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New Tiger Cub Explores Exhibit

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A Sumatran tiger cub wandered around Tiger Trail at San Diego Zoo Safari Park for the first time Monday.

Suka was born in September and has been raised by keepers at the Animal Care Center.

The cub’s mother took care of him for the first few days, but zoo keepers noticed he was losing weight and his mother was starting to neglect him.

“We saw all kinds of tiger behavior,” said Lissa McCaffree, lead mammal keeper. “He was crouching and stalking and pouncing and trying to grab on to just about everything that was out here.”

His name means “loved” in Malay, zoo officials said.

He’s been under intensive medical care for almost a month, McCaffree said, so keepers are transitioning him slowly to the Tiger Trail exhibit.

The public can see Suka in the front exhibit at Tiger Trail, on the park’s Tiger Cam or at the Animal Care Center at various times of the day.

Poaching practices have threatened the Sumatran tiger species. The park has seven Sumatran tigers on exhibit. There are fewer than 350 in the wild.
 



Photo Credit: Ken Bohn, San Diego Zoo Safari Park

CBX Opens on San Diego-Tijuana Border

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NBC 7's Elena Gomez reports on the opening of a cross-border airport terminal making traveling easier for those flying in and out of Tijuana.

SDPD: Thief Steals 21 iPads from Elementary School

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San Diego Police are searching for the suspect they say stole close to two dozen iPads Wednesday from Kit Carson Elementary School.

SDPD Officers were called to the school on Kramer Street in Linda Vista just after 3:30 a.m. San Diego Unified School District police reported seeing a suspect on surveillance footage.

When police got to the school they found a door to the school left open. They also found the thief had pried open a cabinet that held several computer devices.

Keyboards were scattered all over the campus, police said.

They did find a crowbar at the scene but can't say if that was used in this burglary.

No arrests have been made.

Refresh this page for updates on this breaking news story. 

New Artwork Installed Near San Diego Airport

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Two new pieces of unique, public artwork will be installed Tuesday at the San Diego International Airport’s new rental car center, which is slated to be up and running by the New Year.

Measuring 54 feet tall, the two kinetic sculptural forms are dubbed “MetroGnome” and were created by Los Angeles-based artist Christian Moeller. The artist and his team assembled the art installation Tuesday on site, locating the work within one of the exterior bioswale areas of the airport’s brand-new $316 million rental car facility, set to open next month.

MetroGnome is one of three public art installations chosen for the facility.

The new rental car center will house most of the rental car companies that serve the airport in a single building. The project is designed to dramatically reduce the number of shuttle buses circulating the airport and improve traffic in the area.
 



Photo Credit: San Diego County Regional Airport Authority

Police Review Board Needs Reform: City Councilmember

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The city of San Diego’s board responsible for reviewing police misconduct cases needs reform and more transparency, San Diego City Councilman Todd Gloria told NBC 7 Investigates Tuesday.

Gloria said San Diego County’s version of the board, the Citizens Law Enforcement Review Board (CLERB) is more transparent and works better.

“Some of the things that have stood out to me was the ability to subpoena information and individuals have a more direct access to information,” Gloria said. “The county does that and they seem to be comfortable with it. We don’t have that at the city.”

The city of San Diego’s board is called the Citizens’ Review Board on Police Practices (CRB). It is designed to hold San Diego Police Department (SDPD) officers accountable for alleged misconduct and protect police from unfair discipline.

Gloria said the city council, working with the public and the SDPD, should make recommendations for changes to the board. He said he hopes to have those recommendations on the June 2016 ballot, where ultimately voters could vote to reform the system.

The CRB was approved by voters in 1988 to help relieve tensions in the city after the shooting death of a police officer by a young black man in southeast San Diego.

An NBC 7 Investigates story revealed two former board members, Lucy Pearson and Benetta Buell-Wilson, said they think the board has a “fixed” and ineffective review process. According to the women, the process subverts the board's intent, something that’s detrimental not just for citizens but for SDPD officers as well.

