Saturday, March 31, 2012

FOXNews.com: Big comeback leads Kansas to 64-62 win over Ohio St

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Big comeback leads Kansas to 64-62 win over Ohio St
Apr 1st 2012, 04:02

NEW ORLEANS –  Same story, new night for Kansas. The team that's been teetering on the edge of the tournament since before it even began is now one of the last two left.

Tyshawn Taylor made two big free throws late, and Thomas Robinson finished with 19 points and eight rebounds Saturday night to lift the Jayhawks to a come-from-behind 64-62 win over Ohio State in the Final Four -- a game Kansas led for a grand total of 3 minutes, 48 seconds.

After scoring the first bucket, Kansas didn't lead again until Travis Releford made two free throws with 2:48 left. That lasted for 11 seconds, but the Jayhawks (32-6), who trailed by as many as 13, overcame another deficit and finally held on against the Buckeyes (31-8).

Taylor's two free throws with 8.3 seconds left gave Kansas a 64-61 lead, matching its biggest of the game. The Jayhawks intentionally fouled Aaron Craft with 2.9 seconds left. Craft made the first, then quickly clanked the second one of the front of the rim but was called for a lane violation.

Kansas dribbled out the clock and celebrated a win that played out sort of the way the whole season has in Lawrence.

"It was two different games," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "They dominated us the first half. We were playing in quicksand, it looked like. And the light came on. We were able to play through our bigs; we were able to get out and run, but the biggest thing is we got stops."

Early in the year, Self wondered if this team was even tournament material. The Jayhawks trailed most of the night against Purdue in the regional semifinals and were no better than North Carolina for most of the next game.

One win. Then another. This latest one came on the biggest stage -- in the Superdome. Next, a meeting Monday with Kentucky and a chance to bring the second title in five years back to Allen Fieldhouse.

The game will be a coaching rematch between Self and John Calipari, who was coaching Memphis in 2008 when the Tigers missed four free throws down the stretch and blew a nine-point lead in an overtime loss to Mario Chalmers and the Jayhawks.

"It would be a great honor" to win, said Kansas senior Conner Teahan, who could become the first Jayhawk to win two rings. "First we have to make it happen. Honestly, it's not something I've focused on."

This was a heartbreaker for the Buckeyes, who came in as co-Big Ten champions and a slight favorite in a game -- a rematch of a 78-67 Kansas win back in December when Ohio State's star, Jared Sullinger, was not available.

Sullinger was there a-plenty Saturday night, but he struggled. He finished with 11 points on 5-for-19 shooting, no fewer than three of them blocked by Jeff Withey, the Kansas center who finished with seven swats. Sullinger also had 11 rebounds and a steal, but the sophomore who gave up NBA lottery money to return and win a championship will go without for at least another year.

When the buzzer sounded, he plopped at midcourt, clearly pooped -- and maybe wondering how his team let this game slip away.

Ohio State-Kansas was billed as "The Other Game" of this Final Four -- garnering much less ink than the Kentucky-Louisville blood feud that preceded it -- and started off looking like every bit the undercard.

The Buckeyes built an early 13-point lead on the strength of the shooting of William Buford, who came out of a 13-for-44 tournament slump to lead the Buckeyes with 19 points on 6 for 10 from the floor. Kansas trailed 34-25 at the half and only a steal and layup before the buzzer prevented the Jayhawks from a season-low.

But things changed early in the second when Ohio State came out and promptly missed its first 10 shots from the field, while Deshaun Thomas -- the Ohio State big man in charge of shutting down Robinson -- headed to the bench with his third foul.

That opened everything up for KU: A couple easy layups for Robinson and a kick-out to Elijah Johnson for a 3-pointer were part of a 13-4 run to open the half. It tied the game at 38 and set up for a nip-and-tuck finish between these No. 2 seeds, each of which took at least a share of their conference regular-season title and were in the hunt for top seeding all the way up to Selection Sunday.

Releford finished with 15 points and six rebounds for the Jayhawks. Johnson had 13 points and 10 boards. Taylor finished with 10 points and nine assists -- not bad considering the time Craft spent nearly inside his jersey much of the night.

Releford's free throws with 1:37 left put KU ahead 60-59. Buford tried to take the ball to the basket on the next possession, but Withey swatted it away. Johnson followed with a layup -- hardly as dramatic as his game-winner against Purdue, but enough for a three-point lead, which seemed like a million for the Jayhawks in this one.

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FOXNews.com: Authorities find body of missing 2-year-old in Texas pond

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Authorities find body of missing 2-year-old in Texas pond
Apr 1st 2012, 04:13

CLEVELAND, Texas –  Texas authorities found the body of a missing 2-year-old boy floating in a pond Saturday morning, myFOXhouston reports.

Devin Davis disappeared from the home he was staying at with his family in Liberty County Tuesday afternoon. His mother, April Davis, claimed she had woken up after a nap and was unable to find her son.

The Houston Chronicle reported that the toddler's body was spotted by a drone aircraft floating in a pond.

Devin and his family had recently relocated to Texas from Virginia, and were staying at the home of a friend.

