher winners.

    Charbonneau, 35, teaches chemistry, physics, engineering and architecture in Zillah, a city of barely 3,000 residents in Washington's Yakima Valley.

    Charbonneau acknowledges that the subjects he teaches are challenging ones. But through interactive learning -- Charbonneau founded a statewide robotics competition and helped create an ecology program where students go on hiking excursions that can last up for up to two weeks -- he hopes his students can learn better.

    “I fight a stigma,” Charbonneau wrote in his application for the Washington State Teacher of the Year, which he was awarded back in September.  “Students hear the words ‘quantum mechanics’ and instantly think ‘too hard’ and ‘no way.’  It is my job to convince them that they are smart enough, that they can do anything.”

    Charbonneau has managed to set his students up for success after they graduate. By acquiring adjunct faculty status with several local universities, Charbonneau can award his students college credit through their high school science classes -- a deviation from other schools that enable students to place out of courses through Advanced Placement testing, which doesn't award credits. Other teachers at the school have followed suit, giving students a broad range of subjects to get college credit in before they graduate.

    Council of Chief State School Officers

    Jeff Charbonneau teaches students at Zillah High School, a small, rural school of 400 students in Yakima Valley, Wash.

    Since he started offering the college credit program two years ago, enrollment in his upper-level science courses has increased.

    “Over 60 students in this coming year’s junior class – a class of just over 100 students – have signed up to take chemistry. About 26 of the coming year’s seniors – a class of just over 80 students – will take physics,” Charbonneau wrote in his application.

    Zillah High School has about 18 classes that offer college credit, Zillah's guidance counselor, John Griffin, told NBC News. 

    "That's pretty neat for a small high school," Griffin said. "Most of our students want to take the challenge if they can. Some of them are a little bit leery because they don't the confidence yet in themselves. That's something you develop in high school. But we have such great teachers that work those programs, like Jeff Charbonneau, and they help soothe that anxiety."

    The high school, which has about 400 students, is also Charbonneau's alma mater.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    National Teachers of the Year are selected by the Council of Chief State School Officers, a nonprofit panel of educators that chooses the finalists from the 2013 state teachers of the year in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Nominations for state teachers come from students, teachers, principals, and administrators; teachers then must submit applications to the panel.

    Other finalists for 2013 National Teacher of the Year were Rhonda Holmes-Blankenship of Maryland, Alex Lopes of Florida, and Heidi Welch of New Hampshire.

    Griffin, who was Charbonneau's guidance counselor back when he attended Zillah, said Charbonneau was more nervous about another honor he received earlier this month.

    "He loves baseball," Griffin said. "We talked with him several weeks ago. We asked him, what's going to be nerve-wracking for you: Throwing the first pitch out at the Mariners' game, or meeting President Obama? He said, 'Definitely the first pitch. I don't want to be a worm-burner!'"

    75 comments

    Jeff Charbonneau, thank you for everything you've done. We've had a great outpouring of support recently calling our first responders in the Boston tragedy Heroes, and they are Heroes, but so are you and other teachers. I'd like to thank you all.

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  • 22
    Apr
    2013
    4:07am, EDT

    5 dead after shooting in Seattle's Federal Way suburb, police say

    Ted S. Warren / AP

    Police officers walk near evidence markers at the scene of an overnight shooting that left five people dead at the Pinewood Village apartment complex in Federal Way, Wash.

    By F. Brinley Bruton and Christopher Nelson, NBC News

    Five people were killed in a shooting at an apartment complex near Seattle late on Sunday, including a suspect who was shot by officers, police said.

    Officers were alerted to a shooting in progress at around 9:30 p.m. local time (12:30 a.m. ET) by an emergency call from the complex in Federal Way, which is between Seattle and Tacoma, police spokeswoman Cathy Schrock said in a statement.

    Gunshots were still being heard when officers arrived at the complex, she added. 

    "As officers assessed the scene two males could be seen in the parking lot injured," Schrock said.  "An officer attempted to rescue the men, and as the (police officer) approached, one of the males on the ground reached for a weapon."

    This led to police officers firing on the suspects, she said. Three men were confirmed dead in the parking lot, and a woman and another man were found dead in a nearby apartment, police said.

    No officers were injured in the incident, and eight police were placed on administrative leave after the shootings. This is standard policy for officers involved in shootings, Schrock said.

    While there was no word on what caused the gunfire, police said they did not think another shooter was on the loose. Police said they would provide more information at a 11:30 a.m. PT (2:30 p.m. ET) press conference.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    1055 comments

    Drug deal gone horribly wrong? Until they give more information on who and why they were shot, I'm going to assume WAY TOO MUCH and say "Good riddance!" to all of them. Now, I just hope that I'm right and I've not made a complete arse of myself... just a bit of an arse.

