Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Frisco ISD Closes Tax Building Over Conn. Shooting

Written By Unknown on Senin, 31 Desember 2012 | 00.29

Omar Villafranca, NBC 5 News

Parents going to pay their school tax in Frisco say they are confused about why the collection building is closed.

Frisco ISD Tax Building Closure...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

The Frisco school district tax building is closed for the winter break -- but not for reasons most parents are used to hearing.

A note taped to the building tells parents: "Due to the recent events in Connecticut, the FISD administration is requiring us to keep this building locked during the winter break."

In a statement sent late Friday night, Frisco Independent School District spokesman Jamie Driskill said the district decided to keep the building locked during the winter break when the building was not fully occupied because of "security concerns heightened by recent events."

The note on the building tells parents they can drop their payment in a drop box and apologized for the inconvenience.

Driskill said payments are collected daily. Payments are noted as being paid that day, and receipts are then mailed, he said.

The building's note caught Sunil Malik by surprise. The parent was coming to pay his taxes and get a receipt. He said he didn't understand why the building, which is near a middle school but not connected to the classrooms, was closed.

"It says it's a security concern, but the shootings were related to the kids, and it's not a school," he said.

Rejesh Chauhan, another parent, drove up to the building to pay his taxes. He read the sign and thought the note perhaps was a show of compassion for the recent tragedy in Connecticut. But he said he wasn't too pleased about having to drop his check into a drop box.

"If they put this note, I wish they would send a little sweet letter at home telling the exact reason, right?" he said.

Driskill said the district agreed that the note on the building was confusing, saying that a better solution would be determined in the future and communicated better.

The office will be open during its regular hours next week Wednesday through Friday and until noon on Monday, he said.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 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.


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Classic Cars Torched at Forney Shop

Amanda Guerra, NBC 5 News

A vandal smashed the windows of several classic Mustangs at a Forney shop and then set them on fire on Christmas morning.

Vandal Sets Fire to Classic Mustangs

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Investigators are trying to find the person who torched several classic cars at a business in Forney on Christmas Day.

Gerald Gauthier, owner of the Mustang Shop, said a friend called on Christmas morning to tell him that several cars parked outside his lot were on fire.

"He said, 'Your business, it looks like a war zone,'" he said.

Gauthier arrived to find three classic Mustangs gutted and several more with smashed windows.

"The first thing he did is, he went to destroy glass on all the vehicles," he said.

The vandal was caught on surveillance cameras installed outside Gauthier's business.

In the video, the person can be seen walking up to the vehicles, smashing the windows and then lighting something on fire. Shortly afterward, several of the vehicles can be seen erupting into flames.

"They're gone; they're completely gone. The '69 is somewhat salvageable, but these two here, they're just plain gone," said Gauthier while pointing to two classic Mustangs that were scorched and gutted by flames.

Gauthier said it has taken years to build up his business. What happened will set him back thousands of dollars, he said.

"I think someone that does this wouldn't hesitate to do it again to someone else," he said.

Now he just wants the person caught before he strikes again.

"I think somebody doesn't have any Christmas spirit," he said. "I don't have any words for it. I couldn't really even explain it."

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Unions Move Ahead On AA-US Airways Merger

advertisement

Click Here!

AA Merger Talks May Be at Critical Point

Pilots from both American Airlines and US Airways are taking part in four-party discussions with both companies.

APA On Standby for Merger

Leaders of the Allied Pilots Association are on standby, hoping they might be able to reach an agreement that could lead to a merger between American Airlines and US Airways.

More Photos and Videos

Leaders of the pilots union at Fort Worth based American Airlines have now approved a framework for a labor agreement if the airline merges with US Airways.

On the morning of Saturday, December 29, the Allied Pilots Association Board of Directors voted 11 to 5 to approve what's called a "memo of understanding."

The memo outlines temporary wages and work conditions if the two airlines merge. It also addresses seniority and other issues. Now American gets to look at it along with the pilots and the management at US Airways.

Unless all four parties agree to it, the Allied Pilots Association says a merger appears unlikely before American emerges from bankruptcy.  The pilots union cannot talk about specifics but said it wanted to have something done before AMR's Board of Directors meets a week from Wednesday.

Merger talks continue between the two airlines, and American Airlines is expected to emerge from bankruptcy in just months.

Click on this sentence for the statement from APA Communications Director Gregg Overman.

On Saturday, American Airlines released this statement:

"American Airlines remains actively engaged in discussions with US Airways, APA and USAPA to develop a framework for the terms of employment for pilots in the event of a merger.  The APA's proposal for this framework, approved this morning by its Board of Directors, is now subject to review and approval by American, US Airways and USAPA, which represents the US Airways pilots.  If agreed upon, a memorandum of understanding will assist our stakeholders, including the AMR Board, in making an informed decision as to whether a merger should be pursued.  This step comes as a result of American, in collaboration with the creditors committee, inviting the unions to take part in these discussions to better evaluate the costs of operational and pilot seniority integration.  We remain committed in our efforts to secure the best outcome for our financial stakeholders, our people and our customers."  Mike Trevino, AMR spokesman

The board of directors of American's parent company, AMR Corp., has scheduled a meeting Jan. 9 and could vote on a merger then, NBC 5 has learned.

People involved in the process stressed that many difficult details still must be ironed out before a merger vote can take place.

Company officials did not want to be quoted by name because of the sensitivity of the ongoing discussions.

The judge in charge of American's bankruptcy and the influential committee of creditors also would have to sign off on a deal.

American's three major unions -- representing pilots, flight attendants, and ground workers -- have already signed new labor agreements with the bankrupt airline. The talks now under way essentially involve new contracts with a merged company.

Combining workforces is full of potential pitfalls for each company. US Airways has not successfully combined labor groups since it merged with America West seven years ago. A merger with American could allow it to solve its current labor issues all at once -- or merely add to their complexity.

A merger would likely mean thousands of American employees would be pushed lower on the seniority list, but the value of a new deal could be a huge incentive. American pilots, for example, could add $100 million per year to their overall compensation, union insiders say.

It's unclear who would lead a combined airline. But analysts say a merger would likely push out American's top executive, Tom Horton, who has led the airline since it declared bankruptcy last November.

US Airways' executives have said if they win control, they would use American's brand name and keep its headquarters in Fort Worth.

00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Helium Shortage Could Affect Your NYE Party

Mark Schnyder, NBC 5 News

Supply is down, demand is up and cost is way up.

Helium Shortage Could Affect Your...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Business was popping inside Party Warehouse on Camp Bowie Road in Fort Worth Saturday morning.  But party balloons aren't all that's being inflated there.

"We've had to raise prices," said owner Steve Steffgen.

Steffgen says his helium costs are up 300%.  He is charging his customers more on a dozen helium balloons.  From $6.99 to now $9.99.