On Wednesday, April Davis made a public plea for her son's safe return.

"I need my son, I need to know, I need some answers and someone has to know something, somewhere out there!," she begged. "If you're scared, I understand. There's a lot of stuff going on. Do the right thing!"

Click here for more on this story from myFOXhouston.com.

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FOXNews.com: Body of missing ultra marathoner found in New Mexico wilderness

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Body of missing ultra marathoner found in New Mexico wilderness
Apr 1st 2012, 04:23

Searchers on Saturday found the body of renowned long-distance runner Micah True, who vanished four days earlier after heading out from a lodge for a morning run in the rugged wilderness near New Mexico's Gila National Forest.

The body was discovered in a remote area of the Gila Wilderness, state police spokesman Lt. Robert McDonald said.

The cause of death was still unknown, but there were no signs of trauma, incident commander Tom Bemis said.

"It's too early to say, there was nothing obvious," he told the Boulder Daily Camera.

The 58-year-old True, whose extreme-distance running prowess is detailed in the book "Born to Run," set out on what -- for him -- would have been a routine 12-mile run Tuesday from The Wilderness Lodge and Hot Springs, where he was staying. He left his dog at the lodge and never returned. A search began the next day after.

Lodge co-owner Dean Bruemmer, who helped with the search Saturday, said he last saw his friend at breakfast. He said True gave no indication of a specific route, which made the search more difficult.

"There are a lot of trailheads up the road," said Bruemmer, whose lodge is about four miles from the Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument.

Though daytime temperatures in southwest New Mexico have been mild of late, temperatures have dipped into the mid-20s on recent nights. True left for his run wearing only shorts and a T-shirt and carrying a water bottle.

Fourteen search teams that were scouring the area Friday were supplemented with additional volunteer teams from across the state Saturday morning, McDonald said. Teams were hiking and on horseback and ATVs. They also used dogs and employed a helicopter and plane in the search.

True, who had been friends with Bruemmer and his wife, Jane, for 10 years, would often visit their lodge while traveling between Mexico and his Boulder, Colo., home. As a result, Bruemmer said, True certainly knew the trail system well -- which made his disappearance all the more mystifying to everyone.

Michael Sandrock, a columnist who writes about running for The Daily Camera newspaper in Boulder, knew True for at least 20 years and had run with him. He called True a pioneer of the sport of ultrarunning, which involves running extreme distances, often on grueling terrain and many miles longer than a traditional 26-mile marathon.

True, he said, had a rebellious spirit but never sought to draw attention to himself even as he became legendary for his talents, which included "just going up and running for hours and hours at a time."

"He's just authentic and genuine. ... Micah is a guy who follows his bliss," Sandrock said.

True was the race director of The Copper Canyon Ultra Marathon, a 50-plus mile extreme race that took place in Urique, Mexico, on March 4.

He was featured in articles in running magazines and was a central character -- known by his nickname, "Caballo Blanco" -- in Christopher McDougall's nonfiction best-seller "Born to Run."

"He's such an integral part of the fabric of the ultra community," Sandrock said. "He's one of the stars .... the Caballo Blanco, he's a legend."

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FOXNews.com: Man denied entry to US from Mexico to bury son, 10

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Man denied entry to US from Mexico to bury son, 10
Mar 31st 2012, 18:50

ALLENTOWN, Pa.-- A Mexican national says he has been barred from entering the United States to bury his 10-year-old son, a U.S. citizen who died Tuesday in a house fire in northeastern Pennsylvania that killed three other people.

Attorneys for Fidelmar Merlos-Lopez are trying to win humanitarian parole, but say their efforts have been rebuffed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The funeral for Damien Lopez is Monday. The boy died in a Shenandoah row house along with his cousin, aunt and 7-month-old half-brother.

Fidelmar Lopez has been waiting at the U.S.-Mexico border at Laredo, Texas, since the fire.

Lopez was an illegal immigrant who left the U.S. voluntarily in 2008. He's in the process of getting his green card so he can rejoin his wife in Shenandoah.

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FOXNews.com: Prosecutor in Trayvon Martin case known as tough

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Prosecutor in Trayvon Martin case known as tough
Mar 31st 2012, 16:40

SANFORD, Fla. -- The special prosecutor leading the investigation into the shooting death of an unarmed black teen by a neighborhood watch volunteer is known for her tough tactics aimed at locking up criminals for long sentences.

Furthermore, 57-year-old Angela Corey has handled hundreds of homicide cases involving the justifiable use of deadly force -- experience that could prove invaluable.

It will be up to Corey whether to charge 28-year-old George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watchman who says he was defending himself when he fatally shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin during a scuffle. Martin was unarmed as he walked from a convenience store, and the case has become a racial flashpoint with protesters across the nation calling for his arrest. Zimmerman's father is white, his mother Hispanic.

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FOXNews.com: Florida man faces jail after killing bunnies during argument with wife

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Florida man faces jail after killing bunnies during argument with wife
Mar 31st 2012, 15:26

WINTER HAVEN, Fla. -- A Florida man faces two years in jail after admitting killing three bunnies with his bare hands during an argument with his wife.

