Monday, August 31, 2015

Video Appears To Show Texas Deputies Fatally Shoot Man With Hands Up

Footage released Monday appears to show a 41-year-old man putting his hands in the air moments before two Texas deputies fatally shoot him.

Michael Thomas / KSAT / Via ksat.com

Video released Monday by a Texas television station appears to show deputies fatally shooting a man with his hands up after authorities said they were unable to detain him using non-lethal weapons.

Gilbert Flores, 41, was killed Friday morning after Bexar County Sheriff's deputies Robert Sanchez and Greg Vasquez opened fire while responding to a call for a domestic disturbance. Officials said Flores was armed with a knife when they arrived and officers found a woman with a head wound, holding a baby.

The deputies, who have served in the sheriff's office for more than 10 years, have been placed on paid administrative leave for the duration of the investigation.

Gilbert Flores

ksat.com

Sheriff Susan Pamerleau said deputies struggled with Flores for 20 minutes and tried to take him into custody using a Taser and shield, before he was fatally shot, the San Antonio Express News reported.

"The two deputies attempted to arrest the individual and he resisted," Pamerleau said. "They also tried to use non-lethal weapons to try and detain him and after a lengthy confrontation both deputies fired shots causing the man's death."

An edited portion of the video, which was shot from about 100 feet away by witness Michael Thomas, was first broadcast Friday by KSAT, but did not show the fatal shooting.

The full, unedited video released Monday shows Flores with his shirt-off, running back and fourth in front of his house, before he puts his hands up and is shot by the two deputies. In the video, one of his hands is obstructed by a utility pole.

After being shot, another sheriff's department vehicle arrives, and a deputy appears to roll Flores' body over.


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Family Of Woman Killed In S.F. Pier Shooting To Sue Officials

Jim Steinle, second from left, father of Kathryn Steinle, in photograph, testifies at a Senate hearing in Washington in July.

Molly Riley / AP

The family of a Northern California woman whose killing set off a national debate over immigration policies after it was disclosed that her accused killer had been deported five times reportedly plans to file a wide-ranging lawsuit.

The lawsuit brought by the family of 30-year-old Kathryn Steinle, who was shot dead July 1 while walking with her father on a popular San Francisco pier, will be announced Tuesday morning, multiple Bay Area media outlets reported. The family's attorneys could not immediately be reached.

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi — who became a flashpoint in the national debate over immigration for releasing Steinle's accused killer, Francisco Sanchez, despite his undocumented status and criminal record — will reportedly be among those named as defendants in the lawsuit.

Kathryn Steinle, left. Francisco Sanchez, right.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) will also be listed. The gun Sanchez allegedly used was reported stolen from a BLM agent's car.

Sanchez, who remains in custody, admitted to killing Steinle in an interview with local ABC affiliate KGO-TV, but has pleaded not guilty to murder in court.

Steinle's shooting set off a national debate about securing the nation's borders and how local police should better work with immigration officials, particularly in so-called "sanctuary cities," which generally refuse to comply with federal hold requests out of a desire to improve community relations with immigrant communities.

Sanchez, an undocumented immigrant who had been deported five times and convicted of seven felonies, had been behind bars in San Francisco on a drug warrant as recently as this spring. However, he was released in April after prosecutors declined to file charges.

S.F. Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi.

Tony Avelar / AP

ICE officials said they had issued an immigration detainer for Sanchez when he was incarcerated in Victorville, California, and had requested that the San Francisco County Sheriff’s Department notify them prior to his release.

That set off a back-and-forth, with local officials pointing out that there was no arrest warrant out for Sanchez, nor was there a judicial order for his removal, which would’ve made him eligible for extended detention under the law.

ICE, however, insisted that it had merely asked to be notified when Sanchez was released so they could pick him up.

San Francisco's sanctuary ordinance says the sheriff can comply with detainers only if the person has been convicted of a violent felony or is suspected of having committed one. Mirkarimi contends that even sending notifications to federal agencies would violate the policy.

LINK: S.F. Sheriff Hits Back In Fight Over Sanctuary City Policies After Pier Shooting

LINK: S.F. Pier Shooting Highlights Strained Relationship Between Cities, Immigration Officials



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244 Undocumented Immigrants Arrested In Southern California Sting

Lm Otero / AP

A record-setting 244 undocumented immigrants were arrested across Southern California under new federal guidelines that prioritize deporting those who have criminal records or are considered a threat, authorities announced Monday.

All of the immigrants arrested during the four-day operation last week are convicted criminals, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

"By taking these individuals off our streets and removing them from the country, we are making our communities safer for everyone," David Jennings, field office director for ICE's Enforcement and Removal Operations Los Angeles, said in a statement.

ICE has conducted similar operations in areas like Houston, Texas, throughout Oklahoma and New Jersey, detaining 82, 30, and 69 people, respectively.

Of those arrested in Southern California, 191 were from Mexico and the rest were from countries like Peru, Thailand and France.

The issue of undocumented immigrants — particularly those with criminal records or who have been deported more than once — became heated earlier this year after the killing of Kathryn Steinle in San Francisco. She was allegedly shot dead by an undocumented five-time deportee who was also a convicted felon.

Four of those detained by ICE last week were previously deported and being prosecuted for re-entering the U.S.

One of them, Vincente Onofre-Ramirez, was convicted of sexual abuse with force in 2002 in New York. The 35-year-old was taken into custody without incident on Aug. 23 at his Santa Ana home.

ICE said all of the people who were rounded up in the latest sting were considered a priority for deportation by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

At the top of the list, outlined in a DHS memo last year, is anyone who has a criminal conviction, has intentionally participated in a criminal gang, or poses a danger to national security. Followed on the list are people who have three or more misdemeanor convictions, or who have been convicted for significant misdemeanors, such as driving under the influence.

Those who were detained but who don’t face any criminal charges will be placed into deportation proceedings. Undocumented immigrants who have outstanding orders of removal, or who have returned to the U.S. after being deported, could be immediately removed from the country.

Since 2011, more than 12,440 convicted immigrants and 774 others considered a priority for deportation have been taken into custody in the U.S., ICE reported.



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6 High School Football Players Get Probation In Sex Abuse, Hazing Case

Six teenagers accused of sexually assaulting and hazing freshmen teammates at Sayreville War Memorial High School in New Jersey were sentenced Monday to probation and community service.

Julio Cortez / AP

Six New Jersey high school football players accused of sexually assaulting and hazing their freshman teammates were sentenced Monday to probation and community service.

Seven players at Sayreville War Memorial High School were initially accused of having some involvement in hazing and sexually assaulting four younger teammates in the locker room, with victims claiming they had been anally violated.

A New Brunswick Family Court judge handed down the sentences after four of the students pleaded guilty to charges of hazing and child endangerment. Those students were sentenced to two years of probation.

The two other teens were were found guilty of committing a delinquent act and sentenced to one year of probation, the office of Middlesex County Prosecutor Andrew Carey said, according to CBS.

In addition to being put on probation, all six teenagers were ordered to serve 50 hours of community service, CBS reported. However, they will not have to register as sex offenders.

At least two of the teens had faced charges of aggravated sexual assault and aggravated assault, but they were later dropped. Prosecutors also decided to try the boys, who have not been identified but are all under the age of 18, as juveniles.

The Middlesex County prosecutor's office did not immediately respond to BuzzFeed News.

The seventh defendant accused in the case is still awaiting trial.

Mel Evans / AP

The football season at Sayreville War Memorial High School was suspended in 2014 as information about the hazing scandal came to light. The football program was reinstated in January.

The program's head coach, George Najjar, was reassigned to an elementary school and the athletics director John Kohutanycz resigned.


