Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Body Of Teen Who Disappeared Seven Years Ago Found Stuck In Chimney

Colorado Bureau of Investigation / Via colorado.gov

Human remains found inside a Colorado cabin's chimney have been identified as a local teen who went missing seven years ago, authorities said.

It appears that Joshua Vernon Maddux, 18, died accidentally, the Associated Press reported. He was identified with dental records after his body was found last month by contractors tearing down the cabin in Woodland Park, Colorado, which had been abandoned for about a decade.

The 6 foot tall, 150-pound teen was last seen in May 2008 at his home, about a mile away from the cabin. He went for a walk and was never seen again, his family said. A missing person report noted that his brother had died the year before.

Despite the lapse of time, however, his older sisters and other family members had held out hope that Maddux had simply left town to start a new life somewhere else, they wrote in the News of Woodland Park.

Authorities did not immediately release an official cause or time of death.

GoFundMe / Via gofundme.com

Kate Maddux wrote that her brother was a talented musician, cartoonist, and writer.

This is certainly not the outcome that the Maddux family and my brother Josh’s many friends and loved ones were hoping for. We are however eternally grateful for the opportunity to finally provide Josh with the proper memorial service he deserves and to finally lay Josh to rest. Given the strange circumstances, it may be a miracle that Josh has finally been found.

The Teller County Coroner on Tuesday said it appeared Maddux had been trying to get into the cabin by climbing through the chimney, the Gazette reported. There were no signs of trauma or foul play, officials said.

The family is raising money to cover costs of a memorial service, as well as to donate to charities that work to find missing people.



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Was A Mississippi Man Murdered Because Of A Criminal Informant Program?

Chris Bland and Chris Poole were unlikely friends. Bland was 30 and a known drug dealer with a criminal record and a menacing reputation around Oxford, Mississippi. Poole was 18 and had recently graduated from high school, with plans to head off to a faraway college. They’d just met in June 2006, yet within weeks they were kicking it nearly every day.

They lived in the same apartment complex in the Brittany Woods neighborhood of Oxford and on a Saturday night, Aug. 19, 2006, Bland invited Poole over to his apartment to play cards.

Poole was dead before sunrise. Police found his body in the woods in Tallahatchie County, around 50 miles from Oxford. His body had been burned. The medical examiner ruled that he died from a shotgun blast to the stomach.

A few weeks later, Bland pleaded guilty to murdering Poole and was sentenced to life in prison.

This month, Chris Bland sat behind a thick glass window at the Willacy County Correctional Facility, which some inmates have nicknamed “the Killing Field” because of all the violence that goes on within its walls. His right hand was handcuffed to the table. He spends his days in solitary confinement. Bland insisted that he had changed. He said that he plans to get the tattoos on his face — the crown between his eyebrows, the teardrops beneath each eye, the stars on his temples — removed first thing if he’s ever out of prison. But he knows that might never happen. His crime was gruesome and heinous, he admitted.

Bland claims he killed Chris Poole because he believed Poole was working as a confidential informant for Lafayette County Metro Narcotics, a small, four-person unit based in Oxford. As an April BuzzFeed News investigation detailed, Metro Narcotics relies heavily on the use of college-age confidential informants. Each year, the squad recruits an average of 30 CIs, many of them first-time offenders arrested for possessing a few grams of weed. To get these young men and women to turn informant — an extremely dangerous task — agents often coerce them by threatening them with hard time or the shame and lifelong burden of a drug record.

All the hustlers in Oxford know about Metro Narcotics, Bland said, and they keep their eyes out for the unit’s latest batch of snitches. Bland suspected Metro Narcotics agents were after him — and that they were using Poole, his 18-year-old neighbor, to try to bust him.

Was Poole an informant? “I believe in my heart that that’s not true,” said Lafayette County Sheriff’s Deputy Scott Mills, who added that Metro Narcotics told him it has no record of Poole being an informant. Bland has no doubt: “I killed him because he was snitching.”

What is certain is that in Oxford, the use of CIs is so prevalent that it has created an atmosphere of paranoia. “Everybody’s suspecting everybody,” said Latoya Brown, Poole’s sister. “Everybody knows that they recruit these kids. That’s what they do in Oxford. That’s why people here are always saying everybody around here’s snitching.”

If Poole was a snitch, he’s an unrecognized casualty of the increasingly controversial use of poorly trained CIs pressured into perilous police work. But if he wasn’t, he may have been collateral damage of the drug war — and a tragic example of how a confidential informant program can be dangerous even for those who have nothing to do with it.

Once he graduated high school, Poole told people, he would go to college in Miami. He had spent his whole life in northern Mississippi. He’d grown up in a light-green clapboard house tucked deep in the woods, 20 miles east of Oxford. During his senior year of high school, the house had become too expensive for Poole’s mother, who worked at a furniture factory, and the family moved to an apartment complex in Oxford. Poole was tired of northern Mississippi, his sisters and high school principal said, tired of the rolling bluegrass and the poverty and the long country roads through narrow corridors of trees and the stark racial divide that pushed black people into Oxford’s Brittany Woods neighborhood, off the highway at the edge of town, a few miles but a world away from the regal statues and plantation-era buildings of Ole Miss.

“I just remember him saying, ‘I wanna get away from here,’” said Adam Pugh, then Lafayette High School’s principal and now superintendent of the school district.

Poole had been a good student in high school, pulling A's and B's mostly, his sister Latricia Holland said. He was in the Junior ROTC. He told his family he would be a neurosurgeon one day. His high school counselor, Debbie Hewlett, noted that he “didn’t dress like a thug” and said, “I don’t remember him being any kind of troublemaker or anything.”

As a graduation gift, Poole’s brother got him a room at an Oxford motel, where he could get away from the neighborhood for a couple of days and celebrate with friends. The June days were hot, and some of the motel’s guests planted themselves by the swimming pool. By the water, Poole got to talking with one of the guests, an older dude with tattoos all over his face who happened to live in the same apartment complex — Chris Bland. They got along well, Bland recalled, and made plans to meet up again soon.

Bland was 4 years old when he started to see his dad, an unemployed alcoholic and drug addict, beat up his mom. “I had a bad marriage,” Bland’s mother, Patsy Bland, said. “When he was a little boy, he tried to make his father stop jumping on me. That took a toll on Chris all the time.”

He was a solitary child, Patsy recalled, and he often spent his free time playing alone inside their small house out in rural Batesville, Mississippi, a half-hour drive west from Oxford. Patsy worked at a factory, and her salary paid the rent. They lived on a street lined with chipped wooden houses and aluminum trailers and empty lots lush with tall weeds. “Slow living,” Bland said. “Lots of drugs all around.”

In middle school, he started selling marijuana for “the money and flash,” he said. In 10th grade he was kicked out of school for fighting. A few months later, he married a girl and moved with her to Greensville. Several months later, with the marriage in tatters, Bland called his mother and asked her bring him back home.

By then, Patsy and her other children had moved to Oxford. Bland was depressed there. One day, Patsy said, he tried to hang himself from a tree. He was 16 years old. Doctors diagnosed him with bipolar disorder and depression, Patsy said.

Oxford was more fast-paced than Batesville — more people walking around, grilling in yards, dribbling basketballs in the parking lot, and dealing drugs. Bland soon became notorious. One time, Bland recalled, he fired 11 bullets into his auntie’s boyfriend’s car while the guy was still inside it, because he owed Bland $80. In 1996, he was present when a friend of his shot and killed someone his friend had a dispute with. (Bland claims not to have known the slain man.) As a result, he spent four years in prison for accessory to murder. “The word on the street around him was: He’s crazy, don’t mess with him,” said Brown, Poole’s sister.

Bland connected with some suppliers based in Memphis, about a 90-minute drive from Oxford. By the early 2000s he was picking up packages of cocaine three or four times a week, moving hundreds of kilos a week, he said. He ran a crew of around 10 dealers. He brought in around $10,000 in revenue most weeks, he said. He kept around $3,500 of that.

