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Lake Highlands Rape Suspect Agrees to STD Testing

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 06 Juli 2013 | 23.31

Ben Russell, NBC 5 News

The court order requesting the STD testing was issued this week and was initiated by a petition from one of the victims, according to court documents.

Lake Highlands Rape Suspect Agrees to...

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The suspect in a series of sexual assaults in the Lake Highlands neighborhood of Dallas will comply with a court order and submit to testing for sexually transmitted diseases, according to his attorney.

Dallas police arrested Cesar Benitez, a Mexican national also known as Pino Porcayo, in early April. According to investigators, a DNA sample taken from Benitez matches samples taken from three rape victims in attacks between late February through mid-March.

A Dallas County grand jury indicted Benitez in the three assaults in June.

The court order requesting the STD testing was issued this week and was initiated by a petition from one of the victims, according to court documents. The testing will include a screening for HIV and AIDS.

John Key, a Dallas attorney who represents Benitez, told NBC 5 that his client would agree to the testing but, in doing so, does not admit to any wrongdoing.

A trial date for Benitez has not yet been set.

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1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Up For Sale

Mark Segraves

One of the world's most famous addresses is up for sale right now. It's 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. But it's not the White House. This piece of real estate is down the street from where the President and First Family lives. It's 1600 Penn in Southeast D.C. Years ago, it was known for its drug addicted tenants. But as News4's Mark Segraves shows us, the property is being redeveloped with promises of a brighter future.

1600 Penn Ave Going Up for Sale

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Apartments are going up at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, but your housemates definitely won't be the Obamas.

A developer petitioned the D.C. government to acquire the 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Southeast address, a ways away from the first family's Northwest abode.

The Southeast land is now home to a used car lot, but decades ago, it was a go-to haven for drug addicts. The 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. SE apartments are set to go up in 2015, and not everyone is impressed by the marketing scheme selling the famous address.

"I don't think it's funny," one Southeast resident told News4's Mark Segraves. "They're just throwing up places right now trying to inconvenience other people."

Tourists visiting the White House however have a different attitude.

"Oh wow! That sounds interesting" Lottie Polk said.

The developer tells News4 the 5-story building will look over the Anacostia River and will in no way resemble the White House.

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8-Month-Old Child Left in Car Dies

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An 8-month-old child is dead after his mother allegedly accidentally left him in a hot car all day while she was at work.

According to police, the Virginia woman drove to work in Arlington, forgetting she had left her baby in the car. When she left work Friday afternoon she saw her baby in the car and immediately drove to INOVA Alexandria Hospital just after 4 p.m. The baby was pronounced dead.

An investigation is pending.

Police recommend parents of young children are extra careful during hot summer months.

"Slow down and be careful... try not to let things get too busy," Lt. Mark Bergin with the Alexandria Police Department said.

Also on Friday, a 16-month-old girl died after being left in a car for about four hours in Baltimore.

According to KidsAndCars.org, every year, approximately 38 children die from being trapped inside hot cars.

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Guide Dog Spooked by Fireworks Is Missing

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Everyone knows that dogs are a man's best friend, but Sidney, a 5-year-old black Labrador, is more than that. And now he's missing.

Sidney is Caroline Mosely's trained guide dog. Mosely is legally blind.

"We're trained to pay attention to him, and he's trained to pay attention to me," Mosely said. "He's trained to show me the steps. He's trained to stop at every entry doorway, so he lets me know I'm at a door."

Sidney leads Mosely to work every day and also travels with her on trips.

"He goes everywhere -- even airplanes, buses, trains, grocery stores, everything," she said.

Sidney disappeared from his Southeast Dallas backyard on Wednesday after being spooked by fireworks.

Moseley took Sidney's work harness off on Wednesday evening. To the dog, it means work is over and it's time for play. When she let him out in the backyard, she heard neighbors popping some fireworks.

When she opened the door to call Sidney in a few minutes later, he was gone.

"I get up, even now, and keep looking like, 'Can I go get him?' Or, 'I got to go feed him,' or, 'What is he doing?'" Mosely said. "Without him, it's just like something's missing. He's like my best friend. I look down for him every time, keep looking for him every time."

Mosely has checked the Dallas animal shelters, but no luck.

Sidney is a black lab with a white patch of fur on his chest and some white fur under his chin. The inside of his ears are tattooed with the code 449P.

The Moselys live near the intersection of Jim Miller Road and Forney Road. Anyone who might have seen Sidney can contact the Guide Dogs for the Blind at 1-800-295-4050, extension 4090.

Sidney was trained by the group Guide Dogs for the Blind. A local club, the Lone Star Guide Dog Raisers Club, plans to help Mosely find the dog in the neighborhood by posting signs and going door to door starting 11 a.m. Saturday.

More: Missing Guide Dog Sidney

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Saginaw Goes Purple for Alanna Gallagher

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Investigation of 6-Year-Old's Slaying Continues

Investigators were back out in the neighborhood of a 6-year-old Saginaw girl whose body was found in a street a mile away from her home. Businesses and residents plan to wear purple ribbons starting this weekend in remembrance of Alanna Gallagher.

911 Call: Saginaw Girl's Body Found

Audio of a 911 call to Saginaw police reporting a girl's body that was found wrapped in a tarp.

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The town of Saginaw is coming together for a tribute to slain 6-year-old Alanna Gallagher, the girl whose body was found bound and wrapped in a tarp in Saginaw on Monday.

Residents plan to wear either purple ribbons or clothing this weekend in memory of Gallagher, whose favorite color was purple.

Some residents tied purple ribbons around their trees.

One resident even petitioned local businesses to join in. Wal-Mart, Albertson's, Sonic and Country Acres day care will join the tribute, according to the Saginaw Texas News' Facebook page.

Mendi Preston, executive director of Country Acres, said the day car would hand out ribbons on Monday to staff and parents and wear them all next week.

"Although she wasn't a member of our school, she was a member of our community," she said. "And we want to show our support not only of family, but any of the children or parents or even the teachers here locally that were affected by this tragedy."

The day care sits not far from both where Gallagher lived and where her body was found. Preston said the slaying affected her personally, not only because her day care has many students Gallagher's age, but because she has an 8-year-old daughter.

"She was really concerned about it," Preston said. "We went over and placed a bear over at the memorial as well. It really reminded us to emphasize to her to be careful when you're outside and pay attention to close surroundings, never be out there by yourself, and make sure we're out there with you."

The memorial where the 6-year-old's body was found continues to grow. Nancy Moreno, who lives a block away from Gallagher, brought her young daughter to drop off a small teddy bear.

"We feel so bad for Alanna," Moreno said. "She was in same school as she. She was asking, 'Why?' I just decided to bring her so she could see how much people care."

The Saginaw Police Department, the FBI and the North Texas Major Case Investigative Team are working to solve Gallagher's slaying.

Gallagher's cause of death has not yet been determined, and investigators are still trying to establish a timeline of what led up to her death.

On Friday, officers were back in her Saginaw neighborhood, interviewing neighbors. Investigators left a home two doors down from Gallagher's home with a brown paper bag similar to what police use to collect evidence. However, it's unclear why they were there or if it was related to Gallagher's killing.

Gallagher's father said the family is devastated and not ready to talk to the media.

The FBI is offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to the identification, arrest and conviction of the person or people responsible for Gallagher's death. Anyone with information is asked to call 682-888-3682 or 682-888-3684.

NBC 5's Chris Van Horne and Jeff Smith contributed to this report.

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School Failed to Report Abuse

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A school district investigation into a relationship between a Redlands teacher and a student with whom she's now accused of having a sexual relationship – and a baby – did not result in a report to police or child protective services, according to court documents filed Friday.

In May, the Redlands Unified School District questioned Laura Elizabeth Whitehurst – a Citrus Valley High School teacher who was arrested Monday on suspicion of unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor – as well as her alleged victim.

Whitehurst was at the time more than seven months pregnant, and police on Monday said the father was a teen student with whom she had an ongoing sexual relationship.

An affidavit submitted Wednesday to a San Bernardino County judge by Redlands police Detective Dominick Povero describes Whitehurst's alleged relationship with the teen, as well the school district's investigation into the pair on May 16 and May 17.

Povero was seeking a search warrant for school records related to the investigation, and San Bernardino Superior Court Judge Richard Peel on Wednesday granted him access to personnel files for Whitehurst, as well as her work emails and any relevant property on the Citrus Valley High campus. The document was filed in public court records Friday.

"Evidence from email communication and personnel files may show teachers, school administrators, and district administrators failed to report suspected child abuse as mandated," Povero wrote.

Whitehurst, 28, pictured in her booking photo below, was released from police custody Monday night on $25,000 bail. Police said she had given birth on June 18.

On Wednesday, police said investigators had learned of two other alleged victims since Whitehurst's arrest was made public.

One alleged victim was a freshman at the time of a sexual relationship in 2007 and 2008, which occurred at the same time as a similar relationship with a boy, now 23, who spoke to NBC4 about his experience with Whitehurst.

"There wasn't a thought of, 'I'm going to get in trouble' or 'Should I say something?'" Michael Cooper told NBC4 of a relationship he described during his junior year at Redands High School, where Whitehurst was his English teacher. "It's more of like, 'Holy cow, this hot teacher is into me.'"

The affidavit from Povero provides details of the police investigation into Whitehurst and the teen -- and into the school district questioning of the pair that took place more than six weeks before the teacher's arrest.

The court filing states that Redlands Unified Assistant Superintendent Sabine Robertson-Phillips had spoken to Whitehurst about her relationship to the  victim, described as "John Doe." Citrus Valley High Principal Bernard Cavanagh spoke to "John Doe," according to Povero.

But it was not until the alleged victim's mother contact school district officials – after Whitehurst gave birth – that educators got in touch with police, the affidavit states. That happened on Monday, when detectives went to speak with the "John Doe," who was 16 when the alleged relationship began and is 17 now.

The teen told detectives he had had an "ongoing" relationship with Whitehurst since July 2012, the document states.

"John Doe and Whitehurst met at a school sponsored trip to Disneyland, where they began communicating," the affidavit states.

Their sexual relationship included "numerous instances of sexual intercourse and sexual oral copulation" that continued weekly after Whitehurst became pregnant last September, according to the document.

Whitehurst told the teen he was her only recent partner and therefore the father of the child, Povero wrote. The teen attended the birth, according to the document.

In his presence, Povero had the teen call Whitehurst, who on the phone confirmed their relationship and that the teen was the baby's father, the detective wrote.

When Poverothen  spoke to Whitehurst in person, she confirmed the above details of the relationship, the detective wrote.

Officials with the San Bernardino County District Attorney's Office told NBC4 they expect charges against Whitehurst to be filed July 8.

School district officials on Tuesday issued a statement that said the district was cooperating with the investigation.

"The District was recently made aware of allegations involving a high school student and teacher. We immediately notified the police and placed the employee on leave," the statement read.

"Because we do not want to jeopardize the ongoing investigation, we are unable to comment further at this time," the school district statement continued. "We appreciate the quick response to our complaint by the Redlands Police Department. Our heart goes out to the victim and his family."

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SoFla Woman Receives Envelope With White Powder

Miramar Police said they are investigating after a woman received an envelope containing white powder. Postal inspector Ivan Ramirez spoke about the incident in Miramar's Silver Isles neighborhood.

Woman Received Envelope With White Powder

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Miramar Police said they are investigating after a woman received an envelope containing white powder.

A Sunrise Hazmat team responded to 3051 SW 163rd Ave. in Miramar's Silver Isles neighborhood Friday evening, authorities said.

A piece of mail delivered to the home was addressed to a doctor who lives there. His wife, who is also in the medical field, opened it and found a powdery, creamy substance inside, postal inspector Ivan Ramirez said.

Man Charged With Planting Hoax Bomb at MIA

It turned out that nothing inside was hazardous, but the woman was scared and had a bit of a panic attack, according to Ramirez.

"Mailing, even if it's a hoax device, is a crime. It is a federal crime, it does carry some stiff penalties," he said. "You don't have to actually be successful in causing any real particular damage or harm to anyone."

WATCH: Bomb Squad Detonates Suspicious Bag

The addresses on the letter were typed, he said.

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Thawing Permafrost Could Speed Global Warming

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Six to eight times a month, a Sherpa airplane with special instruments takes off from Fairbanks, Alaska, in search of data to answer the question: Is global warming causing changes to the environment that inevitably accelerate the climate change?

That is the suspicion of Charles Miller, principal investigator for a research project that is focusing on greenhouse gas emissions in the skies above the Arctic tundra, the vast treeless region that produces only grasses and low brush during the brief growing season.

"Climate change is already happening in the Arctic, faster than its ecosystems can adapt. Looking at the Arctic is like looking at the canary in the coal mine for the entire Earth system," said Miller, who is based at Pasadena's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, but who now spends much of the year in Alaska.

The carbon compounds implicated in global warming are often associated with combustion, and that is a significant source. But Miller said the amount of carbon compounds such as methane and carbon dioxide that are trapped in the permafrost beneath the tundra is staggering -- comparable to all of the greenhouse gas emissions from the burning of fossil fuels since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution two centuries ago.

During the summer thaw, the very top of the permafrost melts -- a few inches to no more than a few feet -- releasing only a small amount of the carbon that has built up over eons from the annual die-back of vegetation. It decomposes slowly in the tundra environment and historically is recaptured during the winter freeze.

Enter global warming.

"As temperatures warm, it's thought that these organic materials could decompose more rapidly and give rise to gases such as carbon dioxide and methane," Miller said. "The anticipated release of carbon should accelerate climate change...I think the experts all agree that that's the case. The question that we're grappling with is how much carbon might be vulnerable to release, and how fast might it be released."

One possible scenario is what scientists call a "positive feedback loop," akin to what's known in the more common vernacular as a vicious circle that feeds on itself.

"The warmer it gets the more of this carbon gets released from the thawing permafrost. And it then itself contributes to the warming. So you get this positive buildup -- more and more warming."

Determining whether that is actually happening is the mission for CARVE -- Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment, a five-year study now in its third summer.

Ask Miller now if any trends are apparent, and he demurs, wanting to wait for more data. But he does say the airborne surveillance periodically encounter large "plumes of methane," as much as 150 kilometers (90 miles) across.

There are nuances, as well.

It turns out not all carbon compounds are created equal when it comes to effect on the atmospheric greenhouse. Methane, for example, has a much greater impact than carbon dioxide, as much as 100 times greater over a 20-year period, according to Miller.

What's more, the climate itself can influence the type of carbon compounds thawing permafrost is more likely to release. Warm and dry is more favorable for carbon dioxide. Warm and wetter would be expected to produce more methane, and it would not take much of a shift to have a significant impact, Miller said.

"Iif the amount of methane to carbon dioxide shifts just a little bit in favor of methane, just one or two percent, then without increasing the amount of carbon that's released from the soil tremendously you can actually double or even triple the amount of 'radiative forcing' and greenhouse gas warming," Miller said. "That's why we're really interested in -- whether the arctic is becoming warmer and drier or warmer and wetter."

With the data CARVE is generating, Miller hopes climate scientists would be able to produce moreaccurate mathematical models for predicting the effects of climate change.
 

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Mom Who Left Baby in Hot Car Charged with Neglect

Zoraida Magali Conde Hernandez, 32, of Alexandria

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A Virginia mother who left her 8-month-old baby boy in a hot car for about 6 hours has been charged with felony child neglect, according to police.

Arlington County police arrested Zoraida Magali Conde Hernandez, 32, of Alexandria, on Saturday. She is currently being held on no bond at the Arlington County Detention Facility.

Police said Hernandez drove to work on Friday, forgetting she had left the infant boy in the car. When she left work later that day, she saw her baby in the car and immediately drove to INOVA Alexandria Hospital.

The baby was pronounced dead a short time later.

Police recommend parents of young children are extra careful during hot summer months.

"Slow down and be careful... try not to let things get too busy," Lt. Mark Bergin with the Alexandria Police Department said.

Also on Friday, a 16-month-old girl died after being left in a car for about four hours in Baltimore.

According to KidsAndCars.org, approximately 38 children die from being trapped inside hot cars every year.
 

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