Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Hit-and-Run Driver Kills 6-Year-Old Boy

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 26 Januari 2013 | 16.26

Andres Gutierrez, NBC 5 News

Grand Prairie police hope the public can help track down a dark hatchback car responsible for hitting and killing 6-year-old John Raidy Thursday night.

Hit and Run Driver Kills 6-Year-Old Boy

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Grand Prairie police are looking for the driver who hit and killed a 6-year-old boy Thursday night.

Police say John Paul Raidy, a first-grader at Austin Elementary, was crossing the street with his mother and sister at North Carrier Parkway and Holiday Hills Drive at 7:30 p.m. when he was hit by a car.

"This is one of the most horrific scenes I have ever seen, as far the dynamics of the crash and the circumstances surrounding it," said Grand Prairie police Sgt. Eric Hansen.

Police said the driver ran a red light that investigators determined had been red for 14 seconds.

The collision, police said, was so powerful that Raidy landed on the hood of the car and was carried 100 yards before landing on the pavement.

"I pray they grow a conscience and turn themselves in for doing this to a 6-year-old boy," said John's mother, Lauren Raidy.

Investigators said the vehicle that hit him stopped briefly and then drove off southbound on Carrier Parkway.

"We believe that the driver is aware of what occurred and, whether they got scared or what made them leave the scene, we hope they will contact us," said Hansen.

Raidy was taken by ambulance to Arlington Memorial Hospital where he died.

"He's just gone. I'll never be able to hold my son again, I'll never be able to tell him that I love him," said Lauren Raidy.

The vehicle is described as a black or very dark-colored 4-door hatchback.

Police released a traffic camera photo (left) of the small dark hatchback involved in the fatal hit-and-run.

Grand Prairie police said the vehicle will likely have minor damage to the front bumper and hood.

Anyone with information about the vehicle is encouraged to contact the Grand Prairie Police Department's Traffic Division at 972-237-8790.

This is the second traffic fatality in Grand Prairie this year.

Grief counselors spent the day at Austin Elementary to help students and staff.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Former Prosecutor: Tarrant County DA Sexually Harassed Her

advertisement

Click Here!

A former Tarrant County prosecutor claimed she was sexually harassed by District Attorney Joe Shannon "over a long period of time" and later received a $375,000 settlement, according to documents released late Friday.

The former employee, Sabrina Sabin, said Shannon made graphic sexual comments to her and later retaliated against her.

Shannon denies the accusations.

On a business trip in 2008 in San Antonio, Shannon made comments about "seeing my breasts and how good they look," she wrote in a handwritten statement.

She said similar comments continued weekly when they returned from the trip.

"Joe would constantly make comments about my breasts and tell me he would like to see them and touch them," she said. "He would say things like, 'If you ever decide to surprise me and show them to me, no one has to know.'"

Early on, she said, she feared retaliation.

"I knew that if I said anything or made an issue out of being sexually harrassed, that I would possibly loose my job or that he would make my life miserable," she wrote. "I just kept quite and continued to focus on doing my job well." [Eds: The spellings "harrassed," "loose" and "quite" are in the original document.]

She said she worked directly for Shannon when he supervised the economic crimes unit before he became district attorney.

"It wasn't until I moved up into the position as an economic crimes prosecutor under Joe Shannon that things at work started becoming uncomfortable and at times unbearable and stressful," she said. "I didn't know what to say. Things are never going to change. This is never going to get better until he is gone."

In a written statement Friday, Shannon, 72, denied the accusations.

"An objective review of the documents will clearly demonstrate what I have said all along -- there are two sides to this controversy," he said. "The claims have been vigorously denied and disputed. I did not agree to the payment of any money."

In April 2009, Sabin said Shannon told her he had a dream about her.

"We were somewhere like a locker room or swimming pool dressing room and that he followed me in and took my shirt and showed him my breasts and that one breast had two nipples," she said. "He said they looked great though."

She said the conversation continued in graphic details about dreams Shannon said he had.

In January 2009, Sabin wrote she bought a pen that recorded audio to document inappropriate conversations.

In April 2009, she said 'Joe came up from behind me and grabbed and petted my hair. He then leaned down and smelled it."

Earlier, in 2008, she described an incident she said happened in the office after co-workers had left.

"When I turned around, Joe slapped my ass. I could not believe what had just happened. I knew what it would mean for my career if I said anything but I was furious."

In an e-mail last April, Sabin wrote that she was concerned the county was retaliating against her after she complained.

"I need my job and do not want to be retaliated against," she wrote. "I hope this can be resolved in a peaceful and discreet manner."

In June, she asked that Shannon no longer contact her on the telephone.

The DA's office released documents in the case late Friday after Attorney General Greg Abbott ruled they were public.

Tarrant County reached a $375,000 settlement with the woman last September. Part of the deal included a confidentiality agreement, but Sabin later wrote she wanted to withdraw from it.

Late Friday, Sabin told NBC 5 she is glad the details of her allegations have been released.

"I'm really glad everything has come out because the whole thing was I wanted the truth to come out," she said in an interview. "I stand by my diary and what I wrote in my diary 100 percent -- 100 percent. Everything I wrote in there was true."

She defended waiting several years to report the alleged harassment because she was worried about losing her job.

"It just kept going and I just at the time felt like enough was enough and maybe I needed to speak up to prevent someone else from going through the same thing," she said.

Media organizations requested county documents on the case under the state's open records law, but county officials argued they should be kept secret and asked the attorney general for an opinion on whether the documents must be released. The attorney general ruled many of them were public.

Shannon was elected at the age of 24 to the Texas House of Representatives. He joined the Tarrant County District Attorney's office in 1972, where he was later the lead prosecutor in the famous Cullen Davis murder case.

In May 2009, he was serving as chief of the economic crimes unit when then-District Attorney Tim Curry died. Shannon was appointed to replace him and later was elected to the post.

