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Man Enters Gas Station After Being Robbed, Shot

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 26 Oktober 2012 | 23.23

Kendra Lyn, NBC 5 News

Police tell NBC 5 that Marcus Walcott, 34, drove to the Raceway gas station on Jim Miller Road and Samuell Boulevard Friday morning after an armed robber ripped a radio out of his white Cadillac. The gunman shot him twice and continued to fire shots as Walcott drove off.

Police Search for Gunman After Man Robbed...

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Police are searching for a gunman after a man walked into a Dallas gas station with gunshot wounds Friday morning.

Authorities received a call at about 2:30 a.m. about an active shooter on the 4600-block of Samuell Boulevard.

Officers are still sorting out the details.

Police tell NBC 5 that Marcus Walcott, 34, drove to the Raceway gas station on Jim Miller Road and Samuell Boulevard after an armed robber ripped a radio out of his white Cadillac. The gunman shot him twice and continued to fire shots as Walcott drove off.

Walcott, who had a passenger in the vehicle, drove down the road to the gas station for help with two flat tires and a shattered windshield from the bullet, according to authorities.

The car stopped at one of the gas pumps.

An ambulance rushed the Walcott to Baylor Hospital. He is expected to survive.

Crime scene technicians took fingerprints from the car door handle, hoping the robber touched it when he reached into the vehicle to snatch the radio.

The gunman is still on the run.

Police records show that Walcott has a criminal past. He was convicted of child pornography possession and sexual assault in August 1999, and convicted of possession of a controlled substance in September 2011.

Stay with NBC 5 News for updates.

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Parents Warned of Man Who Exposed Himself to Girl

Chris Van Horne, Fort Worth Reporter

Fort Worth police are looking for a man that allegedly exposed himself to a nine-year-old girl.

Fort Worth Police Looking for...

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Fort Worth police are looking for a man who exposed himself Tuesday to a 9-year-old girl who was walking home from school in the Stop Six neighborhood.

The incident occurred right after school let out in the 2500 block of Marlin Street, just two blocks from Logan Elementary.

Police said the man pulled up alongside the girl in a white work van, opened the doors and exposed himself. Police said the man was masturbating.

The girl was unharmed and ran home.

"We are asking the community for their help, because we need to get this guy identified and possibly off the street if he's messing with our children," Officer Sharron Neal said.

Police and the school district warned parents and the public about the incident, and police cars were visible in the surrounding area on Thursday.

Leticia Lopez read the note about the incident that Fort Worth school district sent home while she walked home with her children Thursday afternoon.

"Yes, it's scary," she said. "I got five girls. I got seven kids. Imagine that; it's kind of scary."

The district sent home the note to parents to help spread the word about the man and his vehicle. They said they hope the note would also start a needed conversation.

"We hope that parents will use this as an opportunity to talk to their children about knowing what plan they need to have in the event that something like this does confront them," Fort Worth Independent School District spokesman Clint Bond said.

Lopez said she is grateful that the district let her know about the incident.

"That's a good note to let us parents know," she said.

While police want the public's help, they urge residents not to contact the. Anyone who sees him should write down his license plate and call police, they said.

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Shooting Suspect: I Took That Man's Life

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One of the two people arrested in the shooting death of a Good Samaritan outside a Dallas bar publicly confessed and apologized for his role in the slaying during a jailhouse interview.

Donald Morrow, 36, was fatally shot when he attempted to stop a robbery outside Sherlock's Pub & Grill on Oct. 18.

Justin Jones, 19, and Tierra Winters, 17, have been arrested and charged with capital murder in the shooting.

In the jailhouse interview, Jones admitted to everything.

"I feel like, I took that man's life; my life deserves to be tooken," he said.

He offered an apology to Morrow's family and said he plans to plead guilty to capital murder.

"I'm sorry for what I did," he said. "I can't take it back. And if I could take y'all son's place, I would, but I can't. I'm in here, and I got to face the consequences, and I got to deal with this for the rest of my life."

Jones told NBC 5 that he was so high the night he shot Morrow that he barely remembers details about what happened.

"I don't even remember running up to them, waving a gun," he said. "All I remember is, like, I was dreaming, and the man is like somebody swung on me, and the gun went off."

