Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

3 Atlanta men charged with counterfeiting Super Bowl tickets

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Kamis, 28 Februari 2013 | 15.20

49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick scores a touchdown against the Baltimore Ravens in the fourth quarter in Super Bowl XLVII at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. (Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports)

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Federal authorities say three Atlanta men are accused of trafficking counterfeit Super Bowl XLVII tickets that were destined for New Orleans.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say 57 fake tickets and about $7,000 in counterfeit money were seized after a Jan. 31 traffic stop in Sumter, Ala., by the Alabama Department of Public Safety.

ICE says 53-year-old Dwight E. Wilcoxson; 47-year-old Anthony A. Hunter; and 45-year-old Darryl A. Wesby are charged with conspiring to transport and sell counterfeit tickets to the Feb. 3 Super Bowl.

Hunter and Wilcoxson are also charged with possession of counterfeit U.S. currency.

It wasn't known Wednesday whether the men have attorneys representing them.

(The Associated Press)


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Ex-trooper indicted in crash that killed Braves trainer's wife

Fired State Trooper Donald Crozier

ATLANTA -- The former state trooper accused of causing a crash that killed a woman and injured three others has been indicted by a Fulton County Grand Jury.

Donald Crozier has been charged with vehicular homicide, reckless driving and violating his oath as a public officer in the Dec. 31, 2011 death of 54-year-old Kathy Porter.

Porter, her husband, their son and a family friend were on their way to the Chick-fil-A Bowl when Crozier's patrol car collided with their SUV at the intersection of Capitol Avenue and Memorial Drive. Crozier was on his way to a call at the time.

Kathy Porter died at the scene. Her husband, Braves trainer Jeff Porter, their son and the family friend were injured.

Fulton County District Attorney's spokeswoman Yvette Jones said Crozier was fired after the crash.

The former trooper's case will now be assigned to a judge and scheduled for trial.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

"Driving Miss Daisy" home on the market for $1.95 million

ATLANTA -- Twenty-three years ago, this month, Atlanta was the focus of the Academy Awards when "Driving Miss Daisy" won "Best Picture.

The film was written by Pulitzer prize winning Atlanta playwright Alfred Uhry who grew up in the Druid Hills area.

The story deals with the relationship between an elderly Jewish woman and her African-American chauffeur after World War II.

And as of today, the home from the movie, which forever linked Atlanta to Hollywood is, now, up for sale and it's going to the highest bidder.

To some, the home is as defining as Jessica Tandy & Morgan Freeman and as unforgettable as Alfred Uhry's words.

It's located at 922 Lullwater Road in the Druid Hills neighborhoos.

Jeff Hullinger asked, the listing agent for Coldwell Banker Doris Robinson, "How did this home get selected for the movie?"

"When they were looking for a site, they looked at several homes on this street, they wanted this street."

Ms. Robinson is has been selling homes in Druid Hills since 1959. She is a legendary figure in Atlanta business still going strong a half century after selling her first property in the neighborhood.

Built in 1922, the house is a celebration of the era, arched doorways and a black and white marble floor.

So much of this house is recognizable from the movie, the kitchen where so much memorable dialogue was spoken and the small dining areas, where the characters would eat separate and alone.

The beautiful stairs and landing areas is all work of craftsmen from 90 years ago.

Jeff Hullinger said to Ms. Robinson, "whomever purchases this home has the purgative to do whatever they want but renovation would be a crime against Atlanta & the state."

Ms. Robinson replied quickly, "it would be! it would be."

The asking price is $1.95 million dollars.

After the movie first came out in 1989, there was a non stop conga line of cars driving by with people knocking on the front door and windows.

It's still on a bus tour route of famous Atlanta sites.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

APS audit finds schools with broken, missing metal detectors

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Rabu, 27 Februari 2013 | 15.20

ATLANTA -- Nearly four weeks after terrified parents gathered outside of Price Middle School, desperate for information after news of a shooting on campus, Atlanta Public Schools released an audit of the district's metal detectors.

In the report, some units were found to be lacking pieces, inoperable or missing altogether.

In the days following the incident at Price Middle School, Atlanta Public School officials determined that the school's metal detectors were inoperable the day of the shooting. Superintendent Erroll Davis promised a full audit of the district's metal detectors to determine if any others needed repair.

11Alive News obtained a copy of that report, which showed 70 metal detectors were inspected district-wide: 33 of those in middle schools, 33 in high schools and 4 in district buildings.

Of the high school detectors, most were found to be in working order, though some were missing cords. Only two schools contained an inoperable unit: Forrest Hills and South Atlanta High Schools (marked "missing cord" in the report).

For both schools, the other units in the building were found to be working.

An inspection of the district's middle schools found more problems. Best Academy Middle School was missing a unit altogether. Two more middle school units were inoperable due to missing cords. And four other schools - Price, Parks, Young and Sylvan Middle Schools - included at least one unit marked "not working" or "not working/damaged."

In one of those buildings, Sylvan Middle, both of the school's metal detectors were found to be broken.

Sylvan parent Kierstian Artis said it wasn't easy sending her sixth and seventh graders back to school after the Price shooting. The two schools are only three miles apart.

"I'm terrified. Absolutely terrified," she said. "I've been all up and through [Sylvan] for different reasons and I've never seen a metal detector. I definitely don't think they have an appreciation for the safety of our kids."

District spokesman Steve Alford said in the last three weeks, the district has put hand wand metal detectors in every middle and high school.

District policy requires every student to pass through a metal detector or be hand-wanded before entering a middle or high school building. But following the incident at Price, Alford said district officials have been more vigilant in enforcing that rule.

"There is nothing more important than the safety and security of our students," Alford said.

"You have to understand, maintaining the metal detectors at all our schools, that's an ongoing process. So we'll never be finished servicing all the metal detectors."

Alford said the district is currently working on repairing or replacing the broken metal detectors.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Georgians remember Trayvon Martin, 1 year later

George Zimmerman (L) and Trayvon Martin (CNN)

SANFORD, Fla. -- It's been one year since neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman fatally shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in central Florida.

Tuesday Georgians gathered at the State Capitol to remember Martin.

On Feb. 26, 2012, Zimmerman spotted Martin walking through his neighborhood, a gated community, in Sanford.

Martin was walking back to a house he was staying at after a trip to a convenience store. Zimmerman started to follow him because he thought he looked suspicious.

Despite a police dispatcher telling him "you don't have to do that," Zimmerman got out of his truck to pursue Martin. They got into a fight and Martin was shot.

RELATED | Atlanta teens on Martin: 'It could've been me'

Zimmerman was eventually charged with second-degree murder but has pleaded not guilty. He says Martin attacked him and that he shot the teen in self-defense. His trial is set for June.

(Associated Press)


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Falling tree on I-20 kills "kind, wonderful man"

CONYERS, Ga. -- A tree fell Tuesday morning on I-20 in Rockdale County killing a 60-year-old commuter.

Roy Arndt of Oxford, Ga., was killed when the tree hit his car.

The wreck happened near Sigman Road at around 6:30 a.m. and the west-bound lanes were closed for more than two hours.

PHOTOS | Heavy rains cause trees to fall around the metro

Rockdale County Sheriff's Investigator Michael Camp said the accident caused a chain-reaction crash. A total of six vehicles were involved in smaller accidents as they tried to avoid hitting the truck, Camp said. No one else suffered any serious injuries.

Everyone who knew Roy Arndt describe him the way a co-worker, Robin McGinnish, remembers him, as "one of the kindest, finest men you'll ever know."

Arndt was a commercial printer, and he worked for Geographics in SE Atlanta for 34 years.

Arndt drove I-20 every workday between his home in Oxford and Geographics, a 68-mile round trip.

He was in the right-hand lane, westbound, in Tuesday morning's rains, when the tree fell on top of the cab of Arndt's pickup truck.

"I mean, it's like the hand of God reaching down and just grabbing him," said Arndt's boss at Geographics, Norvin Hagen, shaking his head, stunned.

"I mean, that's such a freak accident," Hagen said, and the nearly 200 employees at Geographics, many of whom have worked side by side with Arndt for decades, are grieving.

"Awful lot of these guys are very, very close to him.  And it's just a sad day."

Arndt's grown son, Gabe Arndt, told 11Alive News by phone Tuesday that his parents divorced "about 20 years ago," and Arndt devoted his life, since, to his job and to his year-round produce garden in the yard of his Oxford home.

"He loved gardening, he'd come home from work and the first thing he'd do, he'd be out working in his garden," Gabe Arndt said.

And Arndt was always calling out to neighbors to come pick some vegetables from his garden.

"Just friendly, real nice," said Virginia Massey, who lives next-door with her husband.

"He would come out and wave me down and say, 'Ms. Massey, would you like to pick some turnip greens?'" Massey said.

Robin McGinnis said Arndt was excited when she became interested in gardening and he'd give her helpful tips.

"He had such a nice, quiet, calm, patient demeanor," even when faced with seemingly impossible deadlines at work, McGinnis said.  "Everyone knew Roy, they all knew him.  And they would speak with him and he would always walk over, he visited, he was always so kind.  And he was just a nice, smart, just a wonderful man."

McGinnins fought back tears.

"I lost my friend.  He was my friend.  He had a lot of knowledge and a lot of kindness and a lot of love."

Roy Arndt is survived by his grown son and daughter, his former wife, his fiancee, and many friends.

The family expected to announce the funeral arrangements on Wednesday or Thursday.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Vote for the best mascot in Georgia

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Selasa, 26 Februari 2013 | 15.20

(USA TODAY) -- Where else can you get potential matchups of Hillbillies vs. Poets, Cornjerkers vs. Unicorns, Feet vs. Orphans and the Poca Dots vs. anyone?

USA TODAY High School Sports is letting the you choose the best high school sports mascot in the country, from A (the Auks in Delaware) to Z (the Zizzers in Missouri). 

Metro Atlanta has three school mascots vying to be the state's best: the Clarkston Angoras, the Gainesville Red Elephants, and the Jefferson Dragons.

Cast your vote for Georgia's best mascot here.

The contest ends at 3 p.m. March 25.

The USA TODAY HSS staff has chosen 255 of the nation's most unique high school mascots - five per state (and Washington D.C.), with voting on the state round running until March 5. 

The 51 winners will advance to the second round, where they will be divided among six regions. 

The regional round will begin March 6 and end March 14.

