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Powerball Jackpot Climbs to $425 Million

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 07 Agustus 2013 | 22.29

NBC 6 South Florida

Odds of winning the jackpot prize are one in 175 million.

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Wednesday's Powerball jackpot is now at an estimated $425 million, the third largest Powerball jackpot ever.

This jackpot started as a $40 million prize on June 26 and is the result of 12 draws without a jackpot winner.

The jackpot is the current largest jackpot available and the fourth largest jackpot in history for any lottery game.

The biggest jackpot in American history was $656 million, split among three winners last year in Illinois, Kansas and Maryland, according to NBC News. That was a Mega Millions win, which is also played in 43 states.

The largets Powerball payout was in May, when an 84-year-old Florida widow named Gloria McKenzie hit the $590 million jackpot.

In November 2012, winners in Missouri and Arizona split a $587 million Powerball prize.

Powerball is played in 43 states plus Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Odds of winning the jackpot prize are one in 175,223,510, and overall odds of winning any prize are one in 32.

Earlier this year, the Powerball jackpot reached a record $600 million.

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

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Consumer Reports: Tasty & Healthy Breakfast Cereals

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When it comes to eating healthy, a diet rich in fiber is right at the top of the list. Fiber can help control your appetite and weight, and may even help lower the risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes. Yet most adults don't get enough fiber. Consumer Reports says one convenient fix is the breakfast cereal you pick.

High-fiber cereals have come a long way. Consumer Reports' first taste tests 14 years ago found that many of the fiber-rich cereals tasted more like straw than grain.

But in Consumer Reports' latest tests of 26 cereals, mostly high in fiber, more than two-thirds tasted very good.

One even rated excellent: Bear Naked Fruit and Nut Granola. But its overall nutrition rating is only fair, and it has just 2 grams of fiber per serving.

Granolas are often thought of as a healthful choice, but they're among the highest in fat and calories, so just be careful how much you pour.

Much better choices include four cereals that were very tasty and very nutritious -- with a lot more fiber:

  • Kellogg's All-Bran Original, with 10 grams of fiber
  • Post Shredded Wheat Wheat 'n Bran, with 9 grams
  • Post Grape-Nuts the Original, with 7 grams
  • Post Shredded Wheat Original, with 6 grams.

But name-brand cereals can be expensive. We found two very tasty store-brands that are Consumer Reports Best Buys.

One, Market Pantry Frosted Shredded Wheat from Target, is sweet, with a toastedwheat flavor. It delivers 6 grams of fiber.

The second, Great Value Raisin Bran from Walmart, has a little more fiber. In milk the flakes lost some crunch but didn't become soggy, even after 2 minutes.

Either is a great, healthy way to start your day. Most of the Consumer Reports suggested cereals get you well on your way to the daily recommended amount of fiber. It's 25 grams for women and 38 for men.

Complete Ratings and recommendations on all kinds of products, including appliances, cars & trucks, and electronic gear, are available on Consumer Reports' website.


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Carroll ISD Adds Armed Officers to Every Campus

Julie Fine, NBC 5 News

The Carroll Independent School District put together a task force to study security after the mass shooting at a Connecticut elementary school in December. The school board unanimously voted for armed school resource officers in every school.

Carroll ISD Adds Armed Officers to...

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Every school in the Carroll school district, which includes much of Southlake, will have armed officers next year.

The Carroll Independent School District put together a task force to study security after the mass shooting at a Connecticut elementary school in December. The school board unanimously voted for armed school resource officers in every school.

Southlake police will run the program.

"I am confident whatever comes through a door in Southlake, on the Southlake campuses, these officers will be able to deal with effectively," Chief Steve Mylett said Tuesday night at a City Council meeting.

Funding will come from the city's Crime Control and Prevention District, which oversees a sales tax that is set aside for public safety, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported.

The officers will work on guidance and mentoring programs, improve student-police relations and teach law enforcement-related topics.

"I think any nervousness parents may have, I am not sure it is going to be significant," Mylett said.

Middle and high schools already had school resource officers, he said.

School resource officers were introduced at the council meeting.

"In consideration of some of the tragic incidents that have happened in the past, it certainly extends to me a feeling of safety," parent Tom Berutti said.

"I am not sure we are quite to that point yet, but the only reason I can see you might want to do it is for peace of mind," Jean Bybee said.

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Dallas Swimmer's Icy Road to the English Channel

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Everything about Bryan Mineo says, "I'm an athlete."

He has almost no body fat and is committed to a clean, healthy diet.

Mineo, who owns a fitness company and coaches triathletes and swimmers, plans to swim the English Channel next year. He set the goal, a feat commonly referred to as "the Mount Everest of swimming," a few years ago.

The straight-line distance across the channel, the arm of the Atlantic Ocean that separates southern England and northern France, is 21 miles. But swimmers have to swim much farther because of the effects of tides.

Between 20 and 30 people make successful solo swims across the English Channel every year. More than 10 people have already done it this year.

Mineo put together a two-year training program last year. It includes upping his daily swimming mileage, monitoring his nutrition and acclimating himself to the frigid water temperatures.

Right now, he swims twice per day, covering about six miles. Things get a little chilly while acclimating himself to the frigid waters he'll see in the Atlantic.

Mineo hopes to take his dip in September 2014, when the water is traditionally at its warmest -- if you consider 60 degrees warm. Most pool temperatures are in the upper 80s.

Twice per day, he submerges himself into a bath tub of cold water and then adds three or four bags of ice. He sits in it for about a half hour each time.

"I'm doing this every day," he said. "Closer to the race, I'll be in the ice bath a full hour a day."

From the ice bath, it's a quick jaunt to the pool, where spends much of his day, alone with his thoughts and isolated in a lap lane.

Mineo is well aware of the dangers in open-water swimming.

Just two weeks ago, a British woman collapsed in the water about a mile from the end of the trek. She was pulled from the water and later died at a French hospital.

"The minute you start thinking about the inherent dangers -- going hypothermic or a shark could attack me -- your swim is over," Mineo said. "You can't just think that way. I think very positively. I think about songs, count numbers. I keep my mind busy."

Mineo will be in the water alone, but a full support team will be on a nearby boat.

"You can't touch the boats or a person," he said. "You can stop, but that means treading water, which means possibly going hypothermic. It's a fine balance."

If a swimmer wants to eat during the swim, the team on the boat has to extend a feeding stick. The rod gives swimmers rations of water, electrolyte mixes and food.

Mineo's food of choice is baby food.

"My biggest trick right now are those squeeze bottles of baby food," he said. "They digest easily. It's pure fruit."

According to channel swimming rules, one of the team members has to be a doctor. Mineo has that covered; his fiancee will graduate medical school later this year.

The average time of successful solo swims is 13 hours. Mineo hopes to do it in 10.


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Humane Society Wants to Stop U.S. Bull Run

In a letter to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, officials from the Humane Society of the United States requested an investigation into what they called an "unlicensed event," and said the running of the bulls is a danger to the animals. Christian Farr reports.

Humane Society Wants to Stop U.S. Bull Run

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The event isn't even slated to hit the Chicago area until next year, but already roughly 1,000 local thrill-seekers have signed up for the American version of Pamplona's Running of the Bulls.

Hawthorne Race Course in south suburban Stickney is just one of the venues around the country that will host The Great Bull Run. Other events are planned for Virginia, Texas, Florida, California, Minnesota and Pennsylvania.

While the premise remains the same, organizers say the events will have a stark difference from the Spanish run.