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Immigration Advocates Banned From Visiting Detainees

A volunteer visitation program at an immigration detention center in Alabama was banned in retaliation for reporting abuses, advocates claim.

An unidentified Guatemalan woman in a dorm at the Artesia Family Residential Center in Artesia, N.M.

(AP Photo/Juan Carlos Llorca)

Immigration advocates say they've been banned from visiting one of the largest detention facilities in the U.S. in retaliation for filing complaints over alleged abuses.

The Etowah County Detention Center in Alabama is the latest holding facility to ban representatives from the Community Initiatives for Visiting Immigrants in Confinement, or CIVIC, after it submitted a formal complaint two weeks ago alleging routine physical abuse, medical neglect, and race-based harassment of detainees.

In June, the organization had also led a demonstration outside of the center to bring attention to the conditions that roughly 260 detainees face every day.

Immigration advocates and attorneys say the ban at the Etowah County facility, which is operated by the sheriff's department, is just the latest instance of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials retaliating in response to criticism.

"This is clearly a violation of our First Amendment rights," said Christina Fialho, co-director of CIVIC and an immigration attorney based in California. "ICE can't turn a blind eye to the sheriff's violation of our First Amendment right. Both ICE and the sheriff's department have violated our First Amendment right here."

In a statement, the Etowah County Sheriff's Department said it banned CIVIC because it "encouraged detainees to file complaints," which caused issues concerning "the safety, security, and orderly operation of our facility."

Sheriff Todd Entrekin also accused CIVIC representatives of acting irresponsibly by pushing detainees to file complaints and discouraging them from participating in on-site programs.

"We allow many individuals to visit and provide programs to those held in the detention center," Entrekin said in an email to BuzzFeed News. "However, when problems arise and programs are no longer beneficial, they will cease to exist."

Entrekin ended the facility's two-year relationship with CIVIC in late July when the organization sent an email requesting visits with 10 detainees. It gave no explanation at the time for the suspension.

Richard Rocha, a spokesman for ICE, clarified in an email to the organization that the programs are allowed "pursuant to the approval and continued endorsement of the local detention center," and that federal officials "fully respect" the sheriff's decision.

The Etowah County program suspension is the sixth time CIVIC has lost visitation rights at a detention center, including in California and Florida.

Immigrants from El Salvador and Guatemala board a bus after being released from a family detention center in San Antonio, Texas.

(AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Andrew Freeman, an immigration attorney, decried the decision to end the visitation program at the Etowah County facility, calling the visits a constitutional right.

"These are constitutional rights, they aren't just visitation privileges," Freeman said. "We certainly are not going to hesitate to litigate if the government continues its unlawful position that we should be banned."

The ACLU of Southern California also said it is prepared to litigate if the ICE fails to prohibit retaliation against attorneys who express criticism or participate in any kind of peaceful demonstration.

"When we see abuse in detention, it is our duty as Americans to speak up," Fialho said in a statement. "By denying us access whenever we do expose abuse, ICE has tried to make us choose between our First Amendment rights and visiting our friends and clients in immigration detention. This is not a choice our government can legally ask us to make."


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White Supremacist Convicted Of Murder In Jewish Centers Shootings

Allison Long / AP

A Kansas jury on Monday found a 74-year-old white supremacist guilty of capital murder over the shooting deaths of three people at two Jewish facilities last year.

Frazier Glenn Miller Jr., a former Ku Klux Klan leader who defended himself in court, argued that he shot the three people because of a Jewish conspiracy to eliminate the white race.

"I wanted to kill Jews, not people," he told the court, according to the Associated Press.

The three shooting victims of the April 13, 2014, shooting were all Christians: 14-year-old Reat Underwood; his grandfather, William Corporon; and Terri LaManno, who was visiting her mother at the Jewish assisted living center when the gunman opened fire.

Jurors took less than two hours to convict Miller, according to the Kansas City Star.

"I believe the fat lady just sang," he reportedly said when the verdict was delivered.

This is a developing news story. Check back for updates or follow BuzzFeed News on Twitter.

LINK: Kansas City Jewish Center Shooter Charged With Capital Murder



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Man's Death Inside Texas Jail Lobby Is Ruled A Homicide

Dallas County Sheriff's Department

The death of a Texas man inside a jail lobby after a struggle with deputies was ruled a homicide on Monday.

Joseph Hutcheson, 48, died on Aug. 1 after he was pinned to the ground and handcuffed by police in the lobby of Dallas County's jail. The county medical examiner’s office determined that factors contributing to his death included cocaine and meth, compounded heart problems caused by high blood pressure, and stress to his body associated with the struggle and being restrained.

Police said Hutcheson went into the building yelling for help, behaving erratically, and claimed his wife was trying to kill him.

A 40-minute video, with no sound, of the incident shows three deputies, later four, pinning Hutcheson to the ground. At different times during the struggle appears as though one of them placed his knee on his neck.

Hutcheson looks unresponsive after deputies prop him up on his knees, about 10 minutes after he was taken down someone begins to administer chest compressions.

Scott Palmer, an attorney for Hutcheson’s family, said the medical examiner’s findings corroborates what the video shows, that deputies were responsible on some level for the man’s death.

"It is apparent from the ruling that Mr. Hutcheson died at the hands of another,” Palmer said in a statement. “We believe without the assault by the Sheriff’s deputies, Mr. Hutcheson would still be alive today."

Palmer told BuzzFeed News that an independent pathologist hired by the family to conduct a second autopsy found that Hutcheson’s neck organs were missing. He had no idea why the medical examiner would keep them, unless they were of particular interest.

The Dallas Morning News reported that hours before Hutcheson’s death, he went to Parkland Memorial Hospital. Dallas County Sheriff Lupe Valdez, said he checked into the hospital at 4:17 a.m. and left “against medical advice” at 9:48 a.m. Hutcheson then entered the jail lobby at 10:24 a.m., she said.

Dallas County Sheriff’s Department declined to give additional details, citing the ongoing investigation.



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Two Dudes Went Fishing And Rescued Some Kittens From A River

“Catfishing.”

Jason Frost

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Brandon Key

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So tranquil. So peaceful. So... ??

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The U.S. Asylum System Is Completely Overwhelmed

Asylum claims have grown sixfold in the past three years, overpowering the U.S. immigration system’s ability to handle them.

M., an asylum seeker from Vietnam, is stranded in the Bronx

David Noriega / Via BuzzFeed News

It will be two years minimum before the U.S. government considers M's application for asylum. He'll have to wait, because like tens of thousands of others, he has no place else to go.

Before he sought refuge, M. was in the U.S. legally as a sophomore at a public college in upstate New York. That ended when he was outed as gay to his parents in Vietnam, after confiding in a cousin whose loyalty he miscalculated. His parents immediately cut him off financially in an effort to force him back home so they can send him to a camp that will "cure" him of his sexual orientation.

"I'm stranded," M. says, standing on a Bronx sidewalk dwarfed by the public housing complex that, courtesy of a friend generous enough to share her twin bed, he is calling home for now. "I can't really do anything until they decide my case." (M. asked that BuzzFeed News withhold his name for fear that speaking publicly would jeopardize his asylum claim.)

Other than going underground as an undocumented immigrant, the U.S. asylum system is M.'s only recourse to avoid returning to a life of physical and emotional abuse in Vietnam. But that system, according to federal data and to the accounts of asylum seekers and their lawyers, is crippled by backlogs. Around the country, asylum seekers are waiting anywhere from two to four years just to schedule an initial interview with immigration officers, merely the first step in a long adjudication process.

This far exceeds the government's own standards, which state that asylum seekers should be interviewed within 45 days and have their cases decided within roughly six months. By and large, the government hewed to this standard before the current backlog, according to more than a dozen asylum attorneys interviewed by BuzzFeed News.

