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Hero Uses Ladder to Save Neighbor From Fire

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A man who rescued his neighbor from a burning building in Simi Valley said it was one of his "best days."

Joe Magana sprang into action when he saw the man ready to jump from a third-story window to escape the flames consuming his home on the 2700 block of Stearns Street Monday.

The painter told the 29-year-old, who asked not to be identified, to hold on, and went to fetch his 24 foot extension ladder.

"The look on his face was he was going over the edge, and so we said, 'Stay, don't jump,'" Mangana said. "It was take care of business now or face the consequences of him possibly jumping."

When he got back the man was hanging from a window, but he managed to erect his ladder just in time for the victim to climb down. He was checked for medical issues on scene and released.

"It was really tough, but to save him on the other end was one of the best days I've had for a long time," said Mangana.

And the man's father, Nima Vazirzaedh, was overjoyed Mangana had saved his son from the fire, which claimed the life of his three pet Chihuahuas.

"He saved my son. If it wasn't for him he probably would have fallen off," Vazirzaedh said.

It took a total of 39 firefighters to extinguish the blaze in 35 minutes at 12:13 p.m.

"When we see someone step up like this, put their life in danger in order to get in there and save one of their neighbors, it's just really impressive," Capt. Mike Lindbery, of Ventura County Fire Department, said.

Magana will be nominated for a lifesaving medal for his efforts, Lindbery said.


Lakers Season: T-Minus 20 Games

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Sixty-two games into the 82-game 2014-15 NBA season, the Los Angeles Lakers have accumulated only 16 wins to go along with 46 losses. For the LA Lakers, the good news and the bad news reads the same: 20 more games to go.

On yet another losing streak--the Lakers enter Tuesday's game against the Detroit Pistons on a five-game losing skid--the Lakers have experienced far more losing than winning. However, the Lakers still have games against several teams hovering at or neat the bottom of the league. With two games against Philadelphia, a couple of contests against the Minnesota Timberwolves, a pair of games against the Sacramento Kings and a visit from the New York Knicks still on the calendar, the Lakers may yet go on to avoid the worst mark in franchise history.

While Mike D'Antoni may have set the dubious record for the worst season by the Los Angeles Lakers with 27 wins and 55 losses, the Minneapolis Lakers once had a season where they won 19 out of 72 games. Entering Tuesday's game, the 2014/15 Lakers have a winning percentage of 25.8 percent. The 1957/58 Minneapolis Lakers won 26.4 percent of their games, so the modern day Lakers are on their way to being the worst team in the storied history of the 16-time NBA champions.

Laying claim to five of those championships, Kobe Bryant expects to be watching this group of Lakers stumble to the finish line from the bench. According to Lakers coach Byron Scott, Bryant will be present for all remaining home games. Counting the Clippers "away" game, Bryant expects to attend 12 of the remaining 20 games in the season.

While Bryant will not be traveling with the team, rookie Julius Randle will hit the road for the first time in his young professional career. On Monday, Randle was cleared to perform on-court basketball work without contact. With only 20 games to go, Randle will not be back this season, and the injured rookie's slow and stable recovery making news at this point points to eyes already focusing on next season.

After all, the 2014/15 Lakers are on the doorstep of being officially eliminated from the postseason. If the Lakers lose to the Pistons, Oklahoma City and New Orleans can both lose out and still finish with 47 losses. If the Lakers miraculously win out after losing to Detroit, the tiebreaker for the final playoff spot would be based on head-to-head record. Not surprisingly, the Lakers have already lost their season series against both teams in contention, so, the Lakers can officially start planning early May getaways.

Spoiler Alert: the Lakers are not about to win out, and the Oklahoma City Thunder and New Orleans Pelicans should easily win at least one more game before the end. Official or not, the Lakers have been out of contention for the playoffs for about 20 games now. A few "I told you so" types would probably say the Lakers fell out of contention at the start of training came. Starting the season 1-9 certainly didn't help convince the critics.

In any case, the Lakers have hit the thee-quarter pole, and the chance to win the race is long gone. The team would need to finish 11-9 to tie the 2013/14 D'Antoni Lakers for the worst mark in the history of the LA Lakers. Based on the 62-game sample, once can safely say the 2014/15 Lakers will finish as the worst team in LA Lakers history. 