"We're not using the hyper-aggressive, Spanish fighting bulls that they use in Spain," said spokesman Rob Dickens. "They train those bulls to really hate people."

But in a letter to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, officials from the Humane Society of the United States requested an investigation into what they called an "unlicensed event," and said the running of the bulls is a danger to the animals.

"These bulls, they're not going to run because they're happy. They're not going to run because they're content. They're going to be running because they're scared," said Humane Society spokesman John Goodwin.

If government officials don't prevent the event from taking place, the bulls will run in Stickney next July. 

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IRS Investigates Home of Dallas Car Dealer Owner

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IRS Investigates Dallas Car Dealer's Preston Hollow Home

Criminal investigators with the Internal Revenue Service swarmed the multi-million dollar, Preston Hollow home of Jeremy Wiggains on Tuesday, an Internet-based, luxury car dealership owner.

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Internal Revenue Service investigators swarmed the multimillion-dollar Preston Hollow home of a Dallas businessman on Tuesday, the agency confirmed.

Jeremy Wiggains, 38, owns a high-end, Internet-based car dealership that recently shut its doors because of bankruptcy.

Straight Line Automotive, which has a physical address in the 2700 block of Northaven Road, filed for bankruptcy in mid-July, according to paperwork that NBC 5 uncovered.

Wiggains declared bankruptcy last week.

An IRS representative would only confirm that investigators were "conducting official business" at Wiggains' home in the 6500 block of Northaven Road. The house has an estimated value of $3.2 million.

Exactly what agents were looking for is not yet clear. The search warrant investigators used to gain access to the home has been sealed, said IRS spokeswoman Denise Corcoran.

A representative from the Drug Enforcement Agency was assisting in the investigation at the Wiggains home.

What asked about the federal agents' presence at the home, Gerrit Pronske, a Dallas bankruptcy attorney representing Wiggains said, "It is news to me."

Pronske said he hopes Wiggains can put the bankruptcy concerns behind him as quickly as possible.

Wiggains was not available for comment Tuesday.

The list of creditors detailed in Wiggains' bankruptcy filing is three pages long. The creditors include banks, car dealerships, auto detailers, audio companies and several people who told NBC 5 they purchased cars from Straight Line Automotive.

Wiggains disclosed in his bankruptcy filing that his personal assets are between $500,000 and $1 million and that he owes between $10 million to $50 million to various entities.

Three of the creditors listed -- Straight Line customers who live in Texas, Alabama and Massachusetts -- told NBC 5 that they had purchased their luxury cars from Wiggains but had yet to receive the title to the vehicle.

Among the listed names of creditors are Orlando Scandrick, a Dallas Cowboys defensive back, and Martellus Bennett, a former Cowboy tight end who now plays for the Chicago Bears.

Scandrick would not comment about what he may be owed by Wiggains when he was approached at Cowboys training camp in Oxnard, Calif., on Tuesday night.

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Obama on Leno: Don't Overreact to Terror Threat

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President Barack Obama gave an unexpectedly serious and wide-ranging interview to Jay Leno on Tuesday night, weighing in on a terror threat, U.S. tensions with Russia and even his recent lunch with Hillary Clinton on "The Tonight Show" — a venue where he was more accustomed to light-hearted joking.

Obama used his appearance on the show – his sixth – to give his first public comments on recent warnings of a possible terrorist attack on U.S. interests in the Middle East. The warnings have prompted the State Department to shutter 19 diplomatic posts across the Middle East and North Africa until Saturday.

"Well, it's significant enough that we're taking every precaution," Obama said to Leno, adding that radical violet extremism "is still out there, we've got to stay on top of it."

The president also reiterated the White House's warning that the threat was significant and urged Americans to act "prudently" when planning travel and checking in with the State Department and embassies to see what precautions they should be taking. 

"The general rule is show some common sense and some caution," Obama said, as the first sitting president ever to go on the show, making his fourth appearance since he took office. 

He also said that Americans have shined in times of danger and peril, pointing out that people kept going to ball games and went on business as usual after the Boston Marathon bombings in April. 

"That's the right reaction. Terrorists depend on the idea that we're going to be terrorized," Obama said. 

The president also commented on the case of National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, plus the secret government data surveillance programs his leaks to the press uncovered.

"We don't have a domestic spying program," Obama said, defending some surveillance as a "critical component to counterterrorism" and saying the information it gathered was "useful."

Audience Members React to President's "Tonight Show" Appearance

President Obama made his sixth appearance on the "Tonight Show" Tuesday. The President spoke to Jay Leno about the economy, his recent lunch with Hillary Clinton, and gay rights in Russia. Beverly White reports from Burbank for the NBC4 News at 6 p.m. on August 6, 2013.

"Tonight Show" Guests Surprised Obama Making Appearance

Guests of the "Tonight Show With Jay Leno" were surprised to find out a secret guests was scheduled to be President Barack obama, who was in town for his sixth taping of the show. Toni Guinyard has the report for the NBC4 News at noon on Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013.

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But NBC News' correspondent Andrea Mitchell told "The Rachel Maddow Show" Tuesday said that he also appeared to express some caution about the surveillance, suggesting some level of discomfort with the NSA's programs.

Obama didn't comment on the legality of Snowden's leaks. Snowden faces espionage charges for them and has been granted temporary asylum in Russia in the face of them.

"We don't know exactly yet what he did," Obama said. "It's important for me not to prejudge something."

The president said he was disappointed by Russia's decision to grant Snowden asylum, but maintained that the U.S relationship with Russia is still intact. 

"There's still a lot of business that we can do with them, but there are times when they slip back into Cold War thinking," Obama said. 

He confirmed to Leno that he will attend the G-20 summit in St. Petersburg with Russian president President Vladimir Putin — despite some protests that he should not, due to Russia's granting Snowden asylum, and others over Russia's new spate of laws cracking down on gay Russians' civil rights. On Wednesday, however, Obama canceled a meeting with Putin that had been scheduled on the sidelines of the summit.

Leno himself told MSNBC host Lawrence O'Donnell in an interview on his show "The Last Word" Tuesday night, after the Obama taping, that the question of Russia — and of its crackdown on gay rights — was one he had most looked forward to asking Obama. The president said he had no patience for countries that try intimidate or harm gay, lesbian or transgender people and said it was his duty to speak out about basic freedoms.

Another topic Leno had most wanted to ask Obama about: The high-profile case of Trayvon Martin and his fatal shooting by George Zimmerman, who was acquitted of second-degree murder and manslaughter last month.

Leno praised the president's public comments on the case and on the experiences of black men and boys in America and asked him about his remarks.

"I think all of us were troubled by what happened," Obama told Leno. "It doesn't mean Trayvon was a perfect kid. None of us were."

Obama said he thought the attention paid to the Martin shooting was indicative of how badly Americans want a fair and just criminal justice system.

"What I wanted to explain was why this was a particularly sensitive topic for the African-American community," he continued. "The system should work for everyone, and what I'm trying to do is just make sure that we have a conversation."

On "The Last Word" Tuesday night, after taping, Leno said he had been particularly interested in hearing about the comments on the shooting's impact. "He put every American in the shoes of the average black teenage boy," Leno said.

Leno also asked the president about the economy and the constant partisan battles in Congress over whether to boost the economy with infrastructure projects and other spending. And it was also pointed out that the president's health care law goes into full effect on Oct. 1.  