He is the former president of the Tarrant County Bar Association and an adjunct professor of law at Texas Wesleyan University.


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Three Arrested for Trying to Drive Black Family out of Compton

Michelle Valles

LA County sheriff's deputies are investigating two hate crimes in Compton. In one case, authorities say gang members repeatedly terrorized an African-American family. Michelle Valles reports from Compton for the NBC4 News at 6 p.m. on January 25, 2013.

LA Sheriff's Investigating Compton...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Two men and a teenage boy were arrested in connection with a series of race-based attacks on an African American family in an attempt to drive them out of Compton, in Los Angeles County, sheriff's officials said.

A group of Latino males who claimed to be in a local street gang used metal pipes and shouted racial epithets at a black man who had recently moved into the neighborhood, sheriff's officials said.

One of the suspects, identified as Efren Marquez, 21, allegedly pointed a gun at the victim and threatened to shoot him while he was being beaten with a metal pipe allegedly by a second suspect, identified as Jeffrey Aguilar, 19, officials said.

After the attack, the group left in a black sport utility vehicle.

Marquez and Aguilar returned 30 minutes later with a group of up to 20 gang members, who surrounded the front of the victims' home shouting racial epithets and telling them that members of the African American race (using the 'n-word') were not allowed to live in the neighborhood, sheriff's officials said.

An unidentified member of the group threw a beer bottle through the front living room window.

Sheriff's officials said the suspects continued to drive by the home of the family -- which includes four children -- several times a day, shouting racial epithets while ordering the family to leave the neighborhood.

Aguilar, Marquez and a juvenile were arrested on Thursday, said Capt. Mike Parker of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Headquarters Bureau.

They face hate crime charges.

Anyone with information is asked to contact Sheriff's Operation Safe Streets Bureau gang investigators at (310) 603-3100 or the Compton Sheriff's Station at (310) 605-6500.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Car Thief Drives Off With Sleeping Toddler

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 25 Januari 2013 | 16.26

Kristi Nelson, NBC 5 News

A man stole a family's vehicle Thursday afternoon with a toddler inside. The thief drove about 15 minutes before letting the child out. Police are still searching for the thief and the stolen vehicle.

Man Steals Car With Sleeping...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

A man stole a car with a sleeping toddler inside in Fort Worth on Thursday afternoon.

Fabiola Garcia said the thief jumped into her still-running car when she stopped at a garage sale at about 3:30 p.m. in the 1900 block of South Henderson Street.

Her son, 2-year-old Ricardo Calderon, was sleeping inside the car.

"They came across the street and told me the little boy was in the car, and I called the police back and told them it was a kidnapping," witness Bobby Duncan said.

Police say the car thief didn't go very far before stopping the car and letting little boy out about 15 minutes later.

Garcia said she thanks God that Ricardo was not harmed, and the family is happy he and his three brothers are all safe.

"I hope they catch that man," a cousin said. "He should pay for what he did."

The stolen car is still missing, and police are searching for the thief.

And tonight police are still searching for both the thief and the stolen car.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man Accused of Practicing Dentistry Without License

advertisement

Click Here!

A Plano man is behind bars, charged in connection to practicing dentistry without a license.

Plano police served an arrest and search warrant at the home and makeshift dentist's office on the 1900 block of East Park Boulevard Thursday morning.

Officers arrested Jose Santiago Delao, 63, and confiscated all of his equipment that he used in his business, according to police.

"We were given information that this is apparently starting to become a problem," said David Tilley, Plano police spokesperson.  "Probably not just in this field, but in other fields as well."

Tilley told NBC 5 a patient of Delao's had come to them to report concerns about work Delao had done on them, and that they were concerned about the legality of his practice.

Plano police worked with the Texas State Board of Dental Examiners, the state licensing agency for dentists, to confirm that Delao does not have a license to practice dentistry within the state. 

Investigators are currently working to find out if Delao has legitimate dental experience in any other state or country.

A car was parked in Delao's driveway Thursday night, hours after his arrest. 

A woman inside the car said she was dropping off her mother for an appointment to have a tooth pulled, unaware Delao was behind bars and his business had been shut down.

She told NBC 5 her mother and other relatives had been seeing Delao for at least four years.  She said her mother does not have dental insurance and always pays in cash.

The woman pulled from her wallet a business card for Delao that appears to have been professionally made.  The business card lists the procedures he performs and the services he provides, including "dental lab tech, orthodontic adults - children, cranio-facial (TMJ) and orthognathic surgery appliances" as well as "full and partial dentures," "relines," "flippers, etc," and "emergencies same day."

Investigators now want to speak with other patients of Delao's to determine the scope of his practice and to determine if anyone has been harmed while under his care.


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Confession: Horror Movie Gave Teen Idea to Kill Family

advertisement

Click Here!

A Parker County 17-year-old wrote in a confession released Thursday that the horror movie remake of "Halloween" gave him the idea to kill his mother and sister.

Jake Evans is on trial for the Oct. 3 slayings of his 15-year-old sister, Mallory, and mother, Jami in their upscale Aledo home. The confession was introduced as evidence.

In a four-page written confession to police hours after his arrest, Evans said he had watched the remake of "Halloween" three times earlier that week.

The 2007 Rob Zombie film is about a 10-year-old boy who murders several people and kills a number of others 15 years later.

"While watching it, I was amazed at how at ease the boy was during the murders and how little remorse he had," Evans wrote. "Afterward, I was thinking to myself it would be the same for me when I kill someone."

Later, as his mother and sister watched the presidential debate that night, he said he "just sat in the living room thinking about how I was going to kill my family."

He wrote that he got a knife.

"I went back upstairs and kept pacing back and forth imagining killing Mallory," he said. "Thoughts of causing her pain kept entering my mind and were really bothering me. But then I'd think about the times she hurt my feelings."

