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Jun 6, 2012

U.S. News: 'America's Got Talent' singer admits to claiming military medals he didn't earn

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thumbnail 'America's Got Talent' singer admits to claiming military medals he didn't earn
Jun 6th 2012, 20:13

NBC

Timothy Michael Poe on "America's Got Talent."

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper

The controversy surrounding "America's Got Talent" contestant Timothy Michael Poe's military service record only continues to grow.

Poe appeared on Monday night's show, singing a Garth Brooks song and earning standing ovations for his performance and for his emotional story about being injured by a grenade in Afghanistan. But later, the Minnesota National Guard issued a statement saying that Poe's military records do not show the injury.

On Tuesday, Poe was interviewed by C.J. Grisham on the military-focused You Served podcast, and admitted that he once claimed medals he didn't earn, and that his story as given on the NBC show may not have been accurate.

Poe told Grisham that he attended a golf tournament put on by the Defenders of Freedom. At the event, a poster, using information provided by Poe himself, claimed that Poe was awarded a Purple Heart, which is given for those wounded while serving, and a Bronze Star, which is awarded for bravery or acts of merit. The blog This Ain't Hell displays a blown-up photograph of that poster, which also shows other medals, including the  Combat Infantryman’s Badge.

But on the You Served podcast, Poe admitted he was never awarded those medals. "It was just something stupid," he told Grisham. Poe said he was not cut by shrapnel or otherwise visibly wounded by the grenade, and noted that "they don't want to give Purple Hearts out for TBI (traumatic brain injury)."

As to why he claimed the Purple Heart and Bronze Star at the tournament, he said, "Everyone there had (medals and honors)," and added "It was just one of those things where you feel out of place and you want to feel like you were part of something."

Defenders of Freedom founder Donna Cranston has spoken out about Poe on the group's Facebook page. "Since being alerted about Tim Poe last week, we have been unable to substantiate his claims," Cranston wrote. "We have reached out to him, but have been disappointed that he has been unwilling to talk with us. As a result, in the best interest of Defenders of Freedom, we have chosen to disassociate with him."

And in response to a comment on that post, Cranston wrote, "He did serve and was injured in training. I stand behind our decision to help him last year. .... What I can't stand behind now is someone who has fabricated a story, personally misrepresented his service to me, and won't talk with me about it."

Cranston's reference to Poe being injured in training rather than combat backs up what his ex-wife, Kelly Ballard, herself a military veteran, told AGTNews and the New York Post, saying Poe's injuries came during training exercises in Mississippi, not overseas. An anonymous source tells This Ain't Hell a slightly different story, saying Poe was injured in Afghanistan, but by falling off a truck, not in an attack.

On "America's Got Talent," Poe said he "got hit" by a grenade and that it "broke my back and gave me a brain injury." On the You Served podcast, he said he had broken his back previously and was told later that he had rebroken it, but did not know if it was related to the grenade. "I don't know for sure if my back was broken at that exact time," he said, saying he didn't even realize his back had been reinjured until told by doctors treating him in Germany.

When asked by Grisham if he said anything inaccurate on "America's Got Talent," he answered, "Sure," and compared it to exaggerating to one's children to make their dad seem cool. "It was a show," he said. "It wasn't out there to make anyone feel bad."

NBC would not comment on whether Poe will remain on the show.

Regarding the Minnesota National Guard's statement, Poe said "They had made a statement without having all the facts," and said he had left a message with the Guard spokesman about correcting his records.

Poe also said he was "very, very upset" by some of the reports about his record, which included negative comments from some of his fellow military.

"I don't think my unit was told the real reason I was sent away," he said. "They don't send you out of Afghanistan for an ear infection." He said that after the blast, he would forget things, couldn't walk straight, and "would close my eyes and I would fall over."

According to AGTNews.com, Joshua Hansen, Poe's squad leader in Afghanistan, posted on his Facebook page that Poe's story is "all a giant lie. He has fooled alot of people and i dont blame them for (believing) him after all who would make something like this up?" Hansen also wrote that Poe was taken out of Afghanistan due to a non-combat "injury," putting "injury" in quotes.

Poe confirmed that Hansen was his squad leader, and said "(The grenade attack) may not have happened exactly how I explained because I don't remember a whole bunch." When asked if he could give names of fellow vets who might support his story, he said "I really wish I could remember them and I really wish they would come out."