The late-night host also took a few swings at the president for becoming a bit closer to his 2008 presidential rival, John McCain, who was recently instrumental in pushing a comprehensive immigration bill through the Senate. 

Obama's appearance on Leno's show wasn't all serious, however, and he managed to have at least some fun with the late night host, with the help of some chat about former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, whom he lunched with recently.

"Who invited who to lunch?" Leno asked.

"I invited her, and we had a great time," Obama said. "She had that post-administration glow — you know, when folks leave the White House, and two weeks later they look great."

So was Clinton, a speculated 2016 presidential contender, measuring the Oval Office drapes for a possible future stint there?

"She's been there," Obama said of the former first lady. "She doesn't have to measure them."

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Deputies Search for Missing Elderly Woman

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Denton County sheriff's deputies are asking for the public's help in finding a 90-year-old woman suffering from dementia.

A Silver Alert was issued for Elizabeth Melder, who was last seen Sunday afternoon in Justin.

Melder was driving a 1993 silver Nissan Sentra with Florida license plate 437MVB.

She is described as being 5 feet tall and weighs about 100 lbs. Melder hash gray hair and brown eyes and was last seen wearing a white and beige shirt with charcoal pants.

If you have any information about her whereabouts, please contact the Denton County Sheriff's Department.

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Why We Love “Hump Day” So Much

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Camels love hump day, and so do most American workers.

Chances are you've seen the Geico insurance commercial starring a camel excitedly interrupting everyone in the office on Wednesday, also known as hump day.

The video has social media by storm and goes viral every single week, according to David Waterhouse, of the technology research firm Unruly.

The "vast majority" of branded videos usually peak on day two, but the Geico ad has attracted a "huge spike in sharing activity" every Wednesday since its launch on May 22, Waterhouse said.

It may seem obvious that a commercial about hump day would garner more hits on Wednesdays. But experts say there is something more profound going on.

Most American employees are not happy at work, and they welcome any sign of the weekend, according to Rich Hanley, director of Quinnipiac University's graduate journalism program.

"The commercial fed into that preexisting condition," Hanley said. "When you get to the middle of the week the end is in sight; the proverbial hump has been passed. Americans celebrate this by sharing this video."

There's plenty to celebrate, namely the end of another unhappy week for many Americans who feel miserable at work.

A recent Gallup poll found that only 30 percent of Americans are engaged in their jobs.

Seventy percent of American workers are either not engaged or are actively disengaged from their workplaces, the 2013 State of the American Workplace Study also said.

Actively disengaged workers are defined as employees who are "miserable and roam the halls spreading discontent," Gallup CEO Jim Clifton wrote in the report.

The brains behind Geico's camel ad are capitalizing on that.

"People seek out this [hump day ad] in particular because people are always looking for a pick-me-up during the week," said Wade Alger, Creative Director at The Martin Agency, which created the Geico Campaign. "This one people keep coming back because it's a weekly tradition."

There is a disagreement between academics of when exactly "hump day" was first coined. Estimates seem to range from the early 1900s to 1970. Hanley, who follows the intersection of social media and advertising, said the phrase became more common once American workplaces became more computerized. The phrase TGIF – Thank God It's Friday – originated around the same time, also celebrating the end of an unpleasant workweek, Hanley added.

Workers rejoicing on Friday have added another YouTube tradition to their weekly ritual: watching (or at least sharing) Rebecca Black's music video "Friday." In the song, Black proclaims such end-of-the-week nuggets as, "Gotta get down on Friday" and "Everybody is looking forward to the weekend." YouTube spokesman Matt McLernon said views of the pop music video still spike weekly on Friday. The video came out in March 2011.

So are jaded employees wasting time on the company's dime by watching viral videos all day in the office? YouTube says: not necessarily.

"Our data differs a bit from what you might be thinking—the peak time for watching YouTube is during primetime evening hours across the globe," McLernon said by email. He cautioned that people are more likely watching web videos at home than at work.

Nevertheless, it's the message of the videos, more than the medium, that seems to resonate with workers.

Hanley, of Quinnipiac, said it doesn't matter whether people watch videos at work or home. Either way, Americans are uniting around the feeling of relief they get as they head toward the weekend, he said.


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Hasan's Attorneys Motion to Stop Assisting

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Standby attorneys for Maj. Nidal Hasan have filed a motion to cut ties with the man who said he carried out the Fort Hood shooting.

Lt. Col. Kris Poppe said it became clear yesterday that Hasan representing himself is moving toward a death penalty and as defense attorneys they can not be put in the position of assisting him to do that.

The judge delayed testimony and the court room cleared to consider the matter further in private with Hasan.

Witnesses Prepare to Face Accused Shooter

As the trial began Tuesday morning, Staff Sgt. Alonzo Lunsford waited for the moment he would face the man who killed 13 of his colleagues in the 2009 massacre at Fort Hood. He'd prepared to confront Maj. Nidal Hasan, vowing to answer questions without fear in his heart.

A showdown, however, never happened.

When the time came to testify Tuesday, Lunsford recounted for jurors how he had played dead, hoping the Army psychiatrist wouldn't shoot him. The retired soldier, who was hit seven times, showed jurors where on his body Hasan's bullets had struck him.

But Hasan -- the 42-year-old defendant who is acting as his own attorney -- didn't ask Lunsford a single question.

As prosecutors began to present a methodical, detailed case, Hasan raised few objections and asked almost no questions on cross-examination.

"The evidence will clearly show that I am the shooter," Hasan said in an opening statement that lasted little more than a minute. The evidence, he added, would "only show one side."

Hasan, an American-born Muslim who was paralyzed after being shot by officers responding to the attack, said he was as a soldier who switched sides in what he described as a war between America and his Islamic faith. He then fell silent for most of the day.

Among the witnesses he did not question Tuesday was Lunsford, one of more than 30 people wounded in the deadliest attack on a U.S. military installation.

Prosecutors asked Lunsford to show the 13 jurors where Hasan had shot him. The tall, imposing retired soldier, who told The Associated Press in a recent interview that he still has nightmares about the attack, slowly got to his feet and pointed to each spot on his body where Hasan's bullets hit him.

Lunsford talked about playing dead, hoping that Hasan wouldn't attack him again, before deciding to flee when he realized he was perspiring.

"When I'm laying there, I do a self-assessment on myself, because I realize that dead men don't sweat," Lunsford said.

Hasan, who wore green Army fatigues and a gray, bushy beard, looked forward impassively throughout the testimony.

When Lunsford was excused from the stand, the two men did not appear to acknowledge each other as Lunsford walked past him and out of the courtroom.

Hasan is charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder, and faces the death penalty if convicted. He has wanted to plead guilty to murder and attempted murder, but military rules forbid guilty pleas in death penalty cases.

Hasan had wanted to argue that he carried out the shooting in "defense of others," namely members of the Taliban fighting in Afghanistan, but the judge denied that strategy. His defense strategy still remains unclear.

During Tuesday's testimony, he occasionally took notes on a legal pad. While two defense attorneys remain on stand-by, Hasan rarely turned to them for advice.

No American soldier has been executed since 1961, and military prosecutors showed that they would take no chance of fumbling details that could jeopardize any conviction down the line.

They described a calculating Hasan, armed with two handguns and carrying paper towels in his pants pockets to conceal the sounds of rattling ammunition as he walked through a deployment-readiness center on the sprawling base.

Employees at a local weapons store described how Hasan bought the pistol he used in the shooting -- and took cellphone video of people instructing him how to clean it.