In order to avoid finishing as the worst team in Lakers' history--Minneapolis and Los Angeles--the 2014/15 Lakers will need to finish the season 6-14.  While it may not be a slam dunk, six wins in 20 games seems possible. The Lakers will strive to reach the modest goal of not being the worst team in franchise history when they take on the Detroit Pistons at Staples Center on Tuesday night. Tip-off is at 7:30 p.m. Pacific Time.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Bus Crashes Off Embankment Near GWB, 2 Hurt: FDNY

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Two people were seriously hurt when a small bus veered off the road, smashed through a stone wall and careened down an embankment near the George Washington Bridge in New York City Tuesday morning, fire officials say.

The bus was heading on a ramp connecting the Henry Hudson Parkway to the bridge on Manhattan's west side when it slid down the embankment north of Fort Washington Park, authorities say. 

The FDNY says two people were hurt in the crash. Their injuries were considered serious, but were not believed to be life-threatening, the department said. Chopper 4 captured two people who appeared to be adults being secured on stretchers, and the FDNY said they were the only two aboard.

Aerial footage showed the bus sitting upright in a small wooded area as about a dozen firefighters picked their way around the snow and branches. Above, yellow caution tape cordoned off a stone wall that appeared to be destroyed.  

The entire front of the white bus was crumpled from some type of impact, though it wasn't clear if the damage was caused by the barrier or a tree. Brooklyn Transportation Corporation was written on the side of the vehicle; reached by phone, the company said it had no information at this time. 

It's not clear what caused the crash. No other vehicles appeared to be involved.

Traffic backed up to the Henry Hudson Bridge. 

-Jen Maxfield contributed to this report



Photo Credit: NYPD

NTSB Issues Preliminary Report in Ford Plane Crash

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A vintage airplane piloted by "Star Wars" actor Harrison Ford lost engine power after takeoff, leading to a forced landing last week on a Southern California golf course, according to a preliminary report issued Tuesday by the National Transportation Safety Board.

The report confirms previous accounts of Thursday's crash landing at Penmar Golf Club that left the 72-year-old Ford hospitalized. Details regarding why the single-engine World War II vintage plane lost power after taking off from Santa Monica Municipal Airport were not included in the preliminary report.

A final report could take months to complete.

The pilot of the Ryan Aeronautical ST3KR, registered to MG Aviation Inc., reported engine failure after takeoff and turned back toward the airport, according to the NTSB.

"The airplane subsequently struck the top of a tall tree prior to impacting the ground in an open area of a golf course, about 800 feet southwest of the approach end of runway 3," the NTSB said in a statement Tuesday.

Ford's injuries were non-life threatening, his publicist said.

Ford received his pilot's license in the 1990s. In 2001, he rescued a missing Boy Scout with his helicopter. Nearly a year before, he rescued an ailing mountain climber in Jackson, Wyoming. In 2000 in Lincoln, Nebraska, a gust of wind sent a six-seat plane Ford was piloting off the runway. He and his passenger were not injured.



Photo Credit: Toni Guinyard

Burger King Drops Soft Drinks From Kids' Meals

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Burger King is no longer promoting soft drinks on its kids' meal menus.

"We have removed fountain drinks from our kids' menu boards and they are no longer merchandised as part of kids' meals," the company said in an emailed statement to NBC.

The company will instead suggest the meals be accompanied with 100% apple juice, fat-free milk, or low fat chocolate milk.

The menu change does not completely prevent customers from getting sodas with the meals. Customers will still be able to request for a soft drink to accompany kids' meals, the company said.

Advocacy groups like MomsRising.org had been pressuring Burger King and other food chains to make the change. 

"Parents and families across the country are applauding as one by one, restaurants are listening to parents and public health experts and starting to do their part to help keep America’s kids healthy,” MomsRising.org director Monifa Bandale said in a statement.

Competitors McDonald's and Wendy’s have announced similar menu changes. 



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Church Recovers Silver Stolen by Repentant Thief

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A church in Carlsbad has recovered all its silver stolen during a February break-in after the suspect was pulled over for an expired license plate.

Carlsbad police say Jeremy Rayburn, 24, broke into the St. Michael’s by-the-Sea Episcopal Church in the 2700 block of Carlsbad Boulevard on Feb. 18. That was Ash Wednesday, a holy day for many Christians.

During the burglary, the onyx tabernacle and communion hosts were smashed, and more than a dozen silver chalices and decanters were taken.

“Lord have mercy,” said Rev. Doran Stambaugh, the church’s rector. “I mean, who breaks into a church and steals all this stuff?”

