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Mar 20, 2012

U.S. News: San Francisco's sheriff will not resign, despite ultimatum

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U.S. News
Stories from NBC reporters around the country.
thumbnail San Francisco's sheriff will not resign, despite ultimatum
Mar 20th 2012, 20:48

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi appears at the Superior Court for the start of his trial on domestic abuse charges in San Francisco, California in February.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

SAN FRANCISCO -- San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, who was sentenced on Monday in a highly publicized domestic abuse case, will not resign, his lawyers said Tuesday, The Associated Press reported.

The announcement came in the face of a reported ultimatum from the city's mayor demanding that the newly elected sheriff step down immediately or face an official misconduct charge and possibly forced removal from office. That report came from The San Francisco Chronicle reported Tuesday, citing multiple sources.

A longtime progressive politician in the city, Mirkarimi agreed to a plea deal in the case involving a New Year's Eve dispute with his wife that left her arm bruised. Under the deal, he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor "false imprisonment" charge, which allowed him to continue carrying a gun. Mirkarimi had signaled that he would remain in his post, to which he was elected in November. 


But the ultimatum reportedly issued by Mayor Ed Lee made it clear that the sheriff is facing a serious political challenge following the abuse case.

Lee has a press conference scheduled for Tuesday afternoon.

Mirkarimi, 50, was sentenced to three years' probation, 52 weeks of domestic violence intervention classes, 100 hours of community service and a small fine for one misdemeanor charge of false imprisonment in a New Year's Eve incident that left his wife, Eliana Lopez, with a bruise on her arm.

After the sentencing, Lee had a short meeting with Mirkarimi on Monday afternoon. After about 15 minutes, Mirkarimi quickly walked out of a side door of the mayor's office without answering questions from reporters. "It'd be premature for me to talk," is all Mirkarimi would say.

Using administrative procedures to oust Mirkarimi is not a slam dunk, said Joe Eskenazi, political reporter for SF Weekly.

Under the City Charter, he noted, official misconduct is defined as "any wrongful behavior by a public officer in relation to the duties of his or her office..."

Sheriff keeps his gun, but will he keep his job?

Domestic abuse billboard aimed at sheriff's comments

Even though Mirkarimi has admitted guilt to wrongdoing, it's hard to see it as job-related, in his view.

If city attorneys nonetheless find a way to charge him with official misconduct, it will be a vote by the Board of Supervisors that would make the final determination. Nine of the 11 supervisors would have to vote in favor of his ouster.

Even some of the sheriff's erstwhile allies hoped that he will now resign to avoid more damage, said Eskenasi. Though he had a reputation for being an effective member of the Board of Supervisors, where he served for seven years prior to his 2011 election as sheriff, the domestic abuse case has made Mirkarimi toxic, he said. 

"Even people who like him would prefer to see him out and out soon," he said. "Even people who are his ideological allies. There’s not a lot of support out there among the people you would want to have."

If he manages to remain in office as sheriff, Mirkarimi could also face a recall by San Francisco voters this summer.

As the city turns against the once promising political figure, Mirkarimi's wife is advocating for him.

"Eliana Lopez is not afraid of Ross, Eliana Lopez supports Ross," said Paula Canny, attorney for Lopez, speaking to the Chronicle. "She absolutely wants Ross to remain in office."

The Associated Press and msnbc.com's Kari Huus contributed to this report.

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U.S. News: Florida 'Stand Your Ground' law could complicate Trayvon Martin teen shooting case

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U.S. News
Stories from NBC reporters around the country.
thumbnail Florida 'Stand Your Ground' law could complicate Trayvon Martin teen shooting case
Mar 20th 2012, 22:03

Reuters and AP

Seventeen-year-old Trayvon Martin, left, was shot and killed as he walked through a gated neighborhood. Neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman said he shot Martin in self-defense.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Florida’s 2005 “Stand Your Ground” law, which says a citizen doesn’t have to retreat before using deadly force against an attacker, could throw a legal wrinkle into the case of a neighborhood watch captain who shot to death an unarmed black teenager.

Police in the central Florida town of Sanford have said that 28-year-old George Zimmerman claims he shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in self-defense during a confrontation in a gated community. Police have described Zimmerman as white; his family says he is Hispanic and not racist.

Police did not arrest Zimmerman after the shooting, but State Attorney Norm Wolfinger announced Tuesday the case will go before a Seminole County grand jury.

 


Legal experts, gun-rights advocates and gun-control groups contacted by msnbc.com offered varying opinions on whether Zimmerman can avoid criminal charges under Stand Your Ground.

 

Richard Hornsby, an Orlando-based criminal defense attorney, says he thinks the grand jury is likely to indict Zimmerman for manslaughter, a second-degree felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison. Less likely is a more serious charge of second-degree murder, a crime that implies intent and that is punishable by up to life in prison, he said.

“This case isn’t even a close call to me. This is a case of a guy trying to be a vigilante,” Hornsby said. “It wasn’t like he was trying to avoid trouble. He brought a firearm to a fistfight.”

“My gut feeling he will ultimately be charged with some type of manslaughter charge,” agreed Philip Sweeting, retired deputy police chief for the Boca Raton Police Department and a law enforcement consultant who has testified  in court cases as an expert in police shootings and use of force.

Watch the entire news conference.

“My gut reaction was this was an accidental discharge,” Sweeting added. “If you put yourself in the shooter’s position and you’re wrestling with this kid and a gun goes off, what are you going to tell the cops?”

If indicted, Zimmerman can raise the Stand Your Ground defense under the 2005 law signed by Gov. Jeb Bush. That legislation, derisively called the “Shoot First” law by its critics, gives Floridians the right to use deadly force to defend themselves in public places without first trying to escape. The National Rifle Association lobbied hard for the bill, saying it would allow citizens to better protect themselves from violent crime.

The key section of the law states:

A person who is not engaged in an unlawful activity and who is attacked in any other place where he or she has a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the commission of a forcible felony."

Kendall Coffey talks about the legal developments in the Trayvon Martin case and Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law.

Hornsby says the 2005 bill allows Zimmerman’s lawyers to argue to a judge – before any trial -- that the case should be dismissed on grounds he was permitted to defend himself. If the case isn’t dismissed, they could argue self-defense at trial.

Daniel Vice, senior attorney with the gun-control group Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, contends “Stand Your Ground,” combined with Florida laws allowing people to carry guns in public, have made it difficult to pursue criminal charges against people who shoot others and then claim it was self-defense.

“All you have to say is that you reasonably believed you were threatened, and the only person who can dispute that is the person you have just killed,” Vice says.

"It's very hard to bring these types of cases because the 'Shoot First' law combined with public carrying of loaded guns protects people who engage someone and shoot to kill."

According to a 2010 review by the St. Petersburg Times, reports of justifiable homicide tripled after the law went into effect. It has been invoked in at least 93 cases with 65 deaths, used to excuse violence in deadly neighbor arguments, bar fights, road rage and even a gang shootout, the newspaper reported.

Lawyer: Trayvon Martin fearful in final call

Trayvon Martin case to go to grand jury

Gun-rights advocates say the facts to date are scarce and “Stand Your Ground” may or may not apply in this case.

According to transcripts of the 911 calls, a police dispatcher tells Zimmerman he doesn’t need to follow the teen, but Zimmerman apparently does anyway. So is he or the teen the one who feels threatened?

“The question again is whether he (Zimmerman) acted reasonably or not. At this point it doesn’t look good for him, but I don’t know what the heck happened and quite frankly no one else does either,” says Jon H. Gutmacher, an Orlando attorney, NRA-certified instructor and author of "Florida Firearms: Law, Use & Ownership."

“When you’re talking about law and whether things were legal and illegal, you can’t guess. You’re supposed to react to facts. The facts have been kept from the public and the press.”

Added Dave Workman, director of communications for the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms: “There’s a misunderstanding about what Stand Your Ground laws really do. No Stand Your Ground law translates to a broad permission for the use of lethal force when it’s not warranted.”

He added: “A lot of people have left the starting gate before they really know what has happened. A rush to judgment is never a good thing.”

The Associated Press, Reuters and msnbc.com's James Eng contributed to this story.

Would you try to flee, or use lethal force if you felt your life was in danger?

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Results
Total of 1,408 votes

52.8%
Try to flee
744 votes
33.3%
Use lethal force
469 votes
13.8%
Not sure
195 votes

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U.S. News: Petroleum jelly burglar targeting Manhattan apartments, police say

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U.S. News
Stories from NBC reporters around the country.
Petroleum jelly burglar targeting Manhattan apartments, police say
Mar 20th 2012, 22:22

By NBCNewYork.com

Police are looking for a burglar who smears petroleum jelly on peepholes as he targets apartments in Washington Heights and Inwood.

He has struck at least 14 times between Sept. 4, 2011, and March 8.

Some reports said the burglar dabs petroleum jelly on the peepholes of the apartments surrounding the one he is targeting, so that no one can look out and identify him as he breaks in with a crowbar.


But police said in some cases there was jelly on the burglarized apartment doors.

Read the original story at NBCNewYork.com

Police have a released a surveillance picture of the man they say has stolen DVD players, jewelry, laptops, cell phones, televisions, iPads, iPods, collectible coins and a carton of Marlboro cigarettes.

The burglarized apartments were on Riverside Drive, Seaman Avenue, Fort Washington Avenue, Cooper Street, Thayer Street, Fairview Avenue and Cabrini Boulevard.

The suspect is described as about 50 to 60 years old, wearing a Yankees baseball cap and dark glasses. He often carries a cane, police said.

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

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Your 2 hourly digest for U.S. News

Comments
U.S. News
Stories from NBC reporters around the country.
Petroleum jelly burglar targeting Manhattan apartments, police say
Mar 20th 2012, 22:22

By NBCNewYork.com

Police are looking for a burglar who smears petroleum jelly on peepholes as he targets apartments in Washington Heights and Inwood.

He has struck at least 14 times between Sept. 4, 2011, and March 8.

Some reports said the burglar dabs petroleum jelly on the peepholes of the apartments surrounding the one he is targeting, so that no one can look out and identify him as he breaks in with a crowbar.


But police said in some cases there was jelly on the burglarized apartment doors.

Read the original story at NBCNewYork.com

Police have a released a surveillance picture of the man they say has stolen DVD players, jewelry, laptops, cell phones, televisions, iPads, iPods, collectible coins and a carton of Marlboro cigarettes.

The burglarized apartments were on Riverside Drive, Seaman Avenue, Fort Washington Avenue, Cooper Street, Thayer Street, Fairview Avenue and Cabrini Boulevard.

The suspect is described as about 50 to 60 years old, wearing a Yankees baseball cap and dark glasses. He often carries a cane, police said.

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

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

thumbnail Florida 'Stand Your Ground' law could complicate Trayvon Martin teen shooting case
Mar 20th 2012, 22:03

Reuters and AP

Seventeen-year-old Trayvon Martin, left, was shot and killed as he walked through a gated neighborhood. Neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman said he shot Martin in self-defense.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Florida’s 2005 “Stand Your Ground” law, which says a citizen doesn’t have to retreat before using deadly force against an attacker, could throw a legal wrinkle into the case of a neighborhood watch captain who shot to death an unarmed black teenager.

Police in the central Florida town of Sanford have said that 28-year-old George Zimmerman claims he shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in self-defense during a confrontation in a gated community. Police have described Zimmerman as white; his family says he is Hispanic and not racist.

Police did not arrest Zimmerman after the shooting, but State Attorney Norm Wolfinger announced Tuesday the case will go before a Seminole County grand jury.

 


Legal experts, gun-rights advocates and gun-control groups contacted by msnbc.com offered varying opinions on whether Zimmerman can avoid criminal charges under Stand Your Ground.

 

Richard Hornsby, an Orlando-based criminal defense attorney, says he thinks the grand jury is likely to indict Zimmerman for manslaughter, a second-degree felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison. Less likely is a more serious charge of second-degree murder, a crime that implies intent and that is punishable by up to life in prison, he said.

“This case isn’t even a close call to me. This is a case of a guy trying to be a vigilante,” Hornsby said. “It wasn’t like he was trying to avoid trouble. He brought a firearm to a fistfight.”

“My gut feeling he will ultimately be charged with some type of manslaughter charge,” agreed Philip Sweeting, retired deputy police chief for the Boca Raton Police Department and a law enforcement consultant who has testified  in court cases as an expert in police shootings and use of force.

Watch the entire news conference.

“My gut reaction was this was an accidental discharge,” Sweeting added. “If you put yourself in the shooter’s position and you’re wrestling with this kid and a gun goes off, what are you going to tell the cops?”

If indicted, Zimmerman can raise the Stand Your Ground defense under the 2005 law signed by Gov. Jeb Bush. That legislation, derisively called the “Shoot First” law by its critics, gives Floridians the right to use deadly force to defend themselves in public places without first trying to escape. The National Rifle Association lobbied hard for the bill, saying it would allow citizens to better protect themselves from violent crime.

The key section of the law states:

A person who is not engaged in an unlawful activity and who is attacked in any other place where he or she has a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the commission of a forcible felony."

Kendall Coffey talks about the legal developments in the Trayvon Martin case and Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law.

Hornsby says the 2005 bill allows Zimmerman’s lawyers to argue to a judge – before any trial -- that the case should be dismissed on grounds he was permitted to defend himself. If the case isn’t dismissed, they could argue self-defense at trial.

Daniel Vice, senior attorney with the gun-control group Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, contends “Stand Your Ground,” combined with Florida laws allowing people to carry guns in public, have made it difficult to pursue criminal charges against people who shoot others and then claim it was self-defense.

“All you have to say is that you reasonably believed you were threatened, and the only person who can dispute that is the person you have just killed,” Vice says.

"It's very hard to bring these types of cases because the 'Shoot First' law combined with public carrying of loaded guns protects people who engage someone and shoot to kill."

According to a 2010 review by the St. Petersburg Times, reports of justifiable homicide tripled after the law went into effect. It has been invoked in at least 93 cases with 65 deaths, used to excuse violence in deadly neighbor arguments, bar fights, road rage and even a gang shootout, the newspaper reported.

Lawyer: Trayvon Martin fearful in final call

Trayvon Martin case to go to grand jury

Gun-rights advocates say the facts to date are scarce and “Stand Your Ground” may or may not apply in this case.

According to transcripts of the 911 calls, a police dispatcher tells Zimmerman he doesn’t need to follow the teen, but Zimmerman apparently does anyway. So is he or the teen the one who feels threatened?

“The question again is whether he (Zimmerman) acted reasonably or not. At this point it doesn’t look good for him, but I don’t know what the heck happened and quite frankly no one else does either,” says Jon H. Gutmacher, an Orlando attorney, NRA-certified instructor and author of "Florida Firearms: Law, Use & Ownership."

“When you’re talking about law and whether things were legal and illegal, you can’t guess. You’re supposed to react to facts. The facts have been kept from the public and the press.”

Added Dave Workman, director of communications for the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms: “There’s a misunderstanding about what Stand Your Ground laws really do. No Stand Your Ground law translates to a broad permission for the use of lethal force when it’s not warranted.”

He added: “A lot of people have left the starting gate before they really know what has happened. A rush to judgment is never a good thing.”

The Associated Press, Reuters and msnbc.com's James Eng contributed to this story.

Would you try to flee, or use lethal force if you felt your life was in danger?

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

Results
Total of 889 votes

55.2%
Try to flee
491 votes
30.4%
Use lethal force
270 votes
14.4%
Not sure
128 votes

thumbnail San Francisco's sheriff will not resign, despite ultimatum
Mar 20th 2012, 20:48

San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi appears at the Superior Court for the start of his trial on domestic abuse charges in San Francisco, California in February.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

SAN FRANCISCO -- San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, who was sentenced on Monday in a highly publicized domestic abuse case, will not resign, his lawyers said Tuesday, according to The AP.

The announcement came in the face of a reported ultimatum from the city's mayor that the newly elected sheriff should step down immediately or face an official misconduct charge and possibly forced removal from office. That report came from The San Francisco Chronicle reported Tuesday, citing multiple sources.

A longtime progressive politician in the city, Mirkarimi agreed to a plea deal in the case involving a New Year's Eve dispute with his wife that left her arm bruised. Under the deal, he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor "false imprisonment" charge, which allowed him to continue carrying a gun. Mirkarimi had signaled that he would remain in his post, to which he was elected in November. 


But the ultimatum reportedly issued by Mayor Ed Lee made it clear that the sheriff is facing a serious political challenge following the abuse case.

Lee has a press conference scheduled for Tuesday afternoon.

Mirkarimi was sentenced to three years' probation, 52 weeks of domestic violence intervention classes, 100 hours of community service and a small fine for one misdemeanor charge of false imprisonment in a New Year's Eve incident that left his wife, Eliana Lopez, with a bruise on her arm.

After the sentencing, Lee had a short meeting with Mirkarimi on Monday afternoon. After about 15 minutes, Mirkarimi quickly walked out of a side door of the mayor's office without answering questions from reporters. "It'd be premature for me to talk," is all Mirkarimi would say.

Using administrative procedures to oust Mirkarimi is not a slam dunk, said Joe Eskenazi, political reporter for SF Weekly.

Under the City Charter, he noted, official misconduct is defined as "any wrongful behavior by a public officer in relation to the duties of his or her office..."

Sheriff keeps his gun, but will he keep his job?

Domestic abuse billboard aimed at sheriff's comments

Even though Mirkarimi has admitted guilt to wrongdoing, it's hard to see it as job-related, in his view.

If city attorneys nonetheless find a way to charge him with official misconduct, it will be a vote by the Board of Supervisors that would make the final determination. Nine of the 11 supervisors would have to vote in favor of his ouster.

Even some of the sheriff's erstwhile allies hoped that he will now resign to avoid more damage, said Eskenasi. Though he had a reputation for being an effective member of the Board of Supervisors, where he served for seven years prior to his 2011 election as sheriff, the domestic abuse case has made Mirkarimi toxic, he said. 

"Even people who like him would prefer to see him out and out soon," he said. "Even people who are his ideological allies. There’s not a lot of support out there among the people you would want to have."

If he manages to remain in office as sheriff, Mirkarimi could also face a recall by San Francisco voters this summer.

As the city turns against the once promising political figure, Mirkarimi's wife is advocating for him.

"Eliana Lopez is not afraid of Ross, Eliana Lopez supports Ross," according to Paula Canny, attorney for Lopez. "She absolutely wants Ross to remain in office."

The Associated Press and msnbc.com's Kari Huus contributed to this report.

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Afghan massacre by US soldier puts focus back on brain testing
Mar 20th 2012, 20:47

The soldier suspected of killing 16 civilians in Afghanistan had suffered a traumatic brain injury in his previous deployments. That fact, as reported by several news organizations, is likely to play a role in his defense.

ProPublica, the nonprofit investigative news organization, investigated the military's testing program for brain injuries last year, finding that it "fails soldiers, leaving brain injuries undetected."

In a follow-up story, ProPublica says U.S. combat staff sergeant Robert Bales probably took the disputed test before his latest deployment. The case will draw further attention to the testing program.

Even if Bales had a previous injury, and even if his defense can establish that the military bears responsibility for failing to properly diagnose it, that still leaves a question of whether or not the injury is related to the violent act he's accused of. As ProPublica's Lena Groeger writes, "Scientists have not established any clear-cut connection between traumatic brain injures and later violence."

Here's that ProPublica article, and the previous investigative report by Joaquin Sapien and T. Christian Miller of ProPublica.

Faces of reform? Parents seek control of failing California school
Mar 20th 2012, 20:06

By msnbc.com staff and news services

Desert Trails Elementary School in the town of Adelanto, Calif., has been failing local kids for years, many parents say. At least a third of the students are unable to pass state math and reading tests.

On Tuesday evening, the school board will be hearing about a radical fix: a parent takeover of the school.

For the moms and dads, it's an intensely personal debate. But their little school at the edge of the Mojave Desert has also become a flash point in a high-stakes national struggle over the future of public education, one that pits powerful teachers unions against some of world's wealthiest philanthropies.


Desert Trails, with children in kindergarten through sixth grades or roughly ages 5-12, could be the first school in the nation to invoke the concept known as "parent trigger."

A 2010 California law permits parents at the state's worst public schools to band together and effectively wrest control from the district. The parents can enact dramatic changes, such as firing teachers, ousting the principal, or converting the school into a charter institution run by a private management firm. Several other states -- Mississippi, Texas and Connecticut -- are considering similar laws.

Desert Trails has had high turnover in the principal's office. Parents complain about difficulty getting their children extra help when they fall behind. Just 31 percent of third-graders are proficient in reading and 14 percent score in the lowest level, "far below basic," in state testing.

"We feel like we haven't been heard," said Doreen Diaz, an Adelanto mother of two. "Unless we stand up and fight for our children's education, no one else will."

Several attempts by msnbc.com to reach the school superintendent or members of the school board by telephone were unsuccessful Tuesday.

'A positive change'
A determined group of Desert Trails parents is leading the charge, with substantial help from a well-funded activist group, Parent Revolution. The trigger advocates say they have collected signatures from a majority of families in support of closing down the school this summer and reopening it as a charter school in the fall, to be run by a partnership of parents, teachers and the school district.

Live Poll

Should parents be able to take control over a failing school?

View Results
  • 179366
    Yes.
    81%
  • 179367
    No.
    15%
  • 179368
    I don't know.
    5%

VoteTotal Votes: 945

"Parents want to see a positive change for Desert Trails, which is the worst school in the county," Linda Serrato, spokeswoman for Parent Revolution, told msnbc.com on Tuesday. "Parents want the school board to hear about a proposed partnership, a partnership where parents work directly with the board, teachers and community."

She said the trigger plan will be presented during a closed hearing late Tuesday.

In Adelanto, a fast-growing community of 32,000, Parent Revolution rented a house to serve as trigger headquarters and sent staff to help organize. Many parents were receptive to the campaign. Some said they had been trying for years, to no avail, to get improvements at the school, where nearly all the students are low-income minorities, mostly Latino and African-American.

"Parents are clear about wanting a positive change for their school," Serrato said, adding "They were told to create a PTA, which they did in 2010 and still didn't see positive changes."

An equally determined group of parents, supported by both state and local teachers unions, say Desert Trails can be improved without being destroyed. They plan to stop the trigger plan.

"Where are their lesson plans?" said Kimberly Smith, a former teacher at Desert Trails who now sends her two children there. "What is the curriculum?... How is it better?"

The parent-trigger battle is perhaps the most dramatic yet in an intensifying fight over the nation's $500-billion-a-year investment in educating kids.

Big names, big money
Over the past decade, several of the nation's wealthiest philanthropists, who see public schools as needing transformative change, have shifted the terms of the education debate. Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Los Angeles developer Eli Broad and the Walton family, heirs to the Wal-Mart fortune, have poured billions of dollars into promoting aggressive reforms. (Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal)

Their prescriptions, many of which have been adopted by the Obama administration, include expanding charter schools, tying teacher pay to student test performance and making it easier to fire teachers.

Unions see many of those reforms as a threat not only to their members but to the very nature of public education. Charter schools are free public elementary or secondary schools that operate independently from the local school district. They often do not employ union teachers, and are typically run by a private management company.

Critics note that some charters are run by for-profit companies that don't open their books to show the public how they're spending tax dollars.

"There's an agenda that basically wants to take apart public education," said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

Union leaders complain that the reformers have little research to prove their overhaul tactics will work -- and that existing data show less-than-stellar results.

Nationally, studies suggest that charter schools rarely outperform regular public schools of similar demographics.

"Too many people on the outside are advocating for things that don't change student learning," said Dennis Van Roekel, president of the National Education Association, which represents 3 million public-school employees.

But to the outside reformers, it's the unions who have their heads in the sand, blocking efforts to remake a public education system that for too long has left too many kids behind. Teachers unions spend tens of millions a year on campaign donations and state and federal lobbying, giving them considerable clout among politicians, especially their traditional allies on the Democratic left.

The Gates and Broad foundations continue to pour huge sums into improving existing public schools; the Gates Foundation, for instance, has pledged $100 million to revamp teacher training, evaluation and pay in Hillsborough County, Fla. Foundation officials say they have no intention of destroying teachers' union or privatizing public schools en masse.

At the same time, however, they say they are committed to experiments like parent trigger.

Seat at the table
Trigger backers say the mechanism isn't intended to convert local schools into charters in every case. Parent Revolution is working with several parent groups in California that have used the threat of pulling the trigger as leverage to negotiate more modest changes, such as cleaning up filthy school bathrooms.

At Desert Trails, the trigger team is negotiating with the district in hopes of reaching a solution that stops short of moving to a fully independent charter school.

"When big decisions about schools are made, there typically are only two players at the table, the teachers union and the district," said Ben Austin, executive director of Parent Revolution. "What we're saying is, we need a third seat at the table for parents. Before, when they complained, they'd be told to go do a bake sale. Parent trigger utterly changes the game."

Parent Revolution started small, reporting assets of just $91,000 at the end of 2009, the year it began pushing parent trigger in California. When the law passed in early 2010, major philanthropies, including the Gates, Broad and Walton Foundations, pledged substantial donations.

Parent Revolution reported nearly $4 million in grants in 2010, the most recent year tax records are available.

The group has used the money to rally parents to consider using the trigger at low-performing schools across California. "At every step of this process Parent Revolution is here to support you," the group promises in a 12-page parent handbook.

Parent Revolution has also expanded to promote trigger laws nationwide. The group recently flew several parent activists from Buffalo, N.Y. to Houston, Tex., for a training session.

Members were also in Florida earlier this month, mixing it up in a bruising political battle over a trigger bill. The mostly Democratic activists at Parent Revolution teamed with former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, a Republican, along with parents and lobbyists representing charter schools to promote the law.

Lining up against the parent trigger law in Florida were the teachers union, the Florida PTA and a rival group of fired-up moms, including Rita Solnet, a mother of three who says she distrusts charter schools. Solnet co-founded Parents Across America, an activist group that has received $25,000 from the nation's biggest teachers union, but says she spent her own money to fly to Tallahassee and knock on lawmakers' doors to lobby against parent trigger.

"These schools were built by the taxpayers of the past to support the taxpayers of the future," Solnet recalls saying. "You have no right to turn them over" to for-profit charter school corporations.

The Florida parent trigger bill narrowly failed.

Msnbc.com's Sevil Omer contributed to this report from Reuters. 

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Breaking News: CBS News: Illinois exit polls: Many not sold on choice

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Breaking News: CBS News
Top Breaking News Stories from CBSNews.com
Illinois exit polls: Many not sold on choice
Mar 20th 2012, 21:24

Early exit polls show that Illinois GOP voters not yet sold on their candidate; Economy, defeating Obama top concerns

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Breaking News: CBS News: Study: Facebook friends linked to narcissism

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Study: Facebook friends linked to narcissism
Mar 20th 2012, 20:53

Researchers find new link between abundance of Facebook friends with narcissism

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Breaking News: CBS News: France shooting probe focuses on paratroopers

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France shooting probe focuses on paratroopers
Mar 20th 2012, 18:48

Expert gunman wanted in deadly school shooting suspected to have been expelled from paratrooper regiment for neo-Nazi sympathies

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Breaking News: CBS News: Malia Obama safe after Mexico earthquake

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Malia Obama safe after Mexico earthquake
Mar 20th 2012, 20:39

First daughter on school trip to Mexico "was never in danger" from 7.6-magnitude earthquake, first lady's office says

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: Export natural gas, export U.S. jobs

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post
Economy News: Get the latest headlines and in-depth coverage of economic news, policy, analysis and more from The Washington Post.
Export natural gas, export U.S. jobs
Mar 20th 2012, 21:24

By supporting large-scale exports of this country's natural gas ["Natural markets," editorial, March 15], The Post dismissed the impact on consumers and ignored the competitive advantage that the United States has in its manufacturing and industrial sector because of low natural gas prices.

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: Romney’s bundlers are key to his presidential campaign

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post
Economy News: Get the latest headlines and in-depth coverage of economic news, policy, analysis and more from The Washington Post.
Romney's bundlers are key to his presidential campaign
Mar 20th 2012, 00:05

If Mitt Romney is victorious in Illinois on Tuesday, it will be due in part to one of his key advantages as a presidential candidate: big-money fundraisers.

Romney has assembled a broad roster of Illinois donors who have helped him bring in millions in President Obama's back yard, part of a network of hundreds of major fundraisers nationwide that has allowed him to easily outpace the rest of the Republican field.

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