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Joshua ISD Apologizes to Valedictorian

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 22 Juni 2013 | 16.26

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

Joshua Independent School District Superintendent Fran Marek apologized to Remington Reimer after meeting with him and his attorney Thursday.

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The Joshua Independent School District has apologized to a high-school valedictorian whose microphone was switched off during a graduation ceremony when he deviated from prepared remarks.

Superintendent Fran Marek apologized to Remington Reimer after meeting with him and his attorney Thursday.

Marek released this statement on the Joshua ISD website:

On behalf of the school district, I would like to take this opportunity to apologize to Mr. Todd Reimer and Remington Reimer for any interpretation of a threat by Mr. Cochran in expressing his displeasure at a meeting on Friday morning between Mr. Todd Reimer and Mr. Cochran following Remington Reimer's valedictory address. The District has never intended to nor will take punitive action against Remington Reimer for deviating from the prior-reviewed speech. The District endorses Remington Reimer's appointment to the Naval Academy and wishes him success for all future endeavors in his naval career. District officials will ensure that district policy is followed at future graduation ceremonies.

Fran Marek, Superintendent
Joshua ISD

Reimer's microphone was switched off during the June 6 ceremony after he deviated from prepared remarks and began talking about his religious beliefs.

He also alleged that his principal threatened to contact the U.S. Naval Academy, where Reimer has been accepted, to complain about his bad character. But Marek said "the district has never intended to, nor will take, punitive action."

Reimer says he's thankful and knew the school district would support him.

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Stars Name Ruff as Head Coach

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Lindy Ruff is the new coach of the Dallas Stars, the team that clinched their only Stanley Cup championship on a goal he has always questioned.

Ruff was hired Friday by the Stars, 14 years after he joined thousands of Buffalo fans in the chant  of "No goal!" in the aftermath of Brett Hull's Cup-clinching shot late in the third overtime of Game 6 in the 1999 Stanley Cup finals.

"It's a long time ago," Ruff said after being introduced. "I've had some great memories. I've gotten past that. I'm a coach, I want to coach, and this is an unbelievable opportunity."

That was the Sabres' only Stanley Cup appearance under Ruff, in his second season as Buffalo's coach.

While the Stars celebrated the title, Ruff questioned whether the goal should have been allowed for Hull's skate being in the goalie's crease before having control of the puck.

Ruff joked Friday that when he first agreed to meet with

new Stars GM Jim Nill

about the job that his only stipulation was, "we can't meet in the crease."

It was 14 years ago Thursday that Game 6 ended in the early morning -- more than 15 minutes into the third overtime.

Ruff coached 15 seasons for the Buffalo Sabres before being fired in February. He was the NHL's longest active-serving coach with one team.

Ruff was the first significant hire for

Nill, the longtime Detroit Red Wings assistant GM who signed a five-year deal in April to replace the fired Joe Nieuwendyk.

Nill said when he started the search, the attributes that he was looking for in a coach included experience, credibility and knowledge.

"All these attributes were checked off," Nill said.

Two weeks after Nill was hired,

he decided not to renew the third-year option for coach Glen Gulutzan.

The Stars missed the playoffs for the fifth season in a row, the longest postseason drought in team history. They were 22-22-4 last season, last in the Pacific Division.

Since Ruff still had two seasons left on his contract with Buffalo, the Stars had to get permission from the Sabres to talk to the 53-year-old coach.

Ruff was the Sabres' winningest coach (571-432-162), but was fired after Buffalo got off to a 6-10-1 in this year's NHL lockout-shortened season. There had been 170 NHL coaching changes between his hiring in July 1997 and the time he was fired.

Under Ruff, the Sabres made the playoffs in each of his first four seasons and eight times overall. They made the Eastern Conference finals in 2006 and 2007.

As a player, Ruff was selected in the second round of the 1979 draft by the Sabres and made the team that year. He was later the Sabres' captain, playing for Buffalo until being traded to the New York Rangers in 1989.

