Sunday, April 3, 2011

High school student struck in head by express train on 4 and 5 line while entering Union Square


Adrian Rodriguez, 18 from the Bronx, was struck and injured by a subway train today while he was on the platform at Union Square
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An award-winning teen chef was fighting for his life last night after he collapsed on a Union Square subway platform and a downtown train slammed into his head, officials said.

Adrian Rodriguez, a favorite of students and teachers at Marta-Valle High School, was rushed to Bellevue Hospital with serious head injuries after the 7:50 a.m. accident.

"I love that boy," said Cliftonia Johnson, 47, a member of the staff at the lower East Side school. "He's absolutely one of my favorites. Wonderful, wonderful person."

A witness told police the teen appeared pale as he walked along the platform — and then either fainted or fell and was clipped by the southbound No. 5 train.

The gruesome accident spattered blood on the platform, while disrupting morning rush hour service for about 90 minutes. Rodriguez was knocked backward on the platform and did not fall to the tracks.

Authorities said he was in serious condition at Bellevue.

Word of the tragedy spread quickly through the school, where the 18-year-old Bronx resident was known as a top chef, top student and all-around nice guy.



Investigators look over the platform where a passenger was struck by a train while on the downtown bound 4,5, and 6 train platform at Union Square Station.

"They call him Obama, 'cause he's always wearing suits," said fellow senior Jeanae Jones, 17, of Fort Greene. "If he's not in his normal suit, he's in his chef suit and hat, ready to cook."

Student Laura Cuautle, 17, said classmates became worried when Rodriguez didn't appear for their culinary class. Their fears grew when a distressed teacher suddenly bolted from the classroom.

"He's always at cooking class, and always early, so we were worried," Cuautle said.

"He was very friendly and respectful. He liked to talk a lot. He was always helping the principal; he was a really good student."

Rodriguez won the Careers through Culinary Arts Program junior competition last year, and was prepping for a shot at a scholarship to the prestigious Culinary Institute of America.

"He was cool," said junior Raheem Devenish, 16, of Crown Heights. "He knows what he wants, and he was going to go out and get it."

Kwame Onwuachi was a mentor to the young chef and hired Rodriguez as an intern with his new business, Coterie Catering.

"It’s so sad," said Onwuachi, 21, of Harlem. "He definitely had a bright future, and I hope he still does. He's one of those that does good all the time. He's a great student."

Friday, April 1, 2011

Dog saved from floating home 3 weeks after tsunami Japanese coast guard spotted animal on island of debris out to sea



Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Cats doing Pat a Cake! lol

Dolphin rescued from rice field 12 days after tsunami




TOKYO — A baby dolphin has been rescued in Japan after being dumped in a rice field by a giant tsunami that hit the coast on March 11.
The dolphin was spotted in the flooded field, about a mile from the coast, said Ryo Taira, a pet-shop owner who has been rescuing animals abandoned after the 9.0 magnitude quake and tsunami left 23,000 people dead or missing.
"A man passing by said he had found the dolphin in the rice paddy and that we had to do something to save it," the 32-year-old Taira told Reuters.
Taira found the dolphin struggling in the shallow seawater on Tuesday and after failing to net it, waded in to the field, which had yet to be sown with rice, to cradle the four foot animal in his arms.
Japanese pet shop owner Ryo Taira rescues a young finless porpoise from a flooded rice paddy. The small cetacean was brought inland by the huge tsunami waves that inundated the area on March 11.

"It was pretty weak by then, which was probably the only reason we could catch it," he said.
Taira and some friends wrapped the dolphin in wet towels and drove it back to the sea, where they set it free. The dolphin appeared to perk up when it was back in the Pacific, he said.
"I don't know if it will live, but it's certainly a lot better than dying in a rice paddy," Taira told the Asahi Shimbun newspaper.

