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Bill Proposes Raising Tanning Bed Age to 18

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 02 Februari 2013 | 23.31

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You have to be 18 to vote, buy a pack of cigarettes or enlist in the military, and a Texas lawmaker wants to add "use in a tanning bed" to the list.

Rep. John Zerwas has proposed raising the legal age to go into a tanning bed to 18.

Currently, Texans who are younger than 18 but at least 16 and a half years old can tan with a parent's consent. Zerwas' bill would treat tanning like buying a pack a cigarettes -- you must be 18.

The Houston-area lawmaker says his bill would protect young people from future medical issues.

"The evidence is so clear and evident in terms of what the increased risk is for subsequent development of skin cancer, that the bill simply addresses that, under 18, you know, no," he said.

Zerwas said medical experts came to him the idea for the bill and are now backing the proposed legislation.

"M.D. Anderson came to me, and the dermatological society came to me, so there is really a strong consensus around this, at least around the medical community," he said.

The legislation would only affect commercial tanning beds at tanning salons. Zerwas said some tanning salons might fight against the bill.

But not all of them.

Gino Vankuilenburg of Metro Tan in Carrollton told NBC 5 that many of his teen customers now prefer spray-tanning because it's cheaper and faster.

Leslie Lopez, co-owner of The Tan Bar in Dallas said she is seeing an increase in younger customers asking for spray tans.

"I think more kids are becoming more aware of the risks and the results of booths," said Lopez, whose business doesn't offer electric tanning. "Our business has grown since we started."

Lopez said she doesn't offer electric tanning beds to her customers, citing the danger of ultraviolet rays to the skin.

"I think it's long overdue, actually," she said. "We all know what happens to the skin when it goes into a tanning bed -- you could develop melanoma, and people could have prior histories. I just don't think younger [people] should be allowed to do it."

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Marine Dad's Homecoming Surprises Kids

Andres Gutierrez, NBC 5 News

Marine Lt. Col. Patrick Johnson's homecoming was a special surprise for his three children during a school assembly at Dallas Academy Friday.

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Three Dallas children reunited with their Marine father in a surprise homecoming after nearly a year apart.

Lt. Col. Patrick Johnson has served three deployments in Afghanistan.

"You focus on the mission; you focus on the requirements," he said.

But as a father, there's a weak spot for his children underneath that exterior.

"I'm not allowed to get broken down," he said. "I think about them frequently. I thought of this moment for a long time."

Hundreds of students at the Dallas Academy gathered a patriotic assembly Friday. Johnson's family, including 12-year-old Bryghte, 10-year-old Asher and 5-year-old daughter Madray sat in the front row.

There were bear hugs from his children and tears from their mother when he came out.

Bryghte, whose birthday is on Sunday, said his father's surprise homecoming is a tremendous birthday gift.

"It was probably the biggest surprise of my life," he said.

Johnson will be home for a while; there is no word whether or not he'll be deployed overseas again.

"The circle has been closed," he said. "It's great to be together again."

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Bull Fighter Steals Show With Vault From Bull

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The Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo is already pretty entertaining, but at Thursday night's rodeo, one performer out did himself.

It's the video that's the talk of the Stock Show and Rodeo on Friday, the video of bull fighter Dusty Tuckness surviving a close encounter with a bull in an usual and spectacular way.

"Just felt like I timed it good and the bull just got underneath me," Tuckness said on Friday. "He threw me pretty good ways in the air, but praise to God we landed it on the rail and got out of their in good shape."

Two different camera angles show Tuckness running in to get in-between a rider and the bull. As he ran Tuckness took what's called a "shot in the shorts" in rodeo lingo, as the bull's horns and head got him in the buttocks and sent him flying anywhere from 6 to 20 feet, by some estimates.

Tuckness hit the top rail with one foot, landing on the back rail of the chute with both feet. He then hoped up, gave a fist pound to another rodeo worker, waved his hand and went right back to work.

Tuckness was humble about his highlight reel efforts Friday afternoon, just as he was about to enter the rodeo ring, yet again.

"That's what we're out there to do is to just distract the bull and take the hookings or the shots needed to keep these guys safe," Tuckness said.