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Alligator Found in "Doomsday Prepper's" House

Scott Gordon, NBC 5 News

Clayton Earthman was arrested on Wednesday after officers found bomb-making supplies in his car. Officers also found an alligator in Earthman's home.

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A man arrested Wednesday with bomb-making materials in his car had drugs and an alligator in his home, a federal agent testified Friday.

Clayton Earthman, 43, was arrested after police said he ran a stop sign near Fair Park.

An officer said Earthman had a gun in his car. A search later revealed he had bomb-making material and notes on how to make bombs, police said.

Earthman claimed to be a "Doomsday Prepper." A cable TV show by the same name profiles people preparing for the end of the world.

On Thursday, agents with the bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives searched his house near Pleasant Grove.

They found 15 marijuana plants, bomb-making material, and an alligator, according to a Dallas police report.

Neighbors say they saw agents carry two alligators from the home on Woodard Avenue.

"That's scary," said neighbor Susan Collins. "We didn't know he had all that."

At his court appearance, a judge ordered Earthman held without bond because he was a danger to the community.

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Three Boys Home Alone During Burglary Attempt

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 21 Juni 2013 | 16.26

Scott Gordon, NBC News

Daniel Rodriguez, 12, was at his cousin's house when burglars broke in. The thieves were scared off when his cousin's mother came home.

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Three young boys were home alone in North Fort Worth playing video games when two masked men broke in on Thursday afternoon.

"We were playing games until I saw a shadow," 12-year-old Daniel Rodriguez said.

"I saw somebody with, like, a black bandana and yellow right here," 12-year-old Kevin Avila said.

Avila and his two cousins, Rodriguez and a 14-year-old, hid in a bedroom.

"I saw them, but they didn't see me," Avila said.

His mother happened to come home from work, unaware of what was going on inside.

"My mom came right in time," Avila said.

Without even knowing it, she apparently scared the burglars away.

"If I didn't show up on time, they would have been dead," Jessica Henderson said.

She called police.

"They got here in two minutes," she said. "Oh my God, it's crazy. You wouldn't think that somebody could come into your house with a freakin' mask on in broad daylight."

Three people were in custody Thursday evening and were being questioned, said Fort Worth police spokesman Sgt. Kelly Peel.

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Joshua ISD Apologizes to Valedictorian Over Speech

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

Joshua Independent School District Superintendent Fran Marek apologized to Remington Reimer after meeting with him and his attorney Thursday.

Joshua ISD Apologizes to...

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The Joshua Independent School District has apologized to a high-school valedictorian whose microphone was switched off during a graduation ceremony when he deviated from prepared remarks.

Superintendent Fran Marek apologized to Remington Reimer after meeting with him and his attorney Thursday.

Marek released this statement on the Joshua ISD website:

On behalf of the school district, I would like to take this opportunity to apologize to Mr. Todd Reimer and Remington Reimer for any interpretation of a threat by Mr. Cochran in expressing his displeasure at a meeting on Friday morning between Mr. Todd Reimer and Mr. Cochran following Remington Reimer's valedictory address. The District has never intended to nor will take punitive action against Remington Reimer for deviating from the prior-reviewed speech. The District endorses Remington Reimer's appointment to the Naval Academy and wishes him success for all future endeavors in his naval career. District officials will ensure that district policy is followed at future graduation ceremonies.

Fran Marek, Superintendent
Joshua ISD

Reimer's microphone was switched off during the June 6 ceremony after he deviated from prepared remarks and began talking about his religious beliefs.

He also alleged that his principal threatened to contact the U.S. Naval Academy, where Reimer has been accepted, to complain about his bad character. But Marek said "the district has never intended to, nor will take, punitive action."

Reimer says he's thankful and knew the school district would support him.

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Scare in the Air: 2 Planes in Near-Miss Above NYC

NBC 4 New York

Two planes came dangerously close to each other in the air over New York City, NBC 4 New York has learned. Andrew Siff reports.

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Two planes came dangerously close to each other in the air over New York City, NBC 4 New York has learned.

