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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/7/2013 3:40:53 PM
Rockne Newell, arraigned on homicide charges today, lost his property in a dispute earlier this year

Pa. man charged with killing 3: Town stole my home


This photo taken May 22, 2013 shows Rockne Newell talking about his trials and tribulations with Ross Township, Pa., over junk on his property. State police identified 59-year-old Newell as the suspect in a shooting Monday, Aug, 5, 2013 in which three people were killed and at least two others injured in Ross Township. Witnesses say he barged into a municipal meeting room and began shooting before being tackled by a local official and possibly another person. (AP Photo/Pocono Record, Keith R. Stevenson)
Associated Press

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SAYLORSBURG, Pa. (AP) — A disabled junk dealer feuding with local officials over his debris-strewn property packed a rental car with guns and ammunition before opening fire at a town meeting and killing three men, authorities said Tuesday.

Rockne Newell, 59, had lost his property this year in a court fight over complaints that he lived in a storage shed, built an illegal culvert and used a bucket outside as a toilet.

At his arraignment on homicide charges Tuesday morning, a judge asked Newell if he owned any real estate.

"They stole it from me. That's what started all this," he replied.

Newell allegedly used a Ruger Mini-14 rifle to blast a barrage of gunfire through a wall into the meeting room Monday night in Ross Township, about 85 miles north of Philadelphia, before entering the room and shooting a supervisor and four residents, two of whom survived.

Newell then retreated to the car and picked up a revolver, authorities said. When he returned to the meeting room, the 5-foot-10, 240-pound suspect was tackled by two men and shot in the leg during the scuffle, officials said.

"I wish I killed more of them!" Newell shouted when state Trooper Nicolas De La Iglesia arrived on the scene before 8 p.m., according to the trooper's affidavit.

Two men died at the scene and the third, Ross Township zoning officer David Fleetwood, died after being flown to Lehigh Valley Medical Center. Fleetwood, 62, also served as a supervisor in nearby Chestnuthill Township, the coroner said.

Officials identified the slain residents as Gerard J. Kozic, 53, and James V. LaGuardia, 64, both of Saylorsburg.

At the hospital an hour later, Newell told police he had gone to the meeting in hopes of finding the township officials in one place.

"He intended to shoot the solicitor and supervisors and thought that he would then be killed," police said in the affidavit.

Newell was about to fire his .44 Magnum revolver when the township's parks and recreation director, Bernie Kozen, and resident Mark Kresh wrestled him to the ground, Monroe County Coroner Bob Allen said at a news conference.

"Two very courageous individuals positioned themselves in a way that they were able to jump on this subject as he came through the door," State Police Lt. Col. George Bivens said. "This could have been much worse."

The two survivors were released from the hospital, along with Newell.

Terry Doll, who lives near Newell, said he was well-known as a "kook," an intelligent man whose unpredictability stoked fear in some neighbors.

"When I found out about the shooting, we all looked at each other and said his name," said Doll, 58, who has lived in her house for more than 30 years. "We certainly always hoped that he would have never done something like this."

About 15 to 18 people had been at the meeting, including a Pocono Record reporter covering his first Ross Township meeting.

"The thing that got my attention: plaster flying out, blowing out through the walls. Witnesses would later tell me they saw pictures exploding away from the walls," reported Chris Reber said in an account to his editors.

In June, the newspaper published an article describing an 18-year fight between the township and Newell over his property, which includes an old camper filled with wooden pallets, a leaning garage close to collapse and a propane tank inside an old dog house.

Township supervisors voted in February 2012 to take legal action against Newell for alleged zoning and sewer regulations. In October, he set up a fundraising page online to try to raise $10,000 for legal fees.

"Ross township took me to court & the court ruled I have to vacate my home of 20 years," Newell wrote on the page. He said he lived on $600 a month in Social Security benefits and had no money to clean his property.

Newell told the newspaper he was unemployed for years after an injury from a crash and had nowhere else to go.

The state Department of Environmental Protection had ordered Newell in March to stop dredging on the property and restore the creek.

"He wasn't happy about the situation, but he was cooperative," department spokeswoman Colleen Connolly recalled.

Newell didn't enter a plea at his arraignment on three homicide counts and two counts each of attempted homicide and aggravated assault. He was given a form for a public defender, but he did not request a lawyer. A preliminary hearing was scheduled for Aug. 19.

Newell's father told WFMZ-TV that his son had been talking about shooting township officials for a while and as recently as Monday. Pete Newell said on the day of the shooting, his son told him he had no reason to live.

"It's no excuse for murder ... but they pushed him to his point," he said of the long battle to evict his son from the property.

Russell Kresge, a township supervisor who lives down the road from Newell and attended Monday night's meeting, found it difficult to discuss what happened.

"This is a little township that always ran super," he said from his front porch, a friendly Rottweiler by his side. Kresge's wife said the dog could sense something was wrong with her master and was shedding abnormally.

___

Dale reported from Philadelphia. Associated Press reporters Patrick Walters and Keith Collins in Philadelphia and photographer Chris Post in Saylorsburg, Pa., contributed to this report.



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/7/2013 3:58:53 PM
A California man begs a friend suspected of killing his wife and abducting their children to turn himself in.

Dad of missing kids asks suspect to turn self in
Police tape lines the perimeter of a partially burned home Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013, near the U.S.-Mexico border in Boulevard, Calif. The husband of a woman whose body was found in the house said Tuesday that he knew the man suspected of killing his wife and abducting one or both of their children. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)

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SAN DIEGO (AP) — The husband of a woman whose body was found in a burned house near the U.S.-Mexico border pleaded Tuesday with his friend who is suspected of killing his wife and abducting one or both of their children to turn himself in.

"Jim, I can't fathom what you were thinking," said Brett Anderson, addressing his short statement at a news conference to his friend James Lee DiMaggio, the subject of a growing manhunt. "The damage is done."

Anderson also pleaded with his missing daughter, 16-year-old Hannah Anderson, who authorities said was in grave danger, to run away from DiMaggio if she got the chance.

Anderson did not make reference to his 8-year-old son Ethan, who was also missing.

The remains of a child were found in the burned house with the children's mother, 42-year-old Christina Anderson.

An autopsy was performed Tuesday, but authorities said it could still take a few days for DNA testing to determine if the child was Ethan.

"It is a possibility that it's Ethan," said sheriff's Lt. Glenn Giannantonio. "Right now we just don't know. And we're praying that it isn't Ethan."

The San Diego County Sheriff's Department has said DiMaggio and Christina Anderson had been in a close, platonic relationship.

Sheriff's officials referred to Brett Anderson, who arrived from out of town to talk to investigators Tuesday, as her ex-husband, but he told The Associated Press that the couple had still been married.

On Sunday night, authorities found Christina Anderson's body near a dead dog when they extinguished flames at the rural home of DiMaggio in Boulevard, a remote hamlet 65 miles east of San Diego.

The child's body was found later as they sifted through rubble.

An Amber Alert advised freeway motorists, television viewers and mobile phone subscribers about a blue Nissan Versa with California license plates that DiMaggio was believed to be driving. The California Highway Patrol said the suspect could be headed to Texas or Canada.

The FBI joined the search and the Amber Alert was later extended to Mexico's Baja California state, which borders Boulevard.

Monday marked the first time that mobile phone users were notified of a statewide Amber Alert in California through their phones, CHP spokeswoman Jamie Coffee said. The alert system, which was introduced in December, sends messages automatically, based on the phone's location, not the phone number.

Christina Anderson grew up with her mother and stepfather in the east San Diego suburb of Santee, and she aspired to a career in child psychology, said her ex-husband, James Chatfield of La Grande, Ore. The marriage lasted four years, until 1992, and Chatfield said he lost touch.

"She was a high school sweetheart," he said. "It was a marriage of convenience that just didn't work out."

Chatfield said he helped Anderson's current husband move to The Dalles, Ore., in the early 1990s, but they lost contact.

___

Associated Press news researcher Rhonda Shafner contributed to this report.


Dad of missing kids pleads with suspect

Dad of missing kids pleads with suspect: 'Jim, I can't fathom what you were thinking'

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/7/2013 4:16:13 PM

Father Tells Abducted Daughter to Run

3 hrs ago

The father of the two missing California children spoke out, telling his daughter to run as soon as she got the chance. Some think since Brett Anderson only mentioned his daughter Hannah and not his son Ethan, also missing, that the boy may already be dead.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/7/2013 5:22:10 PM
Bird flu case has alarming implications

Person-to-Person H7N9 Transmission: First Case Detailed in New Report

LiveScience.com

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The case of a father and daughter in China who both became infected with H7N9 bird flu provides the strongest evidence yet that the virus can transmit from person to person, experts say.

The father, a 60-year-old living in the Jiangsu province of eastern China, fell ill about five to six days after he visited a live poultry market in March, according to a new report that details the case today (Aug. 6) in the British Medical Journal.

The man's 32-year-old daughter, who became ill about two weeks later, did not visit poultry markets, but did spend several days caring for her sick father before he was admitted to the hospital.

Both patients became severely ill, developing fevers and pneumonia, and later died from the disease. [See 6 Things You Should Know About the New Bird Flu]

Genetic testing revealed that the patients were infected with nearly identical strains of H7N9.

The most likely explanation for these cases is that the father became infected with H7N9 from a poultry market (or the poultry he purchased there), and then he passed the virus directly to his daughter, according to the researchers, at theJiangsu Province Centre for Disease Control and Prevention. This is the first detailed report of probable human-to-human transmission of H7N9, the researchers said.

Cases of H7N9 first appeared in China in March, and so far 133 people have become ill, including 43 who have died. The majority of cases appear to be unconnected to each other.

The new report does not mean that H7N9 is getting closer to causing a pandemic in people, James Rudge and Richard Coke, of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in Bangkok, Thailand, wrote in an editorial accompanying the report in the journal.

Limited human transmission of bird flu viruses has been seen in the past, and is not surprising, Rudge and Coke said. Some animal studies also suggested that H7N9 can spread between mammals. But so far, the virus does not appear to spread efficiently — there is no evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission with H7N9, Rudge and Coke said.

In the case of the father and daughter, the daughter was deeply involved in caring for her father — she cleaned up his mucus, and she cleaned his teeth without using protective equipment, according to the report.

Of the 43 people who came into contact with the father and daughter before and during the time they were ill, none became infected with H7N9, the report said.

Still, H7N9 is concerning. The virus does not cause symptoms in birds, so it can spread undetected within poultry populations, Rudge and Coke said.

The report provides "a timely reminder of the need to remain extremely vigilant," Rudge and Coke said. "The threat posed by H7N9 has by no means passed."

Follow Rachael Rettner @RachaelRettner. Follow LiveScience @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.


Deadly H7N9 Bird Flu Breaks Out in China

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/8/2013 12:31:06 AM

Terror threat: analysis

CBC.ca Videos
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Frank Cilluffo, director of the Homeland Security Policy Institute at George Washington University, assesses the threat of terrorism in light of events in Yemen
Yemen Terrorism and Anti US Europe Terrorist Threats Analysis



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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