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Woman Says Hotel Guard Raped Her

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A 49-year-old woman from North Texas says in a new lawsuit that a security guard at the Holiday Inn Northshore Chicago drugged and raped her while she was staying at the hotel on a business trip.

Karla Gress, who is from the Dallas, Texas area, sued the hotel, its owner, its director of operations and a hotel security guard Monday in Cook County Circuit Court.

Gress, a mother of three and a senior application consultant who provides training on software to medical staff, was in town for a week-long business trip on Oct. 2, 2013, her suit says.

According to her suit, Gress went to the hotel's restaurant Bar Louie after finishing up work at a nearby hospital. The hotel’s security guard may have placed a drug in her drink, Gress alleges in her suit.

Gress says the security guard entered her hotel room that evening without her consent and raped her. She says she woke up in her hotel room confused, before she started remembering what she believes happened.

"I realized I had been raped. I could hear his voice, and I remember not being able to stand up," Gress said in a press conference Monday.

"I not only want to make sure this does not happen to another soul, but I also want change," she  said. "I don't believe this is the first time this has happened and I don't believe it will be the last."

Skokie police said a report was filed afterward, and the security guard was arrested in January after months of investigation but ultimately released without being charged. The Cook County State's Attorney's office said the case is an open investigation, and they could not comment.

Gress’ attorney, Tara Devine, says those named in the suit “failed to take reasonable steps to secure the safety of their customers and guests.” Devine told reporters she hopes the lawsuit will encourage police to file rape charges.

“Mrs. Gress’ life will never be the same because of the hotel’s failure to protect her,” said Devine, an attorney with Salvi, Schostok & Pritchard PC. “The Holiday Inn Chicago Northshore-Skokie was negligent on many different fronts, having inadequate security measures, improper training of employees, and failure to follow what should be standard hotel procedures for the safety of its guests. Bottom line, this hotel employee never should have been in Mrs. Gress’ hotel room.”

The hotel's owner did not respond to NBC Chicago’s request for comment.



Photo Credit: NBCChicago.com

Truman National Security Project Launch

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The Truman National Security Project announced a San Diego chapter today. The organization says its mission is to unite next-generation veteran, political, and policy leaders. NBC 7's Bridget Naso reports.

Caught on Video: Armed CVS Robbery

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A robber in a fur-hooded jacket walked into a CVS pharmacy in Manhattan overnight, wrestled the manager to the ground and stole $9,000 in cash at gunpoint, surveillance video shows.

Police said the suspect walked into the CVS at 360 Avenue of the Americas in Greenwich Village at about 3:15 a.m. and forced the manager into the back office.

Surveillance video shows the suspect tackling the manager and attacking him in the office before the manager is forced to open a safe at gunpoint. The suspect stuffs the caash into his black messenger bag, then runs out of the office.

The suspect was wearing a black three-quarter length winter jacket with a fur-lined hood, gray pants and brown boots. 

Anyone with information is asked to contact Crime Stoppers at 800-577-TIPS. 

Mass. Man Fatally Hit by Snowplow

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A man was fatally struck by a plow in Medford, Massachusetts, Monday afternoon, according to the Middlesex District Attorney's Office.

The crash occurred in the parking lot of the Whole Foods Market Bakery on Middlesex Avenue around 1:30 p.m.

Cesar Moya, 60, of Chelsea, was struck while he was walking to his car after finishing his shift at the bakery. He was transported to Massachusetts General Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Police are investigating, but say the incident appears to be accidental. The plow operator has not been charged. 



Photo Credit: NBC10 - Ted Greenberg

Florida Man Stabs Friend Over $5

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A Broward man was arrested after authorities say he repeatedly stabbed his friend over a $5 wager.

Anthony Lemar Mells, 51, was arrested on a premeditated attempted murder charge Sunday.

He was ordered held without bond Monday during a court appearance before Broward Judge John Hurley.

According to the arrest report read by Hurley, Mells and the victim, who have known each other for several years, got into an argument over a $5 wager. Mells stabbed the victim several times, Hurley said.

Mells' attorney said he used the knife in self defense. The victim's identity and condition were unknown.



Photo Credit: Broward Sheriff's Office

Boston Sets Snowfall Record

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Boston has set a record for the most snow recorded in a 30-day period, and more is on the way.

The National Weather Service said Boston had received 68.6 inches in the last 30 days by Monday, breaking the record of 58.8 inches in one 30-day period ending in February 1978.

Logan International Airport had a little more than a foot by 7 a.m. from a storm that was expected to last all day and add several more inches.

There's been more than 29 inches in Weymouth and 24 inches in Norwell as of Monday afternoon.

Bangor, Maine, has also tied the all-time highest snow depth record as of 7 a.m. Monday. The snow depth at Bangor International Airport was 53 inches, tying the record highest snow depth set back in the winter of 1969.



Photo Credit: necn

San Diego Home to National Security Chapter

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San Diego became home to the 16th chapter of the Truman National Security Project - a national think tank that joins together post-9/11 veterans, civilians and policy makers.

Representatives from the organization gathered with local leaders Monday to make the announcement on the USS Midway.

Congressman Scott Peters, County Supervisor Dave Roberts and council members Todd Gloria and David Alvarez were among those local leaders present.

The organization's goal is to develop leadership - particularly that of veterans who have served in leadership roles in the armed services.

The think tank believes that this experience brings with it a wealth of problem solving knowledge and international experience that can be utilized to bring about change in the world and improve national security.

"Veterans are about a third of the membership of Truman," said Executive Director Michael Breen. "So Truman is about bringing together partnerships of like-minded people, that include veterans."

Breen said the idea is to build partnerships between veterans, service members and civilians.

"These are leaders that are focused on results," Breen said.

Congressman Peters said the Project will give San Diegan's the opportunity to have their ideas and solutions heard and represented in national debates.

"I'm particularly looking forward to continuing my work with Truman on diversifying our military's energy portfolio in a way that increases efficiency, embraces renewable sources and provides energy tools our commanders have asked for," Scott Peters said Monday.

“The Truman National Security Project will allow San Diegans ideas and solutions to be represented in national debates," Peters continued. "I am particularly looking forward to continuing my work with Truman on diversifying our military’s energy portfolio in a way that increases efficiency, embraces renewable sources, and provides the energy tools our commanders have asked for."

Jesse Matthew Charged With Murder

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Jesse Matthew, the man accused of abducting University of Virginia student Hannah Graham last year, has been charged with her murder, authorities announced Tuesday.

Matthew, 33, was indicted last week on first-degree murder. Matthew is also facing a charge of abduction with intent to defile and two counts of reckless driving for incidents that occurred during the investigation of Graham's disappearance.

He was not charged with capital murder, which means he would not face the death penalty if convicted. The abduction and first-degree murder charges are each punishable by up to life in prison.

Matthew faces a possibility of five life sentences if convicted in both Fairfax and Albemarle counties.

Graham vanished after a night out with friends Sept. 12. According to police, the 18-year-old left an off-campus party alone and texted a friend saying she was lost.

In surveillance video, she can be seen walking unsteadily and even running at times, past a pub and a service station and then onto a seven-block strip of bars, restaurants and shops. Another video captured her leaving a restaurant with Matthew, who had an arm around her.

Graham disappearance prompted a month-long search that ended when her remains were found just miles from where she was last seen in Charlottesville.

DNA evidence also linked Matthew to the 2009 disappearance and death of Virginia Tech student Morgan Harrington. Her remains were found three months after she disappeared the night she attended a rock concert at U.Va.

The families of Graham and Harrington were notified of the new charges against Matthew, Lunsford said.

Matthew has also been linked to a 2005 attack on a woman in Fairfax. He pleaded not guilty to all three charges he is facing in connection with the 2005 case, in which a 26-year-old woman was walking home from a grocery store when she was grabbed and dragged into a wooded area, where she was sexually assaulted.

Matthew will appear in an Albemarle County courtroom by video link on Feb. 18 for his first hearing on the new charge.


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1 Night to Count the Homeless: Critics Question Tally

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The woman pushing a grocery cart was one of the few out on the streets of downtown Brooklyn after midnight Tuesday as a team of volunteers spread out in search of homeless people trying to keep warm in the frigid air.

Wearing a single mitten in the 20 degree weather and a T-shirt under her jacket, she declined an offer of a van to a shelter. She was the daughter of Coco Chanel and been kidnapped, she told the team at one point.

The volunteers were among a cadre trying to count New York City's homeless population and so they logged her answers to their questionnaire and moved on — though because the early morning was so cold they were making sure no one they encountered was in danger. Last year's count drew 3,000 volunteers and the tally's organizers were hoping for a similar number of volunteers on Monday.

Now in the 10th year, the nationwide estimates of people in shelters and on the streets are required by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and they remain contested, particularly over whether they are accurate.

Patrick Markee, the deputy executive director for advocacy at the Coalition for the Homeless in New York, said the survey’s flawed methodology resulted in an undercount of people who are on the streets.

“The idea of doing a single night count or guesstimate of all of homeless people on the streets of New York City, which has the largest homeless population in the country, is just by its very nature kind of absurd,” Markee said.

A better approach would be to talk to staff at soup kitchens, shelters and other front-line organizations and estimate their use over a month, he said.

The number of homeless people staying in New York City’s shelters is at 58,500 this month. How many are sleeping on streets and in city's parks is more difficult to determine. Last year's estimate was 3,357, down from 4,395 in 2005.

Steve Berg, the vice president for programs and policy at the National Alliance to End Homelessness in Washington D.C., agreed that the count gives only an approximation of the size of the problem. But it is nonetheless valuable, he said.

"It is not the easiest thing in the world to do to figure out exactly how many people there are sleeping outside on a given night and so nobody thinks that they’re finding every single homeless person in the whole country," he said. "But I think places do the best they can."

Los Angeles is second only to New York with the most homeless residents, but there the difficulties are different. Volunteers must try to find people across the county's 4,000 miles over three days and officials have disagreed on the best method.

Los Angeles had nearly 40,000 homeless residents in 2013. It initially counted more but a telephone survey used to find what officials called the hidden homeless was challenged by federal authorities seeking consistency across the country.

This year's count -- communities must tally the number in shelters every year and those on the streets at least every other year -- focused on veterans. Secretary of Veterans Affairs Robert McDonald was in Los Angeles late last month for the tally as part of a national push to find housing for men and women who served in the armed forces.

Chicago has been focused on its young people and the during this year's homeless count, the city sent out a special team of formerly homeless youth to interview their peers on the street.

"Who better to locate and identify with youth, homeless youth, than people who are or have been homeless," said Matt Smith, a spokesman for the city's Department of Family and Support Services. "They've been there, there's much less of a barrier that goes up and we find that they're very helpful."

Last year, the city identified 6,294 homeless people, little changed from the year before. Of those, 5,329 were in shelters and 965 were living on the streets.

Across the country, the number of homeless people has been dropping, from 760,000 in 2005, the year of the first count, to 643,000 in 2009. During the recession, the numbers leveled off, then fell again to 578,000 in 2014.

But national numbers can mask increases in individual communties. Washington D.C.'s count last year found nearly 12,000 homeless people, a 3.5 percent increase.

Berg said the overall decrease was a way to show that money spent on helping people find housing and jobs was well spent.

"I think everybody understands that homelessness is bad, that any amount of homelessness is bad," he said. "The problem is people don’t think you can do anything about it."

The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development allocated $2.135 billion for its largest homeless programs for the 2015 fiscal year and has proposed $2.48 billion for the next fiscal year.

Ann Oliva, HUD’s deputy assistant secretary for special needs, said that the annual counts are a tool for measuring the need in communities.

"This annual exercise gives us valuable data on year-to-year trends and has shown the significant progress we have made over the past five years toward ending homelessness," she said.

Out on the streets in downtown Brooklyn, the team met one man who would rather ride the subways than stay at a shelter and another, with a cane, who claimed to be fine. And on a subway platform, they encountered their first pair of decoys, volunteers waiting to be found as a way to ensure the accuracy of the count.

"It's not a perfect science," said Eric Adams, the Brooklyn borough president, before the teams set out. "Homelessness is not a perfect condition. The face of homelessness changes all the time. You don't know if a person is spending one night on the couch of his friend, another night on the couch of someone else."
 



Photo Credit: FILE-AP

Serial Stowaway Arrested in Florida

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A Florida judge set bail on Tuesday at $55,000 for a Bay Area serial stowaway who landed herself in more trouble when she allegedly snuck aboard a flight without the proper paperwork and checked into a hotel as a "Biggest Loser" guest.

Marilyn Hartman was ordered back into custody after her brief court hearing in Nassau County, Florida where she faces two felony fraud charges and one misdemeanor count of trespassing after sneaking onto a flight from Minnesota to Florida. The judge appointed  a public defender for her and ordered her to return to court on March 5, according to NBC sister station First Coast News.

What remains unclear, is how Hartman snuck aboard another plane, again. Transportation Security Administration officials said they are investigating.

Hartman, who said she has an unrecognized illness called "whistleblower trauma syndrome," was taken into custody on Monday on suspicion of using a false name after landing at the Jacksonville International Airport, authorities said. As a whistleblower, Hartman has said previously that she was forced by the FBI to flee her house, rendering her homeless. Authorities have tried to get her help at a San Mateo County treatment center in the Bay Area, but she was uncooperative and left the program.

Nassau County Sheriff's officials said the 63-year-old used a false name from a real guest checking into the "Biggest Loser Resort" program on Sunday at the Omni Resort Amelia Island Plantation, where rooms go for $300 a night. She used Maria Sandgren's name, the sheriff's report states, and as it turns out, the real Maria Sandgren was staying at the hotel to participate in the "Biggest Loser Resort" fitness and weight loss program, as later noted by the coordinator of the program. Hartman was tipped off to that particular guest, when the van driver at the airport asked if she was Maria Sandgren, and she said yes.