Steffgen fills his customers in about the helium shortage which he said is a supply and demand issue.  Most of the demand comes from the medical industry.  An entrepreneur with three party stores is not on the priority list for helium.

"We've had to raise prices on helium tanks that we rent and we've even had to stop renting for a while," Steffgen said.

The shortage has forced Party Warehouse to become more creative, coming up with arrangements that use less helium or none at all.  Steffgen showed us "balloon columns" on display in his story.  They're decorative and festive and the balloons are filled with air, no helium.

Steffgen said people planning on picking up helium balloon arrangements for New Year's Eve not to do it too early in the day.  His and other stores are filling some balloons with 20% to 40% air to save helium, which means the balloons will deflate a few hours sooner.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

NYC Woman Charged with Hate Crime in Deadly Subway Push

advertisement

Click Here!

Cops Seek Suspect in Deadly 7 Train Push

Police have released a sketch of a woman they say hurled a hardworking Queens immigrant from India to his death in front of a moving 7 train in Sunnyside. Andrew Siff reports.

More Photos and Videos

A 31-year-old Bronx woman has been charged with murder as a hate crime for pushing a man in front of an oncoming No. 7 train at a Queens subway station Thursday evening, prosecutors said.

According to the Queens district attorney's office, Erika Menendez confessed to the crime, saying she pushed 46-year-old Sundando Sen onto the tracks because she has hated Hindus and Muslims since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

"The defendant is accused of committing what is every subway commuter's worst nightmare – being suddenly and senselessly pushed into the path of an oncoming train," said Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown. "The hateful remarks allegedly made by the defendant and which precipitated the defendant's actions can never be tolerated by a civilized society."

Menendez was charged with second-degree murder as a hate crime Saturday. She was awaiting arraignment in Queens Criminal Court.

Authorities said Menendez was seen walking back and forth on the platform of the 40th Street station and talking to herself before sitting down, alone, on a wooden bench near the north end of the walkway. When the train pulled into the station shortly after 8 p.m., she allegedly got up off the bench and pushed Sen.

The suspect then fled the platform, running down a flight of stairs to the turnstile area and down a second flight to Queens Boulevard, witnesses said.

Police said Menendez was taken into custody Saturday in Brooklyn after a passerby recognized her from a surveillance video that captured her leaving the station. Menendez was later identified by witnesses in a lineup.

According to prosecutors, Menendez told detectives, "I pushed a Muslim off the train tracks because I hate Hindus and Muslims ever since 2001 when they put down the twin towers I've been beating them up."

Sen, a native of Calcutta, had been in the country for more than 20 years and was part owner of New Amsterdam Printing on Amsterdam Avenue, according to his three roommates. Sen had opened the business six months ago and worked seven days a week, commuting by subway daily, his friends and roommates said.

Naeem Davis, a 30-year-old deli worker, was recently arrested and charged with second-degree murder for allegedly pushing Ki-Suk Han, 58, off a midtown subway platform to his death on Dec. 3. Han was struck by a southbound Q train at the 49th Street station in Manhattan.

00.29 | 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.


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Woman Survives Attempted Murder-Suicide

NBC 5

Police responded to a shooting at a home on Oakcrest.

advertisement

Click Here!

A Denton County woman is in a Dallas hospital after being shot by a family member overnight Saturday, police say.

Aubrey police said someone called 911 and then hungup from a home on the 1300-block of Oakcrest. When officers arrived at the home, they found an injured woman conscious and talking.

Officers quickly discovered the woman had been shot and that a second victim in the home, a man, was dead from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Paramedics flew the woman to Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas.  Her condition is not known.

Investigators believe the man shot himself after shooting the woman.

A third adult woman was in the house at the time of the shooting, but she was not injured.

The shooting is under investigation, though police said they are not looking for anyone else in connection with the shootings.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fort Worth Gun Show Drawing Big Crowd

Sara Story, NBC 5 News

Gun enthusiasts lined up at gun shows across the country and in North Texas.

Attendance, Cost Up at North Texas...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Fort Worth Gun Show Draws Big Crowds

NBC 5's Sara Story reports on one of the first gun shows in North Texas after the Tragedy in Sandy Hook. Fears over gun control regulation prompted many gun collectors to show up.

More Photos and Videos

Gun enthusiasts were met with long lines at the Will Rogers Memorial Center Saturday for The Original Fort Worth Gun Show.
  
"The attendance has just been over the top," said Tim Finucane, the show's owner.

Finucane said the gun show has been in his family for decades, but Saturday's crowd was a first. He said this crowd was driven by the uncertainty of gun laws in the wake of the school shooting in Sandy Hook, CT., that left 20 children and seven adults dead.
 
"The talk of restricting gun ownership, restricting ammo, restricting accessories, people are concerned," Finucane said. "They think they need to get out and buy it before the government takes it away."

President Barack Obama has formed a team that will look at gun control laws and possibly recommend new regulations.

Meanwhile, as the demand goes up, so do prices.

"Last year, I paid $345 for my .40 caliber hand gun. Now. I paid $557," said gun owner James Smith.

There were no protests visible to NBC 5 crews on Saturday.  However, a small crowd held a protest outside The Dulles Center in Virginia where "The Nations Gun Show" took place.

The Fort Worth gun show runs through the weekend -- and organizers expect as many people to show up on Sunday.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Wind Fuels Fires In North Texas

Written By Unknown on Senin, 24 Desember 2012 | 00.29

Sara Story, NBC 5 News

More than 500 bales of hay caught fire in Reno, and crews spent all night putting out the flames.

Wind Fuels Fires In North Texas

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Wind Driven Fires Burn 300+ Bales of Hay

Fires break out in the Parker County community of Reno.

More Photos and Videos

Strong winds and dry conditions fueled fires in Parker County on Saturday. More than 500 bales of hay caught fire in Reno, and crews spent all night putting out the flames. 

"I don't know what to say, I don't know how to feel," said Reno resident Ken Whitby said. "This was my livelihood. This was how we were going to survive the winter."

Whitby watched as his field and hay supply burned Saturday afternoon. More than $50,000 worth of hay was destroyed, and Whitby said it is a loss for his entire community.

"I've had a lot of customers that were looking at this hay, not just in Reno, but Fort Worth and points south where the drought has hit real heavy," Whitby said. "They were looking at this hay to feed their animals. This is a big loss for our community and everybody around."

Firefighters said the fire started around two Saturday afternoon and an electric fence may have caused it. Windy and dry conditions fanned the flames.

Reno Volunteer Fire Department Chief Mike Patterson said each bale of hay had to be unrolled and extinguished. He said the fire in Reno was just one of the fires that broke out in the region on Saturday.

