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UTA Venue Attracts Visitors to Downtown Arlington

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 29 Juni 2013 | 19.31

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Boxing is among the growing list of events hosted at downtown Arlington venues that compliment the nearby pro sports stadiums.

Local fighters entered the ring Friday at the University of Texas at Arlington's year-old College Park Center for the Bud Light Pro Boxing Series.

"[College Park Center] is probably the No. 1 venue for boxing in the whole state of Texas," said Dustin Haney, president of Standing 8 Promotions, which is organizing the event. "It's beautiful venue -- state-of-the-art and there's not a bad seat in the house."

Last year, ESPN's Friday Night Fights paid the city a visit.

The venue compliments the nearby Cowboys Stadium and Rangers Ballpark in Arlington and helps boost the growing list of restaurants, bars and shops that are making downtown home.

"[College Park Center] is bringing in new acts and new types of events," said Tony Rutigliano, Downtown Arlington Management Corp. CEO. "They've already had boxing there before. They've had Kansas -- they're playing Division I [college] basketball. It's our mini American Airlines [Center]. That's how valuable it is for us."

Rutgliano said that the venues around downtown -- Levitt Pavillion, Capital Bar, Arlington Music Hall -- bring people to the downtown area who may not know about all the new offerings

"We have lots of great venues, lots of great entertainment in downtown Arlington," he said.

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Garland Horse Ranch Fights Housing Development Plans

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A Garland horse ranch that has been in operation since the 1950s is fighting plans to use the land for a housing development.

Merriwood Ranch leased the privately owned land for years until the owners decided to sell it. A developer now wants to use the 10 acres of green space for a development with 45 single-family homes.

More than 600 people have signed an online petition asking the ranch be kept open.

"Merriwood is my life," said Hannah Buskin, a child who visits regularly. "I'm here 24/7, every day. The horses here mean so much to me. They're not just any ordinary horses -- they're one of my bestest friends and I just love being with them."

"Our babies are here, our horses," said Polly Whittle, who has worked for the ranch for years. "There is no other place for us to go that we can have this many horses. It would break the hearts of countless girls and moms and grandmothers."

The property owner has requested to change the zoning from agricultural so houses can be built on the land. A zoning hearing is scheduled for July 8 so the city can assess if a housing development is compatible with the surrounding land.

Some residents who live in the area said they are concerned about the environment and want keep the natural habitat.

"Our concern is with the environment," Lynn Corey said. "There are plenty of homes in Garland. We invite people here, we want you to live here, but enjoy the wildlife and the beautiful treasure that is Merriwood."

Whittle said the ranch puts a new face on Garland.

"People from all over the Metroplex come to Camp Merriwood that never have any reason to come to Garland other than they bring their children to Merriwood and, instead of looking like a sleepy residential community, suddenly, Garland means something very new," she said.

The ranch is ready to clear any hurdles, including using social media and attending the zoning hearing.

"We've had so many memories here, and I would just hate to see it go," said Buskin.

The developer did not return requests for comment.

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Wall-E the Wallaby's Walkabout

Bob Fitch/GrandPrairieReporter.com

Apparently the wallaby was very excited and officers had a hard time controlling the wallaby while they waited for animal control to arrive.

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Wall-E the Pet Wallaby's Day Out

The Grand Prairie Police Department caught a wandering wallaby in a residential neighborhood on Friday.

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The Grand Prairie Police Department gets interesting 911 calls, but this one will be talked about for days.

Police in the Dallas suburb received a 911 call just before 7:45 a.m. Friday about a kangaroo hopping westbound in the 2200 block of Prince John Drive.

Officers arrived but didn't catch a kangaroo -- the animal was, in fact, a wallaby.

"I have been doing this for 20 years, and I will probably never see something like this again," Detective Lyle Gensler said.

John Richardson, the 911 caller, sent NBC 5 DFW a photo of the Wall-E the wallaby sitting at his front door.

Grand Prairie police said the wallaby was very excited, saying officers had a hard time controlling him while they waited for animal control to arrive. When asked how he knew how to catch a wallaby, Charles Munoz, the animal control officer, replied "Animal Planet" with a laugh.