Some of the money paid for his cocaine habit. Some of it helped support his kids: He had 10 kids by several mothers. He usually had two or three or more girlfriends at the same time. He often took them to motels, to make sure nobody ratted him out to any of his other girlfriends. It was during one of these motel excursions in June 2006 that he met the freshly graduated Chris Poole by the swimming pool.

Over a decade of drug dealing, Bland had caught only one drug conviction, for cocaine possession, and served a year in prison in 2001. But Bland had started growing paranoid about Metro Narcotics in 2004. That year, Bland said, then-Metro Narcotics Capt. Searn Lynch walked up to him and said, “In due time.” Sheriff’s Deputy Mills confirmed to BuzzFeed News that local law enforcement agencies were familiar with Bland after he returned to Oxford from his second prison stint. (Lynch did not respond to interview requests for this story; in 2013, the former Metro Narcotics captain pleaded guilty to lying to doctors to get prescription painkillers and was sentenced to two years’ probation.)

Bland was the sort of drug dealer Metro Narcotics has claimed to target: a violent dealer of hard drugs such as crack and powdered cocaine. Born out of the war on drugs in the 1980s, Metro Narcotics is a multi-jurisdictional task force made up of officials from the Lafayette County Sheriff’s Office, the Oxford Police Department, and the University of Mississippi Police Department. The city, county, and university created the unit to meet “the need for aggressive drug enforcement activity within the county,” according to the agreement signed by the leaders of the three institutions.

But in its effort to reach higher-level dealers, Metro Narcotics has depended on constantly turning low-level offenders into confidential informants. The unit has used around 300 confidential informants over the last decade, the unit’s captain, Keith Davis, told BuzzFeed News earlier this year. Around half of those arrested by Metro Narcotics in 2014 were first-time offenders, and the unit made three times as many arrests for marijuana as for any other drug.

More than a dozen young men and women described similar experiences to BuzzFeed News: being detained by authorities for a low-level drug offense, brought into a room in the Lafayette County Detention Center, then pressured by Metro Narcotics agents to work as a confidential informant. The agents often exaggerated the consequences that could follow the offense. In most cases, no lawyer was present.

“In some [interviews], there are people who feel they are misled, and they very well could be,” Sheriff’s Deputy Mills conceded. “But we have to find out where the sources of these drugs are.”

Former informants said that agents texted or called them if they went more than a few days without a buy. Desperate for targets, the informants dove deeper and deeper into the local drug scene. Two Oxford CIs claimed to have gotten beaten up after targets found out they were snitching. Across the country, at least two college-age informants, in Florida and in North Dakota, have been killed in recent years.

Around Brittany Woods, Brown said, if somebody gets arrested then shows back up in the neighborhood a day or two later, a lot of folks immediately think, "Oh, you a snitch.” If prosecutors drop a case against somebody, “Oh, you a snitch.” If somebody gets spotted talking to officers and seeming a little too friendly, “Oh, you a snitch.”

This atmosphere of suspicion collides with the code of silence that's common in so many neighborhoods across America. “Around here the number-one thing is you don’t snitch,” Brown said. “What they do in Oxford, with the informant stuff, it’s risky. They’re putting a lot of kids’ lives in danger.”

Within weeks of meeting at the motel, Poole was dropping by Bland’s house nearly every day. Neighbors often saw them riding around town together. They stayed up late and played cards. “They became friends really quickly,” said Holland, Poole’s sister. “They were like best friends,” which was strange. As one neighbor put it, “One dude was this hard-ass drug dealer, always into some shit, and the other dude seemed quieter, went to school, seemed to have other stuff going on in his life. You wouldn’t have thought they’d be homies like that.” Brown said, “Why would he be out with Chris Bland?”

Bland said that shortly after they met, Poole said that he and some friends were thinking about getting into the drug game. They “wanted to invest in some product,” Bland said. So Bland took Poole into his crew. He brought him along on his business trips to Memphis. (Holland said that Poole never sold drugs.)

On one of the trips to Memphis, a few weeks after he and Poole met, Bland said that he believed he was being followed. He told his suppliers, and they began meeting at different locations, switching up each time. Then the suppliers told Bland that they’d noticed undercover police cars patrolling their block. They worried that there had been a leak, Bland said, and they told Bland they thought it was his fault: For years the operation had run smoothly, and suddenly these problems had started. And they had started soon after Poole had entered the picture.

Bland said he asked around and heard Poole had recently been arrested, for robbery or drugs or something. (Poole had no criminal record, so the rumor may simply have been false, but if he had agreed to work as an informant, he might never have been charged despite being arrested.)

To Bland, the rumors were a red flag. “The narcs told him to come set me up,” Bland said. He took the information back to Memphis.

“The plug in Memphis told me if I didn’t kill him, they were going to kill my whole family,” Bland said.

On Saturday night, Aug. 19, 2006, Bland and Poole went to Bland’s apartment to play cards. Bland’s sister, Shetecia, who also lived in the apartment, Shawanda Driver, who was Bland’s girlfriend, and a few other friends joined them.

What happened next depends on the version of the story. The version Bland first told police was this: After the friends left and Shetecia and Shawanda went to sleep, Bland went to the bathroom. When Bland returned, Poole was pointing a shotgun at him. It was Bland’s gun, and Poole had known where he kept it: under the couch. He also knew where Bland kept his money and his stash, and he told Bland to go to the supply closet and get them. Bland opened the closet, grabbed a bottle of ammonia, and splashed it on Poole’s face. Poole dropped the gun, and Bland picked it up and shot him. Bland said that he told this story to police because he believed it would help him claim self-defense.

The version some of Bland’s neighbors tell, and the version Holland said Driver told her, is this: While playing cards, Bland accused Poole of stealing his money. Poole denied it. Bland grabbed the shotgun and demanded Poole return the money. Poole kept denying that he stole it, and so Bland shot him.

The version Holland believes is this: Bland, mentally unstable and high on cocaine, “killed my brother for no reason at all.”

But the way Bland tells the story now, he and Poole were sitting in the living room playing cards when Bland brought up his suspicions that somebody was snitching on him. Then Bland grabbed the gun from under the couch and asked Poole if he was the snitch. “I was in a rage,” Bland said. “I asked him again if he was snitching. His last words were ‘I had to do it. I had to do it so they’d give me a pass.’”

A few days later, deputies arrested Bland. They also arrested Shetecia Bland, Shawanda Driver, and three neighbors who allegedly had seen Bland move Poole’s body into a car. Bland quickly took a plea deal on the condition that his sister get no jail time. He confessed and told deputies where to find Poole’s body. Shetecia pleaded guilty to accessory to murder and got two years of probation.

BuzzFeed News asked Sheriff’s Deputy Mills for an interview regarding Poole’s murder. The CI allegations had not been mentioned in the request, yet during the interview, Mills volunteered that he had called Metro Narcotics Capt. Keith Davis to ask whether Poole had been an informant. Davis, he said, told him that they didn’t have any record of an informant named Chris Poole from that time period. (Davis spoke with BuzzFeed News for a previous story earlier this year, but declined recent interview requests for this story because he said he was unhappy with the first story.)

When asked why he thought to ask Metro Narcotics about Poole in the days before the interview, Mills said that “someone told me that’s what the story’s about. Someone obviously knew something or got an inkling of that, and that’s what they told me.” Mills said that he didn’t remember who told him.

Brown said she first heard rumors that her brother had been a CI a couple of weeks after his death.

On a recent afternoon, she sat on the stoop of an Oxford church. “In my heart, I don’t know because I’ve been having it go through my mind so many times,” she said. “Maybe Chris was a snitch.”

But there were always rumors of snitching flying around Oxford. She will never know which were true and which were not, she said. So she will always wonder.



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Native American Tribe To Open First Marijuana Resort In The U.S.

The Santee Sioux tribe announced it plans to open what would be the U.S.’ first marijuana resort in South Dakota, a state where recreational pot remains illegal.

