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Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 09 Maret 2013 | 23.31

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City Policy Prohibits Typing and Driving: DPD Chief

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Dallas Police Chief David Brown gave his first formal interview about a nine-month-long NBC 5 investigation that found police officers in Dallas and across Texas were causing car crashes by typing on mobile dashboard computers while driving.

Brown told NBC 5 Investigates that, except for emergency situations, the Dallas Police Department does not allow their officers to type on mobile dashboard computers, or MDCs, while driving.

"We prohibit using the MDC while driving, unless it's to save a life," said Brown. "We're still trying to understand where it's grey. We see it very clearly. It's prohibited, except for emergency situations."

The chief's comments come by surprise because there's no direct statement in the police department's policies telling officers not to type and drive and, during an interview that aired July 30, 2012, Deputy Chief Rick Watson told NBC 5 Investigates indicated there was no policy against typing and driving.

"We rely on their judgment and on their discretion. We're not telling them to do it, we're not telling them not to do it," said Watson.

When asked why the department didn't have a clearly defined policy like some other departments, Watson said last summer that the department was looking at reviewing its policy to see if changes needed to be made. NBC 5 Investigates recently reached out to Watson to clarify his comments from last year, but he has not responded and Brown's office has not offered an explanation for the discrepancy.

In his recent interview with NBC 5, Brown said that typing while driving was actually banned two years ago; however the rule isn't spelled out in the police department's policy. Instead, the chief said, it's in the City of Dallas' Human Resources Department Driving Policy which the chief said covers MDC's even though it doesn't mention them by name.

The HR department rules state that city department heads should: "Hold city drivers accountable for the reckless and irresponsible use of electronic devices while operating a vehicle."

But there's an exception in the policy for police officers, "Emergency response personnel acting within the scope of their official duties may utilize electronic devices while driving - if the device is essential for the nature of the emergency response and another employee is not available to utilize the device."

"The exception is where I think the biggest part of this debate is. What's an emergency situation and when can they do it and when can't they do it?" said Brown.

Other police departments have written more specific rules telling officers exactly what they can and cannot do while driving. In Arlington, police department policy limits typing to minimal use such as one button functions when the car is moving, and only if it is safe to do so. In Fort Worth, the department prohibits typing while driving and even requires officers to pull over to read the screen if there's heavy traffic. The Tarrant County Sheriff Department tells deputies to use the radio to request some information instead of typing.

Brown said his department doesn't need such a detailed policy.

"I'm saying our department may be much different from other departments you've looked at. We just don't see, from our experience, officers using the computer and causing accidents," said Brown.

Dallas Police reports and dash cam videos show police officers rear ending other drivers and running off the road. In one case where there's no video, an accident report shows a Dallas police officer using the MDC, crossed the center line and hit another car head-on.

The department says MDCs have caused 17 Dallas police crashes in four years. That may seem like a lot, but with 2,600 department-related crashes in four years, that number of MDC-related crashes represents less than 1 percent of all department-related crashes over that same time period.

"Our driving accidents are down 26 percent, our MDC-usage accidents are 1 percent of our total accidents. That may be much different for another city and their policies may reflect that," said Brown.

Attorney Trey Branham specializes in litigating injury cases. He said if Dallas gets sued over an MDC-related crash, the city would have a harder time defending itself than other cities with more detailed polices.

Branham's advice to the city of Dallas, "Get real specific. What's the harm? You can make exceptions and you can make specific exceptions if you feel like you need them. But there's no harm at all in being very specific about what you want your officers doing and what you don't want them doing and when you want them doing it."

Brown said he wants to leave plenty of leeway to protect officers who might need to type and drive if their life is in danger.

"It would be an - I'm shot at, another citizen is shot bleeding, I can't get radio transmission, all I had was that computer to communicate with the dispatcher to get me help," said Brown.

For that same reason he's not sure he wants to install devices that lock the keyboard when the car moves, but he's interested to see how they work in cities like Farmer's Branch. The city recently became the first police department in Texas to install the Archangel II that prevents officers from typing on dashboard computers while driving faster than 15 mph.

Brown says he will be closely watching what other departments do to address the issue.

"I think you struck a chord with the series. I think you really have prompted law enforcement to look at something that we have just taken for granted -- that putting so much technology in the car could overwhelm an officer," said Brown.

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Police: Grandma in Amber Alert Arrested in FW

Scott Gordon, NBC 5 News

Bonnie Benton Miller, center, is suspected of abducting her grandchildren, 2-year-old Nevaen Kimora Simpson, left, and 1-year-old Jordan Malik Simpson. They are believed to be in a silver, four-door 2005 Honda Accord with Texas license plate CYX069.

Amber Alert Canceled for Houston...

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An Amber Alert issued for two Houston County children has been canceled.

Authorities on Thursday issued the alert for two toddlers, 1-year-old Jordan Malik Simpson and 2-year-old Nevaen Kimora Simpson, who were believed to be with their grandmother.

Police found Bonnie Benton Miller and her two grandchildren in Fort Worth near the 900 block of East Richmond Street at about 3:30 p.m. Friday.

Miller was arrested, and the children were taken into temporary Child Protective Services care.

The children's father is traveling to Fort Worth to meet with CPS officials and get his children, Fort Worth police said.

On Thursday night, KPRC-TV in Houston reported that Miller had refused to return the children to their father after a Christmas visit. Their father recently received sole custody of the children after their mother died, and Miller left with the children while court proceedings were being finalized, authorities said.

Miller's brother told NBC 5 that she had cared for the children all along and never would have harmed them.

While the Amber Alert was issued from Houston County, officials said Miller had relatives in North Texas, KPRC reported.

NBC 5's Scott Gordon contributed to this report.

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Rare Rendezvous With Koko the Gorilla

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Raw Video: Koko in Natural Element

Here is some raw video of Koko. You'll notice she wanted to get higher than our photographer Jeremy Carroll during this segment. Height equals power in gorilla-land.

Raw Video: Penny Patterson

The woman who has dedicated her life to Koko talks about what its like to live your life with a gorilla.

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After 40 years of tightly guarded living in the Santa Cruz mountains, the most famous gorilla on the planet named Koko is getting a makeover.

It's not the kind that starts with a new hairdo or manicure. This makeover impact's Koko's human family's non-profit in both financial and executive leadership terms.

They are in a clock-ticking fight to save Koko's species of endangered lowland gorillas.

If their organizational transition is successful, her handlers at the Gorilla Foundation in Redwood City say Koko has a shot at settling into a new home in Hawaii with a family of rescued gorillas.

Since 1990, the foundation has had access to a natural preserve in Maui, where they planned to construct the first tropical gorilla sanctuary outside of Africa.

Such a home, they say, could provide a refuge for hundreds of gorillas facing extinction from a combination of poaching and over-development in their homelands.

But fundraising faltered. They remain roughly $10 million shy of their goal. Other issues intervened as well and the foundation's dream of a Maui Preserve has not yet materialized.

Now, with the plight of lowland gorillas worsening, the Gorilla Foundation is hoping a new executive director, with strong ties to technology, could forge the partnerships necessary to – in Silicon Valley parlance – more effectively "leverage" the Koko brand. 

Gorilla Foundation President Dr. Penny Patterson says with a sign language vocabulary of more than 1,000 gestures, and an international fan base from the numerous stories and documentarie, Koko herself is the best possible ambassador for the cause.

Patterson raised Koko from the time she was a one-year old ailing baby at the San Francisco Zoo.

That was in 1972, when Patterson began her doctoral thesis on inter-species communication. Her goal then was to teach Koko a gorilla modified version of American Sign Language (ASL).

Fast-forward to today and her four-year experiment has turned into a lifetime relationship.

Today, Patterson acknowledges that the Gorilla Foundation she co-founded with Dr. Ron Cohn needs a new team to tackle the daunting challenges posed by poachers and endangered species.

Education, she insists, is the key to changing behavior.

NBC Bay Area became the first television station in many years to gain access to the 300-pound gorilla, nestled in her pig-pen of a trailer in the hills above Woodside.

She is magnificent. Alert, thoughtful, and to this reporter's surprise, graceful.

She held her plate level and spooned her meal into her mouth with the almost dainty dexterity of a lady at the Ritz, never spilling a morsel. She was very intrigued by our camera and she gestured repeatedly for Patterson to unlock her gate and let us inside.

At the age of 41, Koko is nearing the end of her child-bearing years. Yet she still expresses maternal yearnings for a baby, and still signs her desire to be part of a typical gorilla family, which consists of one dominant male surrounded by many females and offspring.

If the Gorilla Foundation reaches its goals of fundraising and new leadership, Koko may be able to live out her days in a safe, natural preserve in Maui, with rescued and orphaned gorillas she could mother.

For more information on Koko and the plight of gorillas, visit the Gorilla Foundation's homepage at this link.

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Nationwide Recall of Canned Tuna Fish Expands

Bumble Bee Brand Foods and Tri-union Seafoods, the maker of Chicken of the Sea canned tuna, have voluntarily recalled several canned tuna products because their seals may be faulty.

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The nationwide recall of canned tuna fish expanded on Friday to include more products sold under three popular brand names, according to the two San Diego-based companies involved in the recall.

Tri-union Seafoods and Bumble Bee Tuna Brands voluntarily recalled dozens of lots of canned tuna fish after the companies discovered seals on the cans may be faulty, making the food vulnerable to spoilage and contamination which could sicken consumers.

The recall now applies to these 5-ounce cans of chunk white albacore and chunk light tuna products. All the cans have "best by" dates between Jan. 14 and 18, 2016:

Brunswick Brand

  • Chunk Light Tuna in Water – 48 Count Case (Case UPC 6661332803)

Bumble Bee Brand

  • Chunk Light Tuna in Water – 24 Count Case (Case UPC 8660000990)
  • Chunk Light Tuna in Water – 48 Count Case (Case UPC 8660000020)
  • Chunk Light Tuna in Vegetable Oil – 48 Count Case (Case UPC 8660000021)
  • Chunk White Albacore in Water – 24 Count Case (Case UPC 8660000025)
  • Chunk Light Tuna in Water – 6 Count Case of 4-Pack Cluster (Case UPC 8660000736)
  • Chunk White Albacore in Water – 6 Count Case of 8-Pack Cluster (Case UPC 8660000775)
  • Chunk White Albacore in Water – 6 Count Case of 8-Pack Cluster (Case UPCS 8660000776)

Chicken of the Sea

  • Chunk White Albacore Tuna in Water – Single cans with "best by" date of Jan. 18, 2017 (UPC 048000033550)
  • Chunk Light Tuna in Oil – Single cans with "best by" date of Jan. 18, 2017

There have been no reports yet of consumers getting sick from the recalled tuna, the companies said.

Consumers are being told to throw away the affected cans. Consumers can reach Tri-union Seafoods at this number: 800-597-5898; and Bumble Bee Brands at this number: (800) 800-8572

Click here to see photos of the affected cans from Tri-union Seafoods, and Bumble Bee Brand Foods.

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Call Centers Booming in North Texas

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Customer service call center jobs, long outsourced to workers overseas, are coming back to the United States and bringing employment opportunities to the Metroplex.

For years companies shipped these jobs to other countries like India and the Philippines because it cost less, but that's not the case anymore.

"It's about 15 percent cheaper to do it onshore than offshore now," said Mary Murcott, president and CEO of Fort-Worth based Novo 1.

There are about five million call center jobs in the United States, which represents about four percent of the United States work force, Murcott estimated.

Texas has about 450,000 of these jobs, the most of any state, according to the Professional Association for Customer Engagement.

Novo 1 is one of an estimated 200 major call centers in North Texas, with 50 representatives or more.

Murcott said these are mainly middle class jobs, which often don't require a college education.

"Middle class jobs actually have trickle-down effect and create other jobs," Murcott said. "It's good for people to have middle class jobs because they feed the rest of the economy."

And that's good for the region and the country.

Even President Obama spoke about making "America a magnet for new jobs" in his State of the Union address.

One reason call center jobs are returning to the United States is because wages abroad have gone up annually.

"What's happened is the wages off shore have gone up 10, 15, 20 percent a year," Murcott said.

Plus, American consumers complained their problems were not getting solved by representatives overseas.  And technology has gotten better.  Simple calls like password resets are now automated, or consumers can get their answers online.

"What are left are the contextually sensitive complex calls.  And that's what needs an American who understands American way of life, to be able to answer those calls," Murcott said.

"We really have that, you know, just American spirit that ability to empathize and then to go in and do the best we can to make sure we're solving whatever problems it is that the person on the other end has," said Deidra Walker-Peany, who works Aegis, another call center company in Irving.

Walk the office of Aegis, or any call center, and hear a steady hum of conversations.

Catchphrases like, "May I help you?" and, "Thank you for calling," are a constant.

It's a rhythm with row after row of customer service representatives wearing headsets, looking at computer screens and talking to customers about everything from health insurance to utilities to roadside assistance.

Ironically, Aegis is based in India, but half of its business is in the United States, according to CEO Sandip Sen, making call centers in the U.S. necessary.

"Our largest concentration of call center agents in the United States is in Texas between Irving, here, and Kileen," Sen said, adding that the DFW area is an ideal location for its American hub.

"It has a large labor pool.  Second, I think the cost of living here is much [more] affordable as compared to the East and the West Coast.  Third, for a company, which has clients all across the U.S., this is almost in the center, you know about three-and-a-half hours to New York and three-and-a-half hours to San Francisco," said Sen.

The Lone Star State's southern hospitality is a draw for call centers as well.

"We've had people from other states come and say we want some of that Texas charm on the phone," said Murcott.

Walter Jamison, a father of two, has that charm.  He has worked as an insurance agent at Novo 1 for more than a year.  He had to do a typing test, an interview and a voice test to get the job.

"I have a speaking voice for this type of job," Jamison said with a smile.

He also said he has the patience to handle angry consumers. That even-temper and empathy resonates with Americans seeking customer service help and may be the reason call centers are expanding in the United States.

"Kill them with kindness. Apologize. Please, thank you.  That always works," he said.

For more information on careers with Aegis, click here.  For information on careers with Novo 1, click here.

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Car Crashes Into DeSoto Hotel

NBC 5 News

No guests had to be evacuated when a car crashed into a room at the Hampton Inn and Suites at I-35E and Wintergreen Road in DeSoto on Saturday.

Car Crashes Into Hotel Overnight

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Two people were hospitalized after a bizarre crash in DeSoto at around midnight Saturday.

It started when two cars hit each other on southbound I-35E at Wintergreen Road. The impact of the collision was so powerful that one of the cars went off an embankment, hit a pole the parking lot of a Hampton Inn and Suites then crashed into a hotel room.

No one was in the room at the time of the crash but eyewitnesses who pulled the driver from the car say he wasn't in good shape.

"He was severely inebriated. It was bad, I could smell it on him as soon as I pulled him out of the car and I told him to sit down. He got up, he started running around in circles and it looked like he was going to try to run, then he got back in the car and then the cops came and pulled him out of the car," said Hugh McGuygan.

"I got out and pulled out the fire extinguisher 'cause I saw flames and then the cops showed up and told us to go back, get back. It was crazy, but the guy was okay," said Gaylen Lusch.

Police are still investigating the official cause of the accident.
 

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Mom Gave 14-Year-Old Margaritas: Cops

Joann Goulet LePage is accused of giving her 14-year-old daughter margaritas during dinner.

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Police have arrested a 51-year-old mom from East Hampton, Conn., accused of giving her daughter multiple margaritas, to the point where she became sick, during dinner last month.

Middletown police responded 200 Main St. at 7:21 p.m. on Feb. 27 to investigate a report of an intoxicated female and found a 14-year-old girl who appeared to be drunk and her mother, Joann Goulet LePage, 51, of East Hampton, police said.

As police spoke with the mom and daughter, the teen said her mother gave her several alcoholic beverages as they were having meals, police said.

Police said a witness also reported seeing Joann giving the teen several margaritas, police said.

The teen was transported to Middlesex Hospital for treatment.

LePage was charged with risk of injury to a child because of the girl's age and medical condition.

Police contacted the state Department of Children and Families and contacted the teen's father.

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19 Hurt After Fire in 40-Story Building in NYC

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A two-alarm fire in a 40-story building in New York City left 19 people injured early Saturday morning, authorities said.

The fire began around 3:45 a.m. on the 12th floor of a high rise building on Manhattan's Upper East Side and was contained to one apartment, fire officials said. The blaze saw 25 fire department units – a total of 110 firefighters – respond to the scene.

Smoke from the fire spread throughout the building causing 10 residents to suffer smoke inhalation. Several residents were treated at a nearby hospital. Three firefighters also suffered smoke inhalation and six firefighters were treated for burns on their legs.

The cause of the fire remains unknown. An investigation is ongoing.

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