Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Surfers in California Make Prehistoric Find

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 17 November 2012 | 22.29

Chris Elmenhurst / Surf The Spot Photography

This photo makes the fossil look as big as a dinosaur, but it is actually about 8-10 feet.

advertisement

Click Here!

Surfers normally make news when the "surf's up," but this week in Santa Cruz, in Northern California, the news was made when surfers noticed something strange when the surf was down, as in a very low tide.

Santa Cruz surfers discovered a small prehistoric skeleton Wednesday morning during a lower-than-usual low tide at the base of a cliff at Pleasure Point.

Experts say the bones were the vertebrae of a small whale that had been fossilized. It's not uncommon to find fossils along the coast, but this creature is upright and appears to be well preserved.

Gary Griggs, director of University of California Santa Cruz's Institute of Marine Sciences, told KSBW in Salinas that the skeleton was most likely an extinct Pliocene-era whale. 

View more photos here.

The Pliocene era was roughly 3 to 5 million years ago.

The bones were found just below the home of Jack O'Neill. O'Neill is known around the world for making wetsuits.

The surfers who made the discovery Wednesday were headed to a break water named "Jack's."

O'Neil is among the scores of people who checked out bones that date back to when dinosaurs ruled the world.

He says he never noticed it before even though he has looked down at that part of the beach every day for the past 40 years. "It's a new one," O'Neill told the Santa Cruz Sentinel.

Because of its location in the water, the bones are not likely to be excavated.

More of the creature is expected to be revealed over time, but experts are asking people to leave the bones as they lie.

The next lower than normal tide is not until mid-December. That is the next time the fossil is expected to give a good showing.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Driver's Estranged Husband Speaks Out After Crash into Pond

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

Richard Williams, the estranged husband of Christina Williams, talks about his wife's fatal crash into a pond.

Driver's Estranged Husband Talks...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Mother, Toddler Die After Car Plunges Into Pond

A woman and her 22-month-old daughter died after their car because submerged in a pond at an apartment complex.

More Photos and Videos

The Tarrant County Medical Examiner's Office has not yet released the names of the woman and child who died after their car crashed into a pond Thursday night, but according to family members the driver's name was Christina Williams, 36, and her daughter was Tisiphone Rose, 22-months, both of Mansfield.

Richard Williams of Irving told NBC 5 he is the estranged husband of Williams, from whom he has been separated for two years.

Richard Williams said Christina had likely just picked up her child from child care prior to the crash.

"Usually she'll call me after she picks up Tisiphone and let me talk to her while she's driving. Yesterday she didn't," Richard Williams said. "And I thought that was kind of strange, 'cause I hadn't heard from her all night."

According to Williams, Christina was often distracted when she drove and he is concerned that may explain why she reportedly ran a stop sign prior to Thursday night's accident.

"I knew she was gonna get in another wreck one of these days but not like this," Williams said. "She had quite a few little minor accidents, 'cause she doesn't always pay attention to what she's doing."

Police said the vehicle was heading east on Collett Little Road when it ran a stop sign and collided with a car heading southbound on the Loop 820 service road. The force of the crash sent the car that ran the stop sign through a fence and into a pond at the Amelia Park Apartments in the 6100 block of Southeast Loop 820, police said.

The woman driving the car called 911 as her vehicle was sinking. She told the Forest Hill police 911 operator that she couldn't open the doors to her car.

Forest Hill police have released a recording of the 911 call, but NBC 5 has chosen not to air or post it because it is too disturbing.

Police have not made an official ruling on the crash.

NBC 5's Scott Gordon and Lita Beck contributed to this report.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Search for Clues in Teen's Murder Going Door-to-Door

Alicia Moore, 16, was reported missing on November 2, 2012.

advertisement

Click Here!

Investigators plan to go door-to-door in two counties to search for clues in the murder of a Greenville teenager.

Deputies found the body of Alicia Moore in a trunk more than a week ago in rural Van Zandt County.

The 16-year-old girl's family reporter her missing three days before, after she disappeared sometime after getting off of the school bus a block from her home.

Friday, Greenville police, Van Zandt County deputies and agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation will knock on doors and stop drivers while looking for clues.

So far, officials have remained tight-lipped in their investigation into the teen's murder.

Moore's funeral is Saturday at Ridgecrest Baptist Church in Greenville.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

New Drug Smuggling Trend: Teen Girls

advertisement

Click Here!

Teenagers and children as young as 12 years old are getting involved in the drug smuggling trade along the U.S.-Mexico border – and may even be at risk for recruitment, federal agents say.

Suspected teen smugglers, according to the agents, have been caught this year trying to cross into southern California with drugs secretly taped to their bodies.

Last year, a record 190 teens - ages 18 and under - were caught smuggling drugs along the San Ysidro-San Diego County border, according to federal investigators. While the number is down to 128 so far this year, there are still disturbing new trends, said Jose Garcia, a deputy special agent for ICE Homeland Security Investigations. 

American and Mexican children are being recruited by cartels as drug mules, agents said. Recruiters used to target mainly teenage boys, but now they're targeting young girls. And, these days, marijuana is no longer the drug of choice -- it's meth.

"It shocks me and saddens me that kids are getting involved. It doesn't shock me that cartels will use whatever method they need," Garcia said. 

Garcia's agents have been focusing on teen drug smugglers since 2009, he said. Cartels have recruited kids outside schools, arcades and malls, he said.

Social media has also been used to entice potential teen smugglers.

"We've even had one recruited by someone they know on Facebook," Garcia said.

The special agent said teens can carry as much as six kilos of drugs hidden under their clothing.

"If you look at the way that some females are dressed, it's hard to detect, they're wearing skinny jeans and tight tops and they still manage to hide it on them so the untrained eye wouldn't pick up on it," explained Garcia.

The money they get if they make it across the border is minimal compared to the risk they take.

"The lowest [payment] is $50 and the highest we've heard is about $500. But the average is somewhere between $75 and $300," explained Garcia.

The cartel recruiters tell the kids that because they are minors, they won't get in serious trouble.

However, Garcia says that selling point is misleading.

"The truth is if they are arrested with narcotics, especially hard narcotics, they're going to have two felonies on their record," Garcia said.

To help combat the teen drug smuggling trend, agents have formed a special outreach program that travels from school to school, warning kids about the dangers of drug smuggling.

Agents also warn parents to be alert and aware of their teens' cash flow. Agents say that if a child suddenly has a lot of money and parent don't know where it came from, it could be a red flag.
 

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dramatic Photos: Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

local

3 minutes ago

Firefighters battled a large fire at chemical and plastics distribution facility...

local

17 minutes ago

With the thunderous crack of a freight train slamming into a parade float...

business

4 minutes ago

Pilots at American Airlines will vote again on whether to approve a contract offer fro...

local

Nov 16, 2012

The estranged husband of a woman who died after crashing into a pond Thursday...


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Hostess' Death Sparks Second-Hand Sales Opportunities

Hostess CupCakes and other iconic Hostess products are enjoying a new popularity on ebay, thanks to the company's shuttering.

advertisement

Click Here!

Hostess may no longer be a business worth running, but its products are enjoying a resurgence on second-hand sales sites.

"A 'MUST HAVE' Holiday gift for the one who has everything!" wrote one eBay user who was asking $100 for a box of 10 Twinkies. "What better way to show how you feel than with some of the LAST TWINKIES PRODUCED!"

"With Hostess claiming bankruptcy, these iconic, all-American food snacks will soon be nothing but a legend of desserts past," touted someone in Pembroke Pines, Fla. who turned to Craigslist to ask $500 for four boxes of Twinkies.

Those were some of the more reasonable offerings. Others -- assuming they weren't joking --  appeared overly opportunistic, including the eBay auctioneer who claimed to expect $200,000 for a Twinkies 10-pack. The pitch: "This is a great collectors item that can be passed down to family members and will only gain in value!"

The frenzy was sparked by Hostess' announcement Friday that it was liquidating all of its assets, laying off its 18,500 workers and stopping production of its iconic but financially nonviable snack cakes -- Twinkies, Ho Hos, CupCakes, Ding Dongs -- as well as Wonder Bread.

