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Did Apple copy OK Go's music video concept? (videos)

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Alternative rock band OK Go claims Apple used their music video concept in a video used at the iPhone preview event Tuesday.

As the saying goes, imitation is the highest form of flattery. But for alternative rock band OK Go, they are not pleased with Apple's decision to copy their music video's concept.

Used in the event held Tuesday to introduce the new iPhone 6 and more, Apple's video "Perspective" is very similar to OK Go's video for their new single "The Writing's On The Wall," Mashable reports.

Apple's video was first presented at the very beginning of its event, that took place in Cupertino, California. Mashable says many may have missed the video because of technical difficulties that caused live stream failure.

Bloomberg Businessweek reports that OK Go's video has been viewed more than 10 million times since it first appeared on YouTube in June. Additionally, it won this year's Video Music Award for best visual effects.

While this may seem coincidental, Andy Gershon, manager of OK Go, says that is not the case. Gershon told Bloomberg Businessweek that the band held a meeting with Apple in April to pitch their visual concept as a potential video collaboration. However, Apple declined, and OK Go proceeded to produce its own video.

To make the situation even more sticky, Bloomberg Businessweek says Apple hired 1stAveMachine, the production company behind OK Go's video, to make the video for Tuesday's event. Furthermore, Apple also used the same director. "The videos speak for themselves, and you can draw your own conclusions," Gershon says.

OK Go continues to explore their legal options, Gershon added.


After watching the videos, what do you think? Leave your comments below.


Dan Maffei agrees to six debates and forums with John Katko in race for Congress

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Candidates agree to a series of four TV debates and two radio forums.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- U.S. Rep. Dan Maffei says he and Republican challenger John Katko have agreed to face each other in a series of six debates and forums to be held next month in the 24th Congressional District election.

Maffei, D-Syracuse, and Katko, a former federal prosecutor from Camillus, will take part in four separate televised debates on Syracuse television stations, the Maffei campaign said. The candidates also will appear together at two forums that will be broadcast on public radio stations.

Katko had been critical of Maffei for not agreeing to do more debates and public appearances with both candidates.

Katko asked for debates where the public would have a chance to participate. The televised debates announced today will be conducted with a moderator in local TV studios. Only a debate at the Thursday Morning Roundtable will have a public audience.

Update

The Katko campaign said it had not confirmed details on three of the debates -- one sponsored by WSTM-TV, Channel 3; one from Time Warner Cable News; and a third sponsored by WCNY-TV and the Syracuse Media Group.

Katko issued a statement this afternoon, criticizing Maffei for agreeing to debate only in the last week of the campaign.

"I am pleased that Dan Maffei has reversed his decision on debates," Katko said. "I have said all along that I would debate my opponent every day of the week and twice on Sunday if he would agree to appear alongside me. I just didn't expect that Dan Maffei would take me so literally and only agree to debate in the single week leading up to Election Day."

Katko added, "It is insulting that the incumbent refuses to present his record directly to voters in side-by-side open debates and candidate forums now, instead of insisting on highly scripted exchanges in controlled studio settings far away from the very middle class families he so brazenly claims he serves. To be clear, Dan Maffei continues to refuse to participate in live debates in all four counties in NY-24 with his constituents present. His lack of respect for the district he represents from Washington is maddening."

Here is the full list of the debates and forums confirmed by the Maffei campaign:

The Campbell Conversations
6 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 19th and Sunday, Oct. 26
The candidates will make a joint appearance as part of the Campbell Conversations on WRVO public radio. A recording will be broadcast in two parts on the consecutive Sundays.

Time Warner Cable News Debate
Monday, Oct. 27
The time for this debate has not been determined. It will be broadcast on Time Warner Cable News Central New York.

CNY Central Debate
Tuesday, Oct. 28
This debate will be broadcast on WSTM-TV, Channel 3 in Syracuse.
The time has not been determined.

WCNY-TV / Syracuse Media Group Debate
8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 29
The debate will be broadcast on WCNY-TV public television.

Thursday Morning Roundtable/WCNY Public Radio
8:15 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 30
Maffei and Katko will appear jointly at the Thursday Morning Roundtable, a weekly public affairs meeting hosted by University College of Syracuse University. A recording of the forum will be broadcast on WCNY-FM public radio at 8 p.m. Nov. 2.

WSYR-TV Debate
7 p.m. Nov. 2
The debate will be broadcast on WSYR-TV, Channel 9 in Syracuse.

In a statement about the debates, the Maffei campaign said, "Rep. Maffei looks forward to having a substantive discussion about the important issues at stake for Central New Yorkers in this election, and highlighting his commitment to strengthening the middle class and creating jobs."

Contact Mark Weiner anytime: Email | Twitter | Facebook | 571-970-3751

Police brutality case: Charges dropped against Syracuse man left bloodied during arrest

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The DA's decision sets the stage for a claim of police brutality against two officers who struck Alonzo Grant during an unwarranted arrest.

Syracuse, NY -- A Syracuse man who claims police brutality had all charges against him dropped today by the Onondaga County District Attorney's Office.

Alonzo Grant, 53, complains that Syracuse police left him bloodied after arresting him on false charges of disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and harassment in a June 28 confrontation at his 105 Hudson St. residence.

After reviewing the case, the DA's office concluded that Grant had done nothing wrong.

"Witnesses at the scene, both related and unrelated to Mr. Grant, did not report any conduct by him that could reasonably be considered resisting arrest," prosecutors said in a news release. The law did not support the disorderly conduct charge, either.

"It appears that Mr. Grant has an unblemished record and is well-established in the community," the DA's office continued. "Based upon all of the foregoing factors, this office has moved to dismiss these charges in the interest of justice."

Syracuse Police Chief Frank Fowler declined Wednesday to discuss the decision by the DA's office to drop the charges against Grant.

"That's not something that's appropriate for me to comment on," he said.

Fowler confirmed that an internal police department investigation into the matter is underway, but would not provide specifics.

alfonso grant 2.jpgAlonzo Grant's lawyers provided this photo of injuries Grant suffered in a June 28 encounter with police. 

One of Grant's lawyers, Jesse Ryder, said the DA's office vindicated his client's version of what happened.

"Our client is innocent. He was innocent from day one. We're happy the DA's office has recognized that," Ryder said, stressing Grant's spotless criminal record.

Grant has filed a complaint against officers with the city's Citizen Review Board and plans to file a federal lawsuit, said another attorney, Charles Bonner, of San Francisco.