Hartman disappeared when she was contacted by the resort to return to the front desk due to a booking error. But resort security on Monday found her. She had snuck into in a room that was being renovated, a sheriff's deputy noted.

This is far from the first time Harman has been arrested for sneaking on to a plane.

On  Aug. 4, she was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport after police there say she got through security at Mineta San Jose International Airport and boarded an LA-bound flight.

Officials said Hartman has previously breached security at San Francisco International Airport and has a history of trying to get on flights without a ticket. She had at least seven encounters with police at SFO and was arrested four times, according to the San Mateo County District Attorney's Office. In an email on Tuesday, DA Steve Wagstaffe noted that Florida is treating her more seriously than other states, noting the high bail and setting her court date out for next month.

"Of course, when she was in our county jail," Wagstaffe said, "she seemed to enjoy intermingling with other inmates and correctional officers. Just another place to sleep at night. Airports, jails, she is quite the character."

In less than two weeks after being released from jail for violating her probation at LAX last year, Hartman was arrested at Sky Harbor Airport in Phoenix after being spotted loitering in the baggage claim area.

In court on Tuesday, Hartman told the judge that she is retired legal secretary and received $849 in Social Security each month.

NBC's First Coast News Jacob Long, NBC Bay Area's Kristofer Noceda and Lisa Fernandez and NBC LA's Christina Cocca contributed to this report.

Basics on the Port Development Proposals

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The Unified Port of San Diego is hearing from developers Tuesday behind five proposed ideas to bring an observation attraction to the port waterfront area of Downtown San Diego. All five groups approached the board with an interest in developing a project on the bay.

The board will decide whether they are interested in moving forward with a plan. To get a better understanding of the plans they're looking at, we've broken those five plans down for our readers...

Proposal A: Discovery Point  

This 450 foot tall structure would be built at the G Street Mole surface parking area, according to Port meeting documents. It would have 30 Gondolas that fit 25 people each. Tickets would cost $25 to $30 for the projected 1.7 to 2.3 million visitors. The project proposed by Discovery Point would cost about $200 million and developers estimate it would bring in an annual revenue of $60 to $70 million. Developers at Tuesday's meeting said the revenue the port makes from that property would quadruple if they were allowed to continue.

According to the Port, this proposal is the most comprehensive one they have in front of them. The development team consists of Discovery Point LLC, Gensler, Starneth, SeaWorld Parks and Entertainment, Entertainment + Culture Advisors, McCarthy Building Companies, Greenhaus and Sosolimited.

Proposal B: Allegis Development Services, Inc. 

Headed by developers Paul Kanavos and Brett Torino, the group has not yet come up with a specific project proposal but is working on building a 450 foot Observation Wheel dubbed The San Diego Eye.

The catch is, this team is exclusively interested in a location in the Seaport Village area.

The people attached to the project also worked on the 400 foot tall Orlando Eye project, which opens in Spring 2015. The project would have 28 gondolas. The capacity of those gondolas, the ticket price, any annual revenue or visitor projections as well as the cost of the project is unknown. The developers did not present at the Port meeting.

Proposal C: Bussink Design (Bussink), Chance American Wheels (Chance) and SkyViews of America (SkyViews) partnership  

The developers in this partnership are pitching an observation wheel project similar to other projects the developers have completed at Niagara Falls, Myrtle Beach, Seattle, pigeon Forge and the "Captial Wheel" in Oxon Hill, Maryland. Though the developers do not have a site-specific proposal, they are open to various locations. At the Port meeting Tuesday, the developers pitched a one potential location as the Port Pavilion on Broadway Pier.

The wheel will either be 175 feet tall or 250 feet tall and will either have 42 or 54 gondolas that could fit about eight people. Ticket price would be $15 and developers expect about one million annual visitors. The project's price tag would be $15 to $30 million, plus infrastructure costs. They do not have an estimated annual revenue for the wheel once complete.

Proposal D: Pier 57 Corporation

The family-run business Pier 57, the business behind the Seattle Great Wheel, has said they would like to replicate that wheel in San Diego, dubbing it the "San Diego Great Wheel." The business specializes in West Coast waterfront projects along the coast in places like Seattle, San Clemente and Long Beach. They developed the Seattle Great Wheel in 2012 in addition to renovating and rehabilitating the surrounding area. The company continues to own and operate the entertainment venue and surrounding areas, including shops and restaurants.

Pier 57 has not yet released a site-specific proposal and do not have a specific location in mind, but they are interested in building a 175 foot structure at the Embarcadero area with 42 gondolas, including one VIP cabin, with rides ranging from 25 to 30 minutes in length.