The number of applicants waiting in the backlog has grown more than sixfold, from roughly 12,500 in January of 2012 to nearly 95,000 in June of this year. Meanwhile, the number of cases USCIS adjudicates in a given month has only grown by 40 percent, from roughly 2,400 to 3,700. These asylum seekers cannot work legally for the first five months their application is pending, during which time many struggle to support themselves financially. Until their case is decided, they are barred from receiving any federal benefits. For many, this means being shut off from access to desperately needed medical care. Others have families stranded and in danger in the countries they fled. Once they obtain asylee status they can bring their families legally to the U.S., but, in the meantime, they have no choice but to wait.

The number of affirmative asylum cases pending before USCIS has grown dramatically in recent years.

Via BuzzFeed News

The system became overloaded following a sudden rise in the number of Central Americans fleeing gang violence by crossing into the U.S. from Mexico in 2012. The surge peaked with last year's unaccompanied child migrant crisis, in response to which the government jailed thousands of Central American families and sped up their deportations. Meanwhile, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services dedicated a growing share of resources to interviewing migrants at the border. These resources were siphoned, according to a report by the agency's ombudsman, from the cases of affirmative asylum applicants — those who apply proactively from the interior of the country, rather than as a defense against deportation.

"I've been practicing asylum law for 20 years," said Paul O'Dwyer, a lawyer in New York who is suing the federal government in a class action on behalf of asylum seekers stuck in the backlog. "My opinion, and the opinion of most private attorneys who practice asylum law, is that the asylum adjudication system simply no longer works."

A USCIS spokesperson told BuzzFeed News that the agency has doubled the number of asylum officers in the last two years, although it's not possible to specify how much of this manpower is assigned to border cases stemming from the surge. In spite of this increase, funding levels for the asylum division have remained at a steady 2% of USCIS's total budget, according to data provided by the agency.

Hence the continuing limbo of cases like M.'s. — cases that fit broadly into the government's standards for asylum and which in prior years would have had a good chance at a quick resolution.

M. is his father's first and only son, as his father was to his grandfather. He bears tremendous pressure to carry the patrilineal bloodline, and his family views his sexual orientation as a cataclysm. When M. was a child, he liked to wear makeup and his sisters' dresses. He continued to do so until his father's beatings became severe enough to suppress the urge.

But the pressure on M. had one benefit: His family, which had climbed its way to the middle class on the back of a small appliance store, expected him to surpass their success. So when M. turned 16, they sent him to America to finish high school and start college. M. jumped at the chance, even though the school his parents chose was a Christian academy deep in Kentucky. After a revelatory class visit to New York City, he convinced his parents to send him to college upstate — just far enough from the city to seem sufficiently sheltered.

"I was privileged before this, I guess," M. says. "I was an international student. My parents were paying my tuition. Now I don't really have anything. But waking up and not thinking about what I'm going to do today to not be perceived as gay… that's profoundly valuable to me."

M. sometimes dwells on the fact that many cases are more, as he puts it, "extreme" than his. Among the asylum seekers who spoke to BuzzFeed News, there is the Syrian dentist who was driven from her lab by Islamist gunmen and whose son remains in Damascus. There is the Colombian activist whose husband was killed in broad daylight by narco-paramilitaries and whose daughter remains in Medellín. There is the gay man from Cameroon, where homosexuality is illegal, who contracted HIV during a gang rape that he wouldn't dream of reporting to the police.

Only a few years ago, these kinds of cases would probably have been dispatched quickly and relatively painlessly, said Camille Mackler of the New York Immigrant Coalition, who practiced asylum law privately for several years. "If this backlog hadn't happened, and if the system functioned as it should, [immigrants with strong cases] would have gotten asylum within three to four months and gone on with their lives," Mackler said.

The same is true of M.: There are clear pathways in the law for LGBT students who lose their visas and livelihoods after coming out to their families. But now M. is down to his last $300, with a couple of months to go before he can get a work permit. "I'm just trying not to spend anything," he says, meaning he mostly whiles away his days reading. The idleness is getting to him. "When you're just home all the time, not being productive — it's depressing," he says, riding a northbound bus in the Bronx to meet Dee, the friend whose twin bed, food stamps, and MetroCard he's sharing.

M. has the benefit of making friends easily. Well before he felt comfortable with the idea, Dee insisted that he stay with her and her sister, two brothers, and their parents in their cramped apartment in the Bronx. Dee's family came to New York from Jamaica when she was a child, and it took them several years to resolve their immigration status.

"We can relate," she says, standing with M. in line for a burrito outside Fordham Plaza. "Now my parents call us married. They're like, 'feed your husband!'"

She asks how long, exactly, it will take for M.'s case to be resolved. The government, as it turns out, recently posted new timetables online. "In New York," M. says, "they're hearing cases from 2013. It could be worse. In Los Angeles they're hearing cases from 2011."

Dee nods. "So, 2017? You'll be good?"

M. smiles, shrugs, and doesn't answer.


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Sunday, August 30, 2015

Kim Kardashian Reposts Morning Sickness Pills With Full Warning Label

During the VMAS, Kim Kardashian posted on Instagram a selfie advertising morning sickness pills that the FDA had earlier pressured her to remove, but this time with the drug’s side effects.

instagram.com

Kim Kardashian reposted a selfie during the MTV's Video Music Awards that she had earlier been asked to remove because it advertised morning sickness pills without noting their possible side effects, but this time there was long a list of warnings.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration sent a warning letter earlier in the month to the pharmaceutical company Duchesnay to remove a selfie posted by Kim Kardashian advertising Diclegis that didn't include the drug's possible side effects.

The reality star reposted the ad on Instagram on Sunday, saying "I guess you saw the attention my last #morningsickness post received."

Duchesnay got a warning letter from the FDA in mid-August after it paid Kardashian to post the selfie with its morning sickness pills. The post had included a link the the company's website, which goes to a page that does have the possible side effects.

"The social media post is false or misleading in that it presents efficacy claims for DICLEGIS, but fails to communicate any risk information associated with its use and it omits material facts," the FDA warning letter to Duchesnay said.

The FDA said that the Instagram post was also in violation because it did not warn that the drug hadn't been tested on women with severe morning sickness, called hypermesis gravidarum.

A spokesperson for Duchesnay USA told BuzzFeed News that Kardashian had shared her personal experience with the company, which then wrote the Instagram post that she shared to her social media followers.

#CorrectiveAd I guess you saw the attention my last #morningsickness post received. The FDA has told Duchesnay, Inc., that my last post about Diclegis (doxylamine succinate and pyridoxine HCl) was incomplete because it did not include any risk information or important limitations of use for Diclegis. A link to this information accompanied the post, but this didn't meet FDA requirements. So, I'm re-posting and sharing this important information about Diclegis. For US Residents Only.
Diclegis is a prescription medicine used to treat nausea and vomiting of pregnancy in women who have not improved with change in diet or other non-medicine treatments.
Limitation of Use: Diclegis has not been studied in women with hyperemesis gravidarum.
Important Safety Information
Do not take Diclegis if you are allergic to doxylamine succinate, other ethanolamine derivative antihistamines, pyridoxine hydrochloride or any of the ingredients in Diclegis. You should also not take Diclegis in combination with medicines called monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), as these medicines can intensify and prolong the adverse CNS effects of Diclegis.
The most common side effect of Diclegis is drowsiness. Do not drive, operate heavy machinery, or other activities that need your full attention unless your healthcare provider says that you may do so. Do not drink alcohol, or take other central nervous system depressants such as cough and cold medicines, certain pain medicines, and medicines that help you sleep while you take Diclegis. Severe drowsiness can happen or become worse causing falls or accidents.
Tell your healthcare provider about all of your medical conditions, including if you are breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed. Diclegis can pass into your breast milk and may harm your baby. You should not breastfeed while using Diclegis.
Additional safety information can be found at http://ift.tt/1DprUH2 or www.Diclegis.com. Duchesnay USA encourages you to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

LINK: This Selfie Got Kim Kardashian Into Trouble With The Feds


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Baltimore Police Department Cancels Days Off During Court Hearings In Freddie Gray Murder Case

BPD leadership called for all hands on deck in case of unrest on the days the six officers charged for Freddie Gray’s death will appear in court.