Marijuana plants in a germinating facility on the Flandreau Santee Sioux Reservation.

Jay Pickthorn / AP

Jay Pickthorn / AP

The Santee Sioux tribe, which includes 400 members, plans to add a smoking lounge and other weed actives to its already successful casino, hotel, and ranch, creating the first marijuana resort in the United States.

The endeavor is unique, since even in the states with legalized weed, it's not allowed to be consumed in public. It might be more like an experience had in Amsterdam, which has a bustling tourism industry crop up around its smoking cafes.

Leaders of the tribe are already growing marijuana on the reservation and plan to sell it in a lounge, which will include an arcade, nightclub, and restaurant. They hope to eventually add slot machines and a concert venue.

"We want it to be an adult playground," tribal President Anthony Reider said to the Associated Press. "There's nowhere else in American that has something like this."

The tribe is located in South Dakota, where weed has not been legalized, but the Justice Department in June gave Native Americans permission to grow and sell marijuana.


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The Secret Service Tried To Embarass A Utah Congressman, Investigation Finds

Congressman Jason Chaffetz during a hearing in Washington, D.C., on April 29.

Cliff Owen / AP


Secret Service employees improperly accessed potentially embarrassing personal information about a Utah Republican congressman who was probing scandals at the agency, a federal investigation has found.

The Department of Homeland Security report states that Secret Service employees accessed the personal information of Congressman Jason Chaffetz "on approximately 60 occasions." Moreover, the "vast majority" of the employees who accessed the information "did so in violation of the Privacy Act, as well as Secret Service and DHS policy."

Chaffetz — who is the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform — was investigating a series of recent scandals at the Secret Service.

The DHS report reveals that Secret Service personnel accessed Chaffetz's 2003 application for the agency, as well as other information that could have led to "embarrassment."

In a statement to BuzzFeed News, Secretary of Homeland Security Jen Johnson said he was confident that the Secret Service "will take appropriate action to hold accountable those who violated any laws or the policies of this department."

"I also reiterate the apology I issued in April to Chairman Chaffetz," the statment continued. "Activities like those described in the report must not, and will not, be tolerated."

Chaffetz did not immediately respond to BuzzFeed News' request for comment.



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Grand Jury Indicts Sheriff Who Investigated Volunteer Deputy's Fatal Shooting Of Unarmed Man

Tulsa County Sheriff Stanley Glanz listens to proceedings of a county commissioners meeting on July 13.

Sue Ogrocki / AP

Tulsa County, Oklahoma Sheriff Stanley Glanz will resign from office, his attorney said Wednesday, after he was indicted in connection with his investigation of a volunteer deputy's fatal shooting of an unarmed man.

The grand jury also made recommendations for improvements at the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office, which were released in a report on Wednesday. Scrutiny of the sheriff and his department came after the April 2 fatal shooting of Eric Harris, an unarmed man, by reserve deputy Robert Bates.

A group of activists, We The People Oklahoma, submitted a petition calling for a grand jury probe of the sheriff's office. On Wednesday, they thanked the community for coming together to call for justice.

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The grand jury was convened over the summer to investigate whether Glanz had neglected his duties and whether volunteer reserve deputies like Bates had received special treatment after making gifts to the department. After the death of Harris — who Bates said he mistakenly shot, thinking he had grabbed his Taser — questions arose about Bates' training as well as the thousands of dollars in equipment, vehicles, and cash he had given the sheriff's department, the Associated Press reported.

On Wednesday, the grand jury recommended that Glanz be removed immediately and a hearing on their findings be set for November, the Tulsa World reported. The grand jury also indicted Glanz on two misdemeanors: failing to release a 2009 report related to Bates and being reimbursed financially for driving a personal vehicle.

Glanz released a statement to the Tulsa World:

I know that my decisions have caused some to criticize me both publicly and privately. As sheriff, I take responsibility for all decisions made by me or in my name, but I assure you they were all made in good faith.

"I truly regret that any of my actions have led to the impaneling of this grand jury and the disruptions in the lives of the jurors and the witnesses.

In its recommendations for the department, the grand jury focused on better management of training records. The panel also recommended the department make its internal affairs investigations more autonomous, and provide an anonymous, documented way for employees to make complaints.

The shooting of Harris remains under investigation by the state. Bates has pleaded not guilty to manslaughter.

LINK: Tulsa Volunteer Sheriff’s Deputy Had “No Desire To Take Anyone’s Life”

LINK: Tulsa Sheriff’s Office Supervisors Reportedly Ordered To Falsify Robert Bates’ Training Records




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Caitlyn Jenner Will Not Be Charged With Vehicular Manslaughter

The LA District Attorney’s office has declined to prosecute the case. Jenner still faces two civil suits related to the crash.

Caitlyn Jenner will not be charged with vehicular manslaughter for a car crash in February that left one woman dead, the Los Angeles county District Attorney's office confirmed to BuzzFeed News.

Caitlyn Jenner will not be charged with vehicular manslaughter for a car crash in February that left one woman dead, the Los Angeles county District Attorney's office confirmed to BuzzFeed News.

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

The crash occurred on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu when a Toyota Prius slowed and was rear-ended by a Lexus. Jenner's Cadillac Escalade then hit the back of the Lexus, driven by 69-year-old Kim Howe. Howe was pronounced dead at the scene.

Following the crash, a Los Angeles County Sheriff's spokesperson told BuzzFeed News that Jenner was likely to be charged with manslaughter due to the dangerous speed at which she was driving. Wednesday afternoon, spokeswoman from the LA District Attorney's office, Jane Robison, told BuzzFeed News that they have declined to prosecute the case.

Jenner, the DA said in in the declination, was not speeding and though she hit the brakes belatedly, her conduct was not "unreasonable" based on the behavior of the other drivers.

"We believed from the start that a thorough and objective investigation would clear Caitlyn of any criminal wrongdoing," Blair Berk, Jenner's lawyer, said in a statement. "We are heartened the District Attorney has agreed that even a misdemeanor charge would be inappropriate. A traffic accident, however devastating and heartbreaking when a life is lost, is not necessarily a criminal matter."

Though criminal charges have been waived, Jenner still faces two civil lawsuits related to the crash. William Howe and Dana Redmond, step children of Kim Howe, filed filed a wrongful death suit in May. Jessica Steindorff, the driver of the black Prius, filed a personal injury suit shortly after.

Both suits are ongoing. The next court hearing for the wrongful death suit will be in mid-October.

In July, Jenner was given the Arthur Ashe Courage Award at the ESPNs annual sports achievement award ceremony. She advocated for a greater acceptance of trans people and urged fellow athletes to prioritize transgender issues.

LINK: Caitlyn Jenner Could Face Manslaughter Charge In Fatal Malibu Crash


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New Legionnaires' Disease Outbreak Claims First Victim In New York

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio speaks at a press conference updating the public on the Legionnaires' outbreak in the Bronx at Lincoln Hospital on August 13, 2015.

Andrew Burton / Getty Images

New York City's second outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in less than a year claimed its first victim, a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to BuzzFeed News on Wednesday.

Earlier this year, another outbreak of the respiratory ailment killed 12 and sickened more than 120 people, the spokesperson said. Both bouts were concentrated in lower-income areas of the South Bronx. Nearly all those affected have been elderly people with underlying health problems.

The current outbreak has sickened 13 people, including the person who died. Of those affected, 11 have been hospitalized and one has been discharged. No new cases have been reported after Sep. 21.

The disease is an atypical form of pneumonia and produces symptoms that can include headaches, fatigue, loss of appetite, confusion, and diarrhea.

Legionella, the bacterium that causes the disease, was found in 15 cooling towers in the Bronx, most of them belonging to hospitals and educational institutions during the last outbreak. All affected towers are currently being treated. Health officials continue to look for more affected towers.

Legionnaires' disease is easily treatable with antibiotics and is endemic to New York City, where 200 to 300 cases are reported every year. The disease cannot be transmitted from person to person and does not affect drinking water tanks or the city's water supply.

