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DC Shooting suspect Aaron Alexis - Who was he?

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Selasa, 17 September 2013 | 15.20

Photo of dead gunman, Aaron Alexis

WASHINGTON -- Aaron Alexis had a history with guns.

The 34-year-old Navy reservist, the suspect in a shooting rampage at the Navy Yard that left 13 dead, including himself, was arrested in 2010 for firing a gun through the ceiling of his apartment in Fort Worth, Texas, according to a police report. He said it had been an accident.

RELATED | 13 dead in Navy Yard shooting rampage
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PHOTOS | Shooting at Washington Navy Yard

Alexis enlisted in the Navy in 2007 and was an aviation electrician's mate 3rd Class in 2009. He served with the Fleet Logistics Support Squadron in Fort Worth from February 2008 to January 2011.

RELATED | Seattle Police report from 2004 incident

Alexis lived most recently in New York City, the Navy said, and had relatives in Georgia and Seattle, Wash., according to public reports. He last voted in Queens, N.Y., in 2000.

The Fort Worth Star-Telegram located a self-described "best friend" of Alexis' Monday who expressed surprise at the news and said Alexis had been working for a computer contractor.

"He lived with me three years," Nutpisit Suthamtewakul, owner of Happy Bowl Thai, told the newspaper. "I don't think he'd do this. He has a gun. but I don't think he's that stupid. He didn't seem aggressive to me."

A short LinkedIn profile of Alexis said he attended Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and worked as a network technician at SinglePoint Technologies.

Valerie Parlave, chief of the FBI's D.C. field division, appealed for the public's help to assist in providing information about the shooter's actions and movements prior to the attack. The FBI posted the dead shooter's photographs on its website.

Here's some more information about the suspect:

NAME: Aaron Alexis.

AGE: 34 (born May 9, 1979).

HOMETOWN: New York City.

LAST RESIDENCE: Fort Worth, Texas.

OCCUPATION: Worked for The Experts, a subcontractor on an HP Enterprise Services contract to refresh equipment used on the Navy Marine Corps Intranet network. Navy reservist from 2007-2011; left as a petty officer 3rd class, stationed in Fort Worth. After discharge, worked as a waiter and delivery driver at the Happy Bowl Thai restaurant in White Settlement, a suburb of Fort Worth, until May 2013.

EDUCATION: Was pursuing a bachelor's degree in aeronautics via online classes at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.

RELIGION: Converted to Buddhism and was devout, wanting to become an ordained monk, according to friends.

ARREST RECORD: In September 2010, Alexis was arrested on suspicion of discharging a firearm within city limits after a neighbor reported she was nearly shot by a bullet fired from his downstairs apartment. He told police his gun accidentally discharged while he was cleaning it, and no charges were filed. In May 2004, he was arrested in Seattle for shooting out the tires of another man's vehicle in what he later described to detectives as an anger-fueled "blackout."

QUOTE: "I wouldn't call him nice, but he seemed harmless, if really awkward," said Gene Demby of Philadelphia, who said he dated one of Alexis' younger sisters in the early 2000s. "He was insecure. He was like a barbershop conspiracy theorist, the kind of guy who believes he's smarter than everyone else. He also was kind of like perpetually aggrieved, but not megalomaniacal or delusional."

(USA Today)


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Navy Yard shooter acted alone

WASHINGTON --  A shooting rampage at a U.S. Navy command complex in Washington left at least 13 people dead Monday, including a Navy veteran identified as the gunman, authorities said.

Monday night Washington DC's mayor said the victims ranged in age from  46 to 73.  The police chief said all indications are the gunman acted alone.

THE SCENE | Shooting at the Washington Navy Yard Photos

Aaron Alexis, 34, a civilian contractor from Fort Worth, was identified by officials as a shooter killed in a gunbattle with police responding to the morning attack at the Washington Navy Yard. A military official said Alexis had been a Navy reservist on active duty before being discharged for misconduct.

The carnage and desperate efforts to stop the shooting gripped the nation's capital in a tense, day-long drama just blocks from the Capitol. Hours after reporting that Alexis was dead, city officials said they had not entirely ruled out the possibility another shooter was involved, but law enforcement officials later said that was not the case.

At least three people, including a city police officer, suffered non-fatal wounds in the gunfire inside building 197 at the Naval Sea Systems Command headquarters. Hospital officials said all three were expected to recover.