"I want to applaud Chief Assistant DA Alison Fineberg and DA Fitzpatrick," Bonner said. "They felt the injustice in this case and they wanted to be on the right side of justice. And they did the right thing. I think this is going to have a unifying effect on the Syracuse community."

The confrontation started after Grant called for police help one Saturday evening to report an argument between his daughter and a neighbor in the front yard. By the time officers arrived, the dispute was over.

Instead, police charged Grant with acting aggressively around his wife and other officers. The DA's office described what happened:


"It was Mr. Grant who made the call to police in an attempt to prevent the verbal dispute from escalating further. He was not suspected as the perpetrator of any crime. When an officer entered the residence to assess the situation he eventually asked Mr. Grant to exit his home and speak to SPD Officer Paul Montalto. As he was walking out the door, Mr. Grant punched his screen door, causing the door to slam against the side of his house. Almost immediately following Mr. Grant's action, the police decided to arrest for him Disorderly Conduct.

SPD Officer Damon Lockett reached for Mr. Grant and both parties went over the side of railing and fell to the ground. At this point, Officers Lockett and Montalto struck Mr. Grant about the face and head several times. Mr. Grant suffered injuries which required medical attention.

Those findings came after Fitzpatrick assigned Fineberg and two investigators to review the case. They interviewed six witnesses and three police officers, and read all related police reports, affidavits and partial video of the incident, the release stated. Fineberg declined to comment beyond what was stated in the news release.

The prosecutors' version of events is starkly different from what the two responding officers claimed happened.

An account from Officer Montalto described it this way: "The defendant violently punched the front door of the house causing it to fly open,in the presence of police officers, and continued to annoy and alarm all parties involved with his violent, tumultuous, threatening behavior."

The police then accused Grant of grabbing an officer around the waist and attempting to tackle him.

anfonso grant 3.jpgLawyers provided this photo of Alonzo Grant after an altercation with Syracuse police. 

Grant "refused to comply with several commands to place his hands behind his back so that he could be placed into handcuffs. In order to effect this authorized arrest the defendant's hand (sic) were physically led behind his back," Montalto wrote.

Grant was due in City Court today to face the charges. But instead, Fineberg publicly announced the DA's office intention to drop the charges.

Grant is a 30-year employee of St. Joseph's Hospital Health Center who works seven days a week and has been married for the past 28 years.

His case is one of two recent accusations of police brutality that led to a review of the city's use of force policy by Common Councilors.

Bonner, his lawyer, said this case will be a beacon for those victimized by "rogue officers."

A federal lawsuit will be filed Thursday accusing Syracuse police of false arrest, falsified police reports and conspiracy to deprive Grant of his federal and state Constitutional rights, the lawyer said.

What Syracuse's NAACP leader has to say about the N-word

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It is time for a funeral for the N-word, says Syracuse's NAACP leader.

Preston Fagan was recently at a funeral for the N-word. The Syracuse NAACP leader was at a conference where the kids wrote that word and the word "bitch" down on paper, put them both in a coffin, and held a funeral, complete with a preacher.

"Is it OK for African Americans to use the N-word? If they don't want non-African Americans to use the N-word, they shouldn't use it themselves," Fagan said.

It's not clear who Syracuse University soccer player Hanna Strong was talking to or what she meant when she said called someone a N--and a F--in a widely circulated video.

Fagan said the N-word is still being used, in part, because people aren't being honest about the racial tensions that still exist in Syracuse and across the nation.

"Part of the issue is that we think we're living in a color-blind society and everybody is treated with respect and reality," Fagan said. "That is not the truth."

Fagan said some circles within the black community have begun to crack down on use of the word by African Americans. But it's not enough.

"We started hard with the rappers. No longer should you be using (N-word), bitches and all that," Fagan said.

He said that when he works on the entertainment line-up for the Pan African Village at the New York State Fair, he outlines specifically what words are not okay to use. The N-word and bitch are both on that list.

Fagan said Syracuse University Chancellor Kent Syverud's response to Strong's words was the right way to go. "It was fast," he said.

He said the conversations that have been happening in the black community about the use of the N-word need to happen on a larger scale.

Maybe, Fagan suggested, Syracuse should have its own community-wide funeral for the N-word.

Contact Marnie Eisenstadt anytime: email | twitter | 315-470-2246.

Woman riding 8,000 miles on horseback makes stop in CNY

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Bernice Ende arrived in Fayetteville on horseback Wednesday, and will head to Rome on along the old Erie Canal trail Thursday morning.

Bernice Ende, a 60-year-old retiree from Montana, rode into Fayetteville on horseback Wednesday afternoon to make a stop at the Matilda Joslyn Gage House in the village.

Via back roads from Seneca Falls, Ende rode her 13-year-old Norwegian Fjord Essie Pearl into the village for an afternoon stop at the historic site. She attracted some onlookers as she rode onto Walnut Avenue with her pack horse, 5-year-old Montana Spirit, traveling alongside her.

She'll camp tonight in Fayetteville, and leave on horseback about 9 a.m. Thursday traveling down the Old Erie Canal State Historic Park to Rome, where she'll then head to Maine. The journey will take her a while - she travels about four mph, and typically goes about 25 miles a day.

She's making the trip to celebrate the 100th anniversary of women winning the right to vote in her home state.

"My mission is to pay homage to those who have brought us liberty,'' Ende said.

She started her 8,000 mile journey, which will take her 21/2-years, on April 1 from Montana, and will travel to Maine and back to the Pacific Coast through Canada.

Her journey has attracted national attention.

She arrived in New York state on Aug. 21 and spent time in Dansville and Avon, and then traveled to Seneca Falls and the Susan B. Anthony house. Her last historic stop is at the Matilda Joslyn Gage house.

"I'm really interested in Matilda Joslyn Gage because she was such as extraordinary free thinker,'' Ende said. "She seems even more important than the others because she wasn't just for women's rights - she was for humanitarian rights."

Gage became involved in the women's rights movement in 1852 when she decided to speak at the National Women's Rights Convention in Syracuse. She was president of the National Woman Suffrage Association from 1875 to 1876, She lived in Fayetteville most of her life.

During the past 10 years, Ende has traveled 21,500 miles throughout the U.S. She is known as the "Lady Long Rider" and stops at libraries to record her observations on her blog.

She takes the back roads, travels when it's raining and says she never gets tired of sitting in a saddle all day.


Ban the Box is dead for now, after Syracuse councilor withdraws it

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Advocates for Ban the Box said the proposal before the council contained a "poison pill."

SYRACUSE, N.Y. - After more than a year of discussion and negotiation, efforts to pass a "Ban the Box'' law in Syracuse ended with a thud Wednesday when the proposal was withdrawn from the Common Council agenda. For now, Ban the Box is dead.