There remains a chance that some other company will buy the brand and recipes and start a new line of production. But for now, it appears that the last deliveries are on their way to stores, and when they run out, there will be no more.

That's where the online entrepreneurs jumped in.

One seller, seeking $12.99 for eight CupCakes, posted: "Hostess Cupcakes. Out of Business! So Sad ;("

Another, hawking Twinkies, noted: "Hostess is shutting it down....so, buy extras and throw them in the freezer for future consumption!"

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dramatic Photos: Industrial Facility Catches Fire

local

3 minutes ago

Firefighters battled a large fire at chemical and plastics distribution facility...

local

17 minutes ago

With the thunderous crack of a freight train slamming into a parade float...

business

4 minutes ago

Pilots at American Airlines will vote again on whether to approve a contract offer fro...

local

Nov 16, 2012

The estranged husband of a woman who died after crashing into a pond Thursday...


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ditka "Doing Fine" After Stroke

NBC NewsWire via Getty Images

Former Chicago Bears coach Mike Ditka

advertisement

Click Here!

Former Chicago Bears head coach Mike Ditka was hospitalized Friday after having a stroke.

The Chicago Tribune reported that Ditka was playing cards earlier in the day when he experienced difficulty with his hands and with speaking.

"He's doing fine. He'll be released tomorrow after observation," Ditka's agent, Steve Mandell, told NBC Chicago via text message.

According to the Tribune, doctors classified the episode as "very minor."

"Thoughts and prayers go out to #MikeDitka and his family. Wishing him a full and speedy recovery from his stroke," Sen. Mark Kirk said in a Tweet. Kirk continues to recover from an ischemic stroke he suffered in January.

Ditka, 73, is currently a commentator for ESPN, including "Sunday NFL Countdown." A senior producer with the network, Seth Markman, said Ditka would not be taking part in weekend coverage.

The stroke came on the same day that a Lake County prosecutor said in court that Ditka's son, Mark E. Ditka, tested positive for opiates during a pretrial screening earlier this month. The younger Ditka is awaiting trial on his fourth DUI charge.

Ditka coached the Bears for 11 years, including the team's Super Bowl-winning 1985 season. He had a heart attack during the 1988 season.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Diwali Celebrations Expected to Draw Thousands

NBC 5

More than 12,000 people are expected to attend the second annual Diwali Celebration at the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in Irving.

advertisement

Click Here!

Thousands of North Texans are expected to participate in Indian New Year festivities in Irving on Saturday.

Diwali, which literally means "festival of lights," will be celebrated by more than one billion people around the world.

"It comes to mark the end of the Indian calendar year and, of course, the resolution and the steps one takes for the new year going forward," said Shashi Upadhyaya, BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir spokesperson.

More than 12,000 people are expected to attend the second annual Diwali Celebration throughout the day.

More than 400 volunteers prepared over the past three months to make the Mandir look its best for the festivities. Handcrafted paintings made out of colored rice and glitter are placed prominently at the entrance. Hallways are lined with information about India's contributions to the world. And a theater room will show a 45-minute film called "Mystic India Show" every hour from 1 p.m. until 5 p.m.

"We can all celebrate one another's diversity, one another's customs, and realize that there's so much we can enjoy just through education and knowledge of opening our minds in such a way," Upadhyaya said.

The exhibitions and food booths open at 12:30 p.m., and a fireworks display will take place at 8 p.m. The Mandir is located at 4601 North State Highway 161 in Irving.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fire Out at Garland Chemical Facility

advertisement

Click Here!

Firefighters battled a large fire at chemical and plastics distribution facility in Garland on Friday.

The fire raged through containers inside a covered loading rack at the Nexeo Solutions facility in the 3000 block of Wood Lane on Friday afternoon. The fire was out by Friday night, and fire crews remained at the plant to monitor hot spots throughout the night.

The fire contained mostly methanol, a highly flammable liquid used to produce materials such as plastics, paints and fuels for cars. It can be poisonous if ingested.

A high-powered solvent, toluene, was also in the fire. It can be found in many items, including nail polish and glue, but can be dangerous to your health at high levels.

Nexeo Solutions spokeswoman Christina Reynolds told NBC 5 that all employees escaped the fire without injury. She said the cause of the fire has not yet been determined.

The Environmental Protection Agency is checking air quality in the area. Garland fire crews said the initial EPA tests came back negative for any immediate danger. The first test results show normal to low levels of methanol in the area around the plant.

The agency tested the air from Garland to Dallas throughout the night.

The Garland Health Department is also tested the water and determined there was no threat to the public.

The fire, which was first reported at about 3:30 p.m., was contained to the loading rack, although adjacent containers emitted steam, presumably from heating or blistering paint.

Several explosions could be heard while the fire burned through containers.

"I though the whole plant exploded," witness Adam Lagerberg said. "I never seen anything this bad. It was bad."

Rusty Webb, who works nearby, was fewer than 200 yards away when the fire erupted.

"I was working there and heard the explosion," he said. "Actually, you could feel it in your chest. As soon as it did that, I grabbed the cellphone and called 911."

Chopper 5 was the first helicopter over the fire with aerial pictures. Chopper 5 photojournalist Ames Meyer and a pilot were hovering above the fire when she felt an explosion.

"We were 1,000 feet in the air, and when we felt a boom that big, it was just like a muffled sound," Myers said. "We both looked at each other like, 'What was that?' You know, your first reaction is, do you think it's the helicopter? No, it's that big fire on the ground."

At 4:40 p.m., firefighters began spraying water to try to cool tanks near the fire. Garland Fire Capt. Merrill Balancier said there is concern about spraying water onto the containers that are on fire because it is believed the chemicals do not mix well with water. But firefighters later called for sand trucks to be brought in because the use of water was spreading the fire.

Firefighters allowed the fire to burn out and kept it from spreading. To the west, tanker cars on rail lines contained chemicals that posed a significant risk of exploding, Balancier said.

Nearby businesses within one-quarter of a mile of the facility were evacuated as a precaution. The evacuation was lifted by Saturday morning.

Residential neighborhoods are as close as a half-mile to the east across South Shiloh Road, but were not evacuated, Garland Fire Chief Todd Peele said. However, officials asked people to avoid the area while the fire was burning.

The National Weather Service said the plume of smoke blew from east to west and rose to 7,000 feet. NBC 5 Chief Meteorologist David Finfrock said wind speeds were about 5 mph during the fire.

A Nexeo driver told NBC 5 he was thankful that the wind was blowing to the west. If it were blowing to the east, the tanks adjacent to the fire would be at much greater risk of exploding, he said.

A sign in front of the complex indicates that the facility is owned by Ashland, a world-wide chemical company. NBC 5 has learned that Ashland sold the facility in 2011 to Nexeo Solutions, a Texas company based in the Houston area.

According to the United States Department of Labor, Nexeo Solutions has been cited $11,500 for improperly storing flammable liquids and organic peroxides in December 2011 at a facility in Tewksbury, Mass. NBC 5 has also learned a Nexeo Solutions facility in Willow Springs, Ill., caught fire in June.

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality says Nexeo currently has a satisfactory rating and has had no violations this year.

In 2011, the company received several notices of violations: three minor violations for training and inspections and a moderate notice of a violation for discharging hazardous waste into a water supply.

The notices do not mean a violation has occurred.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration said the Nexeo facility in Garland has not had any issues.

NBC 5's Kevin Cokely, Kristi Nelson, Ames Meyer, Tammy Mutasa, Ellen Goldberg, Scott Friedman, Eva Parks, Ken Kalthoff, Omar Villafranca, Amanda Guerra and Mark Schnyder contributed to this report.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Presented By:

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 16 November 2012 | 22.29

The likely cause for this is that your browser, feed reader, or email application is configured to not accept cookies, or your reader may launch an external browser to view links without sharing cookies.

  • If you're using Internet Explorer, make sure your privacy setting is at medium or below.
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the Privacy tab
    • Adjust your privacy setting if necessary
       
  • If you're using a reader that embeds Internet Explorer (examples: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Feed Demon), you'll also need to select Internet Explorer as your default web browser.
    • Open Internet Explorer
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the 'Programs' tab and check the box for Internet Explorer to check if it is the default browser and save your change
    • Close your browser, re-open it, and when prompted, select Internet Explorer as your default
    • You can then click on an ad in your newsletter and visit the site you wish to view

© 2012 Pheedo, Inc. All rights reserved.


