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President Suggests Opponent Has “Romnesia”

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 20 Oktober 2012 | 16.26

Julie Carey

President Barack Obama started using a new attack on Republican candidate and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney Friday, saying "Romnesia" was the reason for his changing positions. Northern Virginia Bureau Chief Julie Carey found out how it played with local Democrats and Republicans.

President Talks "Romnesia"...

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There's a new buzzword in President Barack Obama's re-election campaign: "Romnesia."

Thousands of supporters who went to the second rally at George Mason University in just two weeks roared as the president introduced the new term, one he says describes Republican candidate and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's shifting position on certain issues.

"He's changing up so much, backtracking, sidestepping," Obama said. "We've got to name this condition he's going through. I think it's called Romnesia."

Obama then used his new word in a series of sentences.

"If you say you are for equal pay for equal work but you keep refusing to say if you'll sign a bill that protects equal pay for equal work, you might have Romnesia," he said.

The President wrapped up his riff saying, "If you come down with a case of Romnesia, here's the good news: Obamacare covers pre-existing conditions.

"We've got a cure," he shouted. "We can make you well Virginia!"

But the Romney campaign had some choice words of its own, calling the president's speech a "comedy routine" intended to distract from the nation's economic woes.

"When you have no record to run on, you try to distract, divert and to attack the other side," said Del. Barbara Comstock, a Romney campaign co-chair. "And that's clearly what the campaign has done all summer and now through the fall you've seen that again. We're focused on talking directly to the American people."

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U.S Attorney Talks About Terror Plot

The U.S District Attorney Loretta Lynch gave the first interview on recent plot to bomb the Federal Reserve. Jonathan Dienst reports.

U.S Attorney: Terror Suspect One of...

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Fed Reserve Targeted in Van Bomb Plot

A suspected terrorist parked a van packed with what he thought was a 1,000-pound bomb next to the Federal Reserve building in Lower Manhattan and tried to detonate it Wednesday morning before he was arrested in a terror sting operation, authorities said. News 4's Jonathan Dienst reports.

Terror Plot Suspect's Queens Neighbors Shocked

The terror plot suspect Quazi Mohammad Rezwanul Ahsan Nafis had been living in Queens for the past two months as a transfer student. Neighbors are now reacting to the news. Gus Rosendale reports.

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The student from Bangladesh who allegedly plotted to set off a truck bomb outside the New York Federal Reserve Bank is one of the most dangerous terrorists the United States has faced since the Sept. 11 attacks, the U.S attorney handling the case said Friday.

"He came here wanting to carry out a terrorist attack and he came here already radicalized," said U.S attorney Loretta Lynch.  She added Mohammed Nafis is likely more dangerous than the group of terrorists in the 2009 Zazi suicide bomb plot who targeted New York City's subway system.

"I would say (Nafis) was as dangerous if not more so than the Zazi members," Lynch said.  "Nothing was going to stop him. This defendant was thinking ahead about how if he survives he can carry out bigger and better plots in the future."

Speaking out for the first time, Lynch said the feds were a bit lucky that Nafis contacted an informant about building a terror cell to carry out bombings in New York.  She said Nafis was plotting and reaching out to others weeks before the FBI knew he was in the country.

"This defendant came here to build his terror network.  It was only through some luck that he did make a connection through law enforcement and that we were then able to pretend to join his group."

Nafis was arrested Wednesday morning after parking a van he thought was loaded with more than 1000 pounds of explosives. But the device was inert because the FBI had secretly provided some non-working components. Officials insist the public was not in any immediate danger as Nafis was being closely monitored.

Lynch said the investigation continues into whether Nafis had al Qaeda contacts overseas. She said he did try to recruit others here in the United States but was not immediately successful. And she pointed out he thought he had the FBI undercover agent as a terrorist accomplice.  

FBI, NYPD and Homeland Security officials have said Nafis was radicalized by watching online jihadist videos and reading al Qaeda's "Inspire" Magazine.

"He was not someone who learned sitting at the feet of bin Laden but he was inspired by him," Lynch said.  

Investigators said he was capable of building a bomb and had been mapping targets for weeks.

Overseas, relatives of Nafis said he was a good man who must have been somehow set up. Lynch said,"It's not the government that is targeting these young people.  It is al Qaeda that is targeting these people.  And we've got to break that hold."

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Riders Stranded on Stratosphere for 2 Hours

NBC 5 News

This raw video shows the lowering to the ground of the 24 riders who were stranded on the Stratosphere at the State Fair of Texas when the ride lost power late Friday night.

RAW VIDEO: Stratosphere Stranded...

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Stratosphere Stalls With 24 Riders

One of the State Fair of Texas' tallest rides stranded two dozen riders in the air after it lost power.

