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Baby Toys Recalled Due to Choking Hazard

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 21 Desember 2012 | 23.23

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The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is recalling more than 45,000 Sassy and Carter's-brand Hug N' Tug Baby Toys due to a choking hazard.

The toys, aimed at infants, have beads inside the clear plastic sphere at the center of the toys that can be released, posing a choking hazard to young children.

There have been 12 reports of released beads with the Sassy toys. No incidents have been reported with the Carter's-branded toys. No injuries have been reported.

The recalled toys have the face of either a puppy or monkey.

Recalled styles include: Sassy Hug N' Tug Puppy, model #80213; Sassy Hug N' Tug Monkey model #80214 and Carter's-branded Hug N' Tug Monkey, models #61083 that were sold on a blue packaging card and #61540 sold on a grey packaging card.

Sassy-branded toys have "Sassy" written on the back of the character's head,  Carter's-branded toys have "Carter's" written on the back of the character's head.

The recalled Sassy-brand toys were sold between July 2012 and October 2012 at Toys R Us, Target and online retailers such as Amazon.com and Carters.com. The Carter's-branded recalled toys were sold in Carter's retail stores.

Consumers should take the toys away from children and contact Sassy to return the toy for a free replacement at 800-323-6336. You can also visit the company's website at www.sassybaby.com and visit the Product Recall Information link.

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6-Year-Old Makes Big Donation to Police Toy Drive

Catherine Ross, NBC 5 Collin County Reporter

After deciding he wanted to help kids in need, one Plano kindergartner is making a big contribution to the police department's annual Christmas Cops gift drive.

6-Year-Old Raises Cash for Plano Christmas...

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A Plano kindergartner is making a big contribution to the police department's annual Christmas Cops gift drive.

Pari Kuechenmeister said she was blown away when her son announced he'd like to raise money to collect toys for kids in need.

"It was all his idea," she said. "He said, 'I saw that they're collecting toys for kids, and I want to do what I can to help.'"

Six-year-old Alex had an idea for a cold-weather twist on a traditional fundraising technique, and the Kuechenmeister family set up a hot chocolate station near their home.

They live in Deerfield, a Plano neighborhood famous for over-the-top decorations that draws huge holiday crowds of gawkers.

Their hot chocolate stand paid off in a big way -- to the tune of more than $500.

"The amount of money he's raised would be amazing, no matter who it came from, a corporation or individual donation," said Christmas Cops organizer and former Plano Capt. Harry Manning.

"Coming from someone of his age just makes it that much more special," he added.

Alex even took it one step further, calling the department to ask which items were most needed or highly requested, Manning said.

The 6-year-old ended up bringing in some big ticket items, such as a bicycle and video games.

His parents say they've always tried to instill the gift of giving in their children, and Alex's take on Christmas is refreshingly uncomplicated.

"I wanted to give presents to kids in need," he said.

Manning said the boy's donation will pay it forward more than many can understand.

"He's the best little elf ever," he said.

Christmas Cops helps 200 families, including 600 to 700 children.

Plano police will pass out the collected boxes and gifts on Saturday.

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'Tis the Season for Stealing

Randy McIlwain, NBC 5 News

'Tis the season for stealing packages from front porches. As deliveries ramp up before the holidays, police say they receive more reports of thefts outside homes.

Deliveries Disappear from Homes During the...

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Police departments everywhere say crimes such as burglary rise during the holidays.

Home and car burglaries tend to increase as thieves look to profit from newly purchased gifts.

Burglars also target home deliveries. UPS, FedEx even the U.S. Postal Service all get more complaints of theft after leaving gifts at unattended homes.

Thieves know to follow delivery trucks and wait, which is what happened at Alicia Vaughn's Oak Cliff home.

A woman walked to her porch and stole a box of gifts seconds after UPS delivered the package.

"Video footage showed them driving in front of the house back and forth two times, and as soon as the UPS guy drove off, they came back again drove up and backed into the driveway," Vaughn said.

The theft happened despite Vaughn's sign in her porch window that warns thieves they are under video surveillance.

"I've uploaded the videos on YouTube, onto Facebook," she said. "I notified the news station, and I want these people to know I see you and I know what you've done and you're not going to get away with it."

UPS trains delivery personnel to conceal packages left at home, especially at this time of year.

"Unfortunately theft at this time of year happens every year," UPS spokeswoman Natalie Godwin said. "We always receive these complaints at Christmas."

The volume of deliveries creates opportunity. Thursday is the busiest day of the year for UPS, which will make 28 million deliveries on Thursday alone -- 300 packages per second.

"They have no idea what they have, and it may not mean anything to them," Vaughn said. "They just want to pawn it or make some money, you know. It's meaningless it's an easy crime."

