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ABC's 20/20 to update investigation into Sheena Morris' death

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The show will air at 10 p.m. on ABC.

Syracuse, NY -- ABC's 20/20 will update the investigation into the death of a former town of Clay woman who was found dead in Florida in 2009 on tonight's episode.

Sheena Morris, 22, who was born and raised in Central New York, was found hanged in her hotel room Jan. 1, 2009, on Anna Maria Island in Florida. The Bradenton Beach Police Department ruled her death a suicide. Morris' family says they have evidence that proves her death was not a suicide, but was staged to look like one.

ABC's 20/20 first picked up the story in the summer of 2013 and the episode aired in October 2013. From the photos of the Florida hotel room to the recordings of the calls made to 911, ABC's 20/20 revealed the evidence from the investigation of Morris' death to a national audience.

ShennaMorris.JPG Sheena Morris

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement's review of the investigation reopened the case in October 2012 after a series of stories by the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. The Post-Standard first wrote about Morris' family's quest for answers in April 2010.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement concluded its investigation in August and released its report in November 2013. The FDLE ruled that Morris did take her own life and "no evidence of homicide" was found.

Kelly Osborn, Morris' mother, has conducted her own investigation since her daughter's death. Osborn said there are issues with the FDLE's investigation.

ABC's David Muir will report tonight on the evidence that was missed and the questions that were never asked. The show will air at 10 p.m. on ABC.

Sarah Moses covers the northern suburbs of Onondaga County and Oswego County. Contact Sarah at smoses@syracuse.com or 470-2298. Follow @SarahMoses315


Solvay wife and second man indicted for attempting to murder husband: Onondaga County indictments

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Virginia LaPoint and John Conway were charged with stabbing LaPoint's husband 42 times and shooting him in the shoulder.

VIRGINIA LAPOINT.JPGVirginia LaPoint 

Syracuse, NY -- A Solvay woman was indicted this week on attempted murder and conspiracy charges, accused of plotting with another man to kill her husband.

Virginia LaPoint, 36, of William Street, and John Conway, 40, of North McBride Street, Syracuse, were each charged in the yearlong plot against Michael LaPoint.

The two suspects face attempted murder, two counts of conspiracy, assault and criminal possession of a weapon charges. Conway is in jail with no bail and Virginia LaPoint on $500,000 bail.

The victim was stabbed 42 times and shot in the shoulder blade with a .38-caliber handgun in the early hours of May 4 in front of his residence. He was hospitalized for a week, but returned home and lived with his wife and children until her arrest about a month later.

CONWAY.jpgJohn Conway 

Prosecutors said Virginia LaPoint was always a suspect, but they needed more proof to arrest her. After more interviews and subpoenaed records, she was confronted during a police interview. She made admissions during the interview, according to court records.

Conway committed the assault, but Virginia LaPoint helped plan the attack, police said.

The two suspects had some sort of relationship, but authorities would not comment further. The crime was not a murder-for-hire, they have said.

Solvay police said Conway and Michael LaPoint had an ongoing dispute before the attack.

The following other people were also indicted by Onondaga County grand juries in cases reported July 31. All charges are felonies, unless otherwise noted:


Kenneth Buntz
, 28, of 1174 state Route 122, Constable: Charged with criminal possession of marijuana and marijuana possession (violation). Arrested March 5 in Syracuse.

Javon Flagg, 20, of 230 N. Collingwood Ave., Syracuse: Charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance (two counts) and criminal possession of a controlled substance (two counts). Arrested March 27 in Syracuse.

Timothy Gower, 24, of 110 Marsden Road, Lyncourt: Charged with criminal possession of a weapon (two counts) and menacing (two counts, misdemeanor). Arrested Sept. 30, 2013 in Syracuse.

Andrew Harvey, 17, of 143 Lakeview Ave., Syracuse: Charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance (two counts, one of them misdemeanor). Arrested May 19 in Syracuse.

Curtis Hudgins, of 330 Richmond Ave., Syracuse: Charged with criminal possession of a controlled substance (three counts, one of them misdemeanor) and marijuana possession (violation). Superseding indictment. Arrested March 6 in Syracuse.

Kemar Pertillar, 28, of 940 Emerson Ave., Apt. 1, Syracuse: Charged with robbery and criminal possession of a controlled substance (two counts, one of them misdemeanor). Arrested May 29 in Syracuse.

Carly Willett, 22, of 7 county Route 41, Malone: Charged with criminal possession of marijuana and marijuana possession (violation). Arrested March 5 in Syracuse.

See previous Onondaga County indictments.

Central New York teenager competes for Miss Teen USA title in Bahamas

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Corrin Stellakis, 16, of Bridgeport, will compete in Saturday's Miss Teen USA pageant in the Bahamas.