On Sunday, a San Diego County Sheriff’s deputy pulled Rayburn over in Vista for expired plates, but he soon arrested him on suspicion of driving under the influence of marijuana and heroin.

As the deputy investigated, he noticed some unusual items in Rayburn’s trunk. He saw they were inscribed with “St. Michael’s Church.”

The deputy called a Carlsbad Police detective, who helped confirm the silver did belong to the church. They say Rayburn confessed to breaking into St. Michael’s.

“He said that he had been driving around with the material in his car for 19 days and felt that pawning it was just as bad as stealing it,” said sheriff’s spokeswoman Jan Caldwell.

He was arrested and booked into the Vista Detention Facility on suspicion of burglary and vandalism. He has since been released on bail and is scheduled to appear in court on March 17.

Rayburn also tried to make amends with the church, Stambaugh said, returning all the silver.

“He showed great courage to be able to stand there in front of me and say what he did and apologize in his way,” said the rector.

Man Accused of Knowingly Spreading HIV Changes Plea

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The man accused of intentionally spreading HIV to an unsuspecting partner pleaded no contest to a violating a state health code the day his trial was set to begin.

Thomas Miguel Guerra, 29, changed his plea Monday and now faces six months in jail and a $1,000 fine at his April 13 sentencing, according to the San Diego City Attorney’s office. This is San Diego County’s first prosecution of willful HIV transmission.

Guerra previously pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor health and safety violation which forbids anyone with a contagious, infectious or communicable disease from willfully exposing someone else to it.

“Mr. Guerra pleaded no contest on my advice, although he’s always denied what he’s been accused of and continues to deny it," said Dan Rodriguez, Guerra’s attorney, in a statement.

His ex-boyfriend says the defendant intentionally deceived him about having HIV. The two started dating in April 2013, and Guerra claimed to be HIV negative, urging his boyfriend to have unprotected sex, the city attorney’s office says.

The unnamed victim, who was HIV-negative at that time, says he later asked Guerra to go get tested together. Guerra tested positive for HIV, and a week later, so did the victim, prosecutors say.

His boyfriend soon discovered message logs on Guerra’s computer, dating back to 2007, in which he references being HIV positive. Guerra even joked in text messages about having HIV and other people not knowing it, according to an arrest warrant.

The couple broke up in August 2013, and the health code violation was brought against Guerra a year later. As he was prosecuted, a judge ordered Guerra to stay off dating websites, specifically the gay dating app Grindr.

The man who was dating Guerra at the time of his arrest said he was shocked to hear the charges against him. As the two dated for a year, the man, who did not want to be identified, said it was like living in a Lifetime movie because the suspect was so caring. 

"And to go from hours away from wanting to propose to him to learning it's a Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde scenario," he said, "it's hard for me to see this man is evil."

This boyfriend said he became HIV positive right before he started dating Guerra, but he told NBC 7 Guerra lied to him about his status.

He then found a texts on Guerra's phone, bragging about infecting people. He said that's why he broke up with Guerra. "I do believe there is some evil in him. It's almost sociopathic," the man told NBC 7. "He doesn't seem to care about the pain he's caused people."

He was granted a restraining order against the suspect on Oct. 28.

City Attorney Jan Goldsmith said this is the first successful prosecution of this kind of case in the state of California since the statute was adopted 20 years ago -- as far as they could find.

"What's important to us is that this law has finally been enforced and we can get this message out," said Goldsmith.

NBC 7 went to Guerra's last known address. A woman there told us he was not available to comment on this story.



Photo Credit: NBC 7

"Jaws of Life" Help Save Trapped Oceanside Dog

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Firefighters were able to save a local dog stuck in a sticky situation Sunday after he wiggled in between storage containers in Oceanside. 

A 12-year-old Rhodesian Ridgeback wedged himself between two storage containers on an elementary school playground around noon Sunday.

A caller reporter their dog, Spike, had run between the containers while playing with kids and got stuck when he tried to get out by walking further between them. Six feet into the gap, the dog got stuck in the space.

The containers, filled with supplies for South Oceanside Elementary School on South Horne Street, were located with less than a foot of space between them.

Oceanside and Carlsbad firefighters helped the owners with freeing the dog after the owners could not get him out with the staff at the Oceanside Unified School District.

“Jaws of Life” from a ladder truck helped save the pup, firefighters said, and moved the containers six inches.

The firefighters turned off their equipment and moved it away to let Spike walk out on his own.