Tuckness, 26, and from Wyoming, has been a bull fighter for seven years. And if you think his efforts are unusual, he would tell you otherwise.

"Sometimes we get thrown in the air and we do land them or make it out in good shape," Tuckness said. "So, when it works out like that it's really good. But when it works out the other way it's not so good for me, but you guys still get enjoyment from it."

Veteran rodeo watchers marveled at the effort on Friday, including the Stock Show's Manager Brad Barnes.

"You will not believe it, I don't think it's ever happened anywhere that anybody's ever known of," Barnes said. "He was almost even with the press box, which was very scary at that moment in time. I was really nervous. But then he landed on the top rail of the buck chute, just like it was planned. He landed just like he was a gymnast."

Barnes joked with Tuckness about performing the move every show, but it is something the Stock Show and Rodeo is glad to show off.

"Good for ticket sales," Barnes said.

But on Friday Tuckness said he kept to himself in his trailer.

"I just kept kind of a low profile," he said.

Thanking God for his solid landing right before he was back chasing bulls and protecting riders.

"We're good and ready to go," Tuckness said.

Tuckness said he's just ready for the last week of shows and will keep doing his job of protecting riders.

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Number of New Flu Cases Continues to Drop

CDC

Both Dallas and Tarrant County are reporting fewer new cases of the flu.

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The number of new flu cases continues to go down in North Texas.

The Dallas County health department has reported a second straight week of decline in the overall number of new cases.

Positive test results dropped by 2 percent from a week earlier to 27 percent for the week that ended Jan. 26. The number of children staying home from school with the flu also dropped in Dallas County.

Tarrant County reported a bigger drop in new cases.

The percentage of positive test results there was down 5 percent to 26 percent for the week. And, like in Dallas County, fewer Tarrant County children are staying home from school sick.

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Downtown Dallas Driver̢۪s License Office Disappears

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The only driver's license office in Downtown Dallas has closed, potentially adding to long lines at other license offices. This comes after DPS told NBC 5 Investigates there were no plans to close any DFW offices.

There is more frustration for North Texans trying to renew their driver's licenses.  The busy Department of Public Safety license office inside Dallas City Hall has shut down. Only an empty counter and some old computer wires remain after the DPS quietly moved out in mid-December.

Just last summer the top DPS official in charge of the Texas license offices told NBC 5 Investigates there were no plans to close any locations in the DFW area, as the DPS tries to reduce long lines and wait times that can last three hours or more especially during the busy summer months.

"We're not closing any offices.  We are opening brand new.  We are expanding our capacity to be able to serve that demand," said Rebecca Davio, director of the DPS License Division in an interview in July, 2012.

Davio was describing a multi-million-dollar DPS plan to open two new Dallas-Ft. Worth license Megacenters, one in Garland and one in Fort Worth.  The agency said the two giant facilities would only add to the current locations in an effort to cut wait times at all of the exiting offices.

So what changed?  Why would DPS close a busy license office when it's already struggling to keep up with demand?

DPS tells us it had no plans to leave Dallas City Hall.  Instead, the City of Dallas kicked them out.

"The decision was not a mutual one.  The city expressly asked DPS to leave the premises in October.  DPS had no plans to vacate the facility," said DPS spokesperson Tom Vinger.

City of Dallas spokesman Frank Librio responded saying, "We really never had adequate space for them to conduct their operations."  He described the office as "inadequate and overcrowded."

Because of new security measures in the works at City Hall, Librio said the city wanted to clear out the space. He points out DPS is free to lease another office anywhere in downtown Dallas. 

So far DPS has not done that.

But in an interview Thursday, DPS Director Steve McCraw said the agency will pull together money to open a new downtown Dallas location.

"Because of some of the savings we achieved in some other areas, we are going to prioritize a Dallas office in the downtown area and a Houston office in the downtown area because we've demonstrated the numbers need it", McCraw said.

DPS had plans to ask the legislature for millions of dollars to create new downtown offices in Dallas and Houston.  However, McCraw said the agency has decided to move ahead using existing funds instead.

Until DPS can find a new location, Downtown Dallas does not have a single driver's license office. 

The office at City Hall used to serve an average of 180 customers a day, or about 45,000 customers last year alone, according to DPS records.