Poe said he didn't really get into singing until a therapist at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio suggested singing in the shower. But his ex-wife tells the New York Post that he was the lead singer in a band called Crawlspace years ago.

Poe also said he didn't audition for "America's Got Talent" in hopes of personal gain, but to show fellow veterans "you can do whatever you want as long as you push yourself and you try."

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U.S. News: Zimmerman's $99 jail shopping list includes Cheez-Its and Pop-Tarts

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thumbnail Zimmerman's $99 jail shopping list includes Cheez-Its and Pop-Tarts
Jun 6th 2012, 20:01

By Jamie Novogrod, NBC News

 

 

George Zimmerman has stocked his 67-square-foot cell with a pantry-full of snack food, plus pens, postal cards, toiletries and underwear, according to an inventory obtained by NBC News.

Zimmerman placed the order Monday through the jailhouse commissary during his first full day back in custody at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility in Sanford, Fla. 

The order came to a total of $98.90. His remaining balance is $395.10.

George Zimmerman has spent nearly $99 of his jail account since Sunday -- buying Cheetos, Cheez-Its, Pop-Tarts and underwear.


Snacks included, among other food, two orders of White Cheddar Cheez-Its, two orders of Fritos, two orders of Cheetos, four orders of Big Grandma’s chocolate chip cookies, one order of Animal Snackers cookies, two packages of Twix, one package of Peanut M&M’s, and five packages of Strawberry Pop-Tarts.

Zimmerman, confined to solitary and denied a television, apparently plans to spend some of his time writing to loved ones. The inventory lists the following postal cards as separate line items:

CARD W/STAMP – MISSING YOU 

CARD W/STAMP – THINKING OF Y 

CARD W/STAMP – WITH LOVE

The list shows Zimmerman bought two of each card, plus pens, golf pencil, stamped envelopes and a legal pad. 

The order also included thermal tops and bottoms, t-shirts and briefs, plus two orders of ibuprofen, five orders of multivitamin pills, two orders of decongestant and antacid tabs, and Irish Spring soap and Mennen deodorant.

Zimmerman returned to jail Sunday afternoon after a judge revoked his bail two days before, having found that Zimmerman and his wife had misled the court about their finances. Zimmerman earlier pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder in the Feb. 26 shooting death of teenager Trayvon Martin in a case that has triggered a nationwide debate about whether race factored into the shooting.

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U.S. News: Burned Arizona bodies appear to be family murder-suicide, not cartel victims

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thumbnail Burned Arizona bodies appear to be family murder-suicide, not cartel victims
Jun 6th 2012, 20:46

Joshua Lott / Reuters file

Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu

By Jim Gold, msnbc.com

Five charred bodies discovered in a smoldering SUV in the Arizona desert apparently are a missing family in a murder-suicide case rather than victims of drug smugglers as first suggested by Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu.

Tempe Police Sgt. Jeff Glover said the vehicle found in Vekol Valley about 30 miles south of Phoenix belonged to the Butwin family. Based on evidence found at the family home, he said in a prepared statement, “detectives pursued this incident as a murder-suicide investigation.”


“We do not believe there are any outstanding suspects involved in this case,” he said, acknowledging the bodies had not been identified.

The Arizona Republic reported James C. "Jim" Butwin, 47, a Phoenix-area businessman and father was going through a divorce and faced financial and medical problems. Butwin sent a letter with a key to the family house to his business partner, The Republic reported.

Butwin had a wife and three children, ranging in age from 7 to 16, the Republic said.

Four bodies were found in the cargo area and one in the back seat of a Ford Expedition about four hours after its driver fled at 4:30 a.m. Saturday when a Border Patrol agent approached the SUV on the side of Interstate 8.

Pinal County Sheriff's office

This photo provided Saturday by the Pinal County Sheriff's Office shows the charred vehicle where five burned bodies were found inside in the Vekol Valley area, west of Casa Grande, Ariz.

The Pinal sheriff said Saturday that evidence pointed to drug smuggling, but he did not specify what the evidence was.

"This is pretty significant," he told reporters. "Given all these indicators, you don't have to be a homicide detective to add up all this information."

On Wednesday, Babeu told The Associated Press, "When you're not being transparent and giving information, then everyone stands on their high horse," he said, adding that he released information as he was learning it. "There were no conclusions given ... There was no pronouncement."

He said in an earlier statement he was relying on investigators, including Border Patrol agents, who theorized the bodies burned were hostages taken by a Mexican drug cartel and that the SUV’s driver had fled on foot after setting it ablaze.

On his Facebook page, Babeu had written:

“Thanks to all our Homicide detectives who are investigating this alarming 5 person murder and the torching of the vehicle (likely in an effort to destroy evidence). All information is pointing that this is connected to the violent drug car...tel smuggling in this high smuggling area.

We have been working closely with ICE, US Border Patrol and other local law enforcement to fight back against the drug cartel smuggling. The border is NOT more secure than ever Ms. Napolitano!”

The Department of Homeland Security, run by Secretary Janet Napolitano, Arizona’s former governor, did not address Babeu’s comment directly. But the department said in a statement to msnbc.com on Wednesday that illegal immigration attempts, as measured by Border Patrol apprehensions, have decreased 53 percent in the past three years, and are less than 20 percent of what they were at their peak, while seizures of illegal drugs, currency and weapons are all up.

The Border Patrol has close to 6,000 uniformed personnel in the Arizona. Homeland Security in 2010 and has provided more than $26 million to law enforcement agencies in Arizona.

"This administration will continue our unprecedented efforts to secure our border, crack down on transnational criminals, drug-related violence, smugglers and traffickers to ensure the safety and security of our citizens," the department said.

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U.S. News: Dog gets starring role in study on what stresses killer whales

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thumbnail Dog gets starring role in study on what stresses killer whales
Jun 6th 2012, 21:22

Fred Felleman

Researchers wait for Tucker to signal where killer whale scat is by leaning in that direction. His presence allows researchers to reduce any stress on the orcas by keeping their distance.

By Miguel Llanos, msnbc.com

A new study on endangered Pacific Northwest killer whales is getting noticed not just for its findings -- less salmon to eat is a much bigger stress factor than whale watching boats -- but for who helped out: namely, a black Labrador trained to detect killer whale scat. 

Cited as "the dog" in the peer-reviewed study, Tucker is credited with allowing researchers to get a better sampling of the resident killer whales in waters off Washington state and Canada's British Columbia while monitoring from a distance.

"We debated about naming Tucker," lead researcher Katherine Ayres told msnbc.com, "but decided it was more 'scientific' to say 'the dog'.

"We also wanted this to be a general method that could be applied with other dogs in the future so we didn't want to make it too specific," she added. "However, you will see that he has a big -- and much deserved -- shout out in the acknowledgements."

Indeed, after thanking numerous humans, the authors concluded with: "Special thanks go to Tucker, the Conservation Canine, for his keen nose and assistance with non-invasive fecal sampling."


He did that with a nose trained to appreciate the scent of scat from killer whales, also known as orcas, up to a mile away. 

"Use of a detection dog enabled us to sample at an average distance of 400 meters from the target whale(s), minimizing any potential disturbance from the research vessel," the researchers wrote in the study published Wednesday in PLoS One.

Prior to Tucker, researchers had to closely follow orca pods to find and collect scat samples. But that probably led to shy orcas staying away from research boats, Ayres said, making for a less representative sampling of the population.

With Tucker, "we were not influenced to follow whales that are naturally charismatic" toward humans, such as large males or mothers with calves, said Ayres, a pet-behavior consultant who led the research while a University of Washington doctoral student in biology.

Jeanne Hyde

Researcher Katherine Ayres handles Tucker as he zeros in on the scent of killer whale scat. Tucker doesn't go into the water, he just leans over the bow in the direction the boat should travel.

The scat was used to detect hormones released by "southern resident killer whales," a population listed as endangered due to low numbers in recent years. Levels of thyroid hormones, which slowly regulate metabolism based on food availability, showed the orcas were best fed when first arriving in the Salish Sea off the coast of Washington and British Columbia.

The researchers also found that fast-acting stress hormones known as glucocorticoids, which are triggered by immediate danger and food stress, did not spike when whale watching boats reached their annual peak around the orcas.

"As Chinook salmon increased, stress levels went down," said Ayres.

The study did, however, find a cumulative impact from vessels on stress. "Say the only place in town to eat is a noisy/crowded bar," Ayres said by way of analogy. "If that bar has all the food you like and plenty of it, you might not be that bothered by the noise. However, if you are starving and the buffet only has rice and potatoes, you might start to notice the noisiness more and you might become more stressed by it."

"Fish matter most to the southern resident killer whales," added study co-author Sam Wasser, director of the University of Washington's Center for Conservation Biology. "Even if boats are important to consider, the way you minimize that impact is to keep the fish levels high," he said in a statement issued with the study.

The researchers wrote that Tucker was chosen "for its obsessive drive to play with a ball." In training, when he located a sample, he was praised with a short play session.

Out on the water, they added, "the dog indicated sample detection by changing his behavior from a relaxed sit or stand to leaning over the bow of the vessel with tensed muscles, anticipating a reward." Tucker maintained that behavior as the scent intensified, and alerted the handler when the concentration was weakening.

"As we got close to the scat, the dog often stood up and began to whimper, presumably because the scent was surrounding the vessel and he could no longer follow a concentration gradient."

Report: Divers collect whale scat to check stress
Report: Whale scat helps fertilize oceans

The technique originated with Wasser, who has applied dogs to similar studies with other species over the last decade, Ayres said.

Tucker was first deployed in 2008, and the study cements his legacy as a pioneer. "This is the first study using scat-detection dogs to locate killer whale feces," Ayres said. 

Nowadays, Tucker is still used for orca studies but he's also expanded his range.

Gigs have included working on St. Lucia in the Caribbean to track iguanas. "He also was trained on moose/caribou/wolf in Alberta, Canada, in the winter time when we weren't using him for whales in the summertime." Ayres said.

"That way," she added, he has "a job almost year round."

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Philly.com News: Rutgers boards: Won't cede control over Camden or other campuses

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Rutgers boards: Won't cede control over Camden or other campuses
Jun 6th 2012, 21:15

Rutgers' two boards declared Wednesday that the university's governing structure would remain intact, signaling to Gov. Christie and legislative leaders that their plans to remake the state's public universities could face significant hurdles ahead.A set of "principles" approved by the boards of trustees and governors expressed willingness to expand and give greater autonomy to both the university's Newark and Camden campuses, work more closely with Rowan University in Glassboro, and have Rutgers take over parts of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey — if the state provides the money to do so. But they affirmed that they would not open up the subject of giving up control of any of the university's three campuses. The meeting of the boards came just two days after Democratic leaders in the state Senate introduced legislation that would restructure how Rutgers is governed. It would give control of the university's Camden campus to an independent board and create a joint board to manage Rutgers-Camden and Rowan University — with political appointees holding the majority on both bodies. Identical legislation was introduced in the Assembly Wednesday.

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Top Stories - Google News: As Central Bank Holds Back, Europe Scrambles on Spain - New York Times

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Top Stories - Google News
Google News
As Central Bank Holds Back, Europe Scrambles on Spain - New York Times
Jun 6th 2012, 20:26

Moneycontrol.com
As Central Bank Holds Back, Europe Scrambles on Spain New York Times FRANKFURT — European leaders were scrambling for a solution to Spain's banking crisis Wednesday, after the European Central Bank indicated that it had no immediate aid to offer. The central bank left its main interest rate unchanged at 1 percent. Spain borrowing costs ease amid crisis aid hopeThe Associated Press Europe ready to rescue Spain's banksTelegraph.co.uk Spain and the final battle for the euroFinancial Times BBC News -CNNMoney all 3,501 news articles »

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U.S. News: Zimmerman's $395 jail shopping list includes Cheez-Its and Pop-Tarts

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thumbnail Zimmerman's $395 jail shopping list includes Cheez-Its and Pop-Tarts
Jun 6th 2012, 20:01

According to this jail shopping list, George Zimmerman spent nearly $400 on Cheez-Its, Strawberry Pop-Tarts and other items for his 67-square-foot-cell.

By Jamie Novogrod, NBC News

George Zimmerman has stocked his 67-square-foot cell with a pantry-full of snack food, plus pens, postal cards, toiletries and underwear, according to an inventory obtained by NBC News.

Zimmerman placed the order Monday through the jailhouse commissary during his first full day back in custody at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility in Sanford, FL. 

The order came to a total of $395.10. 


Snacks included, among other food, two orders of White Cheddar Cheez-Its, two orders of Fritos, two orders of Cheetos, four orders of Big Grandma’s chocolate chip cookies, one order of Animal Snackers cookies, two packages of Twix, one package of Peanut M&M’s, and five packages of Strawberry Pop-Tarts.

Zimmerman, confined to solitary and denied a television, apparently plans to spend some of his time writing to loved ones. The inventory lists the following postal cards as separate line items:

CARD W/STAMP – MISSING YOU 

CARD W/STAMP – THINKING OF Y 

CARD W/STAMP – WITH LOVE

The list shows Zimmerman bought two of each card, plus pens, golf pencil, stamped envelopes and a legal pad. 

The order also included thermal tops and bottoms, t-shirts and briefs, plus two orders of ibuprofen, five orders of multivitamin pills, two orders of decongestant and antacid tabs, and Irish Spring soap and Mennen deodorant.

Zimmerman returned to jail Sunday afternoon after a judge revoked his bail two days before, having found that Zimmerman and his wife had misled the court about their finances. Zimmerman earlier pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder in the Feb. 26 shooting death of teenager Trayvon Martin in a case that has triggered a nationwide debate about whether race factored into the shooting.

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Philly.com News: Man held for trial in fatal beating of takeout owner

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Man held for trial in fatal beating of takeout owner
Jun 6th 2012, 19:25

A 23-year-old West Oak Lane man was held for trial on a murder charge Wednesday in the death of a Chinese takeout owner whom the defendant had viciously assaulted two years ago.On the morning of June 8, 2010, Malik Niblack ambushed owner Jicun Wu outside the takeout store on 66th Avenue near Uber Street. Niblack punched Wu to the ground, then kicked him at least 10 times, severely damaging his pancreas and intestines. Wu, 44, died March 15 at Albert Einstein Medical Center's Willowcrest rehabilitative facility. He had been at the facility or the next-door hospital for more than 21 months, never recovering enough to return home.

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Top Stories - Google News: 'Fahrenheit 451' author Ray Bradbury dies at age 91 after teaching Americans ... - Daily Mail

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Top Stories - Google News
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'Fahrenheit 451' author Ray Bradbury dies at age 91 after teaching Americans ... - Daily Mail
Jun 6th 2012, 17:53

Daily Mail
'Fahrenheit 451' author Ray Bradbury dies at age 91 after teaching Americans ... Daily Mail By AP Reporter Ray Bradbury, the science fiction-fantasy master who transformed his childhood dreams and Cold War fears into telepathic Martians, lovesick sea monsters, and, in uncanny detail, the high-tech, book-burning future of 'Fahrenheit 451,' has ... Obama issues statement on Ray Bradbury's deathLos Angeles Times American science fiction author Ray Bradbury dies age 91The Independent Ray Bradbury, writer who captivated a generation of sci-fi fans, dies at 91The Guardian BBC News -Daily News & Analysis -Washington Post all 1,532 news articles »

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: Medicaid enrollees really like their coverage

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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.
Medicaid enrollees really like their coverage
Jun 6th 2012, 19:07

Medicaid can get a bad rap from policymakers. The entitlement program gets knocked for long wait times, low payments to doctors and inadequate access. Ask the patients what they think of the program, however, and you get a different answer: They really like it.

Read full article >>

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Economy: Economic News, Policy & Analysis - The Washington Post: Garbage: It’s where the jobs are

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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.
Garbage: It's where the jobs are
Jun 6th 2012, 18:59

Garbage is heaping high around the world. According to the World Bank, many cities now devote more resources to coping with their trash than to any other single task:

Solid waste management is almost always the responsibility of local governments and is often their single largest budget item, particularly in developing countries. Solid waste management and street sweeping is also often the city's single largest source of employment.
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U.S. News: 12-person jury, alternates chosen in Sandusky case

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thumbnail 12-person jury, alternates chosen in Sandusky case
Jun 6th 2012, 13:38

Patrick Smith/Getty Images

Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky and his attorney Joe Amendola enter the Centre County Courthouse as the second day of jury selection begins in his child sex abuse trial on June 6 in Bellefonte, Pa.

 

By Msnbc.com staff and wire services

Updated at 3:30 p.m. ET: BELLEFONTE, Pa. -- Lawyers have selected 12 jurors and alternates to hear the child sex abuse case against former Penn State assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.

The seven women and five men on the main panel and four alternates were selected Tuesday and Wednesday in a central Pennsylvania courthouse, according to The Patriot-News in Harrisburg, Pa.

Sandusky faces 52 counts involving 10 alleged victims over a 15-year span. The 68-year-old Sandusky has denied the allegations.


Sandusky's attorney told jurors seven members of the former coach's family had been on his list of potential witnesses.

The jury's composition reflects the area's strong connection to Penn State. It includes a Penn State senior, a retired professor and a woman who's been a football season ticket holder since the 1970s. The woman’s husband also works for the medical group where the father of a key witness Mike McQueary previously worked.