UPS has a program to ensure delivery when customers want it, either by time or adult signature,

Vaughn said she would look into it next time, even though she has been getting gift deliveries the same way for 14 years.

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Fort Worth Service Remembers Conn. Victims

Scott Gordon, NBC 5 News

North Texans came together for an interfaith service to remember the victims of the shooting in Newtown, Conn.

Prayers for Victims of Newtown Shooting

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An emotional interfaith service in Fort Worth Thursday night brought together people of different religions united in their grief over the school shooting in Connecticut.

The service at First United Methodist Church downtown was called Candles for Connecticut.

Mayor Betsy Price sent the city's condolences to Newtown.

"Please know our thoughts and prayers are with you tonight and every day going forward," she said.

Police Chief Jeffrey Halstead represented first responders. Officers and firefighters filled the first pews.

An imam from the Islamic Association of Tarrant County got emotional.

"It doesn't have to be a Muslim or a Christian or a Jewish or any other faith," said Imam Moujahed Bakash. "As a human issue, the picture will never go away from my head."

He said he can't stop imagining the Christmas gifts the young victims will never receive.

The pastor at Fort Worth's Wedgwood Baptist Church, the site of a massacre in 1999, spoke from his heart.

"Deliver us from our nonchalance from those hundreds of thousands -- millions -- who suffer in the darkness of mental illness with no help and no hope," he said.

The names of the 27 victims were read as candles were lit one at a time.

The bells at First Methodist Church and several other churches will ring at 8:30 a.m. Friday to remember the massacre victims.

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Day Care Purse Thief Caught on Camera

Ellen Goldberg, NBC 5 News

Police have released surveillance images of a man who tried to use a credit card stolen from a woman while she picking up her child at a Coppell day care.

Video Shows Man in Day Care Purse Theft

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Coppell police are asking for help identifying a thief targeting day care parking lots.

In the most recent case, the thief stole the purse of an unsuspecting mother Dec. 12 at a Montessori School in Coppell. Investigators said the thief stole her purse from her car during the few minutes she was inside picking up her child.

Surveillance video from a Lewisville Target shows a man trying to buy $2,000 worth of gift cards with the victim's credit card.

"He's very well-dressed -- has a cardigan sweater on and looks like he would blend in with everyone else," Detective Anthony Maurer said. "He doesn't look like a bad guy."

The man left when a manager asked to see his identification.

"I think he has probably struck many times since this time," Maurer said. "It's probably something he does on a daily basis."

The crook left the Coppell day care on Dec. 12 in a newer model, burgundy Dodge double-cab pickup with no license plates and headed to a Target in Plano.

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Police Chiefs Mull Distracted-Driving Policies

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An NBC 5 investigation into the distractions caused by police computers in cars is now gaining national attention. And a prominent group of police leaders is pledging new nationwide guidelines to help police prevent crashes caused by officers driving distracted.

In the last six months, the NBC 5 Investigates team reported on crashes caused by police officers who are looking at their computers instead of the road.

After the original stories aired in Dallas-Fort Worth, NBC5 Investigates worked with "NBC Nightly News" to produce a national story using videos and interviews from the Texas reports.

The story gained the attention of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the world's largest organization of police leaders. The IACP recently sent the story to the state police commanders in all 50 states.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol has made the story mandatory viewing in safety training.

"I thought it was extremely important for our people to view it," Sgt. William Lowe said.

All Missouri troopers have to sign off that they've watched it.

"Showing this and having the other troopers see this footage and the video of these crashes, I think they were pretty taken aback by what can happen in the blink of an eye," Lowe said.

Col. Mike Edmonson, superintendent of the Louisiana State Police and the head of IACP's division of state police, is now leading a nationwide effort to rethink the way computers are used in police cars.

"It's not OK when we know it's an unsafe situation, when we know that it's not the right thing," he said. "We've got to be leaders and step up. We got to be different. We got to change the culture and say, 'You know what? Not acceptable.' We got to fix it."

Working with fellow IACP members, Edmonson plans to create policy guidelines that any police department in the world could use.

The challenge is to balance the benefits and dangers of the computers, cameras, phones, radios and scanners that have turned police cars into offices on wheels where driving can seem almost secondary.

"I think we're going to look at what's going on around the country that's successful," Edmonson said. "Whether we look at Fort Worth and what they've done successfully, I think you have to take those things -- those are templates that can be used to move forward."

Fort Worth's new computer policy, which was implemented after NBC 5 started investigating, gives officers flexibility to key in simple, one-touch responses but prevents them from typing messages while the car is moving.

Edmonson said typing and driving is not only dangerous, but it also creates a double standard in because police are telling the rest of us not to text and drive.

"You pull up alongside a police officer, there they are, texting away," he said. "Well, what makes it right? The bottom line, it doesn't make it right."

At a meeting in San Antonio last week, the Texas Police Chiefs Association told NBC 5 Investigates that it also plans to study the issue in its safety committee.

It could result in the publication of papers and study materials, the development of training and model policies. The group says it is very early in the process.

The Texas Police Chiefs Association does not have a model policy to guide Texas police departments. Neither does the International Association of Chiefs of Police.

A small group of IACP member state police commanders from around the country met last weekend in Louisiana to start looking closer at the issue. They plan to meet again in March and develop recommendations that give police chiefs everywhere a starting point to deal with this.

They recognize every police department has different technology and different challenges, but they want to make a strong statement about the dangers of distracted driving and give some general guidelines.

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One of U.S. Marshals' 15 Most Wanted Captured in Fla.

Broward Sheriff's Office

Felipe Alex Torrealba

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Broward Murder Suspect Eludes Authorities

A man wanted in connection with a Broward County murder is on the run again. Felipe Alex Torrealba, 26, fled authorities Thursday night before they arrived at the southwest Florida home where he was staying, according to the Broward Sheriff's Office. He is believed to have fled from the home in Lehigh Acres near Fort Myers with his 22-year-old girlfriend, Dayana Garcia, a 5-year-old boy and a 4-month-old girl, the BSO said.

"Armed and Dangerous" Suspect Says He Wasn't Armed

Felipe Torrealba says he bolted when he heard officers talking about his outstanding warrants.

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A suspect in a Broward County murder was taken into custody in Fort Myers Thursday, a U.S. Marshals Service spokesman said.

Felipe Alex Torrealba, one of the agency's 15 most wanted fugitives, is being transported to the Broward County Jail Thursday night, spokesman Barry Golden said.

Earlier this year the Broward Sheriff's Office called Torrealba a suspect in the murder of Kris Smalls, 42, of Weston, who was found dead in his SUV in March one week after he was reported missing.

Two handguns and about $15,000 in cash as well as a pair of binoculars and a wig were found inside the two-story townhouse where Torrealba was hiding as authorities arrested him, the U.S. Marshals said in a statement.

A rental vehicle with two different Texas license plates, which was parked outside the townhouse, is believed to be the vehicle that Torrealba used to elude law enforcment, the agency said.

Torrealba's attorney, Jim Lewis, said he has not heard from him since February.

"These are some very serious allegations, and when he's returned here to Broward County I hope to sit down and talk with him, and get to the bottom of them, and find out what the truth is," Lewis said Thursday night.

Torrealba was also wanted in connection with a January incident in which he was shot in the ear by a Sweetwater Police officer as he fled a traffic stop.

"Armed" Suspect Says He Wasn't Armed

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Michelle Obama to Newtown: 'Holding You In Our Hearts'

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A week after a shooting rampage in a Newtown elementary school left 27 people dead -- including 20 first graders and six teachers -- First Lady Michelle Obama penned an open letter to the residents of Newtown, which ran in the Hartford Courant under the title 'Holding You In Our Hearts.'

In the letter, Obama said she was inspired by the heroism of first responders, teachers and children in the school, and proud of the support the entire nation has shown over the past week. And she promised that President Obama will 'use the powers of his office' to find ways to prevent such tragedies in the future.

Here is the full letter:

6:41 p.m. EST, December 20, 2012

Over the past week, we as Americans have been united in our grief as Newtown has laid to rest so many beautiful, innocent children, along with the heroic educators who worked every day to help them achieve their dreams.

As a mother of two young daughters, my heart aches for you and your families. Like so many Americans, I wish there were something - anything - I could do or say to ease your anguish.

But I know that I cannot begin to imagine the depths of your grief. I know that for many of you, the pain you are enduring right now seems unbearable; and many of you may be asking yourselves, how can we go on - as families and as a community?

Over the past week, I have been awed and inspired by Newtown's heroes: the first responders who risked their lives at a moment's notice; the educators whose devotion to their students shone brightest in one of our nation's darkest hours; the children who comforted each other despite their fear; the families coming together to support each other as they grieve.

And I am so proud of the outpouring of love and support that has come from every corner of America: from first responders from neighboring cities rushing to help however they could; from people in Cleveland and Charlotte and Juneau and so many other communities joining together to honor Newtown with their thoughts and prayers; and in living rooms and houses of worship and the halls of our government, where we are beginning to have those difficult conversations about how we can build a safer, more peaceful tomorrow for all our children.

And I want you to know that this is just the beginning. As my husband has said, in the coming weeks, he will use all the powers of his office to engage citizens from across this country to find ways to prevent tragedies like this one. And please know that every minute of every day, we are thinking of you, and praying for you, and holding you and your families in our hearts as you begin the slow and wrenching work of healing and moving forward.

In the months and years ahead, may the memories of those beautiful children and those heroic adults be a blessing for their families, for your community, and for our country, and may God bless you all.

First Lady Michelle Obama, Washington DC


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1 Injured After Street Sweeper Flips on Highway 121

Keaton Fox, NBC 5 News

The driver of a street sweeper was airlifted to the hospital after the sweeper flipped on state Highway 121 in Grapevine Friday morning.

1 Injured After Street Sweeper Flips...

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The driver of a street sweeper is in the hospital after a crash in Grapevine Friday morning.

Grapevine firefighters responded to the crash at northbound state Highway 121 ramp at William D. Tate Avenue at about 12:30 a.m.

The street sweeper was found upside down near Mustang Drive. The driver was pinned inside.

A medical helicopter was called and airlifted the man to the hospital.

Police say the man was in the street sweeper was working along the ramp when he veered off into the grass and the sweeper flipped.

The driver is in stable condition.

The investigation is ongoing.

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Bells Toll for Newtown Victims

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Moment of Silence for Newtown

The grandparents of one of the victims in the Sandy Hook School shooting lives in Delaware County. This morning the community there came together to remember the 20 children and six adults who lost their lives.

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Church bells across the country rang 26 times Friday morning—one for each of the victims killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School —to mark the one-week anniversary of the Connecticut shootings.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy gathered in Newtown with other officials on the steps of the town hall where a bell chimed for each victim, whose name was also read. Five more shooting victims, including three children, were to be buried later in the day.

Malloy requested participation in the bell-ringing earlier this week from all houses of worship and buildings equipped to carry out the symbolic gesture. He also requested Monday a statewide moment of silence at 9:30 a.m. ET, "exactly one week after the horror began to unfold."

Governors from Louisiana to Hawaii to Illinois joined Malloy's call for a moment to remember the 20 schoolchildren and six faculty members killed in one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history.

The federal government participated as well, with President Obama observing the solemn 9:30 a.m. occasion at the White House. In the immediate aftermath of the Newtown tragedy, Obama vowed "meaningful action" and announced Vice President Joe Biden would lead a group to come up with "concrete proposals" to reduce gun violence by the end of January. Obama said in a web video Friday he was encouraged by a "We the People" petition posted on the White House website calling for more gun control. "We hear you," he told signers of the petition, which has amassed 200,000 supporters. The National Rifle Association, which has been largely silent since the tragedy, was to hold a press conference later in the day. The group promised "meaningful contributions to help make sure this never happens again."

For full U.S. news coverage, visit NBCNews.com.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, meanwhile, marked Friday's moment of silence at an elementary school in Washington D.C., where he was scheduled to speak at a school safety forum. His visit to Neval Thomas Elementary School is his first public appearance since the shooting last week.

A group from the technology world planned an Internet-based moment of silence. By Thursday evening, more than 150,000 people had signed a pledge to participate in a "five minute pause from all online activity" organized by Nick Grossman, an activist at Union Square Ventures, and the team at the activist site, Causes.com.

A companion website, webmomentofsilence.org, offered instructions on temporarily blacking out websites to "help bring focus to the events at Sandy Hook and the broader issue of gun violence in America."

The website said that participation did not represent any political agenda and that organizers were hoping to remember the victims and "spark an ongoing productive conversation."

Huffington Post, ESPN, Foursquare, TechCrunch, AOL, Gilt and Adobe were among the sites that participated in the online moment of silence, according to Ad Week.

The National Council of Churches told NBC News that many of its 100,000 congregations were planning to sound their bells Friday morning and those without bells were planning to honor the victims in other ways.

Remembering the Sandy Hook Victims: Portraits of the Fallen.

Susan Marie Smith, a rector at St. Albans Episcopal Church in Bexley, Ohio told NBC News that her church was planning a morning fast and 20 minutes of prayer "to share the burden of our brothers and sisters in Connecticut."

Back in Newtown, funerals will continue for a fifth consecutive day. Three more children and two school staffers will be buried. They include: 6-year-old Olivia Engel; 6-year-old Dylan Hockley; 7-year-old Grace McDonnell; behavioral therapist Rachel D'Avino, 29; and school psychologist Mary Sherlach, 56.

On Thursday five children were laid to rest as well as a Sandy Hook teacher and Nancy Lanza, the mother of gunman Adam Lanza who fatally shot her before ambushing Sandy Hook Elementary School and taking his own life.

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