The six winners then will compete from March 15-25 for the chance to be named the best high school sports mascot in America.

The national winner will receive $2,000 for its athletic department. Second place will be awarded $1,000, third ($500), fourth ($250) and fifth ($100).

Learn more about the contest here.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Hundreds attend autism support day at capitol

ATLANTA, Ga. -- Like the rest of a busy Capitol in session, room 216 was filled with busy people, on their way to somewhere. It's only when you looked more closely that you saw many of these people were clutching photos of children, and many more had  children with them.

Mother Melissa Solares says, "It's a fight right now, they're hoping we go away."

Solares has come with her husband and two children, all the way from Augusta. The couple's five year old son Arturo, was diagnosed with autism one year ago. Solares' husband is a surgeon and in the past year they've spent $100,000 for special therapies for Arturo. He has undergone a transformation. They head upstairs to search for their state senator.

"He doesn't talk at all. He hasn't said a word." 

Outside room 216 is young mother April Covington. Her four year old son Braden was diagnosed a year and a half ago. She says they can't afford extra therapies and they must depend on the school. So far her son has yet to speak. It's frustrating for Covington, because she just moved to Georgia from Florida a year ago, never thinking she would lose her autism insurance. She says Braden was making great strides before their family came to Georgia, and if she had known things would go like this, she wouldn't have uprooted her family.

Each family has a story of emotional and financial hardship. Today is about putting a face to the issue -- and frankly, begging for support for their children.

Melissa Solares and her family go to the third floor and ask for their state Senator Bill Jackson. They wait outside the senate until Jackson comes out.

Solares tells Jackson about her son, about the money they've spent, about how lucky they are to have the money, but that most families don't. "I'm here to plead with you." Senator Jackson responds, "You don't have to plead with me. I'm here to help people." He tells her he's "basically" on her side and will do what he can.

The Andrade family is waiting outside the senate to see their state Senator, Renee Unterman.

"We always wanted to adopt from foster care."

Meg and Santiago Andrade adopted 11 year old Deven two years ago. He has severe autism and cannot speak. Deven waits with his parents, snapping a band and hugging his father.

Unterman comes out to speak with them and tells them she cannot support the bill because it's asking people to pay for something else during a recession and that people don't want it. Andrade responds, "but thousands of Georgians have come out in the last week saying they're for this. People who aren't affected by autism have heard the cost analysis and they support it." Unterman says, "I don't believe 32 cents is an accurate number," referring to data from other states who now cover autism treatments. Andrade says, "What about the data from all the other states?" Unterman tells Andrade she had a son with autism and that she understands, but she is not swayed.

Andrade presses on. "There are tens of thousands of people in this state who don't have the resources you may have had to pay for your childs treatment."

While parents advocated for their children, mother Anna Bullard took the fight to a national level appearing on the Headline News show 'Raising America' with Kyra Phillips.

Towards the end of the morning inside the Capitol, word began to spread that the bill had been put in mandate committee, a move that would stall it for at least another year.

Andrade says she will be back tomorrow. She is exhausted, but won't be deterred. She is also frustrated. "It seems corrupt. That's how it seems."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Alpharetta City Councilman faces DUI charges

Alpharetta City Councilman Michael Cross is in legal trouble, charged with DUI, Endangering the Life of Child and Improper Safety Restraints for a Child.

Alpharetta Police arrested Cross Saturday after receiving a 911 call from a motorist who reported he was driving erratically, swerving in and out of his lane.

According to the police report, the arresting officer said he noticed a strong odor of alcohol when he pulled over the councilman. The incident was recorded on the camera in the officer's patrol car.

According to the incident report, Cross told the officer he'd had a beer several hours earlier but claimed that he was not intoxicated. Police say Cross refused a breathalyzer test.

Cross did appear at Monday's normally scheduled city council meeting. He did not address his arrest or if he plans to resign from office.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

A gift of a lifetime for Joseph

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 25 Februari 2013 | 15.20

FORSYTH CO., Ga. -- VIDEO | We want to take you back.  To one basketball game. To one Friday night in January, in Forsyth County, at Vickery Creek Middle School.

That's the night when young lives changed for the better, forever, with the gift of a lifetime for 14 year old Joseph Brunelle.

Joseph competes in a community wheelchair league, No Limits Sports, in Cumming.  The Vickery Creek 8th Grade basketball players were volunteering at No Limits Sports earlier this school year, and saw how well he plays.  They and their parents and coaches from both Vickery Creek and Pinecrest Academy took it from there.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dog shot with an arrow adopts new family

GAINESVILLE, Ga. - A Hall County Great Pyrenees that survived for days with an arrow lodged inside its back is now recovering at home with a new family. They have renamed her Polar. The big white dog had come to them looking sad and hungry, and though they weren't dog owners, the Peters family in Gainesville started feeding her.

"Since she's had her operation she's much more playful this last week and a half," Peters said as Polar chased his kids and laid on the grass getting a stomach rub. "We didn't know what was wrong, not being a dog owner we thought it was a fight's she'd gotten into."

Polar had a wound that wouldn't go away, even after they gave her medication from a vet. They thought it might be cancer, and worried they would have to put her down. Then they took her to the Hall County Animal Shelter for a biopsy.

They found a hunter's arrow lodged in her back near her spine.

"I went through a range of emotions, the first one being anger thinking about who would actually shoot a dog with an arrow," Peters said. "But then there was relief, because we thought it might have been cancerous, and we'd have to put her down."

At the shelter, Dr. Meghan Seabolt performed surgery on the dog and successfully removed the arrow from her back. She's now getting used to her new home and family.

"She makes everybody happy and everybody smile, and it's another reason for everybody to come outside and play," Will's daughter Imara Peters said. "She's kind of like another member of the family."

If anyone has any information about who shot Polar with the arrow, they're asked to call the shelter at 770-531-6830.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Will DeKalb School Board continue to fight removal?

ATLANTA - Governor Nathan Deal is planning to announce Monday whether he'll remove 6 of the  9 members of the DeKalb County School Board, but a federal court order now has to be addressed.

11Alive News has confirmed a federal judge signed an order that in essence prevents any board member from losing their job until they have their say in federal court.  That is expected to happen Friday.

So, if Governor Deal ousts any of the members they will keep their jobs for the week, but not be making any decisions.  At the same time, the governor will not be allowed to start the process of replacing them.

The bigger question is whether those members will continue to try and stop him.

They tried unsuccessfully to stop a marathon 14-hour State Board of Education hearing Thursday that ended with the state board voting unanimously to recommend the removals based on misconduct and mismanagement.

Evidence against them included being put on academic probation last December, poor bookkeeping practices and what their accrediting agency called a decade of decline.

They also have a court hearing set for next Thursday challenging the constitutionality of the 2011 law that created the removal process.

As he toured new construction at Chamblee Charter High School on Friday, Interim School Superintendent Michael Thurmond said he is more concerned with where the school system goes from here.

"What we're ready to do is to pivot and focus back on improving our academic performance and helping and supporting our teachers on reaching out and communicating with parents," Thurmond told 11 Alive News.

Shawn Keefe is one of many DeKalb County parents who want a new board.

He hopes the focus will finally shift from political bickering to the 99,000 students in Georgia's third largest school system.

"I'm hoping that the recommendation paves the way for us to start anew and, hopefully, improve the situation in the county," he told 11 Alive.

Many are also hoping that the school board will not continue its fight to save their seats and have the removal law thrown out.

"If they feel they need to sue, do it on your own dime," parent Robin Malinovsky told 11 Alive.

"Don't make me pay for it and I don't know if I'd want to sue for a job that nobody wanted me to have anyway," she added.

Newly elected School Board Chairman Melvin Johnson is one of 3 members not included in the removal recommendation since they just took office.

He would not predict if the full board would continue their legal battle to remain intact.

Johnson said part of their reaction will depend on what the Governor decides next week.

"We're operating right now as a board, so whatever the decisions are, that's why we have to take on item at a time in terms of what we will do," he said.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

A gift of a lifetime for Joseph

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Minggu, 24 Februari 2013 | 15.20

FORSYTH CO., Ga. -- VIDEO | We want to take you back.  To one basketball game. To one Friday night in January, in Forsyth County, at Vickery Creek Middle School.

That's the night when young lives changed for the better, forever, with the gift of a lifetime for 14 year old Joseph Brunelle.

Joseph competes in a community wheelchair league, No Limits Sports, in Cumming.  The Vickery Creek 8th Grade basketball players were volunteering at No Limits Sports earlier this school year, and saw how well he plays.  They and their parents and coaches from both Vickery Creek and Pinecrest Academy took it from there.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Adairsville effort continues with concert

ADAIRSVILLE, GA. - As the tornado fades from the headlines, the people of Adairsville are continuing to work together to clean up and move on.  Saturday an all-day bluegrass benefit concert was staged to contribute to a relief fund.  Those who lost their homes were moved to see the support.

"It's a lot of hurt and pain," said Linda Pope of losing her home.  "And now the community is pulling together to get everyone back on their feet."

The relief concert featured Bluegrass bands from all over the state and other acts from as far as Nashville.  The lead singer of Shenandoah was scheduled to take the stage at 7pm. 

Meanwhile across town, the volunteer cleanup effort continued as Fayette county residents unloaded dozens of boxes and crates full of kitchen supplies.  Dorothy Ensley was moved to organize the effort when she learned the federal government wouldn't be stepping in.

"I was sitting down in my easy chair in a warm home, and I thought, 'I can't do anything about it, but then I thought I could, and I did."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Horrific crash mars Nationwide race, at least 30 hurt

NASCAR Nationwide Series driver Kyle Larson (32) goes up into the fence after being involved in a crash on the final lap during the DRIVE4COPD 300 at Daytona International Speedway. (Sam Sharpe-USA TODAY Sports)

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - At least 30 NASCAR fans were injured Saturday when a car sailed into the fence at Daytona International Speedway, and large chunks of debris - including a tire - flew into the grandstands. No fatalities were reported from the accident on the last lap of the Nationwide Series race.

The crash began as the field closed in on the finish line, and rookie Kyle Larson's car came upon the wreck and went airborne into the fence that separates the track from the seats.

PHOTOS | At least 30 hurt in Nationwide race at Daytona

Large chunks of Larson's car landed in the grandstands, and one of his tires appeared to fly over the fence and land midway up the lower section. The car itself had its entire front end sheared off, with the burning engine wedged through a gaping hole in the fence.