He later knocked on her bedroom door and asked her to watch the comedy movie "Water Boy."

Then he changed his plans.

"After a while, I thought to myself that if I were to kill my mom and Mallory, I wouldn't want them to feel anything, so I decided to kill them both with the .22 revolver I stole from my Grandpa," he wrote.

He said he thought about it some more.

"I then spent probably over an hour walking nervously around the house thinking how life will never be the same and how I would never see them again," he wrote.

He said he knocked on sister's door again and told her their mother needed her.

"She came out and out of the corner of her eye she saw me pointing the gun at her," he said. "She thought I was joking and told me that I was freaking her out. I shot her in the back and then the head."

He then went to the study and shot his mother three times.

"In shock, I ran to my room and was screaming at the top of my lungs that I am really messed up and that I killed my mom and sister," he wrote.

"As I emptied the shells on my bed, I heard noizes (sic) and realized that Mallory was still alive," he said. "While I loaded the gun back up, I was shouting that I was sorry and then ran as fast as I could to kill her. I made sure my mom was dead and shot her again in the head."

He said he placed the gun on the counter and called 911.

Sheriff's deputies found the bodies of his mother and sister and arrested him.

In the last lines of his confession, he wrote: "I know now though that I'm done with killing. It's the most dreadful and terrifying thing I will ever experience. And what happened last night will haunt me forever."


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

ME: Southlake Carroll Students Died of Toxic Mix of Drugs

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 24 Januari 2013 | 16.26

From left, Cullen Marino, 22, has been charged with two counts of criminally negligent homicide. Kyle McNutt, center, and Chase Nunez were found dead at Marino's Grapevine home.

advertisement

Click Here!

Details Emerge in Death of Two Carroll HS Students

A Grapevine police search affidavit reveals drug paraphernalia was found in the home where two Carroll Senior High School students were found dead Saturday from what appears drug overdoses.

Grapevine 911 Call Released

Grapevine police release a 911 call where the caller reports two dead children in his home. The man's son has been implicated in their deaths.

More Photos and Videos

Two high school students who were found dead earlier this month died of mixed-drug toxicity, according to the Tarrant County Medical Examiner's Office.

Kyle McNutt, 17, and Chase Nunez, 18, were found dead in a Grapevine home Jan. 5. Both lived in Grapevine and attended Carroll Senior High School.

The Tarrant County medical examiner has ruled that the McNutt and Nunez both died of a toxic mix of heroin, codeine, alprazolam and diphenhydramine.

Police have said that the teenagers were hanging out with Cullen Marino, 22, the night of Jan. 4. His father called 911 the next morning and told the operator that he "might have two dead kids upstairs in my house."

Investigators said Marino moved them to a different room in his house instead of calling 911 after he discovered during the night that they were unresponsive.

Marino is charged with criminally negligent homicide.

Police discovered narcotics and drug paraphernalia in the home, according to a search affidavit.

The document says officers "observed, in plain view, a clear baggie with powdery residue on the table beside the bed..." The document goes on to describe, in an adjacent room, a spoon believed to contain heroin residue and what appeared to be the makings of a mobile meth lab.

According to the affidavit, pipes and bongs for smoking marijuana, a small bottle of Xanax, white powder, an orange pill, a baggie containing possible marijuana and scales were all removed from the home.


Previous Coverage:

Drug Paraphernalia Found in Home Where Teens Died
Two Southlake Carroll Students Dead From Possible Overdose; Man, 22, Charged

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Vigil Remembers Victims of Domestic Violence

Ray Villeda, NBC 5 News

The city of Dallas held a candlelight vigil Wednesday night to remember victims of domestic violence.

Vigil Remembers Victims of...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

The city of Dallas held a candlelight vigil Wednesday night to remember victims of domestic violence.

City leaders hosted the vigil at City Hall Plaza in memory of loved ones lost to domestic abuse.

There were roughly 50 people in attendance, including religious leaders and the Domestic Violence Task Force, to help raise awareness about the issue.

One of the attendees was Casey Cox. He lost his sister Karen Cox Smith, just weeks ago. Police say her estranged husband, Ferdinand Smith, shot her to death at a UT Southwestern parking garage.

The couple had been separated. Smith was hoping to get a divorce.

"I have found myself over the last couple of weeks asking why did this have to happen to my sister," said Cox.

The city's Domestic Violence Task Force was formed in response to the problem of family violence.

The task force is looking into two programs, one to help religious leaders counsel victims, the other program to help children who have witnesses violence at home.

Cox said he wants to help the city as it looks to create programs to help victims dealing with abuse.

"Karen would want the woman who is here tonight going through similar situation to know you too can have the courage to change your life before it's too late," said Cox.

Karen Cox Smith was a mother of three children.

The vigil was held on the eve of one of the worst domestic abuse cases Dallas County prosecutors say they've ever seen – the trial for Jose Arreola. Arreola is accused of raping and mutilating his ex-girlfriend.
 

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Retired Female Pilot Praises Decision on Combat

Scott Gordon, NBC 5 News

A retired U.S. Air Force pilot is praising the military's decision to lift the ban on women in combat.

"What an Exciting Day for Women...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

A retired U.S. Air Force pilot from Mineral Wells is praising the military's decision to lift the ban on women in combat.

"What an exciting day for women in the military," retired Col. Kimberly Olson said. "I couldn't be more proud of our nation."

Olson helped pave the way for women in the military, flying more than 4,000 hours in places such as Iraq and Bosnia.

"Women have been involved in this arena for a long time," she said. "And combat knows no gender."

Women make up about 15 percent of active military members but until now, they've officially been barred from direct combat roles.

In practice, Olson said, women have already been there and done that.