Ticket prices would be $13 to $18 per person, though the developers do not have an estimated annual revenue. They project one million visitors would come to the wheel. Their project would cost upwards of $20 million.

Proposal E: US Thrill Rides (USTR)

The USTR is looking to build an observation attraction called "SkySpire San Diego," a building that would give visitors a 360 degree view of the city with a restaurant at the top. They are interested in developing, owning and operating the structure, which would be 250 feet high or taller, depending on Port restrictions.

Twenty or more gondolas would bring visitors up to the top. Each gondola would fit 10 people. With individual ticket prices set at $15, USTR expects annual revenues to be anywhere between $15 million to $22.5 million dollars. They project the structure will have anywhere from one to 1.5 million project visitors. The developer is open to various locations and the project would cost $30 or $40 million. Representatives at the Port meeting Tuesday said they are considering several locations, including a Seaport Village location.

The developer has built more than 300 rides around the world, including projects at Six Flags, Paramount, Mall of America and San Diego's Balboa Park.


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Local Doc Advises Senate on Measles Outbreak

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A San Diego doctor was one of three doctors to speak Tuesday before the Senate Health Committee as the panel discussed ways to prevent further outbreaks like the measles.

There are currently 1500 kindergartners in San Diego who are not fully immunized and that number is increasing, Professor of Clinical Pediatrics at the University of San Diego Dr. Mark Sawyer told the congressional committee.

He told the panel he believes misinformation is the leading reason behind a parent's choice not to vaccinate.

“All parents want what is best for their children but many parents are choosing not to have their children immunized because they have received inaccurate information about the risks and benefits of vaccines and the diseases they prevent,” said Sawyer.

The Senate Health Committee asked several doctors questions about vaccines and the risks associated with children getting immunized. All the doctors agreed that there are no real risks for children getting vaccinated.

Instead, by not getting vaccinations, parents raise the risk of their children getting sick and spreading their illness to others.

Sawyer said the top ways to prevent this is to improve the communication between parents and doctors about the effectiveness of vaccines, limit philosophical exemptions and monitor the vaccines we do use.

Parents need to talk with their doctors before making decisions on vaccines instead of reading articles online, he added.

“The internet is replete with anecdotes and misinformation that leads parents to think that vaccines have caused harm. What is overlooked by parents is the fact that just because an adverse health outcome occurs in the time after a vaccine, it doesn't mean that the vaccine caused the problem,” said Dr. Sawyer.

Last year, California passed a law that requires parents to get a doctors signature before signing paperwork to exempt their child from vaccinations for philosophical reasons.

Sawyer said these exemptions are made mainly because parents are getting misinformation about vaccines.

Filing 2014 Taxes: What to Know

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With the 2015 tax season under way, here are a few tips on how to file your taxes, notes on what is new this year, and some lighter tax tidbits.

E-Filing Is Most Popular Method — And Offers Fewer Errors

Four out of five taxpayers will file electronically, which has been the case over the past three years, according to a Jan. 15 news release by the Internal Revenue Service. The agency is expecting to receive about 150 million individual income tax returns this year.

As of Jan. 31, the IRS has already received more than 14 million returns so far this season and issued refunds worth $26.8 billion. The average refund is $3,539.  

The error rate for a paper return is 21 percent, according to the IRS. Compare that with an e-file return error rate of half a percent.

Those who decide to file paper tax returns could also wait an extra week or possibly longer to see their tax returns than those who file electronically, IRS Commissioner John Koskinen said last month.

Click here for information from the IRS on how to file your taxes for free.

Fun fact:

On January 24, 1986, the first electronic transmission of tax return data from a preparer to the IRS was completed, according to the IRS. By 1989, taxpayers in 36 states could file their taxes electronically. By 1990, taxpayers across the United States who expected a refund could file electronically.

IRS Assistance Down After Record-Low Funding


Some not-so-good-news is that the IRS is cutting taxpayer services to historically low levels. If you need to reach the IRS for assistance, only half of the 100 million people expected to call this year will be able to reach someone, the tax agency said.

Koskinen said that the IRS is taking a nearly $600 million dollar cut, resulting in the lowest level of funding they’ve received since 2008, The Associated Press reported.

Health Insurance Information is Required

Taxpayers this year will have to report their health insurance information when filing, choosing from three circumstances, according to HealthCare.gov.

If you were enrolled in a health plan through the Health Insurance Marketplace in 2014, you will receive a new Form 1095-A by mail in early February. Once received, it’s important to check over your information before using it to file your federal income tax return.

If you had health coverage in 2014 from another source, including a job, Medicare, Medicaid or a plan bought outside of the Marketplace, you will report so by checking a specific box on your federal income tax return. You won’t receive a Form 1095-A or have to fill out any additional tax forms.

Those who were not insured during 2014 for three months or more will either qualify for a health coverage exemption or will pay a fee while filing.

Nearly six million households may have to pay a penalty for not having health insurance in 2014, which was required under the Affordable Care Act, U.S. government officials told The Wall Street Journal. The penalty is $95 per adult or 1 percent of family income, whichever is greater.

Fun Fact:

Income isn't the only thing that's taxed. Some European countries have begun taxing cattle owners on cow flatulence for their role in contributing to climate change. In the U.S., certain states have slapped a tax on candy and playing cards. Check out a round-up here

Tax Return Fraud Happens

While tax return fraud isn’t a new issue, taxpayers should be aware that when filing online there is the possibility that sensitive information could be compromised.

Turbotax makers Intuit temporarily stopped the transmission of e-filing state income tax returns for less than one day, after the Utah Tax Commission and the Minnesota Department of Revenue found thousands of possibly fraudulent returns, NBC News reported. 

A leading cyber security expert told NBC News that most likely the fraudulent work is caused by “a criminal gang, possibly working outside the country.”

Instead of stealing Social Security numbers, thieves buy compromised credentials to gain access to past returns stored on tax preparation software.

Despite the issue, the IRS said that taxpayers should continue to file their tax returns as they normally would. It’s recommended that once users file their taxes on services, they change their login information right away, NBC News reported.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Georgia Street Bridge to Undergo Expensive Overhaul

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A historic but hazardous bridge in North Park is about to undergo a major overhaul.

It will cost more than $11 million – money coming from Uncle Sam to benefit the city of San Diego.

The Georgia Street Bridge was built in 1914 in one of the city's earliest suburbs, crossing over busy University Avenue where streetcars once traveled.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1998.

But now, ten decades have taken their toll.

Finally, just ahead, is a promising new lease on life in a community that treasures its civic past.

"It's overdue – way overdue – as a landmark,” says North Park resident Jeff Jorgenson. “It's been patched and patched and patched. I don't know what the original bridge would look like. And it probably had some nice columns that have probably been filled in over the years to strengthen it."

But patchwork won't cut it anymore.

The bridge’s basic design is "Romanesque Spandrel Arch" with "Mission Revival" styling.

But Cal Trans classified the structure as "deficient" in 2011, and again last year.

Not only does it need seismic and structural retrofits, but upgrades to the crosswalks and byways along University Avenue beneath it, to help safeguard motorists and pedestrians.

"That's very dangerous down there,” Sonja Helton said of University Avenue and its sidewalks while crossing Georgia Street at the bridge during the noon hour Monday. “So many people come and walk under the bridge."

Fortunately, the west-to-east uphill and downhill footpaths connecting to the north-south span offers a traffic-free route for Roosevelt Middle School students on their way to and from classes.

Over the years, the bridge has become ingrained in countless daily patterns of life, leisure and business throughout North Park.

When construction starts in August, a lot of that figures to be disrupted for more than a year, until the projected – funded by the Federal Highway Administration with Cal Trans as the overseeing agency – is completed.

Creatures of habit: be forewarned.

"I use this quite a bit, actually, for walking to stores down there or down on University Avenue,” longtime resident Randy Walsh said in an interview. “And I walk this way when I need a little extra cardio."

It’s a high-angle vista point for those with the time to stop and take in the scenery stretching from Mission Hills all the way east to the foothills and mountains of East County.

"We live in a beautiful area here,” enthused Jeff Smith, a third-generation San Diegan. “Where else in the middle of a city do you get a view like this? I mean, it's amazing…definitely a gem in our neighborhood."



Photo Credit: northparkhistory.org

Mission Valley Residents Evacuated for HazMat Incident

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Residents in Mission Valley were left without explanation for several hours Monday evening when San Diego HazMat crews told them only that they needed to leave immediately.

HazMat crews, police and fire rescue officials evacuated and cordoned off part of the area at Riverrun Drive and Friars Road after they said a man locked himself inside a third-story bathroom with two barbeques.

Fire officials said the man was trying to kill himself, and carbon monoxide levels in the unit were extremely high, putting emergency crews and the public at risk.

"I was shocked," said apartment resident Michael Sotomayor. "I didn't smell anything at all. Only a barbeque taking place by the pool. I wasn't alarmed until I walked outside."

San Diego Fire Rescue Battalion Chief Dan Froelich said crews had to use caution entering the apartment to ensure the emergency responders weren't at risk.

The HazMat team was able to successfully secure the scene and the evacuation was lifted. Electricity and gas were restored shortly thereafter.

San Diego police are investigating.

Disclaimer: If you or someone you know is considering suicide, call the National Suicide prevention Lifeline at 1 (800) 273-8255



Photo Credit: NBC 7

Egg Freezing Offers Longer-Term Family Planning

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National statistics show more women are choosing to wait to have children later in life.

According to a CDC report, the number of American women who have children after 35 is growing. With age, however, comes potential pregnancy complications or infertility risks.

NBC 7 followed one 30-something year old woman as she navigated through the egg freezing process.

She decided to freeze her eggs to give her peace of mind in case she doesn’t meet the right guy any time soon. She is also career-driven, highly educated and isn’t ready to settle down just yet.

The woman we followed was Angela LaChica, a 34 year old owner of the athlete management firm LaChica Sports.

LaChica’s career has always been important to her. She’s worked in the sports industry for 20 years, advising some of the biggest names in the NBA, NFL and MLB.

“I just love what I do and I couldn’t imagine myself doing anything else,” LaChica said.

She would also love to one day start a family. But because her business is growing and she’s having fun, she’s not ready to give it all up yet. She says she’s freezing her eggs to gain control of the situation.

“Essentially it’s taking the keys away from Mother Nature and saying, ‘I’m driving this bus, and I’ll be in control of what happens,’” LaChica said.

Dr. Michael Kettel, medical director at the San Diego Fertility Center said the prototype for a woman who wants to freeze her eggs is someone who’s single, hasn’t found that life partner to raise her family with and is intelligent enough to know that time matters.

“Fertility begins to significantly decline after 35, and there’s another big hit at 37, and then a huge one at 40,” Dr. Kettel said.

Dr. Kettel said attempts to freeze eggs have been happening for decades, but until recently the technology wasn’t very good.

Now unfertilized eggs can be frozen. Before only fertilized eggs were viable which means women needed a partner. He said vitrification is a relatively new technology that enhances the chances of successfully freezing eggs.

“The survival rate of eggs using slow freeze is in the 10 to 30 percent range, whereas the survival rate using the rapid freeze technology is in the 90 percent range,” Kettel said.

This new technology is one of the reasons egg freezing has gained so much mainstream attention lately.

Just last year, two companies, Apple and Facebook, announced they would cover the costs of the procedure for their female employees who choose to do it.

Celebrities like Sofia Vergara and Joana Krupa have also decided to freeze their eggs, and speak about it publicly.

LaChica got her eggs frozen locally at the San Diego Fertility Center in Carmel Valley. She said the process was rough on her body, but she’s happy she did it.

After going in for her first consultation, LaChica was put on birth control pills for about a month. LaChica also had to have several internal ultrasounds, and give herself hormone injections for about two weeks.

“I was very, very fatigued, day in and day out,” she said, referring to her time during the hormone injections.

The egg retrieval process only takes about 20 minutes, but it’s done in an operating room under anesthesia.

“I’m barely coming out of anesthesia and Dr. Kettel grabs my shoulder and says we got 22 eggs! He was so excited,” she recalled.

LaChica said she was in pain for several days after the surgery.

Looking back she’s happy to have done it, and says freezing her eggs gives her freedom to continue advancing in her career without the worry of her biological clock ticking.

“It’s just this freedom. It’s nice to know that all of my options are open at this point,” she said.

The egg freezing procedure costs at least $10,000 and there’s also no guarantee the eggs will be thawed and fertilized successfully in the future.



Photo Credit: AP

Pet Missing After Van Slams Home

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A Poway man fell asleep at the wheel Monday afternoon, hopping a curb and crashing into a home - letting the family dog loose.

The damage to the home has made it too unsafe to go inside, and the van - which drove over a curb, through bushes and between twin palms trees - collided with the home where the garage meets 11-year-old Capriss Mahtafar's bedroom.

"I'm sad I can't go in my room and see what happened in my room," Mahtafar said.

The van also created a hole in the wall large enough for the family dog Celesty to make a break for it.

She was still missing as of 9:30 p.m.

"[We are] very worried about her," Mahtafar said. "There are a lot of coyotes. She's been bitten once but she survived."

The drive of the van, Rory Higgins, said he's embarrassed and can't believe something like this happened. He was on his way home to take a nap when he fell asleep at the wheel and crashed into the house.

"I'm feeling pretty bad about the whole thing," Higgins said. "I never thought something like that would happen to me."

The family is dealing with the loss with great composure, but the recovery, they said, starts with finding Celesty.

Neighbors who heard the crash said they saw the dog run, uninjured, from the home in a south or southwesterly direction.



Photo Credit: NBC 7

Little League Investigating Residency Questions With Champion Team

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Officials from the Little League International will meet Tuesday to discuss an investigation into Chicago’s championship Little League Team Jackie Robinson West after allegations the team violated rules by adding top suburban players.

League spokesman Brian McClintock said the organization “is in the final stages of reviewing all information relating to the concerns raised” and said the Charter Committee will meet to discuss resolution.

McClintock said a final decision is expected soon.

The league began investigating JRW lsat year after the team was accused of adding top suburban players to make it stronger, a violation of “residency regulations.”

In December, McClintock said an “initial determination” showed the players met eligibility requirements. The organization said the matter was considered closed, but could be reopened if new evidence came forward.

The team made national and international headlines when it made it to the Little League World Series, capturing the attention of major league players, who contributed money so the families of the team from the city's South Side could attend the tournament in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. After winning the national championship game — becoming the city's first all-black team to claim the national title — and then falling to South Korea in the world championship game, Jackie Robinson West was feted with a parade and a visit to the major league World Series and the White House, where they met President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama.

Eerie Message Scrawled on UCSD Building

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Images captured a man who police say smashed several surveillance cameras and wrote an eerie message in gold-colored graffiti on a UC San Diego building.

The San Diego County Crime Stoppers and investigators from the UC San Diego are looking for help finding a man who vandalized school property early Thursday, Feb. 5 morning.

The suspect, described as a thin male wearing a black face mask, caused $14,000 in damage, including spray painting in gold “YOU CAN PAINT OVER ME YOU CAN CATCH ME YOU CAN EXPELL ME I WILL STILL BE HERE” on a first floor wall in Mandeville Center on campus, police said.

Officials are offering a $1,000 reward for information leading to an arrest in the case.

At approximately 1:50 a.m. Thursday, the suspect climbed onto the roof of the UCSD Chancellors complex and destroyed a junction box with surveillance camera cables, causing about $4,000 in damage, police said.

Around 5 a.m., the same suspect broke eight surveillance cameras attached to walls and stairwells with a sledgehammer. At least ten “men” and “women” signs from exterior bathroom doors were also removed and broken, police said. Around this time police said the man also wrote the graffiti on the first floor of Mandeville Center.

Police described the suspect as wearing a gray and dark-colored long sleeve hoodie with a hat under the hood, dark pants and black shoes. They said the suspect may also have a small mole on the inside corner of his right eye.

Anyone with information on the identity or location of the suspect is asked to call the Crime Stoppers anonymous tip line at (888) 580-8477.



Photo Credit: San Diego County Crimestoppers
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Rookie Cop Indicted in Death: NYPD

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A grand jury has indicted an NYPD officer in the November shooting of an unarmed Brooklyn man in a darkened public housing building's stairwell, a law enforcement source and a lawyer for the victim's family told NBC 4 New York.

The Brooklyn District Attorney would not comment on grand jury proceedings, but the law enforcement source and a family attorney said Officer Peter Liang has been indicted in the fatal shooting of 28-year-old Akai Gurley and will surrender tomorrow. The charge is not known. 

“This is the first step in a fight for justice in this wrongful and reckless shooting of an innocent man,” Gurley family attorney Scott Rynecki said.  The family will address the media outside of court tomorrow, he said.  

The head of the NYPD officer's union said Liang deserves the same due process afforded to anyone involved in an accidental death.    

"The fact the he was assigned to patrol one most dangerous housing projects in New York City must be considered among the circumstances of this tragic accident,” Patrolmen's Benevolent Association President Pat Lynch said in a statement. 

Mayor Bill de Blasio urged "everyone to respect the judicial process as it unfolds”

Police say Gurley was accidentally killed after opening a door in a pitch-dark stairway that Liang, a rookie officer, was patrolling in the Pink Houses in East New York.

Police Commissioner Bill Bratton said that the shooting was an accident and called Gurley a "total innocent." Liang was placed on desk duty after the shooting. The shooting, amid the choking death of Eric Garner, sparked protests around the city.

Police say Liang and his partner, who both had less than 18 months on the force, were conducting a floor-by-floor sweep of the building and had gone to the roof when they noticed there were no lights in the stairwell leading up to it.

Given the location and lack of light, Liang drew his weapon and a flashlight for safety reasons, police have said. The other officer kept his service weapon holstered.

As the officers were entering the eighth-floor landing, Gurley emerged on the seventh-floor landing. He heard a noise and turned to look up at the two officers a floor above him, a law enforcement source said.

Then Liang fired, hitting Gurley 11 feet below him, according to police.Gurley was shot in the chest. He stumbled down to his girlfriend, who was by that point on the fifth floor, and she tried to administer first aid, authorities said. Liang and his partner found the couple on the fifth floor; 911 had already been called. Gurley was pronounced dead at a hospital.



Photo Credit: AP/NBC 4 New York
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