Speedway President Joie Chitwood said 14 fans were treated on site, and 14 others were taken to hospitals. Chitwood didn't give any updates on their conditions.

The number of those transported given by Chitwood was slightly lower than that given by local officials.

Halifax Health spokesman Byron Cogdell said 12 people were transported to Halifax Health Medical Center in Daytona Beach and six others were taken to Halifax Health Medical Center of Port Orange. All were in stable condition, Cogdell said.

Lindsay Rew, a spokeswoman for Florida Hospital Memorial Medical Center, said its Daytona Beach hospital had one fan there who was in good condition. She said three others they had been expecting were diverted to another hospital.

No fatalities were reported at either hospital. Cogdell said two people taken to the Halifax in Daytona Beach arrived in critical condition, and one of those had life-threatening injuries, both were upgraded to stable condition.

The accident happened the day before the Sprint Cup Series season-opening Daytona 500 - NASCAR's version of the Super Bowl. Daytona workers could be seen repairing the large section of fence where Larson hit, as well as the wall that was damaged in the accident.

"First and foremost our thoughts and prayers are with our race fans," Chitwood said. "Following the incident we responded appropriately according to our safety protocols, and had emergency medical personnel at the incident immediately.

"We're in the process of repairing the facility and will be ready to go racing tomorrow."

As emergency workers tended to injured fans and ambulance sirens wailed in the background, a somber Tony Stewart skipped the traditional post-race victory celebration.

Stewart, who won for the 19th time at Daytona and seventh time in the last nine season-opening Nationwide races, was in no mood to celebrate.

"The important thing is what going on on the frontstretch right now," said Stewart, the three-time NASCAR champion. "We've always known, and since racing started, this is a dangerous sport. But it's hard. We assume that risk, but it's hard when the fans get caught up in it.

"So as much as we want to celebrate right now and as much as this is a big deal to us, I'm more worried about the drivers and the fans that are in the stands right now because that was ... I could see it all in my mirror, and it didn't look good from where I was at."

The accident spread into the upper deck and emergency crews treated fans on both levels. There were five stretchers that appeared to be carrying fans out, and a helicopter flew overhead. A forklift was used to pluck Larson's engine out of the fence.

Chitwood waited by steps as emergency workers attended to those in the stands. Across the track, fans pressed against a fence and used binoculars trying to watch. Wrecked cars and busted parts were strewn across the garage.

"It's a violent wreck. Just seeing the carnage on the racetrack, it's truly unbelievable," driver Justin Allgaier said.

It was a chaotic finish to a race that was stopped for nearly 20 minutes five laps from the finish by a 13-car accident that sent driver Michael Annett to a hospital, where his Richard Petty Motorsports team said he would be held overnight with bruising to his chest.

The race resumed with three laps to go, and the final accident occurred with Regan Smith leading as he headed out of the final turn to the checkered flag. He admittedly tried to block Brad Keselowski to preserve the win.

"I tried to throw a block. It's Daytona, you want to go for the win here," Smith said. "I don't know how you can play it any different other than concede second place, and I wasn't willing to do that today. Our job is to put them in position to win, and it was, and it didn't work out."

As the cars began wrecking all around Smith and Keselowski, Stewart slid through for the win, but Larson plowed into Keselowski and his car was sent airborne into the stands. When Larson's car came to a stop, it was missing its entire front end. The 20-year-old, who made his Daytona debut this week, stood apparently stunned, hands on his hips, several feet away from his car, before finally making the mandatory trip to the care center.

He said his first thought was with the fans.

"I hope all the fans are OK and all the drivers are all right," Larson said. "I took a couple big hits there and saw my engine was gone. Just hope everybody's all right."

He said he was along for the ride in the last-lap accident.

"I was getting pushed from behind, I felt like, and by the time my spotter said lift or go low, it was too late," Larson said. "I was in the wreck and then felt like it was slowing down and I looked like I could see the ground. Had some flames come in the cockpit, but luckily I was all right and could get out of the car quick."

It appeared fans were lined right along the fence when Larson's car sailed up and into it, but Chitwood indicated there was a buffer. He said there would be no changes to the seating before the Daytona 500.

"We don't anticipate moving any of our fans," Chitwood said. "We had our safety protocols in place. Our security maintained a buffer that separates the fans from the fencing area. With the fencing being prepared tonight to our safety protocols, we expect to go racing tomorrow with no changes."

Larson's car appeared to hit where the cross-over gate - a section that can be opened for people to travel back and forth from the infield to the grandstands - is located in the fence. Previous accidents in which drivers hit crossover gates were severe, but the gates were in the wall and not the fence for Mike Harmon's accident at Bristol in 2002 and Michael Waltrip's at the same track in 1990.

Still, NASCAR senior vice president Steve O'Donnell said it would be studied.

"I think we look at this after every incident," O'Donnell said. "We've learned in the past certain protocols put in place today are a result of prior incidents. Again, our initial evaluation is still ongoing. But it's certainly something we'll look at. If we can improve upon it, we'll certainly put that in play as soon as we can."

Larson had been scheduled to race his sprint car later Saturday night in Ocala, Fla., and even seemed restless to get there during the late stages of the Nationwide race. He pulled out of the event following the accident.

"Honestly, the race itself pales in comparison to the injuries sustained by the fans," said Chip Ganassi, the team owner who has Larson in his driver development program. "Our thoughts and prayers go out to all the fans that were injured as a result of the crash. As for Kyle, I am very happy that he is OK."

Keselowski watched a replay of the final accident, and said his first thoughts were with the fans. As for the accident, he agreed he tried to make a winning move and Smith tried to block.

"He felt like that's what he had to do, and that's his right. The chaos comes with it," Keselowski said. "I made the move and he blocked it, and the two of us got together and started the chain events that caused that wreck. First and foremost, just want to make sure everyone in the stands is OK and we're thinking about them."

Keselowski said the incident could cast a pall on the Daytona 500.

"I think until we know exactly the statuses of everyone involved, it's hard to lock yourself into the 500," Keselowski said. "Hopefully, we'll know soon and hopefully everyone's OK. And if that's the case, we'll staring focusing on Sunday."

___

(The Associated Press)


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Tractor trailer accident snarls traffic on I-285 NB

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Sabtu, 23 Februari 2013 | 15.20

ATLANTA, Ga. -- Two lanes are blocked on Interstate 285 northbound at Donald Lee Hollowell Parkway due to a tractor trailer accident. 

According to the Georgia Department of Transportation, a tractor trailer and more than six other vehicles were involved in an accident shortly after 10:30 p.m. on Friday night. 

Injuries are unknown, at this time. 

Stay with 11Alive for updates. 


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Austim Gap: House Bill 309 in jeopardy

ATLANTA -- The petitions kept pouring in, even as they were packed up and headed for the capitol.

Almost 6,000 people speaking out on the Autism Gap in Georgia, 99 percent of the petitions signed in 11Alive's online survey are in favor House Bill 309, which would require insurance companies to cover medical treatments for autism.

RELATED | The Autism Gap: What Works

Thirty two other States have already passed similar legislation.

WEB EXTRA | The Autism Gap 

We delivered the petitions to the bill's sponsor, Representative Ben Harbin. Harbin says, "It has a good impact as long as people follow back up. Call your local legislators. They see 6,000 petitions and they think they're all Atlanta. People still need to contact their legislators."

What 11Alive learned in this latest trip to the capitol is that measure could be just days away from being put in a mandate committee. It will spell the end.

Let your lawmaker know how you feel about House Bill 309. Find your representative and let them know if you support or oppose House Bill 309 here.

"If it goes back into the mandate it will delay it at least another year. My concern is that there are other powers that be that are trying to push this off and continue to delay it until we give up. but I don't plan to give up."

So while 6,000 is a great number , Harbin says if people want the bill to pass, they need to contact their state representatives.

"Let them know. They've got to hear the passion in the voices. I believe if people truly get behind this and everyone comes out in support of this, we can pass this, because it makes sense."

On Monday, supporters of the bill are inviting everyone to Capitol, to meet face to face with legislators.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

A gift of a lifetime for Joseph

FORSYTH CO., Ga. -- VIDEO | We want to take you back.  To one basketball game. To one Friday night in January, in Forsyth County, at Vickery Creek Middle School.

That's the night when young lives changed for the better, forever, with the gift of a lifetime for 14 year old Joseph Brunelle.

Joseph competes in a community wheelchair league, No Limits Sports, in Cumming.  The Vickery Creek 8th Grade basketball players were volunteering at No Limits Sports earlier this school year, and saw how well he plays.  They and their parents and coaches from both Vickery Creek and Pinecrest Academy took it from there.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bernie Marcus to lawmakers: Close the autism gap

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Jumat, 22 Februari 2013 | 15.20

ATLANTA -- In much the same way The Home Depot transformed home improvement, the Marcus Autism Center transformed the lives of families and their children. Both are the brainchilds of Bernie Marcus, a self made billionaire philanthropist who saw a need and met it.

"A lot of middle class people had a child and didn't know where to go."

For a man who seeks logical solutions to real problems, the struggle for House Bill 309 is a frustrating topic.

MORE | Sign the petitions for or against mandating insurance plans cover autism and see our complete The Autism Gap special coverage

"It doesn't make any sense. It just doesn't make any sense to me."

Marcus, a republican who speaks his mind -- says party politics have no place in this decision.

"This is disgraceful for this state. Thirty-two other states -- democratic, republican states, have all voted for this. Why is Georgia not doing it? It doesn't make sense to me."

Marcus singled out the lobbyists fighting hard to kill the bill.

"The insurance lobbies obviously don't want to cover it and yet we know the cost is only 32 cents per month per member. And they're fighting it tooth and nail. I put it into Home Depot years ago and I will tell you, it didn't break Home Depot."

Opponents of the bill say adding 32 cents opens the door to other causes that want other mandates, but to Marcus it's simple and he called Governor Deal.

Jaye Watson asked, "Did Governor Deal tell you he would support it, that he would try to push it, put in a good word?" Marcus answered, "He said all of those things. He said if the legislature passes it that he would support it and sign the legislation."

Marcus says the middle class is getting hurt worst of all by trying to help their children. "I've heard of people that have mortgaged their houses, have gone into bankruptcy are now living in apartments because they've lost their houses, because they can't take care of the children. Eventually these people will end up being the ward of the state also. Ultimately the state is going to pay for it."