Sandusky's attorney had moved to strike the woman as a juror, but Judge John Cleland overruled his objection.

"We're in Centre County. We're in rural Pennsylvania," Cleland said. "There are these (connections) that cannot be avoided."

Cleland said that unless ties to witnesses or Sandusky were strong, relationships such as hers would not mean she could not serve on the jury, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

Eighteen of 40 potential jurors told the court they are mandated by law to report suspected child abuse due to the nature of their job, according to a Patriot-News reporter following the selection process. In addition to the charges Sandusky faces, two top Penn State officials have been charged with not reporting an abuse incident brought to their attention in 2001 by then-assistant coach McQueary.

'Fair shake'
Twelve of the 40 jurors questioned Wednesday morning were excused, including one who knew Sandusky personally. Some were let go because of financial hardship; others because of previous vacation plans.

As jury selection continued, Cleland reiterated that the trial would start Monday at 9 a.m. and run until the end of June, according to PennLive.com. Cleland said he would not sequester the jury once the trial begins.

Forty prospective jurors were interviewed for the sexual abuse trial of former Penn State Coach Jerry Sandusky. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

Earlier, defense lawyer Joe Amendola arrived with Sandusky just after 8:15 a.m. and said he's confident the nine jurors already picked will give "us a fair shake."

Lead prosecutor Joseph McGettigan, Pennsylvania's senior deputy attorney general, said that jury selection was "so far, so good."

Prosecutors have 'bizarre' letters Sandusky wrote to victim, source tells NBC

Jurors are being chosen from among people who live in the State College area, where Penn State's main campus is located.

"I need you to all have an open mind," Cleland told jurors on Tuesday, according to PennLive.com. "This defendant is charged with sexual abuse of children."

9 jurors chosen so far in Jerry Sandusky trial

Sandusky, 68, faces 52 criminal counts for alleged abuse of 10 boys over 15 years. Some of the accusers are expected to testify. Sandusky has repeatedly denied the charges.

On Monday, the alleged victims were told they would have to use their real names when they testified. Lawyers for five accusers had requested their clients be allowed to use pseudonyms.

Victim #4
Prosecutors have obtained multiple incriminating and “bizarre” letters that Sandusky allegedly wrote to one of his accusers, who is known as Victim #4, NBC News reported Tuesday. The letters are allegedly written in the former coach's handwriting.

According to the indictment handed up against Sandusky, the defendant met the boy -- who is now 28 -- through his Second Mile charity and slowly won his trust by giving him gifts and other rewards.

"Victim 4 became a fixture in the Sandusky household, sleeping overnight and accompanying Sandusky to charity functions and Penn State football games,” it said. Usually the persuasion Sandusky employed was accompanied by gifts and opportunities to attend sporting and charity events. He gave Victim #4 dozens of gifts, some purchased and some obtained from various sporting goods vendors such as Nike and Airwalk." 

The case has drawn intense media attention, with about two dozen television trucks parked outside the courthouse.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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U.S. News: Police: Parents made daughter run laps, stand on one leg for two hours

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Police: Parents made daughter run laps, stand on one leg for two hours
Jun 6th 2012, 18:50

By Karen Yi, NBCMiami.com

A Florida mother and a father are in jail after they allegedly forced their daughter to run laps with nothing to drink and made her stand on one leg for two hours as punishment, officials said.

The 10-year-old girl also told police her parents forced her and her six-month-old brother to sleep on the floor, Michael Dunn, public information officer for Temple Terrace Police Department told NBC 6. Temple Terrace is near Tampa.

He said the girl was an apparent victim of child abuse after she told police that her parents made her hold a weight for two hours while standing on one leg as punishment.


Read the original report and see photos on NBCMiami.com

William Joseph Frederick, 33, and Suzanne E. Frederick, 31, both of Temple Terrace, face child abuse and child neglect charges, according to the Hillsborough County Jail. William Frederick is also being charged with failure to report a fire. Both are being held with no bail.

More weird news from NBCMiami.com

Dunn said police arrived to the apartment complex around 8 p.m. Tuesday after they received a report of a distressed child wandering in the lot.

Authorities said the girl lit a small fire in her apartment prior to police arriving because she was frustrated. When her parents returned, they put out the fire but did not call the fire department, officials said.

When police arrived, they questioned the girl and her parents and found a six-month-old baby in the closet.

The Department of Children and Families took custody of both children.

It was not immediately known if the Fredericks had an attorney.

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