Riot police the night after citywide riots over the death of Freddie Gray on April 28.

Mark Makela / Getty Images

Anticipating potential unrest, the Baltimore Police Department has cancelled days-off for employees on the dates of two upcoming hearings for the six officers charged in the death of Freddie Gray, according to a departmental email obtained by BuzzFeed News.

"In order to ensure adequate staffing, the Police Commissioner is cancelling leave on September 2, 2015 and September 10, 2015, in accordance with the Memorandum of Understanding between the FOP and the BPD/City of Baltimore," stated the email, which was sent by Interim Police Commissioner Kevin Davis's chief of staff, Martin Bartness, to "ALLBPD" under the subject line "Cancellation of Leave."

The Memorandum of Understanding refers to a provision in the contract between the police union and the city that the department has the right to cancel leave in times of emergency.

The Circuit Court and the Sheriff's Office are also taking extra precautions at the hearings because of the heightened media attention and the potential for protests. Last week, court's administrative judge released an order--to "preserve the security and dignity of the Court"--detailing the security protocol and specific public and media restrictions. The Sheriff's Office announced that it would increase the number of deputies stationed at Courtroom 234, where the hearings are slated to take place.

The message from the commissioner reflects a department on edge, or particularly cautious, in the months since protests and riots shook the city following the death of Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old who suffered a fatal spinal injury while in police custody on April 12. It also suggest that Davis learned a lesson from the ousting of his predecessor.

Rank-and-file officers accused department leadership of being unprepared for the dangers they faced on the ground during the riots. At a union meeting in May, officers complained about how then-Commissioner Anthony Batts' handled the riots and hundreds raised their hands in support of a potential no-confidence vote against him. Two months later, on July 8th, the Fraternal Order of Police released a report criticizing Batts and his administration for failing to prevent the protests from escalating into riots. That same day, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake fired Batts, citing the city's rising crime rate. There had been 156 homicides in the city in 2015 by the day Batts was fired, and 100 of them had come in the three months following the unrest, according to data from the Baltimore Sun.

The hearings, scheduled for September 2 and 10, will address the defense's challenges to the case. Defense attorneys have filed motions arguing that Mosby recuse herself because her husband, Councilman Nick Mosby, represents the district where Freddie Gray was killed, and that the court proceedings be moved outside of Baltimore because of what defense attorney called a "presumption of prejudice" in the city. The defense has also argued that the case should be dismissed. Prosecutors have argued that the officers should be tried separately.

The six defendants, all BPD officers currently suspended from the force, face charges including second-degree murder, manslaughter, and assault.

LINK: The Short, Hard Life Of Freddie Gray



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Obama Announces Mount McKinley Will Be Called Denali In Honor Of Alaska Natives

The president said on Sunday the official name of Mount McKinley will be changed back to Denali, the name given to the peak by the Koyukon Athabascan, who have lived in Alaska for thousands of years.

President Obama will be spending three days in Alaska this week to celebrate the official renaming of Mount McKinley to its traditional name, Denali.

President Obama will be spending three days in Alaska this week to celebrate the official renaming of Mount McKinley to its traditional name, Denali.

Becky Bohrer / AP

Mount McKinley, which is the tallest mountain in North America at 20,237 feet, was originally known by Alaska Natives as Denali before it was renamed to honor President William McKinley.

Though the mountain sits on the 6 million-acre Denali national park and has been known as Denali in Alaska since 1975, it wasn't until Interior Secretary Sally Jewell signed an order Friday that the name was federally recognized.

Denali, which means "the high one" in the Athabaskan language spoken, was first renamed Densmore's Moutain in the 19th century by European American explorers. During President McKinley's second campaign, the mountain was renamed in 1896 to boost his candidacy.

"President McKinley never visited, nor did he have any significant historical connection to, the mountain or to Alaska," Jewell pointed out in her order.

Senior Senator of Alaska Lisa Murkowski posted a video on Facebook thanking Obama for working with the Alaskan government to "show honor, respect, and gratitude to the Athabascan people of Alaska."

President Obama will officially announce the name change in Anchorage, Alaska on Monday. He will be the first sitting president to visit the Alaskan Arctic.

Facebook: SenLisaMurkowski

In renaming the peak, the Obama administration breaks a 40-year impasse over the name of the mountain, which has been debated by government officials since Denali was first proposed as a name by Alaska's governor in 1975.

The congressional delegation of Ohio – where McKinley was born – continuously blocked the petitions for the change by introducing numerous bills requiring it to be named after the 25th president.

Though the U.S. Board of Geographic Names does not approve name changes under consideration by congress, the Interior Secretary is granted the right to change names independently when the board does not act in a "reasonable" amount of time. 40 years was enough time to be considered unreasonable.

During this trip, Obama will also meet with Alaska officials and leaders from the Alaska Native community, the president's administration announced in a press release, to discuss ways to "strengthen cooperation between the federal government and Alaska Native tribes."


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TV Station Upping Security After Reporters Killed On Live Television

Days after reporter Allison Parker and cameraman Adam Ward were fatally shot by a former coworker on live television, the station's general manager said the network will be implementing security and safety changes to its live news coverage.

"The plan going forward is to look at each live opportunity separately and make the proper decisions," Jeff Marks, general manager of WDBJ, a local CBS affiliate based in Roanoke, Virginia, said on CNN's Reliable Sources.

It is common on many television news stations for reporters to film live coverage with one camera person, or sometimes even by themselves, Reliable Sources host Brian Steiter explained on air, suggesting that this may make reporters more vulnerable to harm.

Marks said he did not want to reveal how many people WDBJ management were now planning to have on each live shot "because there are crazy people out there and I think it's best if we keep our plans to ourselves." However, he said he believed the discussion about security happening at WDBJ7 is probably also going on in every other newsroom in the country that routinely does live broadcasts in public.

Toward the end of the CNN interview Marks grew tearful as he spoke about how talented his reporters were: "If you had 1,000 job candidates in front of you and you had to pick two," Marks said, "those were the two you would pick out."

Parker, 24, and Ward, 27, were gunned down by former WBJ7 colleague Vester Lee Flanagan II, known as Bryce Williams on television, during a live television interview Wednesday morning.

While driving away from the crime scene, Flanagan posted videos he had filmed of the murders on his social media accounts. After being surrounded by police, he shot himself and died later in a hospital.

Both Parker and Ward were in romantic relationships with colleagues at the small local news station and were valued members of Roanoake's community.

Parker had recently moved in with her boyfriend Chris Hurst, the station’s 6 o’clock news anchor, who called Parker “the most radiant woman I ever met.”

Ward was engaged to Melissa Ott, a WDBJ morning show producer. According to his Facebook page, the two were to be married next summer.

Marks told Steiter that he has just seen Ott on Saturday night. “She was in amazing shape," he said, "supported by friends and family at an informal gathering that some of our employees did."

Hurst has been more "front and center," Marks said, referring to the numerous interviews the anchor has done, as well as the photos and thoughts he has shared on social media remembering Parker.