To Bernie Marcus the solution is to pass the bill, get children help, get them independent. He says this solution saves money -- saves kids, saves families.

"My God, from a humanistic standpoint the destruction that this is causing on families and the emotional impact it's having on families how could you not do this as an american who's supposed to have a heart?"

When asked how he would feel if the bill doesn't pass, Marcus answered, "I'm going to be very disappointed in this state. I'm going to be disappointed in the legislators and everybody involved and I think it would be disgraceful and I think when people go to the polls next year they need to start thinking about this."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

GA BOE recommends Gov. Deal suspend 6 board members

ATLANTA -- After a 14 hour deliberation, the Georgia State Board of Education voted, unanimously, to recommended that Governor Deal suspend 6 of the 9 board members on the DeKalb County School Board. 

The DeKalb County School board members recommended for suspension, include: Eugene P. Walker, Nancy Jester, Sarah Copelin-Wood, Jesse "Jay" Cunningham, Donna Elder and Pamela A. Speaks.

Since Thursday morning, DeKalb County's school board members have been in deliberation with the Georgia State Board fighting to keep from being removed from their posts.

RELATED | DeKalb school board elects new leader

Earlier this week, a judge refused to halt the hearing when DeKalb's School Board challenged the law as unconstitutional.

The judge ruled they had filed the request too late, but left open the issue until another hearing next week.

What could be a day long hearing began before a standing room only crowd.

Making the case for removal, State Department of Education, attorney Jennifer Hackemeyer claimed DeKalb's Board "receives a failing grade for governance."

She claimed evidence will show the school system's accreditation was placed on probation last December due to mismanagement, misconduct and political infighting by board members.

She said a good case exists to suspend 6 of the 9 board members with pay.

She did not include 3 newer board members elected last fall, after the problems surfaced.

Former DeKalb County District Attorney Bob Wilson argued on behalf of DeKalb's Board.

He began by blaming some of the controversy on a "degree of firestorm" from the news media, which he asked the state board to forget.

"Some things have happened that are not pleasant," Wilson admitted, including the threat to accreditation.

But he claimed the DeKalb Board has made "significant progress."

As examples he cited 5 new members elected since 2011, a newly elected Chairman, and last week's appointment of former State Labor Commissioner Mike Thurmond as Interim Superintendent.

"The citizens spoke for change and that should matter," Wilson argued.

The state's first witness was Mark Elgart of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. He explained problems that led his private agency to put DeKalb County Schools' accreditation on probation two months ago.

"The concerns here are not a political, but a performance issue. They (the board members) continue to treat it like a political matter," Elgart said.

Citing an earlier accreditation probation in 2004, Elgart claimed there's been a 10 year pattern of board failure and mismanagement.

After watching a year's worth of board meeting videos Elgart said, "the majority of their discourse has had little to do with student achievement.

"There's no cohesion about where they're headed and there hasn't been for 10 years," Elgart added.

Interim DeKalb County Schools Superintendent Michael Thurmond asked State School Board members not to recommend removal of the school board that just hired him.

Even though he technically works for that board, Thurmond promised to do his best to persuade them to quit their bickering.

"I'm responsible, I bought the farm," Thurmond said. "Give me the opportunity to do the job."

In a related development, Governor Nathan Deal called a mid-afternoon news conference with members of the DeKalb County legislative delegation.

He was expected to react to the State Board's recommendation whether to remove 6 of 9 DeKalb School Board members.

But that news conference was soon cancelled when it became apparent the lengthy hearing might not end in time Thursday.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Autism Gap: What Works

EMORY, Ga. -- "Every family we meet is struggling."

As the Assistant Director of the Emory Autism Center, Michael Morrier says he gets more than a half dozen calls from desperate parents every day.

"I get phone calls from parents, probably seven a day, that want to know what we offer and we tell them, and they say 'I can't afford that.'"

But for those who can afford the $25,000 dollar a year tuition, The Walden Early Childhood Center at the Emory Autism Center can be life changing for a child with autism.

MORE | Sign the petitions for or against mandating insurance plans cover autism and see our complete The Autism Gap special coverage

"In each class, one third of the children have a diagnosis of autism and two thirds are typically developing children." Morrier explains, "Deficits in social behavior are sort of the hallmark of autism. So we feel in order to teach normalized social behavior you need to have normalized social behavior models."

This early intervention program is so effective that a third who graduate from it are indistinguishable from their peers.

Across town at the headquarters for Autism Speaks, a small group of dedicated mothers brainstorm. They've heard the names of the lawmakers reportedly trying to kill the bill. Judith Ursitti handles state government affairs for Autism Speaks. She tries to assure everyone that this sort of battle is expected.

"Passing a piece of health care legislation is always hard. But it was hard in Texas. It was hard in South Carolina. It was hard in Arkansas. It was hard in Louisiana. It was hard in West Virginia."

For families without money, the only option left is the school system. And while schools can help a child, they can't replace the intensive therapies that lead to dramatic change, like in 8 year old Ava Bullard's case. She went from non verbal to high functioning after years of one-on-one specific treatment.

Developmental pediatrician Doctor Alan Weintraub says, "What the lay public doesn't understand is that those therapies are educationally based, they're not medically based, so the intensity--  they're not the same level."

The reality is that some families are leaving Georgia for states with autism insurance, like Florida and South Carolina. Melissa Solares is one year and $100,000 dollars into her son's autism diagnosis. "I remember the first time he said 'Mama I love you.' And that's why I keep working. That's why everyday I get up and I'm exhausted and we're broke from it, but it's because I look at him and he says 'Mama I love you.' So that's why I keep everyday. And we can't give up."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bernie Marcus to Lawmakers: Close the Autism Gap

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Kamis, 21 Februari 2013 | 15.20

ATLANTA, Ga. -- In much the same way The Home Depot transformed home improvement, the Marcus Autism Center transformed the lives of families and their children. Both are the brainchilds of Bernie Marcus, a self made billionaire philanthropist who saw a need and met it.

"A lot of middle class people had a child and didn't know where to go."

For a man who seeks logical solutions to real problems, the struggle for House Bill 309 is a frustrating topic.

MORE | Sign the petitions for or against mandating insurance plans cover autism and see our complete The Autism Gap special coverage

"It doesn't make any sense. It just doesn't make any sense to me."

Marcus, a republican who speaks his mind -- says party politics have no place in this decision.

"This is disgraceful for this state. Thirty-two other states -- democratic, republican states, have all voted for this. Why is Georgia not doing it? It doesn't make sense to me."

Marcus singled out the lobbyists fighting hard to kill the bill.

"The insurance lobbies obviously don't want to cover it and yet we know the cost is only 32 cents per month per member. And they're fighting it tooth and nail. I put it into Home Depot years ago and I will tell you, it didn't break Home Depot."

Opponents of the bill say adding 32 cents opens the door to other causes that want other mandates, but to Marcus it's simple and he called Governor Deal.

Jaye Watson asked, "Did Governor Deal tell you he would support it, that he would try to push it, put in a good word?" Marcus answered, "He said all of those things. He said if the legislature passes it that he would support it and sign the legislation."

Marcus says the middle class is getting hurt worst of all by trying to help their children. "I've heard of people that have mortgaged their houses, have gone into bankruptcy are now living in apartments because they've lost their houses, because they can't take care of the children. Eventually these people will end up being the ward of the state also. Ultimately the state is going to pay for it."

To Bernie Marcus the solution is to pass the bill, get children help, get them independent. He says this solution saves money -- saves kids, saves families.

"My God, from a humanistic standpoint the destruction that this is causing on families and the emotional impact it's having on families how could you not do this as an american who's supposed to have a heart?"

When asked how he would feel if the bill doesn't pass, Marcus answered, "I'm going to be very disappointed in this state. I'm going to be disappointed in the legislators and everybody involved and I think it would be disgraceful and I think when people go to the polls next year they need to start thinking about this."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Five dead in Thomson plane crash

THOMSON, Ga. -- Five people are confirmed dead after a small plane crashed in Thomson-McDuffie County on Wednesday evening. 

According to dispatch, the Hawker Beechcraft 390/Premier I jet crashed shortly after 8:30 p.m. after the pilot overshot the runway at the Thomson-McDuffie Regional Airport. 

According to preliminary reports, seven people were on board, at the time of the incident. The plane arrived at Thomson-McDuffie Airport from the John Tune Airport in Nashville, Tennessee. 

Officials from McDuffie County EMS and fire arrived on the scene and located the pilot, who was able to walk away from the wreckage. The pilot and a male passenger are the only known survivors. 

The plane came to rest in a field behind a factory about a mile east of the airport. 

No further details are immediately available. 


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Pittsburgh community shows "tremendous" crime drop since videotaped beating

ATLANTA -- It's been one year since Brandon White was violently beaten outside of a southwest Atlanta grocery store.

The incident was captured by a nearby surveillance camera; three men were seen kicking, hitting, even throwing a discarded tire on White, who tried repeatedly to escape.

It all happened outside of a small corner store on McDaniel Street in the Pittsburgh community. In the weeks to follow, that store would be revealed as a hub for crime, seen by many in the neighborhood as a gathering place for miscreants.

The incident shined a national spotlight on a community known for some of the worst crime in Atlanta. But 12 months later, residents have used that event to make some major changes.

According to the Atlanta Police Department, crime in the Pittsburgh community has decreased by 26 percent in the last year. That's compared to five percent citywide and 14 percent in zone three.

"To reduce crime by that much, 150 less victims, is tremendous," said APD Deputy Chief Renee Propes.

After the beating, she said, there was a surge of effort from both law enforcement and the community. Federal agencies teamed up with APD to target some of the area's worst criminals.

"[These are] people that have just been problems to that community," Deputy Chief Propes said.

"Repeated crimes that they've committed in that community, repeated victims are no longer being victimized because these people are off the streets and sitting in federal prison."

Once those arrests started coming, the community got to work. It started with little steps: trash pick-up days to make the streets a little cleaner. A few more people showing up to community meetings. Soon, more people were calling 911, addressing crimes that had previously gone unreported.

For LaShawn Hoffman, it was a breakthrough in a battle that he'd been fighting for some time: forging a sense of community ownership. As CEO of the Pittsburgh Community Improvement Association, he said the key was teaching people why those community events were so important.

"I think there was a sense of apathy," he said. "I think the residents just really felt that the city and Atlanta Police Department didn't care about crime in our neighborhood."

"The biggest difference in our decrease in crime has been a more engaged community," he said.