A few moments later, Spike’s tail was slapping the edges of the container as he walked out on his own.



Photo Credit: Oceanside Fire Department

Woman Killed in Malibu Hit-and-Run Crash

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A woman was killed Tuesday morning in Malibu when a hit-and-run driver crashed into her as she was stretching near the car she had been traveling in on the Pacific Coast Highway, officials said.

The woman, who recently celebrated her 21st birthday, was in a car with friends on the northbound lanes of the busy coastal highway near the intersection of PCH and Ramirez Canyon Road at about 5:30 a.m. The vehicle pulled over and she got out to stretch.

A driver fatally struck her and fled the area, she died at the scene. 

A male suspect, also in his 20s, was arrested in connection with the hit-and-run about an hour later after turning himself in to deputies who were stationed about 10 miles from the crash site in Agoura Hills. 

"He knew the gig was over," said Sgt. Philip Brooks, a spokesman from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, Malibu/Lost Hills Station.

His vehicle sustained major damage, including a cracked winshield, he added. 

Two of the northbound lanes were closed on PCH after the collision. It was unclear when they would reopen the roadway.

This is a developing story, refresh for updates.

One Critically Injured in Four-Vehicle Pileup

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A driver was traveling at what investigators described as "freeway speeds" and ran a red light before a four-vehicle crash at a San Fernando Valley intersection that left six injured, including one person in critical condition.

The pileup crash happened at the intersection of Van Nuys Boulevard and Victory Boulevard just after midnight in Van Nuys, the Los Angeles Police Department said.

One of the cars overturned, leaving two females trapped inside. It took firefighters more than 30 minutes to free them from the vehicle. The driver of a Chevrolet Trailblazer, who is in her mid-20s, was in critical condition with life-threatening injuries.

The 19-year-old driver of a Volkswagen Passat, who is believed to have caused the accident, was in  serious condition. He is believed to have been driving east on Victory Boulevard at freeway speeds and then collided with the Trailblazer, police said.

"There was a tremendous amount of damage consistent with what we see in freeway speeds," said LAPD detective Bill Bustos. "This is a 35-mph zone, and all we know right now indicates it was a very high rate of speed."

He was given a roadside sobriety test and officers are hoping to interview him for more information. His male passenger, who is a minor, was also in serious condition.

The driver of a minivan and the driver of a Camry were also injured.

Investigators said one of the drivers ran a red light, causing the pileup. The intersection was closed for the investigation and it was unknown when it would reopen.



Photo Credit: LoudLabs

Mom Shot TV Kids Were Watching: PD

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A woman in a northwest Chicago suburb fired a rifle at the television as her three kids watched it because she didn't like how much TV they were watching, police say.

Jennifer S. Ullery, 40, of Algonquin, pleaded not guilty Monday to a felony and three misdemeanors, the Northwest Herald reported.

Ullery told police she shot the television because was upset with how much TV her children were watching and because she didn't like the program they were watching at the time, police told the Herald. The children are 6, 11 and 15 years old.

Authorities told the Northwest Herald they did not know how many shots were fired at the television from the Ruger .22-caliber rifle.

Ullery, of the 3000 block of Talaga Drive, was charged with one felony count of discharge of a firearm and three misdemeanor counts of endangering the life of a child.

After Ullery was arrested, the children were placed in the care of another family member.

The incident allegedly happened Jan. 20, but the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services were first notified Feb. 9.



Photo Credit: Algonquin Police

State Issues Audit of LADWP Billing System Rollout

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The rollout of the Department of Water and Power's billing system, which resulted in some customers receiving wildly inflated bills and others receiving no bills at all, could wind up costing ratepayers more than $200 million, according to a state audit released Tuesday.

The audit also found that as of November, the utility was still trying to collect more than $681 million from customers for past-due bills, largely due to the botched system.

Read: State Auditor's Full Report

"The department originally budgeted $87 million for implementing CIS (customer information system), however, it more than doubled that budget to nearly $181 million over time," according to the report by the California State Auditor. "Nonetheless, immediately after CIS's launch, it became clear that the system was not yet ready and that the department's decision to implement it was questionable at best.

"Consequently, the department's customers began complaining of late utility bills, unwarranted shut-off notices and excessive wait times to speak with customer service representatives."

Auditors found that the department had spent $187 million implementing and stabilizing the CIS system by September 2014, and its inability to collect on past-due accounts "could add in excess of $40 million to CIS's overall price tag."