"It has been very hectic," Patterson said. "We have had numerous departments out. We had numerous grass fires all over the county today, so our resources were stretched thin." 

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Teen Hit After Getting Off School Bus

Ellen Goldberg, NBC 5 News

A 16-year-old freshman from Shepton High School was hit by a car after getting off of a school bus Friday afternoon.

Student Hit By Car After Getting Off Bus

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

A 16-year-old boy was hit by a car after getting off of a school bus Friday afternoon, officials say.

The student, a freshman at Shepton High School, was transported to the hospital but is expected to recover.

Plano police said the bus stopped on Windhaven Parkway east of Midway Road to let some students who live in the neighborhood off the bus. The injured student got off the bus and walked in front of it to cross Windhaven Parkway.

The driver of a black Lexus apparently didn't see the bus's stop sign and flashing lights. The car hit the boy, sending him flying over the front of the car and smashing the windshield.

In order for the school bus to open its doors to let students out, the stop sign on the side of the bus must be extended and the red flashing lights must be on.

Once the investigation is complete, police will determine if any charges will be filed.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Random Acts of Kindness After Newtown Tragedy

Christine Lee, NBC 5 Irving Reporter

Some people in Irving are honoring the victims of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn., with 26 random acts of kindness.

Irving Honors Shooting Victims with...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

The Irving Convention and Visitors Bureau is taking action after being inspired by NBC's Ann Curry.

This week Curry sent out a tweet motivating those throughout the country to provide random acts of kindness on behalf of the 26 victims of the massacre in Connecticut.

The Irving CVB staff has been planning out the most meaningful ways to pay tribute to all of the shooting victims in Connecticut.

"We are trying to take the characters of students and match them up with some kind act that we can do," said Diana Pfaff, director of communications at the Irving CVB.

The organization is spending roughly $500 to perform 26 random acts of kindness throughout the city. To do so, they have partnered with local businesses to accomplish their mission.

Marlen Torreblanca got her cat food paid for at PETCO in honor of 6-year-old animal lover Catherine Hubbard.

"I'm sad that she is not here and I'm grateful that y'all are doing this for her," said Torreblanca.

As the random acts continued throughout the day, Pfaff said she's grateful to Ann Curry for motivating her to do something positive for her community.

"Her philosophy is, when you do something good, you feel good. And I think a lot of us have felt not very good because of what has happened up there. Even though it's half a country away, we're still affected here in Irving, Texas," she said.

Pfaff said the Irving CVB's 26th act of kindness will be to send a special delivery to Curry, thanking her for inspiring them. That act will be in honor of 27-year-old Vicki Soto, who was an inspiration to all of her students.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Tennis Umpire Cleared in Husband's Death Reinstated

advertisement

Click Here!

Tennis Official's DNA Not on Coffee Mug: Lawyer

A preliminary DNA test did not find Lois Goodman's fingerprints on the coffee mug she's accused of using to bludgeon her husband to death inside their Woodland Hills home, the 70-year-old tennis referee's lawyer announced Thursday. Janet Kwak reports for the NBC4 News at 11 p.m. on Nov. 8, 2012.

Murder Charge Dropped Against Tennis Umpire

Prosecutors dropped charges against Lois Goodman, who was accused of killing her husband, Alan Goodman, with a coffee cup in their Woodland Hills home in April 2012. Gordon Tokumatsu reports for the NBC4 News at Noon on Nov. 30, 2012.

More Photos and Videos

The 70-year-old woman who was arrested -- then cleared -- in her husband's death said on Friday that she can't wait to resume her previous life as an umpire with the United States Tennis Association.

Lois Goodman reacted to the news that the USTA, of which she has officiated some of the greatest players in her more than 35 years in the job, was reinstating her in 2013.

"It's a great holiday gift," said Goodman as she stood alongside her attorney, Robert Sheahen, in Sherman Oaks on Friday. "I'm thankful.

"I get my old life back. I appreciate my life so much more now seeing what I went through."

Goodman drew national headlines when she was arrested in the death of her husband, Alan, in August during the U.S. Open in New York where she was set to begin officiating. Authorities accused her of using a coffee mug to bludgeon her husband to death in their San Fernando Valley home. Upon her arrest, she was suspended from her job.

Alan Goodman's bloodied body was found in the couple's Woodland Hills home on April 17. Officers initially ruled the death suspicious because they couldn't determine if foul play was involved, according to an LAPD press release.

But after launching a full homicide investigation and working closely with the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office, detectives said on Aug. 2 that the case was a homicide and named Lois Goodman the prime suspect, the LAPD said.

On Nov. 30, the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office dropped charges, saying they had received additional information and were unable to proceed because of insufficient evidence.

The announcement came after Goodman's attorneys said that her DNA was not found on the coffee mug and that she had passed a lie detector test.

Shortly after the charges were dropped, Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck announced that detectives would continue to investigate the case.

On Friday, Goodman said she didn't know she had the strength to withstand being arrested, and temporarily housed at Riker's Island, before being charged with killing her husband who she was married to for over 50 years.

"I knew one day that I'd be cleared," she said.

When asked by a reporter what she'd tell her husband if he were alive, she said, "He knew I loved him very much.

"He'd be very proud to know that everything turned out all right."

00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Estimated Seven-Million Texans on the Road

Mark Schnyder, NBC 5 News

More Texans hitting the road this holiday and they're paying less for gas.

Estimated Seven-Million Texans on the Road

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Perfect weather for a road trip Saturday.  Getting to friends and family should be a breeze.

"I have two kids so there's no telling what to expect," joked Jackie Hernandez of Arlington as she and her daughters set out to West Texas.

Hernandez may not know what to expect from her kids, but she can expect to pay less for gas.  The price per gallon just went down another six cents last week.  It's under $3 per gallon a lot of places.

"It's better," said Taieasha Cash of DeSoto who's heading to Mississippi.  "Last year it [the price of gas] was horrible... So traveling [this year] is going to be easy for me coming and going."

AAA Texas says the average Texas family will drive about 750 miles round trip this Christmas holiday season.  And there will be more families hitting the road.  About two-percent more or 7.1-million people.

"Last year when we went on Christmas we were struck in traffic for like four hours on [Interstate] 20," remembered Jackie Hernandez.  "It turned a two-hour trip into seven hours."

AAA Texas sayas with so many people on the roads and so much going on in their own lives, watch out for distracted drivers.  Better yet, don't be one.

"We really want people to put those cell phones away," said Doug Shupe, AAA Texas spokesperson. "That's the biggest problem when it comes to distracted drivers. Turn it off and stow it away."

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 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.


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Thousands Celebrate The Virgin of Guadalupe In Dallas

Cynthia Garcia, NBC 5 News

The Virgin of Guadalupe is a figure in the Catholic religion of the Indigenous people of Mexico.

