“Bad Brad” Lives Up To His Nickname! Keselowski Wins Pocono 500

Despite a broken ankle and a strained lower back “Bad Brad” Keselowski won the Pocono 500 by holding off Kyle Bush for the last 15 laps.

LONG POND, Pa. — Brad Keselowski‘s challenge to the rest of the Sprint Cup field: “I can beat you with a broken leg.”

And he did.

Staying out on the track on old tires under a caution with 21 laps left in Sunday’s rain-interrupted Good Sam RV Insurance 500 at Pocono Raceway, Keselowski pulled away from Kyle Busch after a restart on Lap 185 of 200 to secure his second victory of the season — despite driving with a broken left ankle.

Keselowski, who was injured in a hard crash during testing Wednesday at Road Atlanta, kept Busch at bay over the final 10 laps. With Sunday’s victory — the third of his career — Keselowski’s fortunes took a dramatic turn with respect to the Chase.

Having cracked the top 20, Keselowski is in position to claim the first wild-card spot, being the only driver in positions 11-20 with more than one victory. Keselowski leaves Pocono 18th in the standings, having gained three positions Sunday.

Kyle Busch came home second, followed by Kurt Busch, Jimmie Johnson and Ryan Newman. Jeff Gordon, Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Paul Menard completed the top 10.

He beat the best today with no excuses.

Read the rest HERE

What’s Up In Arkansas? Dead Birds, Belly-up Fish

I heard this story first yesterday.

Just before folks in Beebe rang in the New Year, many witnessed an uncanny resemblance to the Hitchcock movie “The Birds.” About 2,000 black birds fell from the sky off Windwood Drive, leaving quite the mess to clean up.

Folks Today’s THV spoke with initially thought the birds were poisoned because they are what they call a nuisance around this time every year, but they are surprised to hear it is more of a mystery.

Stephen Bryant recalls, “Millions, millions fly over every night. You look up at the sky and it’s just black and then last night at about 10:30 I came out here and saw a bird drop.”

In a matter of hours on New Years Eve thousands of birds fell from the sky to their death.

Then later in the day I saw this.

Arkansas Game & Fish is trying to figure out why 100,000 fish in Northwest Arkansas turned up dead. They were found along a 20-mile stretch between the Ozark Dam and Highway 109 Bridge in Franklin County.

The 20-mile stretch along the Arkansas River where an estimated 100,000 drum fish were found washed ashore and floating looks much different now.

Keith Stephens with Game and Fish explains, “We got a call last week from a tug boat operator that found the fish out on the river along the bank, in the river channel and we immediately dispatched somebody to the area to take a look.”

Investigators from local and state agencies took samples from the affected area. Stephens says fish kills occur every year, but the magnitude of this one is unusual, and disease could be the cause.

How long do you think it will be before “Global Warming” is blamed?


More Proof of The Global Warming Fraud

 

It's all falling apart

 

Professor Emiritus Hal Lewis has resigned from the American Physical Society over the Global Warming Fraud.

It is of course, the global warming scam, with the (literally) trillions of dollars driving it, that has corrupted so many scientists, and has carried APS before it like a rogue wave. It is the greatest and most successful pseudoscientific fraud I have seen in my long life as a physicist. Anyone who has the faintest doubt that this is so should force himself to read the ClimateGate documents, which lay it bare. (Montford’s book organizes the facts very well.) I don’t believe that any real physicist, nay scientist, can read that stuff without revulsion. I would almost make that revulsion a definition of the word scientist.

So what has the APS, as an organization, done in the face of this challenge? It has accepted the corruption as the norm, and gone along with it. For example:

1. About a year ago a few of us sent an e-mail on the subject to a fraction of the membership. APS ignored the issues, but the then President immediately launched a hostile investigation of where we got the e-mail addresses. In its better days, APS used to encourage discussion of important issues, and indeed the Constitution cites that as its principal purpose. No more. Everything that has been done in the last year has been designed to silence debate