Reginald Owen Sear Jr., 35, made a plea deal with prosecutors over the crime and is expected to be given a two-year jail sentence and five years of probation, The Ledger newspaper reported.

Sear, from Winter Haven, central Florida, killed the bunnies after arguing with his wife about who would go and feed them last May.

Following the argument, he took the bunnies into the bathroom at his home, where he twisted them with his hands and killed them.

One of the couple's children said Sear came out of the bathroom with blood on his face following the incident.

He pleaded guilty to three counts of animal cruelty, two counts of child abuse and one charge of domestic battery and will be sentenced April 11.

Click here for more on this story from The Ledger.  

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FOXNews.com: JetBlue crew will stay quiet about Las Vegas incident

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JetBlue crew will stay quiet about Las Vegas incident
Mar 31st 2012, 14:29

NEW YORK- JetBlue says the crew of Las Vegas-bound flight 191 -- which had to make an emergency landing in Texas because of the strange and frightening behavior of its pilot -- will remain quiet about the incident.

"We understand and appreciate everyone's desire to hear directly from the crew regarding their experience, but the crew has decided to decline all media opportunities in order to spend time with their families," JetBlue Airways Corp. said in a statement Friday.

The flight Tuesday that started in New York proceeded normally for most of the trip. But pilot Clayton Osbon became increasingly incoherent, left the cockpit and later sprinted down the cabin yelling jumbled remarks about Sept. 11 and Iran, documents and witnesses say. Co-pilot Jason Dowd brought an off-duty JetBlue captain who was flying as a passenger into the cockpit to assist and locked the door.

When Osbon tried to re-enter by banging on the door, the co-pilot gave an order through the intercom to restrain Osbon, according to the documents, which don't mention Dowd by name. Passengers wrestled Osbon to the ground, and Dowd diverted the flight from New York to Amarillo, Texas. No one onboard was seriously injured.

Dowd's quick thinking and calm management of the emergency landing brought comparisons to `Miracle on the Hudson' Capt. Chesley Sullenberger. The pilot's bizarre behavior also drew references to another crewmember's behavior that JetBlue likely would like to forget.

In 2010, JetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater pulled the emergency chute on a flight after it landed at John F. Kennedy International Airport. He went on the public-address system, swore at a passenger, grabbed a beer and slid down onto the tarmac. He was sentenced to probation, counseling and substance abuse treatment for attempted criminal mischief.

JetBlue is encouraging the public to send messages to the crew of Flight 191 through its blog at http://blog.jetblue.com.

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FOXNews.com: North Carolina military post concert geared toward atheists

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North Carolina military post concert geared toward atheists
Mar 31st 2012, 14:03

FORT BRAGG, N.C. -- For the first time in history, a U.S. military base will play host to an event aimed at service personnel and their families who don't believe in God.

The Rock Beyond Belief concert, scheduled to happen Saturday at Fort Bragg, will bring together bands, speakers and events intended for families and young children.

The headline speaker for the event is Richard Dawkins, the British author and scientist who has become one of the world's most famous atheists.

Sgt. Justin Griffith, the lead organizer of the event, says members of the military who don't believe in God simply want their perspective recognized.

The concert was organized following an event at Bragg in 2010 sponsored by the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.

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FOXNews.com: Texas nurse convicted in bleach deaths case

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Texas nurse convicted in bleach deaths case
Mar 31st 2012, 14:43

LUFKIN, Texas - A former Texas nurse accused of killing five of her patients and injuring five others by injecting bleach into their kidney dialysis tubing was found guilty of capital murder Friday.

Kimberly Clark Saenz, 38, was fired in April 2008 after a rash of illnesses and deaths at a Lufkin dialysis clinic run by Denver-based health care giant DaVita Inc. She was charged a year later.

Her trial began March 5. Defense lawyers argued that Saenz was being targeted by the clinic's owner for faulty procedures at the facility, including improper water purification. They also suggested that officials at the clinic, about 125 miles northeast of Houston, fabricated evidence against Saenz. Prosecutors described claims Saenz was being set up by her employer as "absolutely ridiculous."

The mother of two now faces life in prison or a death sentence as the case moved to the punishment phase. Prosecutors had said they would seek the death penalty if Saenz was convicted.

Prosecutors had described Saenz as a depressed and disgruntled employee who complained about specific patients, including some of those who died or were injured. Her attorneys said she had no motive to kill any patients.

Two patients who were at the clinic on April 28, 2008, testified that they saw Saenz use syringes to draw bleach from a cleaning bucket and then inject it into the IV lines of two patients who subsequently died.

The licensed vocational nurse, on the job about eight months, was dismissed the following day and the clinic was shut down by DaVita and state health inspectors. It reopened about two months later.

Defense attorney Ryan Deaton argued in his questioning during the nearly four-week-long trial that Saenz and others used syringes rather than measuring cups for bleach to ensure precise amounts were being used for proper mixing of cleaning solutions.

Bleach is commonly used to disinfect plastic lines and other dialysis equipment at the clinic. Saenz's attorneys said she was spotted measuring bleach into a syringe because she wanted to put the right amount into cleaning water.