Two funeral services will take place for Ward on will take place next week: one in Roanoake's First Baptist Church and a second in Ward's high school auditorium. Mourners are encouraged to wear "Salem Spartan and Virginia Tech colors," in honor of Ward's high school and college, WBJ7 reported.

Services for Parker have not yet been announced, but her family has asked for donations to two scholarship funds named in her honor: the Alison B. Parker Memorial Fund scholarship through James Madison University – where she attended college – and the Alison Bailey Parker Memorial Scholarship through Patrick Henry Community College Foundation.

cnn.com



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New Orleans Marks Hurricane Katrina Anniversary With Defiant Celebration

On Saturday, residents marked 10 years since the infamous storm devastated their city by holding festive and proud celebrations of just how far they’ve come.

NEW ORLEANS — Thousands of people took to the streets of New Orleans to mark the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina Saturday, singing, dancing, drinking, and hugging one another in a cathartic show of defiance against the storm’s destruction.

NEW ORLEANS — Thousands of people took to the streets of New Orleans to mark the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina Saturday, singing, dancing, drinking, and hugging one another in a cathartic show of defiance against the storm’s destruction.

John Stanton/BuzzFeed News

Part elaborate funeral procession and part moving block party, many in the Crescent City worried that in the storm's aftermath these marches, known as Second Lines, would go extinct as the city's population was scattered across the country.

But the tradition has remained.

Marchers from across the city began gathering early Saturday morning under the grey, imposing levee, the site where the old levee collapsed in 2005, sending a wall of water into this poor, largely black neighborhood, and ultimately filling much of the city in as much as 17 feet of water.

John Stanton/BuzzFeed News

John Stanton/BuzzFeed News


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People Have Been Freaking Out After Seamless And GrubHub Had An Outage Nationwide

There were a lot of hangry customers.

Seamless is a food delivery service that countless people rely on every night to ensure they don't starve.

instagram.com

In 2013, Seamless merged with GrubHub to become a major powerhouse in online food ordering.

instagram.com

But on Saturday, hungry customers who wanted to get food from either service were out of luck.

But on Saturday, hungry customers who wanted to get food from either service were out of luck.

Twitter


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Saturday, August 29, 2015

Man Dies After Falling From Upper Deck During Atlanta Braves Game

The man reportedly fell from one level of bleachers to another during a home game at Turner Field against the New York Yankees.

Rescue workers carry an injured fan who fell from the stands at Turner Field Saturday.

John Bazemore / AP

After falling during the seventh inning, the man was treated at the scene then taken to an area hospital, the Braves announced on Twitter. However, he later died from his injuries.

The Atlanta Police confirmed to BuzzFeed News that the man died, but said his name had not been released while authorities worked to notify his family. Sgt. Greg Lyons said the man was in his early 60s.

Lyons said investigators at the scene found no indication that foul play was involved.

"It seems to be a tragic accident," Lyons added.

ESPN reported that witnesses saw the man lose his balance while yelling at Alex Rodriguez of the Yankees. The man reportedly then fell about 50 feet onto a lower level.


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The First Black Man To Play Jean Valjean On Broadway Dies At 21

Kyle Jean-Baptiste, an actor who made musical theater history in July by becoming the first black man to play the Les Misérables hero Jean Valjean on Broadway, died Friday in New York City. He was 21.

kylejeanbaptiste.com

"The entire Les Misérables family is shocked and devastated by the sudden and tragic loss of Kyle, a remarkable young talent and tremendous person who made magic — and history — in his Broadway debut," the show's producers said in a statement.

"We send our deepest condolences to his family and ask that you respect their privacy in this unimaginably difficult time."

Jean-Baptiste died after falling off a fire escape at his mother's apartment, BroadwayWorld.com reported.

The young actor had served as the Broadway production's Valjean understudy, in addition to playing the roles of Courfeyrac, one of the students, and the Constable.

The graduate of Ohio's Baldwin Wallace University had been making his Broadway debut in Les Mis, when he went on as Jean Valjean in July.

Sir Cameron Mackintosh, the British theatrical producer behind Les Mis, even watched him perform.

His last turn as Valjean was on Thursday night.

"Acting and singing have become an extension of who I am, and I strive to use my gift to influence and inspire others," he wrote on his website. "I am now shooting for the stars and trying to reach my goal of becoming the best stage and screen actor that I can be."



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Bystander Fatally Shot By NYPD Officer During Undercover Operation

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

New York Police Commissioner Bill Bratton has apologized to the family of a man killed Friday night by an officer involved in an undercover operation.

Authorities said the undercover officer had been participating in an illegal gun-buy in Mount Vernon, north of the Bronx, when he was robbed at gunpoint by a second suspect. After the officer attempted to stop the fleeing man, the suspect then pointed his gun at the officer, police said, prompting him to open fire.

The suspect was shot three times in the torso, according to police, but a bystander standing behind the man was also struck.

Authorities said the bystander, Felix Kumi, 61, was taken to a local hospital for a torso wound, but died early on Saturday morning.

In a statement, Commissioner Bratton expressed his "profound sorrow and sympathy" to the Mount Vernon resident's family.

"Mr. Kumi was blameless, and this tragedy has tested and tried his family," Bratton said." I pray that they may find comfort in their hope of resurrection and awakening, and I tender the Department’s support and service in their grief."

The handgun replica police said they found on the suspect.

NYPD

The unnamed suspect who allegedly aimed a weapon at the officer was taken into custody and brought to a hospital, police said, with charges pending.

Police said they recovered a handgun replica from the 37-year-old suspect.

The suspect from whom the undercover officer was allegedly buying weapons from was identified by police as 28-year-old Jeffrey Aristy.

He was arrested and charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance and firearms.



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Friday, August 28, 2015

Sheriff's Deputy Shot Dead In Ambush At Texas Gas Station

The deputy was pumping gas Friday night at a suburban Houston gas station when a man walked up and shot him from behind, sparking a massive manhunt.

Law enforcement vehicles and police tape mark the scene where earlier a sheriff's deputy was killed.

ABC 13 / Via abc13.com

The shooting happened at a gas station about 24 miles from downtown Houston. Sheriff's officials said the deputy, who was wearing his uniform, was pumping gas for his patrol car around 8:30 p.m. when a person walked up and shot him.

"A male suspect came up from behind the deputy and shot the deputy multiple times," Harris County Deputy Thomas Gilliland told reporters. "The deputy then fell to ground. The suspect then continued over to him and shot the deputy again multiple times as he laid on the ground."

Police said the shooter fled the scene and was still on the loose more than two hours later. Officials described the gunman as a man in his 20s with a dark complexion. He was wearing a white t-shirt and red shorts.

Officials called the shooting a "very bizarre incident" and vowed to catch the killer.

"I can tell you that with diligence and justice, this suspect will be caught and he will be brought to justice," Gilliland said.


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Chicago Has Just Been Blessed With Two Rare Snow Leopard Cubs

There are only an estimated 4,000 to 6,500 of the elusive cats remaining in the wild.

"Can you not?" — Snow leopard cubs, probably.

Chicago Zoological Society / Via czs.org

On Friday, the Brookfield Zoo in Chicago announced the births of two rare snow leopards.

The sister cubs were born on June 16 to their 4-year-old mother, Sarani, and currently weigh about 10 pounds each, according to the zoo.

The announcement came just as Chicago was recovering from the news that two red panda cubs born this summer at Lincoln Park Zoo were one step closer to making their public debut.

Chicago Zoological Society

The endangered snow leopard population is believed to have declined by at least 20% over the past two generations — or 16 years — due to loss of habitat and prey, poaching, and persecution, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

The snow leopard is restricted to the high mountains of Central Asia, including Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia, and Russia.