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It just wasn't the State Fair of Texas' day.

About 11 hours after fair icon Big Tex went up in flames, one of the fair's tallest rides malfunctioned, stranding two dozen riders in the air for just more than two hours on Friday.

Riders in the Stratosphere's hanging seats were stuck dangling about 165 feet in air when the ride lost power at about 9:11 p.m.

Carol Stradtman, one of the stranded riders, told NBC 5 by phone that all of the lights went off and the ride just stopped.

"It's extremely scary," she said.

The 24 riders were all on the ground by 11:20 p.m. Dallas Fire-Rescue said all of the occupants were safely removed from the ride after it was manually lowered.

Dallas police said fair officials provided the riders with blankets and refreshments once they were on the ground and that the fire department was on hand to provide any needed medical attention.

State Fair of Texas representatives said the Stratosphere would remain closed for the remainder of the fair's run.

This year's fair ends Sunday.

Power was restored to the ride by 10:50 p.m., but there appeared to be some issue that prevented the ride from immediately lowering its passengers.

Stradtman told NBC 5 that someone had climbed the center of the tower at about 9:40 p.m. and appeared to manually try to bring them down. She said a friend who was not on the ride said there was some kind of mechanical difficulty.

No injuries were reported, Dallas police said. Two Dallas Fire-Rescue technical rescue trucks were at the fair to help.

The Stratosphere, a 200-foot tall tower, turns and swings riders out over the fair.

Friday's woes are not the first for the Stratosphere.

The Dutch-made ride stalled at the Minnesota State Fair twice in as many days in August, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reported, as well as during the ride's debut in Wisconsin.

NBC 5's Ray Villeda and Ellen Goldberg contributed to this report.

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HS Student's Body Recovered at PK Lake

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 19 Oktober 2012 | 16.26

Prayer vigil Sunday night for Jacob Logan at Coppell HS

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Search teams recovered a body at Possum Kingdom Lake on Thursday night, authorities said.

Search crews have been looking for the body of Jacob Logan, a Coppell High School football player who never resurfaced after cliff diving at the lake on Sunday.

Brazos River Authority spokeswoman Judi Pierce said teams found Logan's body at 9:21 p.m.

Pierce said the justice of the peace made a positive identification, and his next of kin was notified.

Logan was missing since Sunday afternoon after jumping from cliffs along the lake that are more than 20 feet high into water that is up to 65 feet deep. Authorities said he briefly surfaced at about 1:45 p.m. and then disappeared.

Divers began looking for Logan on Sunday afternoon.

Friends said Logan, a senior wide receiver, was a star athlete.

"He was Superman," Tyler Jones, a close friend, said earlier this week. "He was the best at everything he ever did -- best football player, best basketball player, best soccer player, great student."

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CDC Says It Advised Aerial Spraying Weeks Earlier

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Was Dallas County's health commissioner slow to react to a key piece of advice from federal health officials as West Nile virus spread this summer?

The NBC 5 Investigates team has learned that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggested the county "strongly consider" aerial spraying for mosquitoes nearly a month before Dallas County launched the planes.

In emails obtained through an open-records request, NBC 5 Investigates learned about conference calls Dallas County Health and Human Services Director Zach Thompson had with the CDC.

The agency recommended the county consider aerial spraying in a July 25 conference call, said Janet McAllister, the CDC official who led the call.

"We asked them to optimize their ground spraying, and we also asked them to strongly consider the aerial spraying," she said. "And part of the conversation was what are the pros and cons of doing treatment by air."

"The option that was available to treat the largest area most efficiently was the aerial application," said Roger Nasci, head of the CDC's Arboviral Diseases Branch, which coordinates CDC's efforts to fight West Nile virus.

But when asked about what CDC said in the July 25 conference call, Thompson told NBC 5 Investigates that it had "incorrect information."

"You have provided misinformation, and you need to get your facts straight," he said.

"I've set the record straight that the recommendation you're talking about is a recommendation that the CDC looks at overall planning," Thompson said. "First you do surveillance, you do enhanced spraying, and then you, you, go to aerial spraying."

Over several weeks, NBC 5 Investigates called Thompson and sent emails asking him to talk about how he handled the crisis. He responded in one e-mail: "There will be no interview."

NBC 5 Investigates tried to talk with him at the health department offices. Thompson disputed what the CDC told NBC 5 Investigates -- that the agency said on July 25 that it was time to look at aerial spraying.

"The information you're pointing out is incorrect," he said. "There is a plan, and we followed that plan, so your information and your story that you put in place is incorrect, so have a good day."

Thompson would not give NBC 5 Investigates his version of what he believes the CDC said in the July 25 conference call.