Buell-Wilson and Pearson claim a lack of transparency and secret decision-making stifles dissent between members and the city. Both women said CRB members who are "pro-police" get the more serious cases, depriving the complaining citizens of a fair hearing.

Under the California Public Records Act, NBC 7 Investigates submitted a request to the city asking for details about cases reviewed during the past two years. The city has not yet responded to the request.

Click here to see the complete investigation.

5 Arrests in Tijuana Linked to Sinaloa Cartel: Feds

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Five men were arrested in Tijuana over the weekend and may be connected to “Paco Troncas”, the leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, officials said Wednesday.

U.S. and Mexican officials say agents also seized an AR-15 assault rifle, a ballistic vest, and more than one kilogram of marijuana.

U.S. Border Patrol officials credit information sharing between the two countries as critical to the operation.

“The arrest of these suspects clearly demonstrates the exceptional level of bi-national cooperation that the Border Patrol has with the government of Mexico,” San Diego Sector Chief Patrol Agent Richard Barlow was quoted as saying in a written statement.

Authorities say interviews with those arrests have netted “valuable information” regarding the cartel based in Baja California.



Photo Credit: U.S. Border Patrol photo

Bomb Squad Deems Airport Cargo Area Safe

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The San Diego Fire-Rescue Department’s (SDFD) bomb squad was called to a cargo terminal at the San Diego International Airport Wednesday after a K-9 officer alerted to some suspicious packages at the facility.

The Harbor Police Department and fire department's Metro Arson Strike Team (MAST) launched an investigation at the southwest cargo area at Lindbergh Field around 9:10 a.m. Bomb squad officers could be seen moving in and out of the area throughout the morning.

MAST Capt. John Wood soon confirmed the packages under investigation posed no threat.

No flights were delayed or cancelled, and airport operations, including ground traffic in the area, continued as normal amid the investigation. Again, there was no threat to travelers.

“It turned out to be nothing. With K-9s, they just have such a sensitive sense of smell. Anything that could’ve been on there – [maybe] from somebody’s hand – could’ve been on the box," Capt. Wood told NBC 7.

"It’s a really great safe measure for us as first responders, and for the public, that we have these K-9s and that we used them appropriately,” he added.

Capt. Wood said the items inspected by the bomb squad were Christmas packages. Hence the busy holiday mailing season, Capt. Wood said his team often gets these types of calls.

Investigators found some type of residue on the packages, which is another reason why the bomb squad was called out to further inspect the cargo, the captain said.

“You can’t be too careful. Just like we like to tell the public, ‘If you see something, say something,’ and that’s what we abide by,” he explained.



Photo Credit: NBC 7 San Diego

Nurse Delivers Sister’s Baby Along Freeway

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A Chula Vista mother says she couldn’t have had a better person with her when she gave birth to a baby on the side of the freeway over the weekend.

Christina Jenkins’ sister Clarissa Coladilla was in the backseat of the car when her husband pulled over on the 15 Northbound just past the Adams Avenue exit. Coladilla is a nurse who, in her 13 years old experience, spent nine specializing in labor and delivery.

“You never think you’re going to deliver your own family member’s baby, let alone in a car,” said Coladilla.

It was 5 A.M., so it was very dark in Jenkins’ husband’s car when she knew they weren’t going to make it to the hospital.

“I was screaming it hurts. It’s coming! He’s there. To the point where [my husband and sister] over there are like ‘You sound like the incredible Hulk,’” said Jenkins to NBC 7.

Her husband was on the phone with a 911 dispatcher, but the baby couldn’t wait any longer. With the help of Coladilla, the Jenkins’ welcomed their third child into the world. We asked Jenkins what it meant to have her sister save the day.

“It means the world to me. I talk about this at the hospital crying all the time because, you know, what would I do without her?” she replied. “We’ve always been close, but to know she was there when I seriously needed someone, and willing to do anything. That’s amazing.”

Coladilla said when the adrenaline subsided, all three of them cried.

