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Whitefish shortage causing Passover meal problems

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A shortage of whitefish in the Great Lakes region resulting partly from the winter deep freeze is coming at an inconvenient time for Jewish families: the Passover holiday, when demand is high because it's a key ingredient in a traditional recipe.

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. -- A shortage of whitefish in the Great Lakes region resulting partly from the winter deep freeze is coming at an inconvenient time for Jewish families: the Passover holiday, when demand is high because it's a key ingredient in a traditional recipe.

Markets in Chicago and Detroit were among those struggling to fill whitefish orders before the beginning of the eight-day celebration Monday evening, and a representative of a commercial fishing agency said the shortfall extended as far as New York.

"Everybody's pulling their hair out," said Kevin Dean, co-owner of Superior Fish Co., a wholesaler near Detroit whose latest shipment provided just 75 pounds of whitefish although he requested 500 pounds. "I've never seen it this bad this time of year."

The dish that inspires such angst is gefilte fish, which somewhat resembles meat loaf or meatballs. Recipes handed down for generations vary but typically call for ground-up fish and other components such as onions, carrots, eggs and bread crumbs. Other fish such as cod, pike and trout are sometimes a part of the mix, but whitefish is especially popular.

"Just smelling that gefilte fish aroma tells my senses that it's a Jewish holiday," said Jason Miller, a rabbi and director of a kosher food certification agency in West Bloomfield, Mich.

In the Chicago suburb of Skokie, Ill., Ira Kirsche of Hungarian Kosher Foods said his market ordinarily would get 200 to 300 pounds of whitefish daily this time of year but has had to settle for 10 to 20 pounds.

Justin Hiller's family market in suburban Detroit eventually received the 4,000 pounds it needed to meet demand but it was a close call.

"There was a short period a couple of days before Passover where we had to create a waiting list," he said.

Gefilte fish ("gefilte" is a Yiddish word for "stuffed") originated in eastern Europe, where it was an inexpensive and tasty choice for Sabbath and holiday meals, Miller said. Because it could be prepared ahead of time, it provided a way to avoid violating the Jewish law against deboning fish on the Sabbath.

It's also available frozen or in cans or jars. But for many, only homemade will do.

Elyse Fine of Rochester, N.Y., who travels to the Chicago area yearly to prepare Seder meals for extended family, said her family used jar varieties until about 10 years ago when her husband suggested she try producing it from scratch.

"Everybody loved it," Fine said. "Now they don't want me to go back to the jar stuff."

She finally located some whitefish an hour's drive away after coming up short at stores closer to home.

The whitefish shortfall is yet another ripple effect of the bitterly cold winter, which caused more than 90 percent of the Great Lakes surface area to freeze over. In some places, the ice cover was many feet thick, leaving commercial crews stuck in port.

"You have a lot of boats that can't get out to fish, even now," said Chuck Bronte, senior fishery biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Green Bay, Wis.

Native American crews in northern Lake Michigan and Lake Huron, as well as Lake Superior, were able to drop their nets through holes drilled in the ice, said Mark Ebener, fishery assessment biologist with the Chippewa Ottawa Resource Authority, which regulates tribal fishing in the area.

They had some success but the whitefish population has dropped in recent years, making the Passover shortage worse, he said.

The reason is unclear, although some scientists blame invasive mussels, which create food scarcity in aquatic food chains by gobbling vast amounts of plankton.


Sex offenders will be prohibited from driving taxicabs in city of Oswego under new law

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City rewrites taxicab law and common council votes 5-0 Monday night to approve the amended law.

Oswego, NY -- The Oswego Common Council has worked on a law that would prohibit sex offenders from driving taxicabs in the city of Oswego for two years.

The common council voted 5-0 Monday night to approve an amendment to the city's taxicab law that will require applicants for a taxi driver's license to submit fingerprints and a background investigation, which will be conducted by the Oswego City Police Department. An applicant may be denied a taxi driver's license on the basis of his or her criminal record.

"The law will take sex offenders off our streets," said Councilor Michael Todd.

Todd said there are currently nine registered sex offenders driving taxicabs in the city of Oswego. But when those drivers attempt to renew his or her licenses, the applications will be denied under the new law. Drivers are required to renew licenses every two years.

"They can drive a cab anywhere else, just not in the city of Oswego," Todd said. "Not anymore."

Common Council President Ronald Kaplewicz said it was "long overdue" that the law was put on the books.

In September 2012, the common council adopted a city law that would prohibit registered sex offenders and anyone who has been found guilty of a felony within the last 10 years from obtaining a license to drive a taxi in the city of Oswego.

The city was quickly hit with a lawsuit over the new law in December 2012.

The Workforce Advocacy Center, a nonprofit group that advocates to end discrimination against people with a criminal record, accused the city of violating the U.S. and New York State constitutions and Article 23A of the state Corrections Law, which protects people with criminal records from discrimination.

The lawsuit wanted the city to make the law invalid and unenforceable.

The common council voted in January 2013 to amend the city law on taxicabs and who can drive them. The amendment eliminated the restrictions for drivers who are registered sex offenders and anyone who has been found guilty of a felony within the last 10 years.

Oswego City Attorney Gay Williams said the lawsuit was dismissed and the town has worked with the state for the past year to rewrite the law.

Williams said the original wording would prohibit anyone with a felony from obtaining a taxi driver's license. That wording was too broad. Now the city will look at each applicant on a case-by-case basis.

"Our first priority is to provide safety to our residents and visitors who come to our city," said Oswego City Mayor Thomas Gillen. "I think that we have to regulate our taxis. Really it's to protect the residents from any harm. I think it's a professional service that we offer to people in our city and they should be entitled to a professional and safe service."

The proposed new law states:

Any new applicant for, or renewal of, a taxi driver's license must submit to a background investigation conducted by the Oswego City Police Department. Any person applying for a taxi driver's license must submit their fingerprints and any application fees in the form and manner as prescribed by New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services. The chief of police and the city clerk, or respective designees, will be responsible for reviewing the criminal history record information disseminated by DCJS; and if a prospective applicant has been convicted of any of the criminal offenses specifically mention in this chapter, any decision regarding such prospective applicant's fitness for a license must be made upon consideration of New York State Correct Law 701-702-b and 751-753. Correction Law 701-702-b provides for certificates of relief from disability and certificates of good conduct and 751-753 sets forth NY's public policy to encourage the licensure and employment of persons previously convicted of one or more criminal offenses and factors that should be considered in making hiring determinations. An applicant may be denied a taxi driver's license on the basis of his or her criminal record in accordance with the aforementioned State and Federal laws, and including but not limited to New York Human Rights Law Section 296 and New York Correction Law Article 23-A.

The proposed new law also includes other changes. All fees will be non-refundable and all taxicabs must have a non-flashing yellow or white top light on the vehicle under the new law.

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

Centro truck crashes into Oswego County Federal Credit Union; causes shutdown

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The driver of a Centro pickup truck is accused of running a red light and causing a two-vehicle crash before hitting the credit union building.

Oswego, NY -- A Centro truck driver ran a red light and collided with another truck before crashing into the Oswego County Federal Credit Union at East Fourth and Bridge streets in Oswego, city police said.

The Centro's 2001 Ford F-250 pickup broke the gas main and electric meter when it crashed into the credit union's main branch, police and 911 officials said. The damage to the gas and electrical services resulted in a "dangerous" natural gas leak, Oswego city firefighters said.

Credit_union_truck_crash2.JPGView full sizeThe Countertop Shop truck hit the Oswego County Federal Credit Union sign after it was involved in a crash with a Centro pickup truck Monday morning at the intersection of East Fourth and Bridge streets in the city of Oswego. 

The credit union, which lost power, was forced to shut down after the crash Monday, authorities said. Employees inside the credit union were not hurt, firefighters said.

Both drivers went to Oswego Hospital, where they were treated for minor injuries, Oswego police said.

Here's how the crash happened, according to city police:

At 8:34 a.m., a Centro pickup truck traveling east on state Route 104, also known as Bridge Street, ran a red light at the intersection of East Fourth Street. At same time, the driver of The Countertop Shop's 2004 Chevrolet Silverado was heading south on East Fourth Street. The Countertop Shop truck, which had a green light, was crossing Bridge Street to continue on East Fourth Street.

The vehicles collided in the 30 mph zone. Both pickup trucks ended up in the credit union's lawn. The Centro truck hit the building; The Countertop Shop truck hit the credit union's sign. It was not immediately known the extent of the structural damage, firefighters said.

After the crash, Oswego city firefighters said they worked quickly to isolate the gas leak. The gas line was eventually repaired, firefighters said.

Oswego police shut down the streets in the area for some time while crews worked to make sure the area was safe, Oswego Fire Lt. Paul Conzone said in an email. National Grid also helped at the scene.

Menter Ambulance took the driver of The Countertop Shop truck to the hospital; the Centro driver was driven to the hospital by another Centro employee, firefighters said.

Police have not released the names of the drivers, citing the crash is still under investigation. The driver of the Centro truck was issued a ticket, charging him with failing to stop at a red light, police said.

Weather: Snow, sleet return; 2 inches of new accumulation possible

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Unseasonably cold temperatures will last through Wednesday before more mild weather returns.

Syracuse, NY -- After two days of beautiful weather, Central New Yorkers will need to dig out their winter coats again because it's going to snow.

Yes, snow.

Two inches of new snow and sleet accumulation is expected Tuesday.

Temperatures reached 83 degrees Sunday and 79 degrees Monday. But on Tuesday, a strong cold front will move through the area and temperatures will plummet from the mid- to low 50s in the morning to mid- to low 30s by the afternoon and into the evening. By mid-afternoon, rain will turn to sleet and snow.

Wednesday also will be "unseasonably cold," according to the National Weather Service. But milder weather should return later this week.

Your forecast

  • Today: Rain before 2 p.m., then sleet, possibly mixed with snow. Breezy. Winds 15 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph. Temperatures will fall to 34 degrees by 5 p.m.
  • Tonight: Snow showers likely, mainly before 4 a.m. Cloudy and breezy. Winds 18 to 21 mph, with gusts as high as 32 mph. Low around 22.
  • Wednesday: Scattered flurries before 7 a.m. Sunny. High near 38. Low around 24.
  • Thursday: Sunny during the day; partly cloudy at night. High near 56. Low 35.
  • Friday: Partly sunny during the day and mostly cloudy at night. High near 62. Low around 42.
  • The weekend

    • Saturday: Mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of showers. High near 58. Low 41.
    • Easter Sunday: Mostly cloudy. High near 54. Low around 40.

    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.

    Weather: What to expect today from fast-moving, fast-changing storm

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    Snow, ice and high winds could make a difficult evening commute.

    Syracuse, N.Y. -- Heavy rain, snow, sleet, ice, high winds -- it's all possible today in Central New York. Today's blast of winter will be fast-moving and fast-changing. Here's what you'll need to know.

    Timing. Rain in the morning, snow and high winds in the afternoon. Temperatures falling rapidly throughout the afternoon. A rough timeline for Central New York:
    9 a.m: Heavy rain
    noon. Rain changes to snow/sleet
    2 p.m. High winds start
    3 p.m. Temperatures drop below freezing

    Rain: Heavy rain will start falling across the Finger Lakes this morning and then move west. The heaviest rain in Central New York will be 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The region could see 1 to 1.5 inches.

    Snow. Rain will yield to snow beginning about 10 a.m. in the Finger Lakes, noon in Syracuse and 2 p.m. in Utica. Syracuse could see 2 to 4 inches.

    Cold. Temperatures will plunge from 61 degrees at 8 a.m. to 30 by 5 p.m. By tomorrow at 8 a.m., it could be 21 degrees.

    Winds. We'll see gusts of more than 30 mph in Syracuse, and up to 45 mph in higher terrain. The heaviest winds will be from 2 to 10 p.m.

    Driving. Roads wet from rain and snow could turn icy as temperatures fall. High winds could blow snow around during the evening commute and beyond. Drive carefully.

    Flooding. The morning's heavy rains could cause flooding of streams, rivers and low-lying areas. Flood warnings have been issued for the Black River in Watertown and Boonville, the Mohawk River in Rome, and the West Canada Creek in Hinckley. A flood watch is in effect for Jefferson, Lewis and Oswego counties.

    Power outages. High winds and wet snow on tree branches could lead to sporadic power outages.

    Here is the National Weather Service public briefing on the storm.

    NWS Public Briefing 04 14 14

    Contact Glenn Coin at gcoin@syracuse.com or 315-470-3251. Follow him on Twitter @glenncoin

    NY Minute: Cuomo staffer & Safe Act author wrote Moreland Commission report instead of panel's choice of outsider

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    Gov. Andrew Cuomo will headline an event for charter schools in May, the state cracks down on welfare abuse, and see what the state spent on April 10.

    SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- It's Tax Day, it's NY Safe Act assault weapons registration day, and it's going to snow somewhere between 2 and 4 inches. And the moon turned red last night. Ah, April.

    A staffer for Gov. Andrew Cuomo wrote the sole report from Moreland Commission, an independent investigatory panel the governor set up (and now dismantled) to look into political corruption in Albany. The author -- who also claims to have written the NY Safe Act -- wasn't the panel's first choice. Instead, the panel, co-led by Onondaga County District Attorney Bill Fitzpatrick, wanted a lawyer who works for the Brennan Center for Justice.

    New York got its $8 billion "waiver" from the federal Medicaid program, an accounting award that allows the state to erase $8 billion in future costs because of successes with past cost-savings.

    Is this historic? Cuomo isn't holding special elections this spring, despite 12 vacancies in the New York State Legislature.

    In case there was any doubt -- Cuomo loves charter schools.

    An effort to crackdown on welfare abuse made it into the final version of the state budget, meaning gambling establishments, strip clubs and other adult-rated businesses can no longer accept the public assistance program's electronic benefits transfer cards.

    Cuomo came to Syracuse on Monday to tout the budget, the fourth on-time state spending plan in his four years in office. Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner didn't stick around for the highlights.

    State officials on Monday named the No. 2 official at the New York State Fair as the acting director. The search for a permanent manager goes on.

    The man who wants to be Onondaga County's next sheriff talks about his son's problems with the law.

    See what New York spent on April 10.

    Despite today's crazy temperature plummet, all things winter are coming to an end. Whiteface and Gore will close on Easter.

    A sign of our climate times: the gefilte fish is running low.

    Donald Trump wants to buy the Buffalo Bills. Seriously.

    Tweet of the Day


    Contact Teri Weaver at tweaver@syracuse.com, 315-470-2274 or on Twitter at @TeriKWeaver.

    Dutch teen arrested for 'joke' threat to American Airlines on Twitter

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    A 14-year-old girl said she was from al-Qaida and would "do something really big on June 1."

    AMSTERDAM (AP) -- Police in the Netherlands have arrested a 14-year-old girl on suspicion of threatening American Airlines in a tweet.

    Police spokesman Roland Ekkers said the girl, who has not been identified for privacy reasons, turned herself in to Rotterdam police in the company of a parent Monday and is now being interrogated.

    The tweet posted Sunday said it came from an al-Qaida member in Afghanistan named Ibrahim and threatened to "do something really big on June 1." But the account's handle came with the nickname "Sarah" and a profile image of a young woman.

    Apologetic tweets were posted to the account after the airline replied it was taking the threat seriously and calling in law enforcement. "Sarah," whose account has since been suspended, said she was just "joking."

    Ekkers said the motive for the tweet is not yet known.

    Boston Marathon bombings: Tributes planned to mark anniversary

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    Vice President Joe Biden, Gov. Deval Patrick and former Mayor Tom Menino will be among the dignitaries expected to honor the victims.

    BOSTON (AP) -- The anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombings promises to be a day of tributes to the three people who died, the more than 260 people who were injured, and the first responders, doctors and nurses who helped them.

    Vice President Joe Biden, Gov. Deval Patrick and former Mayor Tom Menino will be among the dignitaries expected to honor the victims Tuesday during a program at the Hynes Convention Center. Speakers also will include survivors of the bombing.

    Between 2:30 p.m. and 3 p.m., a flag-raising ceremony and moment of silence will be held at the marathon finish line, to mark the time and place where two bombs exploded on April 15, 2013.

    Authorities say two brothers planned and orchestrated the attack and later shot and killed a Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer during an attempt to steal his gun. Tamerlan Tsarnaev, 26, died following a shootout with police several days after the bombings. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, 20, has pleaded not guilty to 30 federal charges and is awaiting trial. He faces the possibility of the death penalty.

    The Tsarnaevs, ethnic Chechens who lived in the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan and the Dagestan region of Russia, settled in Cambridge, outside Boston, more than a decade ago after moving to the U.S. as children with their family.

    Prosecutors have said Dzhokhar Tsarnaev left a hand-scrawled confession condemning U.S. actions in Muslim countries on the inside wall of a boat he was found hiding in following the police shootout.


    If East Syracuse abolishes police department, how much will residents save? Vote is Wednesday

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    Here is a look at the projected savings and impact if the East Syracuse Village Police Department is abolished. A referendum will take place Wednesday.

    East Syracuse residents will vote Wednesday on whether or not to eliminate the village's police department and contract with the town of DeWitt for police services.

    The village board adopted a new local law which abolishes the police department, but it is subject to a public referendum. Voting is from noon to 9 p.m. at village hall. If the department is eliminated. the village would enter into a four-year enhanced-services agreement with the town of DeWitt.

    At public hearings, some residents have questioned the savings from the move, while others have said something has to be done to lower their taxes.

    Mayor Robert Tackman has told residents taxes will rise if the department is retained. He said the village has looked at all options for keeping costs in line, and this is the best alternative.

    Here is a look at the numbers and what they mean for village residents:
    Village police department vs. town taking over policing
    Here's a comparison of the costs, service changes and tax impact if East Syracuse keeps its village police department or turns policing over to the town of DeWitt:









    Area/subject Village department Town takes over policing Difference
    Cost to village $1,100,000 $375,000 ($725,000)
    Number of officers dedicated to village 1 or 2 1 (others could respond when needed)
    Village taxes ($100,000 house) $1,848* $1,519 ($329)
    Town taxes paid by village residents ($100,000 house) $80 $330 $250
    Total taxes (village+town) paid by village residents ($100,000 house) $1,928 ($1,928)
    Taxes non-village town residents No change No change No change

    * Tax rate based on the tentative budget for 2014. The current tax rate is $16.41 or $1,641 for a home assessed at $100,000.
    Source: Onondaga County Comptroller's Office, East Syracuse village

    Boston Marathon bombings: Scenes of tragedy, then and now (photos)

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    Life has resumed on the streets of Boston a year after three people were killed and more than 260 injured when two bombs went off near the finish line of the Boston Marathon.

    Life has resumed on the streets of Boston.

    A year after three people were killed and more than 260 injured when two bombs went off near the finish line of the Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013, the city's landscape bears few reminders of the explosions, or the ensuing manhunt for suspects that ended with the capture of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in Watertown.

    On Boylston Street, the chaos and pain of that day have been replaced by the regular routines of pedestrians and drivers. Businesses are open, including the Forum restaurant, badly damaged when one bomb exploded directly outside.

    This week, barricades and a viewing stand are set up near the finish line for this year's marathon, set for Monday.

    Just down the street, Copley Square became home to a spontaneous memorial. The items, including running shoes and messages, were removed in June. Some are now on view in an exhibit across the street at the Boston Public Library.

    A few days after the bombing, Tsarnaev eluded capture after a gunbattle with police. Residents of Boston and surrounding communities were told to stay indoors while police went house to house searching for him. His brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, died following the shootout with police.

    Today, those neighborhoods are quiet again.

    Sex offenders raped, killed at least 4 women while wearing GPS ankle monitors, say police

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    Two convicted sex offenders dutifully checked in with police every month and wore their GPS trackers around the clock.

    ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- Two convicted sex offenders dutifully checked in with police every month and wore their GPS trackers around the clock -- the rules of parole that are designed to tip off authorities if a freed felon backslides.

    Yet for at least two months last fall, authorities claim, Franc Cano and Steven Dean Gordon were raping and killing at least four women -- and probably a fifth -- in the seedy prostitution hangouts of Orange County.

    It was data from their GPS trackers -- along with cellphone records from the victims and other evidence -- that helped investigators link them to the killings, police said.

    "That was one of the investigative tools we used to put the case together," Anaheim Police Chief Raul Quezada said at a news conference Monday.

    Cano, 27, and Gordon, 45, were arrested by investigators on Friday. Each was charged Monday with four felony counts of special circumstances murder and four felony counts of rape.

    If convicted, they could face a minimum sentence of life without parole or the death penalty. They were being held without bail and expected to be arraigned Tuesday.

    The men had known each other at least since 2012, when they cut off their GPS trackers and, using fake names, fled to Las Vegas, where they stayed at the Circus Circus Hotel & Casino for two weeks before they were rearrested, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court in Nevada.

    While out on parole, police believe the men killed three women in Santa Ana last October and November and an another woman in Anaheim earlier this year. All had histories of prostitution.

    Quezada said authorities were confident that there was at least a fifth victim and perhaps more.

    Investigators "put a stop to a serial killing that would likely have continued beyond this point," District Attorney Tony Rackauckas said.

    The department has contacted other places with missing-persons cases across the country.

    Kianna Jackson, 20, of Las Vegas, arrived in Santa Ana the first week of October for a court hearing on four misdemeanor charges of prostitution and loitering to commit prostitution. Her mother said she stopped responding to her text messages soon after she arrived in Santa Ana.

    She checked in to a Costa Mesa hotel but never paid the bill nor checked out, and her belongings were found there.

    Josephine Monique Vargas, 34, was last seen Oct. 24 after leaving a family birthday party in Santa Ana to go to a store.

    Martha Anaya, 28, asked her boyfriend to pick up their 5-year-old daughter so she could work on Nov. 12, then stopped responding to his messages later that night. She had been planning a birthday party for her daughter.

    Santa Ana investigators didn't realize that they were looking for murder victims at first, Police Chief Carlos Rojas said.

    Instead, police considered them missing persons. Investigators searched a canyon, examined the women's cellphone records, alerted hospitals, put the word out on social media and even checked motels they were known to frequent but without success in finding them.

    Then, on March 14, the naked body of Jarrae Nykkole Estepp, 21, was found March 14 on a conveyor belt at an Anaheim trash-sorting plant.

    That was the key that broke the case, authorities said.

    In the weeks before the discovery, Estepp had become a regular on a strip of Beach Boulevard in Anaheim long known for prostitution.

    Estepp had "a similar profile to our victims; we were able to ... move forward," Rojas said.

    Investigators planned to search for the bodies of the three Santa Ana victims, he said.

    Cano and Gordon each served time after being convicted in separate cases of lewd and lascivious acts with a child under 14.

    Gordon was convicted in 1992 and has a 2002 kidnapping conviction, according to the Orange County district attorney's office. Cano's conviction dates to 2008, prosecutors said.

    After their Las Vegas escapade, Cano and Gordon pleaded guilty to failure to register as a sex offender. They were ordered to provide DNA samples and have their computers monitored by federal agents, according to the federal documents, which were first obtained by the Los Angeles Times.

    The men also checked in with Anaheim police every 30 days, as required, and provided updated photos, fingerprints and addresses, Anaheim police Lt. Bob Dunn said.

    In fact, both men checked in earlier this month, Dunn said.

    Cano was wearing a state-issued ankle monitor and Gordon was wearing a federal GPS device, he said.

    Weather: Icy roads could snarl evening commute; less snow forecast in Central New York

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    Roads could get icy this afternoon as temperatures fall and rain changes to snow.

    Syracuse, N.Y. -- The National Weather Service is warning of icy roads today during the evening commute in Central New York.

    Rain, snow, blustery winds and rapidly falling temperature will converge this afternoon, particularly around the evening commute.

    "Rapidly falling temperatures and a changeover to snow could make for icy road surfaces leading to hazardous travel late afternoon and early evening," the weather service said in its latest briefing. (See full briefing below.)