Hasan spent time at a shooting range and purchased a pistol and extender kit to hold more ammunition before carrying out his plan to "kill as many soldiers as he could" while avoiding civilians, Col. Steve Henricks told jurors in his opening statement.

"He came to believe he had a jihad duty to murder his fellow soldiers," Henricks said, adding that Hasan had researched Taliban leaders' call to wage holy war.

The shooting happened about three weeks after Hasan learned he would be deployed to Afghanistan. Upon getting the orders that he was going overseas, Hasan told a doctor that, "They've got another thing coming if they think they are going to deploy me," Henricks said.

On the day of the attack, Hasan sat among his fellow soldiers who were preparing to go overseas. He tried to clear the area of civilians, even walking over to a civilian data clerk to tell her she was needed elsewhere in the building because a supervisor was looking for her. The prosecutor said the clerk thought that was odd but went anyway.

"He then yelled, `Allahu akbar!' and opened fire on unarmed, unsuspecting and defenseless soldiers," Henricks told the jury. "Allahu akbar!" is an Arabic phrase meaning "God is great."

The long-delayed trial was years in the making after judges in the case had granted a series of delays. A fight over Hasan's beard, which violates military regulations, led to a stay shortly before his trial was expected to begin last year and eventual replacement of the judge.

The trial is playing out amid high security at Fort Hood, where armed guards stood in doorways and 15-foot stacks of shock-absorbing barriers obscured the view of the courthouse. Jurors were told to prepare for a trial that could take months, and Hasan, who is in a wheelchair, needs regular breaks.


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Local Taxpayers Pick Up Tab for Hasan’s Chopper Security

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 06 Agustus 2013 | 22.29

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Almost every day, two Army helicopters land at the Bell County Jail to pick up the man known as the "inmate of high value."

Maj. Nidal Hasan, the Army psychiatrist who's accused of gunning down dozens of fellow soldiers at Fort Hood, is that inmate.

The Army helicopters carry Hasan about 20 miles into Fort Hood so he can work on his legal defense.

Since there is no jail at the Army post, Bell County Sheriff Eddy Lange houses Hasan at the Bell County Jail under a special Army contract in a special room the Army equipped to accommodate Hasan's injuries suffered when he was shot by police officers responding to the attack.

"Every time Mr. Hasan is moved to Fort Hood we incur additional security costs at our facility," said Lange.

Records obtained by NBC 5 Investigates show the Army pays Bell County roughly $15,000 a month to keep Hasan at their jail.  Lange said the money does not cover the cost of security for the helicopter rides, which now require the sheriff's department to go on lockdown twice a day to secure the perimeter.

When the choppers land, Lange said he needs to deploy snipers because Hasan is such a security risk.

Lange estimates the helicopter rides cost his department $800 per landing, twice a day, and Bell County taxpayers are footing the bill.

Lange added that the $1,600 figure didn't include the cost of the flight crew or fuel.

"I don't have any idea what that would be, but it's astronomical," Lange said. "We are losing money every day he is in our facility."

NBC 5 Investigates filed a Freedom of Information Act request in February asking for Army records detailing Hasan's transportation expenses, but nearly six months later the Army has not provided the documents and will not say how much the rides cost or answer any questions about the helicopter rides citing security concerns as the reason.

There's no doubt Hasan is a security risk. Law enforcement officials said there have been threats against Hasan as well as threats made by his supporters.   With threats from both sides, it's easy to wonder why the Army would move him so frequently.

When asked why Hasan is moved so frequently, Lange smiled and said he wasn't qualified to answer that question.  The Army said the jail doesn't have the right facilities for him to prepare his defense, especially now that he's representing himself.

Hasan's trial is set to begin Tuesday after more than three years of delays, including arguments over whether he could grow a beard – which a military judge allowed in spite of military rules.

The sheriff and other local police departments said they were happy to do their part when Hasan was arrested, they just never imagined it would go on this long.

"I don't think anybody had any idea this thing would drag out for three and a half years," said Gene Ellis, Chief of the Belton Police Department.

Belton's officers help with security, especially when the choppers can't fly and a motorcade brings Hasan through town.

Ellis said the cost to his department has been significant, but the delays are far worse for the victim's families.

"The inconvenience we have is nothing compared to their frustration levels," Ellis said.

"It makes no sense to me and I believe most Americans would feel the same way," said Howard Berry, whose son Staff Sgt. Josh Berry suffered years of post-traumatic stress after surviving the Fort Hood shooting before taking his own life on Feb. 13, 2013.

"He was tormented yeah.  That's a good word.  He was very tormented.  He was just tortured and wherever he went he couldn't find a safe place because the Army was his safe place," said Berry.

Berry said his son was constantly frustrated by the fact that Hasan had not been put on trial after more than three years of legal delays.  Meanwhile the Army declined to call the shooting an act of terrorism denying the victims additional benefits and medals awarded to other soldiers wounded in attacks overseas.

"He felt there were considerations that were being given the shooter that weren't being given the victims and he couldn't understand.  He said, 'When a soldier gets injured on a battlefield, you take care of them,' and he felt it just wasn't the case," said Berry.

Other victims told NBC 5 they feel the same way.

"All of the provisions that's been made for [Hasan], the same courtesy wasn't extended to the victims nor the families of the fallen," said Sgt. Alonzo Lunsford, who is blind in one eye after the attack on Fort Hood.

Even members of Congress are frustrated with the toll three years of delays have taken on the families.

"They've had to live day in day out re-living this event and not being able to bring this to closure.  So the delay is just really incomprehensible," said Republican U.S. Sen. John Cornyn.

Meanwhile, as NBC 5 Investigates first reported, Hasan continues to receive his full Army salary that totals more than $278,000 over the three years since the shooting.

Records show Bell County must provide a private guard for Hasan at least 12 hours a day.

So far, the cost of jailing him totals nearly $600,000, not including the helicopter rides.

For Howard Berry it's another wound in a painful process as he fights for the recognition he believes his son and the other victims deserve.

"It makes me sick.  It makes me ashamed," said Berry.  "I told him [his son] I still had his back and I still do.  I still do."

When the trial starts this week the costs will climb even higher as local police provide security for jurors and witnesses for a trial that could last two or three months.

Meanwhile, in July, three congressmen introduced legislation that would strip Hasan's salary and prevent the Army from paying other soldiers accused of serious crimes.


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Details Emerge About Boardwalk Crash Suspect

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Suspect in Venice Rampage in Trouble With the Law Before

Prosecutors have yet to officially charge the 38-year-old man accused of plowing through the Venice boardwalk on Saturday. Suspect Nathan Louis Campbell has had periodic run-ins with the law in several states. Patrick Healy reports from Venice for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on August 5, 2013.

Driver Believed to Have Intentionally Plowed Car Into Venice Boardwalk Crowd

A suspected hit-and-run driver who plowed into a crowd of pedestrians on the Venice boardwalk was arrested on suspicion of murder. Surveillance video and witness statements led police to believe the driver injured 11 pedestrians and killed one on purpose. Kate Larsen reports from Venice for NBC4 News at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013.

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Prosecutors on Tuesday are expected to review charges against a man accused of driving his car into a crowd of people in Venice Beach, killing one and injuring 16 others, the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office said on Monday.

Nathan Louis Campbell, 38, who the LAPD described as a homeless man from Colorado with a criminal history, was being held with bail set at $1 million.