LINK: Legionnaires’ Disease Outbreak In New York City On The Decline

LINK: Two More Fatalities In New York City Legionnaires’ Outbreak, No New Cases Reported




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South Carolina Police Officer Killed Pursuing Suspect At Mall

Officer Greg Alia of the Forest Acres Police Department was fatally shot Wednesday while pursuing a suspicious person at the Richland Mall.

Officer Greg Alia was killed in the line of duty Wednesday after being shot by a suspicious person at the Richland Mall in Forest Acres, South Carolina, Police Chief Gene Sealy said.

"What a tragic day here in Forest Acres," Sealy said at a press conference. "This morning we had one of our police officers shot and killed."

The 32-year-old officer, along with two other cops, had responded to the Richland Mall after a bank employee called in to report a suspicious person sitting in a van.

When Alia and the other cops tried to question the man, later identified as Jarvis Hall, he ran off into the mall. Alia chased after him and struggled with Hall while trying to subdue him. That's when Hall pulled out a gun and shot Alia.

The other two officers, one a rookie that Alia was training, were able to restrain Hall and place him under arrest, Sealy said. He was carrying a handgun and a knife.

Alia, who is a 7-year veteran of the Forest Acres Police Department, later died from his injuries, Sealy said.

"Our hearts are broken," Sealy said. "Forest Acres is a small community, small police department, we're one big family."

Alia leaves behind a wife and an infant son. Alia grew up in the community, graduating from Richland Northeast High School and later earned a degree from the University of South Carolina.

"He was an outstanding young man, he was an outstanding police officer," Sealy said.


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These Parents Found A Note From Their Son After He Died Saying He Was "Still With" Them

Leland Shumake was stricken with a rare amoeba after playing outside.

A couple whose six-year-old son died suddenly after contracting an infection found an incredibly moving note from him after he passed away.

A couple whose six-year-old son died suddenly after contracting an infection found an incredibly moving note from him after he passed away.

Facebook: PrayersforLeland

When Shumake and her husband Tim went home to pick up clothes for Leland's burial, they found a note on the table her child had written. It said, "Still with you, thank you mom and dad... [it's a] good day."

When Shumake and her husband Tim went home to pick up clothes for Leland's burial, they found a note on the table her child had written. It said, "Still with you, thank you mom and dad... [it's a] good day."

Shumake said she is not sure where the note came from.

"We have no idea when he wrote it but you can tell he was always a special child. We will love you forever Leland," she wrote on Facebook.

Facebook: PrayersforLeland

Amber Shumake of Williamson, Georgia, told BuzzFeed News that her son Leland was an intelligent and amazing little boy. "He was the light of our life and the center of this family," she wrote on Facebook.

Amber Shumake of Williamson, Georgia, told BuzzFeed News that her son Leland was an intelligent and amazing little boy. "He was the light of our life and the center of this family," she wrote on Facebook.

facebook.com

His parents took him to a children's hospital in Atlanta, and he was hospitalized. Doctors couldn't figure out what was wrong, so put him on multiple medications.

"I sat by his bedside every day and every night trying to figure it out myself," his mom said.

Eventually, doctors told the family their son had meningitis.

"He then got way worse. Stopped communicating as much, said his vision was completely gone, had to have a drain put in one side of his head to relieve the pressure and the fluid," Shumake said.


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Federal Appeals Court Says NCAA Should Only Pay For Student Athlete College Costs

Doug Pensinger / Getty Images

A federal appeals court on Wednesday said that the NCAA should only pay for college student athletes' cost of attending school.

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals also said that the NCAA should not compensate college athletes $5,000 a year, reversing a lower court's ruling.

Wednesday's ruling is part of an ongoing case, started in 2009, regarding compensation for student athletes in light of the NCAA's making billions of dollars off college sports. It also may set the stage for the NCAA to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, USA Today reported.

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




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Vatican Confirms Private Meeting Between Pope Francis And Kentucky Clerk Kim Davis

Pope Francis greets school children as he departs the Apostolic Nunciature, the Vatican's diplomatic mission in the heart of Washington, D.C.

Cliff Owen / AP

The Vatican on Wednesday confirmed to BuzzFeed News that Pope Francis met briefly with Kim Davis — the Kentucky county clerk who was jailed for disobeying a federal court order to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

When asked if the meeting took place, Vatican spokesperson Rev. Federico Lombardi told BuzzFeed News "yes."

He added, "I don't deny the meeting has taken place. But I have no comment to add."

A spokesperson for Liberty Counsel, the law firm representing Davis, claims the pope also gave Davis these two rosaries:

Liberty Counsel

"While we await the Vatican to send pictures of the meeting between thepope and Kim Davis and her husband Joe, I thought you might be interested in a picture of the rosaries the pope gave the couple," said Charla Bansley.

Bansley added in an email to BuzzFeed News, "We were told that [the Vatican] would be sending" photos of the meeting between Davis and the pope.

The meeting that Davis and her husband, Joe Davis, had with the pontiff — first announced Tuesday night by the clerk's attorneys — reportedly occurred Sept. 24 at the Vatican Embassy in Washington, D.C.

In an interview with ABC News, Davis said she was crying when she met the pope. "I had tears coming out of my eyes," she said. "I'm just a nobody, so it was really humbling to think he would want to meet or know me.”

According to an account of the exchange posted by her attorneys at the Liberty Counsel, Francis told Davis to "stay strong" and thanked her for her courage:

He held out his hands and asked Kim to pray for him. Kim held his hands and said, "I will. Please pray for me," and the pope said he would. The two embraced.

Davis told ABC News, "I put my hand out and he reached and he grabbed it, and I hugged him and he hugged me. And he said, ‘Thank you for your courage.'"

The interaction took place in English, her attorneys added, with Francis blessing the married couple and giving them each a rosary for Davis's mother and father, who are Catholic.

Davis's attorney, Mathew Staver, reported that the meeting lasted for about 15 minutes, with the pope surrounded by security officers and aides. No photographs of the event were immediately released.

Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis, with Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee (left) greets the crowd after being released from jail.

Timothy D. Easley / AP

Davis, who is Apostolic Christian, made international headlines earlier this year for refusing to issue any marriage licenses in Rowan County, Kentucky, due to her opposition to same-sex couples marrying. She repeatedly cited her newfound Christian faith — and her belief in religious freedoms — in opposing a federal judge's order to comply with an earlier Supreme Court ruling that made same-sex marriage a right.

On the papal plane back to Rome from the U.S., Francis appeared to address the showdown in Rowan County, telling reporters that government workers have a "human right" to refuse to perform their duty if they have a "conscientious objection" to it.

While he did not name Davis, the pope continued: "Conscientious objection must enter into every juridical structure because it is a right."

The Liberty Counsel's announcement of the meeting was initially met with skepticism.

Earlier on Tuesday, attorneys with the firm admitted they used a fake photo in an attempt to prove there was a giant prayer in Peru in Davis’s honor. The photo was actually of a religious festival held in May 2014.

The legal team, however, insisted that the underlying claim of prayer rallies occurring for Davis in Peru were real.

LINK: Despite Fake Photo, Kim Davis’s Lawyers Say There Was A Giant Prayer Rally For Her

LINK: Pope Francis Says Government Officials Have A “Human Right” To Refuse Same-Sex Marriage Licenses



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Oklahoma Set To Execute Richard Glossip Today Amidst Claims That He's Innocent

Attorneys for Glossip have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to stop the execution claiming “new evidence” of his innocence. Glossip says he is innocent and has thousands of supporters, including Susan Sarandon and Richard Branson.

AP Photo/Oklahoma Department of Corrections, File

Anti-death penalty activists, including members of MoveOn.org and other advocay groups rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday to protest Glossip's impending execution.

Larry French / Getty Images for MoveOn.org

Oklahoma is set to execute Richard Glossip on Wednesday at 3 p.m. CDT — 4 p.m. EST — for planning the 1997 murder of his former boss, Barry Van Treese, the owner of a motel that Glossip worked at. Van Treese was found beaten to death by a baseball bat in his motel room.