Khalid BeyCouncilor Khalid Bey  

Councilor Khalid Bey, who had sponsored the legislation, said today that he would not put it to a vote because community activists who advocated for Ban the Box objected to a compromise version requested by Mayor Stephanie Miner's administration.

Those advocates argued that an amendment sought by Miner, and agreed to by Bey, was a "poison pill'' that would have made the ordinance unenforceable.

Ban the Box refers to the banning the question on many job applications that asks whether a person has been convicted of a crime. Most Ban the Box laws require employers to avoid asking up front about criminal history; instead, the employer can consider the applicant's criminal background after making a tentative offer of employment.

Syracuse lawmakers last year shied away from voting on Ban the Box legislation that would apply to all employers, after business leaders objected. But recently they were considering a scaled-back proposal to impose the restriction on the city itself and on contractors who do business with the city.

During negotiations with Bey and others, the mayor's office sought to add an exception for "any position that may have direct or indirect interaction, involvement or contact with youth under 18 years of age, senior citizens or the physically or mentally disabled.''

Bey said he thought the request was reasonable and was willing to compromise to get the ordinance passed. But Alan Rosenthal, a lawyer from the Center for Community Alternatives and one of the leading advocates for Ban the Box, said the proposed exception was so broad that it could apply to any employee.

After nearly two years of pushing the council to enact a Ban the Box ordinance, Rosenthal said he suddenly found himself this week pleading for them to reject the ordinance as proposed. Adding the exception would render the ordinance meaningless, according to Rosenthal and other supporters, including retired City Court Judge Langston McKinney.

"Is there any job that you can think of that doesn't fall into that exception?'' Rosenthal said. "I'm a senior citizen, right? So I walked into the bank -- it eliminates all bank jobs. I walked into city hall -- it eliminates all city hall jobs.''

Bey said he thought it reasonable to give the administration discretion to ignore Ban the Box for certain jobs that involve interaction with vulnerable people. But Rosenthal said Ban the Box would actually help the city screen for employees whose convictions might render them unsuitable for certain jobs, because it specifies a mechanism for doing so.

"Ban the Box doesn't stop screening'' of potential employees, he said. "There's no reason for any exception.''

Bill Ryan, Miner's chief of staff, said the compromise suggested by Miner was workable. Ultimately, the mayor and council should craft the ordinance, not outside advocates, he said.

"We thought there was an acceptable ordinance,'' Ryan said. "We were working with the councilor on a Ban the Box ordinance that we thought was acceptable to the administration as well as to the legislative body.''

Bey said today that the majority of councilors supported withdrawing the legislation because the original supporters, including the Center for Community Alternatives, no longer supported it.

"In my opinion, it appears that no compromise at this point is possible,'' he said.

Rosenthal said he plans to contact other city councilors to see if there is a veto-proof majority of six who would support stronger Ban the Box legislation.

Contact Tim Knauss anytime: Email | Twitter | Facebook | 315-470-3023

Slain Rochester officer Daryl Pierson praised, mourned at arena

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The funeral for Rochester police officer Daryl Pierson was held Wednesday.

ROCHESTER, N.Y. -- Officer Daryl Pierson was described as a devoted family man and dedicated cop with an uncanny ability to spot stolen cars as more than 1,000 people filled a downtown Rochester arena for his funeral.

Authorities say the 32-year-old officer was fatally shot last week by a man wanted for a parole violation who fled from a traffic stop. Pierson's partner Rich Ortiz, who shot and wounded the suspect, spoke through continuous tears at Wednesday's funeral.

The mourners included more than 1,000 law enforcement officers from as far away as California and Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy, a former Rochester mayor and police chief.

In a eulogy, Mayor Lovely Warren called Pierson "a man of dedication, faith, great love and compassion."

Pierson's survivors include his widow, Amy, and two young children.

St. Lawrence County man accused of dropping bag of crack on police station floor

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An officer stopped Robertson in the village of Massena early Wednesday morning and arrested him after finding he had no license and that his car wasn't inspected.

 
MASSENA, N.Y. -- A 35-year-old man accused of driving without a license dropped a bag of drugs on the floor of the police station as he was being booked, reports said.

Daniel P. Robertson, of 154 N. Main St., Massena, was charged with second-degree aggravated unlicensed operation, unlicensed operation, failure to signal, no inspection and fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, WWNY TV-7 reported.

An officer stopped Robertson in the village of Massena early Wednesday morning and arrested him after finding he had no license and that his car wasn't inspected.

After the officer brought Robertson to the village police department and placed him in a holding room, the officer noticed a bag on the floor near the patrol room door that hadn't been there earlier, North Country Now reported.

Police said Robertson dropped the bag when he was brought into the police department. The bag contained about a half of a gram of crack.

Robertson is being held at the St. Lawrence County jail in lieu of $1,500 bail or $3,000 bond.


Plattsburgh man arrested after police find drugs inside his D.A.R.E. lion stuffed animal

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An Upstate New York man was arrested at a bus stop in Plattsburgh when cops found drugs inside his stuffed animal.

According to reports from WPTZ, a 22-year-old man was arrested for possession after drugs were found hidden inside his D.A.R.E. lion stuffed animal.

Gregory Bolognese, resident of Plattsburgh, was taken into custody Monday at the Plattsburgh Greyhound Bus Station on Route 9, WPTZ reports. New York State Police say concealed inside the lion was 2 grams of marijuana, 0.6 gram of cocaine and two LSD strips.

Bolognese's plush toy lion, known as Daren the Lion, wore an anti-drug T-shirt promoting the Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or D.A.R.E., program, New York Daily News adds. Founded in 1983, the D.A.R.E. program aims to educate kids about staying away from drugs, gangs and violence.

Newser reports Bolognese was charged with possession of a marijuana and a controlled substance.

WPTZ continues to report that Bolognese was arraigned at the Town of Plattsburgh Court and remanded to Clinton County Jail on $500 cash bail. He is scheduled to return to court Thursday.

Why Teachout did so well Upstate, and why it won't matter to Cuomo come November

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One in 3 voters supported Zephyr Teachout over Andrew Cuomo in Tuesday's primary. Does that matter come November? Probably not, political experts and leaders say.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. - The leader of Madison County's Democratic Party has no idea why 743 people voted for Zephyr Teachout over Gov. Andrew Cuomo in Tuesday's primary.

"I honestly don't know," Mike Oot said of the three-vote victory in unofficial results for Teachout in the county just east of Syracuse. "A lot of people I spoke to didn't even know who she was."

Teachout is a Fordham Law School professor and expert in campaign law. With about $200,000, profiles in the New Yorker and the Nation, and a maddeningly brisk Twitter campaign, she surprised pollsters and party leaders by winning 31 of New York's 62 counties from Cuomo.

One-third of Tuesday's voters picked her over Cuomo - a powerful and popular governor with $31 million in his campaign account. If the numbers hold as elections officials tally results, she'll come away with the strongest primary challenge against a sitting New York governor, according to The New York Times.

"She clearly did better than I expected, better than most expected," said Steven Greenberg, a pollster for Siena College Research Institute and a long-time observer of Albany politics.

So why did so many Democrats turn to Teachout? And what does this spell for November, when Cuomo faces Republican Rob Astorino and Green Party candidate Howie Hawkins? Not so much, political watchers said today. Read on.

Extreme views and voters

Party primaries, Democratic and Republican, tend to bring out more passionate party members fired up about a single issue or candidate, several people said today. On Tuesday, some 180,000 people pulled the lever for Teachout, in large part to tell Cuomo he's not progressive enough.

"Ultimately, we saw the left end of the Dem party being frustrated with Cuomo," Greenberg said.

That's a bit surprising considering the governor's record on social issues (a higher minimum wage, same sex marriage, stricter gun laws), Greenberg added. By November, those Democrats could turn around and support Cuomo rather than vote for Astorino or Hawkins, Greenberg said.

Low voter turnout

Overall, only about 9 percent of the state's registered Democrats even bothered to vote Tuesday. That means they weren't fired up enough about either candidate, a development that should concern Cuomo, to a degree.

At the same time, it means a small group of narrowly focused voters decided Tuesday's outcome, according to Katie Lacey, the chairwoman of the Cayuga County Democratic Committee. Cuomo won Cayuga County, 366 to 355.

"A low turnout skews results a little bit," said Lacey. "It's a more significant showing for her than it really was."

Where Cuomo (barely) campaigned, he won

During the primary, the governor hardly acknowledged he was in one. He sent his running mate, Kathy Hochul of Buffalo, to political party dinners and local parades in Western New York and the New York City area. This summer, he finished up the legislative session in Albany then decamped to New York City, a normal pattern for the Westchester County resident.

Over the summer, he fished in Cayuga County, whitewater rafted in the Adirondacks and toured the New York State Fair (before fairgoers arrived). It wasn't until Labor Day weekend he, finally, began parading and politicking in person in the New York City area.

With that little effort, he won Democrats where the bulk of the party live -- near Buffalo and New York City. In Erie County, Cuomo beat Teachout 4 to 1. In Manhattan - Teachout's home borough - he won by nearly 10,000 votes. He won Queens, by 30,000, Brooklyn by nearly 40,000 votes.

One sidenote: Teachout won big in the Capitol Region. Cuomo has irritated state unions with flat salaries and budget cuts. That region's vote against Cuomo, in part, "is about state workers being frustrated with Andrew," Greenberg said.

What will those Albany-area voters do in November? For the answer, skip ahead to the Green Party section.

The NY Safe Act

Before the primary, the state's arm of the National Rifle Association encouraged its Democratic members to vote for Teachout - who is more liberal on many issues than Cuomo and has said she wouldn't move to overturn the Safe Act - to send a message to the governor.

Oot believes that played a role in Madison County's results. "The Safe Act is a big issue," Oot said of the state's stricter gun laws. "That could be reason."

Ed Cox, the chairman of the state's Republican Party, agrees. "I think that explains it in part," he said.

Most of those gun-issue voters are likely to go back to Astorino in November. Should Cuomo worry? The polls, so far, say no. Cuomo lost Republican support since early 2013, when the Safe Act was passed and signed. But the governor hasn't lost his Democratic base across the state when facing a Republican challenger. Polls this summer consistently show Cuomo leading Astorino 2 to 1.

To the Green Party, the spoils

In the end, it's Howie Hawkins that could be Tuesday's big winner. Greenberg said he wouldn't be surprised if half of Teachout's votes go to Hawkins. If that happened, it would triple the support the Syracuse candidate got in the 2010 gubernatorial race.

That would mean around 150,000 votes for Hawkins. Four years ago, Cuomo won with 2.9 million.

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

Syracuse schools code of conduct approved

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Now comes the hard part - at least two months of training students, parents, staff

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- The Syracuse City School District can begin rolling out its revised code of conduct.

School board members approved the revised code Wednesday night, after a public hearing on it Tuesday.

In coming weeks, students, parents, school staff, bus drivers, food service workers, hall monitors and sentries (security guards) will be trained about the kind of behavior the code expects and  the appropriate responses to misbehavior, said Patty Clark, the district's executive director of student support services.

Clark headed up the 50-member task force that spent seven months revising the code.  The 60-page document will be printed and sent to all student households  in the district.

Teachers have already been trained on it, Clark said, and each school has a plan for how the code will be taught to relevant people.  

The district, which has one of the highest student suspension rates in the nation, was directed to revise its code of conduct by the state attorney general.  The AG's office approved the district's draft code in July.

 "This effort gives us great hope," said Bill Bullen, school board vice president, minutes after the vote. "This is hard. It's going to take time. We're changing a culture to restorative justice. "

Contact Dave Tobin anytime: Email | Twitter | Facebook | 315-470-3277

Highway shutdown averted at Ferguson protests

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Officers from the city, county and Missouri Highway Patrol warned demonstrators to stay off a road near a highway on-ramp.

BERKELEY, Mo. (AP) -- Protesters have dispersed after a failed attempt to block part of Interstate 70 near the St. Louis suburb where a police officer fatally shot unarmed 18-year-old Michael Brown.

The planned rush-hour traffic shutdown fell through Wednesday after a wall of officers in riot gear blocked demonstrators from walking onto the highway.

Officers from the city, county and Missouri Highway Patrol warned the roughly 150 demonstrators to stay off a road near a highway on-ramp. Those who refused were arrested.

Sgt. Al Nothum of the state Highway Patrol says 35 people were arrested. Nothum also says protesters threw rocks, concrete blocks and bricks.

Organizers said the protest was designed as an act of nonviolent civil disobedience.

Transcript of President Obama's speech on Islamic State militants

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The president authorizes airstrikes against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Here is a transcript of the speech President Barack Obama delivered Wednesday night about the U.S. response to Islamic State militants.

My fellow Americans, tonight I want to speak to you about what the United States will do with our friends and allies to degrade and ultimately destroy the terrorist group known as ISIL.

As Commander-in-Chief, my highest priority is the security of the American people. Over the last several years, we have consistently taken the fight to terrorists who threaten our country. We took out Osama bin Laden and much of al Qaeda's leadership in Afghanistan and Pakistan. We've targeted al Qaeda's affiliate in Yemen, and recently eliminated the top commander of its affiliate in Somalia. We've done so while bringing more than 140,000 American troops home from Iraq, and drawing down our forces in Afghanistan, where our combat mission will end later this year. Thanks to our military and counterterrorism professionals, America is safer.

Still, we continue to face a terrorist threat. We can't erase every trace of evil from the world, and small groups of killers have the capacity to do great harm. That was the case before 9/11, and that remains true today. And that's why we must remain vigilant as threats emerge. At this moment, the greatest threats come from the Middle East and North Africa, where radical groups exploit grievances for their own gain. And one of those groups is ISIL -- which calls itself the "Islamic State."

Now let's make two things clear: ISIL is not "Islamic." No religion condones the killing of innocents. And the vast majority of ISIL's victims have been Muslim. And ISIL is certainly not a state. It was formerly al Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq, and has taken advantage of sectarian strife and Syria's civil war to gain territory on both sides of the Iraq-Syrian border. It is recognized by no government, nor by the people it subjugates. ISIL is a terrorist organization, pure and simple. And it has no vision other than the slaughter of all who stand in its way.

In a region that has known so much bloodshed, these terrorists are unique in their brutality. They execute captured prisoners. They kill children. They enslave, rape, and force women into marriage. They threatened a religious minority with genocide. And in acts of barbarism, they took the lives of two American journalists -- Jim Foley and Steven Sotloff.

So ISIL poses a threat to the people of Iraq and Syria, and the broader Middle East -- including American citizens, personnel and facilities. If left unchecked, these terrorists could pose a growing threat beyond that region, including to the United States. While we have not yet detected specific plotting against our homeland, ISIL leaders have threatened America and our allies. Our Intelligence Community believes that thousands of foreigners -- including Europeans and some Americans -- have joined them in Syria and Iraq. Trained and battle-hardened, these fighters could try to return to their home countries and carry out deadly attacks.

I know many Americans are concerned about these threats. Tonight, I want you to know that the United States of America is meeting them with strength and resolve. Last month, I ordered our military to take targeted action against ISIL to stop its advances. Since then, we've conducted more than 150 successful airstrikes in Iraq. These strikes have protected American personnel and facilities, killed ISIL fighters, destroyed weapons, and given space for Iraqi and Kurdish forces to reclaim key territory. These strikes have also helped save the lives of thousands of innocent men, women and children.

But this is not our fight alone. American power can make a decisive difference, but we cannot do for Iraqis what they must do for themselves, nor can we take the place of Arab partners in securing their region. And that's why I've insisted that additional U.S. action depended upon Iraqis forming an inclusive government, which they have now done in recent days. So tonight, with a new Iraqi government in place, and following consultations with allies abroad and Congress at home, I can announce that America will lead a broad coalition to roll back this terrorist threat.

Our objective is clear: We will degrade, and ultimately destroy, ISIL through a comprehensive and sustained counterterrorism strategy.

First, we will conduct a systematic campaign of airstrikes against these terrorists. Working with the Iraqi government, we will expand our efforts beyond protecting our own people and humanitarian missions, so that we're hitting ISIL targets as Iraqi forces go on offense. Moreover, I have made it clear that we will hunt down terrorists who threaten our country, wherever they are. That means I will not hesitate to take action against ISIL in Syria, as well as Iraq. This is a core principle of my presidency: If you threaten America, you will find no safe haven.

Second, we will increase our support to forces fighting these terrorists on the ground. In June, I deployed several hundred American servicemembers to Iraq to assess how we can best support Iraqi security forces. Now that those teams have completed their work -- and Iraq has formed a government -- we will send an additional 475 servicemembers to Iraq. As I have said before, these American forces will not have a combat mission -- we will not get dragged into another ground war in Iraq. But they are needed to support Iraqi and Kurdish forces with training, intelligence and equipment. We'll also support Iraq's efforts to stand up National Guard Units to help Sunni communities secure their own freedom from ISIL's control.

Across the border, in Syria, we have ramped up our military assistance to the Syrian opposition. Tonight, I call on Congress again to give us additional authorities and resources to train and equip these fighters. In the fight against ISIL, we cannot rely on an Assad regime that terrorizes its own people -- a regime that will never regain the legitimacy it has lost. Instead, we must strengthen the opposition as the best counterweight to extremists like ISIL, while pursuing the political solution necessary to solve Syria's crisis once and for all.

Third, we will continue to draw on our substantial counterterrorism capabilities to prevent ISIL attacks. Working with our partners, we will redouble our efforts to cut off its funding; improve our intelligence; strengthen our defenses; counter its warped ideology; and stem the flow of foreign fighters into and out of the Middle East. And in two weeks, I will chair a meeting of the U.N. Security Council to further mobilize the international community around this effort.

Fourth, we will continue to provide humanitarian assistance to innocent civilians who have been displaced by this terrorist organization. This includes Sunni and Shia Muslims who are at grave risk, as well as tens of thousands of Christians and other religious minorities. We cannot allow these communities to be driven from their ancient homelands.

So this is our strategy. And in each of these four parts of our strategy, America will be joined by a broad coalition of partners. Already, allies are flying planes with us over Iraq; sending arms and assistance to Iraqi security forces and the Syrian opposition; sharing intelligence; and providing billions of dollars in humanitarian aid. Secretary Kerry was in Iraq today meeting with the new government and supporting their efforts to promote unity. And in the coming days he will travel across the Middle East and Europe to enlist more partners in this fight, especially Arab nations who can help mobilize Sunni communities in Iraq and Syria, to drive these terrorists from their lands. This is American leadership at its best: We stand with people who fight for their own freedom, and we rally other nations on behalf of our common security and common humanity.

My administration has also secured bipartisan support for this approach here at home. I have the authority to address the threat from ISIL, but I believe we are strongest as a nation when the President and Congress work together. So I welcome congressional support for this effort in order to show the world that Americans are united in confronting this danger.

Now, it will take time to eradicate a cancer like ISIL. And any time we take military action, there are risks involved -- especially to the servicemen and women who carry out these missions. But I want the American people to understand how this effort will be different from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It will not involve American combat troops fighting on foreign soil. This counterterrorism campaign will be waged through a steady, relentless effort to take out ISIL wherever they exist, using our air power and our support for partner forces on the ground. This strategy of taking out terrorists who threaten us, while supporting partners on the front lines, is one that we have successfully pursued in Yemen and Somalia for years. And it is consistent with the approach I outlined earlier this year: to use force against anyone who threatens America's core interests, but to mobilize partners wherever possible to address broader challenges to international order.

My fellow Americans, we live in a time of great change. Tomorrow marks 13 years since our country was attacked. Next week marks six years since our economy suffered its worst setback since the Great Depression. Yet despite these shocks, through the pain we have felt and the grueling work required to bounce back, America is better positioned today to seize the future than any other nation on Earth.

Our technology companies and universities are unmatched. Our manufacturing and auto industries are thriving. Energy independence is closer than it's been in decades. For all the work that remains, our businesses are in the longest uninterrupted stretch of job creation in our history. Despite all the divisions and discord within our democracy, I see the grit and determination and common goodness of the American people every single day -- and that makes me more confident than ever about our country's future.

Abroad, American leadership is the one constant in an uncertain world. It is America that has the capacity and the will to mobilize the world against terrorists. It is America that has rallied the world against Russian aggression, and in support of the Ukrainian peoples' right to determine their own destiny. It is America -- our scientists, our doctors, our know-how -- that can help contain and cure the outbreak of Ebola. It is America that helped remove and destroy Syria's declared chemical weapons so that they can't pose a threat to the Syrian people or the world again. And it is America that is helping Muslim communities around the world not just in the fight against terrorism, but in the fight for opportunity, and tolerance, and a more hopeful future.

America, our endless blessings bestow an enduring burden. But as Americans, we welcome our responsibility to lead. From Europe to Asia, from the far reaches of Africa to war-torn capitals of the Middle East, we stand for freedom, for justice, for dignity. These are values that have guided our nation since its founding.

Tonight, I ask for your support in carrying that leadership forward. I do so as a Commander-in-Chief who could not be prouder of our men and women in uniform -- pilots who bravely fly in the face of danger above the Middle East, and servicemembers who support our partners on the ground.

When we helped prevent the massacre of civilians trapped on a distant mountain, here's what one of them said: "We owe our American friends our lives. Our children will always remember that there was someone who felt our struggle and made a long journey to protect innocent people."

That is the difference we make in the world. And our own safety, our own security, depends upon our willingness to do what it takes to defend this nation and uphold the values that we stand for -- timeless ideals that will endure long after those who offer only hate and destruction have been vanquished from the Earth.

May God bless our troops, and may God bless the United States of America.

Man in Syracuse jail accused of hiding drugs in rectum

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Christopher J. Thomas, 37, was charged with tampering with physical evidence, according to a felony complaint.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- A man arrested during a traffic stop on outstanding warrants is accused of hiding drugs in his rectum and refusing to remove them for jail deputies.

Christopher J. Thomas, 37, was charged with tampering with physical evidence, according to a felony complaint.

Sgt. Gary Bulinski pulled Thomas over at about 6:50 p.m. Monday in the 400 block of Kirk Avenue on a traffic stop. Bulinski, who is also a Syracuse Police Department spokesman, ran Thomas' license and did a warrant check.

Thomas had an outstanding arrest warrant. He was arrested and taken to the Onondaga County jail. Jail records show Thomas was wanted on several outstanding marijuana possession charges.

Sheriff's deputies later performed a strip search on Thomas at the jail and saw a plastic knotted baggie sticking out of his rectum.

Thomas would not comply with procedures to remove the evidence, which posed a risk for a life-threatening ingestion if the baggie with drugs ruptured, the complaint said.

Officers got a search warrant from Syracuse City Court allowing a search of Thomas' person. A doctor at Upstate University Hospital's emergency room removed the baggie around 12:30 a.m. Tuesday.

The recovered baggie had ruptured and was empty, though police said they believed the baggie had contained a "controlled substance" before it ruptured.

"As a result of the defendant's actions numerous Syracuse Police Officers, Onondaga County Sheriff's Deputies, a City Court Judge and hospital staff to include an Emergency Room Doctor were diverted," from their normal duties, the felony complaint said.

Thomas was held without bail.

Weather: Cooling down Thursday in Central New York, rain expected for weekend

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A cold front heading toward our region on Thursday will cause clouds and showers, especially in the morning.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- A major cool down is on the way for Central New York as we head into this weekend.

A cold front heading toward our region on Thursday will cause clouds and showers, especially in the morning, the National Weather Service said. Winds and thunderstorms could appear with some of the heaviest rain.

(View live radar map of New York state here.)

The temperature Thursday will reach into the low 70s. Winds will pick up, with southwest winds up to 25 mph and gusts as high as 35 mph. Northwest winds in the evening of about 15 mph are expected.

Drier, but much cooler weather will move into Central New York on Friday.

Temperatures will struggle to inch above the low 60s and some clouds and a light breeze are expected, Time Warner Cable News said. Low pressure will likely bring a few more showers on Saturday, but Sunday should be fairly dry.

Your Forecast

  • Thursday: Cloudy with a very good chance for rain in the morning. Southwest winds up to 25 mph with gusts up to 35 mph. Cloudy in the evening. Highs in the low 70s. Lows in the mid 40s.
  • Friday: Partly sunny with north winds up to 10 mph. Highs in the low 60s. Lows in the mid 40s.
  • Saturday: Cloudy with a 50/50 chance for rain during the day and evening. Highs in the mid 60s. Lows near 50.
  • Sunday: Cool and Partly cloudy. Highs in the low 60s. Lows in the mid 40s.
  • Monday: Partly sunny, then cloudy later in the day with a slight chance for rain. Highs near 70. Lows in the low 50s.

You can also follow us on Facebook or visit http://www.syracuse.com/weather/ for more on the weather.

To send in weather info, or especially photos: Use the Twitter or Instagram hashtag: #cnyweather Also, please let us know where the images are located.


See Syracuse University's new, $90 million law school building, Dineen Hall

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Check out the airy, high-tech and environmentally green building named for a family with a long legacy at SU.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- Syracuse University's College of Law will dedicate SU's newest building Friday, the $90 million Dineen Hall.

The spacious, airy, high-tech and environmentally green building is named for a family with a long legacy at SU.

Nine decades ago, Robert Dineen left his Syracuse Irish immigrant neighborhood a few blocks away to attend SU's College of Law. Dineen went straight into law school from high school, skipping undergraduate studies -- which could be done in the 1920s. When he graduated in 1924, at age 21, he held a certificate of law.

A few years later, Carolyn Bareham, of Rochester, entered SU's College of Law as one of two women in her class. She graduated with her law degree in 1932.  

Dineen and Bareham met as lawyers when they were representing co-defendants in a lawsuit. They worked for two Syracuse-area law firms -- Dineen for Bond, Schoeneck and King, Bareham for Costello, Cooney and Fearon.

They married. They had four children. One
died of leukemia at age seven, the three others became lawyers. One of them - Robert Jr. - also attended SU's
College of Law, graduating in 1966. He
is a SU trustee.

Robert Dineen died in 1989 at age 85. Carolyn Bareham King died in 2001, at 95.

In 2010, Robert and Carolyn's three children, Carolyn Dineen King, Kathryn Dineen Wriston and Robert Dineen Jr., agreed to donate $15 million toward the
building, named in honor of their parents. All three are expected at the
dedication.

"We had perfectly wonderful parents. They were the best," said Carolyn Dineen King, a senior judge of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in Houston. "Here we are 110 years after my father was born and we have the privilege of dedicating this building in their name. There's a legion of people who put in money and effort to make this possible.  It will be a very happy day."

Robert Dineen Sr., served as superintendent of insurance for the State of New York from 1943-50, and left to join Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., eventually serving as the company's president and CEO.

Richard Gluckman, an SU alumnus and partner in the Gluckman Mayner architectural firm in New York City, was lead architect for the building.

Friday's dedication events will include an 11 a.m. panel of circuit judges discussing the state of judicial independence and judicial legitimacy in an age of partisan gridlock and political polarization.  The panel will be moderated by College of Law Professor Keith Bybee. 

Participating will be Theodore McKee, chief judge of the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, who will be joined by fellow judges James E. Graves Jr., of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Carolyn Dineen King, Rosemary S. Pooler, of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,  and Thomas M. Reavley, senior judgeof the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The building's opening ceremony will be held at 1:30 p.m.

Dineen King said that based on her experience she expects the ribbon-cutting to be an upbeat event.

"As a chief judge of my circuit, I've cut the ribbon on ten or 12 courthouses along the southwest border," she said.  "Ribbon cuttings are a very special event. Everybody in the room is happy and looking to the future. I know that's what it will be like Friday."

Contact Dave Tobin anytime: Email | Twitter | Facebook | 315-470-3277

Did private eye find juror who could overturn Syracuse shopkeeper's rape conviction?

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Craig Davis is running out of time to get his guilty rape verdict tossed by a skeptical County Court judge.

Syracuse, NY -- A Syracuse shopkeeper found guilty of raping an underage girl is due back in court today to see if he's found proof that a juror tainted his conviction.

Craig Davis, 43, claims that one of his jurors could have had an ulterior motive to finding him guilty: the desire to buy his South Salina Street convenience store. He says that was enough to get a new trial.

Davis, owner of 7 Styles Convenience Store, was supposed to be sentenced to state prison for rape, criminal sex act and sex abuse involving a 14-year-old girl.

Davis picked up the girl in his SUV and giving her alcohol in January 2012.

The victim testified that she sneaked out of a window and traveled in Davis's SUV. He bought her alcohol and they had sex in the SUV, then later spent time at an apartment. The victim arrived late for high school the next day.

But at sentencing Aug. 14, his lawyer Paul Carey brought up this mysterious juror as a reason to set aside the verdict.

County Court Judge Anthony Aloi gave Davis a few weeks to find the juror. But on Aug. 25, Carey told the judge a private investigator was still looking.

Aloi gave Davis until today to find the juror and get a statement. If Davis can't, he'll be sentenced.

The judge has expressed skepticism that this will pan out for Davis.

"Do you think a juror will admit it tainting a jury so he could get a better purchase price on the store?" the judge asked Aug. 14.

"Stranger things have happened," Carey replied.

"Not much stranger," the judge responded.

Imperfect Justice: Fulton cops "dropped the ball" in 1968 Carolee Ashby investigation, expert says

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Three homicide and cold case experts said Fulton police could have done more to catch Douglas Parkhurst.

Editor's Note: Carolee Ashby was hit and killed by a car Halloween night 1968, but the driver wasn't found. Forty-four years later, a man confessed. This is the story of what happens when a deadly crime goes unsolved.

By Ken Sturtz and Jeff Stein

FULTON, N.Y. -- Except for the paperwork and some faded photographs, all of the evidence from the 1968 investigation into a 4-year-old girl's killing was somehow lost over the decades.

In the 1960s, the Fulton Police Department would often handle even important case work sloppily, said Arlen Cline, a retired officer and the first one to the scene of the crash that killed Carolee Ashby.

"The way they did investigations, it was atrocious," Cline, now of Tennessee, said of the senior officers.

Back then, some police officers routinely got private donations from citizens, Cline said. They received discounted groceries for running down bad checks. Few had gone to a police academy or knew proper investigative techniques, he said.

"We had a general evidence room that anyone could walk into and out of," Cline said.

Records of the crash show that police were incompetent at best, said Joseph Giacalone, an adjunct criminal justice professor at John Jay College who was an NYPD detective and the commanding officer of the Bronx Cold Case Squad. Giacalone reviewed portions of the police file of the Ashby investigation for syracuse.com.

"The cops in 1968 dropped the ball -- they had an active lead, they had a viable suspect, but they didn't go for the kill," Giacalone said. "Why?"

Cline said it wasn't for lack of trying, calling the push an "all-out effort."

"Every cop who worked that night did everything humanly possible that we could have done," said Larry Mullen, who retired from the police department in 1986. "And any one of them would have died to catch the person."

But it's not just the fact that the police didn't catch Douglas Parkhurst in 1968 that raises eyebrows, Giacalone said.

Related: Fulton cops investigated variety of suspects in 1968 as Carolee Ashby's killer

Giacalone noted that police failed to impound his car. They didn't analyze it for hair follicles or take any samples from it. Those were standard procedures even by the 1960s, he said.

"You hit somebody with a car, that person's going to leave something on that car," Giacalone said. "You can't tell me that the kid didn't leave skin, or some blood, or some clothing, on the car."

Two other experts at John Jay -- professors Jon Shane and Joseph Pollini -- agreed that Fulton officers did poor police work. Syracuse.com shared details of the Ashby case with Shane and Pollini.

"They should've taken a sworn statement from (Parkhurst); they should've photographed the vehicle; they should've photographed the guardrail he said it happened with," said Shane, who in 20 years with the Newark Police Department oversaw a homicide unit.

"They should've conducted a standard investigation - those things are terribly important to a case, especially when they're investigating a fatal accident."

If the police reports don't reflect all the police did, that in itself is a significant oversight, Pollini said.

Related: Read 44 years of police files on Carolee Ashby case

"Whoever did those reports should've been very specific, so someone can pick up the case today, read the case and see everything they did on that day," said Pollini, who was the commander of the Cold Case Homicide Squad, Special Projects Unit, of the NYPD.

Police should have tried to obtain a warrant to seize Parkurst's car, Pollini said.

"At the very least, they should have pursued this a lot more than they did," Pollini said.

Douglas Parkhurst himself said he failed to understand how his claim that his car was damaged by a guardrail held up.

"I never knew why the police never challenged me on this," he said in his signed confession in 2013.

***

A man walked into the Fulton police station on the night of Dec. 28, 1974.

He told a sergeant that while having coffee at the North End Diner, he'd talked with a friend who mentioned being at a party where someone had apparently admitted he was the one who had "hit and killed the Ashby girl and got away with it."

The tipster didn't know much, but the sergeant took down the information about the mysterious confession and added a single one-page police report to the case file.

If police ever followed the tip, there's no record. The report is the only record of the investigation between August 1969 and January 2000.

Douglas Parkhurst, who was questioned in 1968, was the man who reportedly made the startling admission, according to the police report. He wouldn't be questioned again until 2013.


Part 1: Why it took 44 years to catch hit-and-run victim Carolee Ashby's killer


Part 2: Witness mistook hit-and-run victim Carolee Ashby for teddy bear

Part 3: 44 years ago Fulton cops suspected Douglas Parkhurst as Carolee Ashby's killer

Next: Douglas Parkhurst lived full life in 44 years after Carolee Ashby was killed

Contact Ken Sturtz at 315-766-7833 or ksturtz@syracuse.com.

New York finally pays wrongly convicted man: $7.3 million for nine years in prison

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State police coerced a false confession from Dan Gristwood in 1996 about hammer attack on his wife, a judge ruled.

PENNELLVILLE, N.Y. - Dan Gristwood went truck shopping Monday. He picked out a Dodge 3500 pickup with dual rear wheels - big enough to haul a camper he'll buy soon.

They'll be among the first paybacks for an innocent man locked away for nearly a decade over someone else's crime.

Gristwood said he plans to make the purchases with some of the money that arrived Friday from New York state. His lawyer received two checks in the mail totaling $7.3 million to compensate Gristwood for the wrongful conviction.

The checks set the final price tag for state troopers' conduct, an amount paid by state taxpayers.

Of the total amount, $1.8 million was interest that accumulated since a judge ruled in 2011 that state police coerced a false confession out of Gristwood over a hammer attack on his wife in 1996 in their Clay apartment.

The interest got so high because the state's lawyers appealed state Court of Claims Judge Nicholas Midey's verdict. The interest went up $1,369 a day since Midey found the state liable in April 2011.

"They fought me all the way, tooth and nail," Gristwood said.

Of the $7.3 million, the standard one-third, or $2.4 million, will go to the Lynn Law Firm, where Shannon and co-counsel Patricia Lynn-Ford work.

Gristwood, 47, said he plans to put 90 percent, or $4.4 million, of the remaining $4.9 million into trusts for his five adult children.

It was Gristwood's idea, Shannon said. In their meetings about how to apportion the money, Gristwood said he wanted to put most of it in a safe place for his kids, such as a trust or an annuity, Shannon said.

"He's determined to put it aside for his family," Shannon said.

Gristwood plans to use some of the remaining $500,000 in the next month to travel in the new pickup truck and camper he plans to buy. He and his girlfriend Stacy plan to go to a big NASCAR race in North Carolina in October, then keep going, he said. They might visit Disney World, he said.

"I'm going to do some traveling, relax a little bit," he said. "I'm doing good, very happy. But it was a long, hard road."

Gristwood was convicted in 1996 in Onondaga County of trying to murder his wife and was sentenced to 12 1/2 to 25 years in prison. He was released in 2005 because another man, Mastho Davis, came forward in 2003 and admitted he was the one who beat Christina Gristwood over the head with a hammer as she lay in bed.

Christina Gristwood suffered serious brain damage in the attack and was paralyzed on one side. She died five months ago.

"It was rough," Dan Gristwood said of his prison time and the nine years after he got out, wondering if he'd ever get compensated. "Now it's not rough. It's over, 20 years of hard life."

He plans to keep running his business, Gristwood General Services, out of his home in Pennellville. He welds and repairs small engines, cars and chain saws. Why would he keep working with all that money at his disposal?

"It's something to do," he said. "How much TV can you watch? How much vacation can you do? I'm still gonna tinker and do work. Definitely not gonna be a lazy person."

He might build a new house some day, but for now will stay in the same one in Pennellville, he said. He lives in a converted garage that's been in his family for years.

Gristwood and his five grown children, along with his five grandchildren, had a little celebration Saturday with a barbecue at his house.

He had called all of his kids Saturday with the news that the checks had arrived in the mail. None of them was clamoring for his or her share, he said.

"To be honest with you, they don't want anything," he said. "They just want me to be happy."

Contact John O'Brien at jobrien@syracuse.com or 315-470-2187.

Republicans will spend $1.2 million on TV ads backing John Katko for Congress

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Source: NRCC ad campaign will last seven weeks through Election Day.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The National Republican Congressional Committee today will become the first independent group from outside of Central New York to begin airing TV ads in this year's 24th Congressional District race.

The NRCC, the campaign arm of House Republicans, reserved $1.2 million in TV ad time to support GOP candidate John Katko in his challenge against Rep. Dan Maffei, D-Syracuse, according to a Republican source familiar with the ad buy.

The GOP ads begin airing today in the Syracuse television market and will continue for seven weeks through Election Day, the source said.

The decision to invest heavily in Katko's campaign indicates that Republicans view the 24th District race as one of the most competitive in the nation. The NRCC in July elevated Katko to "Young Gun" status, the top tier of a three level recruitment program for House candidates.

Only 43 GOP candidates have qualified for the NRCC's top level of financial and strategic support in the 2014 mid-term elections.

The NRCC has spent heavily in the Syracuse-area congressional district in the two previous election cycles. The committee spent almost $2 million in support of former Rep. Ann Marie Buerkle in her 2012 election loss to Maffei.

The rival Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee spent more than $2 million in independent support of Maffei's campaign in 2012. The DCCC has not yet said how much it will spend on advertising to support Maffei this year. But the committee has elevated Maffei to its top Frontline program to help protect potentially vulnerable incumbents.

Maffei's own campaign committee has already reserved more than $1 million for TV ads that began before Labor Day and will air daily through Election Day on Nov. 4.

Contact Mark Weiner anytime: Email | Twitter | Facebook | 571-970-3751

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