Former DaVita employees who testified for prosecutors told jurors that they never used syringes instead of measuring cups to ensure the proper amounts of bleach were being used in cleaning solutions. Dialysis patients spend up to three days a week tethered for hours to a machine that filters their blood because their kidneys can't do so.

Saenz was charged with one capital murder count accusing her of killing as many as five patients, and with five counts of aggravated assault for the injuries to the five other patients.

On the capital murder count, jurors could have found her guilty of the lesser charges of murder or aggravated assault.

Saenz didn't take the stand in her own defense. But in a recording played at trial, she could be heard testifying before a grand jury that she felt "railroaded" by the clinic and "would never inject bleach into a patient."

Investigators testified that they found Internet searches on Saenz's computer about bleach poisoning in blood and whether bleach could be detected in dialysis lines.

Saenz told the grand jury she had been concerned about the patients' deaths and looked up bleach poisoning references to see "if this was happening, what would be the side effects."

DaVita turned over more than 10,000 pages of records in the case. Through 2011, the company operated or provided services to 1,809 dialysis facilities in the U.S., serving some 142,000 patients and employing more than 41,000 people.

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FOXNews.com: New Jersey man cleared in 2003 attempted flag burning

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New Jersey man cleared in 2003 attempted flag burning
Mar 31st 2012, 14:34

NEWARK, N.J.-- Whenever Declan Devlin got in trouble with the law as a teenager, he usually pleaded guilty to what he'd done. But one accusation would haunt him for nearly a decade, because he knew he would never commit such an act: the burning of an American flag.

Devlin, now 25, was cleared Thursday by the same judge who had convicted him at age 16 for the attempted burning of American flags in a small northern New Jersey town, after another man came forward and admitted he was the culprit.

The incident had taken place on March 25, 2003, against a backdrop of patriotic fervor.

Someone tried to ignite a bundle of flags that was in the back of a municipal public works department truck as workers drove around affixing them to lampposts in support of U.S. troops fighting in Iraq.

Coming less than two years after the 9/11 attacks, the incident sparked a frenzy of negative publicity that raised questions about Devlin's mental capacity and even suggested he was linked to the Irish Republican Army.

"I was absolutely devastated, and scared, and angry and thinking obviously I didn't do this, and that's going to come out," Devlin recalled in a telephone interview Friday.

Devlin said he had pleaded guilty to other offenses as a teenager that he declined to specify, but he refused in this instance -- even though it wasn't criminal, but a disorderly persons charge that wouldn't carry heavy consequences.

"It really tore apart his family and his relationship to the community," said Ronald Kuby, Devlin's attorney for the current case. "People in the little town of Madison could deal with teen cigarette smoking, or occasional beer drinking or pot smoking, but the notion that, so soon after 9/11, someone from their community would burn a flag was really upsetting."

Even though fingerprints on a can of dry gas found at the scene did not match Devlin's, according to court records, identification by a state's witness led to his conviction on the charge. Devlin was sentenced to 50 months of community service by state Superior Court Family Division Judge Thomas Critchley, who admonished the teenager and called him ignorant of both "American and human history."

"I understand we united after 9/11, and I think it was healthy, but people rushed to judgment, and I think it added to the atmosphere and influenced the case," Devlin said. "The judge said at the time I was ignorant to the principles of America, and didn't appreciate the country I lived in, and that really upset me, I don't think it's fair to say that to a teenager."

Critchley said during Thursday's court hearing that he was impressed with Devlin's persistence in clearing his name.

Phone and email messages left for a spokesman for the Morris County Prosecutor's Office and for the judge were not returned.

Devlin, who lives in Madison, said he eventually outgrew his juvenile hijinks and built a successful career in real estate in New Jersey and New York City.

But the case still haunted him. He tried unsuccessfully over the years to enlist a lawyer to help him get it reopened, but two recent chance encounters improved his prospects. One was with the nationally known attorney Kuby inside the Manhattan building where both men had offices, and the other was with a friend who had heard that someone else had admitted to the flag burning.

On Thursday, 22-year-old Michael Sullivan of Chatham testified during the court hearing that he had set one flag on fire and tried to ignite others when he was 13. Not following news reports at the time, Sullivan said he never knew that Devlin had been charged. A phone message left for him was not returned Friday.

The statute of limitations has run out on the crime for Sullivan to be prosecuted, and Devlin said he is grateful to him for having the courage to step forward and grant him the peace of mind he has long been seeking.

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FOXNews.com: Massachusetts teens hospitalized after head-on crash with school bus day of prom

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Massachusetts teens hospitalized after head-on crash with school bus day of prom
Mar 31st 2012, 14:21

Four teenagers were hurt in a crash on Friday morning involving an empty school bus and BMW sedan in Kingston, Mass, MyFoxBoston reports.

The head-on wreck happened at Lake Street and Chipman Way. The students, three girls and a boy, are juniors from Silver Lake Regional High School. Investigators say the red BMW they were in crossed the center line and crashed head on with the bus.

Teens hospitalized after head-on crash with school bus in Kingston: MyFoxBOSTON.com

Their conditions are considered very serious. Three were flown to a Boston hospital, while the fourth student was transported to a hospital by ambulance.

