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Marlins Drop Three of Four to Pirates

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The Miami Marlins added another game to the loss column when they fell to the Pittsburgh Pirates by a final score of 2-1 on Thursday.

The Pirates ended up taking three of the four games in the series to drop Miami's record to 51-77 on the season. The Marlins have lost six of their last seven games and remain in danger of falling into last place.

For the second straight game, the Marlins struggled to get runners on base. Miami had six combined hits and none of them went for extra bases. Only two runners reached scoring position, and Miami left both of them on base.

Marcell Ozuna and Martin Prado were responsible for two-thirds of Miami's hits with a pair of knocks each. Ozuna has lifted his average to .250 and has been productive since returning from AAA New Orleans.

Christian Yelich sat this one out with a bruised knee and is considered day-to-day. With Yelich unavailable, Derek Dietrich was given the start in left field. Dietrich made the most of the opportunity by knocking in Miami's only run in the game.

Justin Nicolino pitched well but took the loss to fall to 2-2. Nicolino allowed two runs on six hits in his six innings of work. The rookie now has a 3.65 E.R.A this year, as he continues to audition for a job next season.

The Marlins will hit the road on Friday when they open a series in Washington against the Nationals. Adam Conley is scheduled to pitch for Miami in the series opener.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

2 Dead in Hazmat Situation

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Two people are dead, one critically injured and four first responders have been hospitalized in a mysterious hazardous materials situation in unincorporated Des Plaines, Illinois.

Around 3:30 p.m., police were called to a northwest suburban townhome in the 9400 block of Harrison Street after receiving a report of three people in distress.

Upon entering the home, four Cook County sheriff's officers were unexpectedly overcome by some sort of hazardous agent.

“They started feeling sick,” said Rick Dobrowski, chief of North Maine Fire Protection District. “They were having some kind of breathing difficulties, we don’t know for sure.”

The officers were taken to area hospitals to be treated. They have since been released and are in stable condition.

Inside the home three adults – two males and a female – were found not breathing, according to police.

No information has been released as to what room of the house they were in or their relationship with one another.

The Cook County medical examiner pronounced both men dead and the woman was transported to a hospital in critical condition. A preliminary investigation revealed the victims likely died due to inhalation of a deadly substance.

Several residences around the home were temporarily evacuated while hazmat teams worked late into the night Thursday to try to figure out what that substance is.

“They didn’t find anything in particular but they were able to rule out anything that was bad – as far as any kind of alkali or acid that was still in there, fumes” Dobrowski said. “They were also able to test the water that they found to make sure there was nothing mixed, chemical wise.

Police said surrounding residents are not in danger, but that doesn’t mean they weren’t on edge as they surveyed the scene of dozens of emergency crews.

“I’m terrified,” one neighbor told NBC Chicago.

Investigators remained at the home near Potter Road well after dark to continue to sweep for evidence.

“They’re just trying to determine what possibly caused this,” said Cook County Sheriff's spokeswoman Sophia Ansari.

Couple Looking for Answers in Motorcycle Theft

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Hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of motorcycles has been stolen from Dania Beach. The couple who owns the company shipping them is looking for answers.

Crystal and Chris Champagne of California said it's still hard to believe, "Went to sleep, woke up the next morning and noticed it was gone."

The couple owns a motorcycle shipping company, Ship Bikes Right.

"We ship from California to Florida and Florida to California," Crystal explained.

Their operation is at a standstill. They hope anyone who spots their truck and trailer, or the license plates (California: 65416V1), calls the Broward Sheriff's Office.

They said there were 11 motorcycles inside and they were to be delivered to customers close to the Fort Lauderdale Best Western where they checked in on Wednesday.

"All of the clients have been contacted. We've apologized to them," the couple said.

They said they've been in business for five years and nothing like this has ever happened.

Even though they have no idea who took their trailer, the couple said they know the crime was caught on surveillance camera. They said they confirmed that with hotel management, and the video is in the hands of detectives.

The couple is hoping detectives catch whoever is responsible.

Man Wanted in Connection to Police-Involved Shooting

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An arrest warrant has been issued for Howard Arom Morraz, 24, in connection to a police-involved shooting.

He's wanted by Miami-Dade Police on one count of possession of a fiream by a convicted felon.

The shooting happened on Tuesday at an apartment complex at 132rd Street and Northeast 7th Avenue, near North Miami Senior High.

Officers responded to the complex as part of an investigation, when they confronted a suspect, later identified as 22-year-old Marvin Arroliga. They said Arroliga fired at officers with a high-powered rifle and they fired back.

Arroliga was killed in the shooting. No officers were injured.

Morraz, Arroliga's brother, was also at the scene and is now wanted by police. Anyone with information on his whereabouts is urged to call Miami-Dade Crime Stoppers at (305) 471-TIPS.

Police said he should be considered armed and dangerous.



Photo Credit: MDPD

Savannah State Lockdown Lifted After Campus Shooting

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A campus lockdown at Savannah State University has been lifted after one person was injured in a shooting near the student union, University spokeswoman Loretta Heyward said.

The college said in a message on social media at around 11 p.m. that the "campus is on lockdown due to a shooting incident" and students received an email advising them to “stay in place.”

According to two women who were in the union, there was a fight that ended in one person being shot in the collarbone area, NBC affiliate WSAV reported. The station said that other students applied pressure to the wound before first responders arrived.

The male victim was taken to the hospital. It wasn't immediately clear whether a suspect was in custody. No further details were immediately available.

NATO Troops Killed in Afghanistan ID'd as U.S. Airmen

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The two NATO troops killed in an ambush in Afghanistan Wednesday were identified as U.S. special tactics airmen, NBC News reported.

Capt. Matthew D. Roland, 27, of Lexington, Kentucky, and Staff Sgt. Forrest B. Sibley, 31, of Pensacola, Florida, died after gunmen wearing Afghan security forces uniforms opened fire on their vehicle while it was stopped at a checkpoint near Camp Antonik, the Air Force said.

"These two combat controllers were incredible warriors who not only volunteered to join our nation's Special Operations Forces, but earned their way to the tip of the spear in defense of our nation," Col. Wolfe Davidson, 24th Special Operations Wing commander, said in a statement.



Photo Credit: U.S. AIR FORCE

NBC 6 Tropical Storm Erika Twitter Q&A

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NBC 6 Meteorologist Adam Berg will once again take over the NBC 6 Twitter account Friday to answer your questions in a LIVE Twitter Q&A from 3 p.m. until 4 p.m.!

Many of you brought your questions and concerns about Tropical Storm Erika during Q&A sessions on Wednesday and Thursday, so we will again turn the account over to Adam to keep the conversation going.

To participate, follow @nbc6 on Twitter  and send your questions before and during the session using the hashtags #Erika and #NBC6! We look forward to hearing from you!

Here are a few of your questions from Wednesday's session:

Dancer Arrested in Pink Pony Strip Club Raid

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A dancer at the Pink Pony strip club in Doral is now the third person to be arrested following a raid that uncovered teens consuming drugs and alcohol, also resulting in the arrest of the father of one of those teens.

According to an arrest report, 21-year-old Kayla Morejon, a dancer at the Pink Pony strip club, is accused of dancing on-stage with one of the teens. The minor was not clothed during the incident, police said.

Morejon was arrested and charged with delivering a controlled substance to a child and promoting a sexual performance by a child. She was ordered held on $17,500 bond.

The report indicates that Morejon requested an attorney, and that she provided a statement against her attorney's advice admitting to her actions with remorse.

Morejon is the third person arrested in connection with the raid, which uncovered teenagers inside the Pink Pony strip club on Northwest 33rd Street in Doral. Police previously arrested 59-year-old Jose Manuel Arguelles, who police say took his own 16-year-old daughter and another girl to the club, and provided them with alcohol and cocaine. Arguelles was charged with child neglect, promoting sexual performance by a child and delivering a controlled substance to a child.

Police also previously arrested 26-year-old Yadier Pena-Gonzalez. He's been charged with child neglect and delivering a controlled substance to a child. It is not known whether Pena-Gonzalez has hired an attorney. Sources told NBC 6 that Pena-Gonzalez was seen in the video using drugs and partying with the underage girls.

According to initial reports, an investigation was launched after Arguelles's daughter's mother saw cell phone photos and video of the daughter and her friend in the club "drinking alcohol and snorting cocaine."

The daughter told police her father often brought them there. The 17-year-old victim told police she witnessed Arguelles give the daughter alcohol, cocaine and marijuana, the report said.

At his bond court appearance earlier this month, Arguelles' bond was reduced from $145,000 to $45,000. He was also ordered under house arrest and to have no contact with his daughter or her friend.

Attorneys for the city and the Pink Pony agreed on August 20th to shut the club down for 45 days, at which point the case will be reevaluated. The Pink Pony was ordered to pay a $3,500 fine and seven employees were fired.



Photo Credit: Miami-Dade Corrections

Evacuation Lifted at G. Holmes Braddock Sr. HS

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Students returned to classes at G. Holmes Braddock Senior High School in Miami following a brief evacuation Friday morning amid reports of a suspicious package in the building.

The school was following regular protocol for such an incident.

School Board police say the package had cleaning supplies in it, and may have been inadvertently left overnight by cleaning crews.

Aerial footage showed throngs of students lined up outside of the school, located at 3601 SW 147th Avenue in Miami. Hazmat crews and bomb sniffing dogs were called to the scene.

No further information was immediately available.

Hero Prof. Thanks Airman for Saving His Life on Train

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A French-American professor shot by a gunman on a train in France has telephoned a U.S. airman who stopped his bleeding to thank him for saving his life, his wife told NBC's "Today" on Friday.

Mark Moogalian, 51, was shot in the back after trying to stop the attacker carrying an assault rifle and other weapons. Moments later, 25-year-old Ayoub El-Khazzani was subdued by three vacationing Americans, including Airman Spencer Stone, who also attended to Moogalian's injuries.

"My husband was able to talk to Spencer on the phone a couple of days ago and he was very emotional," Isabelle Risacher-Moogalian said. "That's the first thing he told him, he said, 'Hey man, thanks for saving my life.'"

She added: "I went to see Spencer and I gave him a big kiss and I said, 'Look, you know, thank you. I will never be able to thank you enough for what you did. You saved his life.' Spencer was like, 'Yeah, you know, no problem!'"


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Waterspout Forms Offshore East of Miami Beach

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A large waterspout was spotted just offshore east of Miami Beach Friday morning around 9 a.m.

NBC 6 crews in the area spotted the waterspout forming in a cloud, stirring up the water below.

This is a developing story and will be updated as new information becomes available.


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NBC 6 Tropical Storm Erika Facebook Q&A

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Our team of experts is here to answer all of your Tropical Storm Erika related questions in a LIVE Facebook Q&A session during our extended Friday newscast from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

You can watch the newscast LIVE on the NBC 6 news app.

To join the conversation, simply reply to our Facebook thread. We will even answer some of your questions LIVE on-air during the broadcast.

Don't forget, NBC 6 Meteorologist Adam Berg will also host a LIVE Twitter Q&A from 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.!

We look forward to hearing from you!

Ashley Madison CEO Stepping Down After Hack

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The CEO of Avid Life Media, the parent company of adultery website Ashley Madison, is stepping down after a hack that exposed the personal information of millions of users, NBC News reported. 

"This change is in the best interest of the company and allows us to continue to provide support to our members and dedicated employees," Avid Life Media said in a statement Friday about CEO Noel Biderman. "We are steadfast in our commitment to our customer base."

The company will be led by the "existing senior management team" until a new CEO is chosen, the company said.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Face of Hurricane Katrina Misery Continues Her Journey

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Of all the transformations Hurricane Katrina left in its wake, the story of one child's journey may be the most striking.

Arianna Evans, who was born male, captured the nation's attention in the days after the devastating storm. Standing outside the New Orleans' Superdome, 9-year-old Evans, known then as Charles, became the face of the tragedy when an NBC News cameraman captured the child making a plea to the world.

"We just need some help out here," the child said. "It is just so pitiful. Pitiful and shame.... We have over 3,000 people out here with no home, no shelter. What are they gonna do? What we gonna do? Take a look at all of this. Now what they gonna do if the hurricane come again?"

Evans became something of a celebrity, but her story had just begun. In the years that followed, Evans endured more tragedy even as she came to an understanding of being "trapped in the wrong body." In May, she began taking hormones to become a woman. Now, 19, she has traveled a long road from tragedy to triumphant self-realization.



Photo Credit: NBC News
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Friday: Chief Meteorologist John Morales on TS Erika

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Friday is the pivotal day in Erika's lifetime. We always knew Danny had 3 strikes against it. But Erika had only two (dry air & shear), until now.

The third strike may be the terrain of Hispaniola, which includes Pico Duarte at over 10,000 feet. The storm is discombobulated, with all of the rain and stronger wind gusts to the east and south of the still exposed (devoid of thunderstorms) center of circulation.

Past experience tells us that disorganized storms often get ripped apart by mountains. Yet Erika, at the moment I write this, continues over water just south of the Dominican Republic's southern coast. It's still producing tropical storm force winds mainly in squalls.

NHC has for 3 days now been forecasting a turn to the northwest (because that's what the models have been showing). Instead, the storm's northern side is so weak that center has been guided by the east-to-west trade winds. Does that change Friday?

Looking at the latest trends it does look like Erika's center will make landfall near the city of Santo Domingo. For the Dominican Republic (more than Haiti) this means the risk of several inches of rain. Puerto Rico saw only an inch or two, but it was on Erika's drier northern semi-circle. The DR would see more of the dirty side of the storm, and possibly have the system's "tail" linger over the country through the night and into Saturday. While some wind gusts as high as 55 MPH are possible, the biggest risk there will be flash flooding.

Meanwhile, with aircraft reconnaissance unable to fly missions into Erika due to the high peaks of Hispaniola, we may not get "ground truth" as to what's left of Erika when she finally leaves the Antilles until late Friday night.

Satellite images will give us some hints, but that hasn't been a good tool due to the disorganized nature of the storm. If Erika is still a viable tropical cyclone tonight and tomorrow morning, then it's "game-on" for the Bahamas and Florida.

But here's the good news: models seem to finally be catching up to reality. While the model tracks mostly point to a landfall in Florida, they've backed off on their intensity projections. Not a single model that brings the storm to Florida brings it as a hurricane.

If you've been paying attention, you know NHC will follow suit and therefore forecast a tropical storm making landfall in Florida and not a hurricane. A Tropical Storm Watch would be issued as early as Friday night, and a Warning on Saturday for a possible Erika landfall late Sunday night.

While this is an inconvenience and some safety precautions are required, it would be a much different situation than having to experience a landfalling hurricane.

So let's see what's left of Erika after Hispaniola. Don't forget that if it's still a depression or storm, there is very warm water in the Bahamas and north of Cuba, so we cannot let our guard down (remember, reality versus models).


3 Generations Linked by Single Womb After Transplant

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For one family in Sweden, a pioneering procedure has led to a baby being born from the same womb that nurtured his mother, uniting three generations.

The new mother, who lost her own uterus to cancer in her 20s, said it was "unimaginable" that she now had her own child, thanks to her mother's donated womb.

"It can't be described how happy we are," she told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview. "It's everything that I hoped for and a little bit more," said the woman, who asked that she and her mother not be identified in order to protect the privacy of her 9-month-old son.

Dr. Mats Brannstrom, who is behind the revolutionary process, has ushered in four babies, all boys, with transplanted wombs; a fifth is on the way. He said there was something very special about this case: "It's one uterus bridging three generations of a family."

Before his breakthrough, there had been two attempts to transplant a womb, in Saudi Arabia and Turkey, but no live births. Doctors in Britain, France, the United States and elsewhere are planning similar operations with wombs from women who have died recently, not living donors.

Brannstrom, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Sahlgrenska Hospital at the University of Gothenburg and Stockholm IVF, first transplanted wombs into nine women about two years ago as part of an experimental study, including the new mother, who was the first. Complications forced the removal of two of the wombs. The women in the trial were either born without a womb or had it removed due to cancer.

The new mother, in her early 30s, recalled that as hospital staffers wheeled in her mother for the transplant, "I was crying and told her I loved her and thank you for doing this."

The woman's mother (the baby's grandmother) said she immediately agreed when her daughter raised the idea.

The proud grandmother, in her mid-50s, acknowledged she has difficulty understanding the magnitude of the birth, but "at the same time, I sometimes think that I am a part of history."

The new mother underwent in vitro fertilization to make embryos using her eggs and her husband's sperm. Doctors waited a year after the transplant to ensure everything was OK. After four attempts to transfer embryos into the new womb, she got pregnant. There were no complications, and she delivered via cesarean section, as planned.

"Feeling him against my cheek was the most wonderful feeling ever," the mother said. In tribute to Brannstrom, she and her husband gave the baby the middle name of Mats.

She said they will one day tell the boy how he was conceived. "My thought is that he will always know how wanted he was," she said. "Hopefully when he grows up, uterus transplantation (will be) an acknowledged treatment for women like me and he will know that he was part of making that possible."

Brannstrom and his colleagues are planning more groundbreaking womb transplant procedures. One trial will use wombs from recently deceased women and another will employ robotic surgery to shorten the time of the 10- to 12-hour operations. Brannstrom is working with doctors in India, Singapore, Lebanon and Argentina to do womb transplants there.

Experts marvel at Brannstrom's work and described it as the biggest breakthrough in fertility medicine since IVF.

"This was impossible until Brannstrom did it," said Dr. Antonio Gargiulo, an associate reproductive endocrinologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston who has not been involved in the operations. He said removing a womb is unlike any other operation and that the organ must be very delicately grafted onto the recipient's major arteries and veins.

Gargiulo said doctors need to monitor whether babies in the womb get enough nutrients from the placenta and must ensure sufficient blood flow to the arteries.

Brannstrom said the blood flow during pregnancy was normal in all four babies and that all are healthy.

The new mother and her husband are contemplating a second child; the transplanted womb was intended for two pregnancies, before being removed so the mother can stop taking rejection medications.

She said she will be forever grateful to her mother.

"The real unique thing is what me and my mom went through," she said. "It's a big thing and he and his grandmother will have this bond for the rest of their lives."

N.C. Police Officer Won't Be Retried for Killing

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The North Carolina police officer who shot and killed an unarmed former college football player in 2013 won't be retried, an official said Friday, a week after a judge declared a mistrial in the case, NBC News reported. 

Randall "Wes" Kerrick, 29, killed Jonathan Ferrell, 24, after a traffic accident on Sept. 14, 2013, and was accused of voluntary manslaughter. Kerrick is white; Ferrell was black.

Prosecutors argued Kerrick should have used nonlethal force to subdue Ferrell, a former defensive back for Florida A&M, after Ferrell climbed out of his wrecked car and dragged himself to a nearby house to get help. The woman in the house called 911 to report a possible break-in.



Photo Credit: AP

Nazi Gold-Train Hunters Used Map Drawn on Deathbed: Official

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Two treasure hunters who claim to have found a Nazi train filled with gold in Poland discovered it by following a map drawn up by one of the people who hid it around 70 years ago, a Polish government minister said Friday, NBC News reported. 

The map was drawn by a man who helped conceal the train at the end of World War II and passed it on "on his deathbed," Poland's Deputy Culture Minister Piotr Zuchowski said.

The deputy minister said officials had been able to locate the 100-yard-long military train using ground-penetrating radar. He stopped short of confirming the claim the train was filled with gold, weapons and valuable art.

According to a local rumor rumor, a German train filled with gold, gems and armaments went missing around the city of Walbrzych while it was fleeing the Red Army advancing towards Berlin in the spring of 1945.



Photo Credit: NBC News

Diabetes Drugs Can Cause Severe Joint Pain: FDA

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Certain diabetes drugs can cause severe and disabling joint pain, the Food and Drug Administration warned patients on Friday.

"The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is warning that the type 2 diabetes medicines sitagliptin, saxagliptin, linagliptin, and alogliptin may cause joint pain that can be severe and disabling," the agency said in a statement.

These are generic names for Januvia, Onglyza, Tradjenta, and Nesina, which are all in the same calss and work by making more insulin for the body.

The drugs are already linked with some potentially severe side-effects. Januvia, for instance, can cause a severe inflammation of the pancreas called pancreatitis that's not only excruciating but that can be deadly. Onglyza has been linked with a higher risk of heart failure.
 



Photo Credit: Getty Images/Caiaimage/FILE

Zoo Announces Two New Leopard Cubs

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Brookfield Zoo in Illinois has announced the birth of two snow leopard cubs.

The cubs, which are currently off exhibit bonding with their 4-year-old mother Sarani, are scheduled to make their public debut in mid-October.

The two females, which each weigh about 10 pounds, were born on June 16, zoo officials said. 

Sarani and her 5-year-old mate, Sabu, arrived at the zoo in October 2011 from Tautphaus Park Zoo in Idaho Falls and Cape May County Park & Zoo in Cape May Court House, New Jersey.

Snow leopards are listed as an endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and experts say their numbers are declining. The Snow Leopard Trust estimates population numbers of the elusive cat are between 4,000 and 6,500 remaining in the wild
 



Photo Credit: Brookfield Zoo
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