“I just broke down. You could see everyone. We just started tearing,” she said.

Little Grant Jenkins Jimenez is a healthy baby boy.

“Ate” in Tagalog means older sister. Coladilla says her other nephew and niece call her “Ate Mom.” It appears there could be no better endearing title for her in this situation.
 


Petition to Bar Trump From U.K. Gets 250K Signatures

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An online petition to bar Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump from the United Kingdom garnered over 250,000 signatures on Wednesday, well past the 100,000-signature threshold needed for lawmakers to debate the issue, NBC News reported. 

By 6:10 p.m. (1:10 p.m. ET), the U.K. petition created on Tuesday had earned 258,934 signatures.

Trump has received backlash both in the United States and from abroad after saying Muslims should not be allowed to enter the U.S. The British government has the power to bar people considered a threat to public safety or national security, or those with criminal convictions. In the past, the U.K. has denied entry to figures as diverse as boxer Mike Tyson, rapper Tyler the Creator, radical Muslim preachers and the late Christian fundamentalist Fred Phelps Sr.



Photo Credit: AP

FBI Chief: Encrypted Messages Stymied Garland Shooting Probe

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FBI Director James Comey told senators on Wednesday that one of the attackers who opened fire outside an exhibit of cartoon images featuring the prophet Muhammad in Garland, Texas, exchanged more than 100 electronic messages with "an overseas terrorist" beforehand, NBC News reported.

"[But], we have no idea what he said, because those messages were encrypted," Comey said during testimony at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing.

Comey pleaded for tech companies to change the design of smartphones and other electronic devices to allow for de-encryption of data under a court order.

Recent terror attacks, such as last month's coordinated bombings and mass-shooting in and around Paris, have renewed the debate around encryption. Apple and other tech giants have resisted calls from politicians and others to either provide a "backdoor" or loosen encryption standards.

"To protect people who use any products, you have to encrypt," Apple CEO Tim Cook said in an interview last month with The Telegraph.



Photo Credit: AP

Driver Sought in Hit and Run of Mira Mesa Toddler

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Police are searching for a driver who hit and injured a toddler on a scooter in Mira Mesa last month and then left the scene.

Officers have released a photo of the suspect’s car in hopes of tracking down the driver. The car is described as a late 90s teal green Honda Accord.

The driver was described as a woman in her 60s, San Diego police said.

Police said the Honda may have a dent near the driver’s side headlight.

The hit and run happened the afternoon of Nov. 29, when a 2-year-old boy rode away from his parents and into the street in the 11200 block of Westonhill Drive.

The car sped off after hitting the boy, continuing north on Westonhill Drive.

The 2-year-old was taken to Rady Children's Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries and was determined to have a fractured skull and pelvis.

Anyone with information on the suspect or her vehicle is eligible to receive a reward of up to $1,000. Tipsters should call the San Diego Police Department’s traffic division at 858-495-7800 or the Crime Stoppers’ anonymous tip line at 888-580-8477.



Photo Credit: SDPD

San Bernardino Shooter Received $28.5K Through Online Lending Site

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San Bernardino shooter Syed Farook received a $28,500 loan through online lender Prosper Marketplace Inc. just two weeks before he and his wife opened fire at a holiday party, killing 14 people and wounding 21 others, NBC News has confirmed.

Though the transaction has raised eyebrows, sources close to the investigation said there are no known indications the money trail in this case links the couple with any foreign terrorist organization such as ISIS.

While individual investors can contribute through these peer-to-peer lending sites, the borrower's identity is protected and investors can't search for a particular loan applicant by name.

That would make it harder for a terrorist group to channel cash to a specific individual, but not impossible, said one expert.



Photo Credit: U.S. Customs and Border Protection via AP, File

Person in Wheelchair Suffers Major Injuries After Collision

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 A person in a wheelchair suffered major injuries after colliding with a car in Ramona, California Highway Patrol (CHP) officers said. 