2. The appallingly tendentious APS statement on Climate Change was apparently written in a hurry by a few people over lunch, and is certainly not representative of the talents of APS members as I have long known them. So a few of us petitioned the Council to reconsider it. One of the outstanding marks of (in)distinction in the Statement was the poison word incontrovertible, which describes few items in physics, certainly not this one. In response APS appointed a secret committee that never met, never troubled to speak to any skeptics, yet endorsed the Statement in its entirety. (They did admit that the tone was a bit strong, but amazingly kept the poison word incontrovertible to describe the evidence, a position supported by no one.) In the end, the Council kept the original statement, word for word, but approved a far longer “explanatory” screed, admitting that there were uncertainties, but brushing them aside to give blanket approval to the original. The original Statement, which still stands as the APS position, also contains what I consider pompous and asinine advice to all world governments, as if the APS were master of the universe. It is not, and I am embarrassed that our leaders seem to think it is. This is not fun and games, these are serious matters involving vast fractions of our national substance, and the reputation of the Society as a scientific society is at stake.

Read It All!

H/T Gateway Pundit

Video: Canada Air Show Jet Crash

LETHBRIDGE, Alberta – A Canadian air force jet crashed and exploded in a ball of flames during a training run for a weekend international air show in Alberta, but the pilot was able to eject from the plummeting plane before it hit the runway.

The pilot, Capt. Brian Bews, who sustained a sore back and scraped-up arms, was treated at a hospital and released Friday.

Bews was practicing Friday in a CF-18 Hornet jet over Lethbridge County Airport for an international air show. The CF-18 he was flying is a model specifically used for air shows.

“All of a sudden you could hear `pop, pop, pop,’ ” witness Roland Booth told CTV News. “I saw sparks come out of the one engine. The plane started banking over to the side. That’s when the pilot bailed out with his parachute.”

The Rest Here

Millions Feel Quake on California Mexico Border

Updated quake news already. Just happened to be up to catch this and it seems even though there isn’t much damage it may be a record for recent quakes.

TIJUANA, Mexico – One of the strongest earthquakes to hit Southern California in decades shook tens of millions of people in two countries and three states on Sunday, swaying buildings from Los Angeles to Phoenix to Tijuana. At least one person in Mexico was killed and others were feared trapped in their homes.

The 7.2-magnitude quake struck at 3:40 p.m. PDT, about 38 miles (60 kms) southeast of the border city of Mexicali, Mexico, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It had a shallow depth of 10 kilometers (6 miles). Three aftershocks of magnitudes 5.1, 4.5 and 4.3 followed within the hour.

“It sounds like it’s felt by at least 20 million people at this point,” USGS seismologist Lucy Jones said. “Most of Southern California felt this earthquake.”

The earthquake was felt the hardest in Mexicali, a bustling commerce center along the border.

Baja California state Civil Protection Director Alfredo Escobedo said a man was killed when his home collapsed just outside of Mexicali, and that there were reports of more people trapped in homes in the area.

Rescue teams with dogs and digging equipment were rushing to the city from nearby Tijuana, but a landslide along that highway was slowing traffic.

The Rest Here

7.2 Earthquake Near California Mexico Border

LOS ANGELES – Seismologists have raised the preliminary magnitude of an earthquake in northern Baja California from 6.9 to 7.2.

U.S. Geological Survey seismologist Lucy Jones says the new magnitude of the 3:40 p.m. Sunday earthquake is still an estimate.

The quake centered south of California’s border with Mexico was widely felt, swaying buildings as far away as San Diego, Los Angeles and Arizona.

There has been no confirmed damage, but some power outages were reported in southern Arizona and Tijuana, Mexico. Jones says any damage would likely have occurred closer to the epicenter such as in the Mexican city of Mexicali or in U.S. border cities.

From the original article:

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A strong earthquake south of the U.S.-Mexico border Sunday swayed high-rises in downtown Los Angeles and San Diego and was felt across Southern California and Arizona, but there were no immediate reports of major damage.

The 6.9 magnitude quake struck at 3:40 p.m. in Baja California, Mexico, about 19 miles southeast of Mexicali, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The area was hit by magnitude-3.0 quakes all week.

The quake was felt as far north as Santa Barbara, USGS seismologist Susan Potter said.

Strong shaking was reported in the Coachella Valley and Riverside, Calif. The earthquake rattled buildings on the west side of Los Angeles and in the San Fernando Valley, interrupting Easter dinners. Chandeliers swayed and wine jiggled in glasses.