Corrin Stellakis, a 16-year-old from Bridgeport, is in the Bahamas this week representing New York in the Miss Teen USA 2014 competition.

Stellakis, who will be a junior at Chittenango High School in the fall, will be judged in the swimsuit, evening gown and interview segments of the pageant. The event is set for 8 p.m. Saturday at the Atlantis, Paradise Island resort in the Bahamas.

The presentation show will be streamed live on the sponsor's web site at 8 p.m. today, with the competition slated for 8 p.m. Saturday.

Stellakis, who lives on a small farm she refers to her as her "farmette," was named Miss Jr. Oz in Chittenango in 2012. She is an avid horseback rider and has 11 horses. She started riding at age four and now competes in hunter jumping, with two international championships to her name.

"The barn is right next to my house, so I ride almost every day,'' Stellakis said. "My horse, Princess, is completely blind. She is 23, and I got her when I was seven years old. She's awesome, and I still ride her."

Stellakis was named Miss New York Teen USA in January, and says she hopes to win the national title Saturday.

"I have a lot of confidence, and I think that's what helps me,'' she said. "I just focus on being myself."

Stellakis said she has the best of both worlds - the gritty farm girl who rides horses and lives in jeans and riding boots, and the glamorous world of beauty pageants.

" I have a little Hannah Montana in me,'' she says. "I love the barn and the farm, but I also love the glitz and glamour."

Stellakis, who said she'd like to study broadcasting in college, says she's comfortable being on a stage and in front of a camera. "I love talking to people,'' she said, "and I thrive when I am in front of people. I've always been the social butterfly in my family."

A starter on her varsity volleyball team at school, Stellakis also sings in the Crossroads Community Church worship band.

CNN anchor Bill Weir calls Fox Nation 'willfully ignorant' in f-bomb Twitter attack

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Weir flew off the handle over a Fox Nation story that mocked Al Gore's Climate Change Reality project.

CNN anchor Bill Weir flew off the handle at Fox Nation on Thursday, sending a vulgar f-bomb-laden tweet that called Fox "willfully ignorant."

In the tweet (explicit), which has not yet been deleted, Weir wrote, "Weather is not climate, you willfully ignorant [expletive]sticks."

Weir was responding to a headline on Fox Nation reading "Climate Doesn't Cooperate With Al Gore's Group's Visit to Denver EPA Hearings."

The story, originally from the Washington Times, mocked the former vice president's Climate Change Reality project. The group brought their "I'm too hot" ice cream trucks to the hearings, only to show up on a chilly 58 degree day.

The "I'm too hot" campaign was launched to be "a rallying point for action in the face of rising temperatures driven by climate disruption," according to the story.

Weir's tweet got over 3,000 retweets and favorites each and generated hundreds of responses.

He later apologized for his language, acknowledging that he had made a mistake:

One user called out his use of foul language, to which he responded:

Weir joined CNN from ABC News and Good Morning America last fall, according to the Daily Mail. CNN did not comment on the tweet.

A Fox News spokesperson told The Daily News that the network was aware of Weir's tweet. So far, Fox has not responded to the incident.

 

Syracuse mom accused of assaulting baby, but cleared of killing her, set free by judge

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Wanda Trumble was released by a judge after being cleared of killing her baby daughter. She's still accused of assaulting 5-month-old Nataliah.

Syracuse, NY -- A Syracuse mother who has spent nine months in jail under suspicion of killing her 5-month-old daughter was set free today by a County Court judge.

That's after an Onondaga County grand jury determined that Wanda Trumble was not responsible for her daughter, Nataliah's, death. Instead, the baby's father, Joseph Molina, is facing a manslaughter charge.

Wanda Trumble
, 20, was charged with assaulting her daughter a day before the baby died last November. After the baby's death Nov. 9, a brain doctor told police that the assault happened several days before.

Wanda Trumble admitted shaking her baby four days before Nataliah died, causing police to suspect that she caused the baby's death.

Trumble was sent to jail last November with bail in the amount of $50,000 cash or $100,000 bond. She remained there as the investigation continued.

molina in court.JPGJoseph Molina (in jail garb) appears for arraignment in County Court. 

But in May came a new twist: an exhaustive autopsy determined Nataliah actually died from injuries within 24 hours of her death.

That fit the timeframe in which her father, Molina, had already admitted to police being with the child. Molina was indicted last month for the homicide and Wanda Trumble was cleared.

But that didn't mean Wanda Trumble was completely innocent: she's still charged with recklessly assaulting her child by shaking her. That's a felony.

So today, lawyers argued before County Court Judge Thomas J. Miller over what Wanda Trumble's bail should be.