Justin Sneed, a maintenance worker at the motel, confessed to killing Van Treese, but under police interrogation said that Glossip offered him money to carry out the murder. In exchange for testifying against Glossip, Sneed is serving life in prison, while Glossip was sentenced to death for his role as the mastermind of the murder.

Glossip's lawyers appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday to stop his execution citing "new evidence" of his innocence, including two witness accounts that said Sneed lied about Glossip's involvement in the murder.

The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals on Monday refused to grant a further stay of execution to Glossip after reviewing the new evidence that his lawyers claimed proved his innocence. The state's highest court had granted Glossip a two-week reprieve on Sept. 16, hours before he was scheduled to be executed.

In its 3-2 ruling, the court said that Glossip's "new" evidence "merely expands on theories" that have been previously raised in his appeals and did not warrant an evidentiary hearing or a further stay of execution.

In his dissent, Judge Smith wrote he would have granted a 60-day stay for an evidentiary hearing to give Glossip the chance to prove his allegations that Sneed has recanted his original testimony.

"...the State has no interest in executing an actually innocent man," Smith wrote.

On Tuesday, several anti-death penalty advocates, including members of MoveOn.org, demonstrated outside the U.S. Supreme Court to demand a stay of execution.

Gov. Mary Fallin has repeatedly denied Glossip a 60-day reprieve as requested by his lawyers, saying in her statement, "Over and over again, courts have rejected his arguments and the information he has presented to support them. If a state or federal court grants Glossip a new trial or decides to delay his execution, I will respect that decision. If that does not happen, his execution will go forward on September 30."

Oklahoma uses midazolam, a controversial drug that has been at the center of problematic executions, as part of its three-drug lethal injection protocol. Unless the court intervenes, Glossip will be the first person to be executed using midazolam since the significant Supreme Court decision in June which allowed the use of the drug in executions.


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Tuesday, September 29, 2015

California Couple Charged With Locking Woman In Shed And Torturing Her

A 61-year-old man and his girlfriend were charged Tuesday with false imprisonment, torture, and elder abuse for allegedly keeping the man’s sister captive in a backyard shed.

Elisa Abdurahman.

abc7.com

After hearing her screams coming from a storage shed in Southern California, authorities were able to find a malnourished woman covered in wounds being held hostage.

Elias Abdurahman, 61, and Sara Kebede Tadesse, 50, are now being accused of torturing and imprisoning the woman, who is the man's sister, according to the Los Angeles County district attorney's office.

The pair were arrested Sept. 22 in Lancaster, California, on suspicion of locking the 54-year-old woman up for more than a year.

On Tuesday, prosecutors charged the couple with false imprisonment, torture, dependent adult abuse, and assault with a deadly weapon. Authorities say they also beat the woman, who has not been identified, with a cane.

abc7.com

The woman was frail, emaciated, and covered in wounds when she was found by deputies, who were sent to the residence after screams were reported.

The exact amount of time the woman was locked up is still not entirely clear, the district attorney's spokesman, Ricardo Santiago, told Reuters. He also said it was "too early to tell" what the couple's alleged motive was.

An arraignment on the charges was delayed due to the difficulty in finding a translator who speaks the couple's Ethiopian dialect, Santiago said.

Both are now scheduled to enter a plea Oct. 20, and could each face life in prison if convicted.


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Father Of Student Who Killed 4 Classmates Is Found Guilty Of Gun Crimes

Ted S. Warren / AP

The father of a Washington state high school student who fatally shot four of his classmates before turning the gun on himself was found guilty Tuesday of illegally owning firearms.

Raymond Lee Fryberg is scheduled to be sentenced Jan. 11 for six counts of unlawfully possessing a firearm. He could face 10 years in federal prison.

Fryberg's attorney had said his client wasn't aware he couldn't own the guns that authorities found in his home. In October, his 15-year-old son, Jaylen, took his Beretta handgun to Marysville-Pilchuck High School and shot five of his classmates, including a former girlfriend and two of his cousins. Four of the teens died. Jaylen also killed himself.

Ted S. Warren / AP

At the time, authorities said the gun had been legally purchased. Investigators later determined that Fryberg had been prohibited by a Tulalip Tribal Court in 2002 from owning guns. The permanent order of protection had been obtained by a former girlfriend who said Fryberg had threatened and assaulted her, the FBI said.

In July, Fryberg's attorney told the Associated Press that the firearms charges were "ridiculous." The state of Washington had approved Fryberg for a concealed weapons permit in 2013 after he passed a background check, and Fryberg had never been informed that he wasn't allowed to own guns, his attorney said.

Prosecutors, however, said Fryberg was aware of the protective order — he had pleaded no contest to an alleged violation of its requirements in 2012, the Seattle Times reported.

LINK: Washington School Shooter Lured Victims To Lunch Via Text, Sheriff Says



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Video Of Officer Threatening To Deport Latino Man's Family Spurs Outcry

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A police officer in New Jersey has come under fire after video footage of him threatening to deport a Latino man's family was posted on YouTube.

The video — recorded in February but posted on YouTube this month — captures the voice of Passaic, New Jersey, police Sgt. Roy Bordamonte. Jasmine Vidal, who recorded the encounter, told NBC New York she was sitting on a porch with her boyfriend and a friend when Bordamonte drove up to them in a squad car and engaged them in conversation.

Bordamonte, Vidal said, got angry and threatened to deport the family of one of the men after he told the officer to get out of the car.

“I’m going to knock on your door and check your mom and dad’s ID and all your fucking cousins, everybody," Bordamonte says in the video. "And when they give me that fucking name I’m going to have immigration pick everyone up so they could cross back to the fucking border or pueblo or wherever the fuck you came from — and all that hard work that came through to come to America, you fucked it up.”

The video prompted protests outside Passaic City Hall last week, and a change.org petition calling for Bordamonte’s removal has more than 2,400 signatures.

At another point in the video, Bordamonte asks why one of the men isn’t smiling any longer.

“Will I see that smile when I drag your mom and dad back to the fucking border?” Bordamonte says. “I’ll make this fucking like Texas bro, or fucking I don’t know where the fuck. Arizona?”

It’s unclear why Bordamonte initiated contact with the trio on the porch, but it appears as though one of the men taunted Bordamonte.

“You said, 'Get out the fuckin' car and you’ll find out,' Well I’m here,” Bordamonte is recorded as saying. “Come on let's go. That's why you were talking shit before right? Come on.”

The Passaic Police Department did not immediately return calls for comment.

Northjersey.com reported that Bordamonte was removed as the head of the department’s bias crimes unit — which investigates racially motivated crimes — after the video took off online. He remains supervisor of the Quality of Life unit, a patrol that walks the city's high-crime areas, but is not allowed to leave his desk job.

Acting Police Chief Rosario Capuana told Northjersey.com that Bordamonte admitted that it was his voice in the video.

LINK: Arrest Of Undocumented Texas Woman In Doctor’s Office Spurs Concern

LINK: Federal Immigration Agents Will Have Access To L.A. County Inmates

LINK: U.S. Border Patrol Agent Charged With Murder In Shooting Of Mexican Teen




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FBI Reviewing Death Of A Man In Jail For Failing To Pay A Traffic Ticket

The FBI opened a civil review of a Michigan county’s investigation into the death of David Stojcevski who died of drug withdrawal in his cell, on Tuesday. WARNING: This post contains some photos of Stojcevski naked in his cell that some readers may consider graphic.

Macomb County Jail

Macomb County Jail

The FBI said on Tuesday it opened a civil review of a Michigan county's investigation into the death of a man serving a 30-day jail sentence for a traffic violation, a spokeswoman for the agency's Detroit division told BuzzFeed News.

David Stojcevski, a 32-year-old Roseville, Michigan resident, was withdrawing from a meth addiction when he decided to serve the sentence beginning June 11 instead of paying a $772 fine for failing to appear in court over a careless driving charge, according to a federal lawsuit filed in March by his brother, Vladimir.