In Los Angeles, the city fire department went on “earthquake status,” and some stalled elevators were reported. No damage was reported in Los Angeles or San Diego.

One woman called firefighters and said she was stuck in an elevator descending from the 34th floor in a building in Century City, but there was no way to immediately know if the breakdown was tied the quake, Los Angeles firefighter Eric Scott said.

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power says there are no power outages anywhere in the city, spokeswoman Maryanne Pierson said.

The quake was felt for about 40 seconds in Tijuana, Mexico, causing buildings to sway and knocking out power in parts of the city. Families celebrating Easter ran out of the homes, with children screaming and crying.

Baja California state Civil Protection Director Alfredo Escobedo said there were no immediate reports of injuries or major damage. But he said the assessment was ongoing.

In the Phoenix area, Jacqueline Land said her king-sized bed in her second-floor apartment felt like a boat gently swaying on the ocean.

“I thought to myself, ‘That can’t be an earthquake. I’m in Arizona,’” the Northern California native said. “And I thought, ‘Oh my God, I feel like I’m 9 years old.’”

A police dispatcher in Yuma, Ariz., said the quake was very strong there, but no damage was reported. The Yuma County Sheriff’s Office had gotten a few calls, mostly from alarm companies because of alarms going off.

Mike Wong, who works at a journalism school in downtown Phoenix, said he was in his second-floor office getting some work done Sunday afternoon when he heard sounds and felt the building start to sway.

“I heard some cracking sounds, like Rice Krispies,” coming from the building, he said. “I didn’t think much of it, but I kept hearing it, and then I started feeling a shake. I thought, ‘You know what? I think that might be an earthquake.”

Wong said the swaying lasted for “just a few seconds,” and he didn’t notice any damage.

An earthquake also hit in Northern California Sunday afternoon. The U.S. Geological Survey says a quake with a preliminary magnitude of 4.0 was recorded at 3:49 p.m. about 25 miles north of Santa Rosa.

A dispatcher with the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Department said the agency had not received any calls for service after the quake.

AP Story. Check here for updates.

Also, check this LINK for ongoing quake information.

Tsunami Warning For Pacific Ring of Fire After 8.8 Chile Quake

Tsunami travel times, National Atmospheric and Oceanic  Administration

Tsunami travel times: National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration

Nations around the Pacific Ocean are on full alert as a tsunami triggered by a 8.8 magnitude earthquake in central Chile brings higher than normal waves.

Tsunami warnings have been sounded in an area affecting about a quarter of the globe.

Waves have spread from the epicentre of quake and may strike land bordering the Pacific in the next 24 hours.

Warning systems have improved since the 2004 Indonesia quake sparked a tsunami that killed some 250,000 people.

Nations affected by the Pacific “Rim of Fire” have all sounded alerts, trying to estimate the anticipated time of arrival of any tsunami.

‘Urgent action’

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center has said there may be “widespread damage” from high waves.

A man walks along Waikiki beach, Honolulu, Hawaii

A warning was issued in Hawaii for a possible tsunami

“Authorities should take appropriate action in response to this threat,” it said.

Large waves are reported to have struck Chile’s Juan Fernandez island group, reaching halfway into one inhabited area. Three people there are missing, local media say. Two aid ships are reported to be on their way.

Parts of French Polynesia’s coast were hit by waves of up to 6ft (2m) at 1630 GMT, but there was no damage immediately reported.

It has been difficult to estimate the possible wave heights of any tsunami – the waves may not arrive at all or could be as high as 10 metres above normal sea level.

In Tahiti, traffic was banned on roads less than 500m from sea, and residents on low-lying land were told to get to higher ground, but the first tsunami waves were smaller there, measuring only 36cm.

New Zealand has warned waves up to 3m could hit the main North and South Islands plus outlying islands.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii gathers information

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center in Hawaii was monitoring the waves

Waves measuring 20cm hit the Chatham Islands, about 400 miles from the mainland, about 1905 GMT, but the Ministry of Civil Defence warned that “the greatest wave heights will occur between six and 12 hours after the initial arrivals.”