Thousands Celebrate The Virgin...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

On December 12, thousands of Catholics from all over Mexico and Texas lined up at the Cathedral in Dallas to celebrate the Feast Day of the Virgin of Guadalupe. 

They crowded into the church for Midnight Mass to pray, and to catch a glimpse of the Aztec Indian dancers known as "Matachines." They performed their ancient dance (a form of prayer) in honor of "La Morenita," the dark skinned Madonna.

The Virgin of Guadalupe is a figure in the Catholic religion of the Indigenous people of Mexico. Her story goes back to 1531 when she appeared to a poor Indian named Juan Diego on the foothills of Mexico City. 

The Virgin is loved and adored by many who's traditions extend to both sides of the border passed on from generation to generation.

Many will continue this tradition of coming to pay homage to The Virgin of Guadalupe. Followers walk away happy that they have seen her.. prayed to her.. asked her for miracles and have had their faith rekindled by her.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Arrest Made After Woman Found In Burning Jeep

Dallas County Sheriff's Dept.

Mark Guida, 43, arrested and charged with Capital Murder.

advertisement

Click Here!

A Louisiana man faces Capital Murder charges for the death of a Dallas woman found in a burning jeep.

On Friday, December 21, Dallas police arrested Mark Guida of The Colony. They say he dated 36-year-old Jerie Ann McCloud.  Guida also recently moved in with McCloud and her three children.

On Thursday, December 20 at 8:00 p.m., officers found McCloud's body inside the burning vehicle, located in the 2100 block of Manana Drive in Dallas. The Dallas Medical Examiner said McCloud died by strangulation.

Witnesses identified Guida's SUV parked across the street from where McCloud was found. Police also recovered a one gallon red plastic gas container near the burning vehicle.

Police said Guida purchased two gas cans and two gallons of gasoline prior to Friday's incident. When questioned, police say Guida refused to answer questions about those purchases.

Officers have not released the motive in this crime.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Search For Missing College Student Underway

Tanya Thomas

Police are looking for 20-year-old Marland Jones, Jr., missing since December 13.

advertisement

Click Here!

Police are searching for a missing Army Reservist and student from Prairie View A&M University.

Marland Jones, Jr. is a 20-year-old freshman at the college. He graduated from Wakeland High School in Frisco in 2011.

Jones was expected home in Denton County on December 13 but his family has not seen or heard from him.

Jones' vehicle is also missing. It is a 4-door, White 2010 Chevy Aveo.

You're asked to contact Prairie View A&M Police Department if you have any information. The Department's phone number is 936.261.1375.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

No Regular Emergency Drills at Some Schools

Written By Unknown on Senin, 17 Desember 2012 | 00.29

advertisement

Click Here!

Most Texas schools regularly hold emergency drills as required by law to prepare for events such as shootings, but some districts do not.

Gov. Rick Perry offered his condolences to the victims of Friday's mass shooting at a Connecticut elementary school and called for all Texas school districts to review their emergency plans.

The Legislature passed a law in 2005 that mandates that schools develop security plans and regularly practice them so that students and teachers know what to do.

"When something does happen, you hope that you've practiced it enough so that that response becomes automatic," said Fort Worth Independent School District spokesman Clint Bond.

Under the state law, schools are supposed to hold regular evacuation drills in the hallways and classrooms and conduct lockdown drills to teach students and teachers what to do if they become trapped.

"You lock the doors on the inside. You turn off the lights. You get the children away from the windows. You get them out of sight if you look in the door," Bond said.

The Texas School Safety Center surveys school districts to find out how often they rehearse their plans.

Its most recent study found that 124 of the 987 surveyed Texas districts reported that none of their schools conducted lockdown drills once per semester as recommended. Another 89 districts reported that only some of their schools held lockdown drills.

And 93 districts said none of their schools held monthly evacuation drills as recommended.

Large districts such as Fort Worth and Dallas say they conduct the drills at the recommended intervals.

"We drill for this once a month in our schools," Bond said.

The Texas School Safety Center survey found that smaller districts are sometimes less likely to complete the requirements.

The center would not name individual districts out of concern for revealing security weaknesses at specific schools.

Texas schools are also supposed to conduct a security audit once every three years. Forty districts reported that none of their facilities completed such audits. Another 10 said only some of their facilities completed the audits.

State law does not require that the people who conduct the security audits to have any kind of certification.

Districts are asked to use competent personnel, and they're given checklists of guidelines, but there currently is no certification program or designation for people conducting the audits.

The Dallas school district's police chief pointed out Friday that it's impossible to prepare for everything.

"We can do prevention," Chief Craig Miller said. "We can instruct prevention. We can have plans, but those plans can always be thwarted."

More: Full Coverage of Newtown School Shooting

00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

North Texans Shocked by Conn. School Shooting

Amanda Guerra, Ray Villeda and Omar Villafranca, NBC 5 News

Frisco residents came together at a candlelight vigil for the victims of the Newtown, Conn., school shooting, as high school football fans at a championship game say their thoughts and prayers are with the victims and the survivors.

North Texans Show Support for Newtown

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Even though Texas is thousands of miles away from the tragedy in Connecticut, North Texans still feel the pain.

Dozens of parents, teachers and students attended a candlelight vigil hosted by Liberty High School students in Frisco on Friday night.

"We wanted to make sure the families know they do have support. There is more than just evil in the world. People are good, and this is just one of those things that can come of tragedies," senior Chelsey Chandler said.

"I think that's what's important -- this needs to be a wakeup call," senior Lauren Tonkovich said. "We all need to start caring more about others and stop being so self-centered and caught up in our own time. I just think that could be a huge help in the future."

"I just could not image what these parents are going through or how you catch your next breath, so my prayers are just with those families," parent Shaw Walker said. "We just have to see the good in each other and come together as a community, as a state, as a country. Our differences don't matter when things like this happen."

Parents attending the high school 3A State Championship game at Cowboys Stadium said news of the school shooting shocked them.

Netha Elliott, who has four young children, said she hugged her youngest when she heard the news.

"Just talk to them about how important it is to tell each other you love each other every day, before school and be so thankful that we make it through life every day," she said.

Parent Laurie Lively said she cried when she heard the news.

"It's hard to know what goes through your mind," she said. "It's confusion. The most astounding thing is what goes through your stomach and your heart -- just totally heartbroken."

More: Full Coverage of Newtown School Shooting

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 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.


00.29 | 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.


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Threat Disrupts Tarleton State Graduation Plans

Tarleton State University says a threat that forced the school to move its graduation ceremonies has turned out to be a false alarm.

advertisement

Click Here!

Tarleton State University says a threat that forced the school to move its graduation ceremonies has turned out to be a false alarm.

