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Rowlett Man Calls Gun-Selling Conviction Unfair

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 16 Februari 2013 | 14.01

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A Rowlett man convicted of dealing guns without a license in Garland says his recent conviction is unfair.

A federal jury on Feb. 8 convicted Jackie Don Burke, 66, of selling guns out of his former screen-printing business.

"By definition, I am now a felon, and that hurts very much," said Burke, who goes by his initials, J.D. "I've been a law-abiding citizen for all my life."

Burke said he did not aim to take his lifelong passion for guns to the wrong side of the law.

"I'm disappointed more than anything else," he said. "I was very shocked when the verdict came in -- disappointed, yes; angry, no."

Burke was found guilty of engaging in the business of firearms without a license after nearly a week of trial and deliberation.

The U. S. Attorney's Office said that Burkes' own records show he sold at least 135 guns during a 14-month period. At one point, he sold a pistol to an undercover Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent, prosecutors said.

But Burke insists that he was selling guns from his personal collection, which is legal.

He had to surrender 45 guns after his conviction.

"Well, that wasn't so many to me -- I love guns," he said. "The only reason I had 45 there at the time is that I couldn't afford to buy 60 or 80 or 100 at a time."

Burke told the jury he was "too old to go to jail" but now says that's not what he meant and that he respects the law.

"Basically when I said, 'I'm too old to go to jail,' it means that I'm going to do right," he said. "I don't want to go to jail in any purposes."

Burke said he is worried about his personal safety now that he will lose all of his guns. He said he survived a knife attack during an attempted robbery of his former gun shop in 1982.

"I had a gun on at the time," he said. "If I hadn't have, he would have definitely killed me."

Burke faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

He will remain free on bond pending his sentencing, which is set for May 24 before U.S. District Judge Barbara M. G. Lynn.

The U.S. Attorney's Office declined to comment on the case because it is still pending.

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North Texas Cruise Passengers Happy to Be Home

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Passengers Cheer Escape From "Horrible" Cruise

Passengers from the disabled Carnival Triumph are glad to be back on land after five nightmarish days marked by overflowing toilets and food shortages.

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A ticket to paradise turned into a cruise from hell.

About a dozen of North Texans who were on board the Carnival Triumph finally made it home on Friday.

The ship, which was adrift in the Gulf of Mexico for five days after an engine fire, was finally pushed to Alabama on Thursday night.

Friday morning, some North Texas passengers were flown home to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.

Gloria Hoagland, of Plano, was part of a Jazzercise group on the cruise. When the ships engines caught fire, the crew didn't know how bad the damage was until nine hours later, she said. That's when that the crew confirmed they were stuck at sea.

"Every day, we kept getting a report -- it was one more day, one more day, so we weren't convinced that we would even arrive on Thursday night," Hoagland said.

Conditions on the ship quickly deteriorated after the ship lost power. Hoagland said the ship started listing some, causing problems on the lower decks.

"The sewage -- when the boat lists back and forth, the sewage did spill out of the toilets onto the floors, came out of the walls, drainage, you know. That's why we stopped showering three or four days ago, because the sewage was coming up from the drain and, with no electricity, you couldn't see what was going on in the bathroom," she said.

Sheila Ruble, of Frisco, was staying on one of the lower floor rooms with some of her friends. When the power went out, trouble poured out into her room.

"There was sewage that came up from the shower drainage," she said. "We did not stay in the room. The stench, the hot, the heat, was so bad down there, we moved up to the fourth floor outside."

The stench forced hundreds of passengers to look for higher ground and fresh air. Passengers dragged bed sheets, mattresses and towels to the deck to set up tents and places to sleep.

Hoagland said the crew members did a great job helping passengers any way they could, from fresh clothes to food. Passengers even helped out other passengers.

"I was very fortunate, because I was in a cabin. I actually met two older women who were down in two and, with the sewage and stuff, their cabin got ruined. And we invited them up and they slept with us for the next four nights. We just sort of made it work," Hoagland said. "People were sharing cabins, people were sleeping in the hallways. My room was clean, so we were inviting people over to use our balcony, get some fresh air, because without the balcony, you smelled sewer and diesel and bad things. I'm thankful for some fresh air."

Because most electricity was out, passengers were fed sandwiches and melons, Hoagland said. She said the lines were long, but people waited in them in order to eat.

Ruble said Carnival offered passengers a reimbursement for the trip, as well as an additional $500. The company also paid for the return trip home and even offered passengers a free cruise in the future.

Ruble loves cruises and had plans to go again with her girlfriends. But after this ordeal, she plans to wait a little while before hopping on an ocean liner.

"The first couple of days -- 'Hey, this is cool. Let's do this again next year.' And then when we were with each other for days and nights, we were like, 'You know, I think we're good catching up for another five years,' so I don't know if we're going to be doing it anytime soon," Ruble joked.

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Illness Closes Duncanville School for 2 Days

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 15 Februari 2013 | 14.01

Mark Schnyder, NBC 5 News

UME Preparatory Academy is temporarily closed due to a number of flu cases. In Texas, once 10 percent of a student body is absent for illness administrators have the option of temporarily closing the school.

Possible Flu Outbreak Closes...

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A Duncanville school closed for two days this week because of a possible flu outbreak.

UME Preparatory Academy is scheduled to reopen Friday after it was closed Wednesday and Thursday.

"We noticed on Monday we had a pretty high number of absences," UME Superintendent Rollin Mayes said. "The trend seemed to be exacerbated somewhat on Tuesday, and they were reporting various symptoms -- fever, vomiting, things like that."

More than 50 students did not attend school Monday. About 70 students -- 20 percent of the school's 350 students -- were absent on Tuesday.

Marty Minnich, a father of three students, said he agreed with the closing.

"I think it was a good decision," he said. "I'm glad they were proactive in getting everybody out of there so they could get this taken care of."

Two of his children were sick last week, he said.

Maintenance workers thoroughly cleaned the school building on Wednesday.

The two unscheduled days off will not extend the school year. UME will use its built-in weather days.

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Manhunt Continues for "Dangerous" Miami Fugitive

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The manhunt for the "dangerous" and "desperate" Florida prisoner who stabbed a detective and escaped in Grapevine while being transported to Nevada continues throughout North Texas for a fourth day.

Alberto Morales, is "a schizophrenic" who vowed not to return to prison, according to authorities and a 911 call released Wednesday.

Though law enforcement officials said Morales had been "appropriately restrained" during transport, Grapevine police told NBC 5 they do not think Morales is in shackles any longer and that he may have gotten out of the shackles somehow inside the SUV. Police have not located the shackles that were on Morales.

Police Release Photo of Morales' Distinct Tattoo

Police released an image showing Alberto Morales' very distinct tattoo in hopes the public can help find the Miami fugitive on the run after police say he stabbed a Miami-Dade detective outside a Walmart in Grapevine.

Surveillance Video Shows Morales on the Run

Surveillance video from the Walmart in Grapevine shows Alberto Morales running after police say he stabbed a Miami-Dade detective Monday night.

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The 42-year-old Morales escaped Monday after using a piece from his eyeglasses to stab Miami-Dade Detective Jaime Pardinas, one of two officers transferring the prisoner by car to Nevada. The escape happened while they were stopped in a Wal-Mart parking lot in Grapevine.

Grapevine police spokesman Robert Eberling said authorities continue to search near the airport and will do so until they believe they should look elsewhere. He said the search covers "any place anybody can hide," including yards and drainage ditches.

Thursday afternoon officials from both Grapevine and Miami-Dade County urged people to continue to report individuals fitting the description of Morales, though all reports to date have not resulted in substantial leads, police said.

 

Grapevine-area Constable Tim Burch is assisting in the search for Morales.  He told NBC 5 that the shackles used in prisoner transport are difficult to free oneself from.

"A transport belt, if used properly, in the many years I've been in law enforcement I haven't seen anybody get loose from one of them," Burch said.

Constable Burch, whose constable precinct 4 covers 400 square miles of Primarily Denton County as well as the Grapevine and Southlake areas, said Thursday that the last known sighting of Morales was by a construction crew who reported seeing a man matching Morales' description running in the area of the Kimball Avenue exit of 114 in Southlake, not far from the Grapevine Walmart where Morales escaped, shortly after Monday night's attack.

"It's not out of the question that he stayed on foot for quite some time that night," Burch said.  "And no one really knows how far he made it."

Police are warning neighbors to watch out, describing Morales as a "dangerous" and "desperate" fugitive from the law.

 

"Make sure your garage door's shut, your doors are locked, you're secure and make sure your house is secure. If your cars are locked out on your driveway, if you happen to park them out there, your keys are where they are.  You know where everything is. Just be aware of your surroundings,"  Lt. Todd Dearing of the Grapevine Police Department told NBC 5 on Wednesday.

"If you see someone that looks like him, please call us.  Even if you're on that edge of, 'Is it or isn't it?'  Call us.  Let us go out and talk to the individual, because you never know when that one person's going to call in, and that's actually going to be him," said Dearing.

More detectives from Miami are expected to come to Dallas to help with the search that already involves the U.S. Marshal's Service, authorities at the U.S.-Mexico border and law enforcement officials from Miami and Nevada, Eberling said.

Miami police officials said they will remain in North Texas until Morales is caught.

Police initially thought Morales might be in a vehicle stolen Tuesday morning at a motel near the airport, but Eberling said Wednesday that's not the case. He said the vehicle has been recovered in Dallas and is not believed to be connected to the incident.

On Thursday Grapevine police released a photo of a distinct tattoo of a Native American on a horse that Morales has on his left arm. Below is the latest photo of Morales and the tattoo.

Investigators say it's possible Morales has gotten some help and escaped from the area. He's now on the state's Top 10 Most Wanted List and a reward of $10,000 has been issued for information that leads to his capture.

Officials: "He's not going back to prison"

Eberling said inmates who knew Morales in prison have told investigators that he had vowed not to return.

"He's made it pretty clear that he's not going back to prison," Eberling said.

On a recording of a 911 call released Wednesday, Pardinas can be heard breathing heavily as he tells the operator that he's been stabbed. He described Morales' height, weight and appearance and then added, "He's a schizophrenic."

On another 911 call, a bystander told the operator: "There's a guy with a gun and somebody on the floor bleeding." The caller than clarified that "the guy with the gun is helping the guy that's bleeding."

Pardinas was accompanied by Miami-Dade Detective David Carrero during the transfer. They flew to Houston with Morales and then decided to drive the rest of the way after he became disruptive on the flight. They had stopped near the Wal-Mart while waiting for a third officer who was flying in to the Dallas area join them. Department policy requires three officers to be present for ground transfers of prisoners.

Pardinas, 54, remained hospitalized in Dallas on Wednesday after undergoing surgery. He's "making progress" and expected recover, a Miami-Dade police spokesman said.

In a news conference at Parkland Hospital Wednesday, authorities said Pardinas was stabbed very deeply in the neck and back and that he suffered a collapsed lung.  While his condition is improving, he is still listed in serious but stable condition.

Pardinas and Carrero were taking Morales to Nevada to serve a sentence of 30 years to life for a conviction of sexual assault with a weapon.

Officials said Morales fled wearing only one shoe and was wearing shorts at the time.

Previous Coverage:

Associated Press writers Danny Robbins and David Warren contributed to this report.

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Shootout Victims ID'd as Cabin Investigation Continues

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 14 Februari 2013 | 14.01

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Dorner Believed to Have Hidden in Big Bear-Area Cabin

A neighbor near a Big Bear-area cabin where suspected murdered and former LAPD Officer Christopher Dorn is believed to have hidden says he didn't notice anything out of the ordinary inside the cabin in the remote area near the mountain resort community. Patrick Healy reports from the Big Bear area for the NBC4 News at 11 p.m. on Feb. 12, 2013.

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Forensic experts will determine whether the charred remains found Tuesday after a deadly shootout at a Big Bear-area cabin are those of Christopher Dorner -- the former LAPD officer wanted in a series of shooting deaths that were part of a revenge plot involving law enforcement agents and their families.

Timeline: Revenge-Plot Slayings | Map: LAPD Manhunt | 10:30 a.m. PT: Memorial for Slain Officer

Investigators remained Wednesday at the burned cabin where a man believed to be Dorner was involved in a shootout that killed a San Bernardino County Sheriff's deputy -- one of four deaths connected to the 33-year-old fired officer in a revenge plot that targeted law enforcement officers and their families.

The slain officer was identified Wednesday afternoon as Detective Jeremiah MacKay, 35. The father of two young children, MacKay was a 15-year veteran of the department, Sheriff John McMahon said in a press conference.

Deputy Alex Collins was also struck during the shootout and is expected to recover after surgeries at Loma Linda University Medical Center, McMahon said.

A positive identification of the charred remains found in the cabin will require forensics tests, authorities said.

The Associated Press reported Wednesday that Dorner's driver's license was found in the cabin. The AP cited a source who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation.

Positive identification might require days or weeks to complete, police said.

"Those types of identifications can be expedited, and I'm sure everything will be done to do that in this case," LAPD Lt. Andy Neiman said at a Wednesday morning news conference.

Until that identification is confirmed, the LAPD will continue protecting law enforcement officers and their families that were named as possible targets in an 11,400-word manifesto apparently written by Dorner, according to the LAPD.

"About a dozen or so" subjects mentioned in the Dorner document remain under protection, Neiman said.

Neiman did not provide details on the investigation in the San Bernardino Mountains, adding that San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department investigators will address questions regarding events at the cabin. The sheriff's department planned to conduct a news conference Wednesday, but it was not immediately clear when that would occur.

The homicide investigations involving Dorner will continue, Neiman added.

"We don't just stop a murder case simply because we suspect that the suspect in that case is no longer with us," Neiman said. "There are some families that are literally traumatized."

A man believed to be Dorner entered the cabin Tuesday afternoon after abandoning a stolen vehicle near Highway 38 at Seven Oaks Mountain Cabins in the unincorporated community of Angelus Oaks (map). The man never came out of the structure, which was destroyed in the fire.

It is not clear how the fire started, and McMahon on Wednesday said that authorities were not involved in starting the blaze.

"We did not intentionally burn down that cabin to get Mr. Dorner out," the sheriff said.

Several walls of the cabin were knocked down with an armored vehicle, then authorities heard a single gunshot from inside, a law enforcement source told NBC4.

The cabins are southwest of Big Bear, where Dorner's burned-out vehicle was discovered Thursday after he allegedly shot and killed a Riverside police officer.

Brief Pursuit Leads to Cabin Shootout

Events unfolded Tuesday after authorities initially responded to a stolen vehicle report at 12:22 p.m. in the 1200 block of Club View Drive in Big Bear, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department.

A man believed to be Dorner held a couple captive at a Big Bear cabin near a command center that was set up to coordinate the multi-agency search, according to sources inside the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. The two were interviewed by investigators and released.

The pair came to the house on Tuesday morning, surprising the man believed to be Dorner, who was inside, according to a spokesman for the California Fish and Wildlife Department.

The couple was tied up by the man, but the woman was able to free herself and call 911, officials said.

Initially, it was reported that the two captives were mother-daughter housekeepers. Mountain Vista Resort owners Karen and Jim Reynolds on Wednedsay night told media that they were tied up by the man before he stole their SUV.

After leaving the cabin, Dorner is believed to have stolen two vehicles before the gunfight.

A Department of Fish and Wildlife warden first noticed a driver matching the fugitive's description driving on Highway 38 at about 12:45 p.m. near Glass Road. The warden then called for backup and three additional CDFW wardens in two separate trucks began pursuing the driver, said Lt. Patrick Foy, with CDFW.

Foy said the man was driving a purple Nissan -- which he may have commandeered from the two captives -- when he was first spotted by the CDFW warden. The driver crashed the Nissan before carjacking a white pickup truck, Foy said.

One of the wardens exchanged gunfire with the subject before the man fled into the cabin, authorities said. Officers could hear audio of the cabin shootout, Neiman said.

"It was horrifying to listen to that firefight," Neiman said. "To hear those words, "officer down," is the most gut-wrenching experience you can have as a police officer."

The manhunt conducted over a widespread area of Southern California led to Big Bear Thursday after the discovery of Dorner's burned-out pickup south of Big Bear Lake. The truck was found about seven hours after Dorner shot and killed a Riverside police officer, according to investigators.

Officer Michael Crain's 10:30 a.m. memorial service was attended by some 8,000 people Wednesday.

NOTE: NBC4 incorrectly reported that the pair held captive inside a Big Bear cabin were mother-daughter housekeepers. A couple who own the Mountain Vista Resort on Clubview Drive on Wednesday evening told media that they were tied up by the man before he stole their SUV. 

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Search Continues for "Dangerous, Desperate" Fugitive

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

The search continues for Alberto Morales who police say stabbed a Miami police officer Monday night in Grapevine and hasn't been seen since.

Search Continues for Fugitive

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Police across North Texas are continuing an active, extensive manhunt for a fugitive officials have described as "dangerous" and "desperate."

Investigators set up a command post inside of the Grapevine Police Department and are working with officers from Miami-Dade and the U.S. Marshals following leads to find Alberto Morales.

Morales escaped from police custody on Tuesday after stabbing a Miami-Dade police officer in the parking lot of a Grapevine Walmart. (Read more on that incident in this story)

Search for Morales Centers Around Walmart

Prisoner Alberto Morales, 42, has been a fugitive since police say he stabbed one of the two Miami-Dade detectives who were transferring him Monday while they were in Grapevine awaiting the arrival of a third officer who was flying in to join them. The police search Wednesday centered around the Walmart in Grapevine.

Search for Fugitive Focuses on Walmart Scene

Grapevine police say they are looking at surveillance tape from the Walmart where Alberto Morales escaped from custody.

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Local investigators said they had some tips on Morales' whereabouts overnight, but that none of the tips received have provided viable leads.

Late Tuesday night, a possible Morales sighting turned out not to be the wanted suspect. Police also questioned two men in a Ford SUV they thought Morales may have stolen, but it wasn't connected to the escape.

Police are warning neighbors to watch out, describing Morales as a "dangerous" and "desperate" fugitive from the law.  He's facing life in prison for aggravated sexual assault as well as serving time for other charges. Officers say if Morales is still in North Texas, he'll need a warm place to hide out.

"Make sure your garage door's shut, your doors are locked, you're secure and make sure your house is secure. If your cars are locked out on your driveway, if you happen to park them out there, your keys are where they are.  You know where everything is. Just be aware of your surroundings,"  Lt. Todd Dearing of the Grapevine Police Department said.

"If you see someone that looks like him, please call us.  Even if you're on that edge of, 'Is it or isn't it?'  Call us.  Let us go out and talk to the individual, because you never know when that one person's going to call in, and that's actually going to be him," said Dearing.

Investigators say it's possible Morales has gotten some help and escaped from the area. He's now on the state's Top 10 Most Wanted List and a reward of $10,000 has been issued for information that leads to his capture.

Previous Coverage:

NBC 5's Greg Janda contributed to this report.

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Escaped Prisoner Joins Texas Most Wanted List

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 13 Februari 2013 | 14.01

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Hunt Continues for Fugitive

The manhunt continues for a prisoner who stabbed a police escort and escaped last night as he was being transferred from Florida to Nevada. Grapevine police say Alberto Morales used his eyeglasses to attack the officer. They believe Alberto Morales is still in the Dallas area.

Extensive Manhunt Under Way

Multiple law enforcement agencies are in an extensive manhunt for a prisoner that stabbed a Miami-Dade Police officer and escaped custody.

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Multiple law enforcement agencies are in an extensive manhunt for a prisoner that stabbed a Miami-Dade Police officer and escaped custody in Grapevine Monday night.

Two Miami-Dade detectives were transporting prisoner Alberto Morales between Miami and Las Vegas. The officers had a connecting flight from Miami to Houston and then on to Las Vegas.

Miami-Dade County officials said prior to landing in Houston, Morales began acting erratically, which resulted in the officers and Morales not being allowed to board the connecting flight to Las Vegas.

Instead, the detectives rented a vehicle and began traveling from Houston to Las Vegas, with a stop in the Dallas area where a third detective was en route to meet them and assist with the ground transport.

Around 11 p.m., the officers and Morales were in the parking lot of a Walmart at 1601 West Highway 114, awaiting the arrival of the third officer, when one of the officers got out of the vehicle and went into the store to use the restroom.

While that officer was in the restroom, Grapevine police said Morales was able to take off his eye glasses, break off the frame, and use the sharp, broken end as a blade to attack the lone officer guarding him, 54-year-old Jaime Pardinas, stabbing Pardinas once in the chest and three times in the back before fleeing.

Pardinas was transported to Parkland Memorial Hospital where he was treated for his injuries.

A large manhunt is under way, involving multiple agencies, as Morales is a violent offender and considered dangerous. The State of Texas has placed Morales on their 10 Most Wanted Fugitives list and is offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to his capture.

At 12:45 p.m. Tuesday, Grapevine police said they are looking for a 2008 white Ford Explorer with Texas license plate 19ZJW8.  The vehicle was reported stolen from a Super 8 motel sometime overnight Monday.  Police said there was a handgun in the vehicle and officials was stolen in crose proximity to the last known location of Morales.

Still Loose, Still Bound

At the time of escape, it's believed Morales was wearing a belly band with his hands shackled to it. Police believe he may still be in shackles. Morales fled the scene on foot, and Grapevine police still believe he is traveling on foot.

"He is considered dangerous at this time and he is still at large, so we're seeking the public's assistance in finding him," Grapevine police spokesman Lt. Barry Bowling said. "As far as we know he may still be in shackles, and the clothing description we had at the time we got the report was that he was in some grey shorts and a blue shirt."

"We don't think he could have gotten too far," Bowling said. "We're concerned about where he might be since he's at large and we do think he's still very dangerous."

Robert Ebberling with the Grapevine Police Department said Morales will have four charges from today's incident, including attempted criminal capital murder, attempted criminal murder, aggravated assault on a police officer, and escape -- each carrying a $1 million bond.

Ebberling said Morale has no known connections in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Law enforcement officers are considering the entire DFW area as their search radius.

Some schools in the area were even placed on lockdown during different parts of the day due to police activity in the area.  Those lockdowns have since been lifted.

Prisons of the Past

All law enforcement officials have reinterated that Morales has a lengthly, violent criminal history and needs to be treated with extreme caution.

Miami-Dade officials said Morales was apprehended in Nevada in 2008 and was brought back to Miami and incarcerated pending a court case from 2003 in which Morales was charged with two counts of Burglary/With Assault or Battery Armed, two counts of Kidnapping/With a Weapon to Aggravated Battery, and five counts of Sexual Battery/With a Deadly Weapon/Serious Injury.

Morales plead guilty to these charges and was sentenced to 10 years in prison to be run consecutively to a sentence in Nevada. We are still looking into Morales' criminal history in Nevada.

NBC 5 has crews on the scene to gather more information. As this is a developing story, details may change.

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Officials Deny Reports That Dorner's Body Was Found in Cabin

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Leading law enforcement agencies and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa are denying earlier reports that the charred body of a fired LAPD officer wanted for at least three shooting deaths was discovered in a burned cabin in the Big Bear area Tuesday evening.

NBC4 reported the discovery based on a report from NBC News, citing a source inside the Los Angeles mayor's office. Villaraigosa told NBC News' Andrea Mitchell that, contrary to reports, officials have not found the body and that the cabin is still too hot to enter.

Officials at the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department and the Los Angeles Police Department refuted reports that Christopher Dorner's body had been found inside the burned-out cabin.

"We believe (the suspect) is still inside that cabin that caught fire … (but) no one has been inside the cabin," said Cindy Bachman, spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department.

"We believe that the person that barricaded himself inside the cabin and engaged in gunfire with our deputies and other law enforcement officers is still inside there even though the building burned."

Homicide investigators are on scene, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department.

LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith echoed Bachman's comments that the still-smoldering cabin had not yet been searched.

"That cabin is still too hot for anybody to make entry. There has been no body located inside that cabin. That cabin has not yet been searched," LAPD Cmdr. Andrew Smith said at an 8 p.m. news conference Tuesday.

"Any reports of a body being found are not true," he said. "No body has yet been found in there."

Smith said the LAPD will continue protecting law enforcement officers and their families that were named as possible targets in an 11,400-word manifesto apparently written by Dorner.

"Until we have confirmation, A, that a body was located and, B, that that body belongs to Christopher Dorner, the Los Angeles Police Department is gonna continue on with its high-profile protection detail of our officers," Smith said.

He added that it could take days or weeks to positively identify any body that may be recovered from the charred rubble.

The manhunt for Dorner turned into a fatal gunfight earlier in the day involving deputies and a standoff that burned a cabin in which authorities said they believe Dorner was barricaded.

One San Bernardino County Sheriff's deputy was killed and another was wounded in a shootout before the standoff, according San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon.

At about 4:15 p.m., aerial video showed a structure on fire at the standoff location, Seven Oaks Mountain Cabins in the unincorporated community of Angelus Oaks (map).

The man in the cabin never emerged Tuesday afternoon after authorities shot tear gas into the structure and ordered him to surrender, an anonymous law enforcement official told NBC4.

Several walls of the cabin were knocked down with an armored vehicle, then authorities heard a single gunshot from inside, the source said.

The cabin was engulfed in flames shortly thereafter, but it's not clear how the fire started.

"It's my understanding that since the fire started, there has been no gunfire," Bachman said at an early evening news conference.

She said authorities have had no communication with the person in the cabin.

Timeline: Revenge-Plot Slayings | Read: Full Manifesto | Map: LAPD Manhunt

The cabins are about 5 miles southwest -- as the crow flies, over a mountain range -- from the town of Big Bear, where Dorner's burned-out vehicle was discovered Thursday after he allegedly shot and killed a Riverside police officer.

On Tuesday, deputies initially responded to a stolen vehicle report at 12:22 p.m. in the 1200 block of Club View Drive in Big Bear, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. A man matching Dorner's description stole a white 2005 RAM pickup, according to the report.

The victim told NBC4 a man resembling Dorner approached him with a rifle and demanded the pickup.

The man believed to be Dorner allegedly held a woman and her daughter, both housekeepers, hostage at a Big Bear cabin near a command center that was set up to coordinate the multi-agency search, according to sources inside the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. The pair was interviewed by investigators and released.

The gunfight with the man believed to be Dorner began after a California Department of Fish and Wildlife warden noticed a driver matching the fugitive's description driving on Highway 38 at about 12:45 p.m. near Glass Road.

The warden attempted to pursue the driver but the chase was hindered by narrow roads, said Lt. Patrick Foy, with CDFW.

The warden then called for backup and three additional CDFW wardens in two separate trucks began pursuing the driver, Foy said, adding that all responding officers are part of a six-warden unit assigned to the manhunt.

Foy said the man was driving a purple Nissan -- which he may have commandeered from the two women hostages -- when he was first spotted by the CDFW warden. The driver crashed the Nissan before allegedly carjacking a white pickup truck, Foy said.

The driver opened fire on the truck carrying two CDFW wardens, Foy said. The pair, whose vehicle was shot numerous times, was not injured. But one of the wardens was close enough to the shooter to note that he looked like Dorner, Foy said.

He said that one of the CDFW wardens exited the truck and fired some 15 rounds at the suspect vehicle, though it was not clear if the driver had been struck by the gunfire. The driver then fled into the forest and barricaded himself inside a cabin, authorities said.

Responding deputies encountered the gunman, the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department said.

"A brief exchange of gunfire occurred between the suspect and our deputies," San Bernardino County Sheriff John McMahon said.

The two deputies were transported to Loma Linda University Medical Center, where one was declared dead.

Dorner was believed to have an arsenal of weapons that includes a semi-automatic rifle.

Highways 38 and 330 were closed for several hours in the Big Bear area. Officers in protective gear were checking vehicles at a Highway 38 roadblock south of Big Bear.

SWAT units and armored vehicles were seen traveling up the mountain road.

The Bear Valley Unified School District placed several campuses on lockdown.

The search for Dorner has focused on the San Bernardino Mountain resort community of Big Bear since Thursday, when his burned-out pickup was discovered south of Big Bear Lake. About 30 law enforcement personnel remained in Big Bear Tuesday morning.

Dorner's Nissan Titan pickup was found about seven hours after he allegedly opened fire on officers in Riverside County. The search for Dorner, fired from the LAPD in 2008, has included Orange, Riverside and Los Angeles counties and the San Diego area.

Teams on the ground and in the air searched the Big Bear area after Thursday's discovery of Dorner's burning pickup, but authorities said there had been no reported sightings of Dorner.

On Tuesday, investigators asked residents in the cities of Big Bear Lake, Moonridge, Sugarloaf, 7 Oaks Community (Converse Flats), Bluff Lake, Jenks Lake and Angelus Oaks who have surveillance cameras at their residences to review the video, starting on midnight Feb. 7.

Dorner was identified Feb. 6 as a suspect in the shooting deaths of a couple, including the daughter of a former LAPD captain, in Irvine. He was charged with murder Monday in the Feb. 7 shooting death of Riverside Officer Michael Crain.

More than 1,000 tips have been received since the LAPD announced a $1 million reward in the case. 

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American Pope Unlikely, Experts Say

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 12 Februari 2013 | 14.02

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American influence on the Papal Conclave that will elect the next pontiff has never been stronger. But the odds of an American becoming pope remain distant at best, Vatican scholars and journalists say.

That's in large part because the United States, with more Catholics than any European country, is already seen as having too strong a hand in global politics and economic matters. So why give us the papacy, too?

"America was a missionary country up to the beginning of the 20th Century, and we like to think of ourselves as the center of the world, but Rome doesn't," said Charles Hilken, a St. Mary's College of California history professor who specializes in papal elections.

Last year, Pope Benedict XVI named three new American cardinals, bringing the country's total to 19, 11 of whom are younger than 80 and thus qualified to vote in the papal election. That's nearly 10 percent of the conclave.

Only Italy, home of the Vatican, has more eligible voters, with 28.

Of the American dark horses, Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York has the best chance to succeed Benedict, who will abdicate this month, observers say.

"Look, the Holy Spirit has his little jokes, as they say in the Curia, so you never know what the conclave will do, and Dolan is certainly the most appealing American candidate, likely the most ever," said David Gibson, a writer for Religion News Service and the author of a biography of Benedict. "But he's still a huge long shot."

The reality is that the U.S. is not where the Catholic Church wants to focus its energy, Gibson said. While popes have always come from Europe, the church's future is widely seen as lying in the Southern Hemisphere: in South America, and in Africa, where membership is booming.

"If they go outside Europe for the first time, Latin America is the best bet," Gibson said.

In that sense, we still could see the first "American" pope, albeit one from Brazil (home of the largest Catholic population, more than that of Italy, France and Spain combined), or Mexico, with the second-largest Catholic population, or even Argentina.

There is also a promising candidate from the north: Cardinal Marc Ouellet, the Canadian-born former Archbishop of Quebec who now works in a powerful position in Rome.

"That's more likely than it going to the U.S., to be quite honest," Hilken said.

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American Airlines' Merger Could Come This Week

Scott Gordon, NBC 5 News

People with knowledge of the high-level talks said CEO Tom Horton was pushing for more time and hadn't yet accepted a lesser position with a combined company. One person suggested he was actively working to kill the deal.

American Airlines Moves to Slow...

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American Airlines and US Airways appear ready to announce a merger in the next few days.

One person pushing the merger said that the timeline could be pushed back because of resistance from American executives, but another source close to the Fort Worth-based carrier said negotiations were progressing and appeared to be on-schedule.

Nobody wanted to be named because of the sensitivity of the negotiations.

Under the merger scenario described to NBC 5 and widely reported, US Airways CEO Doug Parker would run the combined airline. American CEO Tom Horton would be named non-executive chairman for a period of one or two years.

Some board members appeared to be pushing for Horton to have a more meaningful role in the new company. His supporters on the board believe he has done a good job guiding the airline through the difficult bankruptcy process.

Horton replaced former CEO Gerard Arpey when American declared bankruptcy in November 2011.

When talk of a merger first surfaced, Horton said he preferred to wait until American exited bankruptcy as a standalone company.

Pressured by creditors, Horton then agreed to consider the idea and entered into confidential talks with US Airways and others.

US Airways executives wooed American's employee groups with offers of higher pay and benefits. AA's union leaders, who have had a testy relationship with management for years, jumped on board with the merger idea.

US Airways' executives have said if they are successful, they would keep the airline's headquarters in Fort Worth. The company would also keep the American brand. The name US Airways would go away.

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Routh Family Member Speaks

Written By Unknown on Senin, 11 Februari 2013 | 14.02

Kevin Cokely & Amanda Guerra, NBC 5 News

Cousin of Eddie Ray Routh wants people to know the state of his cousin before the killings at a gun range in Erath County.

Cousin of Eddie Ray Routh Speaks Out

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Just one year apart, Adam Routh says he and his cousin Eddie Ray Routh are as close as brothers.

"I tell you what.. my cousin was just one of the best guys ever," Adam Routh said. "I love that dude. And I'm going to stand by him 100 percent."

The Marine reservist accused of murdering former Navy SEAL and best-selling author Chris Kyle and his friend Chad Littlefield at an Erath County gun range on February 2. Routh continues to be held on a single count of capital murder and two separate murder complaints. His bond is set at $3 million.

Adam Routh knew his cousin well during childhood. And later, while Adam stayed in Texas, Eddie headed to the military. The US Marine served in both in Iraq and Haiti.

Adam admits when Eddie came back to Texas, he was different.

"I mean, he was still a good guy but there was an emptiness, there was an emptiness there in his eyes," Adam Routh said. "Thinking back and all that and looking back into it.. he was more of an aggressive person."

Family members claim Routh was diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Records confirm he spent time at Green Oaks Psychiatric Hospital in Dallas.

"The general public needs to understand they're bringing our boys home after doing things that nobody else could do," Adam Routh said. "They need help most of all."

Adam believes extreme mental suffering and aggression led Routh to allegedly shoot and kill Kyle and Littlefield.

"I want to speak out because what my cousin do [sic] was wrong... I fully agree with that I don't condone it," Routh said. "I will stand by my cousin 100 percent day by day. It's a terrible tragedy and I feel so sorry for the Kyle family and the Littlefield family."

"But there are measures in our government, whenever you send our boys home.. they're not right," Routh said. "You need to put our money into making our boys straight and sane, to come home so they don't do things like this."

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Man Killed in Officer-Involved Shooting in Fort Worth

NBC 5 News

One man is dead after an officer-involved shooting in the 3100 block of N. Pecan Street in Fort Worth Saturday night.

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Fort Worth police are investigating an officer-involved shooting Saturday night that left one man dead.

Police said that at about 10:15 p.m. officers were called to a shooting in the 3100 block of N. Pecan Street north of downtown Fort Worth. A shooting victim was taken to a local hospital, there's no word on the victim's condition.

Minutes later police tracked down a vehicle matching the description on Pecan Street in the shooting not far from the scene.

Officers approached the car on foot and confronted a man in the car, police said the driver sped toward officers. Fort Worth police said, fearing for their safety and believing an officer had been hit by the car, the other officers shot at the car hitting and killing the driver.

All of the officers involved in the shooting have been placed on routine administrative leave pending an internal investigation, according to Fort Worth police.

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Man Dead in Officer-Involved Shooting

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 10 Februari 2013 | 14.01

Andres Gutierrez, NBC 5 News

A Dallas family tonight claims police used excessive force in a shooting that killed their son overnight. But police said they had no other choice.

Man Dead in Officer-Involved Shooting

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Man Dead After Officer-Involved Shooting

Dallas police say a man who said he wanted to turn himself into police pointed a weapon at officers and officers opened fire killing him.

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A man is dead after a standoff that ended in an officer-involved shooting just after midnight Saturday morning.

Dallas police said they received word that 39-year old Stoney Eugene Rawlinson, a person of interest in a homicide, wanted to turn himself in to police.

According to Dallas police, arrangements were made for the man to meet with uniformed officers in a parking lot in the 6500 block of Skillman Avenue near Abrams Road.

When officers arrived they said the man was sitting inside his car armed with a gun, according to his father, Stoney Eugene Rawlinson Sr., it was a 12-gauge shotgun.

"The officers gave loud verbal commands for the suspect to drop his weapon, Dallas Police Sr. Cpl. Demarquis Black said. "The suspect pointed his weapon at the officers, and fearing for their lives they fired their weapons." 

The SWAT Unit was called in since the man was still in the vehicle and officers were unsure of his condition.

After a brief standoff police determined the man was dead inside the car.

Rawlinson's father has strong feelings over the incident.

"He was giving himself up last night and I felt like he was executed last night," he said.

 

According to criminal records, Rawlinson's past included a single conviction in Mesquite for criminal mischief above $20,000 for which he recieved deferred ajudication.

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Mesquite Teen Safe and No Longer Missing

Gomez Family Photo

15-year-old Libni Gomez was last seen at 12:45 p.m. Friday.

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Mesquite Police say a 15-year-old girl reported missing Friday afternoon has called her family to say she's with her boyfriend.

Police said at about 12:45 p.m. Friday, 15-year-old Libni Gomez went outside to start the family's van parked on the street in front of their home in the 2800 block of Shelduck Drive.

When her mother and sister came out of the house a few minutes later, she was gone and the keys to the van lying on the ground according to police.

Mesquite officers searched the area but could not locate Gomez.

Mesquite police said Saturday afternoon that Gomez's father said she called and told him she was with her boyfriend and is safe.

Officers verified the information and no longer consider Gomez a missing person.

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