When NBC 5 Investigates visited that office over the summer we found it was so crowded people were sitting on the floor, some waiting for hours. 

Since the City Hall location closed, a steady stream of customers continues to stop by during the day, surprised to find it's gone.

To get to the next closest DPS office they have to get on Interstate 35 and drive 10 miles south to Red Bird Lane, a trip that takes about 14 minutes each way if there's no traffic.

"It is an inconvenience, you know.  It's a waste of time and waste of bus fare," said Tobi Hicks who travelled to the City Hall office only to find it closed.

"You have to come down here waste gas and then go somewhere else I guess," said customer Emmanuel Dotson.

DPS hopes many customers will go to the new Garland Mega Center – which opened in December and is designed to handle 900 transactions every day above and beyond what the existing offices can handle. Now some of that new capacity will be taken up by thousands of customers who used to go to City Hall.

DPS is banking on the Mega Centers to reduce the long lines at all of the license offices. But the DFW population is growing fast and now the agency has lost an office in Dallas.  The Investigative Team will be watching over the spring and summer to see how well the Mega Centers really help improve wait times. 

The new Mega Center in Fort Worth on Brentwood Stair Road opened Feb. 1.


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Fake Energy Workers Tell Residents to Pay "Delinquent" Bills

NBC 5

Workers in the field will always carry identification, and people can ask for it if they are unsure if the worker is legitimate, Oncor says.

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Dallas police are warning residents about schemers posing as energy workers.

Investigators said people posing as energy workers are going door-to-door and ask residents to pay bills that they say are unpaid. The bogus workers tell residents that their power will be shut off if they don't pay.

But Oncor Electric Delivery says that workers who go to homes will never ask for payment on the spot.

Representatives in the field will always carry identification, and people can ask for it if they are unsure if the worker is legitimate, Oncor says.

Police and Oncor say the scheme can also happen over the phone. Dallas police say people should never give out personal information to anyone over the phone.

People should also verify the credentials of anyone who contacts them and claims they need to pay a delinquent bill, police say.

NBC 5's Amanda Guerra contributed to this report.

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Pet Store Accused of Selling Puppies With Parvo

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Mansfield Chief of Police Gary L. Fowler is opening an investigation into a local pet store after the NBC 5 Investigates Consumer Unit was alerted to claims by several families that they purchased puppies that were sick with parvovirus.

Three families who all said they bought their puppies at PetOrama in Mansfield told NBC 5 that their animals were diagnosed with parvovirus, a very contagious, aggressive virus that attacks a dog's intestinal track.

According to the families, two of the puppies had to be euthanized while one survived after an aggressive veterinary treatment that cost them more than $1,000.

While Fowler, who oversees animal control for the city, originally told NBC 5 he had no records of complaints against the store, he said he now plans to open an investigation.

In an unrelated move, PetOrama said it will stop adopting out puppies, but is holding one last adoption event this weekend to sell the remaining dogs at the store.

Families Claim Store Sold Them Sick Puppies

"Truly, I never thought that when you go into a pet store like that you would purchase a sick dog," said Penny Rivera, a Mansfield resident.

Rivera bought a shepherd-mix puppy named Leo as a Christmas present for 13-year-old Andrew Caraveo and his 21-year-old sister Jenny who had lost their beloved dog only a few months before.

"I picked Leo because he just looked really cute," said Jenny, who said she knew her brother would be delighted by the holiday surprise.

And he was.  Andrew immediately fell in love with the dog and made little Leo a doghouse out of a cardboard box.  He doted on him like any 13-year-old with a new puppy would.

But a few days later, Leo was vomiting, had diarrhea and was lethargic.

"He looked very sick," Andrew said.

A trip to the vet revealed Leo had a severe case of parvo.  Andrew and Jenny then made the gut-wrenching decision to put Leo to sleep.

"I knew how he looked and how tired he was, he wasn't going to make it," Andrew said.

 "We just said, 'Goodbye.' I mean, it was just really hard.  There was nothing we could really say to him," said Jenny, as tears streamed down her face.

Joanna McCoy and Phillip Kriesman know that pain. The couple bought a long-haired dachshund named Hudson at the same Mansfield PetOrama and it was love at first sight. 

"As soon as I picked him up I knew he was my dog," said McCoy. "I loved him. I was so happy."