 University spokeswoman Janice Horak on Saturday wouldn't elaborate on the nature of the threat made in regards to the campus gym. The school moved some graduation ceremonies to the football field before authorities gave the all-clear by the afternoon. 

 Nearly 600 students were set to graduate Saturday. Tarleton State is part of the Texas A&M University System. The school's enrollment eclipsed a record 10,000 students this fall. 

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

With the Names, Pain and Questioning

advertisement

Click Here!

Newtown Teacher: I Hid Kids in Coat Closet

Connie Sullivan, a teacher at Newtown Elementary School, barricaded her students in a closet to protect them from the shooter.

More Photos and Videos

The grieving suburb of Newtown, Conn. faces another day with the biggest question—Why?—still unanswered. But Sunday morning, it was still reacting to the news of who is gone.

Memorials to the victims of Friday's massacre grew overnight, after police released victims' names Saturday afternoon. On a cold and damp Sunday morning, paper bags lit with candles, one for every victim, flickered beneath the local Christmas tree at one end of downtown Sandy Hook.

At the other end of downtown, figures of angels had been posted on a hill on wooden stakes in memory of the 20 child victims of the shooting.

The official list of victims went up on the Connecticut State Police's website Saturday afternoon, and to see it in black and white, with so many names, and with dates of birth as late as 2006, was a stark reminder of what the town of 28,000 had lost.

The news was accompanied by a methodical account from the state's chief medical examiner of how 12 girls, eight boys and six women were gunned down with chilling efficiency—each hit at least twice—by a young man armed with a .223 Bushmaster rifle inside Sandy Hook Elementary School.

The killer, 20-year-old Adam Lanza, who took his own life as cops closed in Friday morning, still has not been officially identified. Neither has his mother, Nancy, who was found shot to death in their home nearby. Autopsies on their bodies will be conducted last.

Lanza's father released a statement saying his remaining family was "grieving," "heartbroken" and "struggling to make sense of what has transpired."

"Our hearts go out to the families and friends who lost loved ones and to all those who were injured," Peter Lanza wrote. "We are in a state of disbelief and trying to find whatever answers we can. We too are asking why."

President Barack Obama will visit Sunday to try to console the town, meeting with victims' families and then speaking at an interfaith vigil. "Every parent in America has a heart heavy with hurt," Obama said in his weekly radio address.

As the picture-postcard town in southwestern Connecticut struggled to find its footing, new details emerged about how the attack unfolded.

Lanza apparently shot his way into the school, shattering the front door glass around 9:30 a.m.

Morning announcements were underway, and witnesses remembered hearing screams and gunshots over the PA system.

Others recalled a custodian running down the hall, yelling that there was a gunman.

Teacher Kaitlin Roig described huddling in a bathroom with her 15 first-grade students, trying to assure them that everything would be alright—even though she didn't believe it.

"I'm thinking, 'We're next,'" Roig told ABC News' Diane Sawyer. "And I'm thinking, as a 6-year-old, 7-year-old, what are your thoughts? I'm thinking I almost have to be their parent. So I said to them, I need you to know that I love you all very much, and it's going to be okay, because I thought that was the last thing they were ever going to hear."

The school's principal, Dawn Hochsprung, and school psychologist Mary Sherlach were in a meeting with a parent, other staff members and school therapist Diane Day when the shooting started, Day told The Wall Street Journal. While most people dove under desks, Hochsprung and Sherlach rushed to see if they could help and ran toward the shooter, schools Superintendent Janet Robinson said.

Hochsprung, 47, a mother of five who viewed her school as a model of opportunity and safety, and Sherlach, 56, who was planning her retirement, were both killed.

Another teacher pressed her body against the door to keep Lanza out—and was shot twice in the process, Day said.

Kindergarten teacher Janet Vollmer recalled hearing the attack unfold over the intercom. She told CBS 2 she tried keep her 19 students calm by telling them a custodian was probably on the roof retrieving a soccer ball. Then she and her aides drew the shades and locked the classroom door.

A half hour passed, and finally police arrived to escort them out. On the way, she noticed blood on the floor. "I don't know whether any of them saw that—we kept going," Vollmer said.

Another teacher helped students get out through a window, Robinson said, and one hid the students in the kiln room as the shooter made his way through the school.

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

Police reportedly had the students hold hands and close their eyes as they were led from the building.

By 11:03 a.m., officers said the school had been evacuated and was secure. They went to the Lanza home and found the gunman's mother dead of a gunshot wound. Despite earlier reports, it did not appear she was a staff member at Sandy Hook Elementary.

Court records showed that Lanza's parents had divorced in 2008 after 17 years of marriage, according to The New York Times, which added that Peter Lanza had moved out of the family's home.

The rifle and handguns Adam Lanza carried in the attacks were reportedly owned by his mother, a firearms enthusiast. They appeared to have been purchased legally.

State Police spokesman Paul Vance said investigators had uncovered "very good evidence" that might help explain Adam Lanza's motive.

Former classmates described him as very intelligent and introverted, and quick with computers. Some have suggested that he may have suffered from a personality disorder.

He had no obvious recent ties to the school, and those who had known him as a young, awkward teenager could think of nothing that would have predicted such inexplicable rage.

"We've been doing everything we need to do to peel back the onion, layer by layer, and get more information," Vance said.

Investigators spent hours questioning Lanza's 24-year-old brother Ryan, who told them that Adam had a history of mental health issues and that they had not spoken in two years, NBC News reported.

The state's chief medical examiner, H. Wayne Carver, said the case was probably the "worst that I have seen" in his more than 30 years on the job. He performed autopsies of seven of the victims, all of whom had between three and 11 bullet wounds.

Asked whether the victims suffered, Carver said, "not for very long." Asked where on their bodies they were shot, and he said, "all over." Asked how many rounds were fired, he replied, "lots."

The victims were identified by showing relatives pictures of their faces in order to spare them additional grief.

As the investigation continues, state troopers have been assigned to the parents so the information is communicated directly to them, police said.

With the release of the names, portraits of the victims' lives began to take shape.

They included first-grade teacher Victoria Soto, 27, whose family said they were told by investigators that she was killed while trying to protect her first-graders from the gunfire.

"She was trying to shield, get her children into a closet and protect them from harm," a cousin, Jim Wiltsie, told ABC. "And by doing that, put herself between the gunman and the children."

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

Teacher Anne Marie Murphy, 52, was also among the staffers who died trying to protect her students from the gunman, her family said.

Lauren Gabrielle Rousseau, 30, had just realized her dream of becoming a full-time teacher at Sandy Hook Elementary. "It was the best year of her life," her mother said.

Among the dead children was first-grader Olivia Engel, whose "only crime was being a wiggly, smiley 6-year-old," a family friend said.