"Women have been in combat, I would argue, for the last decade since we've been on two fronts -- in Iraq and Afghanistan," Olson said. "The area of operation is where combat occurs."

She said old stereotypes have changed.

"The men of this generation of military members have had women next to the men on the soccer fields, they've sat next to them in engineering classes, they have strong mothers as role models, they've been beaten up by their sisters, so women in nontraditional roles is not an anomaly anymore," she said.

Olson now runs a nonprofit group, Grace Under Fire, that helps female veterans.

She said women coming home from wars need the same support as men -- especially with more in future combat roles.

It was just a matter of time before the Pentagon reversed its ban on women in combat, she said, adding that the timing of Wednesday's announcement was still a surprise.

"That's what I'm most proud of," she said. "My generation of women who served made women going into combat a nonevent."

More: Grace Under Fire

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Jay Ratliff Arrested on Suspicion of DUI

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 23 Januari 2013 | 16.26

advertisement

Click Here!

A Dallas Cowboys player was arrested on suspicion of intoxicated driving in Grapevine on Monday night.

Defense lineman Jay Ratliff was arrested after a collision with an 18-wheeler in the 2800 block of East Highway 114. Grapevine police said Ratliff refused sobriety tests at the scene and was arrested.

Police obtained a search warrant, and he was taken to a hospital for a mandatory blood draw.

The results of the test are pending.

Ratliff was released on $500 bail on Tuesday morning.

The driver of the 18-wheeler was not injured, Grapevine police said. Ratliff complained of minor injuries but refused medical treatment, police said.

The Dallas Cowboys declined to comment on Ratliff's arrest.

NBC 5's Ellen Goldberg contributed to this report.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Minor Quake Reported in Irving

advertisement

Click Here!

A minor earthquake has been reported in the Irving area Tuesday night.

The epicenter of the 3.0-magnitude quake was 5 miles north-northwest of Irving at a depth of 10 miles, according to the website of the U.S. Geological Survey's Earthquake Hazards Program.

Numerous residents in Euless, Farmers Branch and Irving reported feeling the shaking at about 10:16 p.m.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Video Shows Stunt Plane Nearly Hitting Camera Person

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

A video on YouTube shows a stunt airplane nearly slamming into a person with a camera on a Lancaster Municipal Airport runway.

Stunt Plane's Close Call With Photographer

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Video of a close call with a stunt airplane has received thousands of views since someone posted it on YouTube on Monday.

The video shows a stunt airplane owned by Lancaster-based Viper Airshows nearly slamming into a person with a camera on the runway of the Lancaster Municipal Airport.

Someone on an all-terrain vehicle can be seen riding around in the background.

Efforts to reach the pilot of the plane were unsuccessful as of Tuesday night.

Lancaster City Manager Opal Mauldin-Robertson said the pilot has an aerobatic waiver with the Federal Aviation Administration that allows him to perform practice routines for his stunt shows at the airport, provided he does so during the day in good weather, stays within specifically outlined boundaries and follows other safety measures.

"As long as he's in compliance with what's required of him in the FAA waiver, he doesn't need to come in and say, 'I'm going to do a practice run,'" she said after viewing the video.

Mauldin-Robertson said she confirmed Tuesday that the pilot's special waiver was still current. She questioned the role of the photographer and the person on the ATV, but said she would reserve any judgment or comment until a trained eye could see the video and speak directly with the pilot.

"We are reaching out to the FAA and making them aware that it has been brought to our attention, and we'll rely on their judgment and their decision making related to the activities," she said.

Mark Divita, the airport manager, said he spoke with the pilot Tuesday. He said the pilot posted the video on the Internet to drum up attention and promote his upcoming stunt shows.

It was not immediately clear who posted the video, which does not appear on Viper Airshows' YouTube channel.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

President Obama: "Our Journey Is Not Complete"

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 22 Januari 2013 | 16.26

advertisement

Click Here!

President Barack Obama outlined a broad sweep of second-term goals, from gun control to climate change to revamping the tax code, in a second inaugural address Monday that invoked the country's long battle over civil rights and signaled his commitment to core progressive causes.

In the signature moment of a day of pomp and tradition, Obama spoke to hundreds of thousands of people gathered in front of the U.S. Capitol, using the refrain "our journey is not complete" to draw lines from the work of the founding fathers and Martin Luther King Jr. to contemporary battles over gay marriage, immigration rights, voting laws and fair pay for women.

"That is our generation's task: to make these words, these rights, these values -- of life, and liberty, and the pursuit of happiness -- real for every American," Obama said.

Obama Takes Oath of Office

President Barack Obama is sworn in for a second term by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts in the Blue Room of the White House.

Beyonce Performs the National Anthem

Pop star Beyonce performs the National Anthem at President Barack Obama's second inauguration.

More Photos and Videos

Read: President Obama's inaugural address.

He didn't get into details about his policy objectives, mostly relying on rhetorical flourishes aimed at inspiring a country still mired in the economic doldrums and suffering from a deep political divide. Obama is expected to offer more specifics in his State of the Union address on Feb. 12.

Obama echoed several themes he made during his re-election campaign last fall, which ended with a resounding victory and a recharging of his political momentum. He stressed the importance of government's role in an economic recovery, promised to defend entitlement programs like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, called for greater reliance on sustainable energy sources, promised an emphasis on diplomatic engagement with foreign enemies and called for a withdrawal from "perpetual war."

By bringing up gay marriage, climate change and strengthening the government's safety net, Obama indicated that he would pursue a left-leaning agenda for the next four years.

"Our country cannot succeed when a shrinking few do very well and a growing many barely make it," the president said.

Read: Richard Blanco's inaugural poem.

The inauguration took place on a national holiday, Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The timing represented a unique opportunity for Obama, who is still negotiating his role as a "post-racial" black leader, to show African-Americans that he remains focused on issues of inequality.