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  • 14
    Apr
    2013
    1:12pm, EDT

    Woman dead, search suspended for man missing in Washington avalanches

    NBC News

    Sheriff's department at scene of avalanche.

    By Craig Giammona, NBC News

    One woman has now been declared dead while a 60-year-old man is still missing after a pair of avalanches  ripped through the mountains Saturday near Snoqualmie Pass in Washington state, authorities said.

    The search for the missing man was suspended indefinitely Saturday night because of poor weather in the area, located about 50 miles east of Seattle, the King Country Sheriff's office said.


    Authorities said three men hiking to the summit of Granite Mountain, near exit 47 on I-90, were swept away in an avalanche that hit a little before 1 p.m. Saturday. NBC station KING in Seattle said the avalanche carried the men about 1,000 feet. Two of the three hikers were able to get free from the snow, but the third member of their group, a 60-year-old man, was not located and remains missing.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Snoqualmie Pass, located along I-90, is a popular skiing and snowshoeing destination.

    In a separate incident Saturday afternoon, a woman died after being buried under five feet of snow when an avalanche hit near exit 52 off I-90. The incident occurred not long after the first avalanche in the area, authorities said.

    A group of hikers snowshoeing in the area was caught in the avalanche Saturday. The members of that group were able to "self rescue," but realized the woman, who was walking nearby, was missing, officials said.

    The group found the woman 45 minutes later buried in the snow and dug her out.

    Authorities said the woman was "not moving and somewhat conscious" was she was rescued. Rescuers hiked for two hours to reach the woman and brought her out of the wilderness on a sled, authorities said. Medics eventually declared the woman dead.

    The mountains in the area have been hit by spring snow in recent days, with a ski area at Snoqualmie Pass reporting 11 inches of new snow.

    The Northwest Weather and Avalanche Center reported considerable avalanche danger above 3,000 feet Sunday. Westbound lanes of the Interstate-90 highway over the pass were closed Saturday night because of heavy snow.

    33 comments

    I am 64 and a fit mountain biker and have passed 20 something's puking on the trail. Don't tell I should not partake in challenging outdoor activity.

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  • 10
    Apr
    2013
    4:55am, EDT

    Police: Meat cleaver thrown in maternity ward

    Arlington County Police Department

    Kareem Jorif was arrested after allegedly throwing a meat cleaver in the maternity ward of Virginia Hospital Center.

    By Kelvin Robinson, NBCWashington.com

    A bizarre incident involving a meat cleaver in a hospital maternity ward landed a man behind bars.

    Kareem Jorif, 34, of Arlington, Va., is charged with multiple counts of attempted malicious wounding and carrying a concealed weapon.

    Jorif went into the maternity ward at Virginia Hospital Center last week and got into an argument when he was told he couldn't go into a patient's room, police said.

    More from NBCWashington.com

    Jorif allegedly pulled out the knife from his waistband and used it to bang on a door before tossing it into the patient's room, according to police.

    Investigators said he'd gone to the hospital to tell the woman her baby's father couldn't visit because he'd just been arrested.

    Jorif was being held without bond.

    160 comments

    Those are some hard doors. He didn't want to hurt his fingers knocking on it. Oh crap they seen it, throw it in the room. Could have just fired a few shots in the air and when she looked out the window. He could have told her your boyfriend is in jail he won't make it today. I'm going to see him in  …

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    Explore related topics: featured, washington, virginia, arlington, crime-and-courts, nbcwashington, meat-cleaver, maternity-ward
  • 8
    Apr
    2013
    5:11am, EDT

    Mudslide causes Amtrak derailment in Wash.

    By Alexandria Fisher, NBCChicago.com

    CHICAGO -- A derailment on an Amtrak train from Chicago caused by a mudslide forced passengers to take buses for the last leg of their trip Sunday morning.

    No injuries were reported for the train's 86 passengers and 11 crew members on board, however, travelers were forced to finish the last 30 miles of their trip via buses, according to Amtrak officials.

    A mudslide, repotedly involving 30 feet of earth, trees and rocks, derailed the last three cars on the Empire Builder near Everett, Wash., around 10:30 a.m. Sunday, officials said.

    More from NBCChicago.com

    The train, uncoupled from the three derailed cars, continued to Mukilteo, Wash., where passengers were transferred to Charter buses.

    Crews were working to clear the debris and repair the track, which was expected to reopen Tuesday, and BNSF Railway was investigating the incident.

    32 comments

    At least everyone is OK. It would have scared the hell out of me though.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, washington, train, everett, amtrak, derailment, nbcchicago
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