Full Coverage: Boardwalk Tragedy

Police booked Campbell into custody on a murder charge after he surrendered to police in the Saturday crash at the Venice boardwalk. The crash killed an Italian woman on her honeymoon and injured 16 others, including the woman's husband.

LAPD detectives will hand over their case to prosecutors by Tuesday for filing consideration, said Jane Robison, a spokeswoman with the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office.

Meanwhile, new details emerged about Campbell's past. He bought the Dodge Avenger at a Kia dealership in Littleton, Colo., earlier this summer. He had only been in Los Angeles for about a month before the crash.

Campbell pleaded guilty to public drunkenness in Santa Monica in 2002, and reckless driving with alcohol in Florida in 2008.

And on Saturday, Campbell is accused of driving around a vehicle barrier and intentionally running over pedestrians with his Dodge Avenger as hundreds of people were sitting at cafes and shopping at the popular tourist destination. The crash could be seen through surveillance video captured from nearby businesses.

The suspect knocked over two mannequins, an ATM and then hit people as the car swerved.

Video showed the car struck at least three vendors -- a fortune teller, a couple selling jewelry and a tattoo artist.

Many people ran after the car, screaming and cursing as it sped away.

The driver eventually turned up a side street and headed away from the ocean. The car was later found abandoned less than 2 miles away, police said.

An autopsy conducted Monday on the body of Alice Gruppioni, indicates that the 32-year-old died from blunt force trauma to the head and neck, according to the Los Angeles County coroner's office.

The case was ruled a homicide.

CLARIFICATION: A Los Angeles Police Department official on Monday told NBC4 that 16 people were hurt and one person was killed -- making 17 total victims, two of which refused treatment -- in the Venice boardwalk crash. Los Angeles police updated their earlier reports that there were 12 victims total.

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4 Friends Shot as Masked Gunman Opens Fire on NJ Street

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Police are looking for a masked gunman who approached four friends walking down a street in a northern New Jersey town early Tuesday and opened fire, wounding all of them before running off, authorities say.

Officials say no words were exchanged when the gunman fired up to nine shots at the 18-year-old woman and three men in their 20s around 1 a.m. on Mission Street in Montclair. 

Police said the woman was shot in the chest. She was taken to the hospital in serious condition, but is expected to survive, authorities said.

The three men were respectively shot in the left arm, left leg and buttocks, and are all expected to be fine. 

Three of the victims are from Montclair and the fourth is from Newark, authorities said.

Police believe the gunman is a man. Shell casings have not yet been recovered. 

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Man Accused of Posting "Baby for Sale" Ad on Craigslist

NBC 4 New York

A 23-year-old New York City man is accused of posting an ad on Craigslist offering to sell a 2-month-old baby for $100. Brian Thompson reports.

$100 "Baby for Sale" Ad...

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A 23-year-old New York City man is accused of posting an ad on Craigslist offering to sell a 2-month-old baby for $100. 

The Staten Island district attorney's office said Paul Marquez, of Staten Island, admitted posting the ad twice last week, using photos of the baby and the phone number for the child's mother.

Marquez is charged with harassment and endangering the welfare of a child, both misdemeanor charges.

Prosecutors say he told them that he posted the ad to get back at the baby's mother, a 19-year-old woman he had been dating.

He is being held on $1,000 bail. He was listed as having a lawyer with Legal Aid, which does not comment.

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Reservation Software Glitch Delays Flights Overnight

Kendra Lyn, NBC 5

A computer glitch in reservation software for several major airlines caused delays for travelers overnight.

Computer Glitch Delays Overnight Flights

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A computer glitch in reservation software for several major airlines caused delays for travelers overnight.

Southlake-based Sabre Holdings handles reservations for airlines, including American, Jet Blue, Frontier, Virgin America, Qantas and British Airways, and others.

The company said a "system issue" is to blame for an outage that occurred around 11 p.m. Monday and caused around many flights to be brought to a standstill. 

 Passengers reportedly had to wait in line for hours as airline representatives worked through the issues.

Passenger Spero Canton was one of the passengers delayed at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

"I was actually in the middle of checking my bag in when the computer went down and the representative went to two or three different computers to find out if it was a problem with his particular computer and then we found out it was throughout the entire airport," Canton said.

Sabre fixed the problem around 2 a.m. Tuesday and flights were able to be restarted.

American Airlines said 38 flights were delayed overnight. The airline expects no more major delays and no cancellations following the restoration of the system.

In April, a similar issue caused American to ground around 900 flights.

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Burglars Steal Dallas Church's Sunday Offering

Julie Fine, NBC 5 News

Police are investigating the burglary at Christian Chapel Missionary Baptist Church on Bonnie View Road.

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Thieves who broke into a Dallas church stole about $2,000, including money from Sunday's offering.

Police are investigating the burglary at Christian Chapel Missionary Baptist Church on Bonnie View Road.

"We love you in Jesus' name, and we hope you get help, because this is just going to make us stronger," pastor James Johnson said.

The break-in was discovered when the deacon came in Monday morning to meet an alarm repairman.

"It is pretty ironic," Johnson said. "You just smile and go on."

Church officials said they believe someone entered through a back window and busted through a wall to get to the finance office sometime between Sunday afternoon and Monday morning. The thief avoided security cameras in the hallway.

"I don't believe it is somebody that is part of this fellowship, but it could be someone that knows this building from previous years," Johnson said.

About $2,000 was stolen from the office.

The close-knit congregation of about 75 people has been in the building since 2010.

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Dozen Left Homeless by Dallas Apartment Fire

Jeff Smith, NBC 5

A dozen Dallas residents, including several small children, are without a home after an early morning apartment fire.

Dallas Apartment Residents Displaced

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A dozen Dallas residents, including several small children, are without a home this morning after an early-morning apartment fire.

Dallas firefighters battled the flames at the Prince Hall Apartments on Dixon Avenue at about 2:30 a.m. Tuesday.

No one was injured in the fire.

Several units were gutted by the flames. At least two units are destroyed and several others have smoke and water damage.

Charred furniture, clothes, and even children's toys were thrown across the front yard. The Red Cross is helping the displaced families get emergency assistance.

Firefighters are still investigating how the fire started.

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Taxidermy Shop Destroyed by Fire

Jeff Smith, NBC 5

A Hunt County taxidermy shop was destroyed by fire Tuesday morning.

Taxidermy Shop Destroyed by Fire

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A Hunt County taxidermy shop was destroyed by fire at about 5:20 a.m. Tuesday morning.

Firefighters battled the 4-alarm fire at Hood's Taxidermy on U.S. Highway 69 in Lone Oak, southeast of Greenville, but were unable to save the building.

Owner Larry Hood said he'd been in business for 18 years but had no insurance for the building. Hood said more than 30 customers had animals in the building when it caught fire.

Hood said his wife notified him that the shop was on fire after watching coverage of the blaze on NBC 5.

Hood said the shop was closed when the fire began and he did not believe there was anything in the building that would have ignited. Fire officials have not released a cause of the fire.

Hood asked customers who may have lost animals in the fire to contact him at 903-450-7724.

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Nationwide Search Launched for Murder, Kidnapping Suspect

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Body Found in Boulevard Fire

Arson investigators will bring in a backhoe to sift through the debris left behind by the two-story log cabin and three-car detached garage.

Body Found in Boulevard House Fire

Officials are calling the death of a person in a Boulevard house fire "suspicious."

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A San Diego man is the subject of a nationwide manhunt, the suspect in a double murder and double kidnapping.