The first black president paraphrased King's "I Have a Dream" speech, which was delivered nearly 50 years ago across the National Mall at the Lincoln Memorial. He also mentioned touchstones of the women's rights and gay rights movements.

"We, the people, declare today that the most evident of truths, that all of us are created equal, is the star that guides us still," Obama said. "Just as it guided our forebears through Seneca Falls, and Selma, and Stonewall; just as it guided all those men and women, sung and unsung, who left footprints along this great Mall, to hear a preacher say that we cannot walk alone; to hear a King proclaim that our individual freedom is inextricably bound to the freedom of every soul on Earth."

For full politics coverage, visit NBCNews.com.

With the speech, Obama set out on his second term as a battle-tested but emboldened leader who is still chasing the grand vision he laid out four years ago, when he promised to lead an anxious nation on a path to greater hope, unity and prosperity.

This time around, the Inauguration Day festivities, and the country's expectations, were more modest, with about half as many people expected to converge on the National Mall and Obama working to fulfill his original promise.

But Obama seemed invigorated by the prospect of another four years to accomplish what he hadn't in his first term. There was a bit of defiance, too, as when he took thinly veiled swipes at Republican critics, including his former campaign opponent Mitt Romney, who've accused him of forcing more government into people's everyday lives.

Government safety-net programs "do not make us a nation of takers; they free us to take the risks that make this country great," Obama said.

He referenced the signers of the Declaration of Independence, and the leaders of the Civil Rights era, to make the argument that America can never reach its full potential if it abandons the notion of equality for all.

"It is now our generation's task to carry on what those pioneers began," Obama said. "For our journey is not complete until our wives, our mothers, and daughters can earn a living equal to their efforts. Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law - for if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well. Our journey is not complete until no citizen is forced to wait for hours to exercise the right to vote. Our journey is not complete until we find a better way to welcome the striving, hopeful immigrants who still see America as a land of opportunity; until bright young students and engineers are enlisted in our workforce rather than expelled from our country. Our journey is not complete until all our children, from the streets of Detroit to the hills of Appalachia to the quiet lanes of Newtown, know that they are cared for, and cherished, and always safe from harm."

The speech followed Obama's ceremonial oath of office, administered by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts. Obama took the oath with his left hand on two Bibles, one used by Abraham Lincoln and the other by King.

Officially, Obama started his second term on Sunday, when he took the formal oath of office in a private ceremony in the East Room of the White House. That twist was due to the fact that the Constitution mandates presidential terms begin Jan. 20. Custom holds that when that date falls on a Sunday, public inauguration events are held the next day.

As the capital filled with people on Monday morning, Obama started his day with his family and Vice President Joe Biden at St. John's Episcopal Church, a few blocks from the White House.

During his arrival at church and his departure, cheers erupted from people on the streets, and it continued as Obama returned in his motorcade to the White House for a pre-oath coffee with Congressional leaders.

Only two of four living former presidents made the trip to the Capitol Monday. Bill Clinton showed up with his wife, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. So did Jimmy Carter. Obama's predecessor, George W. Bush, stayed behind to look after his father, George H.W. Bush, who is recovering from an illness.

As in 2009, Monday's festivities had a Hollywood feel. Beyonce, who sung the National Anthem, and her husband, rapper Jay-Z, chatted with Rev. Al Sharpton before the ceremony started. Actress Eva Longoria was seated on the platform outside the Capitol, not far from singers Katy Perry and John Mayer. The program included performances from musicians Kelly Clarkson and James Taylor. Also spotted in the crowd was former Boston Celtics great Bill Russell.

 

 

The crowd for the country's 57th presidential inauguration was expected to reach about a half-million people, an impressive size but considerably smaller than the 1.8 million who showed up to witness the arrival of America's first black president in 2009. Security remained just as tight as it was then, although authorities say there are no credible threats of any attack, terrorist or otherwise.

Obama clearly meant his speech as a pep talk to a country that is in need of one.

Most Americans remain worried about the economy and see tough times ahead, polls show. And although Obama remains a popular and in many ways transcendent leader, they don't think he's achieved many of the lofty goals he set out for himself in his 2009 inauguration, namely rising above the partisan fray, reversing America's fiscal woes and pulling troops out of Afghanistan.

Spurred by the schoolhouse massacre in Newtown, Conn., Obama has put gun control at the top of his agenda, along with reforming immigration and tax laws and taking on climate change. He is also about to begin another battle with Congress over the debt limit and automatic spending cuts.

"Progress does not compel us to settle centuries-long debates about the role of government for all time," Obama said. "But it does require us to act in our time."

Later in the afternoon, after an inaugural luncheon event with Congressional leaders in the Capitol building, Obama and Biden appeared outside with their wives and stood with their hands over their hearts as a procession of military color guards passed.

They then got into a bulletproof Cadillac limousine known as "The Beast" and headed to front of the inauguration parade, making the 1.2 mile trip from the Capitol to the White House at a snail's pace to allow the public a good look – albeit from behind a thick cordon of active and reserve troops, federal agents and state and local police.

About halfway through the route, outside the FBI headquarters, Obama and the first lady got out of the limo, locked hands and walked down Pennsylvania Avenue, waving to the thousands of people who lined the street.

They emerged again near the route's end, strolling together toward the White House gates. Later, joined by their two daughters, climbed into the presidential view stand to watch the remainder of the parade.

 

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

16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cleburne ISD Considers Arming Teachers

Scott Gordon, NBC 5 News

The Cleburne Independent School District on Tuesday night will become one of the first districts in North Texas to consider allowing some teachers to carry concealed guns.

Cleburne ISD Considers Arming Teachers

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

The Cleburne Independent School District on Tuesday night will become one of the first districts in North Texas to consider allowing some teachers to carry concealed guns.

