Saturday, December 28, 2013
Appeals court lets same-sex weddings go ahead in Utah
Pope Francis delivers his first Christmas homily
'What an amazing present': Boston Marathon survivor makes bid to walk
Friday, December 27, 2013
New Jersey 'go-go bar' shooting: 3 dead, 2 hurt
Girl's letter to Santa a gift from heaven for grieving San Diego man
UPS draws fire after Christmas delivery breakdown
One dead, one critically injured in shooting outside San Diego mall
Thursday, December 26, 2013
UPS system overload delays Christmas Eve deliveries
Nevada gunman told patients to flee before killing, 911 tapes reveal
Vegas cabbie, wanting 'to do the right thing,' turns in $300,000 left behind by gambler
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Man shoots sister at LA nursing home in mercy killing: police
AppId is over the quota
By Andrew Blankstein, Todd Miyazawa and Tracy Connor, NBC News
A California man is in custody after two suspected mercy killings — the shooting of his wife at home, followed by his sister at a nursing facility, police said.
Cops were called to the Country Villa Sheraton Nursing Home in Los Angeles on Wednesday morning to investigate a report of a shooting.
When they arrived, they found 58-year-old invalid Lisa Nave dead in her bed of a gunshot to the head, with a derringer-style revolver on the table next to her, and her 60-year-old brother, Lance Holger Anderson, waiting for them on the patio.
"He gave up without any problems at all," said LAPD Lt. Paul Vernon, adding that no one else at the nursing home was threatened or hurt.
When Nave's family was notified, they wondered what would happen to Anderson's wife, who was also ailing, suffering from symptoms related to dementia, Vernon said.
"The family called the sheriff in Santa Clarita to conduct a welfare check, and responding deputies did find a dead woman, presumed to be Lance’s wife," Vernon said.
"The assumption there is that he killed her, then came here and killed his sister," Vernon told reporters outside the nursing home.
Vernon said the double homicide appeared to be "mercy killings at least from his standpoint," although he added the suspect did not use that term.
Nave had been at Country Villa since 2008. She came out of a coma four years ago but required constant care, police said. It's not clear what ailment Anderson's wife had.
Regardless, said Vernon, illness "does not justify any killings."
Nursing home staff declined to talk about the shooting.
"Everything is safe now," said Maryvic Corder, an employee in the home's business office who was in the building when it happened.
The nursing staff was informing other patients about the incident, and sections of the 138-bed facility were secured so police could complete their investigation, Corder said.
This story was originally published on Wed Dec 11, 2013 3:50 PM ESTGroup that survived two days in frigid Nevada wilderness calls rescuers 'valiant'
AppId is over the quota
Cathleen Allison / AP
Two adults and four children arrive at Pershing General Hospital on Tuesday after being lost for two days in the frigid mountains near Lovelock, Nev.
By Elisha Fieldstadt and Erin McClam, NBC News
A couple and four children who survived two days in the sub-zero Nevada mountains, apparently because one of them built a fire and heated rocks to load into their rolled-over Jeep, expressed thanks Wednesday for “care and love from our community and the nation.”
In a statement released by the hospital where they are recovering, the six called their rescuers “valiant” and asked for privacy.
One of the children, a 10-year-old girl, signed her name in blue ink in big, careful, cursive letters.
The statement offered no new details on the group’s harrowing two days in the frigid cold of the mountain range. The six — James Glanton, his girlfriend, Christina McIntee, their two children and McIntee’s niece and nephew — were found in fairly good shape Tuesday after a rescuer spotted the Jeep. The children range in age from 3 to 10.
The rescuer, Chris Montes, said that Glanton built a fire inside a spare tire, used brush and wood from nearby for kindling, and heated rocks to take back to the Jeep. His ingenuity was hailed as the difference between life and death.
The temperature on the range was 21 degrees below zero Sunday night, and below zero again Monday night.
A family of six is recovering in a hospital after being stranded in subzero conditions for three days and two nights after their Jeep overturned. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.
Authorities called the group’s survival miraculous and suggested that at least one of them might have died had they tried to walk to safety rather than holing up in the car to stay warm.
“It’s a miracle. It really is,” said Richard Machado, the Pershing County sheriff.
The ordeal began after the couple and children failed to return Sunday from a trip to play in the snow near their hometown of Lovelock, in Nevada’s high desert, about 100 miles northeast of Reno.
The Jeep had been seen Sunday “doing wheelies or doughnuts” at a mining camp in Seven Troughs, a dispatch supervisor said. Officials said the couple had not taken food or water with them.
The sheriff’s office got word shortly late Tuesday morning that the Jeep had been found, rolled on its roof, with the group inside, “down off a little slope,” said Leslie Steward, a police dispatcher.
The Associated Press reported that Montes first saw what looked to be children’s footprints in the snow before spotting tire tracks that led into a remote canyon but not back out.
The Reno Gazette-Journal newspaper reported that Montes and another searcher, Salvador Paredes, hiked to the spot. Paredes went to find cellphone service while Montes approached Glanton. Glanton was startled at first, Montes told the newspaper.
“And he reached out and caught me, and he probably thought I was his wife first,” he said. “He looked up and saw my face, and it surprised him a little bit.”
Cathleen Allison / APMarty Happy, holding his son Ryder, 2, hugs David Mosier after they received word that a group of six people had been found alive after being stranded for two days in the frigid mountains near Lovelock, Nev., on Tuesday. Mosier's 10-year-old cousin was among the group who were treated at a local hospital Tuesday.
“I think everybody was thinking the worst for a little bit,” said Montes, a longtime friend of Glanton’s who hunts in the area.
U.S. Civil Air Patrol and a search-and-rescue team started looking for the couple and children when they were reported missing Monday.
Nevada wing Civil Air Patrol Col. Timothy F. Hahn said that the family was found “four miles from civilization.”
Hahn said the search team focused on areas without cellphone reception because the last indication of the group’s cellphone activity was early Sunday night.
The CEO of the hospital said that the couple and children had not suffered frostbite but had “some exposure issues and dehydration.”
“I’m relieved that God answered our prayers,” a cousin, David Mosier, told NBC affiliate KRNV. “They just told me that they found them and that’s all I wanted to hear.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
This story was originally published on Tue Dec 10, 2013 10:50 PM EST