The near-miss at 3:45 p.m. on June 13 is being investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration. 

A Delta Airlines Boeing 747 arriving at Kennedy Airport missed an approach, and ended up in the same direction as a Shuttle America Embraer 170 regional jet leaving LaGuardia's Runway 13, according to the FAA. 

"The two aircraft were turning away from each other at the point where they lost the required amount of separation," the FAA said in a statement. 

One source estimated the planes came as close as 100 feet within each other, though the FAA would not confirm that.

It's not clear why the Delta pilot made the decision not to complete the landing at Kennedy Airport, but the standard procedure, called a missed approach, is regulated by specific procedures for both pilots and controllers. 

In this case, air traffic controllers had attempted to vector the Delta 747 away from other air traffic, and the 747 lost required amount of separation with the Embraer leaving LaGuardia, aviation officials said. 

Both planes landed safely.

Flyers at LaGuardia Airport were startled to hear of the near-miss. Gary Margolis recalled a similar experience in which "we had to land and take off again because we were a little too close to a plane on the runway."

"That's a scary thing to be on a plane when that happens," he said. 

Bob Brown of Danbury said passengers deserve stricter measures to make sure planes stay far apart. 

"What is the corrective action?" he questioned. "You never hear about how they make sure it's never going to happen again." 

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Real-Life Snakes on a Plane: Man Smuggles 7 Snakes

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 19 Juni 2013 | 16.26

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

A Texas snake expert has pleaded guilty to smuggling seven snakes into the United States. The man bought the snakes in Peru and flew with them by hiding them in his jacket.

Smuggling Snakes on a Plane

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A Tyler snake expert pleaded guilty in federal court Tuesday to smuggling seven Peruvian snakes into the United States by concealing them underneath his jacket.

William Lamar, 63, was caught with the snakes in August at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. He had purchased the snakes at a market in Lima, Peru, and flew with them in his jacket to Miami and then to DFW, where a Transportation Security Administration officer found them while Lamar was trying to board a commuter flight to Tyler.

Lamar is a partial owner of Colorado-based ecotourism company Green Tracks, according to a representative who answered the phone at the company's listed phone number Tuesday. His biography on the company website states that Lamar also conducts research on reptiles and amphibians for the University of Texas at Tyler.

A university spokesperson confirmed Tuesday that Lamar has been an adjunct professor there but was not able to confirm his current status with the school.

Lamar is the author of at least three books on snakes and reptiles and has been a speaker at an event for the Austin Herpetological Society, among other events in that field.

According to several articles posted online, Lamar has spent decades doing research in the Amazon and leading tours in the region.

According to U.S. Attorney John M. Bales, Lamar stated in an Eastern District of Texas courtroom that he knew he was violating the law by transporting the snakes in his jacket without proper authorization.

Lamar was not available for comment Tuesday.

He could face up to five years in prison at sentencing, according to the U.S. Attorney's office. A sentencing date has not yet been set.

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Dating Service Delivers Duds, Not Dreams: Former Employee

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A former employee of a local, high-priced dating service, Dallas Singles, told NBC 5 Investigates Consumer Unit some individuals with a criminal past are allowed to be members.  

While the service is billed as a professional matchmaking service for upscale singles, the owner said in some circumstances members can have a criminal record.  However, he insisted no member has ever been hurt or harmed.

Stephanie Gardella said she was hired as a relationship counselor at Dallas Singles in January of 2012.  The single mother first thought it was the perfect job.

"I'm such a helper," she said, adding she was able to help connect people looking for love with potential matches.

But soon after she started, she said she noticed several red flags like giving free or discounted memberships to certain clients while others would pay thousands of dollars.

"We would give beautiful, young women free memberships," Gardella said.

She also recalled the time a potential member told her he just got out of prison for theft.  She said she brought this to the attention of her supervisor but was instructed to sign him up anyway.

On its website, the company promises to perform "a thorough background screening including a criminal history check on every client." 