He said he took Xanax, drank alcohol and smoked what he thought was marijuana. The marijuana was laced with PCP, he said.

Jones said he hopes others can learn from him.

"Y'all see the life I chose, and y'all see where that life go me. Y'all see the results I got right, so y'all use me for an example, homie, and go the other way," he said.

Dallas police said Jones and Winters had been on a robbery spree. Jones was the gunman and Winters was the getaway driver, police said.

Jones said Winters should not face capital murder charges because he is the one responsible for Morrow's death.

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Deaf Runner, Blind Runner Set to Compete

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Two runners competing in this weekend's District 5-5A cross-country meet stand out from the crowd.

Cameron Jackson, who is deaf, and Nick Barrera, who is legally blind, run for Ryan High School.

Jackson is among the fastest distance-runners in the nation, completing a 5K in 15:50.

With the use of hearing aids, he's well aware of his surroundings. But when it's race time, he removes them relying on his coaches.

"They'll tell me how the places are and if I'm doing good and if someone has come up, you know, trying to sneak up behind me because I can't see them," Jackson said.

While Jackson can't hear the crowd's thunderous cheers, Barrera said the sounds guide him.

"It's pretty hard in the morning when we go practice, when we're running in the dark," he said.

Barrera refused to use a guide rope depending on his teammates.

"He just looks at me and goes, 'I don't want to use that,' and I was like, 'OK, you don't have to. We'll run next to each other.' We ran four miles," said Jayme Kiraly, one of his coaches.

Their toughness and determination inspire other students.

"Nick can't see very well, and Cameron can't hear. They can do it -- why can't we?" said Luis Barraza, a teammate.

Both Jackson and Barrera hope to run in college.

"I want to show people that it doesn't matter what type of problem you have or something -- you can accomplish anything," Barrera said.

Jackson has already received offers from several schools in the Big 12 and the Southeastern Conference.

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Man Receives Voter Card for Dead Mother

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A North Texas man says he is concerned about the possibility of voter fraud after receiving a voter registration certificate for his deceased mother.

Bill Davis and his wife, who rarely miss an election, said they were excited when their received their cards in the mail.

But there was an extra card -- one for Bill Davis' mother, Isabel. He said he was "just kind of disgusted -- typical bureaucrats."

His mother, who died more than two and half years ago at the age of 96, was still on the voter rolls.

"You hear of dead people voting and stuff like that," he said. "I thought that was something of the past, but I guess there is opportunity for that."

How could it happen? Steve Raborn, the elections administrator for Tarrant County, said voters who registered before the 1970s only had to give their name and address to register to vote.

Raborn said Isabel Davis' registration didn't include vital information such as a Social Security number or driver's license number to cross reference in case she died.

While the state and county courts send information over to the county to help update lists, the database work can take time and, without the vital information, names can be left on the rolls.

"When we get information from the state agencies that provide death information on voters, often time we're not able to match it up with an actual voter because we don't have any additional criteria -- especially if it's a common name, or the address has changed or something like that," Raborn said. "If we think we see a possible match, then we'll send a letter to the voter's home asking the family member if the voter is deceased."

The county sent a letter to Isabel Davis' last known address in 2010, essentially asking her if she was dead or alive. By then, Davis had passed away. Because she didn't respond, she was left on the rolls.

"We have to err on the side of allowing people to vote," Raborn said. "We can't take people off the rolls because we have one uncertain bit of information that they may be deceased."

Raborn said there are not many findings of voter fraud. He also said there are safeguards in place at the polls to make sure fraud is prevented. He noted that poll workers do check sex and age of voters.

That's not good enough for Bill Davis. He said he wants to get his mother off the voter rolls.

"I had to take it upon myself to notify Social Security, notify Medicare," he said. "I didn't think about notifying voter registration, and I don't think very many people would."

The Davises, who are Republicans, said they continue to support voter identification measures in light of what happened to them.

Steve Maxwell, the head of the Tarrant County Democratic Party, said voter ID is not the solution, even though some deceased people can still end up on the rolls.

"It is such a small, negligible problem, that using that kind of a solution -- letting us go to a picture ID in order to accomplish this -- defeats the whole purpose of encouraging as many people to vote as you can," he said. "It's a solution in search of a problem."