Five police officers already work in Cleburne's 13 schools, but the school board is asking if that's enough to prevent a tragedy like the Newtown, Conn., massacre.

"We're at the very beginning stages of talking about it," said Superintendent Tim Miller. "I don't anticipate any action being taken Tuesday night just because it's a pretty controversial topic."

Around the Johnson County town of 30,000, opinions are split.

Special education teacher Mavis Bryan doesn't like the idea of arming teachers.

"I would go with the armed guards," she said. "I think that would be better because they are more trained than a lay person."

A retired police officer disagreed.

"I feel like to make our children more safe, if it takes a few select teachers to go along with the law enforcement -- because I am retired law enforcement -- then I'm for that," he said.

The superintendent said he personally does not support arming teachers.

"If we're going to put more firearms in the schools, I'd rather put them in the hands of our police and our sheriffs instead of our employees," Miller said.

School board president Brent Easdon said he would vote to allow teachers to pack a pistol if the district can set up a system of proper screening and training.

"We don't want this to be a knee-jerk reaction," Easdon said. "But we want to be proactive and not reactive."

He said he has already heard from people on both sides.

"Some are for it, some are against it," Easdon said.

The Cleburne school district covers 209 square miles and employs 900 people. The student enrollment is 6,800.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Residents to be Fined for Dog Poo Left Behind

advertisement

Click Here!

A Plano apartment complex is set to become the latest North Texas multi-family residential facility to demand DNA tests of all dogs living on the property in an effort to catch owners who fail to pick up their dog's waste.

In a letter sent out Friday, the management at NorthSide at Legacy notified residents that the complex is instituting a program with PooPrints, a Tennessee-based company, to create a DNA database for all of the dogs on the property. 

Residents will be required to bring their dogs to the leasing office by Feb. 16 to provide the DNA sample, which will be obtained through a mouth swab, according to the letter.

Once their dog is registered, any dog waste left on the property can be sent off to a lab to be matched to the dog.  The fine for an offense will be $250 and if the fine is not paid the tenant's rental agreement will be terminated, the letter indicated.

"The goal of the program is to help maintain a clean and sanitary environment for all of our residents," said David Marguiles, who represents Lincoln Properties, the company that owns and operates the NorthSide at Legacy apartments.

At least one resident is in full support of the plan.  Jacklynn Holloway runs Animal Addiction Concierge out of her apartment at NorthSide.  Holloway takes care of several dogs throughout any given day while their owners are either at work or out of town.

"They don't pick up, OK.  That is the constant issue," Holloway said about several dog owners at the property who don't clean up properly after their animal uses the bathroom.

Holloway told NBC 5 that she is pleased to know that the property management company is paying to perform the DNA tests and establish the database, a cost she estimates will easily be in the thousands of dollars.

Holloway also said she has heard rumblings from some dog owners at the complex who do not appreciate a test and a database like this being imposed on them.

"The people who are really scared and I believe are really throwing that [concern] out there and being really aggressive that they don't want it are maybe the people that aren't picking up the poop," Holloway said Monday.

NorthSide at Legacy is not the first local apartment complex to institute a policy like this.  The Ilume Cedar Springs in the Oak Lawn section of Dallas contracted with PooPrints last fall, with great success, according to management.

Since instituting the policy, residents have been much more diligent about cleaning up after their animals, and only 12 - 15 samples of feces have been sent off to the lab for identification, according to the property manager.

A representative from PooPrints, based in Knoxville, Tenn., told NBC 5 they have hundreds of clients in 33 states, and foreign countries like Canada, Singapore and Israel.
 


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man Meets Woman Who Saved His Life: "I'm Speechless"

Written By Unknown on Senin, 21 Januari 2013 | 16.26

advertisement

Click Here!

Weatherford truck driver Elias Uribe wasn't sure what to say Friday night to the Dallas woman who saved his life in a fiery crash last week.

"I'm speechless," he said as he got out of his pickup with a huge bouquet of flowers and a heart-shaped box of chocolates.

"It's the least that I could do," he said.

The two met for dinner at a Weatherford restaurant -- the first time they had seen each other since early last Wednesday morning.

Uribe was driving his 18-wheeler when he lost control near Interstate 30 and Interstate 35 near downtown Dallas.

Terry Sims drove by the accident on her way to work the early shift at the post office and stopped to help.

Woman Pulls Man From Burning 18-Wheeler

A Parker County truck driver says he owes his life to a passer-by who pulled him out of his burning 18-wheeler after a crash in Interstate 30 in Dallas.

More Photos and Videos

Uribe's truck was on fire. He was trapped inside the cab. The door was jammed shut. She single-highhandedly pulled him out the window and dragged him to safety.

In the confusion, Uribe told her thank you but wanted to meet her again.

The two met at an On the Border restaurant in Weatherford.

"From Weatherford, Texas, to Dallas, Texas, with love," he said as the two embraced.

They couldn't stop hugging as Uribe's three children looked on.

"Are you OK?" she asked.

"I'm fine," he said. "Thank you so much. Thank you so much."

His children had written letters to her, and they read them to her outside the restaurant's front door.

Twelve-year-old Elias Uribe Jr. wrote: "Dear Terry Sims, thank you for helping my dad get out of the truck, and thank you for your hard effort and your love and heart. May God bless you."

Ten-year-old Elizabeth Uribe wrote: "Dear Terry Sims, thank you for taking my dad out of the truck and pulling him out of the truck and your willingness to risk your life to save his life. Thank you for your bravery and your love for others. Sincerely, Elizabeth."

And 8-year-old Eliazar Uribe wrote: "Dear Terry, thank you for saving my dad's life and your great effort. May God bless you. Sincerely, Eliazar Uribe."

Sims smiled.

"Appreciate that," she said. "I love that. That's so sweet."

Later, inside the restaurant, the two had plenty to talk about.