The LADWP issued a statement in which General Manager Marcie Edwards said the agency agrees with the auditor's recommendations, but finds fault with the basis for making them and cited an independent investigation involving the consulting firm hired to implement the new customer billing system. Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer announced last week that his office had filed a lawsuit against the accounting firm of PricewaterhouseCoopers. Feuer claimed the company misrepresented its level of experience handling such a system, costing the city "millions" of dollars.

Daniel J. Thomasch, an attorney for PwC, called the lawsuit "meritless," contending it was a "transparent attempt by the DWP to shift blame away" from the utility. The DWP "acknowledged in writing last year that PwC fulfilled each one of its contractual obligations and paid PwC in full," Thomasch said.

"We know that a very small percentage of our customers continue to have problems with bills they are receiving," Edwards' statement continued. "Most of these cases involve bills that have been corrected over multiple billing periods, and are clearly labeled as such on the bill.

The DWP, which has said it was unprepared to deal with the volume of calls prompted by the billing system issues, has since hired more customer service representatives and opened up customer service centers on Saturdays.
 

New Measure Could Help 4 Million in Calif. Repaying Loans

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A new measure signed by President Obama Tuesday could benefit some of the four million students with outstanding student loan debt in California.

The Student Aid Bill of Rights, a presidential memorandum signed by President Obama, will direct the Department of Education and other federal agencies to work across the government to help those repaying loans.

More than four million Californian students and residents have outstanding student loans. In total, those in California that borrowed an FFEL loan or direct loan owe an estimated total outstanding amount of $112,268,605,000. That number is the highest in the U.S. In all, more than 40 million people have students loans in the nation. 

The memorandum will create a state-of-the-art compliant system to make sure the Department of Education, colleges and contractors provide quality service.

That website will give students a way to file complaints and provide feedback about federal student loan lenders, servicers, collection agencies and higher education institutions in a timely manner. 

Tuesday's move will also create steps to ensure students understand how to repay loans with monthly payments, analyze new student debt trends to recommend new legislation.

The federal government also released state-by-state numbers outlining how many students have outstanding federal loan balances and the total number of federal student loan borrowers that may benefit from the memorandum.

Texas has the second highest total outstanding amount due with $81,850,800,000.



Photo Credit: Somos/Veer-Getty Images/Somos RF

Proposed Helmet Law Draws Protest From Biking Advocates

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All bicyclists in California may soon be required to wear helmets and not everyone is happy about it.

"We find that when the helmet is the lead, people think 'dangerous sport' I don't want to do this," said Melissa Balmer, spokeswoman for the California Biking Coalition.

Sen. Carol Liu, D-La Cañada Flintridge, proposed in February Senate Bill 192 that mandates all riders wear headgear and reflective clothing at night. SB192 extends another law that has been in effect for more than 20 years and orders anyone under age 18 to wear helmets. 

The bill has yet to be assigned a hearing date but will probably be reach the state Senate Committee on Transportation and Housing in April.

"Any responsible bicycle rider should wear a helmet," said Liu in a statement. "This law will help protect more people and make sure all riders benefit from the head protection that a helmet provides."

Riders found breaking the law face a $25 fine, the current rate for minors.

Ninety-one percent of bicyclists killed in 2009 reportedly were not wearing helmets, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Nearly 14,000 bicyclists were hurt in crashes in 2012, up from 11,760 in 2008, according to a report Liu cited from the California Highway Patrol.

Opponents of the bill argue it will discourage more people from picking up a bike because of a misplaced sense of danger.

Balmer believes the bill goes against the headway the state has made in improving the biking experience, referring to California's 10-spot rise in the League of American Bicyclists' ranking of bike-friendly states, to No. 9 in 2014.

Balmer argued the law could deter casual riders from hopping on because of the production it becomes.

"Somebody who is going to jump on a bike for a slow casual ride, they won't want to do that if they think they're going to get a ticket," Balmer said.

"Even though we encourage folks to wear helmets and require it on our rides, evidence clearly shows all it accomplishes is it reduces bicycling but doesn't make the community as a whole safer," said Eric Bruins, planning and policy director for the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition.

Bruins says while he understands the appeal of mandating helmet use, it's not the solution for improving rider safety.

"There are many different cities that have gotten bicycling right - Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Portland and now New York City," Bruins said. "When cities invest in infrastructure and education, a lot more people cycle and cycling becomes safe. Los Angeles hasn't really done that."

Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia mandate minors to wear helmets, according to Liu's proposal.

If this bill is passed, California will be the first state to require helmet use for all ages.

Promising New Autism Research

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A blood-based measure could lead to a clinical test that could spot signs of autism in boys just 1 or 2 years old, a new study has found, a finding that could help children with autism get the help they need earlier on. 

The study, conducted by an international team led by UC San Diego School of Medicine researchers and published in the current online issue of JAMA Psychiatry, found that certain genetic fingerprints might lead to an earlier method of diagnosing autism in male toddlers.

Researchers were able to identify those biomarkers, or genetic fingerprints, in blood samples from boys with autism as young as 12 months old.

Researchers analyzed two different blood samples with two groups of participants. The first group had 147 toddlers and the second group had 73 toddlers.

"The mean age of autism identification in the United States right now is four to five years so by that point, a lot of brain development opportunities have passed," said Eric Courchesne, Ph.D, professor of neurosciences and director of UCSD's Autism Center of Excellence. "What you really want to do is identify the child at the youngest possible age."

Autism is four times more common in males, researchers said, so the study started with looking at young toddlers because it would be easier to recruit young boys with autism for the study.

Because the causes of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are complex and can vary, it can be difficult to conclusively diagnose a child before the child turns four. 

One parent said an earlier diagnosis in her son could have had a positive impact on his development. 

"I thought I knew how to parent boys," said Karen Heumann. "And he came along, and he was wild and he was out of control, and I thought, 'Oh, he's just trying to keep pace with his brothers,' and instead, he's autistic."

Heumann said as soon as her family found out about her son's Asperger's syndrome, which is on the autism spectrum, they were able to get him therapy. 

That was when her son was 5 years old. She said learning of the diagnosis earlier would have meant more services for him before he started school. 

In the study, researchers looked at blood-based genomic biomarkers that could lead to the development of a clinical test for ASD in boys as young as 1 or 2 years old.

Blood is expected to carry autism-relevant molecular signatures that can be used to detect early signs of autism, said the study's first author, Tiziano Pramparo.

The study found that the genes related to translation and immune/inflammation functions, as well as cell adhesion and cell cycle, were different in boys with ASD and boys without ASD. Genes such as those can have an effect on early brain development in toddlers.

The results of the study may lead researchers to diagnosing autism earlier than current methods. Early diagnosis methods could boost the efficacy of intervention and remedial treatments.

The study is co-authored by Karen Pierce, Cynthia Carter Barnes, Steven Marinero, Clelia Ahrens-Barbeau and Linda Lopez, from the UC San Diego Autism Center of Excellence; Michael V. Lombardo from the University of Cambridge and University of Cyprus; Sarah S. Murray from the Scripps Translational Sciences Institute; and Ronghui Xu from UCSD.

The study, partly funded by the Race for Autism and the National Institute of Mental Health, was published in the March 2015 online issue of JAMA Psychiatry.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Mom to Be Reunited With Son After Amber Alert

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A San Pedro mother is eagerly waiting to be reunited with her 1-year-old son Tuesday after he was found safe in Mexico following an alleged abduction by his father during a “violent” altercation.

Jayden Santiago was found walking with his father, Giovany Santiago-Enriquez in Tijuana around 8:15 p.m. Monday night, according to Antonio “Al” Rios, a supervisory inspector with the U.S. Marshals Service’s Pacific Southwest Regional Fugitive Task Force.

Santiago-Enriquez allegedly took the boy after a violent early morning incident Monday when he stabbed the boyfriend of the child’s mother, Rios said in an email. The boy’s mother and another relative also received minor cuts during the altercation.

A statewide Amber Alert was issued as officials asked for help locating the car Santiago-Enriquez was last seen driving. That car was observed by Mexican law enforcement authorities.

The boy is still in police custody officials work to reunite him with his mother, who left San Pedro this morning to travel to meet with authorities and rejoin her son.

Rios said Santiago-Enriquez will remain in the custody of Mexican police while his immigration status is sorted out.

The child’s mother said she was thrilled her baby son has been found.

"He's good, from what I hear... so I'm happy," said the boy's mother Christy Martinez, told NBC4 after authorities told her they had located her son. "I have to go down there to Mexico to pick him up."

She said she does not bear any grudges against her ex, despite what happened.

"Honestly I wish him the best. I hope it goes good for him," Martinez said. "I don't wish him anything bad. I'm just glad that the baby's fine, that he didn't hurt the baby. All I care about is the baby's well-being."