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Scheme Uses NBC 5 Number on Caller ID

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Identity thieves and con artists are deliberately falsifying the name and number on caller ID boxes as a way to gain access into consumers' homes and, ultimately, their wallets.

Several viewers called NBC 5 to report the scheme, which is called phone or caller ID spoofing. Their caller ID showed NBC 5, but the caller was trying to sell something -- everything from home security systems to roofing services.

Howard Stevens, a long-time, loyal NBC 5 weather watcher and retired Air Force pilot, said he was surprised to get a call that popped up as NBC 5 on his caller ID.

"I looked down and saw Channel 5 on there, so my first thought was that they wanted to set up an interview to talk to me about my being a weather watcher since 1981," he said.

But the person on the other end of the line was not with NBC 5, but a caller who wanted to set up a meeting at Stevens' Bedford home. Stevens said he didn't catch the reason for the call and promptly hung up the phone.

Caller ID spoofing is telemarketing fraud, said Deanya Kueckelhan, director of the Federal Trade Commission's Southwest Region.

"It is a means that telemarketers or scammers use to entice a caller to pick the phone, and they will say anything, do anything and target everyone to reach your pocketbook," she said.

Euless police Senior Cpl. Joe Hoerth said people are more apt to answer if the caller ID comes from a legitimate business such as NBC 5.

"As a citizen, I would think, too, I would probably answer the phone and figure out, 'Why is the news station calling me for some reason?'" he said.

Retired school principal Martha Partlow thought that when NBC 5 appeared on her caller ID box last spring.

"I thought, 'They must be taking a survey or something,'" she said.

But the caller said he was looking for roofing work after tornadoes ripped through the area. When her husband asked for a name and call-back number, he hung up.

Partlow said she thought potential schemers could be targeting residents who lived on the outskirts of heavily damaged areas because these neighborhoods might not be as well monitored.

"I wondered if they were going to the tax rolls and looking at names, looking at ages, and calling people who were retired or older than the retirement age," she said. "It annoyed me that I thought this may not be as random as it appeared. It may be targeting older people that are in the area."

"As soon as you answer the phone and you find out it's somebody trying to sell you something, the red flag should go up immediately on there," Hoerth said.

Authorities said consumers have to be vigilant.

"You cannot use caller ID alone as the sole authentication for the call," Kueckelhan said.

People should not give out any information on the phone unless they are sure of who is on the other line. Asking for a call-back number and calling the main number of the company are two other suggestions. Hanging up may be the best solution.

Residents should never set up a meeting at their home or tell anyone when they may not be there.

People can also report any potential spoofing calls to the Federal Trade Commission on its website or by calling 877-FTC-HELP. The FTC and other law enforcement agencies use that database to help with enforcement efforts.

More: FTC website

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Blood Test for Alzheimer's Disease Shows Promise

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Researchers in North Texas are working on a blood test for Alzheimer's disease and looking at how the disease affects the Latino population.

Alzheimer's disease, the sixth leading cause of death in the United States, is difficult to diagnose, but the research in Fort Worth on the new blood test shows promise.

"We're going to let multiple things in the blood tells us whether someone has Alzheimer's disease, and, as a result, we have a blood test that yields 90 percent accuracy," said Dr. Sid O'Bryant, a researcher at the University of North Texas Health Science Center.

O'Bryant said it will take several years to refine the test and get government approval. Once it is ready, the test could help primary care physicians who are often see first the signs of the disease in patients, he said.

"My goal is to get it into the hands of local primary docs first," he said. "Can we get it to local docs so they can say, 'Now I need to get them to specialty clinics to make sure we get the right diagnosis and the right treatments?'"

O'Bryant, who leads the Texas Alzheimer's Research & Care Consortium, a group of scientists working to bring cures and innovative treatments to those with age-related diseases, said Alzheimer's disease is a huge public health issue.

The 2012 Journal of the Alzheimer's Association reports that 5.4 million Americans have the disease.

Millions more will develop it. Whites make up the great majority, but blacks and Latinos have a higher risk of developing it.