The wallaby had tags and was returned to his owner unharmed.

"As far as we know, we don't have anything in our city ordinance that says you can't have one, " said Danielle Tate, animal services manager.

Wall-E's owners came to get him from animal control after friends saw on social media that he was loose. Their son-in-law said they believe someone tried to steal Wall-E because their fence was ripped.

Jessica Churchill, the owners' daughter, said her father gave the wallaby to her mother for Christmas after she said she wanted a kangaroo someday.

NBC 5's Julie Fine contributed to this report.

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Sheriff's Deputy Shot in the Head; Gunman Killed

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Sheriff's Deputy Shot in Head; Gunman Killed in Hood County Shootout

A sheriff's deputy is in critical condition and a police officer is in the hospital after a shooting in Granbury.

DPS Statement on Hood County Shootings

A Hood County Sheriff's Deputy suffered a life-threatening gunshot wound to the head and a Granbury police officer suffered a non life-threatening gunshot wound to the arm after a man opened fire on police Friday in Hood County. The gunman was killed by police near the Granbury City Hall. Texas Department of Public Safety Trooper Lonny Haschel provides and update to the media.

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Investigators say a Joshua man shot a Hood County sheriff's deputy before being killed in a shootout with police officers in Granbury that also injured a police officer.

Sgt. Lance McLean, a 38-year-old Hood County sheriff's deputy, was shot in the head at a Granbury home while responding to a disturbance call, the Texas Department of Public Safety said. He is in critical condition at a Fort Worth hospital.

The shooting suspect, Ricky Don McCommas, 49, of Joshua, was later killed during a shootout just 50 feet from the doors of Granbury City Hall.

Chad Davis, a Granbury police officer, was injured in the shootout.

DPS spokesman Sgt. Lonny Haschel said McLean was dispatched to a residence in Oak Trail Shores shortly before 11 a.m. When he arrived, he made contact with McCommas. Moments later, shots were fired and McLean was struck in the head, Haschel said.

Another Hood County deputy responding to the call provided a description of McCommas' van as it left the scene -- white with its windows shot out.

A neighbor told NBC 5 that McCommas lives in Joshua and drove to the house in Granbury, where he started a ruckus that led to the shooting. Deputies were then called to the scene, the neighbor said.

Granbury police officers later spotted McCommas' van as he pulled into the Granbury City Hall parking lot. It is unclear if McCommas chose to enter the parking lot or was forced there by pursuing police officers.

Haschel said McCommas then got out of the van and exchanged gunfire with Granbury officers.

McCommas was hit several times and died at the scene.

Davis sustained a nonlife-threatening gunshot wound to an upper extremity believed to be an arm or shoulder. He was transported to Harris Methodist Hospital in Fort Worth, where he remains in the Intensive Care Unit.

McLean was taken to John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth for treatment of a life-threatening gunshot wound. Hood County Sheriff Roger Deeds said McLean is in "extremely critical condition."

"He's hooked up on a lot of machines and on a ventilator right now, so it's about as bad as it gets," he said. "It took them quite a few hours before they were able to do a CAT scan on him, [which] was how unstable he was. ... They didn't find anything good when they did the CAT scan, so we're just waiting and seeing how everything goes in the next few hours over the night."

Several witnesses who were working at a residence just 15 feet away from where the van pulled into the City Hall parking lot saw it all go down.

"He had a cold look on his face. He was going to go for them," Joe Vanderveer said. "He put it in park, looked at us, he got out. He turned and then the cop cars pulled up, because they pulled up about 15 seconds after he pulled up. And then the shooting started."

Gary Farina, who is opening a restaurant next to City Hall, a half block north of the town square, said he heard 40 to 50 shots.

"We kept hearing a barrage of gunfire," he said.

Farina and Vanderveer took cover on their outdoor patio before hiding inside the business. They said McCommas appeared to be wearing a vest, but they were unsure if it was a tactical vest or bulletproof vest.