Stojcevski told Macomb County Jail staff that he was prescribed methadone as a part of a drug treatment regimen, along with klonopin to treat anxiety and oxycodone for pain relief, according to court records.

He was placed in a detox cell for the first week of his sentence, then moved to a mental health unit on June 17 – where inmates are required to be naked and video monitored at all times, according to court records.

Over the next 10 days, corrections and medical staff failed to continue his drug treatment, according to the complaint. Since he was jailed, he lost 50 pounds and began to hallucinate, the complaint said.

He told corrections staff that "all his organs, but 10 percent of his heart was removed and his arms shredded a couple days ago," the complaint said, adding that at another point he said "he died earlier today."


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Obama And Castro Meet For The Second Time This Year

Tuesday’s meeting between President Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro marks the first time a top U.S. official has met with a Cuban President since in America the Cuban Revolution.

(AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

President Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro met briefly on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York on Tuesday, marking their second meeting in 2015 after a historic thaw in diplomatic relations earlier this year.

The two men shook hands briefly and Castro laughed as he looked up at Obama and realized he is much taller, according to NBC News.

Obama on Tuesday was joined by Secretary of State John Kerry, National Security Adviser Susan Rice and U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Samantha Power as well as other aides, according to ABC News. Castro was surrounded by a clutch of aides and officials.

The meeting comes just two months after the Obama Administration reopened its embassy in Cuba. In August, Secretary of State John Kerry made a trip to the Island as part of the administration's strategy to restore diplomatic ties with the country. It was the first time a secretary of state visited Cuba since 1945, according to CNN.

The last time a Cuban President met with someone from the president's administration in the U.S. was in April 1959, just four months after the Cuban Revolution. Former President Fidel Castro accepted an invitation to New York from the American Society of Newspaper editors, ABC News reported. President Eisenhower avoided Castro. But just before he returned to Cuba, Vice President Richard Nixon visited him in private.



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Shell Suspends Oil Drilling Effort In Alaska's Arctic Waters

The Royal Dutch Shell oil drilling rig Polar Pioneer is towed toward a dock in Elliott Bay in Seattle in May.

Elaine Thompson / AP

Royal Dutch Shell is suspending an ambitious effort to become the first company to produce oil in Alaska's Arctic waters, citing a lack of return on what has already been a multi-billion dollar investment.

The announcement posted on Monday comes after the Dutch-held company spent years pushing through a tough regulatory system to gain permission to drill — a right that was bitterly fought by environmentalists.

Shell said it will "cease further exploration activity in offshore Alaska for the foreseeable future" because of lack of any major oil in a test well, the high costs involved, and the "challenging and unpredictable" federal regulatory environment.

Shell has spent more than $7 billion on the exploration effort, according to the Associated Press.

Despite strong pushback from environmentalists who worried about the effects of a major spill on wildlife already grappling with changes brought on by climate change, the drilling project had been seen as a potential game changer for U.S. oil production, which has declined sharply.

Google Maps / Via google.com

Marvin Odum, director of Shell Upstream Americas, said in a statement that the company continues to see "important exploration potential" in an area that is roughly half the size of the Gulf of Mexico.

"However," he added, "this is a clearly disappointing exploration outcome for this part of the basin."

The so-called Burger J exploration well, located in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea, was drilled to a depth of 6,800 feet. And while indications of oil and gas were found in the well, Shell said they were not sufficient to warrant further exploration.

The well will be sealed and abandoned in line with U.S. regulations, Shell added.

Environmentalists cheered the development, calling it a win for a hard fought campaign to block the drilling, despite the Obama administration's controversial decision to grant a permit — the first for the remote area in more than 20 years.

A group of kayakers raft together in April outside Seattle to protest Royal Dutch Shell drilling effort.

Elaine Thompson / AP

Annie Leonard, executive director of Greenpeace USA, which staged a high-profile campaign against the drilling, called Shell's announcement an historic victory.

“This is a victory for everyone who has stood up for the Arctic. Whether they took to kayaks or canoes, rappelled from bridges, or spread the news in their own communities, millions of people around the world have taken action against Arctic drilling," she said in a statement. "Today they have made history."

In late July, Greenpeace activists hanging from a bridge in Oregon momentarily blocked a newly repaired Shell capping stack from returning to Alaska.

Shell warned that it expects to take a financial hit in its third quarter as a result of the exploration effort and continued efforts to safely "de-mobilize people and equipment" from the Chukchi Sea.



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Monday, September 28, 2015

Catherine Coulson, The "Twin Peaks" Log Lady, Dies At Age 71

Alberto E. Rodriguez / Getty Images

Catherine Coulson, known for her role as the Log Lady in Twin Peaks, died Monday of cancer at age 71, KOBI reported.

In addition to her work in David Lynch's cult series, she was active in the Oregon Shakespeare Festival for over 21 seasons. She also returned to her Log Lady roots with a cheeky turn on Psych as the Wood Woman, as well as appearing in a role on Portlandia with fellow Twin Peaks alum Kyle McLaughlin.

Coulson and her then-husband Jack Nance became friends with Lynch as he was making the 1977 film Eraserhead. Nance played the lead role, and Coulson was credited as assistant director and assistant camera. It was during the making of the movie that Lynch came up with the idea of a Log Lady, Coulson told HitFix in May.

"And then years later called me, I think it was like 12 years later, and said 'Are you ready to do the Log Girl?' And that's when I said I don't think she's really a girl anymore. So we called her the Log Lady.

And he put me in the pilot, and the rest is history."

Coulson, cradling a log, introduced viewers in 1990 to the isolated, moody town and its most infamous resident, Laura Palmer.

youtube.com

Though the series aired only for two seasons, it inspired countless pop culture references and its fan base grew from the release of VHS, DVDs, and its appearance on NetFlix. Showtime earlier this year announced it was working with Lynch on a revival of the show, featuring a number of the original cast members.

Last year, Coulson told Alternative Nation about connecting with a new generation of fans. Even 20 years after Twin Peaks aired, she said she still got stopped on the street.

"I have these little cards where I sign the autograph of the log, because that’s what I think people are really interested in, is the wood. So I gave them all little log cards, and they were very happy with that."

CBS Television Distribution / Via twinpeakscaptioned.tumblr.com


LINK: 13 Things One Must Know About The Log Lady Of "Twin Peaks"



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Paul Walker's Daughter Sues Porsche Over Deadly Crash

Stuart C. Wilson / Getty Images

The daughter of the late Paul Walker filed a lawsuit Monday against Porsche, alleging safety defects contributed to the Fast and Furious star's deadly crash in 2013.

Meadow Rain Walker, the 16-year-old sole heir of Walker’s estate, filed the lawsuit in Los Angeles County Superior Court "with great reluctance," her attorney said in a statement to BuzzFeed News.

The lawsuit alleges for strict liability, negligence, and wrongful death. The Porsche Carrera GT that Walker was riding in at the time of the crash as equipped with a 605-horsepower engine capable of achieving 205 mph, but lacked safety features found on all “well-designed racing cars or even Porsche’s least expensive road cars," the lawsuit states.

Meadow's attorney, Jeff Milam, said in a statement that the teen was still dealing with "the tragic loss of her father," and would not be commenting beyond what is in the lawsuit.

"The bottom line is that the Porsche Carrera GT is a dangerous car," Milam said. "It doesn’t belong on the street. And we shouldn’t be without Paul Walker or his friend, Roger Rodas."

Rodas was driving high performance car when it struck a pole and burst into flames Nov. 30, 2013. Rodas and the Fast and Furious star died at the scene. Investigators later determined the car was traveling between 80 and 93 mph, an “unsafe speed for the roadway conditions.”