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Boy Reunited With Firefighter Who Found Him

Kristi Nelson, NBC 5 News

Ten years he was left outside an Arlington fire station on a cold day in 2002, that boy spent his birthday with the firefighter who found him.

Boy Reunited With Firefighter Who...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Ten years after a baby was left wrapped in blankets outside an Arlington fire station on a cold day in 2002, the little boy spent his birthday with the firefighter who found him.

After being one of the first infants found under the state's Baby Moses Law, which designates fire stations as a safe haven, Koregan Quintanilla was adopted by a loving family.

He's now 10 years old, and he asked to return to the fire station celebrate his birthday with Wesley Keck, the firefighter who found and cared for him a decade ago.

"He was asleep at the time; I touched him enough to get him moving, to let me know that he was breathing. I picked him up and brought him into the station," Keck recalled.

Koregan has dreams of being a firefighter some day.

"He wants to be a lawyer. He wants to be everything all at once because he's 10, but always first -- fireman, always first," said Koregan's mother, Rebecca Quintanilla.

On Thursday, Koregan was chief of the station. He got to ride in a firetruck, flash the lights and shoot the water gun.

Koregan said he's not special -- just another kid. But to the firefighters at Station 12, he's a little boy they won't forget.

"I was excited that I got to meet him," Koregan said. "I'm glad I get to come here and see everyone, because this is my fire station that I was abandoned at."

Koregan was adopted on National Adoption Day, the next one happens Saturday.

Across the county, 4,500 children in foster care are expected to join their forever families.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mother, Child in Submerged Vehicle Die

advertisement

Click Here!

A mother and her toddler died after they became trapped inside a sinking vehicle after a car crash in southeast Fort Worth, police said.

Police said the vehicle was heading east on Collett Little Road when it ran a stop sign and collided with a car heading southbound on the Loop 820 service road. The force of the crash sent the car that ran the stop sign through a fence and into a pond at the Amelia Park Apartments in the 6100 block of Southeast Loop 820, police said.

The woman driving the car called 911 as her vehicle was sinking. She told the Forest Hill police 911 operator that she couldn't open the doors to her car.

Forest Hill police have released a recording of the 911 call, but NBC 5 has chosen not to air or post it because it is too disturbing.

Witnesses said the victims were underwater for about 30 minutes before divers were able to pull them from the vehicle.

The woman and her 22-month-old daughter were both pronounced dead at local hospitals.

Nathan Brown, who witnessed the crash, said the car "took off straight into the pond" after it was hit by the other vehicle.

Brown said he and his friend, John Piszor, jumped in to help.

"The car was sinking, just slowly sinking, but it was sinking fast enough to where we couldn't really do much," Piszor said.

They said the car was sinking nose first. Piszor said the car's doors were locked and they tried to break the windows.

"There's only so much you can do when you're swimming," he said.

Regina Brumfield, of Arlington, said the woman pulled out in front of her from Collett Little Road.

"I guess she didn't see my car and she just pulled out and she started swerving, and I swerved my car to miss her," Brumfield said. "It's like she just kept swerving. I don't know what happened, and I did everything I could to avoid her."

The Fort Worth Fire Department said a Fort Worth fire crew and Forest Hill police that responded to crash were not able to free the victims.

Divers from the Fort Worth Fire Department later arrived and pulled the child and mother from the car.

The child was taken to Cook Children's Medical Center in critical condition, MedStar said. The mother, who was also in critical condition, was taken to John Peter Smith Hospital. Both were pronounced dead when they arrived at the hospitals.

NBC 5's Scott Gordon contributed to this report.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Presented By:

The likely cause for this is that your browser, feed reader, or email application is configured to not accept cookies, or your reader may launch an external browser to view links without sharing cookies.

  • If you're using Internet Explorer, make sure your privacy setting is at medium or below.
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the Privacy tab
    • Adjust your privacy setting if necessary
       
  • If you're using a reader that embeds Internet Explorer (examples: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Feed Demon), you'll also need to select Internet Explorer as your default web browser.
    • Open Internet Explorer
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the 'Programs' tab and check the box for Internet Explorer to check if it is the default browser and save your change
    • Close your browser, re-open it, and when prompted, select Internet Explorer as your default
    • You can then click on an ad in your newsletter and visit the site you wish to view

© 2012 Pheedo, Inc. All rights reserved.


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

School Bus Crashes Into FW Home

Amanda Guerra, NBC 5 News

Police say a Fort Worth school bus crashed into a home after another vehicle pulled in front of the bus.

Fort Worth School Bus Smashes Into Home

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Police are investigating why a Fort Worth Independent School District bus crashed into a Fort Worth home Thursday evening.

It happened in the 5000 block of Alta Mesa Boulevard near Whitman Avenue just before 7 p.m.

Police said the car didn't see the bus and pulled in front of it. The bus then clipped the car and smashed into the backyard of a home.

"She called and said, 'There's a bus in your backyard.' And I thought, there's something wrong with that statement. But there's a bus in my backyard," said Campbell. "I came in, and here it is. It went through the fence. There's a brick wall. ... It knocked out the brick wall."

Fort Worth ISD said the bus was coming from Wedgwood Middle School.

Police said the school bus driver was taken to the hospital. None of the nine children on board were injured, and the driver of the car was also OK.

"I'm just glad nobody got hurt," said Campbell. "Life's too short to be upset about little things like that."

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Missing A&M Football Player Found Safe

advertisement

Click Here!

Texas A&M Police Say Missing Student Found

University police confirm Thomas Johnson, a graduate of Dallas' Skyline High School, a freshman at A&M and a member of the Aggie football team has been found.

More Photos and Videos

NBC 5 has learned that Dallas police took into custody a missing Texas A&M student-athlete who was located early Thursday morning.

Texas A&M University police confirmed that Thomas Linze Johnson, a graduate of Dallas' Skyline High School and a freshman wide receiver on the Aggie football team, was found in Dallas at about 2:30 a.m. after disappearing Monday.

According to a Dallas police report, Johnson went to a friend's house on Forney Drive and tried to leave as police officers arrived.

Dallas police blacked-out portions of the report, but the document shows that Johnson was talking about his religious beliefs. Officers transported Johnson from the house, and there is an arrest number on the report.

Dallas police can make an arrest if they feel someone is a danger to himself or others.

The department is not commenting on the case.

A relative who answered Johnson's cellphone Thursday night said the family had no comment.

University officials traveled to Dallas on Wednesday to search for Johnson and found him with the help of the Dallas Police Department and the Texas Rangers.

Authorities have not released further details regarding where Johnson was before he was located.

"We are pleased and relieved to find T.J.," said Texas A&M head coach Kevin Sumlin. "Our foremost concern is for the health and well-being of T.J. I would like to thank everyone for their thoughts, prayers and efforts in locating him."

University police said Thursday that no further details would be released.

Johnson was reported missing Wednesday after he was last spotted leaving his College Station residence at approximately 5 p.m. Monday. He has family in the Dallas area, and it was believed he may have been in Dallas-Fort Worth.

Neighbors said they are glad he is OK but were frustrated by his disappearance and the fear it caused.

"It scared me to death. He's been a good kid," said neighbor Anthony Billard. "I was relieved. I was so glad that he was found, because so many things are happening now."

School officials have not said if Johnson is expected to play in A&M's game this Saturday against Sam Houston State. So far this season for the Aggies, Johnson has appeared in 10 games and has 30 catches for 399 yards with one touchdown.

NBC 5's Christina Miralla and Elvira Sakmari contributed to this report.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

New Technology Could Stop Distracted Officer Crashes

advertisement

Click Here!

Fort Worth police plan to test a new device that could prevent crashes caused by officers typing on dashboard computers while driving.

Over the last five months, the NBC 5 Investigates team has found dozens of those crashes involving Texas police officers distracted by their computers.

The Fort Worth Police Department already has a tough new policy to deal with the issue.

"They will not divert their attention directly to typing and getting more information while the vehicle is in motion," Chief Jeffrey Hallstead said. "We are mandating they do this when the vehicle is stopped."

Now, Fort Worth police tell NBC 5 Investigates that they plan to test a technology solution developed in Fort Wayne, Ind., where the police chief is already putting that new device in hundreds of police cruisers.

"I felt we were really setting our officers up, putting all of this technology in a car and expecting them not to use that while they're moving -- basically texting and driving," Fort Wayne Police Chief Rusty York said. "We looked and really couldn't find any solutions that were available on the market."

Fort Wayne police worked with a local company to develop and test a device called Archangel II.

The software shuts down many of the computer's functions when the car accelerates past a certain speed, which is determined by the department.

Fort Wayne officers such as Raquel Foster will still be able to see the GPS screen while driving, but to check incoming police calls or respond to messages she will have to pull over.

"So now it's above 15 mph, so I can no longer engage the computer," Foster said. "I can't change the screen (BEEPS); it doesn't function. No one likes change. We like to have the information that we believe we need to do the work that we want to do, so we're just going to have to adjust. We're going to have to adapt."

"It will be an adjustment, but it's something they'll get used to and it will be safer for them," York said.

Foster said she has been in situations in which the new device would have helped her.

FWPD Implements Distracted-Driving Policy

Fort Worth police have developed a distracted-driving policy that tells officers not to type on their dashboard-mounted computers while driving.

Arlington Police Changing Driving Policy Following NBC 5 Investigation

An open records request filed by NBC 5 Investigates has revealed even more crashes involving Arlington Police officers using dashboard mounted computers while driving.

More Photos and Videos

"Have I had close calls? Yeah I have. I'd be lying if I said I didn't," she said.

Soon, 360 Fort Wayne police cars will have Archangel II on board and the department is already getting calls from other agencies inquiring about the new device.

"I think that there's going to be a real need for this, because hopefully departments won't wait until something really bad happens," Foster said.

Fort Worth police plan to try the Archangel II to see if it's compatible with new computers they're purchasing. If it works, the police department said it will consider putting the device in all the department's police cars.

Meanwhile, police in the Tarrant County suburb of Colleyville are reviewing their driving policy after an officer hit two pedestrians while driving distracted.

The woman injured in the crash said she believes the incident was caused by an officer distracted by a computer.

According to a police report, a Colleyville police cruiser crashed into Iryna and Oleh Krutko as they walked across the street in front of the police station on the night of Oct. 21. Iryna was bruised and briefly unconscious after the collision.

"They had no place to go," said David Hart, Krutko's attorney.

Iryna, 40, later told investigators she believed the officer was using her in-car computer at the time of the crash.

"It appeared to her (Krutko) that Cpl. Chavez was looking at the computer when she left the driveway of the police department," the report said.

"Obviously, the officers should be trained and supervised to not look at the computer when they're taking off at an intersection when they're supposed to be paying attention to where they're going," Hart said.

The officer who hit Krutko resigned two days later. The city said the officer told her supervisors that she had a family emergency. Her resignation letter said she left due to "unforeseen circumstances."

NBC 5 Investigates was unable to reach the officer for comment.

NBC 5 Investigates has discovered that Colleyville Police Department policy does not prohibit officers from using computers while driving.

"We do not have a specific policy related to the computers inside our police vehicles," city spokeswoman Mona Grandy said. "Obviously, when we have an accident -- any kind of accident -- we look at everything, every possible cause, and then go back and study our procedures."

Investigators determined that a distraction in the police officer's car was a contributing factor to the crash that injured Krutko. But, the accident report also blames Krutko for failing to yield the right of way as a pedestrian.

In a statement, the Colleyville police chief said Krutko was "culpable" because she was crossing a street wearing dark clothing.

Her attorney pointed out that there are street lights at the intersection -- and you can clearly see the couple in the police video after the crash.

The police department declined a request to be interviewed for this story.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Honda Generators Recalled Due to Fire, Burn Hazard

U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission

advertisement

Click Here!

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and American Honda Motor Co. are recalling more than 150,000 gasoline-powered portable generators.

The portable generator's fuel hose can leak, posing a fire and burn hazard.

The Torrance, Calif.-based distributor is aware of four fuel leak incidents. No fires or injures have been reported.

This recall involves Honda gasoline-powered portable generators with model number EU2000i and serial numbers EAAJ-2260273 through EAAJ-2485025. The generators are black and red in color or have a camouflage design. The serial number is located on the lower right side, rear corner of the generator.

The generators were sold at Honda Power Equipment dealers, Camping World, Gander Mountain, Grainger, Hertz Rental, John Deere, National Pump and Compressor, Northern Tool, Scheels Sporting, Sportsman's Warehouse, Sunbelt Rentals, True Value, United Rentals, White Cap and Wholesale Sports store from October 2011 through September 2012.

If you have one of these generators, stop using it and contact the nearest Honda power equipment dealer to schedule a free inspection and repair. You can also contact American Honda directly at 888-888-3139 or visit them online at http://powerequipment.honda.com and click on "Recalls and Updates" under "Service and Support" for more information.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 1 komentar | Read More

Obama on Tricky Path in Fiscal Cliff Negotiations

advertisement

Click Here!

President Barack Obama is kicking off budget dealings with congressional leaders with new leverage from last week's big win, but he confronts a decidedly tricky path to avoiding a market-rattling "fiscal cliff" that could imperil a still-fragile economy.

Obama's GOP rivals promise greater flexibility on new tax revenues, but Democrats face pressure from liberal interest groups urging the president to take a hard line and avoid cutting big benefit programs like Medicare and food stamps. It's up to Obama to navigate the course toward an agreement.

At issue is a one-two punch of expiring Bush-era tax reductions and across-the-board spending cuts set to hit in January as punishment for the failure of a gridlocked Congress to reach a deficit-cutting deal last year. Economists and business leaders warn the combination could send the economy back into recession, and all sides in Washington say they want to avoid going over the cliff.

Attending the meeting with Obama are the top four leaders of Congress: House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

The White House says Obama's starting point for negotiations is his February budget plan, which combined $1.6 trillion in new revenues over the coming decade — chiefly from upper-income earners — with modest cuts to benefits programs. Obama's plan promises $4.4 trillion in deficit cuts over 10 years, but more than half of that comes by banking already accomplished cuts and questionable savings from winding down military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In the run-up to the meeting, Obama has been firm that taxes are going up on upper-bracket earners, though Boehner and McConnell are adamant that his campaign promise of raising the top income tax rate on family income exceeding $250,000 a year is a nonstarter.

"When it comes to the top 2 percent, what I'm not going to do is to extend further a tax cut for folks who don't need it," Obama said at his news conference Wednesday.

Obama will press the leaders to make sure that taxes don't go up on 98 percent of American families and 97 percent of small businesses at the end of the year. The White House says Obama is willing to compromise on a deficit-reduction plan, but only if it asks for more revenues from wealthier Americans.

The bargaining landscape has shifted markedly in Obama's favor since his failed talks with Boehner in the summer of 2011 on a "grand bargain" on the budget. Then, Obama squared off against a tea party-driven House on the need to extend the government's ability to borrow to avoid a market-crunching first-ever default on its obligations.

Now, freshly re-elected, Obama is putting Republicans on notice that he's willing to mount a national campaign blaming them for holding up renewing tax cuts for all with an ultimatum about renewing tax cuts for upper-income earners.

"If you have looked closely at what the president had to say and looked closely at what I have had to say, you know, there are no barriers here to sitting down and beginning to work through this process," Boehner said Wednesday.

McConnell, however, has adopted a harsher tone.

The roadblocks to a deal may come from Obama's left flank as much as they do from his conservative GOP rivals. Liberal Democrats are adamant that the measure not touch Social Security or raise the eligibility age for Medicare. Both ideas were in the mix when Obama negotiated with Boehner last summer, but top Senate Democrat Reid insists that ideas like a lower inflation adjustment for Social Security are off the table now.

On Friday afternoon, Obama will continue his efforts to build a coalition of support for his position when he and Vice President Joe Biden meet with leaders of civil rights and other organizations. The president has already met with leaders of labor and liberal organizations as well as corporate CEOs who have backed his call for greater tax revenue.