Man's forehead removed by surgeons after sickening drunken attack by 16-year-old thug


The victim of a drunken teenage yob had a huge part of his skull removedafter a 'murderous' attack left him close to death
Steven Cloak was targeted while walking home in Bideford, Devon, for looking at a 16-year-old 'in the wrong way' and was left with shocking head injuries.
Thug Jack Hobbs now face 10 years in prison for inflicting the savage beating, the results of which were deemed so severe as to be prejudicial if shown to the jury in his court case.


However, he was found guilty of grievous bodily harm with intent leading to the judge lifting a ban on his identification.
Mr Cloak, who had a titanium plate inserted where his skull was removed, is recovering from the ordeal at his home in Bideford, North Devon.
The court heard how Hobbs had been downing sambuca and beer with friends on the streets of his home town in the early hours of the morning in February.
Trial judge Philip Wassall remanded Hobbs in custody until he is sentenced early next year but warned him he faces 'a substantial custodial sentence'.
And Judge Wassall described the incident as 'a murderous attack' where Hobbs 'kicked this prone and injured man on the floor'.
He ordered reports including one from a psychiatrist because the judge believes Hobbs is an 'unassessed risk'.
Hobbs claimed in court that Mr Cloak - a total stranger to him - had nudged into him outside a takeaway shop in Bideford.
He has no memory of the incident or of the previous months of his life and did not give evidence in court because he has no recall.
His family said: 'He is the one with a life sentence. Steven doesn't have a violent bone in his body, he is so laid back he is horizontal.'
Meanwhile Hobbs who denied a charge of unlawfully and maliciously wounding grievous bodily harm during his trial at Exeter Crown Court, is facing the prospect of years behind bars after being convicted.
He had been drinking beer and sambuca with a gang of his friends but told a jury that 'personally, I was not drunk'.
Giving evidence, he said: 'There was a barge, that was it with Steven Cloak. The barge was quite forceful. It appeared to be Mr Cloak. I looked at him and that was it.
'I had never seen him before.'
He said afterwards: 'I noticed him, appearing to be looking at me, it was an intimidating look. I went to confront him.'
Mr Cloak was a regular at the takeaway after going out to see friends, and Hobbs lied as he tried to claim he acted in self defence as he followed and then confronted Mr Cloak who was holding his bag of food.
Hobbs told the jury: 'It seemed like he threw a punch at me... I did not see a fist. I thought he was going to hit me.'
He also claimed he only hit him once and said he went back to check on his victim - using his foot to move his head.
But key witnesses said Hobbs kicked Mr Cloak as he lay 'motionless and unconscious' on the road.
Prosecutor David Evans said it was the second punch that felled Mr Cloak whose had hit the pavement with a 'sickening crack'.
Mr Evans said: 'The sad truth is this 16-year-old was fired up, in drink, and playing the hardman.' He described the self-defence claim as 'ludicrous'.
After the vicious attack, around 500 protesters marched through the streets of the North Devon town to 'reclaim' it from anti social behaviour in Steven's name following the horrific assault.
His upset family said: 'He cannot remember what happened that night or for several months before it happened. It is as though he had blotted it out of his life.
'He just wants to get a job and move forward. We have been through all this because someone thought he had been given a look.'
Detective Constable Martin Pearse of Bideford CID said: 'This was a completely unprovoked and mindless act of violence which could easily, and very nearly, resulted in a death.
'Hobbs has now been found guilty and I hope that Steven and his family can now concentrate on rebuilding their lives and start looking towards the future.'
The detective also praised the quick thinking witnesses who dialled 999 who helped save Steven's life as the emergency services were on the scene within three minutes.
A RAF helicopter from nearby Chivenor airlifted Steven to a specialist head injury unit at Plymouth's Derriford Hospital where he spent a month being treated - and where surgeons removed part of his skull days later.
A friend said: 'Steven has had a hell of a year. He is recovering really well but what better Christmas present could he have than someone gives him a job to get him well and truly back on his feet.'
Then the spotty-faced teenager told police that Mr Cloak then 'looked at him' - and he followed him before confronting him just yards from the safety of the victim's home.
Hobbs, from Bideford, punched jobless factory worker Mr Cloak twice and felled him to the road - but he banged his head on the ground and suffered massive head and brain injuries.
The yob then returned to kick stricken Mr Cloak in the head - before running away telling his gang of friends to keep silent about what he had done.
The teenage thug, now 17, raced home and put his blood stained training shoes and clothes in the washing machine - but forensic scientists found tiny traces of Mr Cloak's blood on both his shoes.
At the scene, the callous teen had paused to wipe blood off the shoes before he fled into the night.
Some of his friends, disgusted at what he had done to an innocent man, gave evidence against him as he tried to say he is was acting in self defence.
Mr Cloak suffered massive head wounds and a fractured jaw and eye socket.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

