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Highland Park to Begin Mosquito Spraying Friday

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 20 April 2013 | 23.31

A mosquito in Highland Park has tested positive for West Nile virus.

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Another positive test for West Nile virus has been recorded in Dallas County.

Highland Park confirmed a positive test from a mosquito taken in the southwest portion of the town.

The town will now begin ground spraying to curtail the spread of the virus.

Ground spraying will take place overnight Friday beginning at about 10 p.m. and ending at 5 a.m. Saturday.

Spraying will be postponed due to high wind or rain.

The town reminds people to remove any standing or stagnant water to prevent mosquitoes from laying eggs. Residents can visit Highland Park's Mosquito Control web page at www.hptx.org for more information.

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Leaking Gas Well Capped in Denton

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A leaking pipeline at a gas well in Denton prompted evactuations and restricted the airspace over the municipal airport for several hours Friday.

The leak was in an industrial area with a few homes, four of which were evacuated.  Additionally, Jim Christal Road was shut down eastbound at Masch Branch Road and westbound at Western Boulevard, according to a tweet by the Denton Police Department.

A Denton Public Information officer said a gas pipe had separated from the well and that fracking water and natural gas was rising into the air directly around the well site.

The incident was first reported at about 11:30 a.m. A gas capping company was called to the scene to close the leak, which was expected to take about two hours.  At 3:45 p.m., police tweeted that the situation was over and that all roads that had been closed were reopened.

Neighbors nearby to the well told NBC 5's Brian Scott that they saw the water vapor rising last night, but because they did not smell gas, they did not contact authorities. However, natural gas has no natural odor; the smell is added by gas companies to help identify it in the case of leaks.

Authorities on scene said they were not concerned about explosions due to the gas leak.

NBC 5's Brian Scott contributed to this story. As this is a developing story, some details may change as we gather more information.

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Fertilizer Owner Issues Statement on Tragedy

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The remains of the the fertilizer plant smolder in the rain on Thursday, April 18, 2013, in West, Texas. A massive explosion at the West Fertilizer Co. killed as many as 15 people and injured more than 160, officials said overnight. The explosion that struck around 8 p.m. Wednesday, sent flames shooting into the night sky and rained burning embers and debris down on shocked and frightened residents. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

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The following news release was sent to NBC 5 Friday afternoon. We are publishing it below, unedited.

Donald Adair, lifelong resident of the community of West, Texas and owner of Adair Grain Inc., today issued the following statement:

This has been a terrible week for everyone in West, Texas and I want to take this opportunity to express my heartfelt sympathy for those affected and my appreciation for those who responded.

As a lifelong resident, my heart is broken with grief for the tragic losses to so many families in our community. I know that everyone has been deeply affected by this incident. Loved ones have been injured or killed. Homes have been damaged or destroyed. Our hearts go out to everyone who has suffered.

The selfless sacrifice of first responders who died trying to protect all of us is something I will never get over. I was devastated to learn that we lost one of our employees in the explosion. He bravely responded to the fire at the facility as a volunteer firefighter. I will never forget his bravery and his sacrifice, or that of his colleagues who rushed to the trouble.

This tragedy will continue to hurt deeply for generations to come.

My family and I can't express enough our deep appreciation for the loving service and selfless sacrifice from within and around our community responding to the urgent needs of those affected. I am proud to be associated with West Church of Christ, which has opened its doors to the State of Texas to provide grief counseling services. My family and I will continue to assist in relief efforts through our church family.

The genuine kindness we have witnessed will be the hallmark for all of our children's children.

Going forward, the owners and employees of Adair Grain and West Fertilizer Co. are working closely with investigating agencies. We are presenting all employees for interviews and will assist in the fact finding to whatever degree possible. We pledge to do everything we can to understand what happened to ensure nothing like this ever happens again in any community.

While the investigation continues, and out of respect for the investigative process, we will limit our comments during the weeks and months ahead.
 

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Dance Class for People With Movement Disorders

Andres Gutierrez, NBC 5 News

Texas Health Presbyterian is offering classes to help people with movement disorders like Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis.

North Texas Hospital Offers Dance Therapy

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A North Texas hospital's dance class is helping people with movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis.

Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas offers the class twice a week. It uses seated exercises, ballet barres and dance to help the participants.

"With the music and the dance, movements together the body comes together," instructor Misty Owens said. "It reroutes itself through the brain to make the body express the choreography given in class."

She brought the class to North Texas from New York City in 2010.

"I couldn't snap my fingers before I came here," Peggy Martin said.

Martin was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease four years ago. She said she has been able to easily keep her balance since starting the class two years ago and that her doctors have reduced her medication.

Jim Rosenbloom, who has had Parkinson's disease for 11 years, was scheduled for rotator cuff surgery. Three months into the class, doctors told him there was no need for it.

"The doctors are a little bit surprised how slowly it's progressing," he said.

But not everyone has such success stories.

"It depends on what stage of the disease they are and, if they're advanced, it might not help," said Dr. Aanchal Taneja, a Texas Health movement disorders and Parkinson's disease specialist.

The hospital has more information on the class on its website.

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Highland Park Conducts Mosquito Spraying

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Highland Park conducted its spraying after a mosquito caught in one of the town's four traps tested positive for the West Nile virus.

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Spraying for mosquitoes started in Highland Park on Friday.

The spraying was conducted after a mosquito caught in one of the town's four traps tested positive for the West Nile virus.

Last summer, a Highland Park resident died from complications of West Nile virus during the outbreak that sickened more than 900 people in North Texas and killed 35.

Martin Cox said he doesn't mind that the city is starting to spray so early.

"It's earlier," he said. "But last year, they were just deciding on whether to do it or not and this year they're trying to get ahead of it.".

The spraying was scheduled to finish by 5 a.m.

Highland Park is reminding people to remove any standing or stagnant water to prevent mosquitoes from laying eggs.

Residents can visit Highland Park's Mosquito Control Web page for more information.

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West Community Pulls Together After Tragedy

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The town of West is pulling together to help its residents affected by the fertilizer plant explosion that devastated the community Wednesday night.

In West, there is no answer to the question everyone seems to be asking: when can we return home?

The most authorities can say is "soon."

It won't be soon enough for Julia Zaharniak, who hasn't seen her home since she and her son, Anthony, 11, were running away from their home immediately after the explosion.

"It just really got to me because you just don't know what to expect and I don't have any answers to give to my son, other than this is where our life is right now," Zaharniak said Friday night.

Zaharniak found herself at the donation distribution center at the West Fest Fairgrounds, sifting through donated clothes and other items.

"I got an extra outfit which I'm wearing right now and that's the only outfit that I own," Zaharniak said.   "So I'm here to look and get me some clothes."

The donation center is a flutter of activity with explosion survivors searching for items they need and volunteers unpacking, sorting and distributing it all as quickly as they can.

"One of the most amazing things - most of these [volunteers] are actually the community members," said Shane Valverde, a field operations director with Team Rubicon, an organization helping to coordinate the donations.  "So most of these folks you see here are the ones who've been affected by this disaster."

One of those volunteers is Erick Perez, 21, who witnessed the explosion first hand and captured the moment on his cell phone video camera.

View Perez's dramatic video of the West explosion below.

View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.

Perez and some friends had been playing basketball when they noticed the flames rising from the West Fertilizer Plant.  

Perez told NBC 5 he recorded the flames for more than eight minutes before the explosion.  The force of the blast knocked him down. The concussion and the debris combined to total his truck.

Perez spent all day Friday helping to do whatever he could at the donation site, doing so even at the risk of hurting his own employment situation.

"I told my boss I'm not coming in to work. If she's gonna fire me, oh well," Perez said.  "And from what I've heard I think I was fired. But I don't care. I can always find a new job.  I'm gonna go be with my friends and my community up here."

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Grand Prairie ISD Sends Portable Classrooms to West

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The Grand Prairie school district is helping students in West by sending portable classrooms to the small town hit by a massive fertilizer plant explosion.

The district is donating three portable classrooms for sixth-graders in West who no longer have a place to learn. Lyle DuBus, the Grand Prairie district's chief operations officer, said the classrooms would hold a total of 180 students.

"We were able to round up a lot of furniture, vacuums, other items that we know that they will need," he said. "We've also been able to send some of our electricians to aid in the set-up of the portables as they get down there."

Gay Lynn Broom, director of community and youth program, said three of the West district's four campuses are out of commission after the deadly explosion.

Broom and two district officials went to West to help on Thursday.

"They don't have water, not a lot of Internet access, so we were remotely helping," she said. "We went into Waco where we could get Internet access."

Grand Prairie school officials said their close ties to the West school district kept them motivated to help as much as they could.

West Superintendent Marty Crawford is a Grand Prairie High School graduate whose father was superintendent in Grand Prairie many years ago, DuBus said.

West schools were closed Thursday and Friday after Wednesday night's blast but are scheduled to reopen for classes on Monday.

The Grand Prairie school district expects to send all three portable classrooms to West during the weekend so that they can be set up and ready for Monday.

H.D. Snow and Son Moving Inc. workers were busy Friday morning preparing to transport one of the classrooms. Owner H.D. Snow said it was a labor of love.

"They're down on their knees begging for these buildings right now," he said. "We're trying our best to get them down there for them."

Snow's daughter wrote a sign on the side of the building that reads, "A School House on the way to the Good People of WEST, Texas. God Bless West, TX."

"That means I believe there is a God Almighty and that's what this country is founded on, and we need to get back to it a little bit," Snow said.

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Famous Manhunts in American History

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One of the most extensive and chaotic manhunts in Boston history came to an end Friday night when the surviving marathon bombing suspect was captured alive after hiding out all day in a shrink-wrapped pleasure boat that was parked on the side of a suburban house.

Police were tipped off about 19-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's whereabouts when a resident of Watertown, Mass. stepped outside to smoke a cigarette and noticed a hole in his boat's covering. He peered inside and found what appeared to be, and turned out to be, a person, covered in blood.

Once police arrived, yet another shootout ensued, less than 24 hours after an explosive gun battle between suspects and authorities sent the manhunt into high gear. That gun fight led to the death of Dzhokhar's older brother and alleged accomplice, 26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who was found with an improvized explosive device strapped to his chest. Tsarnaev escaped that scene on foot prompting a massive lockdown as police pursued their wanted man.

Below, see some of the other high-profile domestic manhunts in U.S. history:

HUNT FOR CHRISTOPHER DORNER
Found dead: 2013

The hunt for Christopher Dorner, an ex-cop who was fired from the Los Angeles Police Department in 2008, began in early February when he was named as a suspect in the fatal shooting of the daughter of a former LAPD captain and her fiancĂ©e. Over the next few days he was named a suspect in the killing of two others—both LAPD officers—and jittery police wound up opening fire on three innocent people, two of whom suffered injuries.

The hunt intensified when Dorner's truck was discovered abandoned near Big Bear Lake, prompting a door-to-door search by police. On Feb. 12 state wildlife officers encountered Dorner on the road and a shootout and chase ensued. One sheriff's deputy died and another was injured in the confrontation.

Dorner was able to make it to a cabin where he barricaded himself and entered into a lengthy standoff with police. It all came to an fiery end when law enforcement officials filled the cabin with incendiary tear gas, setting the place ablaze. Dorner's charred remains were discovered inside with a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

HUNT FOR "WHITEY" BULGER
Captured: 2011

James "Whitey" Bulger, a Boston gangster wanted for 19 murders, lived on the lam for 16 years before police tracked and arrested him and his longtime girlfriend in their Southern California apartment.

Bulger was working as an FBI informant when he went on the run in 1995 after learning that he would eventually face indictment. His girlfriend Catherine Grieg joined him and was charged in 1997 for harboring a fugitive.

The FBI revived its efforts to find the pair through a series of public service announcements in 2011 that focused mainly on Greig's affinity for beauty salons and animals. Shortly after the PSAs began airing a tip came in that led authorities to a Santa Monica home, where the pair was arrested "without incident." Greig, who was 60 at the time of arrest, was sentenced to eight years in prison; Bulger, who was 81, was charged with participating in 19 murders and is awaiting trial.

HUNT FOR ERIC ROBERT RUDOLPH
Captured: 2003

Eric Robert Rudolph, the man behind the 1996 Olympic bombing in Atlanta, Ga., evaded police by hiding out in the Appalachian wilderness for years.  After carrying out the Olympic attack, which killed one person and wounded 111 others, he carried out several other bombings, targeting abortion clinics and a gay club.

His final attack in 1998 provided police with their first major lead: A witness who saw him flee the scene jotted down his license plate number, which gave police an identity to pursue. It took five years, however, before Rudolph was finally arrested in Murphy, North Carolina. He was found rummaging through the trash by a local policeman who had no idea at the time whom he had encountered. Rudolph is currently serving five consecutive life sentences.

HUNT FOR BELTWAY SNIPERS
Captured: 2002

For 23 days, a pair of gunmen who executed people at random spread terror throughout the Washington, D.C.-area. The invisible killers fired fatal shots at a man closing his pizzeria, a woman pumping gas, a man driving a bus, a woman reading in the park. Ten people were killed and three critically injured in the shooting spree before law enforcement officials were able to identify and capture two suspects.

Their break in the case came when a man claiming to be the sniper called investigators and essentially confessed to a crime he had carried out in Montgomery, Ala. Authorities in Alabama who had collected forensic evidence from that crime scene were able to help link the sniper to a dark blue Chevrolet Caprice sedan. Police and media urged the public to be on the lookout for the car, which was spotted at a rest stop off Interstate 70 in Maryland.

Police closed in and found two men sleeping in the car with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle, a rifle's scope, a digital voice recorder and other materials. The men, John Allen Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo, were arrested at the scene. In 2003 Muhammad was sentenced to death and Malvo was sentenced to six consecutive life sentences. Muhammad was executed in 2009.

HUNT FOR UNABOMBER
Captured: 1996

Ted Kacinzsky's 17-year bombing campaign prompted the FBI's longest-running domestic terrorism investigation in the agency's history. Beginning in 1978, the reclusive terrorist targeted a long list of universities, killing three people and injuring more than 20.

In 1996, acting on a tip from Kacinzsky's brother who had read a manifesto Ted had published in the New York Times, FBI agents discovered the "Unabomber" at a crude cabin in Montana. He is currently serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole. 

HUNT FOR TIMOTHY MCVEIGH
Captured: 1995

The search for Timothy McVeigh, who killed 168 people in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, lasted less than two hours. A state trooper pulled him over for driving without a license plate 80 miles north of Oklahoma City, shortly after he had fled the scene of the attack. The state trooper discovered a concealed weapon and placed him under arrest.

But neither the state trooper nor any other law enforcement officials yet knew that McVeigh was the man behind the bombing. More than a day would pass before a hotel employee would identify McVeigh from a police sketch. It took just one call to the FBI to find that the suspect was already in jail. He was sentenced to death in 1997 and executed by lethal injection in June 2001.

HUNT FOR TED BUNDY
Captured: 1978

Theodore Robert Bundy, one of the most notorious serial killers in American history, murdered an average of one woman a month between January 1974 and February 1978. He was arrested in August of 1975 after police pulled him over and found an ice pick, handcuffs and pantyhose in his car, and later extradited him to Colorado where he faced other charges. Before that trial began, he leapt from the window of the courthouse library and was on the loose for six days before being captured once again.

But he didn't stay in custody for long. Six months after arriving at a Colorado jail he made another escape—this time by losing 30 pounds so he could fit into a light fixture hole in the ceiling of his cell. He made it across the country to Tallahassee, Fla. where his reign of terror continued.

There, he broke into a Florida State University sorority house in January 1978 and murdered two sleeping women, bludgeoning and strangling them to death. Weeks later he abducted and killed a 12-year-old girl—the final murder in his years-long spree. He was captured for good after police in Pensacola, Fla. found him driving a stolen car in February of 1978. He was convicted for the FSU murders and sentenced to death in June 1979. He was executed in 1989.

HUNT FOR BONNIE AND CLYDE
Killed:1934

Clyde Champion Barrow and Bonnie Parker, one of the most infamous couples in American history, were ambushed and killed by police in Louisiana after a brazen crime spree that captured the country's attention. The pair was accused of 13 murders and a host of robberies around the country. Their run ended after police lured them into a trap: Police enlisted the help of an ex-con, one of Barrow's former associates, who promised Barrow protection at his home. As the couple's car sped into the trap, police ambushed them, sending the car careening off the road. Both were dead at the scene.

HUNT FOR LINCOLN'S ASSASSIN:
Killed: 1865

John Wilkes Booth fled Ford's Theatre in Washington after carrying out the first assassination of an American president on April 14, 1865. He and an accomplice, David Herold, led authorities on a 12-day chase that ended in Virginia. Authorities offered a $100,000 reward for information that would lead to the capture of the brazen killer, and dispatched federal troops to search southern Maryland after receiving a tip that he might be in the area. Booth made several stops while on the lam, including his infamous stop at the home of Dr. Samuel Mudd who treated Booth's leg injury caused by his leap onto the theater's stage. He was finally tracked to a Virginia farm and shot and killed by Union soldiers.

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