"And I could hear you and I think that's when I said, 'I need some help,'" Uribe said.

"Yeah, I remember that," she said.

The two went over the rescue second by second.

"And then you almost fell on top of me," Uribe said.

"You fell backwards," she said.

"OK," he said, admitting he didn't have a clear memory of what had happened.

Uribe told Sims a simple "thank you" wasn't enough for what she did.

"I don't have any words to describe my gratitude to you," he said.

But somehow, especially after this, no words seemed necessary.

16.26 | 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

© 2013 Pheedo, Inc. All rights reserved.


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Obama Starts New Term With Eye on History

advertisement

Click Here!

President Barack Obama began his second term on Sunday, emboldened by his renewed political capital but still chasing the grand vision he laid out four years ago, when he promised to lead a battered nation on a path to greater hope, unity and prosperity.

The next step in that journey comes at noon Monday, when Obama will stand outside the Capitol, place his left hand on Bibles used by Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr. and take the ceremonial oath of office.

He took the official oath of office at 11:55 a.m. Sunday in a private ceremony in the East Room of the White House. That's because Jan. 20, the first day of the presidential term mandated by the Constitution, falls on a Sunday.

Just a handful of people attended Sunday's ceremony -- including daughter Sasha, who greeted Obama after he took the oath by saying, 'You didn't mess up" --  but more than a half-million people will pack into the National Mall on Monday to cheer him on. It will be an impressive crowd but considerably smaller than the 1.8 million who showed up to witness the inauguration of America's first black president in 2009. Security will be just as tight as it was then, although authorities say there are no credible threats of any attack, terrorist or otherwise.

Obama, still riding his dominant re-election performance and a triumph in the fiscal cliff showdown, will then deliver an inaugural address to a country in need of a good pep talk.

Most Americans remain worried about the economy and see tough times ahead, polls show. And although Obama remains a popular and in many ways transcendent leader, they don't think he's achieved many of the lofty goals he set out for himself in his 2009 inauguration, namely rising above the partisan fray, reversing America's fiscal woes and pulling troops out of Afghanistan.

Obama is expected to address those challenges and remind the country of his most impressive victories, including health care reform, the killing of Osama bin Laden and the repeal of Don't Ask Don't Tell, while sketching his plans for his remaining time in office.

Spurred by the schoolhouse massacre in Newtown, Conn., Obama has put gun control at the top of his agenda, along with reforming immigration and tax laws and taking on climate change. He may choose not to delve into specifics of these plans on Monday, and instead save the details for his State of the Union speech Feb. 12. By then he could very well be engaged in a battle with Congress over the debt limit and automatic spending cuts.

Obama might also make reference to the fact that his second inauguration falls on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, nearly 50 years after the civil rights leader delivered his "I Have A Dream" speech across the mall at the Lincoln Memorial. It would be a reminder that the president is still negotiating his role as a "post-racial" black leader, even as he tries to show African Americans that he remains focused on issues of inequality.

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

Barbara Perry, a presidential scholar at the University of Virginia's Miller Center, likened a second inauguration to a couple renewing their wedding vows. "They've had all the fights, they know all the strengths and weaknesses, but they try to fall in love again," Perry said. "After his re-election, the American people want to fall in love with Barack Obama again."

Will Obama aim to make his second term about building an ideological legacy? He is already a transformative president, by virtue of who he is, and what he represents. So he will likely approach the next four years as more of a pragmatist, using his talents as a strategist and tactician to secure meaningful but measured advances from a combative Congress, analysts say.

"Obama has four years of job training under his belt. He has a better sense of what's possible and what's not," Perry said.

In 2009, "he believed more in the hope and change business, and he probably thought he could be more of a change agent in that realm…But I think he's learning how to deal with Congress and in the last few weeks he does seem more aggressive in putting forward new policies, such as gun control."

History is lined with second-term presidents who overestimated their political capital and stumbled, or lost focus and allowed stasis or scandal to set in. Obama, the 20th president—and the third in a row—to serve all or part of a second term, hopes to strike a balance between boldness and prudence.

He'll be working against the clock. Historians warn of a turning point somewhere at the two-year mark where allies and enemies alike begin to think of the next election, and a sitting president's influence begins to wane.

At his first inauguration, with the country reeling from a near-economic meltdown and "a sapping of confidence across our land," Obama told Americans they had "chosen hope over fear, unity of purpose over conflict and discord." He called for "a new era of responsibility."

That goal remains a work in progress.

About a third of Americans think the nation is headed in the right direction, and nearly three-quarters don't like where the economy is headed. Democratic pollster Peter Hart told NBC News last week that the results of his latest survey showed that "if 2009 was all about hope, 2013 is about the ability to cope."

But Obama still has a way of inspiring positive vibes. Most Americans say they like him and that he has been a good president.

For his second term, he'll need to draw on that source of goodwill. 

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

16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man Meets Woman Who Saved His Life: "I'm Speechless"

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 20 Januari 2013 | 16.26

advertisement

Click Here!

Weatherford truck driver Elias Uribe wasn't sure what to say Friday night to the Dallas woman who saved his life in a fiery crash last week.

"I'm speechless," he said as he got out of his pickup with a huge bouquet of flowers and a heart-shaped box of chocolates.

"It's the least that I could do," he said.

The two met for dinner at a Weatherford restaurant -- the first time they had seen each other since early last Wednesday morning.

Uribe was driving his 18-wheeler when he lost control near Interstate 30 and Interstate 35 near downtown Dallas.

Terry Sims drove by the accident on her way to work the early shift at the post office and stopped to help.

Woman Pulls Man From Burning 18-Wheeler

A Parker County truck driver says he owes his life to a passer-by who pulled him out of his burning 18-wheeler after a crash in Interstate 30 in Dallas.