"Ed Brooke Didn't Back Down": Senator Mourned

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Former Sen. Edward W. Brooke, the first black U.S. senator elected by popular vote, was remembered at his funeral as an inspiration to thousands of young Americans and a moral compass for fellow lawmakers before he was laid to rest Tuesday.

Lawmakers, former colleagues and family packed a ceremony at the National Cathedral in Washington that paid tribute to the liberal Massachusetts Republican's life and trailblazing work. Brooke, first elected to the Senate in 1966, died Jan. 3 at the age of 95.

"Ed Brooke didn't back down," Secretary of State John Kerry said in a tribute at his funeral, praising the late senator's moral compass and calling him "the embodiment of a style of legislating that valued substance over rhetoric and public needs over public agendas."

"Brooke shunned the title of trailblazer, but that's what he was," Kerry added.

Washington, D.C., Del. Eleanor Holmes-Norton called the Washington-born Brooke "a self-made senator," pointing out that when he was born in 1919, the District of Columbia didn't have a local government.

"He led a phenomenal life," Brooke's chief counsel Ralph Neas, who counted Brooke as his first-ever boss and his life-long mentor, told NBC outside the funeral. "His leadership was indispensable. He was my guidepost for the last 40-plus years."

Also attending the funeral were former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, former Massachusetts Gov. Mo Cowan and many other lawmakers.

A former captain in the Army, Brooke was later buried with full military honors Tuesday afternoon at Arlington National Cemetery, where his widow Anne was presented the flag.

Before he died, Brooke had told The Associated Press he was "thankful to God" that he lived to see President Barack Obama's election. And the president was on hand in October 2009 when Brooke was presented with the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest award Congress has to honor civilians.

Obama hailed Brooke as "a man who's spent his life breaking barriers and bridging divides across this country."

A Republican in a largely Democratic state, Brooke was one of Massachusetts' most popular political figures during most of his 12 years in the Senate.

Brooke earned his reputation as a Senate liberal in part by becoming the first Republican senator to publicly urge President Richard Nixon to resign. He helped lead the forces in favor of the Equal Rights Amendment and was a defender of school busing to achieve racial integration, a bitterly divisive issue in Boston.

He also lent his name to the Brooke amendment to the federal housing act, passed in 1969, which limited to 25 percent the amount of income a family must pay for rent in public housing.

Brooke received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in a White House ceremony in 2004. Five years later, when Brooke received the congressional honor in Washington, he cited the issues facing Congress - health care, the economy and the wars overseas - and called on lawmakers to put their partisan differences aside.



Photo Credit: AP

NY Kids Swing Bats, Brass Knuckles

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Police on Long Island are investigating after high school students brawled with one another using baseball bats and brass knuckles following a lunchroom dispute.

A family member of one of the students involved tells NBC 4 New York the brawl over the weekend was a manifestation of ongoing racial tensions between the students.

The melee broke out Saturday afternoon in an industrial park in Ronkonkoma following a dispute at Connetquot High School in Bohemia, police and family members of those involved say. Authorities say about 10 students were involved in the fight, some bringing baseball bats and brass knuckles.

Video obtained by NBC 4 New York shows several teens standing in a street arguing before the fight breaks out. One person, who is black, accuses a white person of calling him a racial epithet. Then, one of the participants can be seen pulling a metal bat out and handing it to another person.

Then, a person can be heard saying, "Take the brass knuckles off, bro" to the teen who initially had the bat. That person is then heard yelling expletives and, "I'm from Queens, New York!"

The video shows a third teen run up and punch one of the other teens in the face. At that point, all the students begin brawling in the street. 

The fight lasted about 10 minutes, police say. Student Nicholas Abrahamson suffered a broken jaw and was taken to Stony Brook Hospital for surgery. No other students were seriously hurt.

 

Abrahamson remains in fair condition, the hospital said on his family's behalf.

"We are very grateful and thankful for the care he is receiving," the family said in a statement issued by the hospital.

No arrests have been made. The students involved in the fight have been suspended from school pending a disciplinary review. 

Parents packed into a standing-room only Connetquot Central school board meeting Tuesday night to express concern over the violent incident and questioned whether the school did enough to prevent it.

Justine North, a friend of Abrahamson's family, said the teen's mother had "begged" the school to mediate the kids.  

The school district said earlier Tuesday that it tried to intervene following the lunchroom dispute Friday, the day before the brawl, and contacted the students' parents.