All three passengers were unconscious when emergency crews got the scene. The driver was alert, but trapped inside the car and appeared to be the most injured.

The female bus driver was also taken to a local hospital by ambulance. No names were released.

The teens were headed to school when the accident happened. SKYFOX helicopter video showed the entire front end of the car under the bus. The front axle on the bus snapped, the wheel turned around completely.

Town officials say the accident occurred on the same day as the school's junior prom. Silver Lake Regional decided to go ahead as planned and hold their prom on Friday night.

Click here for more on this story from MyFoxBoston

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FOXNews.com: Amber alert issued for two kidnapped girls in Houston

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Amber alert issued for two kidnapped girls in Houston
Mar 31st 2012, 13:23

HOUSTON -- An amber alert was in effect Saturday for two girls allegedly kidnapped in Houston, KTRK-TV reported.

Jayla Gasaway, 4, and Cadence Mills, 2, were kidnapped about 2:30am local time Saturday in southeastern Houston, police said, adding that the girls were taken by their mother's ex-boyfriend Courtney Dickerson, 22.

Dickerson was last seen driving a gold 2003 Chevrolet Tracker with Texas license plates.
Police said Dickerson was a registered sex offender.

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FOXNews.com: Trayvon Martin funeral director: no signs of fight

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Trayvon Martin funeral director: no signs of fight
Mar 31st 2012, 12:53

The funeral director who oversaw slain teenager Trayvon Martin's burial says the body bore no signs of a fight.

Richard Kurtz says there were no notable marks on Martin's hands, face or body other than the gunshot wound that killed him. Kurtz says he expected to see some marks if Martin had been in a fight.

The 17-year-old Martin was killed Feb. 26 by neighborhood watch volunteer George

Zimmerman in the city of Sanford, where Martin was visiting. Zimmerman claims Martin physically attacked him after Zimmerman questioned why he was in the neighborhood.

Kurtz says the condition of Martin's body raises questions about Zimmerman's self-defense claim. Zimmerman has not been charged, leading to racially-tinged protests around the country. Martin was black; Zimmerman's father is white and is mother Hispanic.

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FOXNews.com: Documents show evidence piled up in Utah disappearance

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Documents show evidence piled up in Utah disappearance
Mar 31st 2012, 11:16

TACOMA, Wash. –  In the quest to figure out what happened to Susan Powell in 2009, Utah authorities compiled a heap of evidence -- finding blood in the family home, an eerie hand-written "will" and a young son who bluntly said that mom was dead.

Despite all of the information, investigators with West Valley City police continued to say Friday that they are treating the case as a missing-persons matter. They have never named a suspect or filed charges in Powell's disappearance, even though her husband was linked with much of the evidence and scrutiny.

Josh Powell killed himself and their two young children in a gas-fueled inferno two months ago.

A prosecutor in Washington state, examining the unsealed files for the first time Friday, said he thought there was enough evidence to charge Josh Powell with murder.

"There is direct evidence. There is circumstantial evidence. There is motive," said Pierce County prosecutor Mark Lindquist. "There is everything but the body."

The documents, used as justification to search the home where Josh Powell was staying last year, detail a widespread case that investigators had built.

Shortly after Susan Powell disappeared, authorities found blood evidence on a floor next to a sofa and determined that it was Susan Powell's. The sofa appeared to have been recently cleaned, and two fans had been set up to blow on it.

Investigators found several life insurance policies on Susan Powell that totaled $1.5 million and determined that Josh Powell had filed paperwork to withdraw her retirement account money about 10 days after her disappearance.

The documents describe Josh Powell as unwilling to help in the investigation.

A safety deposit box used by Susan Powell had a hand-written letter titled "Last will & testament for Susan Powell," according to the documents. She wrote in that letter that she did not trust her husband and that they'd been having marital troubles for four years.

The letter also said that "if Susan Powell dies it may not be an accident, even if it looks like one," according to the documents.

Josh Powell always maintained his innocence and said he had taken their boys, then 2 and 4, on a midnight camping trip in freezing temperatures the night she disappeared.

One of the children, Charlie, told investigators in an interview shortly after his mom disappeared that she had gone on the camping trip with them but did not come back home and he did not know why, according to the files. A few weeks later, he told a church teacher with no emotion: "My mom is dead."

Investigators had found a gas can, tarps and a shovel in Josh Powell's vehicle shortly after the investigation began. Susan Powell's cellphone was also in the car, and Josh Powell "did not have an answer as to why," according to the documents. One person interviewed by police said Powell had once made comments about how to kill someone and dispose of the body.

Susan Powell's purse, keys, credit cards and other belongings were found in the couple's master bedroom.

West Valley City police on Friday refused to expand on any details revealed in the search warrant because the investigation is still ongoing, said Sgt. Mike Powell, who is not related to the Powell family.

"This case began as a missing person case and remains as such," he said. "But due to the suspicious nature ... murder and kidnapping have not been excluded."

Although police have only identified Josh Powell as a "person of interest," Sgt. Powell didn't rule out eventual charges against his father, Steven Powell.