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Silver Alert Canceled, 79-Year-Old Man Found

advertisement

Click Here!

The silver alert issued for a 79-year-old man Friday morning has been canceled.

Lewisville police issued a silver alert in the search for Norbert Klepac at about 5:30 a.m. Klepac was found in good condition a few hours later.

Klepac, 79, was reportedly last seen wearing blue jeans, a blue shirt and a tan baseball cap with Washington, D.C. on it. Klepac is approximately 6 feet 2 inches tall with gray hair and brown eyes.

Klepac has the beginning stages of Alzheimer's and was reported driving a white Toyota Tacoma with Texas license plate PW971D.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Butterball Accused of Kicking, Stomping Turkeys

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 15 November 2012 | 22.29

An animal rights group alleges on Nov. 14, 2012 that workers abused turkeys at a Butterball plant in North Carolina.

advertisement

Click Here!

Animal Rights Group Urges In-N-Out to Sever Ties With Iowa Dairy Shown in Animal Abuse Video

Animal rights group Mercy for Animals is calling for In-N-Out and other fast food chains to cut ties with an Idaho dairy where three workers have been charged with animal cruelty. Undercover video revealed employees stomping, shocking and beating cows. Angie Crouch reports from Hollywood for the NBC4 News at 6 p.m. on Octl. 10, 2012.

Animal Abuse in Chester County

7 dead cats, 3 mutilated, are found at the home of a Coatesville woman who cares for stray cats.

More Photos and Videos

Turkeys being fattened up for the Thanksgiving table were routinely kicked and stomped at a Butterball plant in North Carolina, according to a Los Angeles animal rights group.

The animal activist group, Mercy For Animals, said that it had documented a "pattern of shocking abuse and neglect at numerous Butterball turkey operations in North Carolina."

It released hidden-camera video (warning: the video is graphic) on Wednesday of its undercover sting into a Butterball turkey facility showing five workers allegedly being cruel to turkeys.

"Animal abuse continues to run rampant at Butterball factory farms," the group said in a press release on its website.

The group said it has documented workers kicking and stomping birds, dragging them by their wings and necks, and throwing the birds onto the ground or on top of other birds.

It said that birds suffered from untreated illnesses and injuries, including open sores, infections, and broken bones. The group also said workers grabbed birds by their wings or necks and slammed them into transport crates.

The allegations mirror abuses documented by the group at a Butterball turkey farm in 2011, allegations that the group said led to arrests of several employees.

Butterball said in a statement that it takes such allegations seriously and has a "zero-tolerance" policy against animal abuse.

"Upon learning of these new concerns, we immediately initiated an internal investigation and suspended the associates in question," the company said. "Pending the completion of that investigation, Butterball will then make a determination on additional actions including immediate termination for those involved."

Butterball is the largest turkey producer in the United States, accounting for 20 percent of total turkey production in the country. Its 675,000 square foot plant in Mt. Olive, N.C., is the world's largest turkey plant, according to the Butterball website.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Plano ISD Education Foundation Hands Out Grants

Catherine Ross, NBC 5 Collin County Reporter

The Plano ISD Education Foundation distributed more than $100,000 in grant money to district educators on Wednesday. The program rewards teachers for submitting innovative ideas.

Plano ISD Teachers Get Annual Grants

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

It was the "best day of the year" for the Plano Independent School District's Education Foundation.

"Grant patrol" teams took to the streets Wednesday morning, rewarding 22 district teachers with resources to fund innovative education programs.

"This was a complete shock," said Belinda Kinney, a Mathews Elementary School second-grade teacher.

Kinney's grant proposal, Think is the New Pink, is for an after-school program for girls promoting science, technology, engineering and math.

"It definitely makes it possible," she said.

The foundation can provide $100,000 worth of funding this year. The money is 100 percent funded by private donations from individuals and corporate sponsors.

"We can step up and bring back some of the things that were actually cut because of the budget issues," said Lisa Raskin, a former president of the PISD Education Foundation. "They are out-of-the-box thinking. they are new programs the kiddos would not be exposed to unless these teachers went and did this on their own."

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Presented By:

The likely cause for this is that your browser, feed reader, or email application is configured to not accept cookies, or your reader may launch an external browser to view links without sharing cookies.

  • If you're using Internet Explorer, make sure your privacy setting is at medium or below.
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the Privacy tab
    • Adjust your privacy setting if necessary
       
  • If you're using a reader that embeds Internet Explorer (examples: Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Feed Demon), you'll also need to select Internet Explorer as your default web browser.
    • Open Internet Explorer
    • Select 'Internet Options' from the 'Tools' menu in your browser window
    • Click the 'Programs' tab and check the box for Internet Explorer to check if it is the default browser and save your change
    • Close your browser, re-open it, and when prompted, select Internet Explorer as your default
    • You can then click on an ad in your newsletter and visit the site you wish to view

© 2012 Pheedo, Inc. All rights reserved.


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Shingles Stolen Before Roof Repairs

Ray Villeda, NBC 5 News

Coppell police say since June there have been 17 cases of shingles stolen before roof replacement work could begin.

Shingles Stolen in Coppell

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Coppell police say since June, there have been 17 reported cases of thieves stealing shingle shipments from homes.

Police say it's happening overnight or early in the morning, after the shingles have been dropped off, before the roofing work is set to begin.

"It was quiet, I didn't hear anything, I don't know how they could've gotten away with it really," said theft victim Cindy Etheredge.

Etheredge's home was hit hard by the spring hail storms which totaled her roof, then she was targeted by thieves who stolen the shipment of shingles right after it was dropped off.

Police say each shipment could be thousands of dollars.

"It just seems to be heightened right now best we can equate it to is because of recent storms, people are still trying to get roofs repaired," said Coppell Police Sgt. David Moore. "I think the thieves are taking the shingles and selling them on the black market, or maybe their contractors not wanting to pay for the shingles."

Coppell police advise residents to let them know if they're getting a shipment of shingles, so that officers can patrol the area and they say homeowners should stay in touch with contractors throughout the repair process.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fight to Save Braniff Building From Demolition

advertisement

Click Here!

The old Braniff Airlines headquarters at Dallas Love Field will be demolished to make way for a new development under a plan approved by the city Wednesday, but a competing developer is still fighting to save the building.

Opened in 1958, the building on Lemmon Avenue with a butterfly design was intended to symbolize the opening of the jet age as airlines transitioned from propeller-driven planes.

It housed Braniff maintenance and operations until Braniff finally shut down in the early '90s.

The building was then occupied by Dalfort Aerospace, but it's been mostly vacant for the past 10 years.

"This big building has been empty with no revenue coming back to the aviation coffers," Councilman Tennell Atkins said.

A plan unanimously approved by the Dallas City Council would replace the building with new hangers and commercial space, including a car dealership.

Officials said renovation would cost $30 million, but demolition and site preparation for the new developer would cost just $8 million, with annual rent payments to the city of $926,238 to follow under a 40-year lease.

The developer is committed to invest $13 million in the project.

"We've got an opportunity to demolish this building, to bring new revenue to the aviation department," Atkins said.

But Steve Birch of Flying Crown Land Group was trying to get the city to support his plan to renovate the old building for first-class aviation offices, meeting and hangar space.

Birch asked the City Council to reject Wednesday's deal.

"Nostalgia aside, there are clear economic reasons why the council should vote 'no' on this item," he said. "The demolition is costly and unnecessary. A reuse is completely possible."

Birch claims the city would violate Federal Aviation Administration rules by switching part of the site to nonaviation uses. He has also filed an application with the Texas Historical Commission to have the building declared a historic landmark.

"And so we feel comfortable that that will be recognized at that level and, therefore, make the existing proposal today null and void," Birch said.

City officials said they are working with the FAA and the Texas Historical Commission and those issues should not stop the demolition.

A new terminal is under construction at Love Field, and the city has been working with neighbors on what it calls a "good neighbor plan." One goal is to improve the areas around the edges of Love Field, and city leaders said Wednesday's vote reflects that.

"I think this is a great opportunity for the Aviation Department -- not out there sitting on that hill -- but out there trying to bring new development in," Atkins said.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Arlington Medal of Honor Recipient Laid to Rest

advertisement

Click Here!

A recipient of the Medal of Honor was laid to rest in North Texas on Wednesday.

Col. James L. Stone, of Arlington, died last week at the age of 89 after a long bout with cancer.

The colonel received his medal for his brave actions during the Korean War.

"When his platoon, holding a vital outpost position, was attacked by overwhelming Chinese forces, 1st Lt. Stone stood erect and exposed to the terrific enemy fire calmly directed his men in the defense," the U.S. Army said.

"A defensive flame-thrower failing to function, he personally moved to its location, further exposing himself, and personally repaired the weapon. Throughout a second attack, 1st Lt. Stone; though painfully wounded, personally carried the only remaining light machine gun from place to place in the position in order to bring fire upon the Chinese advancing from two directions," the Army said.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower awarded Stone the Medal of Honor in 1953, after the American hero spent 22 months in a POW camp. Stone would go on to serve a tour of duty in the Vietnam War during his 30 years in the Army.

Despite his extraordinary actions, Stone would regularly tell people he was an ordinary guy.

"This is how he was," recalled one family friend at Stone's funeral service Wednesday. "'I was just an ordinary guy,' the colonel would say. 'There were better men than me out there that night, but sometimes ordinary people are called upon to do extra ordinary things.' Col. Stone was not that interested in talking about himself that much."

When the U.S. Army wanted to name a reserve training center in Fort Worth after Stone, he responded, "Young man, can't you find someone more deserving than me?" said another close friend and Army officer who spoke at Wednesday's service.

A friend said that when he wanted his son, a U.S. Military Academy cadet, to meet Stone, his son had an image of the colonel as "a grizzled veteran champing on a half-smoked cigar, resembling something from a World War II recruitment poster."

But that's not who he found. While Stone was a colonel, a war hero and a Medal of Honor recipient, he was even more than that -- a father, a husband and a friend.

"He was one of the kindest, most humble and personable men I've ever had the pleasure to meet," one friend said.

With Stone's death, the number of living Medal of Honor recipients drops to 80.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fists Fly as Parents Rush Youth Football Game

advertisement

Click Here!

"Fists were flying" when angry parents of opposing teams rushed onto a youth football field during a game in Burleson, according to a mother who said she was punched in the face.

"It is plum crazy," said Meagan Yates, of Kennedale, whose 9-year-old son was playing. "This is peewee football."

The incident occurred Saturday during a game between Joshua and Kennedale involving 9- and 10-year-old boys.

Yates said the trouble started at halftime after a player who had been very physical in the game made a questionable hit after Kennedale scored a touchdown.

"The Joshua kid jumps up out of the endzone and goes after our boy and waylays him from behind," she said.

Yates said she and Kennedale's head coach ran onto the field.

"And at that point, the Joshua coach comes out there irate," she said. "And then next thing you know, all the parents jumped over the fence onto the field."

She said a Kennedale parent who happens to be a federal agent flashed his badge and urged people to stop fighting.

"They just continued to shove him around," she said. "It was bad."

Yates said the father of a Joshua player hit her in the right cheek and caused part of her face to turn black and blue.

Burleson police sent officers after parents called 911.

"My understanding is, it got pretty escalated pretty fast and out-of-hand, with a lot of people involved -- pretty poor example for the kids, to say the least," Cmdr. Chris Havens said.

Havens said the man who struck Yates left the area but was arrested a short time later in nearby Joshua.

Joshua police said the man was charged with evading and resisting arrest but would not release his name because Burleson police are still investigating him in the football incident.

"The kids were scared," Yates said. "The kids were very scared. It was to the point our cheerleaders left. They didn't even stay for the second half of the game. They were crying. We almost didn't have our boys to stay."

Bobby Martin, president of the Burleson youth football league, said he believed the incident was blown out of proportion and involved just two parents. He declined further comment but pointed out that the game continued.

Photos of the incident show a number of parents on the field in what appeared to be a physical confrontation.

Burleson police are investigating it as an assault causing bodily injury, Havens said.

NBC 5 was unable to reach the Joshua coach.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dallas Water Main Break Strands Drivers for Hours

Amanda Guerra, NBC 5 News

The northbound Interstate 35E service road was covered in water after a 36-inch diameter water pipe failed during rush hour, stranding drivers for hours.

Water Main Break Along I-35E Service Road

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

A water main break along an Interstate 35E service road caused a huge traffic headache Wednesday evening, stranding drivers for hours.

Dallas Water Utilities experienced a failure on a 36-inch diameter water pipe in the 2700 block of North Stemmons Freeway at about 5 p.m.

Within seconds, the line started spewing water onto the northbound service road, quickly covering the roadway in feet of water.

Crews were forced to shut down the service road from Medical District Drive to Inwood Road.

The water got so deep it stranded several cars, including a firetruck.

The water even spilled into the parking lot of nearby businesses, stranding drivers for several hours.

"I mean, it's flooded," Francesca Pineda said. "I can't get out. I can't go over the curb. Management's telling me I can't go through the building -- nothing or whatever, so I'm pretty much stuck."

"I want to go home, but I don't know which way out," Oleg Shtere said. "I can't get out from here. Everything all around is just water."

As of 10 p.m., crews had the line 85 percent shut off.

Crews worked to get the mud off the roadway early Thursday morning. They expect the roadway should be open by midday Thursday.

The cause of the break is unknown.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Twinkies in Turmoil

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

Irving-based Hostess Brands Inc., maker of Twinkies, Ding-Dongs, and even Wonderbread, announced Wednesday that the company will file a motion with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court on Friday to liquidate if striking employees don't return to work.

Hostess Threatens Liquidation If Employees...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Twinkie Maker Threatens Liquidation

Irving-based Hostess Brands says it will file to begin liquidation if workers don't end a nationwide strike.

More Photos and Videos

Irving-based Hostess Brands Inc., maker of Twinkies, Ding-Dongs, and even Wonderbread, announced Wednesday that the company will file a motion with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court on Friday to liquidate if striking employees don't return to work.

A strike called by the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers Union (BCTGM) started on Nov. 9. Hostess says if enough workers don't return by 5 p.m. EST on Thursday, the company could be closed as early as Nov. 20.

"We simply do not have the financial resources to survive an ongoing national strike," Gregory F. Rayburn, the Company's Chairman and CEO, said in a press release.  "Therefore, if sufficient employees do not return to work by 5 p.m., EST, on Thursday to restore normal operations, we will be forced to immediately move to liquidate the entire Company, which will result in the loss of nearly 18,000 jobs.  It is now up to Hostess' BCTGM represented employees and Frank Hurt, their international president, to decide if they want to call off the strike and save this Company, or cause massive financial harm to thousands of employees and their families."

The company says they've already obtained the support of the largest union, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, as well as lenders.

If the strike doesn't resolve, the company says a decision could be made by Monday by the bankruptcy judge on whether the company could sell off facilities and other assets.

The company says they employ 17,780 people in the U.S.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Missing A&M Football Player Found Safe

Kendra Lyn, NBC 5 News

University police confirm Thomas Johnson, a graduate of Dallas' Skyline High School, a freshman at A&M and a member of the Aggie football team has been found.

Texas A&M Police Say Missing...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

The Texas A&M University Police Department confirms a student-athlete who had been missing since Monday has been found safe.  

University police confirm Thomas Linze Johnson, a graduate of Dallas' Skyline High School and a freshman wide receiver on the Aggie football team, was found in Dallas at about 2:30 a.m. Thursday.

University officials had traveled to Dallas Wednesday to search for Johnson and found him with the help of the Dallas Police Department and the Texas Rangers.

Authorities have not released any further details regarding exactly where Johnson was found or where he was for the last few days.  It was believed that Johnson may have visited family in North Texas, but no one was at his mother's home Wednesday night.

University police said Thursday that no further details will be released.

Johnson was reported missing Wednesday after he was last spotted leaving his College Station residence at approximately 5 p.m. Monday.  He has family in the Dallas-area and it was believed he may have been in Dallas-Fort Worth.

School officials have not said if Johnson is expected to play in A&M's game this Saturday against Sam Houston State.  So far this season for the Aggies, Johnson has appeared in 10 games and has 30 catches for 399 yards with one touchdown.

NBC 5's Kendra Lyn, Christina Miralla and Elvira Sakmari contributed to this report.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Elmo Accuser Retracts Sexual Misconduct Allegations

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 14 November 2012 | 22.29

AP

Clash has been the voice of Elmo for nearly three decades.

advertisement

Click Here!

Elmo's name has been cleared.

The 23-year-old who accused longtime Elmo puppeteer Kevin Clash of sexual misconduct retracted his allegations Tuesday.

"He wants it to be known that his sexual relationship with Mr. Clash was an adult consensual relationship," the attorney for Clash's accuser said in a statement. "He will have no further comment on the matter."

Sesame Workshop—which announced Monday that it received a "communication" from the 23-year-old claiming he had been in a relationship with Clash when he was 16 years old—posted a follow-up statement on its website Tuesday.

"We are pleased that this matter has been brought to a close, and we are happy that Kevin can move on from this unfortunate episode," the statement said.

Sesame Workshop announced Monday it took the allegation received in June "very seriously" and later determined Clash had "exercised poor judgment and violated company policy regarding internet usage and he was disciplined."

After meeting with Clash's accuser twice, however, Sesame Workshop said it could not substantiate his claim of underage conduct.

Clash had maintained his innocence and was granted a leave of absence to take "actions to protect his reputation," Sesame Workshop's statement said.

Clash did admit to having a relationship with his accuser but insisted that it was between two consenting adults and added in a statement to NBC News Monday that he was "deeply saddened that he [was] trying to characterize it as something other than what it was."

On Tuesday he issued a follow-up statement responding to his accuser's retraction: "I am relieved that this painful allegation has been put to rest. I will not discuss it further."

Clash is a three-time Emmy winner for outstanding performer in a children's series and also won Emmys from 2001 to 2006 for his work as co-executive producer on the series, according to his bio.

Neither Clash's statement nor the message posted by Sesame Workshop indicate whether Clash will continue with his leave of absence or return to work.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dallas' Prostitute Diversion Program Under Fire

advertisement

Click Here!

A Dallas County commissioner who often fights for social programs is criticizing a Dallas program that aims to get prostitutes off the street and keep them out of jail.

Dallas police started the program in 2007 to arrest prostitutes and offer them counseling and drug treatment programs to help them stay out of jail and leave the sex trade.

Outgoing Dallas County Commissioner Maurine Dickey has been providing the single county staff member who helps oversee the program.

"Women were just coming into the jail, and they were just a revolving door, and there was no treatment for them," she said.

Dickey leaves office in January, so commissioners on Tuesday considered a plan to put the prostitution diversion staff member under the control of Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins, whose office handles prosecution of prostitutes.

But Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price said the program has not earned its keep.

Price complained that 60 percent of the 850 women served by the program returned to jail.

He said the $76,000 salary for the staff member is far greater than the estimated $15,000 of annual savings in jail expenses from reducing the number of incarcerated prostitutes.

"The purpose of diversion is to show we are diverting cost," he said. "I don't care what program."

Dallas County Commissioner Elba Garcia, who was the Dallas City Council Public Safety Committee chairperson when the program began, said she still supports the program, even if it has only a 40 percent success rate.

"It's a program that makes a difference in the quality of life of the citizens of Dallas and women that otherwise will not have an opportunity to leave a life of prostitution," she said.

Police from other cities in the United States and Canada attended a 2009 Dallas conference to learn about the program.

City officials said residents in areas that had been frequented by hookers and their customers have been pleased with improvements.

Four of the five Dallas County commissioners voted to keep funding the position.

Price abstained from the vote.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

San Diego Panda Cub Named

More than 35,000 people voted on the name of the San Diego Zoo's newest Panda, who was officially named Xiao Liwu. NBC 7 spoke to some of the self-diagnosed Pandaholics at the naming ceremony Tuesday.

Pandaholics Flock to Panda Naming Ceremony

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

As is tradition with pandas born at the San Diego Zoo, the cub's name was announced in an official 100-Day ceremony, Xiao Liwu. The name means "Little Gift" in English. At the time of the naming ceremony, he was tucked away in his den with mama Bai Yun. Zoo vets can be seen measuring the tiny Panda.

The San Diego Zoo announced the official name for its newest panda cub Tuesday.

More Photos and Videos

The San Diego Zoo announced Tuesday the official name for its newest panda cub -- Xiao Liwu.

As is tradition with pandas born at the San Diego Zoo, the cub's name was announced in an official 100-Day ceremony.

The name means "Little Gift" in English. Click here for pronunciation

A member of the Chinese consulate from Los Angeles was at the ceremony and thanked the zoo for taking such good care of Xiao Liwu.

At the time of the naming ceremony, the cub was tucked away in his den with mama Bai Yun. Since her arrival to San Diego in 1996, Bai Yun (White Cloud) has given birth to six cubs. The father's name is Gao Gao (Big Big).

Watch Panda Cam

Bai Yun, who at almost 21 years old was the second oldest panda to have given birth at the zoo, delivered the baby July 29. 

The cub's first exam was shared on social media with admirers around the world. Then, every week his fans followed his growth with weekly images, video clips and updates on Facebook.

Then, came the business of a name.

As it has in the past, the zoo took submissions from panda fans and then posted a selection of six names to its website for a final selection.

The names and their translations included:
Qi Ji (Miracle)
Yu Di (Raindrop)
Da Hai (Big Ocean/Big Sea)
Xiao Liwu (Little Gift)
Yong Er (Brave Son)
Shui Long (Water Dragon)

Nearly 35,000 people voted for the name. Xiao Liwu won with 7,611 votes. The runner up, Yu Di, was only 0.6 percent away from the lead with 7,430 votes.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pickens Still Talking Energy With White House

Getty Images

T. Boone Pickens says he is concerned about what will happen in the energy sector under President Barack Obama.

advertisement

Click Here!

Energy executive T. Boone Pickens says he has spoken with some of the president's administration about energy policy.

The BP Capital chairman and CEO, who donated to Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney's campaign, said he wasn't happy with the outcome of the election. He also said he is concerned about what will happen in the energy sector under President Barack Obama.

"Well there's no question that this president does not like fossil fuels, so are we going to suffer for that? I don't think so, because there is nothing to replace fossil fuels," Pickens said. "He [Obama] likes wind and solar, but they won't move an automobile."

When asked if parts of his "Pickens' Plan," an energy proposal that focuses on the production of more natural gas, were still being discussed in Washington, Pickens said he recently had talked to White House officials about energy.

"Well, I had a conversation last week with some of the Obama people," he said. "I don't want to identify, but we had a two-hour meeting. But when you get down to it, it's pretty easy to understand -- you're going to get on your own resources if you're smart; you're not going to continue to build OPEC."

Earlier this week, the International Energy Agency released a report that said the United States could possibly produce more oil that Saudi Arabia by 2020. Pickens said he doesn't believe a word of it.

"I don't think that," he said. "I think we can be bigger than we are, but we're producing six and a half million barrels, and the Saudis are producing 10 million and Russia produces 10 million. I don't think we'll be at 10 million barrels. We can put natural gas into the transportation fuel mix, and you can look like you're producing 10 million barrels a day because you will replace a lot of oil that goes into transportation."

Pickens was in Dallas on Tuesday and spoke to business leaders about how businesses will react to last week's presidential election.

The event at the Winspear Opera House was put together by Jones Lang LaSalle and also featured Neiman Marcus CEO Karen Katz and Texas Instruments CEO Rich Templeton.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cuban Feuds With Facebook

Scott Gordon, NBC 5 News

Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban says he is upset with changes to Facebook's news feed and is threatening to take the Mavs' business elsewhere.

Cuban Frustrated With Facebook

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Dallas billionaire Mark Cuban is picking a fight with Facebook over the popular social-networking site's fees for businesses to promote their online posts.

The Dallas Mavericks' owner is especially angry about recent changes that Facebook has made to its news feed, which he claims force businesses to pay to reach fans who have already "liked" their pages.

In a tweet, Cuban complained that Facebook wanted to charge him $3,000 to reach 1 million of the team's fans. The team's Facebook page has 2.3 million fans.

"FB is blowing it?" Cuban wrote. "This is the first step. The Mavs are considering moving to Tumblr or to new MySpace as primary site."

Facebook fired back: "There's a lot of misinformation going round ... To be clear -- we did not change news feed so we could charge to promote posts... ."

Cuban later told CNBC that the way Facebook is set up "is far from efficient and not in the best interest of brands."

He threatened to move the Mavs' postings to MySpace or Tumblr.

But social media expert Mike Merill said Facebook has little competition.

"For most people, statistics show that Facebook is the first site we look at in the morning and the last site we look at when we go to bed at night," Merrill said.

Merrill, marketing director for the online advertising company ReachLocal in Plano, said Facebook is clearly looking to make more money. Facebook's stock price is down nearly 50 percent since its debut in May.

"There's only so much content a consumer can see, so you're going to have to pay a premium to get in front of those consumers," he said.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Water Main Break Snarls Traffic in Farmers Branch

Kevin Cokely, NBC 5 News

Farmers Branch officials say drivers should avoid the area of Valley View Lane and Hutton Drive and find alternate routes for the rest of the work week.

Water Main Break Shuts Lanes on...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

A water main break is expected to cause a traffic mess for the rest of the work week in a busy part of Farmers Branch.

Crews had to dig down to get to a 16-inch water distribution main on westbound Valley View Lane at Hutton Drive that broke at about 7:45 a.m. Tuesday.

The city said it expected to restore water service to all businesses in the area by Wednesday morning, but crews still need to repair the road.

"The water problem itself will be fixed before the night is out and water restored to the few businesses that are still out at the moment, but it's that reconstruction of the roadway that's going to take a little while," city spokesman Tom Bryson said.

The westbound lanes of Valley View Lane will be shut down for the work. Westbound traffic will be shifted to lanes on the eastbound side of Valley View.

"They have to replace the line, which is going to necessitate getting under the roadway here at Valley View," Bryson said. "That's going to keep it pretty snarled in the area for most of the week."

The city suggests that drivers find alternate travel routes for the rest of the work week.

NBC 5's Kevin Cokely contributed to this report.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Power Utility Executive Resigns in Wake of Sandy

advertisement

Click Here!

Thousands Enter Third Week in Dark

On Long Island, the rain and falling temperatures are just the latest blow to tens of thousands of people still in the dark. One Valley Stream father is more anxious than ever after bringing his 2-day-old newborn back to a powerless home. News 4's Pei-Sze Cheng reports.

2 Weeks After Sandy, Many Still in the Dark

Fourteen days after the storm, residents in the town of Hopatcong, N.J. say they are powerless, furious, and tired of being lied to. Lori Bordonaro reports.

More Photos and Videos

The chief operating officer of the Long Island Power Authority resigned Tuesday amid accusations of accusations of dysfunction and negligence in the company's response to Sandy as outages stretch into a third week.

LIPA Chairman Howard E. Steinberg announced in a statement that Mike Hervey, who was tasked with performing the functions of CEO at the organization over the past two years, would be stepping down effective at the end of the year. 

Steinberg said in the statement, "Mike has played a leadership role in connection with the planned structural changes at LIPA going forward which will result in better service and accountability to LIPA's customers in the years ahead." 

Meanwhile, the fury over persistent power outages continues to build on Long Island, where authorities are searching for a man who attacked an electrical worker, punching him in the face and breaking his nose.

Police say the electrical lineman, who was part of a crew that came from Florida to assist in Sandy repairs, was wearing his uniform and had just got out of his truck after a 13-hour work day in East Meadow Friday night when he was attacked.

The worker, John Applewhite, told The Lakeland Ledger that a man in a dark BMW yelled at him and another lineman.

"I thought he may have been asking about his power," Applewhite said.

The attacker parked the car, got out and approached Applewhite, punching him in the face and possibly hitting him with an object.  The man fled in the BMW.

"There is always a bad apple," Applewhite told the paper. "For the most part these people were great and they really treated us with respect."

Nassau County Police Inspector Kenneth Lack told NBC 4 New York that police believe the worker was attacked by a storm-weary resident.

"We don't see any other motive, other than a frustrated citizen," Lack said.

Earlier Tuesday, LIPA said that 99 percent of customers who can safely receive power have their lights back on. That means there are still 10,136 outages in Nassau and Suffolk counties, along with 35,000 customers who suffered flood damage and need electrical repairs before power can be restored.

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

An attorney filed a lawsuit Tuesday claiming negligence by LIPA and its contractor, National Grid. A LIPA spokesman had no comment and National Grid did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The company has said the storm was worse than anyone could have imagined and that it didn't just damage outdoor electrical lines; it caused flooding that touched home and business breaker boxes. It has acknowledged that an outdated computer system for keeping customers notified has added to people's frustration. 

But some say the government-run utility should have seen it coming. It was recently criticized in a withering state report for lax preparation ahead of last year's Hurricane Irene and for the 25-year-old computer system used to pinpoint outages and update customers. 

"It's antiquated. I think they're negligent," said Phil Glickman, a retired Wall Street executive from South Bellmore who waited 11 days to get electricity back. 

Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Tuesday ordered an investigation of how utility companies prepared for and reacted to the storm. The governor ordered the probe under the state's Moreland Commission law that provides for subpoenas and other actions. It will be run by former Attorney General Robert Abrams and Cuomo's financial services director, Benjamin Lawsky.

At its peak, the storm knocked out power to 8.5 million customers in 10 states, with New York and New Jersey bearing the brunt. Those outages have been nearly erased, though Con Edison has cited problems similar to LIPA's, saying about 16,300 customers in flooded areas of Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island can't get service until their internal electrical equipment is repaired, tested and certified. 

Priscilla Niemiera, whose finished basement in Seaford flooded, said her house needs to be inspected and she can't get any answers. "I think LIPA should be broken up into small companies and it shouldn't be a monopoly anymore because this is every single time we have a disaster. And then they raise the rates. We're paying very high rates. We're paying high taxes, high electric. Everything," she said. 

LIPA, whose board is chosen by the governor and lawmakers, contracts with National Grid for service and maintenance. Last year, its board chose a new contractor, New Jersey's Public Service Enterprise Group, which will take over in 2014. Cuomo criticized the storm response of all New York utilities in the region, saying their management had failed consumers. 

Asked Monday about LIPA board vacancies he hasn't filled and whether he takes responsibility for what's happening there, Cuomo called the authority a holding company that became "an intergovernmental political organization." He said National Grid was the actual Long Island power provider, one of the monopolistic state-regulated utilities. "They're going to be held accountable," he said, citing lack of communication and preparation and even proposing they consider rebates instead of rate hikes. 

A state report criticized LIPA in June for poor customer communications after Irene last year and for insufficient tree trimming. The Department of Public Service noted major problems in telling customers estimated power-restoration times, faulting its computer system, which a consultant had found deficient back in 2006. 

LIPA acknowledged that customers aren't getting the information they need, partly because of the system, which it is updating. Authority officials said the new system will be operating next year. 

"It is a huge computer system. After Irene we immediately accelerated that process, and even at that it is still an 18-month to two-year process," Hervey said Monday. "We would have liked to have had it up and running for now, but it's just such a large magnitude computer system that it takes that long." 

Hervey said the company will be working with remaining customers over the next several weeks as they get their homes repaired. "They can't be safely re-energized from an electrical standpoint," he said. "We are ready to service those areas, but they are not ready to take it right now." 

John Bruckner, president of National Grid Long Island transmission and distribution, said he had about 15,000 people working on restoration, including 6,400 linemen from all over the U.S. and Canada. 

Matthew Cordaro, co-chairman of the Suffolk Legislature's LIPA Oversight Committee and a former utility executive, said Con Ed and Public Service Electric & Gas New Jersey did a good job responding to the storm, and LIPA didn't. 

While a storm of that magnitude would challenge any electricity provider, he said LIPA is probably one of the most poorly run utilities and has a "crazy" public-private organizational structure that's fraught with problems and raises questions of accountability.

22.29 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger