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Monday, August 27, 2012

Student shot at Md. high school; suspect held

By ALEX DOMINGUEZ | Associated Press


PERRY HALL, Md. (AP) — A 15-year-old student opened fire on the first day of classes Monday at aBaltimore County high school, getting off two shots and wounding a classmate before being rushed byteachers, authorities said.
Investigators do not believe the victim, a 17-year-old male, was targeted by the shooter, a 15-year-old who is also a student at Perry Hall High School, Baltimore County Police Chief James Johnson said. The 15-year-old boy was taken into custody after the shooting and was cooperating with investigators, police said. Police took the weapon, although they did not say what kind of gun it was.
Johnson said at about 10:45 a.m., a student walked into the cafeteria and pulled out a gun. He fired one shot before being grabbed by teachers, and then another shot went off as teachers grabbed him, Johnson said.
Johnson said the shooter acted alone. He did not answer numerous questions from reporters about a motive.
Baltimore County State's Attorney Scott Shellenberger said it was too early to know what charges the shooter would face. Police said they would work with prosecutors to determine whether he would be charged as an adult.
The victim remained in critical condition at Maryland Shock Trauma Center on Monday evening, a hospital spokeswoman said.
Jordan Coates, a 17-year-old student who was in the cafeteria at the time of the shooting, said the student used a shotgun. Coates said he watched teachers, including guidance counselor Jesse Wasmer, pin the student against a vending machine.
"My back was to the door. I heard a pop and thought it was a bag because people do that, but then I heard another one," Coates told The Associated Press. "And I turned around and a teacher had a kid pinned up against the vending machine, and I saw the barrel, and another shot goes off and people just start running."
Coates credited Wasmer with helping to stop the shooting, and numerous students took to Twitter to thank him.
"He grabbed the gun from the kid and got him" until other teachers came over, Coates said.
Kelsey Long, a junior at Perry Hall who was in the cafeteria, said she also thought the first gunshot was someone popping a bag.
"But then we heard it again and again and everyone started screaming and ran out to the front of the school," Long told The Associated Press in a Twitter message.
Detectives were interviewing the suspected shooter Monday afternoon, Baltimore County police spokeswoman Elise Armacost said. Officers spent several hours searching the school and found no other weapons or suspicious materials, she said.
Although no one other than the 17-year-old was shot, several people suffered cuts and bruises in the ensuing melee, Armacost said.
"We have some heroic and brave faculty members," Schools Superintendent Dallas Dance said. "They responded very quickly to minimize damage."
Seth Warner, a youth pastor at the Faith Fellowship Church across from the high school who graduated in 1999 with Wasmer, said he was not surprised to hear that the guidance counselor had intervened. He described Wasmer as "not big, but built."
"I knew that if anyone could take him down, it would be Jesse," Warner said.
The school was evacuated, and students were escorted to a nearby shopping center and middle school.
Perry Hall is a middle-class community along the Interstate 95 corridor, northeast of Baltimore city. The school is the largest in the county, with 2,200 students.
County Councilman David Marks, who lives next door to the school, said he had received dozens of phone calls and text messages from worried parents and residents.
"This is a very comfortable, very safe community, and it's an excellent high school," said Marks, who graduated from Perry Hall. "I think this is an aberration, but clearly one that is horrifying, particularly on the first day of school."
Police planned to provide additional security when the school reopens on Tuesday, and stress counselors were called in to work with students, faculty and staff.
Television coverage showed scores of police cars surrounding the school and parked on neighborhood streets. A group of officers with weapons drawn staked out a corner of the building, one of them lying prone on the ground and appearing to cover a particular area of the campus. Hundreds of students streamed away from the school.
Cathy Le, 15, said students were panicking as they tried to find out what was happening. They texted and called each other frantically as they were locked in their classrooms for more than an hour, she said.
At the scene, buses, emergency vehicles and parents in cars filled the roadway between the high school and the shopping center. There were obvious signs of relief displayed as parents found their children.
Kristin Kraus, whose son James attends the school, described hearing about the shooting as "absolute terror." However, Kraus said, "within a couple of minutes he texted my husband that he was OK."
___
Associated Press writer Ben Nuckols in Washington contributed to this report.

Commentary: Every parent's worst fear is hearing about a shooting at their child's school. As schools around the country have started up again, this is the last thing any parent wants to hear. It's sad that the youth of today are using assorted means of venting their frustrations that often end violently. Thankfully bystanders were able to apprehend the shooter before anymore serious damage or possible deaths could have occurred. 
Since the time God has been removed from all schools, these things seemingly have been occurring more frequently. Prayer should be restored in all schools like it used to be, perhaps this sort of violent outbursts wouldn't occur as often. I hope all the other students and teachers shall be able to gradually move on.


Friday, August 24, 2012

Empire State Building Shooting Suspect Kept Firing After Victim Fell - ABC News

Empire State Building Shooting Suspect Kept Firing After Victim Fell - ABC News


Aug. 24, 2012

The gunman who triggered a wild shootout in front of the Empire State Building today gunned down a former work acquaintance without saying a word, and stood over his prone victim to pump more bullets into him, police said today.
The shooter, identified by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg as Jeffrey Johnson, pulled his gun a second time when confronted by two police officers a half block away and pointed it at the police.
He was cut down in a hail of 16 bullets that left Johnson riddled with 10 bullet holes. Nine bystanders were also wounded by what police believe were ricochets, police said.
Johnson, 58, was lurking outside a building adjacent to the Empire State Building, ABC News station WABC in New York reported. The building housed Hazan Imports Corp., which had once contracted with Johnson to design T-shirts, police told WABC.
Johnson's relationship with the company ended bitterly a year ago in a dispute with the company's account executive, Steven Ercolino, 41, police said.
A friend of Ercolino's who witnessed the shooting told police that she noticed Johnson, who was wearing a suit and carrying a black bag, outside the building. She saw him walk up to Ercolino and without saying a word, fire five times at the victim and keep firing as Ercolino slumped to the ground, police told WABC.
Ercolino's father was heartbroken.
"Steven was a wonderful son. He was very good son and person," Frank Ercolino of Warwick, N.Y., told ABC News.
Johnson calmly walked away from the shooting, the witness told police, but New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said he was followed by a construction worker. The worker alerted two New York Police Department officers who confronted Johnson.
Johnson pulled his gun again, held the gun chest high and extended his arm, police told WABC.
The two cops, who were about eight feet away from Johnson, opened fire, killing Johnson.
"He tried to shoot at the cops," Bloomberg said. "We do not know if he got any shots off."
Police told WABC Johnson had a .45-caliber handgun and there was an extra clip of bullets in his bag.
Johnson was struck at least seven times and some of the 10 bullet holes were exit wounds, authorities said.
The nearby curb was lined with large cement flower pots meant to thwart an attempted car bomb, and some were damaged, WABC reported.
Witness George King told ABC News he watched several people around him struck by bullets.
"I heard multiple gunshots, I'd say about 12 of them," he said. "I thought they were firecrackers, at first. I didn't know what was going on. Everyone started running for cover along with me. The girl that was running next to me fell down to the pavement and, when I looked at her, I could see she had been hit in the leg. She was bleeding from the leg.
"I noticed about five people who had been struck on the sidewalk or the street," he said.
Another witness to the shooting, Cyrus Balanlayos, told ABC News he was on a bus just outside the Empire State building when he heard several very quick gunshots.
"I looked up and saw hundreds of people running north. It seemed like a Godzilla film," Balanlayos said. "I saw two bodies on the ground right in front of the bus."
Balanlayos said that after he got off the bus he saw another two other people who appeared to have been shot -- a man and a woman.
"All I heard was, 'Oh my god, Oh my god,'" he said.
Police told WABC that Johnson legally bought his gun in Sarasota, Fla., in 1991. He illegally brought it to New York City, which has strict gun laws.
Commentary: It breaks my heart when a tragedy such as this occurs, innocent lives are taken. The gunman really didn't care about his actions. May God guide the families effected by this unfortunate tragedy, bestow strength upon them to gradually move on.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Keauhou Beach Hotel to close, 112 to lose jobs - Hawaii News Now - KGMB and KHNL

Keauhou Beach Hotel to close, 112 to lose jobs - Hawaii News Now - KGMB and KHNL


KEAUHOU, BIG ISLAND (HawaiiNewsNow) -
112 people will lose their jobs when the Keauhou Beach Hotel on the Big Island closes in late October.
Kamehameha Schools made that announced Wednesday.
"This hotel has been a place of rest and play for so many people in its past 40 years - myself included," said Kamehameha Schools CEO Dee Jay Mailer. "Despite the good work of many committed and talented people, financial losses at the hotel over the last six years have been substantial."
Outrigger Hotels manages the property.
Kamehameha Schools says Outrigger Hotel management & ILWU leaders have been told of the decision and have met with the majority of the hotel employees to let them know of this difficult decision in person.
"The decision has been very difficult because of its impact on the people here." said KBH's Kyle Chock. "Many of these employees have given years of dedicated service to the Keauhou Beach Hotel, and we owe them our sincerest thanks and appreciation. We along with Outrigger management and the ILWU, will do all we can to assist those affected by the closure."
Once the hotel closes, property will be turned over to Kamehameha Schools.
Kamehameha Schools says planning is underway to demolish the hotel in order to create the opportunity for KS to re-claim and restore a portion of the cultural landscape in Kahalu'u ma kai that has been covered or impacted by the hotel and its surrounding structures for decades.
"We envision creating a place for teaching and learning of applied Hawaiian knowledge. A place where a broad range of culture and aina based learning experiences that recognize and respect the legacy of this place and out kupuna," said
Greg Chun, Vice President of KS' Keauhou-Kahaluu Education Group.
Kamehameha Schools CEO Dee Jay Mailer noted that KBH, KS and various independent consultants had, over the last 18 months, studied a number of options as alternatives to closing the hotel, but the analyses came to the same conclusion: selling, renovating or re-purposing the hotel would create an unacceptable financial risk for Kamehameha Schools and its educational mission.
Commentary: It's never fun seeing a long time business closing its doors, however, with the current state of the economy, this was probably the best decision management had to make. I do hope when the property is used for something else, that it may provide jobs for those losing theirs because of the hotel closing its doors.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Gasoline prices jump 5 cents in one day after Richmond refinery fire

By George Avalos
Contra Costa Times

RICHMOND -- Gasoline prices jumped in the Bay Area by at least 5 cents a gallon Wednesday after a disastrous fire at Chevron's Richmond refinery that shut down a crucial distilling unit, guaranteeing higher gas prices for Northern California for months to come.
"This unit is the heart of the refinery," said Bob van der Valk, a Montana-based fuel price analyst. "Without this crude distillation unit in operation, Chevron can't refine products."
He and other analysts said the damage to the refinery, which produces 20 to 25 percent of the gasoline for Northern California, could push gas prices higher for the rest of 2012 and perhaps into 2013.
"The East Bay, San Jose area, San Francisco and all the other parts of the Bay Area will be hit by $4-a-gallon gasoline in the next 24 to 48 hours," said Patrick DeHaan, a senior petroleum analyst with GasBuddy. "Supply is very tight on the West Coast."
Analysts noted that a similar fire that engulfed a key unit at a refinery in Washington state shut down production there for a four-month stretch from February to June.
"Chevron is still putting out hot spots in the area of the original fire," van der Valk said. "They won't be able to do anything there for months."
The crude distillation unit that the fire knocked out at the Richmond refinery provides the first step in transforming crude oil into motor fuels and other transportation fuels and products, according to Justin Higgs, a Chevron spokesman.
The damaged unit, the only one of its kind at the refinery, supplies most of the feedstock that other production units require later in the refining process. Chevron on Wednesday was shuttling materials that had already been distilled to the other production units at the refinery, and also continued to refine feedstock it had previously bought.
"We continue to operate, we continue to supply product," Higgs said.
But Higgs declined to provide specifics on current production levels, or to say how long it would take to repair the damage from the fire.
Average gasoline prices jumped 6 cents in the East Bay and the South Bay, and 5 cents in San Francisco by evening Wednesday over what they had been late Tuesday, according to a survey by the GasBuddy online site.
"Five or 6 cents a gallon, you might see that sort of increase in a week, but to have that in one day, that shows how significant the refinery fire is," DeHaan said. "Five or 6 cents in a day, that's a lot."
The average price of gasoline was $3.93 a gallon in the South Bay, $3.91 in the East Bay and $3.99 in San Francisco on Wednesday, GasBuddy reported.
"There is definitely a price spike going on," said Gregg Laskoski, a senior petroleum analyst with GasBuddy. "There is no question the fire at the Richmond refinery is the catalyst for this."
Chevron's Richmond refinery can handle 244,000 barrels of oil a day. In addition to producing 20 to 25 percent of the gasoline used in Northern California, it also supplies about 50 percent of the jet fuel used at the major airports in the region.
"They are probably running at half capacity at the Richmond refinery," van der Valk said. "They can bring in blended stocks from other parts of the world, such as from the huge Chevron refinery in India. That could take two months to get here. Chevron will just try to hobble along for a while at the refinery."
Other challenges have surfaced that have contributed to the gasoline price problems on the West Coast. For one thing, refinery inventories are low because refinery operators don't want to be caught with a oversupply of summer fuel ahead of the annual switch to winter fuel blends Oct. 1. And the Valero refinery in Benicia has suffered some hiccups lately.
"There are big problems in California right now," Laskoski said.
Commentary: It's often not too surprising how gas prices suddenly spike upward whenever a refinery has a malfunction that occurs.
It's even more interesting that Chevron hasn't become better prepared for these type of situations through the years.