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  • 14
    Sep
    2012
    5:15am, EDT

    Family of 77-year-old dragged from car demand apology from Texas cop

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

    By Randy McIlwain, NBCdfw.com

    The family of a 77-year-old woman dragged from her car during a traffic stop by police in Texas says a formal apology and anger-management training for the officer is needed to make things right, NBCDFW.com reported.

    Lynn Bedford's videotaped arrest has gone viral, sparking opinions across the country. The video shows Sgt. Gene Geheb pulling Bedford, of Cleburne, from her sports utility vehicle after she did not hand over her license and refused to get out of the vehicle.


    Her granddaughter, Aubrey McQue, sought the video from Keene police and made it public.

    "There was 19 seconds from when he first initially asked her for her driver's license to when he laid his hands on her -- 19 seconds," she said.

    The video shows that the officer requested Bedford's license four times before telling her that he would take her to jail if she did not give it to him.

    Read more from NBCDFW.com

    After Bedford told him, "Well, go ahead," he opened her car door, grabbed her arm and asked her to step out of the vehicle 10 times. He pulled her from the vehicle after she said, "I will not."

    McQue said the officer's use of force was excessive.

    "The video does speak for itself," she said. "Not once did she refuse to give her driver's license to him. She said, 'I'll give it to you in a minute,' and no patience was afforded to her. He controlled the entire situation, and he made it go in the direction it did. He let it escalate; he controlled that."

    The officer said he stopped Bedford after he clocked her going 66 mph in a 50-mph zone. The family is not disputing the speeding citation but is fighting the charge of failure to present a driver's license.

    McQue said her grandmother was speeding because she had a bladder infection and needed to get to a bathroom. The road her grandmother was on did not have a public bathroom in sight, she said.

    Cop drags woman, 77, from car after ID refusal

    McQue said manners and common sense on the part of the officer would have resulted in a different outcome.

    "I know from experience from senior citizens and elderly people that they don't have to move faster," she said. "They take a more leisurely pace to do things, and that's the respect afforded them because they've lived so long."

    Keene city administrator Bill Guinn, who has known the family for 30 years, said he called after hearing about the incident and offered to arrange a sit-down meeting with the police department.

    The Bedfords have declined. The family retained an attorney but said they don't plan a lawsuit at this time.

    "I feel badly for what happened, but that's the way it happened," Guinn said. "It's not the way we want anyone to feel about Keene or to see Keene. Keene is a great town, but there are these things that happen."

    Sleepless and tearful
    Bedford's family said this has never happened to her before. Since the video became public, her home phone constantly rings, and she hasn't slept. The family said Bedford is embarrassed, feeling like her life has been reduced to a video and Internet opinion polls about her as a person.

    McQue said she was speaking on Bedford's behalf because her grandmother can't talk about the incident without crying.

    "An apology would be nice, because she really is embarrassed by this -- that people think that she's a criminal. She's not a criminal," she said.

    Read more US stories from NBC News

    Keene residents said they have noticed that Bedford's arrest is getting national attention.

    "I have people call me from Chicago, one from Michigan, so I'm getting phone calls from people wanting to know what's going on in Keene," Dan Roberts said.

    He said that everyone in town has their own opinion.

    "I watched the video, and I think she was wrong," Roberts said. "She should've handed over her driver's license and ID, and it would've been all over."

    But Rachel Jessup disagreed.

    "More are siding with her because she's a 77-year-old lady," she said. "People feel bad for her."

    "He's a cop," she said. "You expect police officers to be rational and handle situations in a more mature way."

    NBC 5's Amanda Guerra contributed to this report.

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    1600 comments

    I hate to see a 77 year old woman having to get yanked from her car. On the other hand the Law states you must provide your Drivers license and proof of insurance. If you refuse you will be arrested, period. Is that too hard to understand? Show your license get your citation and then you just go. Ha …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ticket, woman, elder, dallas, cop, stop, traffic, featured, licence
  • 13
    Sep
    2012
    4:12pm, EDT

    Woman found alive after getting stuck in freezer at Tulsa home

    An Oklahoma woman was found alive in her deep freezer days after she was reported missing. Family members say she may have been disoriented and attempted to take shelter, KJRH's Breanne Palmerini reports.

    By NBC News

    Updated at 7:10 p.m. ET: A woman who vanished last weekend was found alive in a freezer in west Tulsa, Okla., after possibly climbing inside to take shelter from a storm, NBC station KJRH reported.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Theresa Christian, 59, disappeared Saturday and was discovered Wednesday with severe freezing of the legs, KJRH said. She was listed in serious condition, KJRH reported.

    Her son told the station he is relieved she was found alive.


    "She wasn't answering the phone or anything like that, so I came by here (Tuesday) night, about 10:30, knocked on the door, knocked on the door, and I couldn't get a response or anything," Christian's son, Jermal Stewart, told KJRH.

    Tuesday, Christian's brother, William Andy Jr., entered the apartment near W. 23rd Ave. and Southwest Blvd. and did not find her.

    Theresa Christian

    "We went through the house calling out her name and stuff and couldn't get a response or anything," Andy told KJRH.