Neighbors of James Lee DiMaggio were shocked to learn two people as well as a dog were found dead inside DiMaggio's log-cabin style home Monday.

Deputies were called to 2071 Ross Avenue in the unincorporated community of Boulevard around 8 p.m. Sunday to find the home and detached 3-car garage engulfed in flames. 

Hours after the discovery of 44-year-old Christina Anderson and an unidentified boy, deputies put out an Amber Alert for DiMaggio and Anderson's 8-year-old son Ethan and 16-year-old daughter Hannah.

Deputies believe DiMaggio murdered Anderson and then set the structures on fire. 

Ethan is 4-feet, 11-inches tall, weighing 65 pounds with sandy blonde hair. Hannah is 5-feet, 7-inches tall, 115 pounds with blue eyes, a nose stud, pierced ears and a belly button ring.

DiMaggio is 40 years old, 5-foto 9- inches tall, 150 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. His beard and moustache have recently been shaved off officials said.

They are believed to be traveling in a 4-door, blue Nissan Versa with license plate 6WCU986.

"It's believed that one or both of the children have been abducted by DiMaggio whose whereabouts are also unknown," said San Diego County homicide Lt. Glenn Giannantonio.

Neighbors were in disbelief Monday. They say DiMaggio is a kind, giving and laid back person who the Anderson children considered an uncle.

They believe DiMaggio had planned to take Ethan camping or hunting and authorities may not be able to reach him because he's out of cell phone range.

Christina Anderson was an old friend of DiMaggio who would come to visit him once or twice a month according to neighbors. Giannantonio said Christina Anderson and DiMaggio were not romantically involved but have a close friendship.

They say the Anderson children got along well with other children in the neighborhood but they recently came more often.

"We believe that if they are with DiMaggio that they are in danger," Giannantonio said adding that FBI agents have been asked to help in the investigation.

Anyone who spots the children or DiMaggio should call 911 he said.

Giannantonio could not disclose how Anderson was killed. He said the medical examiner will try and identify the burned remains of the child found in the rubble.

Anderson lived with her two children in Lakeside according to officials. The children were last seen on Aug. 3 officials said. The grandparents reported the children missing.

Officials also found remains of weapons found that were burned in the fire but would not reveal the number or type of weapons found.

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Docs Reveal Turbulence in Mayor’s Office

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Mayor Bob Filner Admits He Needs Help

Mayor Bob Filner's prepared video statement released Thursday, the same day three high-profile allies accused him of sexually harassing female employees.

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New documents obtained by NBC 7 show that San Diego Mayor Bob Filner was approached by his staff about sexual harassment allegations weeks before he was publicly accused of acting inappropriately toward women.

Special Section: Mayor Under Fire

The handwritten documents reveal that there was a serious discussion about staff resignations, sexual harassment allegations and the mayor's behavior on June 20 and 29.

The notes were released after the city attorney's office threatened to sue the mayor's chief of staff, Lee Burdick, who had refused to give copies of the documents to the media, claiming "attorney-client" privilege.

In the notes, former communications director Irene McCormack Jackson, former Chief of Staff Vince Hall and former Deputy Chief of Staff Allen Jones discuss low morale in the mayor's office and call Filner's behavior "unacceptable."

The notes also show that Jones gives the mayor an ultimatum, saying that if Filner doesn't change Jones will quit.

Jones, Hall and Jackson all left the mayor's office shortly after these meetings took place. McCormack later filed a civil suit against Filner, accusing him of sexual harassment.

The sexual harassment allegations against Filner are now under review by criminal investigators.

On Monday afternoon, the state Attorney General's Office and San Diego County Sheriff's Department questioned McCormack, who entered the attorney general's building with her high-profile attorney Gloria Allred, who specializes in women's rights cases.

Allred wants Filner, who's in behavior therapy for two weeks, to give depositions in the case.

"I think this is unprecedented, for this many women coming forward against the mayor of a major city," Allred said. "And I don't think that the end is in sight. I'm sure that it isn't."

The allegations of sexual harassment that McCormack has leveled include grabbing her in a headlock and trying to kiss her, suggesting she might do a better job if she came to work without underwear on.

And legal analysts say it's possible they're looking into whether those purported acts arise to the level of criminal sexual assault. Either way, there's now potential for Filner to claim Fifth Amendment protection against testifying in the civil case, because he's under law enforcement scrutiny.

Allred said Filner first has to show up for the deposition on Aug. 9 before he could "plead the fifth." She also said if he doesn't show up, he could be subject to contempt of court.

In the meantime, Allred and McCormack are waiting to hear from Filner's privately retained civil attorney regarding their next move.

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Accused Fort Hood Shooter Gets Daily Helicopter Rides

Written By Unknown on Senin, 05 Agustus 2013 | 22.29

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NBC 5 Investigates has learned the accused Fort Hood shooter Maj. Nidal Hasan receives extraordinary treatment in jail while victims of the attack argue they have been forgotten and mistreated by the U.S. Army.

While a prisoner awaiting trial, Hasan is ferried by helicopter nearly every day, complete with an additional helicopter escort and security detail, for the 20-mile journey between the Bell County Jail and Fort Hood, courtesy of the United States Army and American taxpayers.

The Army told NBC 5 Investigates the daily helicopter rides are necessary because the jail does not have the proper facilities for Hasan to work on his legal defense and transporting Hasan by car creates additional security concerns.  Fort Hood does not have its own jail, so Hasan is being held at the Bell County Jail under a special Army contract.

Inside the Bell County Jail, the Army requires the Bell County Sheriff provide a private guard for Hasan at least 12 hours a day.  He lives in a special room that, using U.S. Army funds, was equipped to specifically accommodate the injuries he suffered after he was shot by officers responding to the attack on the Army post.

Victims of the Fort Hood massacre told NBC 5 Investigates the Army's efforts to provide for Hasan's needs do not match the treatment they have received since the shooting.  They feel the Army has gone the extra mile for Hasan but not for them. 

Howard Berry said his son, Staff Sgt. Josh Berry, struggled to understand the treatment the Army afforded Hasan compared to those he's accused of injuring.

Josh Berry ultimately committed suicide on Feb. 13, 2013, after his family said he suffered years of post-traumatic stress caused by the Fort Hood shooting.

"He felt there were more considerations that were being given to the shooter that weren't being given to the victims and he couldn't understand," said Howard Berry, Josh's father.

Howard Berry said his son was constantly bothered by what he saw as a lack of consideration such as the Army denying victims of the massacre Purple Heart medals and other combat-related benefits while insisting the shooting was not an act of terrorism – a classification Fort Hood shooting victim Logan Burnett strongly disputes.

"The day that came out was the day the government looked at every single one of the victims of the Fort Hood shooting and spit in our faces, literally spit in our faces," said Burnett.

Burnett, who was shot three times in the attack, also feels the Army has gone to great lengths to accommodate Hasan by allowing him to grow a beard, despite military rules that forbid it.  The courtroom debate over Hasan's beard, and other trial delays have dragged on the case for more than three years.

Meanwhile, as NBC 5 Investigates first reported, Hasan has received nearly $300,000 in military pay since his arrest.  The Army said it cannot suspend Hasan's pay unless he's convicted.  However, the defense department can suspend the pay of civilian employees charged with a serious crime.

After NBC5 Investigates revealed Hasan's total pay, three U.S. Congressmen introduced a bill that would strip Hasan of his salary and prevent other soldiers charged with serious crimes from continuing to remain on the government payroll.