"He definitely looked like he had a purpose in mind," Vanderveer said.

At least 50 evidence markers were placed at bullet casings and other evidence at the scene. What appeared to be an assault rifle was next to McCommas' body for several hours as the investigation continued.

"Those of you who've been to the scene saw how big a scene it is, how many details are going to have to be looked at, so it's going to take some time for everyone to go out and interview witnesses, take a look at physical evidence on the scene, send officers out and really comb those areas," Haschel said.

Haschel had no other details to offer about the shootings, saying only it was an ongoing investigation with large, multiple scenes.

Investigators from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Johnson County Sheriff's Office and Joshua police spent hours Friday evening at McCommas' home along Joshua Boulevard. They removed several guns, boxes of bullets and what appeared to be body armor.

Neighbors said McCommas had been buying and selling guns to make ends meet since he lost his job as a security guard at Texas Health Resources Harris Methodist Hospital following a sexual assault arrest in August.

A man who identified himself as a friend of McCommas said he always carried a gun with him but was a nice man who was a good neighbor.

The case is being investigated by the Texas Rangers, the Hood County Sheriff's Office and the Granbury Police Department.

NBC 5's Chris Van Horne, Ben Russell and Kevin Cokely contributed to this report.

Editor's note: DPS originally reported the name of the gunman as 60-year-old Richard Randall McComas and then later identified the gunman as 49-year-old Ricky Don McComas.

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Fighting Mosquitoes With Fish

Omar Villafranca, NBC 5 News

The city of Dallas is taking the fight against the West Nile virus underwater. The city is deploying Gambusia, or mosquito fish, to battle mosquito larvae in stagnant pools that can serve as breeding grounds.

Dallas Begins Underwater Battle...

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The city of Dallas is using a finned fighter to combat the West Nile virus.

The city is deploying Gambusia fish, also known as mosquitofish, into stagnant pools and creeks.

"Each one of them can eat about 100 to 200 larvae per day," said Jose Ruiz with the Code Enforcement department.

On Friday, Ruiz deployed about 150 fish into a large stagnant creek in North Dallas. In a few days, Ruiz said the larvae count should be lower. Less larvae means less mosquitoes.

"They do eat them, so we do notice a difference," Ruiz said.

Ruiz said the fish can survive in hot temperatures and breed three times a year. That means the fish can eat larvae for longer periods of time as more fish are born.

"They're in our ponds. They're also in other creeks. Sometimes we take them from one creek to 

another creek so there's not telling we actually have, because they breed a lot," Ruiz said.

Ruiz said the city is also dumping the fish in abandoned ponds and pools to fight the spread of West Nile.

Doctor David Rothbart, a North Dallas resident, lives near the stagnant creek where Ruiz was dumping Gambusia. He said the creek is a problem area, and he'll take any help he can get fighting the mosquitoes.

We have our own mosquito abatement, the spray, but as soon as you walk in front of our house, outside the wire, it's like, oh my gosh," Rothbart said.

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Two Officer Involved Shootings Wednesday Night

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 27 Juni 2013 | 19.31

Julie Fine, NBC 5 News

A man was shot by a Dallas police officer outside a check cashing store in the 1900 block of Martin Luther King Boulevard Wednesday night.

Man Shot by Police in Dallas

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Police officers were involved in two separate shooting incidents in Dallas that left two men injured.

Just before 9 p.m. Wednesday witnesses said they saw Dallas police officers shoot a man near a check cashing business on Martin Luther King Boulevard near U.S. Highway 175.

Dallas police said officers were called to help with a shoplifting call in the 1900 block of MLK and  when they arrived they found the security guard who made the call and a man with a knife. Police say officers used a stun gun on the man when he didn't follow officers' orders to drop the weapon, but the stun gun had no effect.

The man ran away and police say when officers caught up with him at a business in the 2300 block of MLK he ran toward officers with the knife still in hand. That's when police say officers shot the man.

Police said the man was transported to Baylor University Medical Center at Dallas for treatment. No word on his condition. No officers were injured.

Earlier in the night, a man was shot as Denton tactical and narcotic teams conducted an investigation in the 3600 block of Frankford Road in a far northwest portion of Dallas that sits in Denton County.

It happened sometime after 7 p.m. Denton police say the man they were investigating shot at officers and at least one officer returned fire.

The man was shot and taken to Medical City Plano with non-life-threatening injuries. None of the officers were injured.

NBC 5's Julie Fine contributed to this report.

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Family Says Missing Boy is Dead

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Missing Boy's Body Found Wednesday

The family of 5-year-old Sida Osman are in mourning after they say his body was found near the apartment where he lived in Fort Worth.

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The search for a missing boy may be drawing to a close.

Fort Worth police say the body of a black boy has been found near where 5-year-old Sida Osman went missing Tuesday and that they are working with the Tarrant County medical examiner to determine the child's cause of death and identity. 

Police added that the case is an active investigation and that no further details would be released at this time.

Meanwhile, Sida Osman's family told NBC 5 reporters that the child found was Sida and that the Fort Worth police didn't take the boy's disappearance seriously.

Osman's mother said her son was last seen at about 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, playing outside of their apartment and that when she called him to come home, he ran off.

At least 30 police officers arrived and began looking for the boy. At one point, crime scene detectives combed through a white van parked near the family's apartment, but later left. Officers continued searching Wednesday by air, horseback and with dogs in an area near the family's residence at the Weber Garden Apartments on the 4800 block of Virgil Street.

Just after 1 p.m., officers cordoned off an area near Lois Street and Anglin Drive with crime scene tape. Police later said "the body of a young black male was located in the backyard of 4801 Lois," a vacant house.

A man, identified as Carl Williams, said he found the boy's body after a woman told him she'd heard the boy was behind the vacant house.

Williams went to check, and said he found a boy unresponsive and badly beaten.

"We ran out of the back yard, flag the police down and everybody came. They set up crime scene and everything," said Williams.

Osman's family, who moved to the United States two decades ago to escape violence in Somalia, rallied for peace and justice Wednesday afternoon after learning a boy's body had been found.

"We didn't expect this," says Muhammad Elmi, the boys' uncle. "We expected to see him alive, you know, coming back to the house smiling; happy."

Meanwhile questions in the community turn to who could have done such a thing.

"I mean the person that did this, man I don't know,  it's just a heartless person that just has something against a little kid," said Hamadi Hussein, 19, a friend of Osman's father.

"It's unacceptable," said Muktar Mohammed, who organized the demonstration in the streets. "Because this is very big crime; five year old boy murdered. This is, in any religion: Christianity, Muslim, Judaism, Hindus. You can't go with this. You can't do this."

NBC 5's Lindsay Wilcox, Ben Russell and Keaton Fox contributed to this report.

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Man Fatally Shot Outside Dallas Apartment

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 26 Juni 2013 | 19.31

Kendra Lyn, NBC 5

Dallas police are searching for a killer Wednesday morning.

Man Fatally Shot at Dallas Apartment

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Dallas police are searching for a killer Wednesday morning.

Officers found a man shot in the parking lot of Stone Ranch Apartments, 9340 Skillman Street, near Interstate 635.

The medical examiner's office has identified the victim as 36-year-old Jerry Worthy.

Homicide detectives are still sorting out what lead up to the deadly shooting. Neighbors tell NBC 5 that they heard two men fighting in the parking lot, then two gunshots rang out.

Officers say the gunman shot Worthy in the leg around midnight. When police found him in the parking lot, he was losing a lot of blood. Paramedics rushed Worthy to the hospital. He died a short time later.

Investigators have not released a motive for the murder or a description of the gunman.

Homicide detectives have been talking with possible witnesses hoping they can lead police to the killer.

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The Most Hotly Contested Points on Climate Change

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 25 Juni 2013 | 19.31

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After months of contentious debates over gun control, immigration and political scandals, President Barack Obama is finally turning his attention to another hot topic that isn't cooling off any time soon: climate change.

In a video released over the weekend, Obama said he will deliver a speech on Tuesday to outline a "national plan to reduce carbon pollution, prepare our country for the impacts of climate change and lead global efforts to fight it."

Obama said there is no silver bullet to solve the effects of climate change, which couldn't be more true considering the complexity of the issue. Here are some of the most debated aspects of climate change:


Global Warming - Is It Real?

NASA, the United Nations and the Environmental Protection Agency cite a large body of evidence to prove that the earth's temperature is indeed rising, and so are sea levels and the ocean's surface temperature.

"The current warming trend is of particular significance because most of it is very likely human-induced and proceeding at a rate that is unprecedented in the past 1,300 years," according to NASA's website.

A Pew survey says 69 percent of Americans, meanwhile, believe the earth is getting warmer.

Still, a group of sixteen prominent scientists jumped in the fray when they signed a Wall Street Journal op-ed piece in 2012 in support of the belief that global warming is a farce.

"The lack of warming for more than a decade—indeed, the smaller-than-predicted warming over the 22 years since the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change began issuing projections—suggests that computer models have greatly exaggerated how much warming additional CO2 can cause," reads the article.

Economists and politicians opposed to tackling climate change say it will costs jobs and hinder GDP growth.

So the Earth is Getting Warmer, But Why?

Of the 69 percent of Americans in the Pew survey who say they global warming is real, opinions are split on what is causing the earth's temperature to rise. Four in 10 blame it on human activity like burning fossil fuels, while 27 percent say it's due to natural variations in climate pattern. Another 27 percent say there is no evidence of any warming.

What are the Outcomes of Global Warming?

Scientists already know the earth's rising temperature is changing the weather and climate. This means more rainfall, floods, droughts and heat waves. But is it also the cause of the recent spate of tornadoes and unpredictable jet streams?

"Global warming may well end up making [tornadoes] more frequent or intense, as our intuition would tell us," writes Robert Kunzig for National Geographic. "But it might also actually suppress them—the science just isn't clear yet."

There is no evidence that tornadoes are happening more frequently and a data shows that the increase is only in the weakest category of twisters, Kunzig said.

As for those "wobbly" jet streams hovering over the earth and wrecking havoc on the weather, some experts say it's a possible effect of climate change, while others disagree.

"It's been just a crazy fall and winter and spring all along, following a very abnormal sea ice condition in the Arctic,'' Rutgers University climate expert Jennifer Francis told The Associated Press. ''It's possible what we're seeing in this unusual weather is all connected.''


Reducing Carbon Emissions - A Smorgasbord of Options

The most economically efficient way to curb greenhouse gas is by taxing the pollutant. But trying to get Congress to agree to a tax hike is a nonstarter.

"Obama can't count on Congress to institute any such tax in the near term," said climate policy expert Nathan Hultman in a Brookings Institute blog post. "As such, he has been looking for other ways to improve, through regulation, the efficiency of parts of the U.S. economy and to expand low-emission sources of energy supply."

Some of those regulations, which Obama will unveil on Tuesday, include implementing stricter standards to reduce carbon emissions from power plants, regulating high greenhouse-effect gases, reduce methane emissions, development of renewable energy technologies, creating energy efficient appliances and investing in new technologies.


The Politics of Climate Change

Lawmakers have been focused on the economy, job creation, immigration and other issues that have forced climate change into the back burner. But in the wake of the recent spate of natural disasters like Hurricane Sandy and the Oklahoma tornadoes, climate change has been thrust back into the limelight, forcing Obama to make due on a promise he made in his second inaugural speech when he vowed to "respond to the threat of climate change, knowing that the failure to do so would betray our children and future generations."

The Clean Air Act gives the president the authority to regulate greenhouse gases as air pollutants. New power plants will be easier to regulate, but this executive authority will be much more controversial for existing power plants, according to Steven Cohen, executive director at Columbia University's Earth Institute. Power plants produce more than 40 percent of the country's carbon emissions.

Obama wasn't kidding when he called this a fight. Not only do scientists have to grapple with the earth's warming temperature, the president himself has an uphill battle ahead with a government mired in partisan politics.

"Mr. Obama's decision to use his executive authority to regulate utilities reflects a determination that he has no prospect of passing such sweeping policies through Congress," according to Peter Baker of The New York Times. But the move "may draw lawsuits and other challenges from industry and Republicans citing the economic costs," he wrote.


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Sisters Traveling in Same Car Both Charged With DUI: Authorities

Monroe County Sheriff's Office

Steffany Miranda, 18, and Vanessa Miranda, 24

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Two sisters from Miami were both charged with driving under the influence of alcohol in the Florida Keys Saturday night, authorities said.

After they were stopped by deputies, Steffany Miranda, 18, and Vanessa Miranda, 24, switched seats in the Volkswagen they were traveling in, the Monroe County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.

Deputy Juan Martin-Reyes, who followed the car north from the 23-mile marker to the 30-mile marker of U.S. 1, saw the Volkswagen swerving, increasing and decreasing speeds and braking suddenly, according to the sheriff's office.

Woman Gets DUI While Celebrating End of Previous DUI: Police

When Martin-Reyes turned on his vehicle's lights and siren, the Volkswagen stopped suddenly in the traffic lane, and through the back window he could see the driver and passenger quickly switch seats, the sheriff's office said.

After Deputy Spencer Curry arrived, the two deputies had the Mirandas perform field sobriety exercises. Both had trouble doing so, and they were visibly impaired and smelled of alcohol, according to the deputies.

Woman Begins Serving Sentence in Fatal Gables Crash

Both sisters were charged with DUI because at some point they were both in control of the car behind the steering wheel with the keys in the ignition, the sheriff's office said.

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It wasn't immediately known whether they have an attorney.

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Alligator Found in "Doomsday Prepper's" House

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 23 Juni 2013 | 19.31

Scott Gordon, NBC 5 News

Clayton Earthman was arrested on Wednesday after officers found bomb-making supplies in his car. Officers also found an alligator in Earthman's home.

Alligator Found in Alleged...

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A man arrested Wednesday with bomb-making materials in his car had drugs and an alligator in his home, a federal agent testified Friday.

Clayton Earthman, 43, was arrested after police said he ran a stop sign near Fair Park.

An officer said Earthman had a gun in his car. A search later revealed he had bomb-making material and notes on how to make bombs, police said.

Earthman claimed to be a "Doomsday Prepper." A cable TV show by the same name profiles people preparing for the end of the world.

On Thursday, agents with the bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives searched his house near Pleasant Grove.

They found 15 marijuana plants, bomb-making material, and an alligator, according to a Dallas police report.

Neighbors say they saw agents carry two alligators from the home on Woodard Avenue.

"That's scary," said neighbor Susan Collins. "We didn't know he had all that."

At his court appearance, a judge ordered Earthman held without bond because he was a danger to the community.

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Fired Employee Shot and Killed Former Boss: DPD

Mark Schnyder, NBC 5 News

Dallas police say shortly after he was fired, Charles Hooks (left) shot and killed his former boss, Alejandro Fernandez (right), at Ramon's Barber Shop on Friday.

Police Say Fired Employee Shot and...

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Dallas police say a man who was fired from his job at a barber shop shot his former boss late Friday afternoon.

Just after 5 p.m. Dallas police officers were called to a shooting at Ramon's Barber Shop in the 300 block of West Jefferson Boulevard.

Dallas police said 30-year-old Charles Hooks knocked on the back door of the barber shop and was let in by a customer. Police said he went up to 29-year-old Alejandro "Alex" Fernandez , who was cutting someone's hair, and shot him in the chest.

Hooks had been fired by Fernandez earlier in the day according to police.

Fernandez was taken to Methodist Central Hospital where he later died.

Hooks was arrested a short time after the shooting. He has been charged with murder and his bond is set at $250,000.

Shooting Victim Was Building His Business

Fernandez was the new owner of the longtime Oak Cliff barber shop. He'd bought Ramon's Barber Shop about three weeks ago according to friends.

Linda Jones who worked nearby said she was fond of her new neighbor.

"He had told me he had just bought the business and he really wanted to make it grow," said Jones. "For this young man to take his life the way he did, it just doesn't make any sense at all."

Fernandez was a married father of two with another child on the way. Friends say he owned another barber shop in town called Ace Chop Shop.

"I can only tell you he had great girls," said family friend Caroline Lozano. "His wife was amazing. They stood by him. He was expanding his business and the fact he was growing as a businessman and he was doing a great job at it and he had a lot of potential and his life was taken."

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San Francisco Church Hoping to House Dead Pets in Basement

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During his lifetime, Saint Francis of Assisi was famously devoted to animals. Paintings and statues depict the saint frolicking with birds, dogs and other beasts.

The lore of San Francisco's namesake seemed an ideal fit for a city where dogs outnumber kids. Inside the National Shrine of Saint Francis of Assisi in San Francisco's North Beach, tributes to the saint's life abound, especially in its annual blessing of the animals.

On a recent weekend, the shrine's rector Father Gregory Coiro blessed some 500 pets during the two-day stretch.

"Mostly dogs," said Coiro, wearing a brown robe and tangled beard. "But there were a few cats and a few angora rabbits."

The Shrine has long opened its doors to living pets in the spirit of Saint Francis. But now, it's also opening them to the dead. In a newly discovered grotto beneath the shrine's front steps, Coiro has envisioned the building of a columbarium to house the ashes of the dearly departed of the pet world.

"The people who bring their pets here can be Catholic or they can be non-Catholic," said Coiro. "Cause afterall, the animals have no religion."

Currently the concrete pillared cave looks like the ruins of a Roman temple.

Though work on the site has not yet begun, the Shrine recently released a brochure with depictions of glass-walled partitions where pets' ashes will be interned.

Visitors will be greeted by a large portrait of Saint Francis himself, and a video monitor will play video loops of pets enshrined in the space. In another corner, a large memorial will pay tribute to police and rescue dogs, like those who searched for survivors and bodies amid the rubble of the Twin Towers in New York on 9/11.

"As somebody walks through and visits the columbarium it'll be like an on-going history of people involved with the shrine; animals that have been involved in families lives," said Bill McLaughlin, a church volunteer who's helping organize the construction.

Some of the shrine's neighbors have complained they weren't notified in advance of plans to store ashes amid hundreds of businesses. Fabio Giotta, one of the owners of nearby Caffe Trieste said he was surprised by plans to build a "pet cemetery in a national shrine." Coiro said the shrine hasn't yet applied for permits from the city.

Both the San Francisco Health and Planning Departments referred calls on the matter to each other. A Health Department Spokeswoman said the department was only interested in dead animals when people ate them.

Coiro admitted the columbarium would also help generate money for the upkeep of the shrine.

He said the church hadn't determined the fees for housing pet cremains, although the brochure was seeking donations to the project in the $1000 to $40,000 range.

Coiro said he was moved by his childless sister who considered her dogs family, and was distraught when they died.

"I understand for many, many people, their animals are very dear to them," said Coiro.

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Cruz Gets Big Hit Again, Rangers Beat Cardinals

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OF Nelson Cruz.

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Nelson Cruz got the decisive hit for the second straight game with a two-run homer in the third inning and Martin Perez prevailed in a matchup of rookie starters as the Texas Rangers beat the St. Louis Cardinals 4-2 on Saturday night.

Shelby Miller (8-5) allowed two homers for the second time in three starts and didn't make it out of the sixth against the team the Cardinals beat in the 2011 World Series making its first regular-season visit to Busch Stadium.

A.J. Pierzynski also hit a two-run homer for Texas, which goes for a three-game sweep on Sunday night with Nick Tepesch (3-6, 4.84) facing Adam Wainwright (10-4, 2.37).

The first two games have been sellouts and the finale was supposed to be a matchup of aces, but the Rangers are saving Yu Darvish for the Yankees Tuesday in New York.


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