Josh Powell moved with the boys to Steven Powell's home in Puyallup, Wash., but the grandfather was arrested and charged with voyeurism and child pornography last September.

The boys were placed with Susan Powell's parents for their safety.

On Feb. 5 -- a few days after incestuous images found on Josh Powell's computer prompted a judge to order him to undergo a psycho-sexual evaluation -- he locked a social worker out of his rental house, attacked the boys with a hatchet and ignited the home in an explosive, gas-fueled inferno. The social worker was not injured.

Pierce County sheriff's spokesman Ed Troyer said his detectives would have arrested Powell "a long time ago" if this had been their case. He said a detective in Washington state was aware of the details gathered and local authorities had been anticipating that Utah investigators would pursue an arrest.

"Obviously, it's frustrating," Troyer said. "We were always waiting for the phone call to go arrest him."

The documents also describe how Steven Powell had an apparent obsession with his daughter-in-law. A locked cabinet in Steve Powell's bedroom contained multiple images of Susan Powell, including some of her in her underwear. Other images showed nude female bodies with Susan Powell's face copied onto them.

Another image showed Steven Powell masturbating to an image of Susan Powell.

Susan Powell wrote in her personal journals that she did not want Steven Powell involved in her life and wished that Josh Powell would sever ties with him. She described Steven Powell as a pedophile.

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FOXNews.com: Iraqi-American woman bludgeoned to death in her California home brought to Iraq

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Iraqi-American woman bludgeoned to death in her California home brought to Iraq
Mar 31st 2012, 09:18

NAJAF, Iraq –  The family of an Iraqi-American woman found bludgeoned to death in her California home last week, with a threatening note left beside her, brought her body to Iraq on Saturday for burial.

A plane carrying the Iraqi-born Shaima Alawadi landed in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, south of Baghdad.

Two police cars escorted a pickup truck carrying her casket, draped in an Iraqi flag, from the airport to the "Valley of Peace," a large cemetery where many Shiites prefer to bury their dead.

The cemetery, thought to be the world's largest, is located close to the tomb of Imam Ali, a cousin of Islam's seventh century Prophet Muhammad and founder of the Shiite faith. Mourners offered a prayer for Alawadi's soul at the tomb's mosque before they took her body into the cemetery for burial.

The 32-year-old Alawadi, a mother of five, was found unconscious by her teenage daughter in the dining room of the family's home in El Cajon, one of America's largest enclaves of Iraqi immigrants. Three days later, she was taken off life support.

A note saying: "Go back to your country, you terrorist," was found near her body, the daughter told a local TV station.

El Cajon police declined to disclose the contents of the note but said it had led investigators to regard the killing as a possible hate crime.

"We are shocked by this criminal act against my daughter who called for love and tolerance," said Alawadi's father, Nabil Alawadi.

From the funeral, relative Haidar Alawadi called on the Iraqi government to take quick action to press U.S. authorities to reveal the results of the investigation into Alawadi's killing. No suspects have been identified or apprehended so far.

"We are totally surprised at the attitude of the Iraqi government, which has not taken any action. What we want is the truth about this ugly crime," he said.

The plane that brought Alawadi's body home to Iraq was dispatched by Iraq's Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

The victim and her family left Iraq in the early 1990s after a failed Shiite uprising against Saddam Hussein, living in Saudi Arabian refugee camps before coming to the U.S. Saddam's troops had hanged Alawadi's uncle.

The family arrived in the Detroit area in 1993 and later moved to San Diego. Shaima Alawadi was a religious Shiite Muslim who wore a hijab and volunteered at the local mosque.

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FOXNews.com: Officials expand search for missing Colorado ultrarunner in New Mexico

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Officials expand search for missing Colorado ultrarunner in New Mexico
Mar 31st 2012, 06:47

GILA, N.M. –  Authorities expanded their search for Colorado ultrarunner Micah True on Friday after the 58-year-old went missing near Gila, N.M., in the state's southwest.

True, from Boulder, Colo., was last seen Tuesday morning at the Gila Wilderness Lodge when he went for a run, the Boulder Daily Camera reported. The lodge's owners reported him missing Wednesday morning after he failed to return.

Incident commander Frankie Benoist told the newspaper that 14 search and rescue teams continued searching for True on Friday, assisted by tracking dogs, horse teams, a National Guard helicopter and a fixed-wing aircraft.

True was the subject of Chris McDougall's 2009 best-seller "Born to Run," which chronicled his time running in Mexico's Copper Canyon with a local tribe known for their grueling running feats.

McDougall joined the search parties Friday.

"It's some intense wilderness, but I can't believe that so many people can't find him," he said. "We've gone over every place there is, and we can't figure out where he could possibly be."

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FOXNews.com: Lottery official says winning Mega Millions ticket sold in Maryland, could be others nationwide

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Lottery official says winning Mega Millions ticket sold in Maryland, could be others nationwide
Mar 31st 2012, 06:21

Maryland lottery officials announced early Saturday that their state sold what could become the world's largest lottery payout of all-time, but it wasn't immediately clear if that ticket holder would get sole possession of the $640 million jackpot or have to split it with other winners.