Ana Marquez-Greene, 6, had just moved to Newtown a few months ago from Puerto Rico, her grandmother said. Her family was attracted by Sandy Hook's safe reputation.

Chase Kowalski, 7, was an athletic kid, always on the move, who bragged to a neighbor about winning a mini triathlon.

Emilie Parker, 6, was a girl who was always smiling, always willing to try new things, as long as those new things didn't involve food, her father said. "I'm so blessed to be her dad," he said.

"Those educators and those innocent little boys and girls were taken from their families far too soon," Connecticut Gov. Danell Malloy said. "Let us all hope and pray those children are now in a place where that innocence will forever be protected."

The release of the names was a dreaded but anxiously awaited moment as the town — and the nation — struggled to absorb the second-deadliest school shooting in American history, second only to the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting that killed 32.

With so many unanswerable questions, Newtowners sought solace amongst each other, flocking to vigils and religious services and building spontaneous memorials to the victims around town.

In downtown Sandy Hook Saturday night, where Church Hill Road and Washington Avenue intersect, candles for each victim flickered beneath the local Christmas tree, while passersby added flowers, votives and two smaller Christmas trees decorated with children's ornaments and topped by angels. They wrote notes to the victims and their families, promising to pray for them and their town. Some brought their young children and struggled to explain what it all meant.

Across the street, in front of an office building, someone had erected a sign made of Christmas lights that read "FAITH," "HOPE" and "LOVE."

Outside Sandy Hook Wine and Liquor, an American flag on poster board was propped on a bench. Owner Mike Kerler and his wife made cards with each of the victims' names and affixed them to the flag.

Kerler, whose four children attended Sandy Hook Elementary, was glad to see the names released, he said, because it will allow the community to step up in support of them, neighbor to neighbor. The victims included a girl who lived across the street from him, he said.

"I'm still searching for something we can do," Kerler said. "We just want to let them know we're thinking about them and we care."

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

00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Heightened Security After Threatening Rumors at Granbury ISD

Extra police will be on hand at Granbury High School starting Monday morning after rumors of an alleged threat started spreading over the weekend.

advertisement

Click Here!

Extra police will be on hand at Granbury High School beginning Monday morning after rumors of an alleged threat started spreading over the weekend.

Granbury school leaders have issued a statement to concerned parents stating the district is actively investigating the threat and the threat rumor has not been confirmed.

Still the district said all week there will be extra security on campus because threats are taken very seriously.

The district is also urging anyone who sees suspicious behavior to report it to police or school staff immediately.

Statement to Parents from GISD Superintendent Dr. James Largent

Granbury school officials have become aware of a rumor regarding an alleged threat to the security at Granbury High School.  

 

In cooperation with the Granbury police department, we are actively investigating this matter.

 

All next week, we will have extra law enforcement officers at the high school campus to provide extra security for our students and staff.

 

Although these rumors may not be confirmed, we take seriously any threat against our schools - whether it is real or a prank.  We also continue to encourage 

 

students to report suspicious behavior and rumors to the police department or district staff, and we will investigate each report that we receive.  

 

We understand that rumors such as this causes a high level of anxiety and speculation as to the truth – especially given the tragic events in Connecticut on 

 

Friday.   Please know that the highest priority of Granbury ISD is the safety and security of our students and staff.

 

I know that this information may not answer all of your questions, but we have a responsibility to report facts and not to extend rumors.

 

Like you, many of our district and campus staff have children in our local schools, and we all expect a safe and secure environment.  We take very seriously 

 

the charge we've been given to protect our students and staff and, and we will continue to monitor this situation closely.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

North Texans Support Sandy Hook With Vigil

Sara Story, NBC 5 News

North Texans gathered in Richardson on Saturday night to honor and pay tribute to the victims of the Sandy Hook.

North Texans Hold Vigil For Sandy...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

North Texans gathered in Richardson on Saturday night to honor and pay tribute to the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary Tragedy.

"I felt like why, why,  why kill those innocent children? why?" said Tina Hossaian. Hossain was part of the crowd who gathered in front of Fun Asia in Richardson.  

"This is a time of immense pain for America," said David Reid,  just one of the parents in this crowd.  "We have 3 grown children, the oldest is 30 today," said Reid. "We have had a lifetime of joy and I sense that people have been robbed of the joys that we have."

"It seems like they have traded a lifetime of joy for a lifetime of pain and shattered dreams," said Reid.

A candle light vigil marked the end of the ceremony. A symbol that North Texas is grieving with the rest of the nation. 

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dump Truck Driver Convicted in Fatal Crash

Written By Unknown on Senin, 10 Desember 2012 | 00.29

Leann Selkirk, seen here with her husband, was killed in a car crash in April 2007. Alberto Espinosa, the driver of the dump truck that jackknifed and landed on her car, has been convicted in her death.

advertisement

Click Here!

A Collin County man was found guilty Friday of causing a car accident more than five years ago that killed a kindergarten teacher and her unborn child.

Leeann Selkirk was 18 weeks pregnant when a dump truck jack-knifed and landed on her car.

A jury convicted the truck driver, Alberto Espinosa, of one count of criminally negligent homicide.

Selkirk was killed in April 2007 as she drove to work.

The case went to trial after five years of court delays, new judges and five prosecutors.

Selkirk's husband, Alex, told NBC 5 in May that he was frustrated by the delays. He said then that he still saw Espinosa around town.

"I see him almost every day driving down the road, and that's hard to see him and know what he took from me," he said.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Police: Man Tried to Set Fire to Stolen School Bus

Ellen Goldberg, NBC 5 News

Dallas police said a man tried to set himself and a stolen school bus on fire in the parking lot of a pizza restaurant.

Stolen School Bus Nearly Set on Fire

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Dallas police have arrested a man who allegedly tried to set himself and a stolen school bus on fire on Friday afternoon.

Police received a call about at about 3 p.m. about a suspicious man in a the parking lot of Peter Piper Pizza on West Jefferson Boulevard near Van Buren Avenue in North Oak Cliff.

Witnesses said the man was behind the wheel of an empty school bus and was trying to set a roll of paper towels on fire.

"All of a sudden, I see a man in a bus, and he's, like, tearing up something and he was holding it up in the air," Martin Munoz said. "The next thing you know, there are like five officer's cars coming in every direction, blocking him off."

Munoz and some of his friends were sharing a pizza at Peter Piper when the incident occurred.

"They were telling him to get off, and then that's when we saw something on fire, which was his shirt, because we saw him shirtless," Tanya Delrio said.

Police said they broke the door of the bus to prevent the man from injuring himself and then arrested him.

The school bus had been stolen at about 1 a.m. from Jesuit College Preparatory School in North Dallas. Investigators are still determining whether the man stole the bus or found it abandoned in the pizza restaurant's parking lot.