It took people like Helen Jenkins, who has lived in the Pittsburgh community for more than 20 years. She said she never considered living anywhere else, even when the beating happened within two blocks of her home.

"[That incident] was a turning point for people, saying 'I don't want my community to be branded,'" she said.

Neighbors agree it's still not a bed of roses; there is still plenty of work to be done. They say that grocery store, for instance, is still a sore spot in the community.

But for Helen, something as simple as cleaner streets makes a world of difference.

"I believe in this community," she said. "I think everything's turning around. It can only get better."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Battle at the Capitol: The fight for autism insurance

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Rabu, 20 Februari 2013 | 15.20

ATLANTA -- "My name is Anna Bullard and I'm from Lyons, Georgia."

She says it over and over, countless times in a single day, reciting her name and her hometown and her reason for being hours from that hometown, walking the halls of the Capitol.

Anna has a remarkable story to tell, the story of her eight year old daughter Ava, who couldn't talk, dress herself, interact, or sleep - who was diagnosed with autism at two and a half years old, who after years of therapies at a cost of $50,000 dollars a year, is thriving.

MORE | See more of Anna's story, hear from her mom and sign the petitions for or against HB 309, requiring insurance plans cover autism.

And all of that happened with no help from insurance.

Anna recalls, "Before Ava was diagnosed she was covered. Once she was diagnosed, they would not longer pay for it."

Ava's success story is incredible, but not unusual. Not for the children who receive intensive early intervention therapies.

That's why Anna cannot be satisfied -- she wants each of the estimated 30 thousand children with autism in Georgia to have the same chance to find their voices -- to lead independent lives.

There is no law in the state of Georgia requiring health insurance plans to cover autism. Thirty-two other states require it. Military and federal government insurance plans cover it. But in Georgia, insurance companies don't have to cover autism treatment. And many don't.

Senator Renee Unterman, an insurance executive says it's a slippery slope.

"If you raise the rates on insurance, you have the probability of more people not being able to afford insurance."

Yet studies from states that have required autism insurance -- including South Carolina and Florida-- show that the coverage added an average of thirty-two cents per person per month.

Unterman says, "It doesn't seem a lot. But for that one advocate you've got down here, you've got ten other advocates who want to add other mandates onto insurance and it's a cumulative effect."

In some ways, it's about a dirty word. Mandate. Lawmakers don't like that word. They don't like the idea of the government forcing them to do something.

The Harvard School of Public Health estimates the cost of caring for someone with autism over their lifetime at more than $3 million dollars. That number drops dramatically if that person with autism can lead independent lives.

Representative Ben Harbin, the sponsor of the bill, says "We can make sure that child that's been diagnosed with autism gets the coverage they need in those early years. And they can lead a better quality of life. They can go on and be in the normal classrooms, not the expensive special needs. It saves us money, saves the taxpayers and the insurance companies money in the long run."

Harbin says the bill ought to appeal to Republicans, who hold a super majority in both houses, because it would treat autism early and save money later.

Melissa Solares' five year old son Arturo was diagnosed with autism last year. She says their family spent over $100,000 dollars out of pocket. Melissa is a nurse. Her husband is a surgeon. She says they will leave Georgia for South Carolina if the bill doesn't pass.

"My husband and I have a choice. We chose Georgia. Because Georgia provided a life that we believed in. And if they can't give it to us we are going to have no option but to leave because we can choose to go somewhere else."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Accused officers back in court

ATLANTA, Ga. -- New details are emerging about a couple of Metro Atlanta police officers caught up in a drug and corruption scandal.

The 11Alive Center for Investigative Action has learned that half of them have been in trouble with their police departments before. We've learned 5 of the accused have had run-ins with the law like spousal abuse, charges of battery and disorderly conduct in the past.

One former DeKalb Detention officer who appeared today had even had his law enforcement certificate suspended and ordered to attend management training. However the accusations they now face are more severe.

DeKalb County police officer Dorian Williams accused of even threatening to shoot someone to protect the dealers. Former detention officer Monyette McLaurin also accused of doing the same if given the signal to shoot to protect drug dealers.
And Gregory Lee Harvey seen in the middle accused of pretending to be a sheriff was with them.

Ken Vance, Executive director of Georgia of Peace Officers Standard and Training says immediate action is being taken. This week suspension notices like this will go out to 9 of the 10 officers accused stripping them of the ability to be police officers in Georgia or anywhere else.

The state suspended McLaurin's certificate in 2007 for threatening a spouse and put on probation by the licensing body. Dorian Williams had been charged with battery and disorderly conduct and criminal trespass in a 2011 case but the charges were dropped. He was suspended for a week but he kept his job.

Both Dorian Williams and McLaurin will be released on $10,000 bond and put under electronic monitoring. The other man who appeared today is being handed over to DeKalb County to clear up a domestic charge, when he's released he'll come back here and to put up bond and undergo home monitoring too.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

DeKalb School Board sues to stop possible ouster by Governor

ATLANTA -- DeKalb County's controversial school board members, faced with the possibility that the Governor may remove them from office, have suddenly decided to fight him.

They are suing Governor Nathan Deal to try to stop the process that could lead to their removal.

Their lawsuit, filed Tuesday in Fulton Superior Court, just a block from the Georgia Capitol, claims that the state law empowering the Governor in certain circumstances to replace elected school board members violates the state Constitution.

The nine school board members are usually fighting each other, and their infighting is one reason the school district could lose accreditation at the end of the year. Losing accreditation would threaten the futures of thousands of school students.

The accrediting agency, AdvancED, has already placed the district's accreditation on probation, and told the board to correct the specific problems that the agency has listed.

As a result of the probation, the State Board of Education is authorized to intervene, and hold a hearing in which the DeKalb board members can try to prove that they should be able to remain in office to fix the problems they're accused of causing.

The state board makes a recommendation to the Governor, and the Governor decides whether to replace the board with an interim board.

That hearing is scheduled to take place on Thursday.

The DeKalb board is asking a judge to issue a restraining order to stop Thursday's hearing, and to keep the DeKalb board in place while the lawsuit moves forward.

Governor Deal said the law is needed.

"It's the only remedy that we currently have to be able to deal with situations such as this one," he said Tuesday evening.

Gov. Deal said he had not yet decided, anyway, whether to remove the DeKalb School Board.

"The [State] School Board was holding the hearing on Thursday, and after they had the hearing they would then make recommendations to me, and we would have acted based on their recommendations."

The Governor said he hopes the courts will not grant DeKalb's request for a restraining order, and, instead, allow Thursday's hearing to proceed.

"I think the longer you leave this [situation in DeKalb] in a state of uncertainty, the greater the process of harm that comes. All of us should be focused on what's good for the children in the DeKalb school system.... I don't see anything good that has happened up to this point. I was hopeful that we could dispose of the matter in an expeditious fashion, but it appears it may be prolonged" by the lawsuit.

The DeKalb School Board hired former DeKalb County District Attorney Robert Wilson to file the lawsuit for them and represent them.

Wilson, along with former Georgia Attorney General Michael Bowers, recently led the state's investigation of cheating in the Atlanta school system. They were hired by Deal's predecessor, Sonny Perdue. Now Wilson is suing Deal on behalf of Atlanta's neighboring school district, DeKalb. 

Wilson had not returned calls from 11Alive News as of Tuesday night.

But his lawsuit says no good can come from the Governor replacing the elected school board with an unelected, lame-duck board. That, says the lawsuit, would be worse for the school children than what the current board's critics claim would result from leaving the current board in place.

No one was saying Tuesday how much money in taxpayer funds the board members are paying Wilson to challenge the state law and fight their removal from office.

The spokesman for DeKalb County Schools, Jeff Dickerson, had not responded to messages from 11Alive News as of Tuesday night.

The President of the Organization of DeKalb Educators, David Schutten, criticized the board for spending taxpayer funds to file, and proceed with, the lawsuit.

"We are deeply disappointed and angry that the DeKalb Board of Education is using taxpayer dollars to fund a lawsuit challenging the law allowing the Governor to remove them," Schutten wrote in an email to 11Alive News on Tuesday. "Employees have taken pay cuts for many years, and class sizes have increased. Virtually everyone in DeKalb County is outraged by their hiring another [outside] law firm to help them with training [to try to avoid losing accreditation], and now, by their filing this lawsuit. They have lost the confidence of the citizens and voters of DeKalb County. They are tone deaf. Many citizens are already talking about launching recall elections."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

The Autism Gap: The Fight for Insurance

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Selasa, 19 Februari 2013 | 15.20

Autism Facts

-Autism affects 1 in 88 kids.  1 in 54 are boys.

-More kids diagnosed with Autism than AIDS, diabetes and cancer combined.

-32 States have Autism included in insurance coverage


-Average claims indicates an avg. premium impact of 32 centers per member per month

-Cost of caring for someone with autism over their lifetime is $3.2M

ATLANTA -- Eight year old Ava Bullard is playing with her sisters, riding their bikes on their long country driveway. It is a simple act that defies those who said she would never talk, those who said she wouldn't function in the real world.

Ava was not a typical baby, or toddler.

Her mother Anna says, "You couldn't interact with her."

Ava did not play with toys. Did not speak. Could not dress herself. Did not interact with her parents or sisters. Slept two hours a night. She was in her own world.

Anna says, "It's like she looked straight through me. She would just...it's like you weren't there, if you were in the room with her."

Anna Bullard took Ava from doctor to doctor for months. One doctor told the family Ava was 'just weird.'

Finally, when Ava was two and a half years old -- a diagnosis of autism.

Anna remembers asking the doctor, "What do I do? Where do I go to get Ava treatment? Where do I get these specialized treatments that I read about on the internet? And that's when the developmental pediatrician looked at me and said, 'That's the cadillac version. And you'll never be able to afford it.'"

The doctor told Anna to put Ava in special education in school, that she would remain there her entire life, and that she likely would never speak.

"It was the most heartless thing. It was just cruel." And to the doctor she wanted to say, "And you don't know me because I will do anything I will sell my house, I will do whatever it takes."

Before her diagnosis, insurance covered Ava's speech therapy. After diagnosis, "They said, autism is excluded coverage. Your child can't get anything."

Despite the 'no's' from the doctor and her own insurance, the Bullards pushed forward, giving Ava 40 hours a week of therapy called applied behavioral analysis, ABA -- plus speech and other therapies. They borrowed money from their families, spending more than 45 thousand dollars a year. It worked. Ava found her voice.