But Gardella told NBC5 Investigates Consumer Unit if potential members were willing to pay thousands to join, little else mattered.

"We were supposed to have them sold in 90 minutes," Gardella said.

A Dallas Singles client also told NBC 5 a background check she did on her own showed one of her potential suitors had a criminal past. 

The company's owner, Ted Law, who, on repeated occasions declined to speak with NBC 5 on camera, insisted his company does do background checks.  But he also said "non-violent felons" can be members.  He said no client has ever been harmed or would have to go on a date with someone he or she found to be objectionable.

Law called Gardella a "liar," and said she was never told to sign up a felon. 

However, he confirmed non-violent felons had bought memberships and some members, like young attractive women and older men, would get complimentary memberships.

Ultimately, Gardella was fired after a few short months of working at Dallas Singles.

"She was let go because she refused to do things our way," Law said.

Gardella insisted she didn't have a vendetta against Dallas Singles and she did not speak with NBC 5 because she was fired.

"The best thing I ever did was to leave that place," Gardella said. "What they're doing is wrong.  It's so wrong."

Dating Disasters

Former client Carol Carrillo first came to NBC5 Investigates Consumer Unit after she said the service failed her and her one and only date was a disaster. 

She said getting a refund for the $2,200 she spent on the service was difficult at best.   After months of unanswered phone calls and certified letters she contacted NBC 5. Minutes after NBC called the company, Law reached out to Carrillo and promised to give her all her money back.

But the paperwork she received said her refund was conditional.  She had to agree "not to disparage Dallas Singles, Fort Worth Singles or Singles International, or its affiliates, clients or personnel in any way in the future."

"I'd rather lose all my money than not fight these people.  They haven't given me any of what was promised," Carrillo said.

Ultimately, Carrillo said she did get refund after contacting her credit card company and filing a dispute through the credit card.

However, Law insisted Carrillo "didn't give the service a chance."  He also said the company has given thousands of dollars in refunds to unhappy members.  And he said his business has led to many happy, long-term couples.

Ariel Osterreicher, 23, said he would like to be one of those success stories.  He signed up with Dallas Singles after having little luck with online dating.

"I'm a shy person," said the college student who lives modestly.

He said his mother spent $4,500 for the service, but in the seven months since signing up he has had no dates.

"It's just a giant chess game and I just fell into the trap," he said.

His complaint echoed those of a 2012 class action lawsuit.  It was filed against Ted Law and his wife, Rachel, and related to their former company, another matchmaking service.  Plaintiffs claimed they were deceptive, did not make promised matches and set pricing "based solely on a potential customer's ability to pay." 

Law called the allegations "ridiculous." But he said he settled the suit.

As for Osterreicher, Law said he is working with him to find a perfect match, but he so far, he's still waiting for his first date.
 

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Starbucks to Post Calorie Counts Nationwide

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Coffee drinkers might soon reconsider splurging on 460-calorie Java Chip Frappuccino at Starbucks.

Beginning next week, the coffee giant will post calorie counts on their menu boards, getting ahead of the federal menu-labeling requirements that will go into effect later this year.

The company's decision follows its recent smoking ban within 25 feet of stores. These moves demonstrate Starbucks commitment to becoming a health-conscious leader in the food and beverage industry.

It seems as if the change will be a win-win for customers, according to two departments. The Stanford Graduate School of Business found that when calorie information was posted, consumers ordered items with 6 percent fewer calories.

"We are encouraged by the findings highlighted in the Stanford study that show posting calories can have a positive impact on an individual's daily caloric intake," Starbucks spokeswoman Linda Mills said.

Additionally, market research firm NPD Group found that consumers spent 20 cents less on average per purchase.

So, what does this mean? Restaurants with calorie counts posted on their menu boards may be selling healthier choices to their customers, but may also be losing money in lieu of the change.

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Carrollton Chiropractor Accused of Sexual Assault

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 18 Juni 2013 | 16.26

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Another North Texas chiropractor has been accused of sexually assaulting a patient.