However, Dallas County should not have been surprised by a recommendation in July for aerial spraying.

The CDC's written West Nile virus guidelines say cities should "consider a coordinated widespread aerial adulticide application" when a widespread outbreak reaches Risk Level 5. The West Nile virus situation that Dallas County faced on July 25 met the criteria for Risk Level 5.

Five days after the July 25 conference call, Thompson continued to say that ground spraying was working to end the epidemic.

Dallas Revisits West Nile Virus Attack Plan

An NBC 5 investigation has found that Dallas County did not do some of the key things in the months leading up to the West Nile virus epidemic that experts recommend to identify and then slow the spread of the virus.

WNV Fight: Comparing Dallas to Sacramento

The plan for fighting West Nile virus in Sacramento, Calif., could offer lessons for Dallas and Dallas County.

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"We think education and targeted spraying is working," he said at a July 30 press conference. "Why we're seeing more neuroinvasive cases than anyone in surrounding counties, we don't know. We'd just be speculating."

As days passed, more people got sick.

The county had 36 human cases of West Nile virus and two deaths on July 23, the week of the conference call with the CDC. By July 27, Dallas County had 82 cases and three deaths. And by Aug. 3, the numbers had jumped to 123 cases and six deaths.

Jay Wortham was sitting by his mother's hospital bed on Aug. 3 as she slipped into a coma. Doctors said she probably would not make it.

"I'm somewhat philosophical about it," he said. "You have to accept. You have to accept what's put on your plate."

Margorie Wortham died Aug. 5.

That same day, a group of concerned doctors met about the outbreak.

Dr. James Luby, an infectious disease specialist at UT Southwestern Medical Center, said he had not talked with the CDC but thought Dallas County needed to conduct aerial spraying because so many people were brain-damaged and dying.

"People felt these were terribly ill patients and that they, we, needed to prevent more of these cases from occurring," he said.

Luby and other doctors took their concerns to the Dallas County Medical Society, which held an emergency meeting on August 5, and wrote a letter to the health department urging it to launch aerial spraying.

But Thompson recommended more intense ground spraying at a county commissioners meeting two days later.

"And we're going to take it block by block, be able to do it three nights in a row in one area and move to another area," he said.

According to a video of the Aug. 7 meeting, Thompson mentioned that he had spoken with CDC. But he did not tell commissioners at that meeting what the CDC says it told Thompson -- that the county should strongly consider aerial spraying.

County commissioners told Thompson to stick with ground spraying.

"I definitely believe a targeted approach that we're doing is the right approach at the time," Commissioner Elba Garcia said

When reporters asked Thompson about aerial spraying after the meeting, he said he needed to see more research to prove it was safe.

"I'm looking for vetted information from cities who've done spraying in urban areas," he said.

The CDC told NBC 5 Investigates that it had sent Thompson's department research about a week earlier, after the July 25 conference call, showing how aerial spraying had been used safely in other major cities, including Sacramento, Calif., where aerial spraying is frequently used to kill infected mosquitoes.

After the commissioners meeting on Aug. 7, County Judge Clay Jenkins decided to take stronger action. In his role as emergency management coordinator, Jenkins declared a health emergency on Aug. 9 and started talking directly with experts, including the CDC and Texas Health Commissioner Dr. David Lakey.

As Lakey studied the Dallas County data more closely, he saw no way that ground spraying alone was going to end the epidemic.

"I couldn't have gotten enough trucks to Dallas County to be able to cover Dallas County as a whole, so there was that logistical challenge that it would have taken much too long to get the coverage rates you would need to get," he said.

Dallas County began aerial spraying Aug. 16 after Jenkins authorized it and got cities on board. By then, the county had 230 human cases and 10 deaths.

After the planes flew, the number of new human cases dropped from about 30 or 40 per week to near zero, according to data from the state health department.

Dr. James Haley, a West Nile virus researcher at UT Southwestern Medical Center, called Jenkins' decision "heroic."

"And that ended the epidemic -- it just cut it right off," he said. "He saved lives, and he saved people from having brain damage. And there will be some people who will get to know their grandchildren because of that decision."

The day before the planes took off, Thompson said he supported the decision to aerial spray.

"We're in a fight we can't win from the ground level," he said.

But if CDC was recommending that the county consider aerial spraying weeks earlier, it appears Thompson did not share that information with Jenkins, the top official who could authorize the aerial spraying.

In a statement, Jenkins told NBC 5 Investigates: "My first communication from anyone regarding the possibility of aerial spraying for the 2012 WNV outbreak was August 6th, 2012."

Aug. 6 is 12 days after the date the CDC says it recommended that the county consider aerial spraying.

Wortham said he knows that spraying even a few weeks sooner would have probably been too late to make a difference for his mother but wonders if it might have saved others who died.