The crash happened at approximately 12:57 p.m. Wednesday on Day Street at State Route 67 when a black SUV and the person collided. 

The person in the wheelchair suffered major injuries. 

The car is believed to be on scene. There is no word yet on any citations against the driver. 

No further information was immediately available. 

Refresh this page for updates on this breaking news story. 

White House Hanukkah Celebration

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President Barack Obama hosted Israeli President Reuven Rivlin Wednesday evening for a Hanukkah candle-lighting ceremony, one of two official parties for the festival being held this year at the White House.

The first of two menorahs used in the candle lighting ceremonies, lit by President Rivlin, came from the North Carolina Museum of Art’s Judaic Art Gallery.

"The menorah was made in Israel during the 1920s by a pioneer designer, Ze’ev Raban, who trained in Europe and blended European, Jewish and Palestinian Arab design elements to create a new aesthetic for Jewish art in what would become the State of Israel," according to the White House blog.

The second menorah will be lit at an evening reception by holocaust survivor Manfred Lindenbaum. Lindenbaum escaped to England with his brother via the Kindertransport after being deported to Poland from Germany during World War II, the White House said.    

The menorah chosen for the second ceremony was made by Holocaust survivor Erwin Theiberger, who fashioned the sacred candelabrum's from cement nails and solder while imprisoned in one of the sub-camps of Auschwitz. 

After WWII, Theiberger settled in the Washington, D.C., area as a refugee to the U.S. and continued to make menorah's from materials similar to those made during the war. 

"Thieberger was dedicated to creating a living reminder to the spirit of Hanukkah and the Jews’ continual fight for freedom and survival," the White House said.

The second Hanakkah candle-lighting ceremony is expected to begin at 7:35 p.m. ET.



Photo Credit: AP

Escondido Manhunt Suspect Found Dead

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The dangerous fugitive wanted in the killing of his wife was found dead inside a home in unincorporated Escondido Tuesday night, authorities confirmed.

At 11 p.m., San Diego County Sheriff’s Department (SDSO) deputies were called to a home in the 3000 block of N. Broadway – the same site where resident Teresa Ortiz, 46, was found critically shot on Saturday. Ortiz later died from her injuries.

For the past four days, investigators have been searching for Ortiz’s estranged husband, Juan Garcia, 50, aka Jose Luis Paredes, in connection with her deadly shooting.

According to the SDSO, deputies were tipped off Tuesday night that Garcia may have been back in Escondido. Deputies were at the home on N. Broadway helping Ortiz’s family members recover personal belongings from the property.

Before family members were allowed inside, deputies did a protective search of the house. During the search, deputies discovered the body of a Hispanic man matching Garcia’s description.

The San Diego County Medical Examiner’s (ME) office conducted an autopsy and has now confirmed the man was Garcia. The ME said Garcia died by suicide from a gunshot wound.

On Tuesday night, officers with the Escondido Police Department (EPD) recovered a stolen Ford Taurus used by Garcia abandoned near Reidy Creek Elementary School – just two miles away from the home where Ortiz was found fatally wounded.

Investigators believe Garcia abandoned his red Ford Explorer at a commercial property a few miles north of where the homicide happened on Saturday and then stole the Ford Taurus from the area near Thunderbird Driving Range.

The motive for the deadly shooting of Ortiz remains unknown. Investigators are classifying the case as domestic violence.

SDSO Lt. Kenneth Nelson said that, to his knowledge, there was no restraining order in place between the estranged couple, nor any recent 911 calls reporting domestic violence at the home in unincorportated Escondido.

The homicide case is under investigation and anyone with information is urged to call the SDSO Homicide Detail at (858) 974-2321 or Crime Stoppers at (888) 580-8477.


 



Photo Credit: NBC7

How Muslim Groups, Scholars Have Been Fighting ISIS

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When evidence emerged linking the San Bernardino shooting to ISIS, President Barack Obama called on Muslim leaders in the U.S. and around the world to speak out against the group’s violent ideology.

