Diberdayakan oleh Blogger.

Popular Posts Today

Texas Bill Would Ban a Federal Firearms Ban

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 17 Januari 2013 | 23.18

Omar Villafranca, NBC 5 News

Lawmakers in Austin are coming up with a plan to make it illegal to enforce any federal ban on semi-automatic firearms or gun magazine sizes.

Texas Considers Making Any...

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Texans have loved guns longer than the Lone Star State has been in the United States.

One Texas lawmaker is pushing to keep a possible federal ban on the purchase of certain firearms out of the state.

Rep. Steve Toth, R-The Woodlands, is authoring the Firearm Protection Act, which he says would "make any federal law banning semiautomatic firearms or limiting the size of gun magazines unenforceable within the state's boundaries."

The bill would also make it a felony to enforce any such federal law.

Toth told reporters that his phone and email has been inundated with calls of support.

"It's not going to be hard to get people behind this," he said. "The level of excitement is already there for it."

Gun owners and gun rights advocates say they like the idea.

"I am definitely in favor of keeping our firearms, keeping our magazines, keeping the right to bear arms," said Tom Mannewitz, who runs the Target Master gun store and range in Garland.

But Mannewitz said the bill has a long legal battle ahead.

"I say power to him on that point," he said. "I'm not sure a state can override government, but if it's possible, I think he's got something working for him."

Toth said he is aware of the legal issues that could face the bill but is prepared. He said he is asking Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott to look over the bill for legal hang-ups.

"There is this thing called the Supremacy Clause, but there also is this thing called the United States Constitution and the Second Amendment of the Constitution says that the government shouldn't make any laws regarding our firearms," he said.

The full text of the bill is not yet available.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Third Drowning in Three Years in FW's Trinity Park

advertisement

Click Here!

Woman Drowns in Trinity River

The Fort Worth Fire Department pulled a woman's body from the Trinity River Wednesday afternoon after receiving calls of a woman yelling for help.

More Photos and Videos

A Fort Worth man whose wife drowned in the Trinity River in 2011 says more warning signs are needed after another woman died Wednesday in the same spot.

"I'd like to tell the city to do something about it, to put something bigger there," Gerardo Ladino said.

Ladino and his family were visiting Trinity Park when his 7-year-old son slipped into the river. His wife, Dania, jumped in to save him. The boy made it out, but she drowned. Ladino said he nearly drowned trying to save her.

On Wednesday, Fort Worth firefighters were called to the same area when office workers in a nearby building heard screams and saw someone struggling in the water.

When firefighters arrived, the woman was already under water. A dive team recovered her body.

The woman's identity wasn't immediately released. Fire department spokesman Lt. Tim Hardeman said the woman was in her late teens or early 20s.

She is the third person to die in the same area in less than three years. Many people walk across a rock dam which appears to be a walking path.

One sign on the bank of the river warns "Safety first, Watch your children." Another small sign, attached to the rocks themselves, is a symbol of a person walking with a circle and red line through it.

"I feel really sorry for the family that went through this today," Ladino said. "I don't have any words to tell them, especially when this should not be happening, I think."

City spokesman Bill Begley said no city officials were available to comment on the tragedy or whether the signs are enough. He also noted the river itself is owned by the Tarrant Regional Water District.

Water district spokesman Chad Lorance said the warning signs now in place are clear.

"There are inherent dangers when you're around any water," he said. "It can happen anywhere."

Ladino said the river looks deceptively calm but he quickly learned when he was trying to rescue his wife how powerful the water can be.

"The currents on the edge, it was pulling me under, so I had to let go of her to get my breath and pull myself out, too," he said.

In July 2010, a man drowned trying to save a 7-year-old girl whom he and his wife were trying to adopt. A passing bicyclist managed to save the man's wife and the girl.

"It's very slippery, and people will fall in," Hardeman said. "We do want people to know that is not a walkway."

Ladino said he hopes people are more cautious and called for stronger-worded warning signs.

"How many more is it going to take before they can understand this is dangerous?" he asked.

23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Travis, Fiancee File Lawsuit Over Assault Charges

Ellen Goldberg, NBC 5 News

Country singer Randy Travis and his fiancee have filed a lawsuit against the two men they were arguing with in the simple assault case for which Travis is charged.

Travis Sues Over Assault Allegations

Copy

Close

Link to this video

Copy

Close

Embed this video

Replay

advertisement

Click Here!

Country singer Randy Travis is fighting back against assault charges.

Travis and his fiancee, Mary Beougher, have filed a lawsuit against two men they were arguing with in the parking lot of Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano in August. Police cited Travis for simple assault in the incident.

Travis' attorney, Larry Friedman, said he filed the lawsuit on behalf of people who are bullied everywhere. Travis was protecting his fiancee's honor when he was cited, Friedman said.

According to the nine-page lawsuit filed Wednesday, Travis and Beougher were in the church parking lot to pick up her 15-year-old son from a camping trip.

Her estranged husband, Ritchie Beougher, a Plano dentist, and her brother, William Barnes Davis, pulled up behind the couple, according to the suit. Ritchie Beougher and Mary Beougher got out of their cars.

"Ritchie grabbed Mary by the arms and threw her up against his truck multiple times," the lawsuit states.

Travis then got out of his car and, according to the suit, "exchanged some choice words" with his fiancee's ex and brother.

The suit says that the brother wrestled Travis to the ground and held him there until a Plano police officer who was waiting in the parking lot arrived and arrested him.

The lawsuit says that Ritchie Beougher arranged for the officer to be in the parking lot because "he knew he was going to start a fight."

The lawsuit is seeking damages for bodily injury and civil conspiracy.

NBC 5 left a message for Ritchie Beougher at his dental office in Plano but did not hear back as of Wednesday night.

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

"Aaron's Law" Would Tweak Hacking Law for Late Reddit Activist

advertisement

Click Here!

A Silicon Valley congresswoman took to Reddit this week to propose tweaking a computer fraud law used to prosecute Aaron Swartz, the Internet activist who committed suicide last week and had faced federal hacking charges.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) not only posted a draft of "Aaron's Law" on her website. She also posted a link on Reddit's blog about her proposal to change the 1984 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (PDF) by excluding terms of service violations.

The legislation aims at helping "prevent what happened to Aaron from happening to other Internet users" by seeking to limit the "broad scope" of the act and the wire fraud statute, Lofgren wrote.

Lofgren argues the government inappropriately used vague language in the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to apply Swartz's alleged actions to wire fraud.

"Using the law in this way could criminalize many everyday activities and allow for outlandishly severe penalties," she wrote in the Reddit post.

Her proposal is a narrow one: It would amend the CFAA to exclude terms of service violations, so that it would no longer be a crime to violate a term of service by, for instance, using a fake name on Facebook or downloading more material than is allowed.

"His family's statement about this speaks volumes about the inappropriate efforts undertaken by the U.S. government," Lofgren wrote on the Reddit post.

Swartz's father on Tuesday blamed the government for his son's death, arguing the feds "hounded" him.

"He was killed by the government, and MIT betrayed all of its basic principles," Robert Swartz said Tuesday in Highland Park, Ill., as his son was laid to rest at the family's suburban Chicago synagogue.

"There's no way to reverse the tragedy of Aaron's death, but we can work to prevent a repeat of the abuses of power he experienced," Lofgren said in her Reddit post.

Swartz, who help create Reddit and RSS, the technology behind blogs, podcasts and other web-based subscription services, was found dead on Friday in his Brooklyn, N.Y., apartment.

He faced decades in prison amid federal charges he illegally gained access to articles from a Massachusetts Institute of Technology computer archive. His family blamed his death on "prosecutorial overreach."

Prosecutors alleged that he had violated JSTOR's terms of service by using automated programs and downloaded more articles than allowed. Lofgren's bill, if it passes, would forbid these allegations from being criminal charges.

In fact, JSTOR had urged federal prosecutors to drop their case, which hinged on Swartz violating the terms of service agreement with JSTOR for downloading too many articles at once.

Swartz had contended that JSTOR's fees limited access to academic work produced at American schools.

JSTOR announced this week that it would make more than 4.5 million articles publicly available for free.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Anti-Doping Experts: Culture Must Change

advertisement

Click Here!

Anti-doping pioneer Don Catlin spent a quarter century trying to catch athletes using performance-enhancing drugs, snaring many of the world's biggest cheaters — but he never caught Lance Armstrong.

Catlin figures he must have analyzed about 50 of Armstrong's urine samples at his UCLA lab over the years, and the seven-time Tour de France winner, the most scrutinized athlete on Earth, always turned up clean.

"That's fairly disturbing," Catlin said a couple of days before Armstrong's doping confession was to air on prime-time television. "We thought we had a good program."

How Armstrong's "Blood Doping" Went Unnoticed

After years of vehemently denying the charges, Lance Armstrong admitted to doping in an interview with Oprah Winfrey. It is believed Armstrong participated in "blood doping," which improves stamina but not strength by boosting red blood cells in the body and is difficult to prove. Dr. Bruce Hensel reports for the NBC4 News at 5 p.m. on Jan. 15, 2013.

More Photos and Videos

Going after dopers is an exercise in endless frustration, because unscrupulous athletes will always find new drugs and new methods to beat tests, and sports organizations have too much to lose by allowing stringent inspections. That is why Catlin, a chemist, has moved beyond the endless game of cat-and-mouse, and thinks the rest of the world should, too.

Testing holds a necessary place in anti-doping efforts, he says, but science alone can't solve sports' problems. The chase will never be won — and sports will never really be cleansed — unless the focus shifts toward a voluntary system that rewards honest athletes while pressuring the dirty ones to change their ways.

Kind of like peer pressure for jocks.

"That's what it's been criticized for, and to that I say, 'Nothing much works these days,'" Catlin said.

Case in point is Armstrong, who fooled authorities for a decade before the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency released a mountain of evidence against him last year and accused him of running "the most sophisticated, professionalized and successful doping program that sport has ever seen." A month earlier, his former U.S. Postal Service teammate, Tyler Hamilton, published a book about how they got away with it.

"Very scary stuff," Catlin said.

Catlin got out of the testing business six years ago, ending a 25-year career at UCLA's Olympic Analytical Lab, which he built into one of the world's premier testing facilities. The lab broke open the Bay Area Laboratory Cooperative, which was linked to many elite athletes, including track star Marion Jones and San Francisco Giants slugger Barry Bonds, by discovering the designer steroid THG. Catlin later developed a test that was used to catch Olympic gold medal sprinter Justin Gatlin with unnatural levels of testosterone.

His lab also specialized in detecting the blood-oxygen booster EPO, which Armstrong is accused of using.

Catlin left his lab in 2007 to develop the nonprofit Anti-Doping Research Institute in Los Angeles.

"The cause is good, but after 25 years you know everything about the field, and you don't see it going away," Catlin said. "You see doping staying forever and that's frustrating. You try to figure out, as I'm doing now, better approaches to take the problem from very different ways."

University of Texas doping historian John Hoberman doesn't know Catlin, but, he, too, believes that the only way to save sport from doping is to reform its culture. He advocates for a refocusing on "the human chemistry" of the scourge.

The most formidable obstacle to clean competition, Hoberman says, is a kind of institutional corruption in which members of groups that profit from the "sports entertainment industry" are implicitly or explicitly allowing doping to happen. To these organizations, the "appearance of compliance" with World Anti-Doping Agency codes is enough.

"The other aspect of this is the many national and international sports officials who should be good guys, and aren't," Hoberman said.

That is why Hoberman hopes that Armstrong — who arguably knows more about doping than any of his accusers — will implicate top cycling officials in his confession. That could help spark an unprecedented reform effort.

"If you can get everything out of him, you can make extraordinary inroads in improving the culture," Hoberman said.

But even with Armstrong's confession, neither Hoberman nor Catlin is idealistic enough to believe that doping is ever going to end.

"This is not the last they're going to see of (someone like) Armstrong," Catlin said. "Look at his story and ask: Could this (still) be going on today? The answer is yes."

23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

One Injured in Arlington House Fire

advertisement

Click Here!

A Thursday morning house fire in Arlington injured one person, according to fire crews.

The fire started at about 1:25 a.m. in the 2400 block of Jo Lyn Lane. Linda Rivon, who lives next door, snapped a picture shortly after the fire started. The picture shows flames shooting through the top of the home.

An older man and woman were able to escape out the back door. Fire crews said the two are brother and sister, around 80 years old.

The man was suffering from smoke inhalation and was taken to the hospital. His injuries are not believed to be life threatening. The woman was not injured.

Firefighters said she woke up the man and helped him out of the home.

Investigators have not yet determined how the fire started. 

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fake Te'o Girlfriend Tweets Response To Hoax

AP

FILE - In this Oct. 27, 2012, file photo, Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o stands on the sidelines during an NCAA college football game against Oklahoma in Norman, Okla. Notre Dame issued a release Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2013, saying a story about Te'o's girlfriend dying, which he said inspired him to play better as he helped the Fighting Irish get to the BCS title game, turned out to be a hoax apparently perpetrated against the linebacker. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File)

advertisement

Click Here!

The tale of the girlfriend who hoodwinked Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o continues.

In response to a detailed, published article about Teo's supposed California girlfriend who died of leukemia last year, University of Notre Dame Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick on Wednesday night said Te'o was the victim of a "very elaborate, very sophisticated hoax."

Following the school response, the fake girlfriend, Lennay Kekua, apparently tweeted a response late last night.

New Developments in College Football Star's Girlfriend Hoax

In a bizarre and confusing story out South Bend, Indiana, Notre Dame All-American linebacker Manti Te'o says he was the victim of a cruel hoax, and the mastermind behind it may be living in Southern California. Robert Kovacik reports for the NBC4 News at 11 p.m. on Jan. 16, 2013.

Notre Dame Athletic Director Speaks of Te'o

A published story that Notre Dame football star Manti Te'o's girlfriend had died of leukemia was dismissed by the university Wednesday as a hoax perpetrated against the linebacker.

More Photos and Videos

"It isn't fair to drag Reagan and Troy into this.. a lot of truths and myths need to be addressed here, and they will be at noon PST tomorrow," someone tweeted from an unverified Twitter account. 

The tweet refers to Arizona Cardinals fullback Reagan Mauia who told ESPN that he and Pittsburgh Steelers star Troy Polamalu actually met the girl. Mauia told ESPN that before Te'o's relationship with Kekua, they became "good friends" and talked on and off.

Is it true? Is she real?

Throughout Te'o's season — one that ended with him placing second in Heisman trophy voting, and playing in the BCS National Championship game — the story of his sick girlfriend provided a tragic back story to his triumphs on the field.

But Swarbrick said that, based on a report from an investigative firm hired by the school, he believes Te'o was duped into an online relationship with a woman whose death was then faked by the perpetrators of the ruse.

Te'o called the situation "incredibly embarrassing."

"Over an extended period of time, I developed an emotional relationship with a woman I met online," he said in a written statement responding to the article. "We maintained what I thought to be an authentic relationship by communicating frequently online and on the phone, and I grew to care deeply about her."

"To realize that I was the victim of what was apparently someone's sick joke and constant lies was, and is, painful and humiliating," he wrote. "In retrospect, I obviously should have been much more cautious. If anything good comes of this, I hope it is that others will be far more guarded when they engage with people online than I was."

Get the latest headlines sent to your inbox!


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More
techieblogger.com Techie Blogger Techie Blogger