NYC woman lured over CraigsList to New Hampshire home where man raped, imprisoned her


A New Hampshire town official was charged with abducting and raping a New York City woman lured to his lakefront home by the promise of a fresh start in a new town.

Jeffrey Gray, who avoided arrest for two weeks by checking himself into a veterans' hospital, was jailed Thursday on charges of kidnapping, rape, false imprisonment and assault.

The elected planning board member attacked the 34-year-old victim after responding to her craigslist ad, where she was seeking a new home in New England, authorities charged.

Gray, 48, convinced the woman to visit his rented Windham, N.H., home on March 5. Police said she was instead taken captive, raped and held for three days before Gray drove her to Boston's Logan International Airport.
Instead of boarding a plane on March 9, the victim approached a state trooper and detailed her terrifying stay at Gray's lakefront home in a quiet town of 15,000.

The suspect, who was arraigned by video on Wednesday from the Rockingham County jail, has a rap sheet that includes criminal threatening and criminal mischief.

There were also several restraining orders filed against him - including one filed by an ex-girlfriend who claimed Gray threatened her and her children, local court officials said.
The unsuspecting woman came to Windham after a computer conversation with Gray about her search for a new home. She was later treated for minor injuries at Massachusetts General Hospital and released.

Landlord Kevin Bleeker, who rented the house to Gray, was distraught over the allegations.

"I thought he was pretty reputable," Bleeker said. "I should have done a background check. I would have found he had a long history of problems with women."



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/03/31/2011-03-31_nyc_woman_lured_over_craigslist_to_new_hampshire_home_where_man_raped_imprisoned.html#ixzz1IE8eJJkq

Bronx Zoo deadly escaped Egyptian Cobra is found alive after 6 days on the lam


Snakes alive! - the cobra has been found.

The Bronx Zoo's escaped snake was snared in the House of Reptiles on Thursday, six days after she slithered out of her enclosure.

"We found our snake and we're very happy," Jim Breheny, the zoo's director, told the Daily News.

The fanged fugitive was spotted coiled in a corner around 9 a.m., during one of three daily sweeps by a half-dozen zoo workers.

Using special tongs and hooks, they easily apprehended the deadly Egyptian cobra, which is now under observation.

"We knew it was going to be a game of patience. We set the place up to make it easier to search," Breheny said.

Contrary to one report, the zoo did not set any traps with mice for the snake. It simply kept the Reptile House dark and quiet.

"We wanted to just let her feel comfortable," he said. "We did everything we could to help her feel secure."

The snake escaped from a fiberglass box with a sliding glass front while no one was around.

"Clearly she finagled her way out of the enclosure," Breheny said of the cold-blooded Houdini.

Zoo officials are now reviewing the safety of the enclosures and plan to reopen the Reptile House soon.

The cobra will eventually go on exhibit - which should be a big draw, given its notoriety.

The hunt for the missing adolescent made headlines across the globe and prompted either anxiety or amusement from New Yorkers.

An anonymous wit even created a Twitter feed chronicling the reptile's made-up misadventures - and picked up nearly 200,000 followers, from Mayor Bloomberg to Ellen DeGeneres.

All along, zoo officials said they were confident the pencil-thin 20-inch-long reptile was still somewhere in the House of Reptiles, not roaming the city.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2011/03/31/2011-03-31_bronx_zoos_deadly_escaped_egyptian_cobra_is_caught__near_the_reptile_house.html#ixzz1IE7hSLGX