RELATED STORIES
- Alexis arrested in 2010 on weapons violation

- President Obama's statement
- Braves game postponed due to shooting

Hundreds of workers in the Navy complex were forced to hide in their offices or flee for safety while gunshots echoed from a gunman firing a high-powered weapon into the cafeteria and other parts of the building.

A mile or so away at the Capitol, the Senate temporarily locked down all its offices and buildings. The House of Representatives was not in session and did not suspend office functions.

President Obama said he is mourning "yet another mass shooting" and vowed to ensure that "whoever carried out this cowardly act is held responsible."

A federal law enforcement official said Monday that Alexis, who had been staying at a nearby Residence Inn since late August or early September, legally purchased at least some of the weapons used in the assault within the past few days in Virginia.

Alexis allegedly drove to the Navy Yard complex with the weapons early Monday and cleared security checkpoints before parking in a lot on the property, said the official, who was not authorized to comment publicly. After leaving his car, it is believed that Alexis was involved in two altercations in which he opened fire, killing one or possibly two people.

The official said Alexis then entered the building and went to the third and fourth floors, where much of the assault was carried out. He said Alexis did not appear to have an escape plan and it wasn't clear whether he was targeting specific people.

Mayor Vincent Gray said the shootings did not appear to be terrorism-related but said the possibility had not been ruled out.

The Washington Nationals baseball team, which plays home games at a stadium close to the shooting scene, canceled the evening game. 

At Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, departures were halted briefly.

Helicopters filled the skies around the Navy complex on the Anacostia River in the Southeast quadrant of the city, an area that has seen a development revival in recent years. Some of the copters airlifted the injured away in baskets suspended beneath the aircraft.

Alexis was an online student at the Fort Worth campus of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University pursuing a bachelor's of science in aeronautics, the school said.

With the city on edge, the Secret Service arrested a man for tossing firecrackers over the White House fence late Monday. The Secret Service locked down the White House when the incident happened, fearing the pops could have been gunshots.

Gary Humes, a programs manager with the Navy, was entering the building where the shootings took place around 8:20 a.m. when he was met by people fleeing and warning of a shooter inside. He and more than 100 others ran to a building across the street, while others ran to the Navy museum nearby.

"I decided to go in to work a little late this morning,'' he said. "I guess God was with me.""

Washington Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy Lanier said one shooter was killed in an exchange of gunfire with authorities and one police officer was wounded. Federal officials identified the dead shooter as Alexis.

Internal security at the Navy Yard building had already "identified and engaged the shooter" by the time the first D.C. police arrived, Lanier said.

She said police exchanged gunfire with the shooter "multiple times" before the final gun battle.

"It's one of the worst things we've seen in Washington, D.C.,'' Lanier said.

Lanier earlier said authorities had information indicating there could have been more shooters. One was later cleared, but police still were searching for a man wearing a military-style uniform and carrying a long gun, she said.

Lanier said the FBI was taking the lead in the investigation.

A federal law enforcement official told USA TODAY that Alexis was armed with an AR-15, which is a light-weight semi-automatic rifle, as well as a shotgun and a handgun. The federal official, who requested anonymity because of the fluid nature of the investigation, said there is no firm evidence that anyone else fired weapons in the attack.

The official said surveillance video of the shooting was being reviewed and scores of investigators were interviewing hundreds of witnesses.

Alexis may have gained entry into the Navy Yard by using someone else's identification card, said a federal law enforcement official who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to speak publicly.

Terrie Durham, an executive assistant at Naval Sea Systems Command, said a fire alarm sounded and she was trying to leave with a group of people when they encountered a shooter.

"We couldn't see his face, but we could see him with the rifle," Durham said. "He raised and aimed at us and fired. And he hit high on the wall."

Rick Mason, a program management analyst, said a gunman began shooting from a fourth-floor overlook in the hallway outside his office. He said the gunman was aiming down at people in the building's cafeteria on the first floor.

Patricia Ward, a logistics management specialist, said she was in the cafeteria. "I heard three shots - pow, pow, pow. Thirty seconds later I heard four more shots."

Then panic, as people tried to get out of the cafeteria. "A lot of people were just panicking. There were no screams or anything because we were in shock."