Police expect to file multiple charges against the man.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

6 Injured in Fort Worth Car Crash

advertisement

Click Here!

Six people, including four children, were injured in a car crash on an Interstate 35 on-ramp early Saturday.

The driver lost control of the sport utility vehicle on the southbound State Highway 121 on-ramp to northbound I-35 near Belknap Street at about midnight.

The SUV rolled several times before landing upright.

The two adults and four children who were in the SUV are all expected to recover.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gay Marriage: How the High Court Might Rule

advertisement

Click Here!

The U.S. Supreme Court made a historic decision when it chose Friday to address same-sex marriage, but the potential outcomes aren't as simple as deciding whether such unions are legal.

The high court could use California's Proposition 8 and the Defense of Marriage Act to issue broad decisions that would make it unconstitutional to block same-sex marriages or deny federal benefits to gay spouses. The court could also do the opposite and say such bans are not unlawful, and deal a considerable blow to the gay rights movement.

But legal scholars say the more likely scenario is a set of narrow rulings that support gay marriage but stop short of the kind of grand rulings of the past that settled matters of racial and gender discrimination.

"I think they will likely take the approach that would bite off the least ground," said Geoffrey Stone, a University of Chicago law professor and Supreme Court expert.

The options in each case vary widely.

On Proposition 8, the court could either uphold or reject California voters' 2008 ban on same-sex marriages -- passed in response to a state Supreme Court ruling that legalized gay marriage. But the court actually has four options, legal scholars say:

  • It could issue a far-reaching decision that declares that the Constitution protects same-sex marriages, thus invalidating similar bans in dozens of states around the country and allowing gay marriages to take place anywhere, said David Cruz, a University of Southern California law professor who specializes in civil rights and equality issues. This would uphold the decision by a federal judge who struck down Prop. 8 under the Constitution's equal protection clause.
     
  • The high court could rule that same-sex couples don't enjoy the same constitutional protections to marriage that opposite-sex couples do. That would keep Proposition 8 on the books, and essentially protect similar measures from being challenged elsewhere, Cruz said.
     
  • The justices could also rule that it was wrong for California to strip rights that had already existed, strike it down on those grounds, and leave it at that -- mirroring the narrow decision of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
     
  • It could also rule that the sponsors of Prop. 8 did not have proper legal standing to make its case. This would likely send the case backwards through the court system to the original trial court, Cruz said. The overturning of Prop. 8 would probably stand, but the decision wouldn't have any legal influence on cases outside of California.

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

Then there's the DOMA case, one of several challenges to the 1996 federal law that defined marriage as between a man and a woman. The legislation prohibits same-sex couples in states that have legalized gay marriage from an array of federal benefits, including tax deductions, Social Security survivor benefits and federal employee health insurance.

Several married gay people have challenged DOMA on grounds they were denied assistance they would have otherwise had access to if they were in a heterosexual union. Several of those cases reached the Supreme Court's doorstep this year, but the justices agreed on Friday to take just one, and put off announcements on the others.

Under President Obama, the Justice Department has stopped defending DOMA in court, and the Republican-led House of Representatives has taken up the fight.

The case before the high court involves 83-year-old Edith Windsor, a New York woman who married her longtime partner, Thea Spyer, in 2007 in Canada. Spyer died two years later, and left Windsor her entire estate. Because of DOMA, Windsor could not seek tax exemptions for the inheritance, leaving her with a $363,000 tax bill.

Again, the Supreme Court has a range of options. It could uphold DOMA as constitutional, which many legal scholars see as unlikely. Or the the justices could rule against DOMA and choose to apply one of several tiers of legal scrutiny, depending on how unfair it deems the ban on same-sex marriage. Which level of scrutiny they choose would influence the breadth of the ruling's impact, Cruz said.

The DOMA and Prop. 8 cases are expected to be argued in March and decided in June. As for the other DOMA challenges, they probably won't be denied, just delayed until after the court rules on these two cases, Cruz said.

American public opinion has shifted gradually toward a more lenient view of same-sex marriage in the years since DOMA, and since Proposition 8. On Election Day this year, voters in Maine, Maryland and Washington endorsed gay marriages, bringing to nine the number of states where they are legal (the District of Columbia also allows them).

In May, President Barack Obama said his feelings on the issue had evolved to the point that he was comfortable with same-sex marriage.

00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Three-Hour Standoff in SE Dallas Ends Peacefully

advertisement

Click Here!

Dallas police have arrested a 19-year-old without incident after a three-hour standoff early Saturday morning.

Police said David Ramirez locked himself inside van in the area of Elam Road and Sunburst Drive in southeast Dallas. A SWAT team was called in because police believed he had an assault rifle with him.

Nearby homes were evacuated as precaution.

Ramirez came out after about three hours with his hands up.

He faces charges of a prohibited weapon and sleeping in public.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Plano Christmas Parade Draws Thousands

Kevin Cokely, NBC 5 News

NBC 5 is a proud sponsor of the annual Plano parade.

Thousands Attend Plano Christmas Parade

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Tens of thousands of people attended Plano's annual Christmas Parade.

The Early Lions Club puts on the annual event.

"It's a tradition in Plano we think is very special that we enjoy doing every year," resident Mark Sims said. "The kids look forward to it. We get doughnuts and hot chocolate."

The marching bands of all nine Plano high schools performed in the parade, which had dozens of floats from civic groups and churches. Boy Scouts and other groups handed out candy to children.

The Lions say 4,200 people were in the parade.

Before the parade, which NBC 5 sponsors, the Lions held a pancake breakfast with Santa Clause where people donated canned goods to the Plano Food Pantries.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 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.


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cowboys Player Charged With Intoxication Manslaughter

Cowboys player Josh Brent makes a statement about the fatal crash that killed Jerry Brown Jr.

advertisement

Click Here!

Somber Cowboys Arrive in Cincinnati

The Cowboys appeared somber as they arrived at their hotel in Cincinnati hours after learning about the death of Jerry Brown Jr. and the arrest of Josh Brent.

Brent Charged in Crash That Killed Fellow Cowboy

A Dallas Cowboys player has been arrested on suspicion of intoxication manslaughter in connection with the death of a teammate.

More Photos and Videos

A Dallas Cowboys player was arrested Saturday on suspicion of intoxication manslaughter in connection with the death of a teammate.

 

Irving police said Josh Brent, 24, crashed in the 1400 block of the State Highway 114 service road at about 2:21 a.m.

Jerry Brown Jr., 25, a passenger in the vehicle, died at an area hospital. Brown was a practice-squad linebacker.

"I am devastated and filled with grief, filled with grief for the loss of my close friend and teammate Jerry Brown," Brent said from jail in a statement through his agent late Saturday night. "I will live with this horrific and tragic loss every day for the rest of my life."