"The intention was to make the parents aware of the school district’s concern that the verbal argument could grow into something more serious over the weekend outside of the school district’s jurisdiction," the school said in a statement.

In addition to increasing security measures following the fight and conducting random bag checks on students, the school district said at the meeting it will set up a task force to deal with harassment and set up a mediation system for feuding students. 

School board president Lee Kennedy added that officials were cooperating with police in the ongoing investigation. Detectives from Suffolk's Fifth Precinct were also at the meeting to solicit leads from anyone who might know anything about the fight. 


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Did Girl With Lighter Spark Blaze?

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An ember that prosecutors say may have drifted from a San Marcos teen's backyard to spark last year's devastating Cocos Fire could be at the center of the girl's arson trial.

Attorneys debated in court Tuesday whether an ember from a branch the girl tried to light on fire could have floated close to half a mile to spark the blaze that ripped through nearly 40 homes last May.

The teen suspect, who is charged with four felonies and was just 13 when she was arrested, is accused of setting a tree branch on fire in her backyard. That fire, prosecutors say, left behind an ember that floated away to cause the Cocos Fire. 

Prosecutor Shawnaysa Ochoa said that last May, the girl had used a lighter to set a fire in her backyard and laughed when she told her sister about it.

The next day, prosecutors say, the girl posted photos of the Poinsettia Fire on Facebook. She then went into the backyard to set a second fire on a bigger branch and did not tell her mother, prosecutors said.

An ember from that fire traveled more than four-tenths of a mile from the backyard and sparked the Cocos Fire, which torched dozens of homes and businesses, Ochoa said. 

"Her willfulness was demonstrated through her planning, her clear intention through her actions," the prosecutor said. "Her maliciousness was established by starting a second fire less than 24 hours after the first fire, and doing so with a bigger branch, she told the detective. All these actions she took on May 13, 2014, will show her actions were willful and malicious." 

The teen suspect's defense attorney McGlinn said that "phantom ember" could not have spread to cause another fire. 

"We're talking about a phantom ember, a magic ember, one ember, which happened to travel .44 miles and cause one spot fire in the canyon," McGlinn said in court. "Not multiple spot fires, just one spot fire in this canyon."

McGlinn said he was glad there were photos presented as evidence in the trial. 

"We are lucky that we have photos from people are the scene, far away, close, of what the fire looked like what the smoke looked like," he said. 

San Marcos' fire chief Brett Van Wey testified that in his 29 years as a firefighter, he had seen embers travel to start other fires, especially in dry weather conditions.

But in his opinion, he added, it was a spot fire from the Washingtonia Fire that caused the Cocos Fire. 

"Because of the amount of smoke and direction of smoke from the Washingtonia fire where I witnessed, and by the time I drove and saw smoke from Cocos, there was no other source," Van Wey said. "It was in direct line of the smoke."

The accused teen's parents previously turned down prosecutors' offer of a plea deal last month when she appeared in juvenile court. That deal would have required her to admit responsibility for one count, plus the allegations; the DA's office told NBC 7 the teen's parents and attorney did not accept the offer. 

The girl faces four felony charges, including two counts of arson of an inhabited structure or property in which multiple structures were burned and two counts of arson of a structure or forest land in a reckless manner. She also faces a misdemeanor of unlawfully allowing a fire to escape from one’s control.

The fire that sparked near Village Drive and Twin Oaks Road in May 2014 forced the evacuation of Cal State San Marcos and hundreds of other homes. It scorched 1,995 acres and cost the city of San Marcos approximately $10.4 million in damage and firefighting expenses.

Officials have set up an information line for victims, where they can call for basic info on the case and leave messages with questions. That number is 858-694-4241.

"Sniper" Killer Sent to Psych Hosp.

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Eddie Ray Routh, the former Marine convicted of killing former Navy SEAL Chris Kyle and his friend Chad Littlefield, has been transferred to a correctional psychiatric facility near Houston.

Routh, who gunned down the "American Sniper" author and his friend in 2013 at a gun range, was transferred to the Jester IV unit in Richmond, according to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

Earlier this month Routh, 27, had been sent to the Middleton Unit near Abilene to undergo an evaluation and psychological screening that would determine where he would begin serving out his sentence.

After jurors rejected his insanity defense, Routh was sentenced to life without parole for shooting Kyle and Littlefield at a gun range in Erath County in 2013.

An attorney for the former Marine filed an appeal and a motion for a new trial about a week after the verdict.

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