According to the Snow Leopard Trust, there are only an estimated 4,000 to 6,500 of the elusive cats remaining in the wild.

For now, the cubs at Brookfield Zoo will continue to bond with their mother in their den, as they prepare to make their public debut in mid-October.


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Six People Begin Living In A Dome In Year-Long NASA Experiment

University of Hawai'i at Manoa

Six people have embarked on the ultimate staycation — 365 days inside a 20-foot tall dome on a rocky, dormant volcano in Hawaii as part of a close-quarters living experiment for NASA.

On Friday, the crew — a German physicist, a French astrobiologist, and four Americans, including a soil scientist, a pilot, an architect, and a doctor — started living inside a dome that is just 20 feet tall and 36 feet in diameter on the dormant volcano of Mauna Loa as NASA tries to understand how long term isolation affects humans.

NASA estimates that a human mission to the Red Planet would take one to three years, so the space agency is trying to find out how living in a small, cramped place without access to fresh food, air, or water for long periods of time affects humans.

HI-SEAS Mission 3 crew and support members.

University of Hawaii at Manoa

The year-long commitment is the longest U.S. isolation experiment yet to help NASA prepare for a potential mission to Mars. The first long term co-habitation experiment was for four months, followed by an eight-month mission that ended in June.

At $1.2 million, principal investigator Kim Binsted told the AFP that the Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation, or HI-SEAS, is actually "very cheap for space research" given the nature of the overall mission.

Inside the HI-SEAS dome.

University of Hawaii at Manoa

"It is really inexpensive compared to the cost of a space mission going wrong," she said.

Among the issues scientists hope to shed light on: How will the team members cope with internal conflicts and lack of privacy?

Carmel Johnston, Christiane Heinicke, Sheyna Gifford, Andrzej Stewart, Cyprien Verseux, Tistan Bassingthwaighte will each get their own tiny room with just enough space for a small bed, chair, and a desk. But for the most part, they will be sharing a communal space meant to simulate a station on Mars — if someone wants to leave the dome for the rocky, barren landscape outside, they'll have to put on a space suit.

youtube.com

Gifford, the health science officer/journalist on the team, wrote on her blog, Live From Mars, that she looked forward to playing a role in resetting the "human boundary."

"In less than a generation, if we set our minds to it, we will be packing a group of people off to the 4th planet from the Sun," she wrote. "The same species who landed on the beach in Normandy in 1944, on the Moon in 1969, and a comet in 2014 now brings you: #occupymars."



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Twitter Refuses Actor James Woods' Request To ID Anonymous User

Twitter is refusing to identify an anonymous user who accused Academy Award-nominated actor James Woods of being a “cocaine addict.”

Woods filed a $10-million defamation lawsuit July 30 against the Twitter user, who was using the handle "Abe List," claiming he has "never done cocaine." His legal team then asked Twitter to reveal the identity of the anonymous tweeter.

Twitter, however, refused, noting that Woods' lawsuit did not appear to outline the basics of a defamation action and that the tweets appeared to be more opinion than statements of fact.

“Attempts to unmask anonymous online speakers in the absence of a prima facie defamation claim are improper and would chill the First Amendment rights of speakers who use Twitter’s platforms to express their thoughts and ideas, instantly and publicly, without barriers,” Twitter’s attorney, Ryan Mrazik, wrote in denying the request.

The anonymous Twitter user, named only as "John Doe" in court papers, also objected to being identified. His attorney, Kenneth White, told BuzzFeed News that Woods' legal action seemed ironic given that the actor also engages in the same type of "trash talking, internet smack talk."

White pointed to many of Woods own tweets in which he uses the words "clown" and "scum" and even accuses others of drug use.

"He is suing someone over an insulting tweet calling him a cocaine addict, but he goes straight to the 'Why are you on crack?' insult several times," White said.

He added that his client's tweets about Woods aren't actionable.

"Only something that is a provable statement of fact can be defamation — an insult or rhetoric can’t be (defamation) and that is what this so clearly is," White said.

He also argued that his client's anonymity and statements are protected by the First Amendment.

"We believe this is meritless, a form of bullying and the strong praying on the weak," White said. "His anonymity is what helps him talk back to people like this."

A court hearing to address the anonymity issue and other matters in the case is scheduled for Oct. 2.

Read Twitter's full response to James Woods' request here:

LINK: Actor James Woods Sues Anonymous Twitter User For $10 Million




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Black Man Held For Months For Stealing $5 Worth Of Snacks Found Dead In Jail Cell

Jamycheal Mitchell, 24, was arrested in April for allegedly stealing soda and candy from a 7-Eleven. He was found dead in his jail cell Wednesday, Aug. 19.

Jamycheal Mitchell in a picture from Facebook and GoFundMe.

GoFundMe / Via gofundme.com

Jail personnel found Jamycheal Mitchell dead in the morning, Portsmouth Police Capt. Scott Burke told BuzzFeed News. Police are investigating the death, but Burke said "there's no indication of foul play."

Burke did not have details Friday about Mitchell's housing situation at the jail, including if he had been in a cell by himself. He also did not know if an autopsy had been performed yet.

Officials at Hampton Roads Regional Jail, where Mitchell was being held, could not immediately be reached Friday evening.

According to The Guardian, Mitchell was accused of stealing a Mountain Dew, a Snickers, and a Zebra Cake.

Mitchell had been held in the jail without bail, The Guardian also reported.

According to Burke, Mitchell was being evaluated to determine if he was mentally fit to stand trial. At the time of his death, Mitchell was awaiting transfer to a state hospital for that evaluation.

Family members told The Guardian Mitchell suffered from bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, and may have starved to death after refusing food and medication.

"His body failed," Roxanne Adams, his aunt, told the newspaper. "It is extraordinary. The person I saw deceased was not even the same person."

Burke said Mitchell was arrested on suspicion of larceny the same day a Portsmouth Police officer shot and killed an 18-year-old man in a Wal-Mart parking lot.


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Gunman Who Killed Virginia TV Journalists "Closely Identified" With 9/11 Terrorists

Vester Lee Flanagan II.

WDBJ-TV via AP

The disgruntled employee who gunned down two Virginia reporters on live television "very closely identified" with people who committed mass murder and carried out the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, authorities said Friday.

Vester Lee Flanagan also "acted alone and shared his plans with no one" before opening fire Wednesday, killing WDBJ-TV reporter Alison Parker, 24, and her cameraman, 27-year-old Adam Ward, during a live morning telecast, the Franklin County Sheriff's Office announced.

State Police officers leave the apartment of Vester Lee Flanagan II, in Roanoke, Va., Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015.

Steve Helber / AP

Shortly after Flanagan killed Parker and Ward, he posted footage of the shooting online and, in a series of tweets, accused the two of having wronged him in the past.

Seventeen shots where ultimately fired from Flanagan's Glock in what authorities said was a "well planned and pre-meditated" attack — a determination they said was based on items found inside his apartment.

Vicki Gardner, a chamber of commerce official who was also shot while being interviewed by Parker at the time, was expected to make a full recovery.

Her husband, Tim Gardner, told the Associated Press his wife "just laid there playing possum" after Flanagan shot at her.

Tim Gardner said his wife never saw Flanagan approach the three because the camera's bright light was blinding.

Flanagan tried to flee in a rental car after the attack, but shot himself as authorities closed in. Inside the car, police said they found an "escape kit" that included a wig, extra license plates, 17 stamped letters and a to-do list.

Jonathan Drew / AP

On Friday, sheriff officials said they also found two Glock handguns in the rental car, but no firearms in his apartment.