She came out of herself -- into her family's world.

"I came into the door where the therapist had Ava and she spontaneously said 'mama.' There aren't words for that. It was just the best moment in my life, really."

Today, five and a half years later, Ava is in a mainstream 3rd grade classroom, a top student. She still has autism. But she is thriving.

For Anna Bullard, it isn't enough that Ava is okay. She has taken her fight for the 30,000 children with autism in Georgia to the capitol.

House bill 309 will require state regulated health plans to cover therapies that are medically proven to help children with autism.

To sign the petition FOR House Bill 309, requiring coverage, click here.

To sign the petition AGAINST House Bill 309, opposing coverage, click here.

Anna and Judith Ursitti, the director of state government affairs for the national non profit Autism Speaks work the lawmakers one by one.

MORE | 11Alive News Poll on Autism and insurance coverage

Autism Speaks is armed with hard numbers. 32 states have passed legislation to cover autism. The military now covers autism treatment as does the federal government for all its employees. Data from state employees in South Carolina , Illinois, Louisiana, Florida and Arizona shows the cost is about 32 cents per person, per month-- less than the price of a stamp. But Georgia lawmakers shot down a similar bill three years ago. Lobbyists fought against the bill and lawmakers said they didn't want the government mandating them to pay more money for insurance.

"We're living in the dark ages here." Doctor Alan Weintraub is one of just seven developmental pediatricians in Georgia. Parents wait months to see him, to get the diagnosis of autism.

"You can take this child like looking like he has severe autism to fitting into the world. it would make a huge incredible difference. If the families can afford the therapies early on, it's the biggest turning point."

The autism diagnosis highlights a class divide. Families with money can give their children all the therapies. The rest, can't.

"You're talking about someone's salary to pay for that weekly intervention. If we can get that covered in a more appropriate fashion, you're taking away that class warfare. You're taking away that inequity."

Weintraubs says it's pay now or later. The Harvard School of Public Health estimates the cost of caring for someone with autism over their lifetime is $3.2 million dollars.

Ava is the poster child for what is possible with early intervention -- a future.

Sitting in a chair in her living room, her legs swinging above the floor, she smiles and says, "I want to be a fashion designer and I have a sewing machine in my room."

Anna Bullard is fighting to help other children like her daughter, find their voice.

"I was brought up to believe that when something is right and fair you fight for it. I just feel like Georgia's not going to let me down this year."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Morehouse students "elated, excited" for President Obama's commencement speech

President Obama gets a round of applause

ATLANTA -- The announcement came days ago, but students at Morehouse are still on cloud nine.

"Everybody has their chest out a little bit," senior Nathaniel Sinckler smiled. "You know we had to brag a little."

It happened during the school's Candle in the Dark anniversary celebration Saturday night: Morehouse President Dr. John Wilson, Jr. announced President Obama will be this year's commencement speaker.

This will be President Obama's first time speaking at a Morehouse Commencement, but it's not for lack of trying. Two years ago, the class of 2011 put together a video in hopes of luring the president to campus.

This time, Dr. Wilson said, it was the White House who called him.

Student Government Association president and Morehouse senior Anre Washington said the speech couldn't come at a more perfect time.

"The fact that he would come this year, 50 years since the 'I Have a Dream' speech, 100 years of Morehouse being named Morehouse, 150 years since the Emancipation Proclamation...it's just divine orchestration," he said.

Morehouse College is a school deeply rooted in tradition, and commencement is certainly no different. Each year, ten thousand chairs are arranged in the middle of Morehouse on Century Campus, where the ceremony takes place. Graduating seniors line up at King Chapel, walk down Brown Street and file into the graduation area, a picturesque open space surrounded by trees and brick buildings.

But senior class president Michael Daniels-Fleming said he's already heard talk that the location might change.

"I could understand that, with security and everything," he said. "But personally, as a student and a lover of Morehouse's tradition, I actually want it to stay on campus."

A Morehouse spokesperson said it is too early to say what, if anything, would change. Morehouse officials will meet with the White House in the coming weeks to discuss plans, she said.

But Daniels-Fleming said the most important thing is already a done deal:

"President Obama is still speaking at my graduation," he smiled. "Wherever it's at, I'm gonna be there!"

Morehouse College's spring commencement is Sunday, May 19.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

KSU student struck by hit-and-run driver in Athens

ATHENS, Ga. -- Police said Monday they know who is responsible for a hit and run accident that left a 19-year old Kennesaw State student fighting for life. But they don't have the evidence they need to arrest him.

Emily Bowman's parents said Monday their daughter had gone to Athens to celebrate a friend's birthday Friday night.  She was walking in the grass along Oak Street just after 3:00 am Saturday to turn in for the night, when a red Mazda pickup went off the road and hit her from behind.

Bowman was rushed to Athens Regional Medical Center where her parents said Monday night she remains on life support.  According to Emily's father, Dale, she has a broken pelvis, nose, is unconscious, and for the most part unresponsive.

"She's sick, she's not doing good. Her brain continues to swell," he said.

Bowman said doctors have already removed a large piece of his daughter's skull to help with the swelling, which a recent CAT scan shows stabilizing.

Police found the truck they believe was involved in the crash abandoned a few blocks down the road. Investigators said there were empty beer bottles inside the cab and truck bed.

Investigators said they know from car parts and surveillance video that the truck was involved in the crash. The challenge now is proving who was behind the wheel.

"We suspect that he contacted someone that night and that is how he left the scene, so we're asking anyone that did have contact with him to come forward," said Lt. Don Eckert, one of the investigators on the case.

Eckert said the 22-year old male suspect, who has not yet been named, has already hired a lawyer and refused to talk.  Police said he has been in trouble before, but not for drinking and driving. Investigators are tracking down his movements leading up to the crash.

A woman who answered the door Monday evening at the address listed in the police report as being that of the the suspect would not comment on camera, but did say her family is "heartbroken;" she called this "an unbelievable nightmare" that has left the whole family "beyond distraught," and said "we're just praying."  She said she could not comment about anything else, such as whether the young man will surrender to police.

She would not give the name of the family's attorney, but said she would ask the attorney to contact 11Alive News right away.

As of late Monday night the attorney had not called 11Alive News.

Emily Bowman's parents, their eyes swollen from not enough sleep, and too many tears, said they simply don't understand.   They're begging the man to come foward, explain what happened and accept responsibility for it.

"She's the love of my life," said her mom.  "And she's all we really have," added her father, as they sat side by side in the hospital chapel, asking the community to keep them in their prayers.

Tatiana Martinez, who has been one of Emily Bowman's best friends since they were four years old, said Bowman was "the funniest person I've ever met.  She's one of the friends that you know will be there for the rest of your life.  We talk every single day."

Martinez thought for a moment about the suspect as if she is sure he was the driver.

"I just want him to know what he did and how many people he's hurt.  And that's just another reason why people shouldn't drink and drive.  That's why Emily wasn't.  That's why she chose to walk."


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Starting Monday: The battle over Autism insurance coverage

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 18 Februari 2013 | 15.20

Autism Facts

-Autism affects 1 in 88 kids.  1 in 54 are boys.

-More kids diagnosed with Autism than AIDS, diabetes and cancer combined.

-31 States have Autism included in insurance coverage

-Average claims indicates an avg. premium impact of 32 centers per member per month

-Cost of caring for someone with autism over their lifetime is $3.2B

BEGINNING MONDAY ON 11ALIVE NEWS

An emotional battle is underway at the capitol and it is one that will impact everyone in Georgia, including the estimated 30,000 children with Autism and their families.

The battle is to get insurance companies to cover medical treatments for Autism.

Georgia is one of 19 states that doesn't have coverage.  The military requires coverage, as does the federal government for its employees.

Beginning Monday night at 11 p.m., we will bring you Ava's story. It's a tale of before and after you'll want to see.

Is this something Georgia can afford?  You decide.

House Bill 309 would require state health care plans to provide insurance for children with autism.  State plans include private sector and state employees.

Sign our petition for or against the effort to pass this bill and mandating insurance coverage.

To sign the petition FOR House Bill 309, requiring coverage, click here.

To sign the petition AGAINST House Bill 309, opposing coverage, click here.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Free Gift Card Giveaway and Free Pizza!

Follow Me on Pinterest

ATLANTA - Michael's Crafts stores will be randomly handing out gift cards to customers in honor of Random Acts of Kindness week on Sunday, February 17th. More than 100 thousand gift cards will be distributed nationwide. Michael's is also asking customers to "Craft it Forward" by doing random acts of kindness and posting them on its Facebook page.

Calvin Klein's Presidents' Day Sale is already underway with 40 percent off apparel and some accessories. Clearance items are an additional 25 percent off the clearance price.

Ann Taylor has full priced styles marked down 30 percent for President's Day and clearance items are an additional 40 percent off.

WorldofWatches.com  is having a Presidents' Day Sale with some watches marked down as much as 90 percent off retail.  (From DealNews.com)

Uncle Maddio's Buckhead Facebook Page has a coupon for a free 9 inch pizza.  Facebook members need to "Like" the page to get the coupon.   Uncle Maddio's Kennesaw location has the same coupon. The Windward Parkway location in Alpharetta also has the coupon.   Click here for a free Pizza coupon for the Cumberland Mall area location.   Keep in mind supplies are limited, the Woodstock location has already run out of coupons.

 For more deals throughout the week follow ValuesVal on Twitter.  


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Save Money on Fashion, Twinkies and Candy

Follow Me on Pinterest

ATLANTA - Valentine candy and cards are on clearance at Walmart and many other stores this week. Much of the candy has expiration dates in late fall 2013 and can also be frozen for months. Candy can be used for other holidays or gifts and cards can be saved for next year, espcially childen's Valentines for school.

For Twinkie lovers, Justdeals.com has a deal on a home made twinkie kit. The Hostess Twinkie Kit retails for $29.99 but it will be $9.99 Monday and Tuesday while supplies last.

Also online Tuesday, the flash sale fashion site RueLaLa.com has Lily Pulitzer accessories for women  and for the home as well as Kids décor Items and a flash sale from FAO Schwartz. Rue LaLa's sales start at 11am every day, and popular items sell out fast. Shoppers can invite their friends to join and will receive a $10 store credit each time a friend makes a Rue La La Purchase.  Click here to join.