Dave Sarr, an environmental engineer, was walking down a nearby street when he saw people running from the Navy Yard. Sarr has seen an evacuation drill a few days earlier at the Navy Yard. "At first I thought it was another drill," Sarr said. "Then I saw an officer with his weapon drawn."

At MedStar Washington Hospital Center, chief medical officer Janis Orlowski said the hospital was treating three victims - a male D.C. police officer and two women.

She said the police officer had multiple gunshot wounds to his legs and was in surgery. One woman was shot in the shoulder, and the other in the head and hand. All are expected to survive, she said.

Bryan Lynn Chaney, who said he was employed at the Navy Yard through the Wounded Warrior Project, was on the second floor of building 197 when he heard the gunshots.

"I was coming in the main entrance and as I was going up to my office area, I heard what I thought was a locker falling to the ground or slamming a door," Chaney said.

"After that maybe 10 or 15 seconds I heard another couple of bursts,'' he added. "It was confusion. We just knew there was something going on that was unexpected, so we tried to escape out of the area.''

The Navy Yard shootings are the latest in a long line of multiple slayings involving powerful semi-automatic weapons to shock the nation, including the deaths of 20 children and six educators at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., last December.

Newtown resident Chris Aug called the rampage "another horrible example of our world gone wrong.''

"Instead of healing, the town's wound has been reopened,'' Aug said. "Hopes of optimism are replaced with grief."

Naval Sea Systems Command is the largest of the Navy's five system commands and accounts for a quarter of the Navy's entire budget. It builds, buys and maintains the Navy's ships and submarines and their combat systems.

NAVSEA headquarters' security requires guests to pass through turnstiles that are watched by security guards before entering. Visitors must also turn in their phones and other electronic recording devices upon entry.

Marine Barracks Washington also put its base on a partial lockdown, only allowing Marines to leave if they were on official business, said Capt. Jack Norton, a base spokesman. A small contingent from Marine Barracks Washington's Guard Company serves at the Navy Yard, Norton said.

(USA Today, WUSA, Navy Times & NBC News have contributed to this story.)


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Gwinnett triple murder suspect still on the loose

SNELLVILLE, Ga. -- Investigators in Gwinnett County are looking for the suspect who shot four people at a house in unincorporated Snellville overnight.

Police are looking for 33 year-old Robert Bell.  He's six feet tall and weighs 300 pounds.  Police have charged him with three counts of murder and one count of aggravated assault.

RELATED | Track crime in your neighborhood with our interactive crime map

Investigators say Robert Bell shot and killed 34 year-old Angelina Benton at her home on Anderson-Livsey Lane.

After getting a 911 call Sunday evening around 9:30, police found Benton and her boyfriend, 23 year-old Justin Cato, in the yard.  Both were taken to the hospital with serious injuries. Benton later died. Cato was shot in the leg but is expected to survive.

The SWAT team was called to the house because the suspect was believed to still be inside.  The suspect wasn't found but police found Benton's son, 12 year-old Joseph McDonald and Benton's godson 19 year-old Raynord Daniel dead in the house.

Police say Benton let Bell and his wife stay in her house two weeks ago, after the Bells fell on hard times.  Police say they met at church.

Investigators say Bell even went to Albany Sunday to pick Benton up and bring her back home from a trip.

They do not know the motive for the shooting.

Police say Bell left his SUV at the home, and found his keys nearby on the ground.  They believe he ran away.

They also found an assault rifle in the truck which they believe is the murder weapon.


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Hundreds still unaccounted for in deadly Colo. floods

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Senin, 16 September 2013 | 15.20

Aerial photo shows flood damage in Boulder, Colo. on Saturday. (Photo: U.S Army photo via EPA)

(USA TODAY) -- More than 500 people remained unaccounted for Sunday across Colorado after deadly, historic flooding left weary residents reeling amid the dark forecast of more rain to come.

"I don't know that she's even OK," Rob Clements told The Coloradoan about his mother, Libby Orr, 73, who he last spoke with Thursday. Clements, who lives in Dallas, saw a photo of his mother's Big Thompson Canyon home in ruins on a Denver TV station's website. "I presume she is. But her house, if not completely gone, fell into the river and is most of the way gone."

MORE | "Biblical Flooding" in Parts of Colorado
MORE | Colorado battles historic flooding; more rain to come

About 350 people are unaccounted for in Larimer County, according to the county's sheriff's office. In adjacent Boulder County, more than 170 people were unaccounted for but were not considered missing yet, though they had not contacted family members.