Chiropractor Scott Tan Viet Lai, who was arrested Friday, is accused of assaulting a female patient during a June 11 office visit.

According to a redacted arrest affidavit released Monday, the woman arrived at Lai's office for her third appointment after a car crash. She had been seeing Lai for back and neck pains.

When she arrived, she met the doctor in the parking lot, and the two walked into the office together at about 11 a.m.

The woman told police that she noticed Lai locked the door behind them after they entered and thought it was unusual.

During the exam, Lai requested she wear a gown, but she refused, according to the affidavit. During the treatment, he began massaging her back and said he needed to pull her shorts down to provide treatment to a problem area.

In the affidavit, the woman said she started to feel uncomfortable but complied because she trusted the doctor.

The woman then told police that he said he needed to adjust her tail bone and asked her to roll over onto her back. The woman said Lai then grabbed her shorts and pulled them off, saying he needed to get to the tail bone area. She said she then felt the man's hands near and inside her genitalia. The woman said she asked him what he was doing and he replied that he was putting pressure on her tail bone.

In the affidavit, the woman then told police that Lai put his head next to her ear and whispered, "Do you want me to help you relax?"

The woman told police she then pushed him away and told him that she did not think he was doing what he was supposed to do. The woman told police she was then scared for her well-being and searched for a place to run after asking to use the bathroom. Finding no easily available exit, the woman said she returned to the doctor's office to sign some papers before she was allowed to leave by the front door.

According to the affidavit, the woman said that Lai told her that she should have known what the procedure would be because she is studying to be a nurse.

(The redacted arrest affidavit can be read here and recounts the woman's allegations in greater detail.)

The woman went to a hospital emergency room, where she reported the incident and police were called.

Police have not revealed the woman's age.

Lai practices at SSC Chiropractic at 1212 N. Josey Lane and his web site lists a second location on Pioneer Parkway in Arlington. According to his web site, his clinic opened in 2002 and specifically reaches out to Vietnamese patients.

The clinic was closed Monday and no one answered the phone.

Lai is being held in the Carrollton Municipal Jail on a $100,000 bond. He has been charged with sexual assault, a second-degree felony.

In April, McKinney chiropractor Dr. David Russell was sentenced to 23 years in prison after he was convicted of sexually assaulting several of his patients, including children.

NBC 5's Brian Scott contributed to this report.

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Lawmakers: Put Dangerous Chemical Site Info Online

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There are 16 fertilizer production sites in Texas like the one that exploded in West, but authorities aren't clear how many of those might be built near schools or other residential centers, a top state official said Monday.

Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw told members of the House Homeland Security and Public Safety Committee that the facilities are mostly in rural areas, though he wasn't aware if the state had looked at other fertilizer plants for proximity to key community buildings.

McCraw was among the officials who told lawmakers that 129 facilities store at least five tons of ammonium nitrate and other potentially explosive materials. Sixteen of those were fertilizer-mixing facilities similar to the West Fertilizer Co., which blew up following a fire that ignited ammonium nitrate.

A school, apartment complex and nursing home nearby were all damaged and 15 people were killed. Monday's hearing was the second of its kind since the April 17 blast as the committee works to determine if local, state and federal regulations were followed and if more oversight is necessary.

Committee Chairman and El Paso Democratic Rep. Joe Pickett said since authorities are still conducting a criminal investigation to determine the cause of the explosion, there was little lawmakers could ask state officials about that. Instead, he focused on what Texas should be doing moving forward, saying: "I personally would hope there is more overview at the state level."

Pickett said he'd like to see the state fire marshal's office build a website so the public can see where facilities like the one that exploded in West are located. He said it would help residents and first responders, such as volunteer firefighters, who constituted the bulk of the West victims when they rushed to fight the initial blaze. He suggested modeling it after other online resources, such as those for tracking registered sex offenders.

State Fire Marshal Chris Connealy said his office could create such a site. Some newspapers have already done so in the wake of the West blast.