One of Josh Berry's friends and former military commanders said Josh constantly talked about the trial delays and the denial of benefits for the victims.

"It weighed on him heavily and affected his ability to cope because he would definitely get obsessive about it.  It was something that was constantly on his mind," said Greg Majewski, Josh's former commander. 

"I just cannot imagine Josh taking his life if the events at Fort Hood had not happened that day," said Majewski.  "And whatever coping skills and whatever threads he was holding on to that day were pretty much obliterated for him.

"I can understand why he did what he did. Because our country left a wounded soldier on the battlefield," said Howard Berry.  "And he felt he wasn't given the same consideration that our enemies were.  And he didn't understand."

Josh Berry Injured in Massacre Awaiting Paperwork to Head Home

Josh had just returned from a tour in Afghanistan and needed to file some final paperwork before he headed home to Ohio.

"He sounded like he had won the lottery.  He sounded like the most incredible, I couldn't wait to see him," recounted Howard Berry.

But the next day, 13 people were killed and dozens of others were injured in the mass shooting at the base, including Josh.  Though he was able to dive for cover and only suffered a shoulder injury, the mental wounds were far worse.

"The guy that came home was not the guy I talked to the night before and he was never the same," said Howard Berry.

Josh had suffered some post-traumatic stress in Afghanistan, and now he had seen a fellow soldier gun people down at an Army base that was supposed to be safe.

The Army eventually sent Josh home to Cincinnati for treatment at a local Veterans Affairs Hospital.  For a while friends and family said he seemed to be getting better, but the scars of Fort Hood were deep. Josh's relationship with his wife deteriorated and PTSD continued to torment him.  More than two years after the shooting on the Army base, police were called to Josh's apartment.  In a police report, Josh is quoted as telling officers he had "…a gun under his pillow" and that he was "a war veteran from Fort Hood and needs the gun for protection because he believes he's in danger."

"He was in a war zone 24-7. He honestly was," said Howard Berry. "He was never at peace.  He was never at peace."

And like many soldiers that suffer from PTSD, despite efforts to help, there would be no recovery.

"My wife called me and she said Josh is dead," said Howard Berry.

Howard Berry said one of his son's proudest moments was when he was able to shake President Barack Obama's hand at a memorial service for victims of the attack.

"That was his absolute proudest moment as a member of the United States Army.  Absolutely," said Howard Berry.  However, Berry says the government's handling of the victims since that day left Josh hurt and angry.

Howard Berry is still waging Josh's war.  He has written hundreds of letters to Congress, and the president, asking them to pass a law that would give the Fort Hood victims the same benefits as soldiers wounded in attacks overseas.  He has also called Fort Hood prosecutors asking them to file another murder charge in his son's name against Hasan.

"The number that died shouldn't be 13, it should be 14.  That's what I feel. I feel Josh's name should be added to the list of those on the memorial because that was it.  It just took him three and half years to die," said Howard Berry.

NBC 5 Investigates contacted the Fort Hood prosecutors.  In a statement, an Army spokesman said, "the prosecution will not comment on the ongoing procedures at this time.  In the interest of due process for Maj. Nidal Hasan, it would be inappropriate to comment further."

A request by NBC 5 Investigates to interview Lt. Gen. Dana Chipman, who oversees the Army's law division, was denied. In a recent letter to a congressman, Chipman said the Army is willing to reconsider whether the attack was terrorism if there's any new evidence that warrants that at a later time.


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Cowboys Beat Dolphins in Hall of Fame Game

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A Very Happy Jason Garrett

Dallas Cowboys head coach Jason Garrett is happy with how his team played in the Hall of Fame Game. More at NFL.com and DallasCowboys.com.

Big Game For George Selvie

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Sometimes, when youth is served, it pays off. Ask Dallas Cowboys coach Jason Garrett about that and see him smile. 

Rookie Devonte Holloman's 75-yard interception return with a tipped pass keyed the Cowboys' 24-20 victory over the Miami Dolphins in the Hall of Fame game Sunday night that opened the NFL's preseason.

Dallas also got a strong effort from its relatively inexperienced running backs, from some youngsters on the offensive line, and by a defense making the switch to the 4-3 alignment under new coordinator Monte Kiffin.

"Any time you can give young players an extra chance to play in a game, they grow," Garrett said. "With an extra preseason game, it makes sense to give those young guys an opportunity to play."
Hollomon, a sixth-round pick from South Carolina was perfectly situated when rookie Chad Bumphis had Matt Moore's pass go off his hands in the second quarter.

"I thought about it the whole way here and it actually happened," he said of making a big play, after which he got his "first handshake from coach Garrett."

The linebacker sped toward the end zone with a group of blockers escorting him, and after he scored he tightly clutched the ball as he headed to the Dallas sideline. "I had a celebration in my mind, but I was overwhelmed and decided to celebrate with my teammates," he said.

"It was fantastic, a really great play from him," Garrett said. "We were swarming to the football, had a lot of guys around the quarterback, and then the ball pops in the air and he makes a great play and great run."

Bumphis otherwise had a strong game with five receptions for 85 yards. "I feel like I can create mismatches in the slot," said Bumphis, who was undrafted out of Mississippi State. "Just get open. I'm a good receiver when it comes to getting in and out of my breaks, and that's where I feel like I'm my best."

The Cowboys controlled most of the game one night after their former offensive lineman, Larry Allen, and former coach, Bill Parcells, were inducted into the hall.

Quarterback Tony Romo, coming off back surgery to remove a cyst, sat out for Dallas. So the Cowboys turned to their ground game -- and ground down Miami as few regulars got onto the field.
Miami's mistakes were decisive. They struggled most of the night against Dallas' new defense masterminded by Kiffin, the man who designed the Tampa 2 scheme so prevalent throughout the NFL.

Although top running back DeMarco Murray was held out, the Cowboys were dominant on the ground. Phillip Tanner did the bulk of the early work and finished with 59 yards and a touchdown. Joseph Randle handled the late duty and had 70 yards as Dallas piled up 170 yards rushing.
"We're trying to get an identity as a group," Tanner said. "We had `Coach' DeMarco on the sideline telling us to just go out and play."

Allen, Parcells and the other five inductees -- Cris Carter, Jonathan Ogden, Warren Sapp, Curley Culp and Dave Robinson -- were on hand and were honored again before the game. Parcells, who coached Dallas and was an executive for the Dolphins in his final two NFL stops, walked through a line of players from both teams, pointing and exchanging barbs and smiles with them.

Soon after, Dallas led 7-0 on Tanner's 1-yard run. The Cowboys were set up at the Miami 9 when Ryan Tannehill botched a handoff to Lamar Miller on the Dolphins' first offensive play and Nick Hayden recovered.

Tanner soon departed with a left arm injury, but returned and ran over and through Miami's defense. Dallas moved the ball well in offensive coordinator Bill Callahan's first outing as its play caller; those duties were taken away from head coach Jason Garrett in the offseason. Of course, few starters ever made it onto the field for either side.

Dan Bailey's 49-yard field goal made it 10-0, then Holloman made his long sprint to the end zone.
Dan Carpenter kicked a 27-yard field goal for Miami, which used Tannehill for only 10 snaps before Moore came in. Third-string QB Pat Devlin hit rookie Keenan Davis with a 5-yard TD pass on fourth down in the final period, making it 17-10, and Carpenter added a 45-yarder.

But rookie Kendial Lawrence ran in from 7 yards with 1:57 left to clinch it for Dallas, even though Moore returned and added a 5-yard TD pass to Kyle Miller with 16 seconds to go.

Defensive end Dion Jordan, the third overall pick in the draft, had little impact for the Dolphins.
"I thought we'd play better," a clearly disappointed coach Joe Philbin said.

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Newlywed Dies in Beach Boardwalk Crash

Tena Ezzeddine

An Italian woman on her honeymoon was killed when a car plowed into a crowd on the Venice boardwalk on Saturday night, officials said. Eleven others were injured, including her husband. Tena Ezzeddine reports from Venice for NBC4 News at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 4, 2013.

Victim of Venice Boardwalk Crash Was...

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RAW VIDEO: Venice Hit-and-Run Aftermath

A witness captured this video shortly after a car plowed into a crowd of pedestrians on the Venice Boardwalk.

Hit-and-Run Driver Plows into Crowd by Venice Boardwalk, Killing 1

A hit-and-run driver plowed into a crowd of pedestrians near the Venice Boardwalk on Saturday afternoon, killing one person and injuring 11 others. Detectives have detained a possible suspect and a vehicle of interest, authorities said. Jane Yamamoto reports from Venice for NBC4 News at 11 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013.

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The woman killed in Saturday's crash on the Venice boardwalk was on a honeymoon with her husband after getting married two weeks ago in Italy, Italian newspapers reported on Sunday.

Alice Gruppioni, 32, was the newlywed daughter of an Italian businessman from Bologna, Italy. She died with her injured husband at her side at a Los Angeles hospital, the newspaper La Republicca reported.

The groom, Christian Casadei, suffered minor injuries in the 6 p.m. Saturday crash. Relatives from Italy arrived in Los Angeles late Sunday to join him.

Gruppioni reportedly ran a family business in her hometown, Rastignano, a village just south of Bologna. La Republicca reported that she and her husband were building a house there.

An aunt told NBC4 that Gruppioni was a businesswoman and a romantic who had dreamed of visiting California with her husband. She said Gruppioni's death was "a tremendous injustice."

Gruppioni was the daughter of Valerio Gruppioni, a businessman and former president of the Bologna soccer team.

Family members were rushing from Italy to Los Angeles, the newspaper reported, and an official from the Italian consulate office in L.A. was at the hospital as well.

City News Service contributed to this report.

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Taco Bell Teases New Doritos Locos Flavor With Vine Video

Consumer Bob

Taco Bell will introduce a new taco made with Doritos.

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Taco Bell released a Vine video to tease yet another Doritos Locos Tacos flavor that will hit restaurants later this month.

The new, mystery flavor will join the popular Nacho Cheese Doritos Locos Tacos, which has become Taco Bell's most successful product launch in its 50-year history. The Cool Ranch flavor was introduced in March.

Rumor has it that the new flavor will be inspired by Dorito's chili-lime flavored Flamas chips. Nation's Restaurant News reported about a year ago that Flamas Doritos Locos Tacos were being tested at stores in Toledo, Ohio.

 

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4-Year-Old Mayor of Minn. Town Wins Second Term

AP

This handout photo released by the Tufts family shows Mayor Robert "Bobby" Tufts, right, shaking hands with and unidentified woman in Dorset, Minn. Tufts hasn't made it to preschool yet, but he's already been elected twice as mayor of a tiny tourist town in northern Minnesota. Mayor Tufts' name was picked Sunday Aug. 4, 2013 during annual Taste of Dorset festival to be mayor of Dorset for a second term. It has no formal city government and has a population of 22 to 28, depending on whether the minister and his family are in town.

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The 4-year-old mayor of a small town in Minnesota was re-elected Sunday on a platform that embraced fundraising for charities and regular playtime.

Robert "Bobby" Tufts' name was drawn from a "ballot box" (a clear tub) at a festival in Dorset, a town of 22 people with no formal city government.

Anyone can vote and as many times as they like for $1 a vote. The proceeds goes toward organizing the Taste of Dorset festival.

Bobby was 3 years old when he won his first election. His mother Emma Tufts said the mayor's second term agenda includes fund raising for the Ronald McDonald's House Charities and new welcome sign for Dorset.

They have already raised $750 from a walk this summer and planned to donate half the money from Sunday's T-shirt sales to charity, according to The Associated Press.

When the incumbent mayor was asked how he felt about his victory, he made it clear that he was done answering questions.

"I want to be with the boys," he told his mother.

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Bystander Saves Drowning Boy

Ray Villeda, NBC 5 News

Reynaldo Martinez helped save a 9-year-old boy from drowning by pulling him out of the swimming pool of a Fort Worth apartment complex.

Bystander Becomes Hero, Saves Drowning Boy

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Reynaldo Martinez was inside his home at the Spring Hill Apartments on Hamilton Avenue when he looked out of the window, saw trouble and knew he had to do something.

He asked some children if anyone was under water at the apartment's swimming pool.

"They said, 'Yes,'" Martinez said. "I jumped over the fence and went over there, asked the Lord to help me out, grabbed the boy from the arm, brought him out of the swimming pool."

The victim was a 9-year-old boy. Officials with MedStar ambulance said the boy was under water for about four minutes.

Spokesperson Matt Zavadsky said the boy was conscious during transport to Cook Children's Medical Center in Fort Worth, where he was listed in critical condition. Zavadsky said a MedStar dispatcher also helped give CPR instructions over the phone.

"He was not breathing," said Martinez. "I just started applying CPR. I asked the Lord God to help me and I was doing it and he started turning blue. His fingers started twitching. His feet started moving. His eyes opened. I just telling him, 'Breathe. Breathe.'"

Martinez said he saw the boy's father use a pole to poke at the water and help rescue his son, but it was Martinez who dove in.  He doesn't know the family well because he said they are new residents to the apartment complex.

"It makes me feel real bad because I have a 14-year-old son," Martinez said. "I tell him that you have to have an adult when you are swimming over here, because there is no lifeguard." 

"I'm just so grateful that the [9-year-old] boy's alive," Martinez said. "I just thank the Lord upstairs for helping guide me through this."

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PHI Adds Air Ambulance in Denton

Kevin Cokely, NBc 5 News

PHI Air Medical already operates four helicopters throughout Dallas - Fort Worth, and will now add a fifth later this month in Denton.

Denton Getting Second Medical Helicopter

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Paramedics who need to get crash victims and others to the hospital quickly will soon have another helicopter to call in Denton.

PHI Air Medical already operates four helicopters throughout Dallas-Fort Worth and will now add a fifth to their fleet later this month.

"We can go all the way into Oklahoma, covering Cooke and Montague and Wise and Collin counties and we can go anywhere and pick up patients where a trip might take an hour, hour and a half by car, and we can fly then in 15 minutes," said Michael Olson with PHI Air Medical

CareFlite already operates a medical helicopter in Denton, but the Denton Regional Medical Center approached PHI about adding a second.

"If one helicopter is busy on a different call then it's nice to still have a second one in town,"
said Battalion Chief Brian Glenn, with the Denton Fire Department.

Paramedics throughout Denton County are now getting a close up look at the company's brand new helicopter.

"We can do a complete critical care, we basically got it's a mix between ER and ICU we carry in here," said Olson.

Denton residents welcome the city's second medical helicopter.

"I think it will be great, definitely. Keep everything even twice as safe. And especially with me having kids, I mean it kind of puts you at ease," said Brandi Fairington of Denton.

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