"The sad thing is there's nothing we can do," Larimer County sheriff spokesman John Schulz told the Coloradoan, referring to the numerous phone calls the department has received from people who haven't heard from loved ones. "It's just taking time. It's so frustrating to people because there's no information available."

Areas from Denver to the Wyoming border remained under the threat of additional rain Sunday, with flash flood watches and warnings posted. Airlifts were set to continue with helicopter crews expanding their searches east to include Longmont, Fort Collins and Weld County.

The evacuations come as another round of storms swept into the battered state Saturday.The flood zone has grown to cover portions of an area nearly the size of Connecticut.

"It is a sinking feeling when you realize that when some people call ... we are not going to be able to get to them," Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle said. "But we are making great progress."

Two fatalities were identified by the Boulder County coroner Saturday as Wesley Quinlan and Wiyanna Nelson, both 19. Authorities believe the couple died when they were swept away after driving into floodwaters and then leaving their vehicle.

A missing woman could become the fifth confirmed death in the state. Witnesses saw floodwaters from the Big Thompson River destroy her home in the Cedar Cove area, Schulz said.

"We're sure there are going to be additional homes that have been destroyed, but we won't know that for a while," Schulz said. "I expect that we're going to continue to receive reports of confirmed missing and confirmed fatalities throughout the next several days."


By Saturday night, 1,750 people and 300 pets had been evacuated from Boulder and Larimer County, according to National Guard Lt. James Goff.

Thousands of people have fled homes in an area that normally sees less than 2 inches of rain in all of September but has been deluged by more than 14 inches this week alone, the National Weather Service said.

"We don't expect quite the level of intensity we've seen the last few days, but the soil is saturated, so it won't take much to do damage," Scott Entrekin, a weather service meteorologist in Boulder, told USA TODAY.

Entrekin said the storms, which have brought flooding in some areas that "we've never seen before," could ease Sunday. "Hopefully after that we will start drying out," he said.


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Alabama church marks 50th anniversary of bombing

Rev. Julius Scruggs, second from left, leads people in prayer during a wreath laying ceremony at the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala.,on Sunday. (Photo: Hal Yeager, AP)

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) -- Hundreds of people black and white, many holding hands, filled an Alabama church that was bombed by the Ku Klux Klan 50 years ago Sunday to mark the anniversary of the blast that killed four little girls and became a landmark moment in the civil rights struggle.

The Rev. Arthur Price taught the same Sunday school lesson that members of 16th Street Baptist Church heard the morning of the bombing - "A Love That Forgives." Then, the rusty old church bell was tolled four times as the girls' names were read.

RELATED | Share the Journey 

Bombing survivor Sarah Collins Rudolph, who lost her right eye and sister Addie Mae Collins in the blast, stood by as members laid a wreath at the spot where the dynamite device was placed along an outside wall.

RELATED | 50 Years of Change: Education Special

Rudolph was 12 at the time, and her family left the church after the bombing. She said it was important to return in memory of her sister, who was 14, and the three other girls who died: Carole Robertson and Cynthia Wesley Morris, both 14, and Denise McNair, 11.

"God spared me to live and tell just what happened on that day," said Rudolph, who testified against the Klansmen convicted years later in the bombing.

Congregation members and visitors sang the old hymn "Love Lifted Me" and joined hands in prayer. The somber Sunday school lesson was followed by a raucous, packed worship service with gospel music and believers waving their hands.

During the sermon, the Rev. Julius Scruggs of Huntsville, president of the National Baptist Convention USA, said, "God said you may murder four little girls, but you won't murder the dream of justice and liberty for all."

Later Sunday, Attorney General Eric Holder and others were set to attend a commemoration. Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, a Birmingham native who went to school with McNair, was among the scheduled speakers.

The dynamite bomb went off outside the church Sept. 15, 1963. Of the Klansmen convicted years later, one remains imprisoned. Two others convicted died in prison.

Two young men, both black, were shot to death in Birmingham in the chaos that followed the bombing.

Birmingham was strictly segregated at the time of the bombing, which occurred as the city's schools were being racially integrated for the first time. The all-black 16th Street Baptist was a gathering spot for civil rights demonstrations for months before the blast.

The bombing became a powerful symbol of the depth of racial hatred in the South and helped build momentum for later laws, including the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

During the commemoration, an honor guard composed of black and whites officers and firefighters watched over ceremonies with mixed-race crowd, something unthinkable in Birmingham in 1963. That same year, white police officers and firefighters used dogs and water hoses on black demonstrators marching for equal rights.

Rev. Bernice King, a daughter of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., noted the changed city in a prayer.

"We thank you father for the tremendous progress we have made in 50 years, that we can sit in the safe confines of this sanctuary being protected by the city of Birmingham when 50 years ago the city turned its eye and its ears away from us," she said.


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Domestic dispute ends with 1 dead and another shot

SNELLVILLE, Ga. -- Gwinnett police responding to a domestic dispute call in the 4,000 block of Anderson Livsey Lane Sunday night, found two people shot, one fatally.

Gwinnett Police spokesman Jeffrey Richter said the call came in around 9:30 p.m. Both shooting victims were rushed to Gwinnett Medical Center where one was declared dead. The condition of the second person was not available. Police have not released the ages or genders of the victims.

Because police believed the shooter might still be in the house, the SWAT team was called in and the neighborhood remained sealed off into the early morning hours Monday.

11Alive News


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Durham native Lee leads Ga Tech past Duke 38-14

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Minggu, 15 September 2013 | 15.21

Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets mascot Buzz leads the band against the Elon Phoenix in the third quarter at Bobby Dodd Stadium. Georgia Tech defeated Elon 70-0. Credit: Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -- Vad Lee threw a career-high four touchdown passes and ran for another in his hometown, and Georgia Tech beat Duke 38-14 on Saturday.

The Durham native had scoring throws of 24 and 10 yards to DeAndre Smelter, 13 yards to Robert Godhigh and 19 yards to Zach Laskey.

He also ran 4 yards for a TD. The Yellow Jackets (2-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) fell behind 7-3, then took command by scoring the next four touchdowns.

Lee was 8 of 16 for 125 yards and added 76 yards rushing. Georgia Tech rolled up 344 yards rushing and 469 total yards against the No. 6 total defense in the Bowl Subdivision.

Jela Duncan rushed 1 yard for an early score for the Blue Devils (2-1, 0-1). Brandon Connette had a late 7-yard TD run and was 15 of 28 for 122 yards in his first start as Duke's full-time quarterback.


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Minnesota coach Jerry Kill suffers another game-day seizure

Minnesota Golden coach Jerry Kill was carted off the field in Saturday's game. (Photo: Jesse Johnson, USA TODAY Sports)

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Minnesota coach Jerry Kill suffered another game-day seizure, at halftime while the Gophers were playing Western Illinois on Saturday, and was taken to a local hospital as a precaution.

But the Gophers, used to this by now, carried on and pulled away for a 29-12 victory. Afterward, despite the unavoidably distracting absence of the boss, they said again they're not concerned about his health.

Kill was at home and resting comfortably two hours after the game, according to the university. Taken away on a stretcher, after he writhed back and forth on the ground for several minutes with the Gophers in the locker room with a 7-6 lead, Kill went to the hospital to ensure proper medication levels, according to spokesman Chris Werle.

"Everybody tries to spin it, that it's going to have an effect," defensive coordinator Tracy Claeys said. "I'm telling you: We know how to coach football, OK? The kids know how to play. They're trained very well."

Still, Claeys acknowledged the frustration of the attacks that occur without warning.

"If it happens again, we'll handle it the same way. I have confidence in that," Claeys said, adding: "You just don't have him there, but beside that we just all do our job."

Kill has worked with doctors to bring his seizures under better control with medication, rest, nutrition and exercise, but the stress of a game day is hard to avoid.

Kill suffered a seizure in the locker room at halftime last November during a loss to Michigan State, his third documented episode during a game at Minnesota since taking over here in 2011. He had seizures after a defeat by Northwestern last October and also in September 2011, on the sideline near the end of his first game at TCF Bank Stadium, a loss to New Mexico State. Other episodes have occurred elsewhere, too, including more than a dozen during a particularly difficult week in September 2011 that kept him away from the team. But he has never missed the start of a game, and there's no indication he won't be on the sideline next week at home against San Jose State.

"His recovery time now is so much better than it's ever been because of all this stuff he's done," Claeys said.

Kill also had seizures on game day in 2001 and 2005, when he was at Southern Illinois, so the university was aware of Kill's condition when he was hired and has long insisted it isn't a deterrent to his ability to succeed in the job. After the last publicized seizure, the one during the Michigan State game last season, athletic director Norwood Teague said the school has "100 percent confidence in Jerry."

Teague added then: "You don't want to downplay it, but you get to the point of realizing that it's just something he has to deal with at times."

Teague was unavailable for comment on Saturday, and Werle didn't take questions from reporters. But the players described their confidence in handling the situation.

"We're well prepared like no other. We know something like this can happen because we know coach and what he goes through. I think our coaches just knew we weren't going to miss a beat. I knew it, too," tight end Maxx Williams said.

Said defensive tackle Ra'Shede Hageman: "We just pretended that coach Kill was still there. Nothing really changed. We've been through this before."


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Hurricane Ingrid forms off Mexico

A man walks through a flooded street during heavy rains caused by Tropical Storm Ingrid in the Gulf port city of Veracruz, Mexico, Friday Sept. 13., 2013. (Photo: Felix Marquez, AP)

XALAPA, Mexico (AP) -- Ingrid became the second hurricane of the Atlantic storm season off Mexico on Saturday, while Tropical Storm Manuel threatened to cause flash floods and mudslides on the opposite side of the country.

On Saturday afternoon, Hurricane Ingrid was packing maximum sustained winds of 75 mph (120 kph). The storm was centered about 195 miles (315 km) east of Tuxpan Mexico.

MORE | Tropical Storm Ingrid forms in southern Gulf of Mexico
RELATED | Humberto becomes first hurricane of the year

The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said that if Ingrid stays on the forecast track, it's likely to reach the coast of Mexico on Monday.

The government of the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz began evacuating coastal residents Friday night, and local civil protection authorities said that more than 5,300 people have been moved to safer ground. Of those, about 3,500 people are being housed in official shelters with the rest staying with family and friends. There were no immediate reports of injuries blamed on the storm.

More than 1,000 homes in Veracruz state have been affected by the storm to varying degrees, and 20 highways and 12 bridges have suffered damages, according to the state's civil protection authority.

A bridge collapsed near the northern Veracruz city of Misantla Friday, cutting off the area from the state capital. Thirteen people died when a landslide buried their homes in heavy rains spawned by Tropical Depression Fernand on Monday.

State officials imposed an orange alert, the highest possible, in parts of southern Veracruz.

Off Mexico's Pacific coast, Tropical Storm Manuel was moving with maximum sustained winds of 50 mph (85 kph). It was 105 miles (170 kilometers) off the city of Lazaro Cardenas and 215 miles (345 kilometers) southeast of Manzanillo. A tropical storm warning is in effect from Acapulco to Manzanillo.

Manuel is expected to produce 10 to 15 inches of rain over parts of the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Guerrero, and life-threatening flash floods and mudslides are likely.

Elsewhere, the remnants of Tropical Storm Humberto were swirling in the Atlantic, far from land. It was expected to regenerate in a couple of days, according to the Hurricane Center.


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16,000+ turn out for Kaiser Permanente 5K Corporate Run

Written By Kom Limpulnam on Jumat, 13 September 2013 | 15.20

ATLANTA--After a brief early rain, the sun came out to welcome more than 16,000 runners and walkers to downtown Atlanta. 

RACE PHOTOS| Upload your photos!

It's the country's largest and most successful workplace fitness program. Thursday night, the Kaiser Permanente 5K Corporate Challenge will shut down several downtown streets in a nod to health and fitness.

RAIN or SHINE| What's the weather look like?

WHO'S GOING?| See a list of companies participating

TENT MAP| Find your company's tent

The events center around Turner Field. The race starts under the Olympic rings. Runners take Piedmont to Harris to Courtland. Memorial and Hank Aaron Drive will carry runners and walkers to the finish line. Expect traffic backups in the area during rush hour. Hank Aaron Drive will close at 4:00pm.

LEARN MORE| Kaiser Permanente Fitness Challenge

More than 16,000 participants are expected, representing 400 workplace-based teams. Are you running or walking? We want your photos and videos! Send them to photos@11alive.com. 11Alive's Julie Wolfe will be gathering photos and video to include in our extensive user-generated content for on-air and on-line. Tweet her @JulieWolfe and look for her "RunnerCam" 11Alive T-shirt on the course. Remember to use #KPRunWalk and #11Alive. 


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