Connealy noted that, though the West plant was authorized to have 270 tons of ammonium nitrate on its premises, it only had 150 tons when the explosion occurred, and that only between 28 and 34 tons were actually involved in the blast.

The committee was told that municipalities and counties often set regulations for facilities with hazardous chemicals, but Connealy said neither West nor surrounding counties had regulations in place.

Pickett acknowledged that passing legislation mandating further oversight of facilities with hazardous chemicals could be a tough sell in the Republican-controlled Legislature, suggesting instead that the state fire marshal's office provide a list of "best practices," or rules that have worked in some communities and others might like to follow.

Connealy said that since the West explosion, no fire departments had approached state officials about how they might improve regulations. Another of Pickett's suggestions was that facilities at least post signs marked "hazardous materials," even though he acknowledged that federal law may already require that.

But adding potential new rules made some lawmakers nervous that nurseries and other businesses with small amounts of fertilizer could be subject to too much oversight.

"You can paperwork a company to death," said Rep. Dan Flynn, R-Van. "I just want to be sure we don't give everybody a lot of disruptions."

McCraw was also asked about the Federal Emergency Management Agency's recent decision not to provide additional money to help rebuild West, and responded, "I think it's an aberration, regardless of what they say."

The committee voted to draft a letter to FEMA, asking it to reconsider.

NBC 5's Eric King was at the briefing in Austin. You can follow him on Twitter at @EricKingNBC5

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Names Released in Crash That Killed 4

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The Tarrant County Sheriff's Office on Monday afternoon released the names of the 16 people involved in a car crash that killed four pedestrians late Saturday night.

Investigators have not released details about how the crash occurred. Sheriff's office officials said the investigation is ongoing.

Tarrant County sheriff's spokesman Terry Grisham said it has been a particularly difficult crash to investigate because of how many people were involved.

"We have many people who were actively involved in this accident and, tragically, four of them can't speak with us. They're deceased," he said. "We want to find who's responsible, both at the scene and away from the scene, if such people exist. And we want to bring those people to justice if, in fact, this is a criminal act."

The sheriff's office have said that Breanna Mitchell, 24, of Lillian, was stopped along the 1500 block of Burleson-Retta Road in a disabled sport utility vehicle. At some point, Brian Jennings, 43-year-old Burleson youth minister, happened upon Mitchell and stopped his white pickup truck to help.

Jennings was joined by Hollie Boyles, 42, and Shelby Boyles, 21, a mother and daughter who lived nearby.

What exactly happened next is a mystery, but Mitchell, Jennings and the Boyles, all pedestrians, were struck and killed in a multi-vehicle crash that involved Jennings' white truck, a red Volkswagen and a red pickup truck driven by 17-year-old Ethan Couch, officials with the Tarrant County Sheriff's Department said Monday afternoon.

Two children, Lucas McConnell, 12, and Isaiah McLaughlin, 13, were inside Jennings' truck.

Ashlyn Evans, 18, was driving the Volkswagen. Peyton Alan, 14, was a passenger in her car. Both are of Burleson.

Seven teenagers were inside Couch's truck or in the truck bed: Garrett Ballard, 16; Avery Rich, 19; and Starr Teague, Christian Victoria, Soliman Mohmand, Sergio Molina and Jacob Goodsell, 15.

The four pedestrians were declared deceased at the scene. Nine of the other 12 people involved, whose names and conditions have not been specified, were hospitalized after the crash.

Several of the teens riding in the red pickup truck were friends on Facebook and, according to their Facebook pages, attended Keller Central High School.

Funeral services for Jennings will be held Wednesday at 3 p.m. at Venue 510 at 510 Wilshire Blvd. in Burleson, a family representative said.

Editor's Note: The Tarrant County Sheriff's Office issued a correction to its news release Monday to correct the spelling of Brian Jennings' first name, as well as correct the driver of the red Volkswagen's last name from Peyton to Evans. All corrections are reflected in the article above.

NBC 5's Ben Russell contributed to this report.

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