Carole Everett, director of communications for the Maryland Lottery, said the winning Mega Millions ticket was purchased at a retailer in Baltimore County. She said it's too early to know any other information about the lucky ticket holder or whether others were sold elsewhere in the nation.

The winning numbers were 02-04-23-38-46, and the Mega Ball 23.

National lottery officials were expecting to list early Saturday on their website how many winning tickets were sold and from what states, but Maryland sent out its news release and called media organizations hours before the scheduled announcement. The headline of its news release said the winning sale was "one of several nationwide," but Everett told The Associated Press she couldn't immediately confirm any others.

Everett said the last time a ticket from the state won a major national jackpot was 2008 when a ticket sold for $24 million.

"We're thrilled," she said. "We're due and excited."

The estimated jackpot dwarfs the previous $390 million record, which was split in 2007 by two winners who bought tickets in Georgia and New Jersey.

Americans spent nearly $1.5 billion for a chance to hit the jackpot, which amounts to a $462 million lump sun and around $347 million after federal tax withholding. With the jackpot odds at 1 in 176 million, it would cost $176 million to buy up every combination. Under that scenario, the strategy would win $171 million less if your state also withholds taxes.

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Friday, March 30, 2012

FOXNews.com: Mother faces contempt, jail for baptizing children

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Mother faces contempt, jail for baptizing children
Mar 31st 2012, 02:46

NASHVILLE, Tenn. –  A Shelby County mother faces contempt-of-court charges and possible jail time for baptizing her two children without the knowledge or consent of her ex-husband.

This week the Tennessee Court of Appeals said Lauren Jarrell must face a criminal contempt hearing for violating a court order that said major decisions regarding the religious upbringing of her two children should be made jointly with the children's father.

Both parents are Christian. Emmett Blake Jarrell, the father, is a member of the United Methodist Church, and she's a Presbyterian.

The father, according to court records, thought the children should be baptized when they are older and better able to understand the significance of the baptismal ceremony. The couple, according to court records, had even consulted a minister when they were married because they couldn't agree what age was best for the kids to be baptized. Records show the children will be 5 and 7 next month.

"Obviously she knew that the father did not want the children baptized at that age and she did that without telling him," Memphis attorney Any Amundsen, who is not involved in the case, said of the mother. "She violated the court order."

The Court of Appeals decision sides with the father, who had asked that his ex-wife be convicted of criminal contempt after discovering that she baptized the kids against his wishes.

A lower court has already found the mother in contempt of court. The appellate court decision overturned that decision and said criminal contempt proceedings are more appropriate because the mother can't undo the baptisms.

Legal experts disagree on whether the appellate court decision is treading into the forbidden territory of deciding spiritual doctrine or is just upholding the law when a parent is accused of flagrantly violating a court order.

The parents could not be reached for comment. Their attorneys did not return calls to The Associated Press.

Court records show that the mother argued that it was wrong for the lower court to find her in contempt it was tantamount to preferring the father's religious views on baptism over hers.

But the Court of Appeals disagreed.

"Mother is correct that courts `must maintain strict neutrality in cases involving religious disputes between divorced parents' and they may not `prefer the religious views of one parent over another unless one parent's religious beliefs and practices threaten the health and well-being of the child," Judge Alan E. Highers wrote. "However, simply put, this is not a religious dispute." Highers said the court is only being asked to determine whether the mother can be found in contempt for failing to follow the court order.

Nashville attorney Helen Rogers says the courts ought to stay away from these kinds of decisions.

"How would a court decide between baptizing a Presbyterian and a Methodist or a Catholic," Rogers asked. She wondered whether a court could step in and order the child of a Muslim and a Jew to attend a synagogue or a mosque. The problem, she said, is that the standard parenting plan in Tennessee orders many parents to mediation if they can't jointly decide on major decisions involving religious upbringing. If they can't agree even after mediation, she said, it ultimately means that a court has to decide.

"The bigger kind of global look at this is should religious decision-making be a private matter or should it be something that a court orders to begin with," Rogers asked.

However, Amundsen said the courts are only following state law, which says the courts have to consider religious upbringing when it comes to parental decision making.

Both attorneys said it's not unusual for parents to disagree on religious upbringing.

If the mother is convicted, she could face up to 20 days in jail and a $100 fine.

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FOXNews.com: 1 dead, 6 hospitalized after drive-by shooting outside Miami funeral home

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1 dead, 6 hospitalized after drive-by shooting outside Miami funeral home
Mar 31st 2012, 03:52

MIAMI –  One person was shot dead and another six people were injured in an apparent drive-by shooting outside a funeral home in Miami on Friday night.

Local station WSVN-TV reported the shooting occurred as mourners gathered for the funeral of a boy who died recently.

Three of the injured victims were airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital, while three were taken to another hospital. The seventh victim is believed to have died at the scene.

The Miami Herald reported that a person opened fire from inside a car driving past the mourners outside the funeral home.

No further details were immediately available.