Watch Ways to Save Wednesday Morning at 6 when I'll put Ted and Karyn to the test in Fact Versus Fiction! We'll explore some of the myths about saving money on gasoline.

.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Starting Monday: The battle over Autism insurance coverage

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Minggu, 17 Februari 2013 | 15.20

Autism Facts

-Autism affects 1 in 88 kids.  1 in 54 are boys.

-More kids diagnosed with Autism than AIDS, diabetes and cancer combined.

-31 States have Autism included in insurance coverage

-Average claims indicates an avg. premium impact of 32 centers per member per month

-Cost of caring for someone with autism over their lifetime is $3.2B

BEGINNING MONDAY ON 11ALIVE NEWS

An emotional battle is underway at the capitol and it is one that will impact everyone in Georgia, including the estimated 30,000 children with Autism and their families.

The battle is to get insurance companies to cover medical treatments for Autism.

Georgia is one of 19 states that doesn't have coverage.  The military requires coverage, as does the federal government for its employees.

Beginning Monday night at 11 p.m., we will bring you Ava's story. It's a tale of before and after you'll want to see.

Is this something Georgia can afford?  You decide.

House Bill 309 would require state health care plans to provide insurance for children with autism.  State plans include private sector and state employees.

Sign our petition for or against the effort to pass this bill and mandating insurance coverage.

To sign the petition FOR House Bill 309, requiring coverage, click here.

To sign the petition AGAINST House Bill 309, opposing coverage, click here.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

20 Year old killed in SW Atlanta fire

ATLANTA -- Investigators say a 20-year-old man was killed in a house fire early Saturday morning.

The victim, identified as Scarri McNeal, was pronounced dead upon arrival at Grady Hospital.

It happened on Campbellton Road in southwest Atlanta.

Fire officials say it started around 2a.m. and the cause isn't known yet.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mom speaks about passenger charged with slapping son

ATLANTA -- An Idaho businessman is charged with assaulting a child under the age of 16 after he was accused of slapping a crying toddler on an airplane.

Now, the mother of that child is describing what happened aboard a Delta flight as it descended into Atlanta.

Jessica Bennett said her 19-month-old son, Jonah, started crying because of the altitude change. 

"That's when the man next to me said something I couldn't believe," said Bennett.

In a Federal Criminal Complaint obtained by 11Alive News it stated "According to Ms. Bennett, a male passenger seated next to her in row 28, seat A, later identified as Joe Rickey Hundley, told her to shut that (racial slur) baby up. Ms. Bennett stated that Joe Rickey Hundley then turned around and slapped (her son) in the face with an open hand."

Bennett claimed Hundley's slap caused a scratch below her son's right eye.

Hundley is the President of an aircraft parts manufacturer in Idaho.  He denied striking the child or using a racial slur. He has since been suspended from his job.

11Alive News has learned that in 2007 Hundley pleaded guilty to assault after a fight with his girlfriend.

It appears there were several witnesses that saw the incident on the plane.

According to the complaint Bennett received assistance from a number of people, including passenger Todd Wooten. "Mr. Wooten was seated in row 16, seat C, and heard derogatory language coming from the rear of the aircraft," the complaint said. "According to Mr. Wooten, he saw Joe Rickey Hundley strike (the boy)."

Bennett is convinced Hundley was intoxicated when he boarded the plane, adding that he "reeked of alcohol".

Hundley's Decatur Attorney said she is sure both parties are very nice people. "We want the case to move along as it's supposed to," said Attorney Marcia Shein. "We hope it will resolve itself."

Unitech, the aerospace and defense company Hundley works for posted a statement on their website:

"We understand that authorities are investigating the recent behavior of one of our business unit executives while on personal travel. The allegations are disturbing and are contradictory to our values."

"We are taking this matter seriously. In accordance with our company's personal conduct policy, we have suspended the employee pending investigation."

You can follow Kevin on Twitter @kgrowson


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Starting Monday: The battle over Autism insurance coverage

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Sabtu, 16 Februari 2013 | 15.20

Autism Facts

-Autism affects 1 in 88 kids.  1 in 54 are boys.

-More kids diagnosed with Autism than AIDS, diabetes and cancer combined.

-31 States have Autism included in insurance coverage

-Average claims indicates an avg. premium impact of 32 centers per member per month

-Cost of caring for someone with autism over their lifetime is $3.2B

BEGINNING MONDAY ON 11ALIVE NEWS

An emotional battle is underway at the capitol and it is one that will impact everyone in Georgia, including the estimated 30,000 children with Autism and their families.

The battle is to get insurance companies to cover medical treatments for Autism.

Georgia is one of 19 states that doesn't have coverage.  The military requires coverage, as does the federal government for its employees.

Beginning Monday night at 11 p.m., we will bring you Ava's story. It's a tale of before and after you'll want to see.

Is this something Georgia can afford?  You decide.

House Bill 309 would require state health care plans to provide insurance for children with autism.  State plans include private sector and state employees.

Sign our petition for or against the effort to pass this bill and mandating insurance coverage.

To sign the petition FOR House Bill 309, requiring coverage, click here.

To sign the petition AGAINST House Bill 309, opposing coverage, click here.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Three charged in death of Grayson student

GWINNETT COUNTY, Ga. -- All three men accused in the shooting death of 14-year-old Paul Sampleton are being held in the Gwinnett County Jail. 

The threesome, which include: Larnell Sillah, Achiel Morgan and Romaine Stewart will all be charged as adults for conspiring to rob the Grayson High School football player and leaving him to die on his kitchen floor. 

According to detectives, the three had planned on robbing Sampleton for his Nike Air Jordan sneakers however, investigators recovered various clothing pieces and electronics, in addition to, the originally coveted shoes at the homes of the accused. 

Sillah is charged with the actual murder of Sampleton, he's allegedly the leader of a local gang "Young Wavy Goons" and Morgan is charged with armed robbery and is said to have walked Sampleton home to obtain the 14-year-old's home address. 

All three have been sent to Gwinnett County Superior Court and they are being held in jail until their trial. 


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man accused of slapping toddler on Delta flight

ATLANTA -- An Idaho businessman is charged with assaulting a child under the age of 16 after he was accused of slapping a crying toddler on an airplane.

According to a Federal Criminal Complaint obtained by 11Alive News the incident happened on February 8, 2013 on Delta Flight 721 from Minneapolis to Atlanta.

Joe Rickey Hundley, age 60, from Hayden, Idaho is charged with slapping the two year old boy.

According to the complaint Jessica Bennett, 33, from Minnesota told an FBI agent she and her two year old son were seated in row 28, seat B. The aircraft was in final descent into Atlanta's Hartsfield Jackson International Airport when the boy started crying due to altitude change.

"Ms. Bennett stated that she was trying to get (son) to stop crying, but he continued," the complaint said. "According to Ms. Bennett, a male passenger seated next to her in row 28, seat A, later identified as Joe Rickey Hundley, told her to shut that (racial slur) baby up. Ms. Bennett stated that Joe Rickey Hundley then turned around and slapped (her son) in the face with an open hand."

Bennett claimed Hundley's slap caused a scratch below her son's right eye.

According to The Smoking Gun, which broke the story, Hundley is the President of an aircraft parts manufacturer in Idaho, and he denied striking the child or using a racial slur.

But according to the complaint Bennett received assistance from several people on the plane, including passenger Todd Wooten. "Mr. Wooten was seated in row 16, seat C, and heard derogatory language coming from the rear of the aircraft," the complaint said. "According to Mr. Wooten, he saw Joe Rickey Hundley strike (the boy)."

Bennett told The Smoking Gun that she believed Hundley was intoxicated when he boarded the plane, adding that he "reeked of alcohol" and was "stumbling and wasted."

Hundley's Decatur Attorney said she is sure both parties are very nice people. "We want the case to move along as it's supposed to," said Attorney Marcia Shein. "We hope it will resolve itself."

11 Alive tried unsuccessfully to contact both Hundley and Bennett. The US Attorney's in Atlanta is waiting for Hundley to turn himself in. His attorney said he is in Washington, DC on business.

Unitech, the aerospace and defense company Hundley works for posted a statement on their website:

"We understand that authorities are investigating the recent behavior of one of our business unit executives while on personal travel. The allegations are disturbing and are contradictory to our values."

"We are taking this matter seriously. In accordance with our company's personal conduct policy, we have suspended the employee pending investigation."

You can follow Kevin on Twitter @kgrowson


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Charred remains in cabin positively ID'd as Dorner

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Jumat, 15 Februari 2013 | 15.20

Former LAPD officer Christopher Dorner (KNBC)

LOS ANGELES (KNBC) -- The charred remains of a body found in a cabin burned after a gunfight in the Big Bear area of southern California have been identified as those of ex-LAPD officer and shooting suspect Christopher Dorner.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff-Coroner Department announced the positive identification on Thursday afternoon.

RELATED | Sheriff's office: Remains found in Calif. cabin

A former Los Angeles Police Department officer, Dorner was the subject of an extensive manhunt after he allegedly shot three people and threatened to kill police officers.

In a firefight that took place at a cabin near Big Bear Tuesday afternoon, a San Bernardino County sheriff's detective was killed, bringing the body count associated with Dorner to four.

(KNBC Los Angeles)


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

10 local officers charged with helping drug dealers

ATLANTA -- Ten law enforcement officers are charged with assisting drug dealers around metro Atlanta. 

The U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia announced the charges after a year-long undercover investigation of gang related activity. 

The overall undercover operation uncovered officers from the DeKalb County Police Department, Stone Mountain Police Department, the Atlanta Police Department, MARTA Police Department, Forest Park Police Department, DeKalb County Sheriff's Office and the Federal Protective Service. In addition, one man, Alexander Hill, falsely represented himself to be a Clayton County Police Officer.

MORE | Read the full criminal complaint

US Attorney Sally Yates said, "This is a troubling day for law enforcement in our City. The law enforcement officers charged today sold their badges by taking payoffs from drug dealers that they should have been arresting. They not only betrayed the citizens they were sworn to protect, they also betrayed the thousands of honest, hard-working law enforcement officers who risk their lives every day to keep us safe. We will continue to work with our local law enforcement partners to pursue this corruption wherever it lies."

According to the indictments, the drug deals didn't take place in dark alleys, but often in very public parking lots in broad daylight.

Investigators say the officers often used their patrol cars, wore their uniforms are carried a weapon as they observed the drug deals take place.  Some would sit in their car, others would walk the parking lot around the deal as a backpacks with cocaine and money were exchanged.