"It's (Latinos) the largest ethnic group in the Unites States, and there's almost no literature, and it's a major problem," O'Bryant said. "I looked at it and said, 'We can do something about this.' There's plenty of reasoning to suggest the disease may impact Hispanics differently."

"Diabetes is one of the risk factors for Alzheimer's, and we know the prevalence of diabetes in the Hispanic population is huge," said Liz Trevino, UNTHSC School of Public Health assistant professor.

She said she believes some Latino patients don't get help early enough because of cultural barriers and a lack of awareness.

"Many of our Hispanics don't go there," Trevino said. "They keep it from their families. They won't say, 'My mother or someone lost their memory.'"

Sarah Canales, of Fort Worth, said "it was like they hit me in the gut" when she learned four years ago that her mother, Juanita Renteria, had Alzheimer's disease.

"I cried just thinking about it," she said. "It's emotional. She's always been my rock. She's been there for me, and now it's my turn to be there for her. I'm going to do my best to keep her here as long as I can."

Renteria, 83, agreed to move in her with daughter and her son-in-law, and she gave up driving.

"There was a lot of traffic," she said. "And for the first time in my life, I was scared, so I said, 'It's time for me to stop driving.'"

"We're lucky hers is a slow progression," Canales said.

Canales said she feels fortunate that she and her mother can talk about the disease, learn about it together and get support. Both attend free group sessions offered by the Alzheimer's Association - North Central Texas Chapter.

The are walking with thousands of others Saturday in Fort Worth in the annual Walk to End Alzheimer's. It the 20th year for the fundraiser in Fort Worth.

Canales said she hopes sharing the story about her mother's journey will encourage more people to get out and walk, too.

"In the Hispanic community, I feel like we don't reach out to get help or find out what is out there," she said.

Walk to End Alzheimer's
Saturday, Oct. 27
Farrington Field/Trinity Park - Fort Worth
Registration is at 7:30 a.m. The ceremony is at 8:30 a.m., and the walk begins at 9 a.m.


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Keller PD: Officer Shot Shoplifting Suspect During Struggle

Ellen Goldberg, NBC 5 News

Keller police say an officer fired four shots during a struggle with a shoplifting suspect at a Kohl's department store. The suspect later died at a Fort Worth hospital.

Keller Officer Fatally Shoots...

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A police officer in Keller fatally shot a shoplifting suspect at a department store Thursday.

Officer Johnathon Hicks was called to the Kohl's in the 2000 block of South Main for a report of shoplifting.

Hicks was not working off-duty as security at the store.

Keller Police Chief Mark Hafner said a Kohl's employee detained the shoplifting suspect at the store. When Hicks arrived, the suspect began struggling with him and tried to get the his weapon, police said.

"He (the officer) feared for his life," Hafner said. "The suspect was grabbing for his weapon. He said he was going to kill him, and that is being corroborated right now by people who were shopping at the store."

Hafner said Hicks fired four shots at the 40-year-old suspect.

The man was not armed.

Kohl's employees were inside the store at the time of the shooting. None immediately able to answer questions about the shooting.

Hicks, a 10-year veteran of the Keller Police Department, is in the hospital for treatment of injuries he sustained to the chest.

The suspect, whose name was not released Thursday night, was transported by CareFlite to John Peter Smith Hospital, where he later died.

NBC 5's Greg Janda, Frank Heinz, Ken Kalthoff and Ellen Goldberg contributed to this report.

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Tanker Overturns, Blocks Lanes on I-35W

Keaton Fox, NBC 5 News

An overturned 18-wheeler blocked southbound lanes of Interstate 35W, north of downtown Fort Worth, Friday morning.

Tanker Overturns on I-35W

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A tanker carrying salt-water likely took a curve took fast, causing it to flip on Interstate 35W at 28th Street on Friday morning, Fort Worth police said.

Rescue crews responded to the overturned 18-wheeler on the I-35W southbound ramp to NE 28th Street at about 4:30 a.m.

The crash closed all the southbound lanes and caused delays in the northbound lanes during morning commute hours.

No one was injured.

A second tanker arrived on the scene to offload the first tanker, then a wrecker can upright it.

A wrecker was ordered just after 5 a.m. to clear the area.  The roadway was reopened shortly after 8 a.m.

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