    The latest forecast does call for less snow than originally forecast, though. Here's the latest from the weather service:

    Rain: The heaviest rain will fall from mid-morning to early afternoon. Expected totals:
    -- Onondaga, Oswego and Cortland counties, a half inch
    -- Madison and Chenango counties, 1 inch
    -- Albany and the Catskills, 1.5 inches.

    Snow: Rain will change to snow after noon. We'll see 1 to 2 inches in Central New York, mostly at higher elevations. A narrow band of heavy snow could drop 2 to 4 inches on Utica.

    Winds: Gusts could hit 30 to 40 mph in Central New York later this afternoon and tonight. There's a slight potential for power outages.

    Temperatures: They'll fall rapidly:
    9 a.m.: 55 degrees
    noon: 37
    5 p.m.: 30
    8 a.m. Wednesday: 21

    Flooding: Some low-lying areas might be flooded. A flood watch has been issued for Oswego County because of rapid snowmelt, and warnings for moderate flooding have been issued for the Black River and the West Canada Creek.

    Flash flooding isn't likely; that would take about 2 inches of rain in a six-hour period for most of the region.

    "Current indications are that most areas see just minor flooding," the weather service said.

    Here is the latest public briefing by the weather service's Binghamton office:

    Public Briefing 2 04 15 14

    Contact Glenn Coin at gcoin@syracuse.com or 315-470-3251. Follow him on Twitter @glenncoin

    US Airways tweet: Pornographic photo posted on Twitter was human error, airline says

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    Tweets mocked the gaffe as #usairways became a trending topic on Twitter Monday.

    US Airways is in hot water after an employee posted a pornographic photo on the airline's official Twitter account Monday.

    "We welcome feedback, Elle. If your travel is complete, you can detail it here for review and follow-up," the company tweeted to a customer complaining about an hour-long delay in her travel.

    But rather than include a link for contact or service, US Airways' tweet included a picture of a nude woman posing with a toy airplane between her legs.

    "We apologize for an inappropriate image recently shared as a link in one of our responses. We've removed the tweet and are investigating," the company later tweeted.

    It was too late -- the graphic image immediately went viral, and #usairways became a trending topic on Twitter. Users began flooding the social media site with jokes and bad puns about the mishap.

    • "CNN spent one month straight speculating about the plane, but they never once thought to look there," @AG_Conservative wrote.
    • "Some people are saying @USAirways was hacked but it looks like an inside job," @HeyVeronica tweeted.
    • "So THAT'S what happened in Lost?" @Bolton_Lava joked.
    • "#usairways really told her where to shove it," @JennaMarotta added.
    • "Maybe that US Airways photo was their new ad for more leg room?" @MarcMalkin speculated.

    It's not the first time a large brand has committed a faux pas on social media, but it's certainly one of the biggest in recent months. How did it happen?

    Despite theories their account was hacked or a bitter employee wanted to quit with flourish, the company told The Washington Post it was simply a matter of human error.

    "Our investigation has determined that the image was initially posted to our Twitter feed by another user," US Airways told the newspaper in a statement. "We captured the tweet to flag it as inappropriate. Unfortunately the image was inadvertently included in a response to a customer. We immediately realized the error and removed our tweet. We deeply regret the mistake and we are currently reviewing our processes to prevent such errors in the future."

    According to BuzzFeed, the image originally came from a German amateur porn and shock site. A Twitter user copied and pasted the image in a tweet to @USAirways, and then an employee apparently accidentally copied and pasted the link to the Twitter photo in the tweet to a customer.

    US Airways hasn't said if anyone's been fired, but AdAge reports similar gaffes have cost brand managers and social media agencies their jobs at other companies.

    Home Depot was accused of racism when its Twitter account asked "which drummer is not like the others?" and shared a photo of a man in a monkey costume next to two African-American men last year. And Chrysler fired New Media Strategies from managing their accounts in 2011 when a staffer wrote "I find it ironic that Detroit is known as the #motorcity and yet no one here knows how to f---ing drive" on @ChryslerAutos.

    US Airways is owned by American Airlines Group, which also made headlines via Twitter this week when it responded to a tweet threatening an attack on an American Airlines plane. A 14-year-old Dutch girl was arrested Monday after the company reported her IP address to the FBI, despite pleas later that she was "joking."

    Blood moon: Photos, video of Tuesday's rare eclipse

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    Viewers around the U.S. were treated to some spectacular blood moon sightings.

    The "blood moon" lunar eclipse treated viewers around the United States to some fantastic celestial views in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

    Regarded by some as the herald of a momentous and potentially earth-shaking event, the blood moon is the result of all the sunsets on the Earth projected onto the face of the moon. This gives the moon a deep red hue during the maximum eclipse, rather than obscuring it entirely.

    Last night's weather may have made the eclipse difficult to view in Central New York, but The Associated Press and The Oregonian captured photos of the eclipse in the middle and western parts of the country in the gallery above.

    The AP also shared a spectacular close up video of the eclipse:

    Viewers also shared some great shots via Instagram:

    Onondaga Nation: U.S. violated human rights by taking land, rejecting appeals

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    The Onondaga Nation wants an international forum to declare the United States has violated their human rights.

    Washington, D.C. -- The Onondaga Nation says in papers to be filed with an international panel today that the United States has systemically violated the tribe's rights by taking land and then creating discriminatory laws to keep the Onondaga from ever getting it back.

    The nation today will file a 40-page petition with the Organization of American States' Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

    "The United States is responsible for violations of the rights that are set forth in the American Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Man, the American Convention on Human Rights, and in other provisions of human rights law," said the petition, signed by nation spiritual leader Sid Hill.

    The petition says that New York state illegally took 4,000 square miles of Onondaga land -- including Onondaga Lake -- from 1788 to 1822, despite at least three separate treaties with the federal government.

    The United States also ignored the Onondaga Nation's request to get back the land or reach a settlement, culminating in the U.S. Supreme Court's rejection in 2011 of the nation's land claim. The Supreme Court relied on its 2005 decision in an Oneida Indian Nation land claim that said land claims had been filed too late and that giving back land after 200 years would be disruptive.

    "The prohibition created by the federal courts and applied to the Onondaga Nation
    is specifically limited to indigenous peoples and applies to no other category of claimant," the petition says. "Because this rule is created and applied only to indigenous peoples, it violates the right to equal treatment."

    The commission is an advisory body and cannot force the United States to reconsider the Onondaga claims. The Onondaga are asking the commission to write a report that would urge the United States to reverse the Oneida Indian ruling and "remedy the
    violations of the Nation's rights."

    Today is the deadline to file the petition with the commission in Washington, D.C. The nation plans to hold a protest in front of the White House today.

    "The Nation brings this petition to bring about a healing between themselves and all others who live in the region that has been the homeland of the Onondaga Nation since the dawn of time," the petition reads.

    Here is the full petition.

    Onondaga OAS Petition 4 14 14

    Contact Glenn Coin at gcoin@syracuse.com or 315-470-3251. Follow him on Twitter @glenncoin


    No parking on your lawn in the city of Oswego or you will be fined

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    City law prohibits vehicles from being parked on the lawn within the first 25 feet of the property line in the front yard of a residence.

    City of Oswego, NY -- If you park on your lawn in the city of Oswego you will be fined.

    Vehicles parked on the lawn within the first 25 feet of the property line in the front yard of a residence violate the city of Oswego Zoning Ordinance.

    "It's always been against city code to park on your lawn," said Oswego City Mayor Thomas Gillen. "It just wasn't enforced."

    The city formed a Neighborhood Quality of Life Committee about two years ago to improve living conditions throughout the city. One of the committee's efforts is to improve the off-street parking conditions particularly as it pertains to the use of public space for parking as well as parking on lawns and grass.

    "We're a college town and everyone has a car now," Gillen said. "But this city was built long before they had cars so driveways weren't in the original design."

    Gillen said the committee found that having vehicles parked on the lawns creates a negative image of the community.

    "It has a negative effect on the lawns and the sidewalks," he said. "The sidewalks are blocked for kids walking to school. There are lot of issues."

    Homeowners will have the opportunity to apply for a special permit for front yard parking. To apply for a permit, contact the zoning office at 342-8157. Failure to comply with this requirement will result in violation tickets issued by the parking attendant of the Oswego Police Department.

    "We know it's hard," Gillen said. "People have cars, we know that, but work with us. Go to our planning board and come up with some ideas. We want to beautify our city, but we also want to make it accessible for people living here.

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

    Updated: Fuel back on at DeWitt stop on NY Thruway

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    Check back for updates.

    thruwaypromo.jpgAs of late morning today, the DeWitt Service Area had no fuel available on the New York State Thruway. 

    SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- The DeWitt Service Area along the New York State Thruway currently was down for regular maintenance, according to the Thruway Authority. The lines are now running again.

    Earlier today, the Authority put out this notice:



    Contact Teri Weaver at tweaver@syracuse.com, 315-470-2274 or on Twitter at @TeriKWeaver.

    New owners take over former Excellus building in downtown Syracuse

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    Investment group that bought the former Excellus building says it is looking for the best options for redevelopment.

    Syracuse, N.Y. — The former home of Excellus Blue Cross Blue Shield in downtown Syracuse has new owners.

    Paradise Companies Two LLC bought the 253,000-square-foot, 10-story office building at 344 S. Warren St. for $1.05 million on Feb. 13.

    The building has been vacant since Excellus moved its offices and 825 employees to suburban DeWitt in 2008, leaving a giant hole in Warren Street's commercial real estate market.

    Investor Robert Walker, of Utah, bought the building for $500,000 in 2012. Walker put it up for auction in September. The building did not sell at the auction, however, because the highest bid for the building was $656,250, well below the $900,000 minimum bid sought by Walker.

    Paradise Companies Two is a real estate entity formed by a group of investors for the acquisition of the building. Grazi Zazzara Jr., president of The Icon Companies and managing partner of the investment group, said the group is in the process of studying the property "to understand the best options for redevelopment."

    The Icon Companies has the building up for lease to retail and office tenants. According to Icon's listing for the property, the first floor and, if needed, the second floor are available for retail users. The upper floors are available for office space.

    City officials are eager to see the building re-occupied as part of its goal of revitalizing South Warren Street. The city's plan includes the proposed renovation and reopening of the historic Hotel Syracuse just a block south of the former Excellus building.

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

    DA: Syracuse doc slapped sedated patients dozens of times, but can't face criminal charges

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    Dr. Michael T. Clarke slapped patients, used vulgar language and made inappropriate sexual advances, but cannot be charged, DA says.

    Syracuse, NY -- A doctor at St. Joseph's Hospital Health Center who slapped sedated patients on the buttocks, made vulgar remarks and exhibited sexually inappropriate behavior toward staff cannot be charged with a crime, Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick said today.

    The conduct by Dr. Michael T. Clarke, 47, of Manlius, happened over an extensive period of time and many surgeries, Fitzpatrick said.

    But the sheer number of times made it impossible for witnesses to identify exactly which patients were in the operating room, the DA said. That's despite a subpoena for hospital records to determine which patients were victimized.

    The DA's findings against Clarke mirror those released by the federal government earlier this month. A state health department investigation into Clarke could lead to professional sanctions.

    But none of the witnesses -- which included members of Clarke's surgical team -- described conduct that could be proven to be sexual in nature, Fitzpatrick said.

    The witnesses described Clarke slapping both male and female patients on the buttocks after they had been anesthetized for surgery. The slapped patients likely had no knowledge of the conduct after they woke up.

    Clarke defended his actions by suggesting he was checking to ensure patients were fully unconscious for surgery. But witnesses and experts undermined that explanation, the DA found.

    Despite Clarke's misconduct, Fitzpatrick said he needed identified victims and proof of sexual motivation to file criminal charges.

    "It is necessary to have proof of the element of 'sexual gratification,' and identified complainants who have come forward to pursue prosecution," Fitzpatrick said. "In this case there is neither and therefore there is insufficient evidence to support a viable criminal prosecution."

    The DA's office began an investigation in mid-January after a complaint to his office. A copy of the complaint was obtained by Syracuse.com.

    That complaint triggered a grand jury investigation that included numerous witnesses and hundreds of pages of records.

    The state health department investigation commenced at the same time. The DA's office and health department interviewed many of the same people, prosecutors said.

    The health department interviewed 24 staff members at St. Joe's, 13 of whom had direct experience working with the doctor, according to the federal report. Of those 13, 11 said the surgeon sometimes slapped patients and eight said he used sexually explicit language during OR cases.

    Fitzpatrick said the health department and hospital are taking "appropriate action" in regards to Clarke. He did not elaborate.

    But Clarke is no longer working at St. Joe's. He is now doing surgeries at Crouse Hospital. His lawyer, James Lantier, has said his client denies wrongdoing.

    The government report also suggests that the hospital ignored at least one warning from a staffer about Clarke's behavior.

    Other witnesses said they did not report it because they doubted anything would be done, they feared their jobs could be jeopardized or they did not want to confront the doctor.

    The hospital is facing serious sanctions over the issue, including a possible termination from the Medicare and Medicaid programs which pay for the majority of patients treated in hospitals.

    The DA commended the "concern and courage" of those who helped bring Clarke's misconduct to light.

    "I commend those staff members from St. Joseph's that came forward and cooperated in the investigation," Fitzpatrick said. "There is no doubt that they made a difference and improved patient services at St. Joseph's.

    No arrests so far in Cazenovia lockdown case

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    No one has been charged in connection with bullets found in a Cazenovia High School hallway on April 4.

    No one has been arrested or charged in connection with the bullets found April 4 in a hallway of Cazenovia High School, according to Cazenovia village police.

    The discovery of the bullets prompted a more than three-hour lockdown in the middle and high schools while police and dogs searched the schools room by room.

    Cazenovia Police Chief Michael Hayes said there have been no arrests in connection with the incident. He said there is no further information at this time as the investigation continues.

    Rumors of a student being suspended after being caught with two knives are false, said Cazenovia Schools Superintendent Robert Dubik. One student was suspended following the lockdown because the student had a pocket knife in school, he said.

    "We haven't determined yet who brought the bullets into the school,'' Dubik said.

    After a student reported finding the .22-caliber bullets on the ground, the high school principal was called. When he went to find the bullets, they were gone and it was later determined they had been flushed down the toilet.

    District officials said no gun was ever found, and the students weren't in danger at any time. The lockdown was precautionary in nature, officials said.


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