    Watch the Top Videos on NBCNews.com 

    Stewart went back to the apartment early Wednesday and had the apartment's maintenance crew unlock the door again.

    "I heard her say, 'Help me, help me,'" Stewart said.

    Stewart told KJRH he opened a closet door in the kitchen and saw his mother sitting in the freezer with the lid open, unable to move.

    Family members say she may have been disoriented. “My mom takes a lot of medications, and it mixes with her system and it don't give her an appetite at all," Stewart told KJRH.

    Police told reporters they suspect Christian crawled into the freezer to take shelter.

    There was no severe weather in the area on Saturday, KJRH reported.

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    "Possibly she thought maybe there was a tornado coming, but they're not really sure why or how she got there," Tulsa police Cpl. Daisy Vallely told KJRH.

    No foul play is suspected, KJRH reported.

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    • 73-year-old birdwatcher: I was raped in New York's Central Park

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    330 comments

    I'll bet that frosted her ass.

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    Explore related topics: woman, tulsa, freezer, theresa-christian
  • 19
    Apr
    2012
    11:52am, EDT

    Divers to search pond for missing Fort Bragg soldier

    More than 100 police officers and soldiers searched the woods near Fort Bragg Wednesday, looking for clues in the disappearance of Army private Kelli Bordeaux. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports.

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    Divers planned to return to a Fayetteville, N.C., pond on Thursday in an attempt to find clues in the disappearance of a 23-year-old Army soldier.

    Authorities say Pfc. Kelli Bordeaux -- from St. Cloud, Fla., but stationed at Fort Bragg in North Carolina -- was last seen leaving a bar with a tavern employee early Saturday. She was reported missing Monday when she did not report for duty.

    On Wednesday, Fayetteville police and military authorities searched along Ramsey Street between Interstate 295 and the bar, Froggy Bottoms, which Bordeaux left around 1:20 a.m. Saturday.

    A police helicopter crew circled above the area while about 50 officers and 65 soldiers searched thick woods, according to WESH-TV, an NBC News affiliate in Raleigh, N.C.


    Detectives were able to track down the last few people known to have been with Bordeaux; one of them is a convicted sex offender, according to Fayetteville Police Chief Tom Bergamine. "Anybody that had last seen her on the early morning of Saturday is someone we want to talk to," Bergamine told CNN.

    Bordeaux, assigned as a health service specialist with the 601st Area Support Medical Company, 261st Multifunctional Medical Battalion, 44th Medical Brigade, joined the military one year ago, WESH-TV reported.

    'I just want my sister'
    Family and friends made their way to North Carolina this week.

    "I drove up here from Fort Stewart when I found out," Bordeaux's sister, Olivia Cox, told WESH-TV. "My best friend and I drove up here and went to the police station, and we've just been doing everything we can. I just want my sister, Kelli Bordeaux, brought back safe and sound. I just want my sister."


    Follow @msnbc_us

    According to Bordeaux’s Facebook page, she has been married for two years to her husband, Michael Bordeaux, and she studied dental hygiene at Valencia Community College.

    A friend told WESH-TV that Bordeaux's husband recently moved back to Florida from Fayetteville. A U.S. Army official said the couple had been separated. Officers said the husband was cooperating with investigators, according to WESH-TV.

    Follow Sevil Omer on Twitter and Facebook.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    11 comments

    So sad...I hope her bright future hasn't been stolen from her.

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    Explore related topics: army, fort, missing, st, woman, crime, cloud, bordeaux, bragg
  • 16
    Mar
    2012
    9:02am, EDT

    Bear bites Florida woman in rear end as she walks her dog

    By msnbc.com staff

    Ouch! A woman walking her dog near an apartment complex in Longwood, Fla., early Friday morning was bitten in the rear end by a bear.

    A wildlife official told the Orlando Sentinel that the woman was taken to a nearby hospital after the incident, which took place northeast of Orlando, the home of Disney World.



    Follow @msnbc_us

    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission spokeswoman Joy Hill said the attack happened at about 7 a.m. 

    The woman was taken to Florida Hospital-Altamonte in Altamonte Springs with four puncture wounds, the paper reported.

    According to the Sentinel, the woman was disposing of her dog's waste into the apartment complex's trash container when she turned around, saw the bear and stumbled to the ground. She was then attacked.

    The bear may have been spooked by the woman's large dog, an Akita Shepherd mix, Hill said.

    Traps set
    Hill told the Sentinel that officers are setting traps for the bear, which will be euthanized if it is caught.

    Florida black bears, which are a sub-species, are listed by the state's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission as being a threatened animal. However, they have surged in numbers in recent decades, the paper reported, rebounding from about 300 to about 3,000, and the commission has proposed taking the species off the list.

    Mike Orlando, who works for the wildlife agency, told the Sentinel that bear sightings are not uncommon in the area, which is near a state park, but that attacks are rare.

    A resident of the complex, Arlene Friedlander, 79, told the paper that she often sees bears near the apartments. "I'm not afraid of them," she said.

     

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    289 comments

    Maybe the bear needed a piece of a--

    Show more
    Explore related topics: woman, dog, bear, walk, bite, bitten, orlando

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