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FOXNews.com: Mega Millions numbers to be drawn, as Americans spend $1.5B for a chance at massive jackpot

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Mega Millions numbers to be drawn, as Americans spend $1.5B for a chance at massive jackpot
Mar 31st 2012, 02:14

Across the country, Americans plunked down an estimated $1.5 billion on the longest of long shots: an infinitesimally small chance to win what could end up being the single biggest lottery payout the world has ever seen.

But forget about how the $640 million Mega Millions jackpot could change the life of the winner. It's a collective wager that could fund a presidential campaign several times over, make a dent in struggling state budgets or take away the gas worries and grocery bills for thousands of middle-class citizens.

And it's a cheap investment for the chance of a big reward, no matter how long the odds -- 1 in 176 million.

"Twenty to thirty dollars won't hurt," said Elvira Bakken of Las Vegas. "I think it just gives us a chance of maybe winning our dream."

So what exactly would happen if the country spent that $1.5 billion on something other than a distant dream?

For starters, it could cure the everyday worries of hundreds of thousands of American families hit by the Great Recession. It costs an average of $6,129 to feed the typical family for a year -- meaning the cash spent on tickets could fill up the plates of 238,000 households.

As gas prices climb faster than stations can change the numbers on the signs, the money spent on tickets could fill the tanks of 685,000 households annually.

Or it could play politics. So far in this campaign, Republicans and President Barack Obama have spent $348.5 million. The amount spent on Mega Millions tickets could cover that tab four times over.

Could the money dig governments out of debt? That's a problem that even staggering ticket sales can't solve. It could trim this year's expected $1.3 trillion federal deficit by just over a tenth of 1 percent. In Illinois, the money would disappear just as fast into that state's $8 billion deficit.

On a personal level, that much money staggers. Giving $1.46 billion to a broker could purchase 2.4 million shares of Apple stock. (It would also be enough to buy about 2.4 million iPads at the starting price of $499. That's almost as many as the 3 million new iPads that Apple has already sold.)

Or consider the whimsical: A family of up to 12 could live for more than a century at Musha Cay, magician David Copperfield's $37,000-a-night private island resort in the Exuma Cays of the Caribbean.

For a more celestial vacation, the nearly $1.5 billion wagered could purchase about 7,300 tourist tickets for a ride into space aboard Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo. And it would pay for 26 rides for U.S. astronauts to the International Space Station aboard the Russian Soyuz spacecraft.

It would even buy a stake in pop culture. Want to influence the next winner of American Idol? If it costs a quarter to text in a vote to Ryan Seacrest, and it takes 122 million votes to win as it did last season, the money could control the outcome of the next 47 seasons.

For the states that participate, the money spent on lotto tickets is hardly a waste. It doesn't all end up as the winner's personal fortune -- much of it is used by states to fund education and other social service programs, which is why advocates promote the lottery.

Though the specifics vary among the 42 participating states and the District of Columbia, only about half of ticket sales go into the actual jackpot. Another 35 percent goes to support government services and programs, while the rest funds lottery operating costs.

On Friday, the lottery estimated that total ticket sales for this jackpot, which has been building up since Jan. 28, will be about $1.46 billion, said Kelly Cripe, a spokeswoman for the Texas Lottery Commission.

You're about 20,000 times more likely to die in a car crash than win the lottery, but that doesn't matter to most people.

"Part of it is hope. ... The average person basically has no chance of making it really big, and buying a lottery ticket is a way of raising the ceiling on what could possibly happen to you, however unlikely it may be," said George Loewenstein, a professor of economics and psychology at Carnegie Mellon University who has studied how rich and poor consumers make a choice to buy lottery tickets.

The odds are much better that someone will begin their weekend a winner. Aaron Abrams, a mathematician at Emory University, said he calculated that there was only a 6 percent chance that no one would hold the winning numbers.

"Every time the jackpot gets higher, more and more people buy tickets, which makes it more and more likely that someone will win," Abrams said. "So the chance that it rolls over this many times in a row is very small. It's quite a rare event."

The estimated jackpot dwarfs the previous $390 million record, which was split in 2007 by two winners who bought tickets in Georgia and New Jersey.

The rarity of Friday's jackpot was fueling the fervor. Lines formed at grocery stores, gas stations, liquor stops and other venues across the country.

In Arizona, a cafDe worker reported selling $2,600 worth of tickets to one buyer. In Indiana, hundreds lined up for a giveaway of free tickets. Hundreds from Utah and Las Vegas streamed in to neighboring California or Arizona to buy tickets because their states don't participate.

Accountant Ray Lousteau, who bought 55 Mega Millions tickets Friday in New Orleans, knows buying that many tickets doesn't mathematically increase his odds, and that his $55 could have gone elsewhere. He spent it anyway.

"Mathematically, it doesn't make a difference, and intellectually we know that. But for some reason buying more tickets makes you feel more lucky," Lousteau said. "Even people who know better are apt to feel that way."

In Chicago, Peter Muiznieks bought a ticket at a liquor store. He knows his chance of winning is a long shot, and that the money the country is spending on tickets could go elsewhere. He still couldn't help himself, and laughed as the apparent contradiction of his opinion and his actions.

"Lottery and games of chance are a stupidity tax and the more we all buy into this, the less rational we are as a society," he said.

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