A former employee of WDBJ, Flanagan had a troubled past with the news station. According to internal memos posted by 8 News WRIC Richmond, Flanagan had filed a civil lawsuit against the station and claimed he was harassed and suffered sexual and racial discrimination before he was fired.

LINK: Gun Used In Deadly On-Air Shooting of Virginia Journalist Was Legally Purchased

LINK: Wig And "Escape Kit" Found In Virginia TV Killer's Getaway Car

LINK: Here's What We Know About The Man Who Killed A Virginia TV News Crew



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The $1 Million Official Art For The Pope's U.S. Visit Is In Copyright Trouble

An unholy copyright battle may be brewing.

This is Philadelphia-based pop artist Perry Milou.

instagram.com

And this is his portrait of Pope Francis, entitled "A Prayer For Peace." His PR team says it's the official licensed portrait for the pontiff's upcoming U.S. visit in September.

instagram.com

Here it is on some official merchandise available for purchase through the World Meeting of Families, the Vatican-sponsored event scheduled to be held in Philadelphia.

Here it is on some official merchandise available for purchase through the World Meeting of Families, the Vatican-sponsored event scheduled to be held in Philadelphia.

shop.worldmeeting2015.org

Here it is on a Tote...

Here it is on a Tote...


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Owen Labrie Found Not Guilty Of Felony Sex Assault At St. Paul's School

Jim Cole / AP

Owen Labrie was found not guilty Friday of the three most serious sexual assault charges – all felonies – filed against him after a 15-year-old former St. Paul's School student accused him of raping her at the Concord, New Hampshire campus in 2014. The jury – nine men and three women – deliberated for about seven hours.

Labrie was, however, found guilty of a felony count of using "computer services" – namely, Facebook messages and emails – to lure a child under 16, the age of consent, into a sexual assault. That carries a possible sentence of 3.5 to 7 years in jail and the possibility that he will have to register as a sex offender.

He was also found guilty three charges of misdemeanor sexual assault, one misdemeanor charge of using a computer to endanger a child, and one misdemeanor charge of endangering the welfare of a child. The misdemeanor sexual assault charges could carry could carry a year in prison.

His ultimate sentence will be determined by the judge – who had wide discretion – at a later time. Labrie was also found not guilty of simple assault.

The jury's decisions indicate that they believe Labrie was guilty of having sex with an underage girl, but they didn't believe the accuser's charge that it was not consensual.

Labrie hung his arms around his neck and cried as the guilty pleas were read. His mother, with her face in her hands was audibly crying as well. Other family members reached out to comfort his mother. The victim sat in the courtroom in between her mother and her sister as the verdict was being read.

"Today, a measure of justice has been served for victims of sexual violence," the victim and her family said in a statement. "While he was not convicted on all charges, Owen Labrie was held accountable in some way by a jury of his peers for crimes he committed against our daughter. This conviction requires him to take ownership for his actions and gives him the opportunity to reflect upon the harm he has caused. There is no joy in this outcome, however, as our daughter can never get back what she has lost nor can St. Paul’s School ever be our community again."

The trial called into question a decades-long tradition at the elite prep school – which boasts Pulitzer Prize winners, U.S. Ambassadors, and Secretary of State John Kerry as alumni – known as the “Senior Salute,” whereby male and female seniors invite underclassmen out on dates.

While a “Senior Salute” can be as simple as walking to class together, or kissing, prosecutors claim it is sexual as boys compete with each other on how many girls they can sleep with.

Prosecutor Christine Ruffle explained to the court that the tradition has been passed down year after year, occurring at the end of the school term when seniors are preparing to graduate. Before receiving their diplomas, she said seniors extend invitations, often to younger students, to go on dates.

Ruffle claimed that Labrie specifically targeted the girl because he had hooked up with one of her relatives, who was also a student. The previous hook-up with the relative increased the point-value of his encounter with the accuser, Ruffle said.

J.W. Carney

Cheryl Senter / AP

Much of the trial has focused on consent and whether the girl, now 16, was a willing participant of the “Senior Salute.” Presenting Facebook messages and emails the two teens exchanged, Labrie’s attorney, J.W. Carney, said the girl knew what she was doing.

Carney called this case a story about “two high school kids and the experiences they have growing up,” and said both teens lied to protect their reputations. He said when Labrie told his friends he and his accuser had sex, he wasn't telling the truth. But Carney said the girl accusing Labrie of rape also lied to protect her reputation.

She "had to make a decision if it was her reputation that went in the toilet, or Owen's," Carney said during closing arguments. "She took the easier choice."

Carney said Labrie had a moment of clarity – “divine intervention” – and ended the date before the two had sex.

Labrie testified that he did indeed have a crush on the girl and wanted to spend time with her. He said the two kissed and removed some clothing. She was giggling the whole time, he said.

“I thought she was having a great time,” he said.

After putting on a condom, Labrie said he realized “it wouldn’t have been a good move to have sex with” the girl. He said he then got dressed and left. By the time he got back to his dorm, he said younger boys were high-fiving him and congratulating him on having sex with the girl.

Labrie said he didn’t correct them because he “wanted to look good."

“I’m not saying he is a saint,” Carney said during closing arguments. “He is not a saint. He is a teenager.”

A number of former St. Paul’s School students who knew Labrie, including his roommate of three years, testified that Labrie told them he had sex with the girl.

Carney dismissed these statements saying that teenage boys often embellish or lie about their sex lives.

In stark contrast to Labrie’s side of the story, the girl took the stand in an emotional testimony and said she was raped and “violated in so many ways.”

Joe Cherniske

Cheryl Senter / AP

The prosecution argued that Labrie “confused and manipulated” the girl to “get what he wanted.” Using emails and Facebook messages as evidence, prosecutors said Labrie planned to have sex with the girl as early as January 2014.

The girl initially declined Labrie’s “Senior Salute,” but after one of Labrie’s friends told her he was a good guy, she changed her mind and accepted. She testified that she expected they would kiss, but nothing more.

During her testimony she graphically described how their sexual encounter quickly escalated. She let him take her shirt off, she said, because she didn’t want to offend him. The girl then said Labrie ripped off her bra and bit her chest. She said he attempted to remove her underwear but that she said “no” while trying to be as polite as possible because she didn’t want to come off as “bitchy.”

“I didn’t know how to deal with it because I’ve never been in a situation like this,” she said in court. “I’d never been touched in that way.”

Prosecutors argued that the girl, being an inexperienced teenager, did not know how to properly stand up to an older boy, but she explicitly said “no.”

“I didn’t kick or scream or really push,” the girl testified. “I didn’t. But I did say ‘no.’ I said ‘no’ three times.”

Prosecutor Cherniske said during closing arguments that the whatever the girl’s intentions were before the encounter are not important as she never consented at the time.

Cherniske said that Labrie “pulled every trick in the book,” to “get what he wanted.”

“You only need tricks when you don’t have consent,” he said.

Here is the victim and family's full statement:

“Our family, like many others, have read several articles on campus sexual assault in recent years with concern as our daughters progressed through school. But never in our worst nightmares could we have imagined that we would be experiencing this issue firsthand with our 15-year-old daughter during her first year of high school. The reality of this national epidemic has hit home and there is overwhelming sadness for the large number of students suffering from sexual violence everyday in this nation.

Today, a measure of justice has been served for victims of sexual violence. While he was not convicted on all charges, Owen Labrie was held accountable in some way by a jury of his peers for crimes he committed against our daughter. This conviction requires him to take ownership for his actions and gives him the opportunity to reflect upon the harm he has caused. There is no joy in this outcome, however, as our daughter can never get back what she has lost nor can St. Paul’s School ever be our community again.