"We're talking about a life-and-death epidemic," he said.

Still, Wortham said he is holding back his anger toward the people in charge.

"No, I'm not angry," he said. "They're going to have to carry that on their own conscience."

16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

State Senate District 10 Candidates Debate

Omar Villafranca, NBC 5 News

Dr. Mark Shelton and Sen. Wendy Davis did not hold back during their debate Thursday night. Shelton is challenging Davis, the incumbent, in the race for State Senate District 10.

Shelton, Davis Don't Hold Back in Debate

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Don't be surprised if the two candidates in State Senate District 10 don't send each other a Christmas card.

Dr. Mark Shelton and the incumbent, Sen. Wendy Davis, went at each other at a debate on Thursday at Texas Christian University.

NBC 5's Omar Villafranca was one of the moderators for the debate.

The two candidates differed on the expansion of Medicaid (Shelton is against; Davis is for).

The most heated part of the debate came when ethics and lobbying were brought up. Shelton has accused of Davis of "peddling influence," a charge Davis denies.

"I think it's important if you have people in Austin representing you, then we need to know where their money is coming from and that plays into the whole lobby of who is Influencing the law in the Texas and who is getting rich off of it," Shelton told the crowded room.

"I have complied with every ethics law in the state of Texas," Davis answered. "My law partner and I are very proud of the work we do. We have filed every bit of paperwork the TEC requires us to do."

She said the allegations are part of Shelton's plan to deflect from his record.

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Written By Unknown on Kamis, 18 Oktober 2012 | 16.26

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Elementary School Coach Accused of Indecency With Child

Omar Villafranca, NBC 5 News

A PE coach at an elementary school in Murphy has been charged with indecency with a child by sexual contact. Todd Alan Reich, 38, is free on bond.

Elementary Coach Charged With Indecency Wit...

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A Plano Independent School District elementary school coach is on paid leave after he was accused of indecency with a child.

Todd Alan Reich, 38, was booked into the Collin County Jail on Tuesday on one count of indecency with a child by sexual contact.

Reich bonded out on Wednesday.

The website of Martha Hunt Elementary School, which is in Murphy, lists Reich as a PE coach.

On Wednesday, parents received a note from the school and district about the investigation.

Mike Graves, the parent of a second-grader at Hunt Elementary, said he was shocked.

"I'm totally blown away," he said. "I can't believe that something like this actually happened. This is, I mean, it's close to home."

The investigation comes just two years after another Hunt Elementary teacher was accused of similar charges with another student.

Joseph Peter Garbarini was later sentenced to more than 60 years in prison.

PISD provided a copy of the note to parents:

Dear Parents,

In an effort to keep our families informed, I am writing to share information regarding a matter that we are managing at our school. We were notified last night of the arrest of a Hunt Elementary School employee by the Collin County Sheriff's Department. An investigation regarding alleged inappropriate behavior with a former student is ongoing and details remain confidential.

Hunt Elementary and Plano ISD administrators are working in full cooperation with local authorities, and the teacher has been placed on administrative leave. We are committed to continuing to provide an outstanding education to all of our students and will minimize any impact this transition may have on them.

Our team at Hunt Elementary would like you to know that the security of our students is of the utmost importance and we feel it is imperative to keep the lines of communication with our families open as we work together to maintain an environment of trust and safety. We will keep you informed appropriately as details become available. If you have questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to call on us. Any information regarding this investigation should be forwarded to the Murphy Police Department at 972.468.4200. Thank you for your assistance in keeping our school focused on learning.

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Man Accused of Having 2 Wives in Separate Cities

Kevin Cokely, NBC 5 News

A 38-year-old man has charged with bigamy after his first wife called police when she learned about her husband's second wife in another North Texas city.

North Texas Man Arrested on Bigamy Charge

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A North Texas man is charged with bigamy, accused of having two unsuspecting wives in two Tarrant County cities.

Germaine Gardea, 38, lived in Grapevine with his first wife until May, when she found out he had another wife in Arlington.

He was arrested and charged with bigamy after the first wife alerted police. She found out what was happening when Gardea's second wife called her after discovering that Gardea was paying her bills.

Investigators say Gardea married his second wife on the same day he filed for divorce from the first but then didn't show up for the hearing.

Police said Gardea lived with both for almost three years. Investigators said he was able to pull it off because he traveled so much for his job.

Until about six months ago, he was a flight instructor for a company based at the Grand Prairie Airport.

Now, his first wife has filed for divorce.

Gardea posted a $2,000 bond to get out of jail. In returning a request for comment he said he's "trying to put all this behind me" and refused further comment.

More: Grand Prairie husband, married to two women, charged with bigamy

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