Defense lawyer Ed Klein argued that Trumble should be released: she had no prior record, did not intend to hurt her baby, plans to fight the charges and her family had no money to pay any amount of bail.

Prosecutor Mike Kasmarek acknowledged that bail might be lowered, but stressed the severity of Trumble's felony charge in asking for some amount of bail.

Miller decided to grant Klein's request and release Trumble, noting that if she violates the rules of her release she would wind up back in jail.

Klein said Wanda Trumble has three other children, two in foster care and one with the child's father. She has orders of protection barring her from contact with her children.

Trumble is facing abuse and neglect charges in Family Court. Molina will also be part of that case, Klein said.

Molina remains in jail with bail set at $150,000 cash or bond.

Congress deadlocked on border bill; no money to open new shelters for children

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The Senate starts summer recess, while House GOP deals with conservative revolt on border bill.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Congress will head into its five-week summer recess today without a deal on an emergency spending bill to address the surge of children from Central America illegally crossing the southern border.

The gridlock means no money will be available to open new shelters for children in places like Syracuse, where the federal government has considered setting up temporary housing for unaccompanied minors awaiting deportation hearings.

The Democratic-controlled Senate began its summer break after failing Thursday to gain the 60 votes necessary to pass a $2.7 billion bill to tighten border security and provide money for federal agencies charged with detaining and deporting immigrants. President Barack Obama had asked for $3.7 billion.

The Republican-controlled House also failed Thursday to pass a stripped-down $659 million bill aimed at speeding up deportations. That bill would have provided $197 million for the temporary shelters.

The House Republican leadership had to withdraw the bill after conservative hard-liners within their ranks pushed back and said they would oppose the legislation. Now GOP leaders are offering a revised $694 million package that could come to a vote this afternoon. The new bill includes an extra $35 million for the National Guard.

Regardless of what happens in the House today, with the Senate already in recess the issue will spill over into September.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is considering a 10-acre property owned by the Sister of St. Francis on Syracuse's North Side as a potential temporary shelter for children awaiting deportation hearings. HHS officials did not respond to a request for comment today about plans for the property.

Contact Washington Correspondent Mark Weiner at mweiner@syracuse.com or 571-970-3751. Follow him on Twitter @MarkWeinerDC

Skaneateles man pleads guilty to using fake IDs to fly air ambulances, news choppers

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Prosecutors say John M. Dial used fake credentials and IDs to get jobs as a pilot for air ambulances and news helicopters.

Sacremento, Calif.--John M. Dial, a Skaneateles man, who used fake IDs to get credentials to fly air ambulances and news helicopters, pleaded guilty Thursday in a federal court in California to aggravated identity theft.

Federal investigators tracked Dial, 58, to Mercy Flight Central's base in Marcellus where he was arrested in July 2013. He had been flying helicopters for the service for about eight months under the name Alex Coussirat and presented all the certifications he needed to be a pilot, according to EMS Air Services of NY, which provides Mercy Flight Central its pilots. Dial had passed the company's background check, which included calling the references he listed, the company said at the time of his arrest.

Federal authorities in Sacremento Thursday said Dial used a former co-worker's name to get a job at the air ambulance service in New York. Dial also created a fraudulent United States passport using that person's identity.

Dial, who prosecutors said lived in Skaneateles, is scheduled to be sentenced by United States District Judge Morrison C. England Jr. on Aug. 14. He faces a mandatory statutory penalty of two years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Prosecutors said his criminal record shows Dial, who is a former military pilot, has used at least 24 fake names.He used fake Social Security numbers and dates of birth to assume other people's identities.

Dial has theft and forgery convictions going back 35 years and in 1994, was convicted of making false statements to the FAA, prosecutors said.

According to his plea agreement, Dial was a television news helicopter pilot from December 2009, to August 2010 in the San Francisco area. In June 2011, in order to work for a California air ambulance service he provided fake documents and make false statements which kept the FAA from knowing his true identity.

He had been previously convicted of making false statements to the FAA about his medical certificate and student pilot certificate. From July 2011, to November 2011, Dial operated a helicopter approximately 63 times, without having a valid pilot certificate.

Dial was hired as a television news helicopter pilot in Sacremento in March 2012, and submitted a fake FAA certificates under his real name. He flew for the television station twice without having a valid pilot certificate.

During a traffic stop in Cascade, Idaho in April 2012, Dial produced a fake Vermont driver's license. He was cited for driving without a license and told to not drive his vehicle.

Then, Dial was seen driving away from the scene. When he was stopped again, police learned that his true name was likely John M. Dial and that he had two outstanding felony warrants in Washington state.