American Samoa has urged residents to seek shelter, calling on coastal villagers to seek higher ground.

Sirens were sounded in Hawaii to alert residents to the tsunami threat several hours before waves were expected.

The first waves in Hawaii are expected about 1100 local time on Saturday (2100 GMT) and measure about 8ft (2.5m).

Strong currents

John Cummings, Oahu civil defence spokesman, said: “Get off the shoreline. We are closing all the beaches and telling people to drive out of the area.”

Australian officials warned of “possible dangerous waves, strong ocean currents and foreshore flooding” from Sydney to Brisbane.

Japan may be hit at 0300 GMT on Sunday, the country’s meteorological agency said, calling for people to be fully alert.

California has also warned its coastal cities to prepare for possible tsunami waves, the first strike possibly around San Diego.

The Cook Islands, Kiribati, Niue, Tonga, the Solomon Islands, Fiji and Vanuatu could also all be at risk.

BBC News




Huge 8.8 Quake Hits Chile. Tsunami Threatens Pacific Rim… LIVE VIDEO FEED ADDED (tsunami watch)

Live tsunami warning feed from Hawaii HERE

AP – Residents look at a collapsed building in Concepcion, Chile, Saturday Feb. 27, 2010

TALCA, Chile – One of the strongest earthquakes ever recorded struck Chile on Saturday, toppling homes, collapsing bridges and plunging trucks into the fractured earth. A tsunami set off by the magnitude-8.8 quake threatened every nation around the Pacific Ocean — roughly a quarter of the globe.

Chileans near the epicenter were tossed about as if shaken by a giant.

It was the strongest earthquake to hit Chile in 50 years. President-elect Sebastian Pinera said more than 120 people died, a number that was rising quickly.

The quake shook buildings in Argentina’s capital of Buenos Aires, and was felt as far away as Sao Paulo in Brazil — 1,800 miles (2,900 kilometers) to the east.

~~~~~

The jolt set off a tsunami that raced across the Pacific, setting off alarm sirens in Hawaii, Polynesia and Tonga. Tahitian officials banned all traffic on roads less than 1,600 feet (500 meters) from the sea and people in several low-lying island nations were urged to find higher ground.

Hawaii could face its largest waves since 1964 starting at 11:19 a.m. (4:19 p.m. EST, 2119 GMT), according to Charles McCreery, director of the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center. Officials evacuated people and boats near the water and closed shore-side Hilo International Airport.

Experts said tsunami waves were likely to hit Asian, Australian and New Zealand shores within 24 hours of the earthquake. The U.S. West Coast and Alaska, too, were threatened. In all, 53 nations and territories were subject to tsunami warnings.

Waves 6 feet (1.8 meter) above normal hit Talcahuano near Concepcion 23 minutes after the quake, and President Michelle Bachelet said a huge wave swept into a populated area in the Robinson Crusoe Islands, 410 miles (660 kilometers) off the Chilean coast.

Bachelet said she had no information on the number of people injured in the quake. She declared a “state of catastrophe” in central Chile but said the government has not asked for assistance from other countries.

More Here

Tragedy At The Rat Farm !Update!

more about “Tragedy at The Rat Farm“, posted with vodpod

!Update! The men were identified by the Shasta County Coroner’s office as Noel Smith, 38, of Burney, and Nathan Smith, 32, of Citrus Heights.

Two men have died after falling through the ice Saturday evening trying to rescue a dog at the Big Lake boat launch in McArthur.

Paramedics were unable to resuscitate the two men, who had been submerged for several minutes under the icy water as firefighters and volunteers searched for them in a duck hunter’s boat.

Video footage posted on the Intermountain News Web site shows firefighters feeling around in the slush-covered, inky, black water with poles in the hopes of bumping into one of the men in the current.

Their identities haven’t been released by the Shasta County Coroner’s Office.

“I’ve had a lot of firemen call me up today before going to church wondering how to pray,” McArthur Volunteer Fire Department Chief Pat Oilar said today.

One of the men in the party apparently survived and swam to shore but he had severe hypothermia, Oilar said.

The other two men apparently had been submerged under the ice — one for about 20 to 25 minutes and the other for about 50 minutes, Oilar said.

Rescuers performed CPR on the two men before ambulances took them to the hospital.

The three men — all believed to be in their 30s and brothers — wound up in the water and ice after trying to get a dog that went through the ice first. “That was my understanding,” Oilar said. It’s also the chief’s understanding that the dog survived.

Oilar credited Jeff Stackhouse of McArthur for assisting in retrieving the two men.

“He was key in the rescue,” Oilar said.

Stackhouse had been hunting in the area, but unloaded his boat from a trailer to take several McArthur fire department volunteers on the lake to find the two men.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection received a call at 5:22 p.m. that three men had fallen into the ice at the Rat Farm boat launch, said Cal Fire Capt. Ed Almeda.

This time of year, the Rat Farm launch area is a popular duck hunting boat ramp as the Big Lake area remains one of the few marshy waterways not completely frozen over after cold spells.

But, Oilar said, he didn’t know whether the three men were part of a hunting party. At least one witness said the men may have been fishing.

Oilar said it was strange that the two men appeared to have stripped down to their T-shirts before going after the dog.

The ice was 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 inches thick, Oilar said.

Assisting at the scene were firefighters from Cal Fire, the McArthur and Fall River volunteer fire departments, and Shasta County Sheriff’s Office.

Sources: Record Searchlight and Intermountain News

My prayers go out to all involved.

Money Not Motive In Burney US Bank Standoff !Update! Shooter Identified

The latest from  The Record Searchlight.

!!UPDATE!! The shooter has been identified as Gregorio Enrique Estrada, 46, of Chico. Details Here

Dr. Timothy Kersten of Burney leaves US Bank in Burney after being shot in the back of the head at point blank range. Obviously in shock, (or the calmest man I've ever seen) he drove to the Burney Fire Station a few hundred feet down the road and now is in critical condition in a Redding hospital.

Police are calling a 47-year-old Burney man’s shooting spree from inside a Burney bank an orchestrated attack that left them no choice but to fire back.

“This was a clear, calculated ambush situation for officers and deputies,” Redding Police Lt. Scott Mayberry said today at a press conference.

Though many details are still unclear since bank tellers remain traumatized and the two customers the man shot have been in surgery, police say this is what they know:

His pockets stuffed with .50 caliber handgun ammo and a bag filled with dozens of 9 mm rounds, the gunman walked into the Main Street bank around 12:14 p.m. Tuesday.

He pointed a semi-automatic pistol at a customer’s head and pulled the trigger.

The gun misfired.

Still without saying a word, the gunman pulled back the slide on the black 9 mm Smith and Wesson and fired again, shooting Timothy Kersten, 53, of Burney in the mouth.

Remarkably, Kersten didn’t die.

Instead, bleeding from a wound in his neck, the Burney dentist managed to walk out of the bank. Witnesses said later that he appeared calm or in shock.

//

Kersten got into his car and began driving west toward Redding. He was hoping to make it to an emergency room.

He got only as far as the Burney fire station, just a few hundred feet down the street. Firefighters took him to a Redding hospital, where he was listed in serious (critical as of 12-17) condition today.

Shooting Kersten was just the start.

Next the gunman walked up to a teller and told her to give him some money.

She did.

Then he asked the terrified woman whether she had activated the bank’s hold up alarm.

When she said no, he told her to push it.

At some point around the time the alarm went off, the gunman fired again at another customer, Gloria Brown, 64, hitting her in the wrist with a 9 mm bullet.

She would lie bleeding for three hours until two sheriff’s deputies took the gunman down.

Like Kersten, Brown is listed in serious condition today.

The first officer to arrive in response to the bank alarm was Shasta County Sheriff’s Sgt. Marc St. Clair. He got there within minutes.

Shots from the gunman’s silver .50 caliber Smith and Wesson revolver boomed, breaking out the bank’s glass storefront and hitting St. Clair’s truck.

St. Clair immediately called for back-up and dozens of on- and off-duty deputies, Redding police and California Highway Patrol officers flooded the town. They were joined by agents with the U.S. Forest Service, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and the FBI.

As action inside the bank escalated, one employee inside was in the middle of a conference call with co-workers at the its Redding office.

The co-workers heard gunshots over the telephone and notified authorities.

The employee on the telephone locked herself in the bank’s ATM room, where she called 911 and gave dispatchers information about how many people were inside the bank and other details.

Meanwhile, as backup and SWAT team members from Redding continued to arrive, the gunman fired at least two more volleys through the front window.

The bullets from the cannon-like .50 caliber ripped two inch entrance holes in the sheet metal bodies of the deputies’s patrol cars.

In total, at least 21 rounds of .50 caliber ammunition were fired. He shot the 9 mm at least 11 times.

SWAT team members were ordered to fire if they had a clear shot that wouldn’t hurt any of the women inside.

The opportunity came after 3 p.m.

Two sheriff’s SWAT deputies saw the suspect through a window. He was moving aggressively toward the women. They fired at him at least three times. One shot hit him in the chest.

SWAT medics, including armed volunteer Dr. Jesse Wells, were among the dozens of officers who responded to the bank.

He treated the gunman’s wound and continued to treat him in the ambulance that drove him to Mercy Medical Center in Redding. The medics also patched up Brown before she was taken to Mayers Memorial Hospital in Fall River Mills.

Bad weather prevented using a helicopter to move the wounded to the hospital.

Officials say it’s doubtful a medical flight would have made much difference to the gunman as his wound appeared to be mortal.

He was pronounced dead Tuesday evening at Mercy.

An autopsy report Tuesday afternoon listed the man’s cause of death as a single shot to his chest.

The gunman’s name hasn’t yet been released, pending notification of family members.

The two deputies who shot the man remain on paid administrative leave, standard procedure in officer-involved shooting cases.

Meanwhile, Redding police, who are handling the investigation, kept several blocks of Highway 299, Main Street, through Burney closed this morning as investigators collected evidence and took photographs in and around the U.S. Bank branch.

One lane of the four-lane road was reopened in each direction about 2 p.m.

Traffic trickled by as many motorists slowed to look at the bullet battered Shasta County Sheriff’s SUV still parked in front of the bank.

Burney residents today talked about Tuesday’s standoff and shooting in the grocery line, at the cafe counter and in front of the deli counter.

The small town an hour’s drive east of Redding was still shaken by the dramatic scene of a SWAT team and the crushing roar of .50 caliber gunfire.

Lisa Wilburn, 19, said the shooting left the town of 3,000 people on edge.

“That was a pretty big thing to happen in Burney,” she said.

Rumors swirled around town about who the gunman might have been and whether he had help.

Sgt. Bruce Bonner of the Redding Police Department, said investigators were taking any tips seriously as they investigated the shooting and robbery, but it appeared this afternoon that the gunman acted alone.

“There is no indication that he came with anyone else,” Bonner said.

Evelyn Jacobs, Northern California regional president for U.S. Bank in Redding, said the tight-knit community has given the three bank employees a remarkable amount of support.

The bank has offered the women counseling, but she said the women are doing remarkably well thanks to the support of family and friends.

“They amaze me,” Jacobs said.

Wow, just wow. I don’t know the two who were shot but have probably seen them in passing in Burney. I wish them a speedy recovery. As for the girls in the bank, whom I’ve known for years, thank God for keeping you safe and I and my wife will see you soon. To the shooter, still unidentified, Rot In Hell, Bastard!

VIDEO: Footage From Tuesday’s Burney Hostage Standoff

US Bank Robbery Attempt In Burney… Updated! Victims Identified

!!LATEST NEWS!! Shooter Identified, Money Not Motive , More Info… !!!

It has just ended as I post this. Last report is suspect down and 3 hostages,  Sherry, Charlene and Lisa, taken away in squad cars. This is our bank and my wife and I know these people.

!!Update!! Record Searchlight reporting the gunman is dead. (still no name) Great video HERE from Intermountain News.

!!!UPDATE!!! Victims Identified. Gunman NOT!??

A lockdown on Burney schools has been lifted after a bank robbery suspect was reported down after a two-and-a-half hour standoff in Burney.

What sounded like four shots rang out in the armed robbery stand-off at the U.S. Bank just after 3 p.m.

Onlookers also heard what sounded like a high pitched scream.

Three women were escorted away from the bank in squad cars and appeared to be OK. The women’s first names are reportedly Sherry, Charlene and Lisa.

Dianna Fischer, principal at Burney Elementary School said the school was in lockdown after the robbery was first reported.

School was out at 2:35 p.m., but sheriff’s deputies told her that no one is to go in or out of the school until they notify her. Buses were not able to take kids home and parents were not able to pick up their kids from school until sheriff’s officials released the school from lockdown.

A bank customer was reported shot and bank employee was reportedly taken hostage and held in the bank vault, according to dispatch reports.

Authorities have confirmed at least one suspected robber, a male, said Shasta County Sheriff Tom Bosenko.

CNN reports that when police arrived on scene shots were fired and they witnessed a female customer fall to the ground and they believe she is injured, CNN reports.

“Numerous” shots were fired, including several out a bank window into a sheriff’s deputy patrol car, Bosenko said, adding he did not know exactly how many. No deputies have been injured in the gun fire, he said.

Authorities say three to four people are inside the bank building, but they don’t know how many are employees and how many are customers, Bosenko said.

More Here

I’ll be updating as I get more

A suspect involved in an armed robbery at the U.S. Bank in Burney has been arrested and transported to a hospital.

One person was been taken away in an ambulance after a two-and-a-half hour standoff this afternoon.

~~~~~~~~~
Latest from KRCR7 in Redding.

Tue, 12/15/2009 – 17:11

A bank robbery turned into a hostage situation in Burney, and the suspect was shot by law enforcement officers inside.

It started around 12:15 Tuesday afternoon at the US Bank on Main Street in Burney.

Exact details about what happened inside the bank are still sketchy, but here is what authorities who were there have told us: they say a man fired his weapon at least three times inside the bank. One customer and four employees were inside at the time.

The customer, a woman, was shot. Authorities have not confirmed where she was shot, but they say she had non-life-threatening injuries.

After what officials tell us were numerous attempts to negotiate, a sniper shot the man inside the bank. Officers from both the Shasta County Sheriff’s Department and Redding Police were there, but they say only the sniper fired, not any of the officers.

He has been seriously injured and has been taken to a Redding hospital. One other person has been questioned. It is not clear if that person was involved.

Highway 299 is closed because of the shooting, but a detour has been set up. Officials are not giving us an estimated time when it will reopen.

~~~~~~~~

Latest from Redding Record Searchlight

A suspect involved in an armed robbery at the U.S. Bank in Burney has been arrested and transported to a hospital where he is in serious condition.

Capt. Mike Ashmun said the robbery was reported at about 12:14 p.m. The suspect was in the bank and shot a woman customer in the arm but her injuries are not life threatening, he said.

She was taken to Mayers Memorial Hospital in nearby Fall River Mills.

There also were three or four employees in the bank, one of whom was in the middle of a conference call with co-workers at the bank’s Redding office. Those people heard gunshots over the telephone and notified authorities. The woman locked herself into the bank’s ATM room, where she called the sheriff’s office and fed them information about how many people were inside the bank and other details.

Since she was inside a locked room she was unable to provide details of what was going on in the bank lobby.

As deputies, California Highway Patrol (CHP) officers and police surrounded the bank, the robber grabbed one of the other tellers and dragged her into the bank vault.

The suspect fired at officers at least three times during the three-hour stand-off, shattering all the windows on the Main Street bankfront. Witnesses reported that up to 20 rounds were fired during the stand-off.

“Officers didn’t return fire until the suspect was shot,” Ashmun said.

He did not identify what kind of gun the suspect had used.

The bank was surrounded by deputies, police and CHP officers, and when the Redding SWAT team arrived they took over those duties.

Ashmun said deputies repeatedly tried to reach the suspect. The telephoned the bank, they talked to him through a public address system and they threw a radio phone into the bank through the shattered windows.

“The suspect never picked up the phone,” Ashmun said. “He never negotiated.”

Finally, a little after 3 p.m. two sheriff’s deputies “engaged” the suspect, Ashmun said. At least three shots were fired and the suspect went down, he said.

An ambulance took him to a Redding hospital. Ashmun said his condition was serious.

The two deputies who shot at the suspect were placed on administrative leave, Ashmun said. In addition, a chaplain was called in to counsel the hostages from the bank.

Meanwhile, deputies are trying to sort out what role, if any, a second man might have played in the robbery attempt.

A witness told deputies that he had seen the man, identified as Steven Bautista, outside the bank making hand signals to someone inside. That occurred around the time the first shots were fired and before deputies arrived. Ashmun said there were conflicting reports about what Bautista’s role, if any, but Bautista was arrested and was being questioned.

Identity of the alleged bank robber was not available.

Lifeflight Air Ambulance Crashes Near Susanville. 3 Dead

RENO – Investigators said the pilot of a medical helicopter issued a mayday early Saturday moments before the aircraft crashed into a hilly area north of Reno near the Nevada-California state line.

All three crew members – the pilot, flight nurse and paramedic – were killed.

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators spent Saturday combing the wreckage of the helicopter, an Aerospatiale AS350, about 29 miles northwest of Reno in Lassen County as they searched for clues about the cause of the crash.

Pilot James Bradshaw, 39, of Hawaii, Chief Flight Nurse Clinton Reger, 40, and Chief Flight Paramedic Christopher Ritz, 37, both of Susanville, died in the 2 a.m. crash, Mountain Lifeflight of Susanville announced Saturday afternoon.

Mountain Lifeflight helicopter, N5793P, in undated photographs on the Susanville company's Web site. The helicopter crashed early today, killing the three crew members onboard.Photo Courtesy of Mountain LifeflightMountain Lifeflight helicopter, N5793P, in undated photographs on the Susanville company’s Web site. The helicopter crashed early today, killing the three crew members onboard.

 

The company operated the helicopter and provides medical helicopter service for communities in northeast California, including Alturas, Chester and Quincy.

There was no patient on board, the company reported.

The helicopter had dropped off a patient at a Reno hospital and was returning to its base in Susanville, FAA spokesman Ian Gregor said. The aircraft was destroyed in the crash and fire. The wreckage was set to be taken to a salvage yard today.

Gregor said the pilot was not communicating with air traffic controllers at the time of the accident.

The helicopter was built in 1982, according to FAA records.

The crash was the second fatal crash of a Mountain Lifeflight helicopter while on a return flight to Susanville after delivering a patient to Reno.

On March 21, 2002, a Eurocopter As-350B operated by the company hit the glassy surface of Honey Lake about 11 miles from Susanville and tumbled into the chilly water, according to the NTSB. That crash killed the pilot and seriously injured the two medics onboard.

NTSB investigators determined that the 2002 crash was caused by pilot error for not maintaining altitude, compounded by the reflective surface of the lake’s water.

Just before hitting the water, the pilot said over the intercom, “Boy, it’s disorienting when the lake is this smooth,” according to a NTSB report.

Both helicopters had transported patients to the Renown Medical Center in Reno, which changed its name from the Washoe Medical Center about four years ago, before crashing.

An average of about four fatal medical helicopter crashes occurred per year from 2002 to 2007 nationwide, Gregor said. That number spiked to eight fatal crashes last year. He said there has been one other fatal crash so far this year.

Part Of World Trade Center Becomes Warship

What could be more fitting? And two more to come.

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana —  The USS New York is heading from New Orleans to its namesake city on its maiden voyage Tuesday morning.

The warship is an amphibious transport dock ship that was built in Louisiana and named in honor of the victims of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. It incorporates in its construction nearly eight tons of steel salvaged from the fallen World Trade Center towers.

The USS New York left south Louisiana, where it was built, on Tuesday. The Navy will officially commission it in New York in early November.

A company spokesman says two ships under construction — Arlington and Somerset — will join the New York as 9-11 “tribute” ships.

Organizers of a “line the levees” event in the New Orleans area are expecting several thousand people to turn out for a send-off there.

Organizer Lola Lass says she expects a festive, patriotic scene. Flags were being handed out to people gathering at a riverfront park.

Thousands of workers helped build the ship at Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding’s yard in Avondale.

Source

A Moody Tuesday Too

But not the kind I usually put up here. One of my best cyber friends is having some health Issues. Stop by and give Nuke some kind words if you would please. If you’ve visited here before you probably know what Nuke means to me.

Oh, and just for the hell of it…..


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