In March 2014, authorities concluded that there were no preexisting mechanical problems with the Porsche that would have caused the crash. The investigators examined the car’s exhaust, throttle and fuel system, electrical system, steering and suspension, brake system, tires and wheels, and airbag control modules, as well as the car’s history.

instagram.com

Meadow’s lawsuit, however, states that Porsche knew the Carrera GT had a history of instability and control issues, but failed to install its electronic stability control system, which is "specifically designed to protect against the swerving actions inherent in hyper-sensitive vehicles of this type.”

To cut back on weight, the car was equipped with side door reinforcement bars made in material weaker than mass-market cars, the complaint states. In addition, the seat belts were anchored in a way that made it impossible for Walker to escape, breaking his ribs and pelvis and trapping him “where he remained alive until the vehicle erupted into flames one minute and twenty seconds later,” the lawsuit alleges. The fire was also due to faulty rubber lines without “break-free” fittings to automatically shut down the fuel flow, the lawsuit states.

Porsche did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

This year on what would have been her father’s 42 birthday, Meadow launched the Paul Walker Foundation to continue his legacy of goodwill missions. Walker’s estate at the time of his death was estimated at $25 million.



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FBI To Start Collecting More Data On Police Shootings

Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

FBI Director James Comey on Monday announced that the federal government will start collecting more data on police shootings for a new report on use of force incidents.

Historically, the FBI has collected numbers from local police departments on violent crimes and other offenses. The agency also collects data on justifiable homicides — defined as "the killing of a felon by a law enforcement officer in the line of duty" — as well as killings and assaults on law enforcement officers. But the agency could never definitely say how many people were dying at the hands of police, the circumstances of their deaths, or who they were.

In the wake of the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, a Wall Street Journal analysis found hundreds of fatal police shootings were uncounted in the federal statistics. The lack of information prompted projects by news organizations, including the Guardian and the Washington Post, to provide more information about the scope of police shootings in the U.S.

Damian Dovarganes / AP

In a statement Monday, Comey cited the ongoing debate on police use of force and said the FBI would seek more information from law enforcement agencies on shootings involving police and civilians. Once the FBI receives the data, he said the agency would release a special publication on use of force.

"We hope this information will become part of a balanced dialogue in communities and in the media — a dialogue that will help to dispel misperceptions, foster accountability, and promote transparency in how law enforcement personnel relate to the communities they serve," Comey said.

Comey also called for every law enforcement agency to submit its crime statistics into the National Incident-Based Reporting System, a database that includes information on the circumstances surrounding a crime. Only about a third of agencies are currently using the database, he said.

Comey also asked for patience from media and the public as the FBI works to provide more complete crime data, which he described as a "tremendous effort."

"But to continue in our current system without comprehensive data only stalls meaningful conversation and fuels empty debates, both within law enforcement and in the communities we serve," he said.



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New York Police Will Now Hand Out Stop-And-Frisk "Receipts"


Kena Betancur / Getty Images

New York police officers must now to hand out informational slips to the people they stop and frisk, a department spokesperson confirmed to BuzzFeed News on Monday.

The slips, which list the officer's name and the reason for the stop, are only given to suspects who are not ultimately arrested. The small paper cards also include the phone number for the Civilian Complaint and Review Board, the independent agency that investigates police misconduct.

The new policy comes in the wake of a 2013 decision by U.S. Circuit Court Judge Shira Scheindlin, who found that the New York Police Department engaged in systemic and unconstitutional pattern of racial profiling when implementing the tactic.

Of the nearly 4.5 million stops that NYPD officers performed between 2004 and 2012, 83% targeted blacks or Latinos, even though those demographics only account for about 50% of the city's population. Nearly 90% of those stopped were never arrested or issued a summons for a violation.

The number of stops has fallen dramatically since the ruling, from nearly 700,000 in 2011 to just 13,600 in the first half of 2015, according to data from the New York Civil Liberties Union.

"These guidelines were established in accordance with federal court recommendations," police Lt. John Grimpel told BuzzFeed News.

Police reform advocates welcomed the new policy. Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, told BuzzFeed News that "the stop-and-frisk receipts should result in greater accountability, which is a good thing."

However, the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, the NYPD's largest union, strongly opposes the slips. In a statement released in August, when the policy was still under discussion, PBA President Patrick Lynch said the slips were "clearly designed to invite retaliatory complaints against police officers who make an active effort to prevent crime and take guns off the street."

Some former officers expressed skepticism about the effectiveness of the new policy, arguing that the real intention behind the slips is to reintroduce the practice of stop-and-frisk while appeasing police reform advocates.

"The purpose of these slips is to reintroduce the form and the concept after the Scheindlin ruling so that cops start doing it again. And at the same time, trying to assuage the community," said a five-year veteran of the department who asked not to be named to avoid jeopardizing his current job.

He added: "This is the city saying, 'Hey, so we need to stop murders and we know that people carrying guns commit murders, so please stop them. But at the same time, this is a kindler, gentler stop and frisk, so it's totally not the same thing, citizens.'"

LINK: Why Does The NYPD Almost Never Apologize?







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Missouri AG: There Is "No Evidence Whatsoever" That Planned Parenthood Is Selling Fetal Tissue

Missouri is now the seventh state to conclude the women’s health organization isn’t profiting from illegal tissue sales.

Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

Missouri's attorney general announced on Monday that there is "no evidence whatsoever" that Planned Parenthood is selling fetal tissue in the state.

Attorney General Chris Koster's office launched an investigation into the matter after the anti-abortion group Center for Medical Progress released a series of videos claiming Planned Parenthood was illegally profiting from selling fetal body parts.

Koster said in a statement that his office carried out an exhaustive investigation, but found the claims as they pertained to Planned Parenthood in his state were without merit.

"We have discovered no evidence whatsoever to suggest that Planned Parenthood's St. Louis facility is selling fetal tissue," he said.

The probe only examined activities at the organization's location in St. Louis because that facility is the only one in the state approved to perform surgical abortions.

In the probe, Koster's office tracked the facility's actions in each abortion it performed in a 30-day period and found Planned Parenthood broke no laws.

"The investigation examined documents from all 317 separate abortions that occurred during the audited period, tracing each procedure from Planned Parenthood to the incinerator," the statement said. Investigators also conducted interviews with staff and examined "thousands" of documents.

The chief executive of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region and South Missouri said in a statement to BuzzFeed News that the facility's top priority is "compassionate healthcare and education," and the results of the state attorney's investigation reflect that.

"We have always followed the highest medical and ethical standards and comply with all laws," Mary M. Kogut said. "We are pleased, but not surprised that this thorough investigation by the attorney general found our actions fully compliant with the law."

Olivier Douliery / Getty Images

The videos from the Center of Medical Progress set off one of the fiercest abortion fights in recent memory, with a number of states cut funding for Planned Parenthood.

Even though only California and Washington allow Planned Parenthood to facilitate the donation of fetal tissue, 12 states opened probes into how the organization was handling fetal remains.

Missouri is the seventh of 12 states to announce finding no evidence of wrongdoing.

The issue, however, is causing problems in Congress, with some Republicans threatening to shut down the government unless Planned Parenthood loses its federal funding.

In announcing his plans to resign on Friday, House Speaker John Boehner cited the Planned Parenthood standoff.


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Christian Syrians In the U.S. Fear For Their Families Back Home

Angela sitting at home in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, after dinner with her mother and 7-year-old son.

Leticia Miranda for BuzzFeed News

Angela’s talks with her family in Syria are brief.

“Anytime there is a bomb there or something we always call and say, ‘Are you good? Is it far from where you are?’” she told BuzzFeed News. Living in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, Angela said she and her family can’t offer much more than moral support to her relatives still in Syria, like answering her uncle's calls during the brief periods he has electricity.

As thousands of refugees of all religions flee the country — now in its fourth year of an intractable war between government, rebel, and ISIS forces — to make the grueling and dangerous journey to Europe, Angela’s extended family opted instead to stay in their homeland and apply for visas. (Angela’s name and the names of her family members have been changed out of their fear for their relatives’ safety.)