Dial admitted that his name was John Michael Dial, and that he obtained the Vermont driver's license about 12 years ago by providing fictitious information. Dial said he did it to avoid apprehension for the two outstanding felony warrants.

During a search of Dial's vehicle, police found two wallets. One contained information relating to John M. Dial, including a California driver's license; in the other wallet were documents relating to the identity theft victim and second fraudulent Vermont driver's license.

Dial was sent to Washington for the felony warrants, made bail and disappeared, prosecutors said. His veterans' benefits were tracked to the Finger Lakes region, and eventually to his employment under a fake name to Mercy Flight Central.

The investigation included officers from the U.S. Department of Transportation, Office of Inspector General, the United States Secret Service, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation with the assistance of the Cascade, Idaho, and McCall, Idaho Police Departments.

Contact Charley Hannagan by voice or text at 315-470-2161, by email, on Facebook at Neighbors West or on Twitter @charleypost.

Vietnam vet drone protester acquitted on charges by jury

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A drone protester was acquitted on charges by a jury in DeWitt.

Vietnam veteran Russell Brown of Buffalo was acquitted by a jury in DeWitt town court Thursday night on charges of obstruction of governmental administration and disorderly conduct, according to DeWitt court officials.

The jury returned the verdict after deliberating for two hours. The OGA charge Brown faced was a misdemeanor carrying a possible one-year in jail penalty, while the disorderly conduct was a violation.

Brown was arrested and charged during a protest against the use of drones at Hancock Air National Guard Base on April 28, 2013.

During the protest, Brown lay down with red paint in a roadway across from the base to symbolize the death of drone victims, according to members of Upstate Drone Action.

Brown was a U.S. Marine from 1965 to 1967.

Brown testified that "lying in that road was the most peaceful moment I've experienced since I left Vietnam," according to Upstate Drone Action member who attended the trial.

Jordan McNamara, Onondaga County assistant district attorney, said in this case Brown "by his own admission lay down in the eastbound lane of East Molloy Road and on videotape is seen laying in front of a DeWitt police car blocking the officer's path.

"The DA's office believes this is obstructing governmental administration and disorderly conduct,'' he said. "The jury disagreed."

Judy Bello of Upstate Drone Action said the six-person jury appeared to be "extremely moved by his description of how Mr. Brown went from being a Marine to working for peace in the world."

About 20 protesters are awaiting prosecution on charges stemming from a series of protests at the base.


'Revenge porn' now illegal in New York

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"No one should be humiliated by having their image broadcast without their consent," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Posting intimate images of your ex on the Internet as a means of revenge is no longer allowed in New York, according to legislation Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed today.

The legislation closes a loophole in state law about unlawful surveillance. Previously, it was against the law for someone to broadcast images of another person engaged in sexual activity without the person's consent. But that law required that certain body parts be identifiable.

Now, the law does not specify anatomy, only that a sexual act is captured and broadcast without the person's consent.

"No one should be humiliated by having their image broadcast without their consent - and this common-sense legislation ensures that any victim of such an act will have the law on their side," Cuomo said in a news release.

Under the new law, people will face a charge of second-degree unlawful surveillance "if they use a device to view, broadcast or record another person engaged in sexual conduct without their consent, regardless of whether that other person's sexual parts were broadcast or not," the news release said. That charge is a felony.

The law will take effect Nov. 1.

Contact Teri Weaver anytime: Email | Twitter | 315-470-2274

Oswego County's worst child molester ever moved to psychiatric center in Marcy

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Raymond G. Younis sexually abused as many as 17 boys in the mid-1990s in Phoenix.

Phoenix, NY -- Raymond G. Younis, who is infamously known as the worst child molester in Oswego County history, has been released from prison and placed in a psychiatric center in Marcy.

Younis sexually abused as many as 17 boys in the mid-1990s in Phoenix.

Younis, now 52, was set to be released on July 14 after serving 17 years in state prison.

Oswego County District Attorney Gregory Oakes said he was informed by the Department of Corrections on July 9 that Younis' release was delayed indefinitely.

Younis was released on July 23 on a court ordered discharge to another state agency, according to Vinelink, the national victim notification network.

Younis is being held at The Central New York Psychiatric Center in Oneida County, according to the state division of Criminal Justice Services.

Younis was 35 when he was sentenced to 20 years in state prison in 1998, after pleading guilty to 86 counts in his sex-abuse case.

He got to the boys by befriending single mothers and posing as a father figure to their sons, according to relatives and neighbors. Younis was charged with sodomizing and molesting boys, aged 6 to 13, from the fall of 1994 to the spring of 1996.

Sarah Moses covers the northern suburbs of Onondaga County and Oswego
County. Contact Sarah at smoses@syracuse.com or 470-2298. Follow @SarahMoses315

Prosecutor: Son who left mom in woods lied to court

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The Oneida County District Attorney's office said Tomas Zavalidroga lied to the court, saying he does not own property when he does. Therefore, he no longer meets the criteria to be assigned a public defender.

Tomas Zavalidroga, the Oneida County man charged with leaving his elderly mother in the woods July 8, lied to the court about his financial status, according to Oneida County Assistant District Attorney Joseph Mellace.

Zavalidroga, 52, told the court he does not own any property, but the DA's office learned he owns 220 acres in Annsville, along with a home on the property, Mellace said. With the power of attorney given to him by his mother, Margaret, he transferred the property into his name in June, Mellace said.

It is unclear if that property is the same property where mother and son were residing.

Because he owns property he does not meet the qualifications for a public defender, and the judge said he must hire his own attorney or represent himself, Mellace said.

Tomas Zavalidroga is accused of leaving his mom in the woods for four days after reporting her missing on July 18. After she was rescued from the woods, she told police her son had returned and fed her oatmeal.

Tomas Zavalidroga, of Blossvale is being held in the Madison County Public Safety Building jail after pleading not guilty July 25 to charges of second-degree reckless endangerment and third-degree falsely reporting an incident in connection with his mother's disappearance.

In court today in Oneida, Zavalidroga said he has not been permitted by the jail to contact family, friends or a private lawyer, but Mellace said that is not true. The judge assured him he would have an opportunity to reach out to a lawyer before his next court appearance in two weeks.

Zavalidroga also asked for a reduction in his $5,000 bail, but Mellace argued that he has indicated he would try and contact his mother despite the order of protection preventing him from doing so. The bail reduction request was denied.

The investigation continues, and there is no more information at this time, Mellace said.

"We are moving slowly, but deliberately," he said.


Schumer, Gillibrand top list of U.S. Senate spending on charter flights

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Schumer justifies spending on 1981 Piper prop plane with no bathroom.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer flies around New York in an aging 1981 Piper propeller plane with four seats and no bathroom, but that's not earning him any sympathy from congressional watchdogs.

Schumer, D-N.Y., was singled out today in a report by USA Today and the nonprofit Sunlight Foundation for spending more than any other senator on taxpayer-paid charter flights last year.

Schumer spent $286,276 on the flights -- three times more than the No. 2 person on the list, his friend and Senate colleague U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., who spent $93,098 on charters, according to the report.

Money to pay for the charters comes from an annual federal allowance each member of Congress receives to run their offices and pay staff salaries and expenses. Schumer and Gillibrand receive about $4.1 million per year. It's up to each office to decide how to spend the money. House members receive about $2 million per year for their offices.

The issue of Schumer's charter flights has been raised several times in the past. A Schumer spokesman said the expense with a charter service in New Hartford is justified since Schumer has a demanding schedule in which he visits all of New York's 62 counties each year. At the same time, he is No. 3 in the Senate leadership, dealing with issues of national significance in Washington.

"As everyone knows, no senator visits all corners of his state to interact with constituents and get involved in local issues more regularly and thoroughly than Chuck Schumer," said his spokesman, Max Dworin.

"The Senator visits all 62 counties in New York each year, including more than 100 separate visits to Upstate New York cities and towns thus far this year," Dworin said. "It is not possible to keep this rigorous a schedule by flying on commercial airlines alone, so he also travels on a small, four-seat propeller plane that is not even big enough to stand up in, and has no bathroom."

The charter plane is a 1981 Piper Navajo Chieftain 350 that staffers say had rear seats removed years ago.

Bethany Lesser, speaking for Gillibrand, also justified the travel.

"Last year, as in previous years, the senator spent time in all 62 counties across the state, and uses commercial travel whenever feasible," Lesser said. "She strongly believes being accessible and hearing directly from her constituents is an essential part of doing her job effectively. While some senators may choose to budget their office resources in other ways, she places a priority on meeting directly with families."

Contact Washington Correspondent Mark Weiner at mweiner@syracuse.com or 571-970-3751. Follow him on Twitter @MarkWeinerDC

Syracuse man convicted of car chase through University neighborhood, breaking cop's wrist

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Willie Strong could spend more than 20 years in prison after being convicted by jury in a police chase that ended in an officer's injury.

Syracuse, NY -- A Syracuse man was found guilty Thursday of leading police on a chase last September through the University neighborhood before breaking an officer's wrist during a struggle.

Willie Strong, 36, could spend more than 20 years in prison after a jury found him guilty of criminal possession of a weapon, assault and resisting arrest, said prosecutor Matthew Bloss. He could face 5 to 15 years in prison for the weapons charge and 3 to 7 years for the assault.

Someone threw a sawed-off, 12-gauge pump-action Mossberg shotgun out the window of Strong's fleeing minivan.

The 2 a.m. chase stretched from Lexington Avenue on the city's East Side, down Westmoreland Avenue to Tecumseh Road on the city's border with DeWitt.

Strong eventually stopped near the Mobil station at the corner of Tecumseh and Nottingham roads, but then confronted two officers, fists raised, in a struggle that broke one officer's wrist, Bloss said.

The chase started after an officer spotted Strong driving with a burnt-out headlight. The officer recognized Strong and knew he didn't have a valid license, the prosecutor said.

Strong pulled onto Ellis Street before taking off, circling back to Westmoreland Avenue on East Fayette Street.

Once on Westmoreland, he sped up to 40 to 50 mph and crossed East Genesee Street, up a brick-paved hill and across Euclid Avenue.

The gun came flying out of the window two blocks later. Just past Broad Street, his passenger jumped out and disappeared between houses.

Strong's lawyer, Tom Ryan, argued that the passenger forced him to flee by holding a knife to him, but Strong was later recorded in jail saying that he sped away to protect his unknown passenger, Bloss said.

The jury took about two hours to convict Strong of all charges.

 

Bill Clinton 'could have killed' Osama bin Laden, hidden recording reveals

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10 hours before 9/11, Bill Clinton told a small audience in Australia that he had the opportunity to kill Osama Bin Laden.

Ten hours before two planes crashed into the World Trade Center buildings on September 11, 2001, Bill Clinton told a small audience in Australia that he had the opportunity to kill Osama Bin Laden when he was president.

Clinton was speaking to a group of 30 businessmen and women at the Crown Casino Complex in Melbourne, Australia, on Sept. 10, 2001 when he made the remarks, CNN reported.

"I'm just saying, you know, if I were Osama Bin Laden ... He's a very smart guy. I spent a lot of time thinking about him. And I nearly got him once. And I could have killed him, but I would have had to destroy a little town called Kandahar in Afghanistan and kill 300 innocent women and children, and then I would have been no better than him. And so I didn't do it."

Ten hours after Clinton made the remarks, nearly 3000 people died when the planes struck the towers under Bin Laden's orders.

The tape was revealed by SkyNews during the network's "Paul Murray Live" program.

Michael Kroger, a former Liberal Party leader in Australia, provided the recording, which he had saved for years.

"The event was taped with his knowledge," Kroger said. "Bill Clinton was answering a question from a member of the audience about terrorism, international terrorism and he made some extraordinary remarks which had hitherto remained in my vault."

The 2004 9/11 Commission Report (PDF) made reference to a plan to take out Osama Bin Laden in 1998. According to the report, "fear of collateral damage was an important factor" in the decision not to use cruise missiles to take out Osama Bin Laden.

"Wariness about ordering a strike appears to have been vindicated," the commission wrote. "Bin Laden left his room unexpectedly, and if a strike had been ordered he would not have been hit."

According to NBC, Bin Laden was not as well known by the public at that time, but was on the FBI's most wanted list for the 1998 attacks on the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

Bin Laden was finally killed in 2011, during an early morning raid by U.S. Special Forces on May 2 in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

Watch the video recording above, and leave a comment below.

 

WHO: Ebola moving faster than control efforts can contain it

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Medical experts are trying to come up with a new strategy to stop the spread of the deadly virus.

CONAKRY, Guinea (AP) -- An Ebola outbreak that has killed more than 700 people in West Africa is moving faster than efforts to control the disease, the head of the World Health Organization warned as presidents from the affected countries met Friday in Guinea's capital.

Dr. Margaret Chan, the WHO's director-general, said the meeting in Conakry "must be a turning point" in the battle against Ebola, which is now sickening people in three African capitals for the first time in history.

"If the situation continues to deteriorate, the consequences can be catastrophic in terms of lost lives but also severe socio-economic disruption and a high risk of spread to other countries," she said, as the WHO formally launched a $100 million response plan that includes deploying hundreds more health care workers.

Medecins Sans Frontieres, also known as Doctors Without Borders, said the WHO pledge "needs to translate to immediate and effective action." While the group has deployed some 550 health workers, it said it did not have the resources to expand further.

Doctors Without Borders said its teams are overwhelmed with new Ebola patients in Sierra Leone and that the situation in Liberia is now "dire."

"Over the last weeks, there has been a significant surge in the epidemic - the number of cases has increased dramatically in Sierra Leone and Liberia, and the disease has spread to many more villages and towns," the organization said in a statement. "After a lull in new cases in Guinea, there has been a resurgence in infections and deaths in the past week."

At least 729 people have died since cases first emerged in March: 339 in Guinea, 233 in Sierra Leone, 156 in Liberia and one in Nigeria.

Two American health workers in Liberia have been infected, and an American man of Liberian descent died in Nigeria from the disease, health authorities there say.

Plans were underway to bring the two American aid workers -- Nancy Writebol and Dr. Kent Brantly -- back to the U.S. A small private jet based in Atlanta has been dispatched to Liberia. Officials said the jet was outfitted with a special, portable tent designed for transporting patients with highly infectious diseases.

While health officials say the virus is transmitted only through direct contact with bodily fluids, many sick patients have refused to go to isolation centers and have infected family members and other caregivers.

The fatality rate has been about 60 percent, and the scenes of patients bleeding from the eyes, mouth and ears has led many relatives to keep their sick family members at home instead. Sierra Leone is now sending teams door-to-door in search of Ebola patients and others who have been exposed to the disease.

Chan emphasized Friday that the general public "is not at high risk of infection," but also said the Ebola virus should not be allowed to circulate widely.

"Constant mutation and adaptation are the survival mechanisms of viruses and other microbes," she said. "We must not give this virus opportunities to deliver more surprises."

Randy Schoepp, chief of diagnostics at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, which is running the only lab in Liberia testing Ebola samples, said: "The virus is getting to large, dense, city areas. We're now getting samples (to test) from all over."

But he said he thinks "we're only seeing a small portion of the cases out there," partly because many drivers are scared to transport vials of blood that may contain Ebola to the lab.

Other countries are taking precautions to prevent the spread of Ebola.

The African Union mission in Somalia canceled a planned troop rotation by Sierra Leonean forces in an effort to prevent Ebola from crossing into the Horn of Africa country, the military said.

Seychelles forfeited an African Cup qualifying game and withdrew from the competition Thursday rather than allow Sierra Leone's soccer team to travel to the Indian Ocean island. And a cyclist from Sierra Leone competed in the Commonwealth Games after testing negative for Ebola.

Nigeria's minister of health, Onyebuchi Chukwu, said Thursday the government has located 10 more people who had primary contact with the man who flew to Lagos, and died there because of Ebola. The government is tracking down the remaining people who had contact with him, he said. As of Friday, 69 people are under surveillance and two are quarantined, Chukwu said.

Meanwhile, families in the United States expect to be reunited as early as this weekend with some of the more than 300 Peace Corps volunteers evacuated from West Africa as a precaution.

"We did really have faith in the Peace Corps that if things would become dangerous they would do what they're now doing," said Mirna Jope of Carmichael, California, whose 25-year-old son called home Thursday after learning he would be leaving Sierra Leone.

A Peace Corps spokeswoman said the organization is working to bring the volunteers home as quickly as possible and following Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines that say people without a known exposure don't need to be screened but should monitor their health. Two workers who have been exposed to the virus still were being monitored.

"The two Peace Corps volunteers who have had contact with an individual who later died of the virus are not symptomatic and are currently isolated and under observation," said spokeswoman Shira Kramer. "When they receive medical clearance for return to the U.S., we will work with them to travel safely back."


102-year-old man dies in ATV accident in Dutchess County

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The man drowned in a creek after he crashed about 60 miles north of New York City

LAGRANGE, N.Y. -- A 102-year-old man died Thursday in Dutchess County after the all-terrain vehicle he was riding overturned in a creek.

Neil Pearson was riding the ATV on his property when the accident occurred and he was pinned under the ATV, the Poughkeepsie Journal reported. Police and the Dutchess County Medical Examiner's Office were alerted to the incident after a 911 call.

The Daily Freeman reported that Pearson was a "very active" man who regularly took his ATV for drives.

Pearson drowned in the creek after he crashed about 60 miles north of New York City. The tall grass kept him from seeing the creek.


Saving Face Barber Shop to raise money for the Central New York Food Bank

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The Barber-Q features free hair cuts, food and beverages to raise for the Central New York Food Bank at the Saving Face Barber Shop in Camillus.

Camillus, NY-- The Saving Face Barber Shop hosts its fifth annual Barber Q from noon to 6 p.m. Sunday at the shop at 4300 W. Genesee St., Camillus.

The event featuring free hair cuts, food and beverages seeks to raise funds for the Central New York Food Bank. Last year the Barber Q performed 100 hair cuts and raised $1,700 for the Alzheimer's Foundation.

The event is first come, first served.

Sylvan Beach Topless event: Is it on or not?

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The Sylvan Beach Topless event is being promoted by a Facebook page, but village officials say the page has no credibility and the event is bogus.

A Facebook page is continuing to promote Topless Tuesdays as starting tonight and continuing through Sunday at Sylvan Beach, but the mayor says it's bogus.

"There is absolutely nothing to it,'' says Sylvan Beach Mayor Greg Horan. "It's a figment of a kid's imagination who has a Facebook page. It has nothing to do with us."

If by some chance a person shows up and takes their top off, they will be politely asked to put it back on, Horan said, as Sylvan Beach is a place for families.

"But I am 99.9 percent sure there is nothing to it at all,'' he said.

The Facebook page says the event will start by the beach area and will include free wet T-shirts, games, live bands, boat races and two-for-one Margaritas. The page claims 306 people are attending.

At one point, it says it starts at 5 p.m. and then another post says it is corrected to start at 7 p.m.

The page invites people to participate simply because it is legal.

Going topless is legal in New York, as the highest court ruled in 1992 that baring your chest in public -- for noncommercial activity -- is perfectly legal for a woman, just like it is for a man.

The event is listed on the Sylvan Beach NY Facebook page, but that page is not an official Sylvan Beach page at all, Horan said.

Official: NYPD chokehold caused NYC man's death

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A medical examiner ruled the death of Eric Garner a homicide after an NYPD officer put Garner in a chokehold during an arrest.

NEW YORK (AP) -- A chokehold used by a white police officer on a black New York City man during his arrest for selling untaxed, loose cigarettes last month caused his death, the medical examiner announced Friday, ruling it a homicide.

Eric Garner, 43, whose videotaped confrontation with police has caused widespread outcry and calls by the Rev. Al Sharpton for federal prosecution, was killed by "the compression of his chest and prone positioning during physical restraint by police," said medical examiner spokeswoman Julie Bolcer.

Asthma, heart disease and obesity were contributing factors, she said.

Chokeholds are prohibited by the New York Police Department. The case is being investigated by prosecutors on Staten Island, though Attorney General Eric Holder has said the Justice Department is "closely monitoring" the investigation.

The NYPD didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on the medical examiner's ruling. The officer who put Garner in the chokehold was stripped of his gun and badge pending the investigation, and another was placed on desk duty. Two paramedics and two EMTs were suspended without pay.

Police Commissioner William Bratton has said the officer appeared to have placed Garner in a chokehold and has ordered a top-to-bottom redesigning of use-of-force training in the NYPD.

In provocative comments Thursday, Sharpton called for the officers to be charged criminally. Sharpton believes chokeholds are used disproportionately on minorities.

Cicero Chamber of Commerce says $70,000 state fine is a mistake

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The Workers' Compensation Board said the Greater Cicero Chamber of Commerce dropped its state-required compensation insurance policy in 2013 and did not purchase another one.

Cicero, N.Y. — The president of the Greater Cicero Chamber of Commerce says a $70,000 fine levied against it by the state Workers' Compensation Board is the result of a mixup.

"I'm rather upset, but we'll straighten it out," said John Annable, the chamber's president and owner of Karate John's Martial Arts Center in Cicero.

The Workers' Compensation Insurance Board recently filed a $70,000 judgment against the chamber. Joseph Cavalcante, assistant director of public information for the board, said the chamber canceled its workers' compensation insurance on Jan. 31, 2013, and did not purchase another policy. The judgment represents the penalty for not carrying the insurance.

State law requires all employers to carry workers' compensation insurance to compensate employees for lost wages and medical costs if they are hurt on the job.

Cavalcante said the chamber is not required to carry the insurance if it no longer has any employees. However, he said the chamber failed to respond to multiple notices from the board and has never notified it that it has no employees.

Annable said the chamber has not had an employee since shortly after he became its president on Jan. 1, 2013. At the time, he said the chamber had a secretary who was hired through Onondaga Leasing, an employee leasing agency. He said he did away with the position because the work could be performed by volunteers.

Annable said he didn't even know the secretary was considered an employee of the chamber, since the worker was hired through a leasing agency.

The chamber has 150 members and promotes economic growth in the suburban Syracuse communities of Cicero, Clay, Bridgeport, Brewerton and North Syracuse.

Annable said the chamber never received the compensation board's notices because they were sent to the chamber's former post office box. The chamber, which is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, has no office but currently has a mailbox at a UPS store at 5701 E. Circle Drive. Its website lists its current address, but Google's search results still list the chamber's old post office box.

Annable contacted the Workers' Compensation Board Friday after being told of the $70,000 judgment by a reporter for syracuse.com. He said a representative of the board asked him to mail the board a copy of the chamber's 2013 tax return showing it had no employees last year.

Cavalcante said the board would withdraw the judgment if the chamber can show it no longer has an employee. Annable is counting on that.

"We run off a shoestring budget," he said. "Do we have $70,000 in the bank? Absolutely not."

Contact Rick Moriarty anytime: Email | Twitter | Facebook | 315-470-3148

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