More Photos and Videos

Uribe's truck was on fire. He was trapped inside the cab. The door was jammed shut. She single-highhandedly pulled him out the window and dragged him to safety.

In the confusion, Uribe told her thank you but wanted to meet her again.

The two met at an On the Border restaurant in Weatherford.

"From Weatherford, Texas, to Dallas, Texas, with love," he said as the two embraced.

They couldn't stop hugging as Uribe's three children looked on.

"Are you OK?" she asked.

"I'm fine," he said. "Thank you so much. Thank you so much."

His children had written letters to her, and they read them to her outside the restaurant's front door.

Twelve-year-old Elias Uribe Jr. wrote: "Dear Terry Sims, thank you for helping my dad get out of the truck, and thank you for your hard effort and your love and heart. May God bless you."

Ten-year-old Elizabeth Uribe wrote: "Dear Terry Sims, thank you for taking my dad out of the truck and pulling him out of the truck and your willingness to risk your life to save his life. Thank you for your bravery and your love for others. Sincerely, Elizabeth."

And 8-year-old Eliazar Uribe wrote: "Dear Terry, thank you for saving my dad's life and your great effort. May God bless you. Sincerely, Eliazar Uribe."

Sims smiled.

"Appreciate that," she said. "I love that. That's so sweet."

Later, inside the restaurant, the two had plenty to talk about.

"And I could hear you and I think that's when I said, 'I need some help,'" Uribe said.

"Yeah, I remember that," she said.

The two went over the rescue second by second.

"And then you almost fell on top of me," Uribe said.

"You fell backwards," she said.

"OK," he said, admitting he didn't have a clear memory of what had happened.

Uribe told Sims a simple "thank you" wasn't enough for what she did.

"I don't have any words to describe my gratitude to you," he said.

But somehow, especially after this, no words seemed necessary.

16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

North Texans Head To DC For Inauguration

Lindsay Wilcox, NBC 5 News

NBC 5 talks with people who left DFW early Saturday for the Second Inauguration of President Barack Obama.

North Texans Head To DC For Inauguration

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Dallas Students to Attend Presidential Inauguration

Fourteen 8th grade students from Dallas International School will be in Washington, DC Monday for the inauguration of President Barack Obama.

More Photos and Videos

North Texans will be among the hundreds of thousands of people expected in Washington, DC for Monday's ceremonial Second Inauguration of President Barack Obama.

Just after 2:00 a.m. on Saturday, six buses left Friendship West Baptist Church in Dallas carrying 300 people to Washington. Those taking the trip said watching the President take the oath of office carries a special meaning.

"It is historical, but it's also let the President know that we support him and the things that he's trying to do for this country," passenger Linda Wynn said.

"To me, it's an experience," said passenger Yolanda Hamilton. "You know, to get there for this inauguration and everything, so it's an experience for me."

Most of the people on the bus are from North Texas, but some passengers are from Austin, San Antonio and Arkansas.

Also, 21 students from Southern Methodist University in Dallas arrived in Washington on Saturday. The communications and journalism majors will report, tweet and blog about the festivities. This is the fifth inauguration attended by SMU students as part of the "Hilltop on the Hill" program.

Also, 14 students from the Dallas International School will be part of the crowd in Washington. They include five U.S., seven French, one Belgian and one Iranian/Moroccan student.

Dallas city councilman Dwaine Caraway helped fund an effort to send 117 members of the Townview 'Big D' High School Marching Band to attend the inauguration. 

Also, members of the Lake Highlands High School Wildcat Wranglers plan to be in DC to perform at the Texas State Society's Black Tie and Boots Inaugrual Ball.  The Richardson ISD group is a high school juniors and seniors group of country and western dance and stunt team members.

Several North Texas representatives will also be in the nation's capitol for Monday's events. State Representative Rafael Anchia (D) of Dallas will be among those in attendance.

Finally, 11 police officers from Dallas Area Rapid Transit will be in Washington, DC to assist with security.  They will work with the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority during the inaugural activities.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fans Welcome Stars Back To The Ice

advertisement

Click Here!

Fans Welcome Stars Back to the Ice

The Dallas Stars returned to the ice on Saturday night and so did their fans, selling out the American Airlines Center.

More Photos and Videos

After a more than 3-month lockout, hockey returned to the American Airlines Center in Dallas on Saturday.

The Dallas Stars took on the Phoenix Coyotes as the National Hockey League started an abbreviated season.

Fans coming to the game were excited to see hockey return. Winning fans back after a work stoppage can be difficult. Some fans were worried there wouldn't be a season, but were glad players and owners were able to work things out earlier this month.

"We were going nuts without hockey," said Ryan Stordahl. "We have the Mavericks, but it's great to have the Stars back."

Fans sold out the American Airlines Center to welcome the team back to the ice. Those fans were greeted by a pre-game fanfest and will be for every home game at AT&T Plaza just outside the AAC.

Children adults played games, won prizes and enjoyed music during the fanfest, as they were happy to see their team and their fellow season ticket holders.

"I'm happy to see my hockey family," said Matt Day. "We've come to be close, all the other season ticket holders, people in the organization. I'm just really glad to get to see them and to see my favorite game ever."

It's a game Day thought he might not see this year, but most fans were confident that lockout would be resolved.

"I knew there would be eventually, but who knows with those guys," said Dan Crelin.

"We had faith, absolutely," said Charlie Gantenbein. "National Hockey League, no way it go without a season."


"We just didn't know what we were going to do with the winter," said Kelly Austin.

"Knew hockey would be back, it's only a matter of time," said Stordahl.

And these fans know their fellow Stars fans would return as well.

"I love it, I tell you Dallas is a very good hockey town," Austin, a Minnesota native, said.

But they all have high hopes for the season, even a shortened one.

"We'll make the playoffs," Gantenbein said.

16.26 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger