Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Woman charged with attempted murder of baby boy

Woman charged with attempted murder of baby boy

woman with one count of attempted murder for allegedly throwing a seven-month-old baby boy from a children's hospital parking garage Monday night, according to a statement from local authorities.

The infant, who was rushed to a trauma center, remains in critical condition, police said.

Sonia Hermosillo, 31, was detained shortly after the incident and remains in custody, Orange police said in a statement Tuesday. No bail has been set, authorities said.

A woman walking near the Orange County Children's Hospital saw the infant fall from the second level of the garage and called police, Sgt. Dan Adams said.

Investigators later interviewed several witnesses and reviewed a surveillance video from the garage. The image of a license plate on a 2000 Chevy Blazer seen leaving the garage shortly after the incident led police to Hermosillo.

Authorities found an empty child seat in Hermosillo's vehicle, according to the statement. Hermosillo's husband reported earlier that both his wife and their seven-month-old son were missing, the statement said.

Battle for Libya: Rebel Forces Loot Gadhafi's Armory

Battle for Libya: Rebel Forces Loot Gadhafi's Armory

Libyan rebel fighters prepare to shoot towards pro-Gadhafi forces during fighting in downtown Tripoli, LIbya, Monday, Aug. 22, 2011. 
Large numbers of rebel fighters are retreating into Libya's western towns and cities to regroup with weapons looted from Moammar Gadhafi's armory while others continue to clash with the Libyan leader's regime as the battle for Tripoli enters its third day.

Rebels broke into Bab al-Azizya, the main military compound in Tripoli, and reportedly filled several pick-up trucks to the brim with munitions and supplies. Rebel soldiers told ABC News that they plan to return to their bases then go back to Tripoli to attack Gadhafi's loyalists one more time in an attempt to seal victory.

The retreat is a shift in the situation in Tripoli on Monday when reports indicated that two of Gadhafi's three sons were captured by rebels and the 40-year reign of his regime was crumbling.

Gadhafi's forces have been pushed into a corner since rebel fighters entered Tripoli on Sunday, with State Department officials estimating that the rebels are in control of 90 percent of Tripoli.

The conflict reportedly entered an extremely bloody phase on Tuesday with violent street fights erupting across Tripoli, while hospitals in all the cities and towns around the capital overflowed with casualties, and reports of extensive deaths flooded in.

Late Monday night an emboldened Seif al Islam Gadhafi -- the son and heir apparent of Moammar Gadhafi whom Libyan rebels claimed to have captured -- re-appeared to a cheering crowd at Tripoli's Rixos Hotel, where he claimed the Libyan regime will be victorious.

"We are going to win because the people are with us. That's why we're going to win," Seif al Islam Gadhafi said after turning up early Tuesday morning amongst regime forces at the hotel where dozens of foreign journalists are staying.

"Look at them, look at them," he said referring to Libyans who have flooded the capital. "In the streets, everywhere.

"We have broken the backbone of the rebels. It was a trap," he told the BBC. "We gave them a hard time, so we are winning."

When asked if his father is safe, Seif al Islam laughed and said, "Of course."

His appearance in a white limousine amid a convoy of armored SUVs on the streets of Tripoli conflicts with the rebels' National Transitional Council claims Sunday that three of Gadhafi's sons had either been captured or surrendered.

The leadership's spokesman Sadeq al-Kabir had no explanation for his sudden re-appearance and could only say, "This could be all lies."

On Monday the NTC's ambassador to the United States Ali Suleiman Aujali told ABC News that Moammar Gadhafi's other son Muhammad Gadhafi had escaped after surrendering to opposition forces.

Muhammad had publicly announced that he was surrendering during a weepy phone call to Al Jazeera in which he said his house was surrounded by gunfire.

Mohammed Abdel-Rahman, another rebel fighter spokesman who was in Tripoli, said that the "danger is still there" as long as Moammar Gadhafi remains at large.

Speaking while on vacation at Martha's Vineyard, Mass on Monday, President Obama said that the situation in Tripoli is "very fluid," while calling on Gadhafi to resign. He also praised the rebels fighting to oust the strongman and gain control of Tripoli.

"Although it's clear that Gadhafi's rule is over, he still has the opportunity to reduce further bloodshed by explicitly relinquishing power to the people of Libya and calling for those forces that continue to fight to lay down their arms for the sake of Libya," Obama said from Martha's Vineyard, Mass., where he's vacationing.

"I want to emphasize that this is not over yet. As the regime collapses, there is still fierce fighting in some areas. We have reports of regime elements threatening to continue fighting," Obama said.

Is This the End of Moammar Gadhafi? Watch Video

Moammar Gadhafi, Libya and the World Watch Video

Moammar Gadhafi: 'Mad Dog of the Middle East' Watch Video


As Obama spoke, the whereabouts of Gadhafi are still unknown. Pentagon officials believe Gadhafi is still in Libya.

"I think that's probably fair to say that we believe he's still in the country," Pentagon spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said. "On what basis can we say that? Just again, it's a belief. We do not have any information that he has left the country."

Lapan said there's been no indication that there's been any outreach to the United States from the Ghadafi government.

 Gadhafi was last heard publicly on Sunday when he spoke in an audio message urging Libyans to protect Tripoli from rebels. ABC News Jeffrey Kofman contributed to this report

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Braddon murder accused pleads not guilty

Braddon murder accused pleads not guilty



A 20-year-old Canberra man has pleaded not guilty to murdering a man in Braddon last week.

Taylor Lewis Schmidt was apprehended by police in Queanbeyan yesterday and extradited to the ACT.

Today he faced the ACT Magistrates Court charged with murdering 27-year-old university graduate Liang Zhao in Braddon early last Thursday morning.

Schmidt appeared distraught and slumped in his chair as he heard Magistrate Maria Doogan charge him with murder.

Schmidt has also been charged with using a baseball bat to threaten the victim and rob him of his mobile phone and $21 in cash.

He has pleaded not guilty to both charges and has been remanded in custody until October.

Yesterday a 17-year-old boy was also charged with the aggravated robbery and murder of Mr Zhao.

He faced the ACT Children's Court which heard the teenager used a machete to menace the victim and rob him.

The teenager remains in custody and is due to face court again in October.

Mr Zhao's body was found outside the Northbourne Flats in Braddon about 6:40am on Thursday. He had suffered extensive and severe head injuries.

Police say he was ferociously attacked while walking along Northbourne Avenue on his way home from the Jolimont Centre.

Newer Canadian immigrants have fewer heart health risks

Newer Canadian immigrants have fewer heart health risks

Immigrants who have lived in Canada for more than 15 years are at greater risk of developing cardiovascular disease than those who have lived in the country for a shorter period of time, according to researchers.

The study by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) was released Tuesday and is published in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology.

Using data from Statistics Canada’s national population and Canadian community healthy surveys from 1996-2007, it focused on immigrants living in Ontario, where the majority of the about 250,000 people who migrate to the country annually usually settle.

“We found a negative acculturation effect, in that long-term residents of Ontario had worse cardiovascular risk profiles than recent immigrants,” said Maria Chiu, the study’s principal investigator and an ICES doctoral fellow.

“Moreover, the degree to which cardiovascular health declined was different for different ethnic groups.”

The study notes there is growing evidence that cardiovascular risk profiles differ across Canada’s major ethnic groups. It assessed 163,797 participants:

154,653 white individuals.
3,364 South Asians.
3,038 Chinese.
2,742 black individuals.

Chiu and her fellow researchers, from institutes and hospitals affiliated with the University of Toronto and University of Ottawa, looked at the prevalence of risk factors for heart disease and stroke among immigrants who had resided in Ontario for at least 15 years, compared with those who had lived in the province less than 15 years.

They found that for all ethnic groups, cardiovascular risk factor profiles – ie., the percentage of people with two major risk factors, such as Type 2 diabetes, obesity, smoking and high blood pressure – were worse among those who lived longer than 15 years in Canada.

Canadians of Chinese descent showed the worst decline in heart health over time, followed by whites, blacks and South Asians.

The study also found smoking was a major risk factor for blacks and South Asians, especially females, living in Canada 15 years or more.

The study extended beyond examining the physical effects of being an immigrant in Canada over the longer term.

It also found higher psychosocial stress among South Asian females who had been residents for at least 15 years, although the researchers were uncertain about the reasons for that finding.

Heart disease incidence drops, risk factors rise

ICES notes that this study is the first to pinpoint which factors most likely contribute to the decline in heart health in each of Canada’s major ethnic groups.

The research found, for instance, that the Chinese and white individuals in the study who lived in Canada at least 15 years had a higher prevalence of diabetes than their recent immigrant counterparts. The researchers believe this finding is likely driven by much higher obesity rates among Chinese and white individuals who were longer-term residents.

As well, the cardiovascular dangers among the black and South Asian groups were mainly linked to their higher propensity to smoke – in fact, black and South Asian females who had lived in Canada for at least 15 years were three to four times more likely to smoke compared to their recent immigrant counterparts.

The study concludes that advances in clinical and public health strategies have resulted in the reduction of cardiovascular disease incidence and mortality. But the rates of cardiovascular risk factors, namely obesity, diabetes and high blood pressure, continue to rise.

“Given that immigrants will be responsible for the net growth of the Canadian population by 2031, there is a need to better understand how we can preserve the healthy lifestyles and behaviours of recent immigrants and how we can reduce the negative influences of Western culture that causes health to deteriorate in long-term residents,” it says.

“These study findings will enable us to be more responsive to the health-care needs facing different ethnic-immigrant groups in Ontario and will be critical in the development of cardiovascular disease prevention strategies and appropriate health-care delivery.”



Saturday, August 6, 2011

After tornado, Alabama students finally get graduation day

After tornado, Alabama students finally get graduation day

Alabama students finally graduate

(CNN) -- There might not have been a truer definition of bittersweet than the events that unfolded this weekend in an Alabama college town recovering from an April day when the winds screamed and the houses blew away like feathers.

In the Coleman Coliseum, named after a long-time Crimson Tide historian, 4,770 young men and women, draped in black gowns emblazoned with red A's, marched down the aisles normally reserved for basketball audiences. Sports are big at the University of Alabama; the spirit of legendary football coach Bear Bryant looms large in these parts.

It was appropriate then that Fan Day, heralding the start of a new football season, falls Sunday, just a day after momentous ceremonies and remembrances that, this year, came with an uneasy blend of joy and sorrow, hope and despair.

A killer tornado twisted and turned through Tuscaloosa April 27, reshaping the lives of the latest batch of graduates at the university that dominates this otherwise sleepy town. Six of their own were among the 47 dead.

After the storm, the university ended the semester. School finished abruptly. Many students joined the community's relief efforts or went home.

This weekend's graduation helped bring closure, students said, and will help them start anew.

Friday night, the names of the six students who were killed were said aloud at a candlelight vigil on campus.

Scott Atterton, Danielle Downs, Ashley Harrison, Melanie Nicole Mixon, Morgan Sigler and Marcus Smith.

Their families watched as former student government President James Fowler laid down a red rose for each of their loved ones.

"Tonight we honor them," Fowler said. "Tonight we heal."

At the first of two undergraduate commencement ceremonies Saturday, University President Robert Witt called the names of their parents. They stood to applause and then accepted their children's diplomas awarded posthumously.

David and Darlene Harrison pinned photos of Ashley on themselves. It was hard to keep eyes dry.

"It was huge for those families to see the university body to recognize what they are going through," said Shannon Lindamood, who earned her degree in dance.

She could not imagine her own family -- her parents or her brother -- having to accept on her behalf.

"I know it will never be the same for them," Lindamood said. "But I hope this helped them."

The six were not there, among their classmates, for the all-important day that marks the end of student life and the start of the real world. Their absence bore down inside the Coliseum like a dark cloud hanging low, puncturing pomp and circumstance with the grief of what was lost.

'Walking for a city'

That April morning, journalism student Candace Murphy was out reporting on another storm north of Tuscaloosa. She was struck by the damage to people's homes, by the stealth destruction wrought so randomly.

She returned to the television station where she was working only to realize that what had been a news story for her could quickly become very personal.

The weatherman announced the tornado was heading straight toward Tuscaloosa. She could see the violent vortex speeding straight toward downtown and campus. When the power went out, Murphy knew it was serious.

"It's OK," said one of the anchors to her husband. "We'll make it." Murphy started crying. She huddled with others under the anchor desk and began praying. "Our father who art in heaven ..."

She pleaded with God: "Please let this be over."

Minutes passed. They felt like unending hours. When it was finally over, Murphy walked outside on campus and was, at first, heartened by the lack of devastation. The university campus was largely spared destruction. Everything was all right, she thought.

It was only later when her station sent her out to cover the tornado that she realized the scope of the suffering.

Forty-seven dead. Five have not been found to this day. Nearly 7,275 homes and businesses damaged or destroyed -- 12% of Tuscaloosa.

Murphy was heartbroken. This was the city that had shaped her. She had even learned to love football.

She felt lucky to be alive. But she also felt short-changed when she opened the university e-mail announcing the end of classes and the cancellation of graduation on May 7.

There would be no Senior Week. No last few nights of revelry with her Alpha Omnicron Pi sorority sisters.

"I couldn't experience any of that," she said. "I felt stripped of all my privileges."

Murphy remained in Tuscaloosa, continuing her job at the local television station. On the three-month anniversary of the tornado, she broke down. That's when it hit her hard, she said.

The images in her head were vivid -- of trees stripped of their bark, squished cars, missing walls and debris everywhere. She reported standing in front of a building once. She couldn't tell what it used to be until a man walked up to her and said: "That was my home."

Murphy thought she had healed. She hadn't.

But this week brought relief. Thursday night, she and 10 of her sorority sisters hit the town for one last hurrah.

Saturday, she will collect her degree in the afternoon ceremony with her parents, brother, grandparents and godparents looking on. "This will be a day I will never forget," she said. "I am walking not only for myself but for everyone in the tornado. I am walking for a city."

Closure and a new start

Desiree Mahr drove west on Interstate 20 from Atlanta Friday afternoon, back to the place she had called home for four years.

She thought of another drive she made more than three months ago.

After the tornado, Mahr left Tuscaloosa for home in Illinois. When she crossed the Alabama state line, she fought back tears. She had not wanted her college days to end like that.

"I never even got to say a proper goodbye," she said.

That haunted her as she began a new life on her own in Atlanta, working at a public relations firm. It felt strange in some ways to go back now as a graduating student. But she looked forward to finally draping a commencement gown about her, feel the mortarboard snug on her head.

Bethany Travis felt the same way. She, too, was returning to Tuscaloosa from Atlanta.

"We're going to start remembering our friends who aren't here to walk, and who can never even walk again," she said. "I think it's probably going to be more sad than happy."

In Tuscaloosa, Jessica Winters readied her dress -- a black, after-5 that she bought at J.C. Penney.

She had survived the storm huddled in the hallway of her apartment with her roommate. She put pillows on top of her head and prayed as windows busted and wood shards sliced through the rooms. An entire side of her apartment building was gone.

They are memories that Winters will live with for the rest of her life. Saturday, she will add to those memories in a good way.

"I am excited," she said.

The Rev. Kelvin Croom, whose church was destroyed in the storm, said it was time for the university, for the entire community, to move on.

"It was admirable of the university to postpone the graduation," said Croom, whose congregation includes five graduating students. "It's closure but also an opening. It's the beginning of another school year. What an awesome way to start it."

In another part of Alabama, Scott Atterton's mother stayed at home Saturday. The tribute to her son was too painful to bear.

But she plans to hang Atterton's degree in her house, a mark of his accomplishment given to him on a day when the University of Alabama reached an emotional milestone.

Organization gives more details about deadly polar bear attack

Organization gives more details about deadly polar bear attack

The polar bear was shot dead following the attack, on the Von Postbreen glacier in the Norwegian Arctic.

London (CNN) -- The organization that oversaw a school trip to the Norwegian Arctic where a polar bear attacked and killed a 17-year-old boy on Saturday has ended its expedition.

The British Schools Exploring Society (BSES) said that they, police and local authorities "feel it would be wrong to continue their expedition in light of the tragic incident."

BSES identified the boy who was killed as Horatio Chapple. The organization has been in touch with all of the families affected by the attack -- four others were injured; two severely -- who gave their support and understanding, the group said.

"Horatio was so excited about his plans to be a doctor, strong, fearless and kind with an amazing sense of humour and an ability to laugh at himself," his family said via BSES. "He was on the cusp of adulthood and had a clear vision of where his life was going."

A polar bear attacked the students' tents on Friday as they took part in a school trip to the Norwegian Arctic archipelago of Svalbard, officials.

The group who was attacked -- 11 students and two leaders -- belonged to a British school and were at the Von Postbreen glacier.

The BSES expedition was made up of seven teams known as "Fires," the group said. The team that was attacked was taking part in a long-term project to study glaciers and document changes from previous expeditions as they looked into climate change, BSES said.

The two leaders, Andy Ruck and Spike Reid, sustained severe injuries, the organization said, and have been stabilized after operations.

Every other team in the field returned to the base camp and are safe and accounted for, BSES said.