The recent history of Syrian Christians — an umbrella term for the diverse minority group of Greek Orthodox, Catholics, Protestants, and others — has gone from being accepted under Bashar Al-Assad’s regime to becoming a persecuted class. Their plight has been an ongoing concern for human rights advocates since the beginning of the war in 2011. Since then, more than 700,000 Christian Syrians have left the country, according to Open Doors International, a U.K.-based organization tracking the persecution of Christians.

Angela’s family comes from a long line of Syrian Christians, who have become special targets for ISIS and other Islamist rebel groups because of their faith and a belief that all — instead of some — Christians support President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, said Princeton historian Christian Sahner and author of Among the Ruins: Syria Past and Present. As a result, the world’s oldest Christian community along with its churches, books, and icons are slowly being erased.

Angela seated a table with her family after services at the Saint Nicholas Antiochian Orthodox Cathedral.

Leticia Miranda for BuzzFeed News

Last winter, ISIS held a group of Greek Orthodox nuns — along with 150 other Syrian women and children — hostage for four months in Syria until it released them through a prisoner exchange facilitated by officials from Qatar and Lebanon. When ISIS took the city of Qariyatain, in Homs Province, last August, it demolished the Syrian Catholic Saint Elian Monastery and kidnapped 250 Syrians from the town who still remain missing.

Angela’s immediate family — her two brothers and mother — arrived in the U.S. in 1998 hoping for more economic opportunity and a chance to study at American colleges. The family quickly adjusted to life in Brooklyn. They continued their family business of jewelry and began attending services at Downtown Brooklyn's Saint Nicholas Antiochian Orthodox Cathedral, where Angela met her husband and started a family of her own.

Angela and her family in the U.S. said they can only watch as their relatives, who once enjoyed prosperity, now live in constant fear of their lives. Her mother said she read on Facebook that the priest of her hometown church in Hama, Father Rafael, was beheaded by ISIS when they took the city last April. Another friend’s Facebook post said that a Christian friend of the family was beheaded in Idlib because he owned a liquor store. Angela’s childhood church in Idlib, St. Mary’s Orthodox Church, was taken over and destroyed by a coalition of rebel forces led by Al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra, an Islamist group competing with ISIS for control of Syria. Three homes in their predominantly Christian neighborhood in Idlib have been bombed, leaving one man killed in his sleep, she said.

Sunday services at Saint Nicholas Antiochian Orthodox Cathedral.

Leticia Miranda for BuzzFeed News

Angela's uncle, who is an engineer and building inspector in Syria, told her that a jihadist group learned he was Christian and attempted to kidnap him last year. He was inspecting a building just outside of Damascus when a group of co-workers ran to him yelling, “They’re coming! They’re coming!” — though they were unsure who they were affiliated with. The co-workers rushed him to a home nearby to hide for the rest of the day and returned him home to Damascus when it was safe. The next day, the group of men who helped him went missing and still have not been found. Angela’s uncle now refuses to leave the city out of fear for his life.

“When we know they’re leaving before they leave, we talk to them and talk to them once they get there,” said Angela. “We always worry.”

Most of Angela’s family, like thousands of other Christians, fled Idlib about three months ago to join her uncle in Damascus. They are essentially hostage there. Before the war, the trek would take a few hours by car. Now the trip takes two days because the family must follow longer roads and change cabs to throw off potential kidnappers.

The possibility that her entire extended family can escape the country seems bleak. Instead, they have dedicated themselves to finding safety for her 23-year-old cousin. The family recently made a two-day journey to Lebanon for a visa, and the cousin was later approved for one to Germany. The rest of her family remains in Syria.

Najid shared this photo from his cousin's Facebook page.


Najid, a 40-year-old physician who immigrated to the U.S. in 2000 and also lives in Bay Ridge, fears his 500-year-old family home in Damascus will become another erased relic of Syria’s past. (His name has also been changed.)

The home, where nearly his entire maternal family was born, is undergoing a renovation that requires careful construction to preserve the old molding and rock walls. The house is surrounded by churches.

“I hope we’re lucky and don't get bombed,” said Najid as he swiped through photos of his home on his iPhone. “It’s sad to me thinking about preserving my house. Think about how many houses like this get destroyed.”

Many of his family members still live in Syria and are facing violence they believe is in part due to their Christian faith. One cousin in Damascus was hit in the stomach with a shard from a small bomb that detonated just feet away from him. An uncle was attacked by two rebels who pushed him to the ground, held a gun to his head, and forced him to give them his car. One of his other cousin’s homes in Damascus was damaged by a bomb hurled into a wall. Fortunately, said Najid, the bomb did not explode.

“They’re probably targeting the Christian community to force them to leave,” he told BuzzFeed News. “Probably the Christians shouldn’t stay in Syria. Just looking objectively, the Christians in Iraq were demolished completely. I hope not in Syria. But it might be denial. It’s my fear this community will be forced out somehow.”

The violence in Damascus has reached such a peak that, as he was browsing Facebook one day, he noticed a cousin had taken a smiling family photo on their patio after dinner. To the left of a table full of figs, pears, finished plates, and cups was an automatic handgun.

“I’m sure they have no intention to show it but this is the reality,” said Najid, who is also a parishioner of Saint Nicholas Antiochian Orthodox Cathedral. “This is how dangerous things are.”

One of his cousins has decided to join tens of thousands of other refugees and make his way to Europe. Najid's other relatives have no plans to make the trek to safer lands or apply for visas. They feel like they're in danger if they try to flee, he said.

It is unclear how many of the current refugees walking toward Europe from Syria are Christian because the U.N. does not track the religious affiliation of refugees, said Human Rights Council spokesperson Ariane Rummery to BuzzFeed News. In all, there are over 4 million registered Syrian refugees, and more than 6,500,000 Syrians have been internally displaced, according to the United Nations.

While the U.N. Convention on Refugees defines a refugee as someone escaping religious persecution or discrimination, it does not give prioritization by faith. The agency does not determine settlement based “on the basis of their minority status but on their needs and vulnerabilities,” said Rummery.

“Focusing purely on resettlement intakes of minorities would only serve to reduce this diversity and risks sending the wrong message, running counter to the principle of impartiality,” she said.

Sammy Fattouh at home in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, with his daughters Sara and Julia, who is holding one of the family's rosaries.

Leticia Miranda for BuzzFeed News


The war has sent thousands of Christians scrambling across the country, often running from town to town just to be turned away. Sammy Fatouh, a 47-year-old Orthodox Christian living in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, who also attends Saint Nicholas Antiochian Orthodox Cathedral, said his extended family faced this hurdle six months ago when they fled Idlib.

Nusra forces invaded the city in March during the night. The family was asleep when news spread that Islamist fighters were nearing. His extended family of eight piled into three cars and caravanned for about 77 miles to Lattakia.

At the town border, the Syrian Army turned away the family because it had reached capacity, Fatouh said. They turned and made the hours-long drive to the coastal town of Mashta al Helou, where Fatouh’s mother and brother live. Fatouh, who was visiting, said he had to meet the family at the city entrance to explain to the Syrian Army guards that they were relatives and should be allowed in.

Najid shared this photo from his cousin's Facebook page.

“I have a feeling Christians are not going to be there that long,” he told BuzzFeed News. “From Damascus to Homs to Lattakia, the Christians have been fading. You see Christians giving up everything just to go away.”

He said a friend of his family in Idlib was burned alive with his wife for running a liquor store. The churches have been destroyed and its icons sold to fund rebel groups. His home in Mashta el Helou is relatively safe for now, but he still calls home every day between 10 a.m. and noon.

The war has reached such a level that the lines between Christian, Muslim, and Jewish targets of violence have become blurred, many of the Christian Syrians interviewed said. Even the Assad regime has been accused of using barrel bombs against its own citizens.

Angela, with no family left in Idlib, has no sense of the state of her childhood home or where her friends have gone. But even though she understands the reality must be grim, she holds out hope.

“Once they stop it, and I hope it’ll stop soon, I wish to go and visit at least and see the house and see the town where I grew up and see all my friends,” said Angela. “But yes, I wish.”



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