 

He urged Muslim leaders to not only speak out against acts of violence, "but also those interpretations of Islam that are incompatible with the values of religious tolerance, mutual respect and human dignity."

 

It’s a call that world leaders have repeated in the wake of increasingly frequent ISIS attacks — and one that Muslim leaders have already been heeding.

 

Ever since ISIS stormed onto the world stage last year, prompting a U.S.-led bombing campaign against the group in Iraq and Syria, Muslim scholars and community leaders have been on the front lines in the war against the group’s ideas, ​which are far from mainstream.

 

Shortly after ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared himself leader of the so-called "Islamic State," Muslim scholars published a 17-page open letter to Baghdadi, challenging everything from his claim to be "caliph," or leader of the world’s 1.6 billion Muslims, to the way his group "cherry-picks" verses from the Koran to justify its actions.

 

The September 2014 letter was translated into 10 languages and signed by more than 120 supporters, from the grand mufti of Egypt to a professor of Islamic studies at Massachusetts’ College of the Holy Cross.

 

In it, the authors argue that Islam forbids forced conversions, slavery, torture, the killing of innocents and the disfiguring of the dead — all of which ISIS has notoriously done and sought to justify in its own extensive, multi-lingual arguments.

 

Citing religious texts, the letter also says that Islam forbids the mistreatment "in any way" of Christians or "people of the book," and that it is "obligatory" to consider Yazidis — members of a religious minority that ISIS fighters have attacked and enslaved — as part of that group.

 

It ends by demanding al-Baghdadi desist from all of his actions, "cease harming others and return to the religion of mercy."

 

The letter racked up more than 120,000 likes on Facebook and signatures from notable scholars around the world, including the vice president and deans of Shariah law and theology from Egypt’s Al-Azhar University, one of the most renowned centers for Islamic scholarship in the world. 

Since then, the chorus of condemnation has grown, yet ISIS has been notably successful at recruitment and savvy at steering its sympathizers away from mainstream and moderate messages.

ISIS propaganda demonizes and dismisses critics as "infidels," claims to be the one true voice of Islam and orders Muslims across the world to leave the "lands of disbelief" and move to its territory in Iraq and Syria.

Some efforts to disseminate challenges to ISIS’ religious authority come via social media, where they might wind up on the radar of potential recruits

In Indonesia, home to the world’s largest Muslim population, a 50 million-strong Islamic organization recently launched a global anti-extremism initiative that will disseminate counter-messages online.

 

A. Mustofa Bisri, the spiritual leader of the Nahdlatul Ulama or NU, recently told The New York Times that "the spread of a shallow understanding of Islam renders this situation critical, as … extremist groups justify their harsh and often savage behavior by claiming to act in accord with God’s commands, although they are grievously mistaken."

 

The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), a 57-member inter-governmental organization that bills itself as "the collective voice of the Muslim world," is using a similar strategy to counter ISIS ideology.

 

The group recently launched a "messaging center" that will connect senior Islamic scholars with the sort of cutting edge social media strategies that has made ISIS such a powerful force online.

 

Amanul Haq, the head of the OIC’s Peace, Security and Mediation Unit, pointed out that the scholarly work against ISIS that already exists "simply hasn’t been communicated in ways likely to resonate with those who need to hear this message the most" and that the project aims to correct that.

 

Muslim community leaders in the UK are contributing to counter messaging as well, via an online magazine dedicated to "exposing the reality of ISIS."

 

On the ground, Muslim community leaders have taken to the streets repeatedly, from Berlin to New Jersey, to denounce violence in the name of Islam.

 

"We denounce [terrorist attacks] continuously," Abdul Mubarak-Rowe, the communications director of the New Jersey chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations told NBC Owned Television Stations in the wake of the Paris attacks. "It is not something that is found in Islam at all and we speak out vociferously against it."

 

Mubarak-Rowe also said that sweeping anti-Muslim rhetoric has become a problem in the wake of ISIS attacks.

 

"We are very disturbed by what we are hearing and what are seeing," he said.

 

Iin his San Bernardino speech, President Obama urged Americans to steer clear of discrimination and bigotry and not let the fight against ISIS be "defined as a war between America and Islam."

"That, too, is what groups like ISIL want. ISIL does not speak for Islam. They are thugs and killers, part of a cult of death, and they account for a tiny fraction of more than a billion Muslims around the world — including millions of patriotic Muslim Americans who reject their hateful ideology," he said.

Though overwhelmingly dismissed, thousands have heeded ISIS' call.

According to the Soufan Group, a security consulting firm, about 30,000 people from 86 countries have traveled to Iraq and Syria to join ISIS. The firm points out that recruitment has more than doubled over the last 18 months.

 

Most recruits come from neighboring countries, with just 280 joining ISIS from North America and even fewer from the United States, where recruitment has been mostly reliant on social media.

 

Haq from the OIC acknowledged the challenge of trying to compete with ISIS’ notorious social media machine. But he added that that is why support for counter-messages is critical in the "battle for hearts and minds that's taking place across social media and in the wider world."



Photo Credit: AP

Israel's Netanyahu Rejects Trump's Muslim Comments

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is rejecting Donald Trump's remarks about banning Muslims from entering the United States, saying that Israel "respects all religions and strictly guarantees the rights of all its citizens," NBC News reported.

"As for the meeting with Mr. Trump that was set some two weeks ago, the Prime Minister decided earlier this year on a uniform policy to agree to meet with all presidential candidates from either party who visit Israel and ask for a meeting," Netanyahu's office said in a statement Wednesday afternoon. "This policy does not represent an endorsement of any candidate or his or her views. Rather, it is an expression of the importance that Prime Minister Netanyahu attributes to the strong alliance between Israel and the United States."

On Monday, Trump called for "a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on."



Photo Credit: AP

Fire Rips Through Webster Home

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San Diego Fire-Rescue crews were called to a house fire in Webster.

Firefighters arrived to the home on Ridge View Drive just before 10 a.m. and found smoke and flames coming from the building.

An image posted by firefighters on Twitter shows a single-story home with obvious damage. SDFD said they had the fire knocked down in 20 minutes.

San Diego Police Officers were helping with crowd and traffic control.  

Investigators said the house sustained $250,000 in damage and was caused by unattended cooking.

Refresh this page for updates on this breaking news story. 



Photo Credit: San Diego Fire-Rescue photo

America's Middle Class Is No Longer the Majority: Study

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After more than four decades as the nation's economic majority, the middle class as a whole is losing ground and is now matched by the upper and lower economic tiers, according to a report released Wednesday by Pew Research Center, NBC News reported.

In 2014, almost half - 49 percent - of the nation's aggregate income went to upper-income households and 43 percent went to middle-income households. By contrast, in 1970 those numbers were 29 percent and 62 percent.

Meanwhile, Hispanics have experienced a small increase in income status since 2001, but their share in the lower-income tier was flat.

One factor behind this short-term trend for Hispanic adults, says Pew Research Center, could be the slowdown in immigration from Mexico, especially of unauthorized immigrants, who tend to be less educated.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

World's First Test-Tube Puppies Are Born

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Tens of thousands of test-tube babies are conceived each year, but a new litter of puppies marks the first time dogs have been born via in vitro fertilization, NBC News reports.

The first human test-tube baby was born in 1978, and it's taken decades of work to figure out how to make a puppy the same way – dogs have a different reproductive cycle from other animals bred through IVF. 

A team from Cornell University's College of Veterinary Medicine used a chemical bath to find the right egg cell to use, they reported in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS ONE.

The idea is to be able to produce lab animals for medical tests. But the method can also be used to preserve endangered species or correct genetic diseases prevalent in some breeds, the team said. 

"What's next for the puppies is a lot of house training," associate professor Alexander Travis told NBC News.



Photo Credit: Jeffrey MacMillan
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