We still feel betrayed that St. Paul’s School allowed and fostered a toxic culture that left our daughter and other students at risk to sexual violence. We trusted the school to protect her and it failed us. We continue to feel anger and disappointment for the lack of character and integrity that the young men of St. Paul’s School showed, laughing and joking with Owen Labrie at graduation about “slaying” our daughter. Both the school and these young men should bear the shame of these crimes along with Owen Labrie.

While we stood together as a family through this process, it was our young daughter who took the stand to speak the truth and request justice. We admire her bravery in coming forward and speaking out in the face of great adversity. It is truly her courage that has made this measure of justice possible today.

We would be remiss not to express our deepest thanks and appreciation to the Concord Police, the Concord Child Advocacy Center, and the Merrimack County Prosecutor's Office for their tireless efforts to pursue the truth and secure justice in this case. They treated our family with dignity and respect during this long ordeal and we are eternally grateful for their service.

We also would like to thank the court and its staff, for preforming their civic duties, the jury for its service, which required spending time away from their families, extended family and friends, for traveling here or otherwise sending their support, and for the complete strangers who offered us support and words of encouragement through the most difficult process of our lives.”

The indictment:

LINK: Closing Arguments Conclude In St. Paul’s School Rape Trial

LINK: Owen Labrie Testifies In Rape Trial: “I Thought She Was Having A Great Time”

LINK: Former St. Paul’s Student Testifies That Owen Labrie “Told Me He Boned Her”

LINK: Teen Who Says She Was Raped At New Hampshire Prep School Was Worried About Coming Off As “Bitchy”

LINK: New Hampshire Rape Trial Calls Into Question Elite School’s Tradition Of Sexual Competition



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Virginia Teen Jailed For 11 Years For Supporting ISIS On Twitter

A video released by ISIS in September 2014.

Handout . / Reuters

A Virginia teenager was jailed Friday for more than 11 years after pleading guilty to supporting ISIS on social media and assisting another teenager to travel to Syria to join the terrorist group, officials announced.

Manassas resident Ali Shukri Amin, 17, was sentenced by a federal court judge to 136 months in prison after pleading guilty in June to using Twitter to provide encouragement to ISIS supporters, as well as advice on how to use the digital currency bitcoin to mask their funds.

Amin also admitted to helping an 18-year-old, Reza Niknejad, travel to Syria to take up arms with the militants. Niknejad was charged in absentia in June with terrorist offenses.

“Today’s sentencing demonstrates that those who use social media as a tool to provide support and resources to ISIL will be identified and prosecuted with no less vigilance than those who travel to take up arms with ISIL,” U.S. Attorney Dana J. Boente said in a statement, using an alternative acronym for ISIS.

ISIS has made sophisticated use of social media to spread news of its attacks and executions, as well as recruit potential fighters. Federal officials have made concentrated efforts to counter the online radicalization by ISIS, with Department of Justice officials describing Friday's sentence as an example of its efforts to quash a main source of recruitment for the group.

“Amin’s case serves as a reminder of how persistent and pervasive online radicalization has become," said Andrew G. McCabe, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Washington, D.C., field office.

Upon his release from prison, Amin will spend the rest of his life under supervision and his internet use will be monitored.



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George W. Bush Returns To New Orleans For Katrina Anniversary

President Bush during a tour of the Katrina wreckage in 2005

Susan Walsh / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ten years after his administration faced serious backlash for its handling of Hurricane Katrina, former President George W. Bush will return to New Orleans on Friday and deliver a speech on the anniversary of the storm.

Historians and political experts said that the Bush administration's response to the catastrophe, its handling of recovery efforts, and his own personal reactions marked perhaps the lowest point in his presidency. Particularly raw moments came when Bush first flew over the wreckage and when he congratulated then-Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Michael Brown by saying, "Heckuva job, Brownie."

"That's when I think his presidency started on a downward trend," Douglas Brinkley, a presidential historian at Rice University and author of "The Great Deluge" told the Associated Press.

Bush will deliver his speech at Warren Easton Charter High School, which he visited a year after the storm struck. The school is seen as a success story because it was badly flooded but fought to stay open.

Several protesters were outside the school, including Aaron Grañt, a 35-year-old river boat manager who grew up in New Orleans.

"I wanted to let the president know, we still remember," he said, holding up a sign that said: "You're early, come back in a week."

Aaron Grañt

John Stanton/BuzzFeed News

This is a developing story. Check back for updates and follow BuzzFeed News on Twitter.

Read BuzzFeed News's ongoing coverage of the Katrina 10 Year Anniversary:

LINK: Here's the full archive

LINK: 5 Katrina Survivors Talk About Making It Through The Storm

LINK: Louisiana’s Justice System Remains Unforgiving A Decade After Katrina

LINK: One Man’s Effort To Escape New Orleans’ Cycle Of Poverty And Incarceration

LINK: How A Small Time Drug Dealer Rescued Dozens During Katrina



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Student Fatally Shot At Savannah State University

A junior at Savannah State University in Georgia was fatally shot Thursday night in the student union building, school officials said.

Christopher Starks got into "an altercation" with another person before he was shot, the university said, and died at a local hospital. The shooter is still at large and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation and the school's police are handling the case.

"If students are aware of the presence of weapons, please think and act responsibly to disclose such information to a member of the faculty, staff or administration, or other figure of authority. While it may be natural to want to protect an associate, the lack of disclosure may do more harm than good in the long run," university officials said.

The school went on lockdown after the shooting. It was lifted Friday morning after around seven hours:


Local news station WTOC said family and friends shared these photos of Starks:

The school's student government association planned a vigil for Starks for Friday:

instagram.com

This is a developing story. Check back for updates and follow BuzzFeed News on Twitter.



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Thursday, August 27, 2015

The Earth Is Now "Locked In" To A 3 Foot Sea Level Rise, NASA Says

“The best science today says it is going to happen and that we’re not ready for it,” a climate scientist told BuzzFeed News. “That, unfortunately, is bad news.”

An iceberg floats in Disko Bay, near Ilulissat, Greenland, on July 24, 2015.

NASA / Saskia Madlener

Steve Nerem, a geophysicist at NASA and the University of Colorado, Boulder, said the world is all but certain to see a three foot sea level rise due to the concentration of carbon dioxide already in the atmosphere.

Nerem told BuzzFeed News Thursday even if global emissions stopped immediately, the effects of CO2 already in the atmosphere would lead to rising sea levels, in a sort of "inertia" effect. The ocean rise could hit three feet by 2100 or later, Nerem said.

"Eventually we're going to get to 3 feet," he added. "Is that going to happen in 2100 or 2200, or somewhere in between? It really depends on what we do with our CO2."

Peter Gleick, a climate scientist and president of the Pacific Institute, was not a member of NASA's research team but praised the conclusions.

"The best science today says it is going to happen and that we're not ready for it," Gleick said. "That, unfortunately, is bad news."

Venice, Italy, sits just above the water, making it particularly vulnerable to rising sea levels.

Andreas Solaro / AFP / Getty Images

Since 1900, global sea levels have risen about 7 inches, Nerem said, and the rate of rising has increased over the last two decades, with NASA documenting a nearly 3 inch change since 1992. The geophysicist said multiple factors contributed to the rising, but the largest one was human impact on the environment.

"There can be short term variations due to, for example, El Niños," Nerem said. "But over long time scales, like the last 100 years, almost all the rise we see is due to our influence, in my opinion."

But that rise hasn't been experienced equally; some parts of the world have seen as much as a 9-inch rise, while other areas, such as California, have actually seen sea levels fall in recent years. However, in California's case NASA anticipates accelerated sea level rising over the next decade.

The NASA video below visualizes worldwide changes in sea level since 1992, with warm colors indicating higher waters and cool colors indicating the opposite.


View Entire List ›



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