They paraded Hudson to McCoy's mother's house and showed him off to other relatives. But that evening they rushed Hudson, who was throwing up, to an emergency veterinary hospital.  The veterinarian told the couple that little Hudson had parvo.

They too made the decision to put Hudson to sleep.

"I just couldn't feel myself afterwards. It was just so weird and upsetting," Kreisman said.

PetOrama to Stop Puppy Adoptions Due to Complaints

NBC 5 called PetOrama and spoke to Rochelle Browning, the daughter of the owner who said she manages the store for her father.

 She insisted she takes good care of the puppies and that her dogs are checked by a veterinarian.

"My veterinary bills are outrageous," Browning said. 

Browning admitted that Hudson, who died shortly after leaving her store, had parvo when she sold him. PetOrama's owner did refund McCoy and Kreisman for Hudson and she paid their vet bill, but they said it's little consolation.

"It's a heartache that no one should have to go through," said McCoy, who thinks about Hudson every day.

As for the other dogs, she believed they may have gotten sick after they left her store. Browning said her staff sanitizes cages daily but does not dispute the fact that parvo has up to a two-week incubation period.

The families said Leo and Hudson were visibly sick within days of being purchased.

Browning then became emotional, telling NBC 5 she's under extreme stress because so many puppies have gotten sick with parvo and customers have been very upset.

"I've never seen this before in my life.  Emotionally, I'm spent," Browning said. "I can't listen to people cry over the phone anymore."

On the company's Facebook page she told customers that PetOrama has decided to "stop adopting out puppies." But there will be one last adoption event this weekend to sell the remaining dogs.

"It's hard when you love pets like we do and have taken all the measures possible trying to prevent illness, but then get treated badly by customers when they do get ill," she wrote.

Parvo is extremely contagious because a dog can shed the virus before it ever shows signs of the illness.

"It's really hard to kill the virus. It's resistant to common disinfectants," said Dr. Nancy Turner, the Dallas District Director of the Texas Veterinary Medical Association.  "It's resistant to heat. It's resistant to sunlight. So, really, it's a tough bug essentially."

Turner, who practices at Bent Tree Animal Hospital in Dallas, said that by the time one puppy shows the signs there is a good chance other dogs could be infected.

State Offers No Legal Remedy for Purchase of Sick Dogs

Unlike some other states, Texas does not have a Lemon Law for dogs.

"There's no regulation of pet stores of any shape, form or fashion at the state level," said Skip Trimble, a Texas Humane Legislation Network board member.

Trimble's organization advocates for state animal welfare legislation. While there are rules and regulations for larger breeders at the state level, as of now, individual cities and towns may or may not have ordinances that can help pet owners.

"You're just totally at risk and virtually there is no warranty on these dogs," Trimble said.

The City of Mansfield does have an ordinance that gives animal control the authority to inspect pet stores.  It also mandates that anyone with care and control of an animal "maintain the animal in good health."

Fowler said that if a pet store fails to maintain the health of their animals they can impose a fine.

Fowler originally insisted he had no record of any complaints against PetOrama.  But McCoy said she called animal control and spoke with an officer several weeks ago.

"He said that unfortunately it's not in their jurisdiction and there's nothing that they could do for me,"  McCoy said.

However, after speaking with NBC 5, Fowler said he is now opening an investigation.

Rivera said Browning did not give her a refund for Leo or help with the vet bills.

Craig Haemker said he also received no help from the store after a puppy he purchased, Sophie, was diagnosed with parvo and required a $1,000 aggressive medical treatment to be rid of the virus.

Today, Sophie is a happy, healthy dog, but Jenny and Andrew are still reeling from losing Leo.

"That dog just meant the world to us," said Jenny.

They want to make sure other families don't suffer like they have.  That, they said, is Leo's legacy.

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Son's Last Message Inspires Newtown Mother

A chalkboard message from 6-year-old Sandy Hook victim Jesse Lewis inspires his mother to "Choose Love."

Son's Last Message Inspires Newtown Mother

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"Nurturing. Healing. Love."

Scarlett Lewis noticed the chalk-written message on her kitchen chalkboard when returning home for the first time – days after her son Jesse was taken from her on December 14th.  "It was in 6-year-old handwriting. Right about where he'd be standing," says Lewis from her Sandy Hook farmhouse.  "It's phonetically spelled. It's very clear what it says. I was stunned."

Lewis described her son as an "energetic, happy boy" whose personality could dominate a room. This type of message, however, was out of the ordinary for him but feels it was left for when she and her oldest son, J.T.  would need it most.

"He isn't the type of boy who would write that. He was loving and sweet and kind but that was a prophetic statement. I felt like it came from his spirit."

It was this same message that the single mom sent while eulogizing her son.  "I said 'I have something for you to do for us. That's to consciously change an angry thought into a loving one' because it is a choice."

It's now the mission of the newly formed Jesse Lewis Choose Love Foundation. Scarlet hopes it grows from the chalkboard to the pulpit to – one day – your child's classroom. She is meeting with professional educators to create a school curriculum that will be taught nationwide.

"This will be taught right along Math, Reading and Writing. It will be a life management course."
Lewis was the first family member to speak at Wednesday's Legislative Gun Violence Prevention and Children's Safety hearing held in Newtown. She says she is not looking to get involved in the political debate that has followed the shootings. Rather,  she will focus on a message that can be supported on all sides of the discussion.

"I feel like he wrote that message for a reason and handed me a torch. I'm gonna take it and hopefully – with everyone's help – change the world so this will never happen again."

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Search Dog Finds Potential Evidence in "Black Dahlia" Murder

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Steve Hodel cannot let go.

And so he returned to a distinctive Hollywood mansion with another ex-cop, Paul Dostie, and Dostie's search dog, Buster. Hodel had a mission for them.

In his book "Black Dahlia Avenger," the retired LAPD detective and best-selling author convinced many skeptics that he had solved the gruesome 1947 murder that perhaps became LA's most notorious cold case.

The body of Elizabeth Short, 22, had been severed in two with surgical skill and technique, leading investigators to conclude early on that the killer likely had medical school training.

That killer, Steve Hodel ultimately concluded, was his late father, George Hodel, MD.

What's more, because there was no trace of blood in the empty Leimert Park lot where the remains were found, detectives realized she must have been killed elsewhere.

That elsewhere, Hodel concluded, was the landmark Hollywood mansion where Dr. Hodel made his home, the distinctive "Sowden House" designed on a Mayan theme by famed second-generation architect Lloyd Wright.

Steve Hodel lived there as a child. As he looked into the case, he was able to determine from records that he and his siblings were away with their mother at the time of the Black Dahlia murder.

Hodel marshaled considerable evidence, which was later corroborated after "Black Dahlia Avenger" was published, when the District Attorney Steve Cooley agreed to reopen decades-old case files.

Right at the top was a picture of Dr. Hodel; it turns out he had been the principal suspect. Investigators had even planted a bug in the house to listen for incriminating admissions. But before authorities brought charges, Dr. Hodel abruptly abandoned his family and relocated to Asia.

The likes of Steve Kay, then a head Deputy DA, concluded that Steve Hodel had made the case against his father.

But that wasn't good enough for Steve Hodel, who has continued seeking more evidence in hopes of convincing his former employer, the LAPD, to declare the case officially solved.

So when the opportunity arose to return to the Sowden house with Dostie and Buster, Hodel took it.

The arrangements with the current ownership had been made by producers of a segment for the "Ghost Hunters" program on the SyFy Channel.

Hodel knew that the sounds of blows and a woman's screams had been heard coming from the basement, according to the transcript of what police heard through the bug. The basement had never been finished and when Hodel, Dostie and the SyFy crew went there last November, the floor was still dirt.

With his keen sense of smell, Buster alerted in four locations, indicating he had picked up the scent of human decomposition, faint traces of which can remain for decades, Dostie said.

But is it corroboration? Dostie cannot say for sure. The decomposition of human tissue that Buster detected did not necessarily originate in the basement.

With the house on a slope, it is possible traces may have migrated downslope from the hillside lot above. Labwork may be able to pin down the possibilities. Hodel is waiting for the results.

Dostie and Buster have moved on to other searches, Buster hardly losing a step despite the fact that the black lab was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer in a hind leg, which had to be amputated.

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