But Yates says some did more than watch, some got involved in the process, counting the bags of cocaine, setting up signals to communicate, even discussing how and when deals should go down.

"Remarkably one of the police officers suggested that future drug deals be made in parking lot of a local high school so they could exchange backpacks there and that backpacks wouldn't be something that would cause suspicion," said Yates.

Perhaps even more frightening, was how far the US Attorney said some officers were willing to go to protect the dealers.

Dekalb county police officer Dorian Williams allegedly said if things didn't go well, he couldn't just shoot the buyer, he had to kill him.

Monyette McLaurin's, a former Dekalb Sheriff's deputy, also allegedly offered to shoot a buyer if necessary and discussed killing someone he  feared might snitch.

Mark F. Giuliano, Special Agent in Charge, FBI Atlanta Field Office, said, "In recognizing the need for the criminal justice system and those who work within that system to firmly have the public's trust, the FBI considers such public corruption investigations as being crucial. The FBI will continue to work with its various local, state, and other federal law enforcement agencies in ensuring that the public's trust in its law enforcement officers is well deserved."

The law enforcement officers arrested today were: Atlanta Police Department (APD) Officer Kelvin Allen, 42, of Atlanta; DeKalb County Police Department (DCPD) Officers Dennis Duren, 32, of Atlanta and Dorian Williams, 25, of Stone Mountain, Georgia; Forest Park Police Department (FPPD) Sergeants Victor Middlebrook, 44, of Jonesboro, Georgia and Andrew Monroe, 57, of Riverdale, Georgia; MARTA Police Department (MARTA) Officer Marquez Holmes, 45, of Jonesboro, Georgia; Stone Mountain Police Department (SMPD) Officer Denoris Carter, 42, of Lithonia, Georgia, and contract Federal Protective Services Officer Sharon Peters, 43, of Lithonia, Georgia. Agents also arrested two former law enforcement officers: former DeKalb County Sheriff's Office (DCSO) jail officers Monyette McLaurin, 37, of Atlanta, and Chase Valentine, 44, of Covington, Georgia.

PHOTOS | Officers charged with assisting drug dealers

Others arrested today were: Shannon Bass, 38, of Atlanta; Elizabeth Coss, 35, of Atlanta; Gregory Lee Harvey, 26, of Stone Mountain, Georgia; Alexander B. Hill, 22, of Ellenwood, Georgia; and Jerry B. Mannery, Jr., 38, of Tucker, Georgia.

The undercover operation arose out of an ATF investigation of an Atlanta area street gang in August 2011. ATF agents learned from an individual associated with the gang that police officers were involved in protecting the gang's criminal operations, including drug trafficking crimes. According to this cooperating individual, the officers-while wearing uniforms, driving police vehicles, or otherwise displaying badges-provided security to the gang members during drug deals.

In affidavits filed in support of the charges, an FBI agent described how drug traffickers sometimes recruit law enforcement officers to maintain a physical presence at drug deals. The traffickers hope that the officers' presence at the drug deals will prevent rival drug groups from intervening and stealing their drugs or money, and also keeps legitimate law enforcement officers away from the scene. In return for the corrupt officers' services, the drug dealers often pay the officers thousands of dollars, according to the affidavits.

Acting at the direction of FBI and ATF, the cooperator communicated to gang members and their associates that the cooperator sought police protection for upcoming drug deals.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Passengers finally leaving disabled cruise ship

The cruise ship Carnival Triumph is towed during sunset into Mobile Bay near Dauphin Island, Alabama

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) -- The first of some 3,000 passengers are starting to come off a cruise ship disabled for days at sea.

At about 10:15 p.m. Central time some aboard the Triumph were walking down an enclosed gangway to a terminal at Mobile, Ala.

As people started disembarking, others on board waiting were chanting, "Let me off, let me off!"

Carnival CEO Gerry Cahill apologized on the public address system to passengers.

Passengers have the option of a seven-hour bus ride to the Texas cities of Galveston or Houston or a two-hour trip to New Orleans. Buses are standing by to take them to their next stop.

Associated Press


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man dead after College Park shooting

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Kamis, 14 Februari 2013 | 15.20

RIVERDALE, Ga. -- One man is dead after a shooting at a College Park apartment complex on Wednesday evening. 

The shooting happened at the Willow Way Apartments which are located on the 5900 block of Riverdale Road. 

According to Clayton County Police, the shooting happened around 5 p.m. and the situation looks to be domestic. 

Clayton County Police Major Crimes unit is investigating the incident. 


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Bandits target iron storm grates, again

ATLANTA, Ga. -- Interstate 75 between Moore's Mill and Howell Mill is the scene of a crime.

In fact, it's the scene of many.

For years, thieves have been targeting the iron storm drains that sit off the shoulder of the interstates. Back in 2010, more than 1,000 were ripped out and ripped off. But then the crimes stopped.

Now, the thieves are back, and the latest tally stands at more than 600 gone.

Ironically, the state passed a new law last year that was supposed to cut back on the metal theft.

"They came up with the idea that having the GBI come up with a database for all metal transactions at recycling centers," explained GBI spokesman John Bankhead. "But it was not funded; it had to do with providing the database once funding was made available and that hasn't been done."
And without having a record of what's being sold to area recycling centers investigators have no way of knowing where the metal might be going. That's why the GBI is monitoring similar databases elsewhere.

"GCIC, in the meantime, has gone to another state that has set up a database similar to our requirements and we're working with that state to utilize their database," said Bankhead.

"To see if we can cut the cost of implementing this program. Right now that's going to depend on funding that hasn't come yet."

The stolen grates are a huge danger to drivers who have to pull off the interstate shoulder. And the lack of a grate can also lead to flooding in bad weather.

The Department of Transportation is asking motorists to report anything they see suspicious concerning these grates. Because, after all, they belong to you.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

10 local officers charged with helping drug dealers

ATLANTA -- Ten law enforcement officers are charged with assisting drug dealers around metro Atlanta. 

The U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia announced the charges after a year-long undercover investigation of gang related activity. 

The overall undercover operation uncovered officers from the DeKalb County Police Department, Stone Mountain Police Department, the Atlanta Police Department, MARTA Police Department, Forest Park Police Department, DeKalb County Sheriff's Office and the Federal Protective Service. In addition, one man, Alexander Hill, falsely represented himself to be a Clayton County Police Officer.

MORE | Read the full criminal complaint

US Attorney Sally Yates said, "This is a troubling day for law enforcement in our City. The law enforcement officers charged today sold their badges by taking payoffs from drug dealers that they should have been arresting. They not only betrayed the citizens they were sworn to protect, they also betrayed the thousands of honest, hard-working law enforcement officers who risk their lives every day to keep us safe. We will continue to work with our local law enforcement partners to pursue this corruption wherever it lies."

According to the indictments, the drug deals didn't take place in dark alleys, but often in very public parking lots in broad daylight.

Investigators say the officers often used their patrol cars, wore their uniforms are carried a weapon as they observed the drug deals take place.  Some would sit in their car, others would walk the parking lot around the deal as a backpacks with cocaine and money were exchanged.

But Yates says some did more than watch, some got involved in the process, counting the bags of cocaine, setting up signals to communicate, even discussing how and when deals should go down.

"Remarkably one of the police officers suggested that future drug deals be made in parking lot of a local high school so they could exchange backpacks there and that backpacks wouldn't be something that would cause suspicion," said Yates.

Perhaps even more frightening, was how far the US Attorney said some officers were willing to go to protect the dealers.

Dekalb county police officer Dorian Williams allegedly said if things didn't go well, he couldn't just shoot the buyer, he had to kill him.

Monyette McLaurin's, a former Dekalb Sheriff's deputy, also allegedly offered to shoot a buyer if necessary and discussed killing someone he  feared might snitch.

Mark F. Giuliano, Special Agent in Charge, FBI Atlanta Field Office, said, "In recognizing the need for the criminal justice system and those who work within that system to firmly have the public's trust, the FBI considers such public corruption investigations as being crucial. The FBI will continue to work with its various local, state, and other federal law enforcement agencies in ensuring that the public's trust in its law enforcement officers is well deserved."

The law enforcement officers arrested today were: Atlanta Police Department (APD) Officer Kelvin Allen, 42, of Atlanta; DeKalb County Police Department (DCPD) Officers Dennis Duren, 32, of Atlanta and Dorian Williams, 25, of Stone Mountain, Georgia; Forest Park Police Department (FPPD) Sergeants Victor Middlebrook, 44, of Jonesboro, Georgia and Andrew Monroe, 57, of Riverdale, Georgia; MARTA Police Department (MARTA) Officer Marquez Holmes, 45, of Jonesboro, Georgia; Stone Mountain Police Department (SMPD) Officer Denoris Carter, 42, of Lithonia, Georgia, and contract Federal Protective Services Officer Sharon Peters, 43, of Lithonia, Georgia. Agents also arrested two former law enforcement officers: former DeKalb County Sheriff's Office (DCSO) jail officers Monyette McLaurin, 37, of Atlanta, and Chase Valentine, 44, of Covington, Georgia.

PHOTOS | Officers charged with assisting drug dealers

Others arrested today were: Shannon Bass, 38, of Atlanta; Elizabeth Coss, 35, of Atlanta; Gregory Lee Harvey, 26, of Stone Mountain, Georgia; Alexander B. Hill, 22, of Ellenwood, Georgia; and Jerry B. Mannery, Jr., 38, of Tucker, Georgia.

The undercover operation arose out of an ATF investigation of an Atlanta area street gang in August 2011. ATF agents learned from an individual associated with the gang that police officers were involved in protecting the gang's criminal operations, including drug trafficking crimes. According to this cooperating individual, the officers-while wearing uniforms, driving police vehicles, or otherwise displaying badges-provided security to the gang members during drug deals.

In affidavits filed in support of the charges, an FBI agent described how drug traffickers sometimes recruit law enforcement officers to maintain a physical presence at drug deals. The traffickers hope that the officers' presence at the drug deals will prevent rival drug groups from intervening and stealing their drugs or money, and also keeps legitimate law enforcement officers away from the scene. In return for the corrupt officers' services, the drug dealers often pay the officers thousands of dollars, according to the affidavits.

Acting at the direction of FBI and ATF, the cooperator communicated to gang members and their associates that the cooperator sought police protection for upcoming drug deals.


15.20 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger