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Falcon Chicks Nest in NYC

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Eleven peregrine falcon chicks are now fledging in nests high atop three city bridges. 

Officials from the city Department of Environmental Protection recently banded the birds as part of a state nesting program that gives the falcons, nearly wiped out in New York during the 60s, homes atop the Verrazano-Narrows, Throgs Neck and Marine Parkway-Gil Hodges Memorial bridges.   They also photographed the newest falcons.

On the Marine Parkway bridge the nest box is poised 215 feet in the air. The Throgs Neck box is 360 feet above ground and the Verrazano-Narrows box offers a view from 693 feet.   The urban falcons like to nest in bridges because their height offers a good vantage for hunting prey.

 “We frequently have to go to the top of the towers for maintenance work but we are very respectful of the falcons during nesting season and while the chicks are learning to fly,” said Verrazano-Narrows Maintenance Superintendent Daniel Fortunato. “The mama bird in particular is very protective so for the safety of our employees and the birds, we do our best to keep out of their way.”

 Photos: MTA

 

 

 

 

 

 



Photo Credit: MTA

55-Year-Old Soldier Graduates From Basic Combat Training

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Sgt. 1st Class John Taffe may be 55 years old, but he definitely doesn’t act his age.

That’s because Taffe may possibly be the oldest person to graduate from basic combat training – tackling sit-ups, push-ups and barbed-wire low crawls like any other young soldier in his class.

A resident of Alameda, California, Taffe graduated from Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, Thursday after a demanding 2 1/2-month training. He’s a former sailor, having served 14 years with the U.S. Navy before being released from active duty in 1991.

Taffe’s age almost stopped him from enlisting in the Army, but he made the cut-off, getting in 36 hours before his 55th birthday, when a waiver would have been required.

“My son told me, ‘I hope they crush you.’ My daughter was more concerned,” Taffe said of his family’s reaction to his decision to re-enlist. “My plan is to serve until I’m 62.”

“For John to come back at his age, it says a lot about his character,” said Shatara Seymour, chief of public affairs at Fort Leonard Wood.

Taffe is back in the Bay Area Friday, where he will join the Army Reserve and go back to his job as a logistics management specialist for the Department of Homeland Security.

Right after he finished a night crawl while live shots were fired over his head, NBC Bay Area caught up with Taffe to ask him what boot camp felt like at age 55.

When was the exact moment you realized that you wanted to return to the Military?
"After 9/11 I really felt compelled to rejoin the military, but the organization I worked for was not supportive of the idea. It wasn't until almost 14 years later that the opportunity presented itself again while I was exploring other positions within the government. At this time my only choice was the U.S. Army due to my age."

What inspired you to return?
"Serving as a military member is the most unique way to pay it forward for those you love, those you honor, and those who have been lost and couldn't return home. It is the most honorable way for an individual to serve his or her country."

How did your family react?
"A degree of shock at first, but when they saw my commitment and drive to making it a reality, they knew it was the right decision."

How did you prepare yourself?
"I consulted with my doctor, completely changed my diet and eating habits, ramped up my exercise routine, running further and faster almost every day, joined a Cross Fit gym and rode to work every day on my bicycle."

How did others in boot camp react when they saw you training? How do they react now?
"Older people would come up to me and ask my age, and tell me they couldn't/wouldn't dream of doing what I was doing. The younger ones wanted to know if I was human or if I had discovered the fountain of youth. They all say I am an inspiration to them now and that if you get your mind and body right you can achieve anything"

You mentioned culture change and how younger soldiers have a different attitude now. Can you elaborate?
"The military they perceive is like a video game, when in fact it is very far from it. It requires real effort, both physical and mental strength to win in battle. You can't win by how well you can manipulate a game controller."

What is boot camp like?
"Up at 04:00, shave, conduct physical training for about 1.5 hours until breakfast, then it's off to the ranges to conduct live fire training with our weapon. MRE for lunch, continue training until 17-18:00, dinner, back to training after dinner until final formation at 20:30. Then shower, laundry, letter writing and bed by 21:00. Up again for a one hour watch detail between 21:00 - 04:00."

What was the hardest part of your training?
"The physical stuff wasn’t so hard, it was almost too easy. The mental part was hard – just trying to cope with the different things."

Did you feel like quitting at any point?
"At first I did question my thought process that brought me here. I will never accept defeat, I will never quit, just like the lines of the Soldier’s Creed I learned here in the first couple of weeks."

What do you plan to do next?
"Go home to my family and job."

Photographs courtesy of Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.



Photo Credit: Photo: Melissa Buckley, Fort Leonard Wood Guidon

Daughter, One Other Arrested in Death of DC Nurse

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The Spotsylvania County Sheriff’s Office announced the arrest of two suspects in the homicide death of a D.C. nurse, including the arrest of the victim’s daughter.

Sheriff Roger L. Harris said Christina Brown, 25, and Alaina Mercer, 25, both of King George County, were arrested Friday evening and charged with felony conspiracy to commit murder in the death of Nancy Mercer. Alaina Mercer is the daughter of the victim. 

The suspects are being held in the Rappahannock Regional Jail without bond.

Nancy Mercer was found dead after she didn’t show up for work at MedStar Washington Hospital Center on May 18. Police have not released a motive in the death.

 

Aquanauts to Embark on 31-Day Underwater Mission

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It's a challenge very few have undertaken: Discovering the mysteries that lie under water. Less than 5 percent of our oceans have been explored.

On Sunday, a team of ocean explorers will dive in, just off Key Largo as part of Mission 31. At the helm, a man for whom adventure runs in the family.

"It's hard to turn your back on the ocean, once you have been immersed in it, because it's such a fantastic world," said Fabien Cousteau, the first grandson of famed underwater explorer Jacques Cousteau.

Like his grandfather, Fabien Cousteau is an ocean explorer and documentary filmmaker. He will pay homage to a mission his grandfather led nearly 50 years ago in the Red Sea. Ocean explorers then spent 30 days living in an underwater village. Now a new generation of aquanauts will do so for 31 days.

"It's freedom, to me its my home," he said.

That home will be the Aquarius, an 81 ton living reef. It is 63 feet below water. The world's only underwater research lab. The space is the size of a school bus, so the crew will be in tight quarters. It includes six bunk beds and a mini-kitchen. It even comes equipped with air-conditioning, but not a whole lot more.

"It won't really set in until you sit down that first night, that galley window and you look outside and see all these fish swimming around. I'm living underwater right now. This is really cool experience," said Florida International University PHD candidate Andrew Shantz.

He has taken part in a shorter mission. That one was 7 days. But opportunity to do what he'll do in June is rare. His team will spend most of its time conducting research on the impact of climate change and the impact pollutants like plastic have on marine life. He'll have very little downtime, and little space to indulge in it.

"I have my headphones to bring down, three books," he said. "Everything else will be work space."

While so much has changed in the time the senior Cousteau led his underwater mission, many things are similar like the way food, electronic equipment and towels are delivered to Aquarius. Divers use pressurized painting pots. One thing Fabien's father did not have is WiFi.

"Being able to do Twitter chats, and Facebook posts and Instagram, to be able to share this experience is something my grandfather was never able to do," Cousteau said.

Their adventures will be streaming live on Mission-31.com. Through Skype in the Classroom sessions, students from across the globe will be able to vicariously join the explorers.

It's a mission that honors a legacy of connecting human beings to the vast unknown under water.

"My grandfather used to say, 'If one person for whatever reason has a chance to lead an extraordinary life, he or she has no right to keep it to themselves,'" Cousteau said.



Photo Credit: NBC 6 South Florida

Supporters Rally for Weston Marine Jailed in Mexico

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Family, friends and supporters stood united at Veteran's Park in Pinecrest Saturday to mark the two-month anniversary of Andrew Tahmooressi's arrest.

More than 50 people gathered with signs that read "A Hero Not a Criminal" and "Let Andrew Go" as they stood by the side of U.S. 1 chanting "Bring Andrew home."

The 25-year-old Marine reservist is being held in a Mexican jail on weapons charges after he drove his black Ford pickup over the border at San Ysidro, California, into Tijuana. Family members said Tahmooressi, who was in possession of three U.S.-registered firearms, got lost near the border after dark and took a wrong turn into Mexico.

Tahmooressi, who is from Weston and has served two tours of duty in Afghanistan, was in the San Diego area to receive treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

His mother said she is still concerned about her son's safety and that his family and friends will not back down in trying to bring him back.

"I'm like an expectant mother," said Jill Tahmooressi. "My bag is packed, his bag is packed, I'm ready to head there and bring him on home."

A hotel receipt made public by Tijuana newspaper Zeta indicates Andrew Tahmooressi had crossed the border once before his arrest. The receipt indicates he stayed in a Tijuana hotel on the night of his arrest. Jill Tahmooressi confirmed to NBC 6 the receipt is factual and claims her son's first attorney told him to say he had never been in Mexico at the time of his arrest. Since then, Tahmooressi has hired a new lawyer.

"Yes, that document is accurate," Jill Tahmooressi said. "Andrew had secured a hotel room that day on March 31 when he had walked into Mexico. He purposefully registered at a Mexican hotel thinking he could save $50."

Once he checked in, Jill Tahmooressi said her son thought the room was dirty and dark, so he left and walked across the border to his truck parked on the U.S. side.

"He crossed on foot and then was driving towards San Diego to stay again in the old town San Diego in a hotel when he accidentally made that wrong turn," Jill Tahmooressi said.

Andrew Tahmooressi went before a judge Wednesday for the first time since his arrest near Tijuana on April 1. The hearing was closed but a second hearing was reportedly scheduled for June.

Olivia Hammar, also the mother of an ex-Marine, said Andrew Tahmooressi's case is all too familiar for her. In 2012, her son Jon Hammar was arrested at the Mexican border for carrying an antique shotgun.

"Recently it was disclosed that Andrew was stripped and beaten and the fact that our government hasn't done anything about that is heinous," Olivia Hammar said.

Tahmooressi has gained the support of Florida elected officials, including Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Sen. Marco Rubio. His family has also started a White House petition asking for his release.

"With a 100,000 signatures that we've already met, we'll be looking for a White House response now," Jill Tahmooressi said.



Photo Credit: NBC 6 South Florida

Marriage Equality for Illinois

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Same-sex couples in Illinois will soon be able to legally wed.

Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation last year allowing same-sex marriage in Illinois, and the law takes effect June 1.

The day marks the first day all of 102 counties in Illinois can issues marriage licenses to same-sex couples and couples with civil unions can convert to marriage.

Several Illinois counties have already been issuing marriage licenses after a federal court ruling in February, however, many consider Sunday a historical day for the state.

“Today is a special day and I thank everyone who worked so hard to pass marriage equality and put Illinois on right side of history,” Quinn said in a statement. “All couples across Illinois can now receive the rights and protections under the sacred vow of marriage. The Land of Lincoln has always been a place to embrace all people and today we stand as an example for the rest of the nation.”

Cook County Clerk David Orr said he has already issued nearly 1,600 marriage licenses to same-sex couples in the last three months, though officials said the office will not be open Sunday and will resume issuing marriage licenses Monday.

Wedding planners said the industry is seeing a major boost as excitement over marriage equality booms.

“We’ve seen a huge uptick already,” said Tracy Baim, owner of Keith House in Chicago’s South Loop. “Really it’s a pent up demand. We have people together 30-40 years that never had a chance to get married.”

Baim says she’s seen about a 20-percent increase in her bookings and economists predict big money in Illinois thanks to a same-sex wedding boom.

“Between 50 and 100 million dollars in economy for all things associated with weddings whether that’s hotels or the booking, the venue, the flower, the bakeries,” Baim said.

Wedding planners point out that many of the same-sex couples set to hear wedding bells are older, established couples with money to spend on the occasion.

At luxury hotel JW Marriott in the Loop, a new sales package includes “Jeff and Jeff”—the first gay couple to get married at the venue last year.

The package includes an elegant array of food and the venue has even planned for cake toppers with two men or two women.

“We wanted to make sure when couples came they had something that spoke to them,” said Miranda Thomas with the JW Marriott Hotel. “They’re not trying to fit in to a segment they don’t belong.”

Illinois' health insurance marketplace is allowing gay and lesbian couples to enroll for private coverage.

Get Covered Illinois announced it will open up special enrollment periods for gay couples.

Married same-sex couples and their children can enroll as a family and may qualify for financial help.

The Affordable Care Act requires insurance companies to offer the same coverage to people in same-sex marriages as they do to opposite-sex spouses.

Under the law, marriage is a qualifying life event that makes people eligible for a special enrollment period. The period lasts two months in the state's marketplace and one month under an employer's marketplace plan.

(The Associated Press contributed to this report)

Students Gets Perfect SAT Score

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Most juniors fret about it. It is a test with so much riding on it. From college entrance applications, to prestige and honor in the home and community, the Scholastic Aptitude Tests, better known by three little letters, SAT, can cause many to worry. One Methacton High School junior can now rest easy. She’s done the nearly impossible task. Lucy Jai, a Methacton 11th-grader, scored a perfect score on her SATs.

The Methacton School board of directors recognized Jai for her accomplishments during a presentation on May 27 during its public board meeting.

“Lucy Jai has brought considerable recognition to her school community by obtaining a perfect score of 2400 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT), a rare and significant accomplishment, therefore be it resolved that the Methacton School District board of directors go on record this 27th day of May, 2014, honoring the spirit of the exemplary performance,” read board president S. Christian Nascimento. Nascimento was joined by Methacton School District Superintendent Dr. David A. Zerbe in congratulating the teen.

A citation was given to Jai, who attended the meeting with her mother and father, Tuesday night. A proclamation and presentation were given in her honor.


This story was published through a news content partnership between The Alternative Press of Lower Providence and NBC10.com



Photo Credit: Melissa S. Treacy

Teen Pilot Begins World Flight

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A 19-year-old pilot geared up Saturday morning for a highly ambitious feat: a record-breaking, 29,000-mile solo flight around the world that took off from a small airport in east San Diego.

“I’m just really excited. It’s been a long time planning, and now here we are,” Matt Guthmiller told NBC 7 as he prepared to load his small aircraft and take off from Gillespie Field in El Cajon, Calif.

The teen pilot, who just finished his freshman year at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), is embarking alone on the long journey, which will include 25 stops in 14 different countries across five continents. He’s flying a 1981 Beechcraft A36 Bonanza N367HP.

In the process, Guthmiller hopes to break the Guinness World Record for the youngest person to circumnavigate the world by aircraft solo.

According to Guinness World Records, just one year ago that title belonged to Jack Wiegand, a pilot who flew a Mooney M20R Ovation from May 2, 2013, to June 29, 2013, at the age of 21. Wiegand completed his flight in Fresno, Calif., and flew approximately 24,000 miles during his trip around the world.

In September 2013 Australia Ryan Campbell broke Wiegand’s record, completing his solo flight around the world at the age of 19 years, seven months and 25 days old.

Guthmiller will turn that exact age on July 24, so time is of the essence.

Though the bar has been set high, Guthmiller is confident he’ll be able to complete his solo flight in just over one month while clocking about 160 hours of flying time. He said the other young pilots before him inspired him to take on this challenge.

“I thought, ‘Hey, I can do that,’” he said.

After taking off from El Cajon, his first destination is his hometown of Aberdeen, S.D., followed by far-off places like Cairo, Abu Dhabi, Manila, London and Greece. He plans to end his trip back in his South Dakota hometown on July 7.

Before take-off, Guthmiller said he wasn’t nervous, but admitted that might change.

“I think once I head out over the ocean for the first time that could change a little bit but right now I feel fine,” he said. “The biggest thing I’d like to accomplish is to go out and inspire other people to do similarly ambitious things.

Through his journey, Guthmiller hopes to raise money for Code.org, a non-profit that aims to introduce computer science in more schools. He’ll offer advertising space on his plane, apparel and website in order to raise those funds.

His entire journey will be tracked on this website, updated frequently with his whereabouts and progress.

Guthmiller said his love of flying dates back to when he was a young boy playing flight simulator games for hours on end.
 


Woman Recovering After Home Robbery

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A woman was recovering from a gunshot wound Saturday as police continued their search for three masked men who tied her and her husband up during a brutal nighttime robbery at the couple’s Beverly Hills home.

Police said the couple was confronted by the three men at their house in the 400 block of Doheny Road after answering a knock at their front door sometime before 8:30 p.m. Friday.

"The victims are elderly male and female couple who were tied up inside the location," said Lt. Lincoln Hoshino of the Beverly Hills Police Department.

The woman was shot in the leg before the robbers took off with some of the couple’s belongings, Hoshino said. Her injuries were non-life threatening.

One neighbor said officers searched her backyard with their guns drawn.

"They had guns, rifles," said the neighbor. "When they left they just told me, 'Lock your door.'"

After the men left, the husband was able to untie himself and call police, Hoshino said. They were both taken to the hospital.

On Saturday, the woman was hospitalized and the husband, who suffered severe bruising, was by her side.

Police have stepped up patrols in the area.

Jane Yamamoto contributed to this report.

Ex-Cop Investigates Father's Past

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First a cadaver dog, now chemical analysis support the suspicions of a retired police detective that human remains were buried in the foothills above Hollywood decades ago, NBC4 has learned.

Analysis of soil taken from a location indicated by the cadaver dog found chemical markers for human decomposition, said the scientist who performed the labwork at the request of the retired detective.

It's the theory of former detective that as many as 10 long-unsolved slayings of young women in Los Angeles in the 1940's were committed by a single serial killer.   

What adds poignance to Hodel's suspicion is his personal connection to the suspect he's identified: the late medical doctor George Hodel -- the retired detective's father.
 
"I see him as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," said Hodel, alluding to the fictional split personality depicted in one of Hollywood's first horror films.  "Unfortunately, the monster, Mr. Hyde, was stronger and
over-ruled the good."
 
Hodel's suspicions date back more than a decade.  After his father's death, going through possessions, Hodel came across evidence that implicated his father in the infamous 1947 dismemberment murder of a young woman named Elizabeth Short, remembered to this day as the Black Dahlia.
 
Writing books and continuing his research, Hodel came to suspect his father had killed repeatedly before fleeing to Asia in the late 1940s.
 
During that decade, the Hodels lived in what is now regarded as a Hollywood landmark, the Sowden House designed by the famed architect Lloyd Wright in the distinctive Mayan block style that was developed by his even more famous father Frank Lloyd Wright.
 
Records long stored in the District Attorney's office confirm that the doctor had come under suspicion in the Dahlia case, and that police had planted a listening bug in the house.  Transcripts reveal that detectives heard him discussing the Dahlia at one point.  At another time, they heard from the basement what sounded like a woman being attacked.
 
Hodel believes his father committed murders in or near the house, and in some cases buried the remains nearby in unmarked graves.
 
In 2012, Hodel was able to return to the Sowden house when he was invited to participate in a TV program being recorded there.  Hodel got permission to bring along another retired cop, former Mammoth Lakes Police Sgt. Paul Dostie, who has worked extensively with Buster, his search dog.
 
Buster indicated a scent of human decomposition at several locations, including in the alley behind the house.  But where the scent is picked up does not necessarily mean that is where the
chemical remains are located; carried over time by water or gravity, the marker molecules can migrate considerable distances, according to forensic anthropologist Arpad Vass, PhD, a pioneer in chemical analysis of human decomposition.
 
A soil sample was taken from the alley, and late last year Vass used gas chromatography and mass spectrometry to identify the chemicals in it.
 
"The soil came up positive for human remains because there are a number of human specific markers," said Vass from his laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
 
What is more difficult is narrowing down how long ago death occurred.  Vass's estimate:  20-100 years ago. 
 
The chemical analysis cannot help determined cause of death, or even whether or not it was homicide, Vass noted.  But he said his findings are "consistent" with Steve Hodel's theory of homicide victims buried in shallow graves 70-80 years ago.
 
"We're talking about clearing potentially 10 cases," Hodel said.
 
But who?
 
Definitely not Elizabeth Short, Hodel is quick to say, pointing out that all of her remains were accounted for.
 
But the possibilities include actress Jean Spangler, then 26, her career on the rise in 1949 when she vanished.  Nothing more than her purse was found days later in Griffith Park, not far from the Hodel home.  A note inside hinted she was going to have an abortion, then illegal.  Dr. Hodel was one of the few physicians who then performed abortions in Los Angeles, Steve Hodel found in his research.  He also discovered Spangler and his father had a mutual friend.
 
Hodel hopes to search further for the human remains, but has been unable to get permission to go onto the privately owned hillside.
 
After repeated attempts by Hodel the past decade to interest LAPD in following up on his civilian 
investigation, LAPD passed again.
 
"Too old, too cold." was the feedback Hodel said he got.
 
But if it appears the ageless sleuth is running out of leads to pursue--don't count on it.
 
His research has led to three books, Black Dahlia Avenger, Black Dahlia Avenger II, and Most Evil, in which Steve Hodel lays out his case that when his father traveled to northern California in the 1960s he committed the infamous Zodiac murders.
 
Steve Hodel still hopes to find the source of the scent of human decomposition near his childhood Hollywood home.
 
"I'm going to keep digging," Hodel vowed--figuratively, if not literally.

Marlins Promote Realmuto, Place Saltalamacchia on DL

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The Miami Marlins recalled catcher J.T. Realmuto on Sunday, bringing one of their top prospects into the major league level.

The young catcher is replacing Jarrod Saltalamacchia on the roster who was placed on the 7-day concussion disabled list in a corresponding move.

Realmuto was drafted in 2010 by the Marlins in the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft, which takes place annually in June. The backstop was a third round pick out of high school in Midwest City, Oklahoma.

The 23-year old had fallen off the charts a bit the past two seasons but came alive in 2014 to earn this promotion. In 2012, Realmuto slashed .256/.319/.345 while in 2013, the catcher's slash line was .239/.310/.353. It's very likely that the lack of production from Realmuto helped the Marlins make the decision to sign Jarrod Saltalamacchia to a multi-year contract.  

This season, Realmuto has slashed .301/.364/.503 and stayed consistent with similar numbers in April and May. He was listed as the 10th best prospect in the Marlins system by Baseball America in the past off-season.

Realmuto is known for his strong throwing arm, which is due in part to being a converted shortstop. Throwing out base runners in 2014 has been one of the problems that has plagued Miami and Realmuto could help with that.

The Marlins would likely only promote Realmuto if the plan is to give him regular playing time. If it was for a depth role, they would be more inclined to not have one of their top prospects stay idle on the bench.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Heat To Take on San Antonio Spurs in NBA Finals Rematch

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The Miami Heat now know their opponent for the NBA Finals after the San Antonio Spurs eliminated the Oklahoma City Thunder on Saturday.

This will be a rematch of last year's championship series when the Heat came away as back-to-back champions. The biggest moment of the series came in game six when Ray Allen hit a three-pointer to tie the game when all hope had seemed lost for the Heat. Ropes were famously brought out even in preperation for the Spurs' trophy presentation. The Heat would go on to win that game and the next.

The 2012-13 Finals went seven games with the final two coming in Miami. This time around, things will be different location wise.

The NBA has switched to a 2-2-1-1-1 formart for the Finals which coincides with the setup of the earlier rounds. The Spurs also have home-court advantage this year unlike last year when the Heat did. This means that a potential game six would be in Miami while a game seven would take place back in San Antonio.

This season, the two teams took eachother on twice with each team hosting a game. On January 26th, the Heat defeated the Spurs 113-101 in Miami. On March 6th, the Spurs got their revenge for the earlier game with a 111-87 win of their own.

The NBA Finals will begin on June 5th with games one and two taking place in San Antonio before the series switches to Miami for games three and four. The Heat are seeking a third consecutive NBA title.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Pitchers Let Marlins Down in Second Straight Loss

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The magic of playing at home appears to be wearing off for the Miami Marlins as they lost to the Atlanta Braves for a second consecutive day on Saturday.

The final score of the game was 9-5 and it was the 10th loss of the season for the Marlins at Marlins Park. Miami still leads Major League Baseball in home wins with 20, but the San Francisco Giants with 19 are creeping close to taking the top spot.

Jacob Turner was tagged with his third loss of the year by allowing five runs on seven hits in only five innings on the mound. Turner looked in control for the two innings before everything unraveled for him beginning in the third inning. The right-hander struck out four and walked four forcing him to throw 90 pitches in the short outing.

It was a busy day for the bullpen with five relievers seeing action over the last four innings of the game. A.J. Ramos has the toughest day amongst those pitchers when he allowed three runs while only retiring one batter. Ramos walked three while on the mound and extended the Atlanta lead right after the Miami offense had reduced it to only one run.

Casey McGehee picked up his 12th double of the year and also had two runs batted in to give him 34 on the season. Christian Yelich tripled for the fifth time this season as part of a three-hit day. The left-fielder also scored a pair of runs and walked once.

Defense continued to be a problem for Miami with another three errors being charged to the team. Jarrod Saltalamacchia (8), Adeiny Hechavarria (6), and Garrett Jones (7) picked up an error each.

The Marlins will look to avoid the sweep on Sunday with Nathan Eovaldi on the mound.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

"Bottle Bomb” Arrest

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Police have arrested a suspect for allegedly detonating a "bottle bomb" inside a Prince George’s County theater.

Manuel Joyner, 20, was arrested Sunday by officers from the Prince George’s County Office of the Fire Marshal with help from county police.  Investigators said Joyner made and exploded a "bottle bomb" inside the Magic Johnson Movie Theatre in Largo, Md., on May 24.

He is officially charged with manufacture/possession/detonation of a destructive device – a felony charge. If convicted, he could face up to 25 years in jail.

After the arrest, ATF, FBI, Anne Arundel County Fire Marshal, Fairfax County Fire Marshal, City of Alexandria Fire Marshal and the Montgomery County Fire Marshal, executed a search warrant at a home in the 600 block of Stillwater Place in Bowie.

More charges against Joyner are expected, according to a release from authorities.

Investigators said those bottles were filled with chemicals and metal, and they consider the incidents possible acts of terrorism.

Two "bottle bombs" exploded recently at the AMC movie theater in Tysons Corner, Va. There have been no injuries in any of the cases.

The Associated Press reports online court records show Joyner pleaded guilty in late 2012 to malicious destruction of property and was given probation before judgment. A person who answered the phone at Joyner's home on Sunday said she was unaware of the arrest and did not say whether he had an attorney.

Possible Shark Bite at Intracoastal in Fort Lauderdale

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A 22-year-old woman was bit by what officials think may have been a shark Sunday in Fort Lauderdale.

The woman, who has not yet been identified, was inner tubing with a friend at the Intracoastal Waterway near Bayshore Drive around 2 p.m., according to Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue.

The woman was in the water when she felt something on her leg and then felt a fin hit her face, officials said.

The woman's friend told her to get back on the boat, and when she did, that's when she saw what appeared to be a large bite mark on her leg, according to officials.

They made it back to 511 Bayshore Drive where they began yelling for help and someone nearby called 911.

The woman was taken to Broward General Hospital for treatment.

GRAPHIC PHOTO WARNING: Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue released the following photo of the injury on their Twitter feed:


Cyclist Alleges Fort Lauderdale Police Used Excessive Force

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A cyclist riding at Fort Lauderdale's Critical Mass on Friday claims police used excessive force when they arrested him for intentionally blocking police cruisers on the road.

Dan Littell, an avid cyclist, said the incident began on the Las Olas bridge during Critical Mass, a monthly event where large groups of people ride their bikes through the city.

He said a Fort Lauderdale Police cruiser was speeding next to the cyclists on the bridge, a dangerous spot for the bike riders.

"I yelled, 'Please slow down, we're on bikes here,'" Littell said.

He said the officer ignored him, so he pulled into the left lane from the right lane where other cyclists were pedaling and pulled in from of the police car.

"To block them to slow them down," Littell said. "Because they weren't slowing down... They were driving recklessly."

Police, meanwhile, said Dan was confrontational and started giving them the middle finger as he cut them off.

Video uploaded to YouTube by another cyclist shows the moment Littell was arrested. It appears the police officer tackles Littell and pins him down before taking him into custody on charges of resisting arrest and impeding traffic, according to the Broward-Palm Beach New Times.

"I finally did stop, and they were stopped too," Littell said. "He could have come over and talk to me. I wasn't trying to run away or do anything crazy."

The Fort Lauderdale Police Department said it is conducting an administrative investigation. Police also said they take it upon themselves to help riders maneuver through the city during Critical Mass but that some riders are disrespectful and hard to maneuver.



Photo Credit: NBC 6 South Florida

Twitter Hidden Cash Hits Chicago

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It appears the Hidden Cash Twitter craze has made its way to Chicago.

Using the Twitter handle @HiddenCashChi, someone has been leaving envelopes of money around the city.

The hidden money movement, which sprouted as an experiment in San Francisco and generated a mini-Gold Rush that has since spread to cities across the nation, began in the Windy City Memorial Day and the first clue was posted Tuesday.

Juan Campos was the first to find the hidden stash of $40.

Campos was donating clothes at a donation box on Western and Grand Avenues on the city’s Northwest Side.

“I saw a note attached to the bin and I thought it was like people advertising for a yard sale or apartments for rent,” Campos said. “At first I didn’t know what it was, then I actually opened it and that’s when I realized.”

Campos said he was reading about the San Francisco events earlier in the day, but didn’t know it had to spread to the city.

“It was a bit of a surprise,” he said. “I wasn’t actively searching for it but I thought it was pretty neat that I happened upon it while I was donating clothes.”

Campos tweeted a photo to the Twitter handle, as requested on the envelope he found, and said the manager of the page asked him to “pay it forward.”

“We went back and forth and they suggested a random act of kindness,” he said.

The same day he found the money Campos said he decided to buy someone’s coffee. The next day he bought someone’s breakfast at Starbucks.

According to the Twitter page, at least four other envelopes were hidden around the city Tuesday, and one other person had found an envelope.

And apparently more envelopes are on their way.



Photo Credit: @HiddenCashChi/Twitter

Church Keeps Faith After Fire

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Just 48 hours after a fire ripped through an Overtown church, the smell of burn is still in the air.

The fire started in the back of a duplex at 219 NW 14th Terrace in Miami and quickly spread to the entire building and then a neighboring church.

Despite the church being locked up, with yellow tape still in place, parishioners from the Christ church of the Living God are determined to keep the faith.

Churchgoers moved chairs to an empty lot nearby on Sunday. With bibles in hand and emotions running high, they stood tall, sang hymns and prayed in the face of adversity.

"The building is down, but I am still standing," said a parishioner who did not want to be named. "The building is gone, but I am here, for I am the church."

The church's pastor, Bishop James, preached Sunday from the lot as his pulpit stood in debris.

"It's very painful and mournful for us and for the people," he said. "We miss the church so bad. The people in the neighborhood miss the church and this is just something."

A total of 40 Miami firefighters were on the scene at one point working on the fire. Fire crews had to cut power to the entire block because their rescue equipment was getting too close to the power lines in the area. The fire shutdown NW 14th Street as firefighters battled the blaze.

The flames could be seen across downtown including as far away as the AmericanAirlines Arena where the Miami Heat was playing Game 6 of the Eastern Conference Finals against the Indiana Pacers.

The fierce flames ripped through the roof of the church and shattered the stained glass as the structure was reduced to ash.

But the pastor says he and his congregation are ready to rebuild and move forward.

"Trust God and The Lord will make a way, The Lord will fix it, He will work it out," James said.



Photo Credit: NBC 6 South Florida

Family Displaced After Boy, 7, Starts Apartment Fire

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A family has been displaced after a young boy set fire to his northwest Miami-Dade apartment.

Miami-Dade Fire Rescue officials say firefighters responded to the apartment at 1351 Northwest 103rd Street around 8:30 p.m. Thursday.

Firefighters were able to extinguish the blaze but not before it destroyed the first floor apartment, officials said.

Officials and family members said the fire was started by a 7-year-old boy, who lit his bunk bed up. The family was able to escape uninjured.

"Everybody's okay, I'm just glad that we're alive," mother Christy Davis said.

"I had a fire and I light the bed up and then... all the stuff get on fire," young Amoz Davis said.

"I woke up to the heat," said Amoz's father Brandon Knight. "He did not wake me up. I was on the couch. He didn't wake me up. When I woke up, he was standing by the room and he was stuck. I grabbed him."

One neighbor said he tried to use a fire extinguisher to no avail.

"But when I get right to the door, it was too hot to get in. The fire was too hot," Arthur Lewis said.

"Don't leave lighters around your kids 'cause it's very dangerous," Christy Davis said.

It's a message yojng Amoz knows all too well know.

"Do not play with fire 'cause it's too dangerous," Amoz said.

Amoz will go through a fire safety program. The Red Cross is helping the family with housing in the wake of the fire. 



Photo Credit: NBC6.com

Volunteers Helping to Clean Up Miami Marine Stadium

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Hundreds of volunteers are donating their time Friday to help remove trash and debris from Miami Marine Stadium.

More than 325 volunteers are expected at the event, organized by Friends of Miami Marine Stadium, the Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau, the Virginia Key Beach Park Trust, the City of Miami, and Miami-Dade County.

"It got banged up during Hurricane Andrew, but you know what, she's a strong lady," said Bill Talbert, president of the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau.

In addition to removing trash, volunteers will create a photographic survey of the graffiti and street art inside the stadium, and will complete a native planting project in Virginia Key.

The 6,500-seat stadium, located at Virginia Key on the Rickenbacker Causeway, was built in the 1960s for powerboat racing. But it was closed in 1992 after damages from Hurricane Andrew.

"This officially marks the restoration of the Miami Marine Stadium, absolutely," said Jorge Hernandez, co-founder of Friends of the Marine Stadium.

Last summer, the Miami City Commission gave control of renovations to Friends of Miami Marine Stadium. The renovation includes building a marine exhibition center, on part of the parking lot, to support its operations.

Volunteers said they are excited to return the stadium to its former glory.

"There's nothing like this in the world," said volunteer Carolyn Cauceglia. "This is an incredible jewel on Biscayne Bay. It's hidden, no one knows about it. They need to know about it. They need to know how great it was and how great it can be."

The cleanup efforts conclude National Tourism Month in Miami. Talbert said he hopes the stadium will be yet another reason for tourists to flock to the Magic City.

"This will be another venue for our community that we can sell for meeting and conventions and for visitors," he said.

Stadium supporters said they plan to start working on the privately funded $30 million project by the end of the year.



Photo Credit: Friends of Miami Marine Stadium
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