Police said Brent, whose full name is Joshua A. Price-Brent, was speeding when his vehicle hit the outside curb, causing it to flip at least one time.

Investigators said the Mercedes was on fire when officers arrived.

"When our officers arrived on scene, Mr. Brent was removing or dragging Mr. Brown from the vehicle," Irving police spokesman Officer John Argumaniz said.

Irving police said investigators believe alcohol and speed were contributing factors in the crash. Brent was arrested at the crash scene after failing a field sobriety test. He was taken to an area hospital for a mandatory blood draw, police said.

"After he performed those tests, or based on his performance of those tests, along with our officers' observations and the conversations that they had with him, he was placed under arrest for driving while intoxicated," Argumaniz said. "Now, once our officers learned that Mr. Brown had passed away, then Mr. Price-Brent was under arrest for intoxication manslaughter."

Brent was booked into the Irving City Jail on one count of intoxication manslaughter.

The investigation into the crash is ongoing. Investigators are trying to determine where Brent and Brown spent the evening before the crash.

Irving police are asking anyone who witnessed the crash to contact police.

Brent remained in jail Saturday night awaiting a Sunday morning bond hearing. Dallas criminal defense attorney George Milner will represent Brent.

According to court records in Illinois, where he went to college, Brent was arrested in 2009 for driving under the influence, speeding and driving with a suspended license.

He served 30 days in jail for the misdemeanor DUI charge and finished probation in July 2011.

Brent had several off-the-field issues at Illinois and was briefly suspended before leaving school early for the draft.

Brent and Brown were teammates in Illinois and lived together in Irving.

"We are deeply saddened by the news of this accident and the passing of Jerry Brown," Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said in a statement Saturday. "At this time, our hearts and prayers and deepest sympathies are with the members of Jerry's family and all of those who knew him and loved him."

According to NBC 5 Sports Director Newy Scruggs, players were told about Brown's death before the team plane left for Cincinnati, where the Cowboys are scheduled to play Sunday.

Head coach Jason Garrett removed the media, guests and sponsors from the charter plane to deliver the news to the team, NBC 5's Matt Barrie reported. Some players were in shock, and the mood on the plane was somber, players told Barrie.

The team requested extra security when they arrived in Cincinnati. Team members were visibly sad and somber as they arrived at the team hotel.

Brent has played in all 12 games this season and has been a bigger presence on defense with starting nose guard Jay Ratliff battling injuries. He made his first career start the season opener against the New York Giants and has 35 tackles and 1 1/2 sacks.

The Cowboys signed Brown to their practice squad Oct. 24, but he hasn't been on the active roster.

 

NBC 5's Newy Scruggs and Matt Barrie and The Associated Press contributed to this report.


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

"Living Nativity" Scene Meant to Skirt Ban

advertisement

Click Here!

Nativity Scenes Will Rise Again in Santa Monica

Santa Monica will have nativity scenes after all, but they won't be at Palisades Park where the city has banned the long-term tradition. Beverly White reports from Santa Monica for the NBC4 News at 11 p.m. on Dec. 3, 2012.

Judge: Santa Monica Can Bar Nativity Display in Park

Santa Monica will not be showcasing any seasonal decorations, including nativity scenes, for Christmas this year. The Nativity Scene Committee blamed the Anti-Religion Activists for City Hall's decision to deny the traditional displays. Patrick Healy reports from Santa Monica for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on Nov. 19, 2012.

More Photos and Videos

The battle over nativity scenes in Santa Monica – the subject of a federal court ruling last month – took a new turn Saturday when a group staged a reenactment from scenes of Bethlehem with live participants.

The "living nativity" scene was meant to skirt a city ban on private winter displays in Palisades Park. The prohition enacted this past summer followed controversy that arose last year when atheist groups began competing for display space with Christian organizations.

So, on Saturday, in the clifftop park overlooking the Pacific Ocean, a group of Christians reenacted the scene of Jesus' birth in the open.

Costumed, arrayed on hay bales and surrounding a wooden manger, they sang Christmas carols, including "O Come, All Ye Faithful."

The City Council's vote in June to ban seasonal displays in the park (PDF) was upheld by a U.S. District Court judge in November after a challenge by a Christian group.

Rev. Patrick Mahoney, director of the Washington-based Christian Defense Coalition, said the living nativity was strategic.

"We noticed that all the bans were for unattended displays, so we thought, what about a live nativity? What about having people there?" said Mahoney, a Christian conservative activist who was joined by believers from across the Southern California region, including children.

"The season really isn't about the fight," said Jeff McCulty, pastor of the Church on Pearl in Santa Monica. "The season is all about the glory of God."

Before the fight over the displays last year, the city had allowed nativity scenes in Palisades Park for nearly six decades.

Last year, atheist groups used a new lottery system that granted access to the park displays to erect signs that stated "Happy Solstice" or asked questions about religious "myths." The atheist signs far outnumbered the religious displays, and there were many complaints about the displays, according to the city's ordinance banning them.

A group that has fought to keep nativity displays in Palisades Park said it intended to appeal the federal judge's ruling.

Meanwhile, a lighted nativity scene is set to be opened to the public on Sunday at 2700 Ocean Park Boulevard – a location that is private property.

00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More

Arrested Burglary Suspect Steals Police Car

Mark Schnyder, NBC 5 News

White Settlement police are searching for Darren Douglas Porter, police say he was caught on dashcam stealing a police car while still in handcuffs.

Police Car Stolen, Caught on Camera

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

White Settlement police say a man suspected of burglarizing an antique store escaped the back of a police cruiser and stole it.

Police said they caught 41-year-old Darren Douglas Porter burglarizing the shop in the 800 block of South Cherry Lane at about 7:20 a.m. Friday.

Officers detained Porter and cuffed him. They placed him in the back of the police car, shut the door and stepped away to talk to the store owner.

But Porter somehow got his cuffed hands in front of him and rolled down the window -- even though the back windows are not supposed to roll down.

"Unknown to us the back windows were still active so the suspect was able to hit the back window release to roll down the window and reach around and unlock the door from the outside," Lt. J.P. Bevering said. "We believe they came from the dealership with those disconnected, but they were not."

Police said Porter tiptoed to the driver's seat, got in and took off. White Settlement police received two 911 calls about a police car that was driving erratically.

He abandoned the police car at an apartment complex off Shenandoah Road and Calmont Avenue in West Fort Worth.

Police said their chances of finding Porter are "very good."

"We know who he is. We've dealt with him previously," Bevering said. "We know his associates, so now we're in the process of contacting them and keeping an eye out for him."

Porter will face additional charges of felony theft and escape in addition to charges related to the burglary.

Bevering said the police department would check its nine other patrol cars to make sure the windows can't be rolled down. It had never happened before, he said.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


00.29 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger