Showing posts with label virginia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label virginia. Show all posts

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Eastern US Storms Kill 13, Cut Power to Millions



WASHINGTON (AP) — Millions across the mid-Atlantic region sweltered Saturday in the aftermath of violent storms that pummeled the eastern U.S. with high winds and downed trees, killing at least 13 people and leaving 3 million without power during a heat wave.

Power officials said the outages wouldn't be repaired for several days to a week, likening the damage to a serious hurricane. Emergencies were declared in Maryland, West Virginia, Ohio, the District of Columbia and Virginia, where Gov. Bob McDonnell said the state had its largest non-hurricane outage in history, as more storms threatened. "This is a very dangerous situation," the governor said.

In West Virginia, 232 Amtrak passengers spent Friday night on a train that was blocked on both sides by trees that fell on the tracks, and they were waiting for buses to pick them up Saturday. And in Illinois, storm damage forced the transfer of dozens of maximum-security, mentally ill prisoners from one prison to another.

In some Virginia suburbs of Washington, emergency 911 call centers were out of service; residents were told to call local police and fire departments. Huge trees fell across streets in Washington, leaving cars crunched up next to them, and onto the fairway at the AT&T National golf tournament in Maryland. Cell phone and Internet service was spotty, gas stations shut down and residents were urged to conserve water until sewage plants returned to power.

The outages were especially dangerous because they left the region without air conditioning in an oppressive heat. Temperatures soared to highs in the mid-90s in Baltimore and Washington, where it had hit 104 on Friday.

"I've called everybody except for the state police to try to get power going," said Karen Fryer, resident services director at two assisted living facilities in Washington. The facilities had generator power, but needed to go out for portable air conditioning units, and Fryer worried about a few of her 100 residents who needed backup power for portable oxygen.

On Saturday night, the train passengers stranded near rural Prince, W.Va., were waiting for buses to pick them up after they got stuck at 11 p.m. the previous evening, said Amtrak spokesman Steve Kulm. Kulm said the train bound from New York to Chicago has power, so lights and air conditioning are working. He says that since it's a long-distance train, it was stocked with food and crew members were able to get to town to buy more.

Kulm says passengers should be on the buses sometime Saturday evening.

About 170 miles to the northeast in Morgantown, W.Va., Jeff and Alice Haney loaded their cart at Lowe's with cases of water, extra flashlights and batteries, and wiring for the generator they hoped would be enough to kick-start their air conditioner. Even if they had to live without cool air, the family had a backup plan.

"We have a pool," Jeff Haney said, "so we'll be OK."

The storm did damage from Indiana to New Jersey, although the bulk of it was in West Virginia, Washington and suburban Virginia and Maryland. At least six of the dead were killed in Virginia, including a 90-year-old woman asleep in bed when a tree slammed into her home. Two young cousins in New Jersey were killed when a tree fell on their tent while camping. Two were killed in Maryland, one in Ohio, one in Kentucky and one in Washington.

Illinois corrections officials transferred 78 inmates from a prison in Dixon to the Pontiac Correctional Center after storms Friday night caused significant damage, Department of Corrections spokeswoman Stacey Solano said.

No one was injured, Solano said. Generators are providing power to the prison, which is locked down, confining remaining inmates to their cells.

Utility officials said it could take at least several days to restore power to all customers because of the sheer magnitude of the outages and the destruction. Winds and toppled trees brought down entire power lines, and debris has to be cleared from power stations and other structures. All of that takes time and can't be accomplished with the flip of a switch.

"This is very unfortunate timing," said Myra Oppel, a spokeswoman for Pepco, which reported over 400,000 outages in Washington and its suburbs. "We do understand the hardship that this brings, especially with the heat as intense at is. We will be working around the clock until we get the last customer on."

Especially at risk were children, the sick and the elderly. In Charleston, W.Va., firefighters helped several people using walkers and wheelchairs get to emergency shelters. One of them, David Gunnoe, uses a wheelchair and had to spend the night in the community room of his apartment complex because the power — and his elevator — went out. Rescuers went up five floors to retrieve his medication.

Gunnoe said he was grateful for the air conditioning, but hoped power would be restored so he could go home.

"It doesn't matter if it's under a rock some place. When you get used to a place, it's home," he said.

More than 20 elderly residents at an apartment home in Indianapolis were displaced when the facility lost power due to a downed tree. Most were bused to a Red Cross facility to spend the night, and others who depend on oxygen assistance were given other accommodations, the fire department said.

Others sought refuge in shopping malls, movie theaters and other places where the air conditioning would be turned to "high."

In Richmond, Va., Tracey Phalen relaxed with her teenage son under the shade of a coffee-house umbrella rather than suffer through the stifling heat of her house, which lost power.

"We'll probably go to a movie theater at the top of the day," she said.

Phalen said Hurricane Irene left her home dark for six days last summer, "and this is reminiscent of that," she said.

Others scheduled impromptu "staycations" or took shelter with friends and relatives.

Robert Clements, 28, said he showered by flashlight on Friday night after power went out at his home in Fairfax, Va. The apartment complex where he lives told his fiancee that power wouldn't be back on for at least two days, and she booked a hotel on Saturday.

Clements' fiancee, 27-year-old Ann Marie Tropiano, said she tried to go to the pool, but it was closed because there was no electricity so the pumps weren't working. She figured the electricity would eventually come back on, but she awoke to find her thermostat reading 81 degrees and slowly climbing. Closing the blinds and curtains didn't help.

"It feels like an oven," she said.

At the AT&T National in Bethesda, Md., trees cracked at their trunks crashed onto the 14th hole and onto ropes that had lined the fairways. The third round of play was suspended for several hours Saturday and was closed to volunteers and spectators. Mark Russell, the PGA Tour's vice president of rules and competition, couldn't remember another time that a tour event was closed to fans.

"It's too dangerous out here," Russell said. "There's a lot of huge limbs. There's a lot of debris. It's like a tornado came through here. It's just not safe."

The outages disrupted service for many subscribers to Netflix, Instagram and Pinterest when the storm cut power to some of Amazon Inc.'s operations. The video and photo sharing services took to Twitter and Facebook to update subscribers on the outages. Netflix and Pinterest had restored service by Saturday afternoon.

The storm that whipped through the region Friday night was called a derecho (duh-RAY'-choh) , a straight line wind storm that sweeps over a large area at high speed. It can produce tornado-like damage. The storm, which can pack wind gusts of up to 90 mph, began in the Midwest, passed over the Appalachian Mountains and then drew new strength from a high pressure system as it hit the southeastern U.S., said Bryan Jackson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.

"It's one of those storms," Jackson said. "It just plows through."


Friday, December 17, 2010

Brittany Smith Found Alive

(CNN) -- A missing Virginia girl and her alleged abductor were panhandling outside a San Francisco supermarket when someone nearby spotted them on Friday and alerted law enforcement, police said.

Brittany Mae Smith, 12 -- for whom police have been searching since Monday -- was found Friday afternoon, as was 32-year-old Jeffrey Scott Easley.

Easley is a "very good suspect" in the murder of Tina Smith -- his girlfriend and Brittany's mother -- who was found dead at her Salem, Virginia, home last Monday, Roanoke County, Virginia, Police Chief Ray Lavinder said Saturday.

Easley and Brittany Smith left Virginia early last Saturday or late on Friday, December 3 -- the same day that the girl's mother was killed, according to Lavinder.

A surveillance video from December 3 shows the pair shopping for a blue domed tent at a Walmart in Salem, Virginia.

A similar tent was found within walking distance of the Safeway store in northern California, where a witness saw Easley and Brittany Smith on Friday. The tipster recognized the pair after watching broadcast report's about the case on HLN's "Nancy Grace."

Lavinder said Saturday that he believes the girl and her alleged abductor were asking for money and holding up a cardboard sign when they were spotted.

Police were called, and the two were found shortly thereafter outside the store, more than 2,300 miles from where the girl was reported missing four days earlier, Lavinder said Friday. Police in San Francisco contacted their counterparts in Virginia with the news.

San Francisco Police Officer Albie Esparza said Brittany was turned over to California's Child Protective Services division after she was found. She has no visible injuries, has been in touch with family members and should return soon to Virginia, according to Lavinder. Easley did not resist arrest, he added.

"It's a fantastic sense of relief, and I know in my heart that it's due to information that you folks put out," Lavinder said Friday, thanking the media. "It's a party atmosphere, believe me."

Authorities found Easley's car relatively early in the manhunt. Lavinder said Saturday that authorities had located a silver 2005 Dodge Neon four-door sedan with Virginia tags that belonged to Tina Smith in a parking lot adjacent to San Francisco International Airport.

He said he believed the two had driven across country together, but he did not know when they arrived in California.

Police issued an Amber Alert for Brittany on Monday after finding the body of Tina Smith, 41, after her co-workers called to express concern that she hadn't shown up for work. Authorities in Florida and Alabama followed suit in subsequent days and notices went out to law enforcement nationwide .

Until Friday, Lavinder said the last known sighting of Easley and Brittany Smith was in December in the Salem, Virginia, Walmart.

The chief said Saturday that four Roanoke County detectives were heading to San Francisco, to help bring back Brittany Smith and to deal with Easley. Lavinder said he hoped "to get information back from them in the next 24 hours," though the earliest Easley could be extradited to Virginia is Monday, when California courts are back in session.

He could head east relatively soon if he waived extradition, or the process could be delayed for weeks if he contested the return.

Prior to his arrest, Easley was wanted for credit card theft, credit card fraud and abduction. Lavinder said that, "we are concentrating most of our efforts ... on the homicide investigation."

The chief has said Easley met Tina Smith online this summer, then moved into the family home in October. Authorities said they do not know if the girl went willingly with Easley.

Back east, the girl's great aunt told HLN's Nancy Grace on Friday night that Brittany already had talked to her father, and that there was widespread relief and joy from Salem to South Boston, Virginia, where many relatives live.

"Everybody here is just elated," said Lois Choquette, who is the late Tina Smith's aunt. "It's been a terrible thing, but we are just so thankful."

Relatives Plead for Safe Return of Virginia Girl, 12

(CNN) -- Tearful relatives sent messages of love and concern Wednesday night to a 12-year-old girl who authorities believe was abducted by the boyfriend of her dead mother.

Virginia police said earlier that someone may be helping Jeffrey Scott Easley, 32, subject of a felony abduction warrant in the case of Brittany Mae Smith.

Police are "still actively searching" for Brittany, and believe she and the suspect may be camping in the region, Roanoke County Police Chief Ray Lavinder told reporters. More than 375 tips have come in.

"I prayed for you everyday since I found out you were gone and will continue to pray until you are found and returned to us," Brittany's cousin, Kim Stephenson, said at an evening press conference.

Brittany is believed to be with Easley, who met the girl's mother on the internet, authorities said. They do not know if Brittany went with Easley willingly. The pair may be seeking refuge in another state, the chief said.

"As to what relationship Jeff Easley and Brittany may have between them is irrelevant," Lavinder said. "With a child, consent is irrelevant in the eyes of the law. She is a victim."

Authorities provided images of two tattoos, including a red star, Easley is believed to have.

Authorities also showed an image of a blue dome tent they believe Easley purchased December 3 at a local Walmart.

Easley and Brittany are believed to have bought several other items at a Salem, Virginia, Walmart before they disappeared.

Lavinder said the key is finding a silver 2005 Dodge Neon four-door sedan with Virginia tag XKF-2365 that belonged to the girl's dead mother.

"For someone just to drop off the face of the earth -- I think that someone has to be providing them some money or some other support for them to remain unlocated," Lavinder said Wednesday.

Authorities launched a search for the seventh-grader Monday after officers found the body of Brittany's mother, Tina Smith, 41, inside the family's Salem home. Tina Smith's co-workers contacted police after the woman failed to show up for work Monday morning.

Smith's death is being investigated as a homicide, Roanoke County spokeswoman Teresa Hall told HLN Wednesday. She would not provide details of an autopsy.

Lavinder asked Easley to safely return Brittany so that she could attend Tina Smith's funeral.

"I thinks it's important that she be able to say goodbye to her mother," he said.

Police are examining social media sites that may have been used by Easley and Tina Smith.

A friend of Brittany Smith told the Roanoke Times that the missing girl called her several weeks ago.

Brittany was afraid her mother's live-in boyfriend "would come over and take her away and hurt her mom," Rebecca Kilian, 13, told the Times on Tuesday.

Kilian told the Times that Brittany asked her to stay on the phone until her mom got home.

Virginia State Police are working with North Carolina, Alabama, West Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio and Florida to issue alerts in their states for the missing vehicle and Easley and Brittany Smith, authorities said.

Police are "confident" that the girl is with Easley, Lavinder said. He described Easley as a "friend of the family" who "developed a relationship" with her. Easley moved in with Smith and her daughter in October, the chief said.

After finding Tina Smith's body, police soon got information that Brittany Smith's whereabouts were unknown, leading them to issue the statewide alert.

"We found out pretty quickly that (Brittany) had not shown up for school. Nobody seemed to know where she was," said Roanoke County Police Lt. Chuck Mason Monday, according to CNN affiliate WSET of Lynchburg, Virginia, adding that police were concerned her disappearance "has something to do with the homicide."

Easley, a 265-pound white male, is 5 feet, 11 inches tall, has brown hair and hazel eyes, the Amber Alert says. Brittany Smith is 5 feet tall, weighs 100 pounds, and has straight brown hair and brown eyes.

Hall said authorities don't yet have a specific search area, as they are uncertain which direction Easley might be heading or how far he might have gotten. They have asked anyone with information to call 911 or Roanoke County police at 540-777-8641.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Teen Abducted, Escapes Captor

CHESAPEAKE, Va. - Chesapeake police say a 15-year-old girl was abducted Thursday afternoon while walking in the 1700 block of Dock Landing Road.

Police spokesperson Dorienne Boykin tells WAVY.com the suspect, 33-year-old Christopher Scott Little, pulled up in a white pickup truck, grabbed the teen and put her into his vehicle.

Police say Little then drove into Portsmouth. While the vehicle was stopped, the victim acted quickly and ran out of the truck. According to police, Little chased the girl and tried to pull her back into the vehicle, but the victim was able to flee.

The teen ran to a Portsmouth Deputy Sheriff and made him aware of the situation. Chesapeake police were later notified and given a description of the suspect's vehicle, including the license plate number, which the victim had remembered.

Chesapeake police located the suspect's vehicle in the 4000 block of Maple Street a short while later. With the help of the victim, the suspect was positively identified.

Little has been charged with one count of Abduction.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Possible UFO Caught on Video



Possible UFO caught on video 1:22
Denna Smith and her family video taped what they believe was a UFO in the sky over a Virginia theme park.

Court Gives Would-Be Assassin John Hinckley More Freedom

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The man who tried to kill President Ronald Reagan is now allowed to visit his mother more, to get a driver's license and spend more time away from the mental hospital where he lives, a federal judge ruled.

The ruling, released Tuesday, expands the freedoms of John Hinckley Jr. over the objections of prosecutors. They argued that Hinckley is still mentally ill and harbors unhealthy feelings about women.

Hinckley, 54, has been confined to St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington since he was found not guilty by reason of insanity in the 1981 shooting of Reagan.

Hinckley shot Reagan and wounded three others reportedly because of an obsession with actress Jodie Foster.

Gradually, Hinckley has been allowed more freedom as he has progressed in therapy.

Recently, family members and hospital officials requested that he be allowed to visit his mother's home in Williamsburg, Virginia, for nine nights instead of the six he was allowed; to get a driver's license; and to do volunteer work, according to court documents. There also was a request for Hinckley to have more unsupervised time away from the hospital.

Prosecutors objected to many of the requests, saying that Hinckley "continues to maintain inappropriate thoughts of violence," court documents said.

Hospital officials asked him to keep a journal of his recent relationships with women, and some of those relationships alarmed prosecutors.

Prosecutors said Hinckley has been having sex with at least two women -- one who is bi-polar and the other who is in a long-term relationship with someone else. At the same time, Hinckley has been dating two other women.

His relationships could cause an "increased risk for violence due to depression or due to a request to act out to demonstrate his love for a woman," prosecutors argued.

Also troubling was a song that Hinckley recently recorded, called "Ballad of an Outlaw," prosecutors said. They described the song as "reflecting suicide and lawlessness."

Hinckley wrote it before his assassination attempt and recently re-recorded it. Hospital officials said he was trying to take responsibility for his past by recording the song again.

In the ruling, Judge Paul L. Friedman of the U.S. District Court in Washington sided with hospital officials and expanded many of Hinckley's freedoms, saying:

"Hinckley will not be a danger to himself or to others under the conditions proposed by the hospital."

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Man Wanted in Connection with Brother's Murder; Ex-girlfriend Missing

WINCHESTER, Va. - Investigators spent Friday searching the banks of the Shenandoah River for a 22-year-old woman whose disappearance coincided with a manhunt for her ex-boyfriend, a suspect in the murder of his brother.


The mother of Kayleigh Marie Plamondon publicly pleaded for help finding her daughter Friday.

"We miss Kayleigh. We love Kayleigh. We want Kayleigh to be found," said Debbie Plamondon, pleading for 21-year-old Justin Shane Slater, who is wanted on a murder warrant, to contact her. "I really need to hear from you now, because if I can go to Kayleigh, that will be my next step," she said. "My next step is to find her and make sure that she's safe and that I can help her."

Kayleigh Plamondon was last seen Wednesday afternoon. Investigators searching the farm where she was house sitting came across disturbing signs.

"There was significant evidence to believe that there was a violent confrontation at the house that she was sitting at," said Investigator Trisha Putnam with the Clarke County Sheriff's Office.

Justin Shane Slater, 21, should be considered armed and dangerous, according to the Frederick County, Va., Sheriff's Office.

The body of Slater's brother, Gregory Scott Slater Jr., 28, was found early Thursday morning. He had been shot to death, police said. Justin is wanted on a first-degree murder warrant in connection with the shooting.

Slater is described as 6'1", 170 pounds, with brown hair and green eyes. He is believed to be driving a 1999 Jeep SUV, brownish gold in color, with Virginia tags XXG3569, investigators said. The vehicle has flaring on the wheel wells and window tinting on the right side, but not the left side, police said. The back, driver's-side compartment window is also broken, according to police.

Investigators ask anyone who sees Slater or the vehicle to call 911 immediately.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Family Watched As Lightning Struck Boy

A 12-year-old boy was struck by lightning and killed yesterday evening while playing catch with another boy on a ballfield south of Fredericksburg in Spotsylvania County, authorities said.

The other boy was critically injured in the lightning strike, which came as powerful thunderstorms raked much of the Washington region with hail, gusts of wind and downpours that caused trees to topple and roads to flood in spots.

The 12-year-old, Chelal Matos of Spotsylvania County, was struck at 6:26 p.m., said 1st Sgt. Liz Scott of the county sheriff's department.

She said that because of the weather, umpires had called off a baseball game and ordered participants off the field, which is two or three miles east of Interstate 95 and just north of Route 17.

Scott said the boy and his 11-year-old teammate stayed on the field under parents' supervision.

The boys were taken to Mary Washington Hospital, where the older boy was pronounced dead.

The younger was transferred to a Richmond hospital in "very critical" condition, Scott said.

She said it appeared that the 12-year-old was struck directly and that the bolt might have jumped from him to the younger boy.

The incident came on a second night of powerful thunderstorms.

Almost an inch and a half of rain fell at Reagan National Airport between 6 and 11 p.m. Rainfall was even heavier in western Fairfax and eastern Loudoun counties, as more than two inches fell at Dulles International Airport between 8 and 10 p.m.

Flash flooding was reported on Route 50 about a mile northeast of Chantilly. As much as a foot of water was flowing across the roadway just before 10 p.m.

Flooding was reported in the South Riding area of Loudoun County, with as much as 2 1/2 feet of water on Tall Cedars Parkway.

High water also was reported on Interstate 270 in the Rockville area, with two cars stalled.

About 11 p.m., power was out at about 4,400 homes and businesses in Montgomery and Prince George's counties and Northern Virginia.

The National Weather Service said it would check today for a possible tornado touchdown yesterday evening in Page County, Va.

Hailstones ranging in size from marbles to quarters to golf balls and even baseballs were reported in parts of Virginia.

In the District, six trees were reported toppled near Rhode Island Avenue and Fourth Street NE.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Details Emerge in VT Student Decapitation Case

..MORE Virginia Tech tragedy?

Christiansburg, VA - Details are emerging involving the decapitation murder of a Virginia Tech student in January. Haiyang Zhu was in Montgomery County General District Court Friday morning for a preliminary hearing.

Zhu is charged with first-degree murder in the slaying of 22-year-old Xin Yang. The 22-year-old woman was beheaded in her dormitory cafe where she met Zhu for coffee Jan. 21.

The following is how testimony played out in court Friday morning:

Corey Cox had just returned from a break as a cashier at Au Bon Pain, a cafe in Virginia Tech's Graduate Life Center, when he heard what he describes as an "aggressive growl". "It's the best way I can describe it," said the Blacksburg resident.

When Cox looked up, he saw a man attack a woman as she sat at a table just 10 feet away. Before pointing to Haiyang Zhu, identifying him as the attacker, Cox described a scene he calls "atrocious".

As patrons ran for the doors, Cox' boss became "hysterical", yelling for him to call 911. In a second, Cox had found comfort behind a counter where he made the call. As dispatch kept Cox on the phone, the young man kept peering over the counter catching segments of the attack.

"At first there was quite a struggle, but then she just lay there."

The victim is graduate student Xin Yang of Beijing, China. She had been in the United States just 13 days, studying at the Pamplin College of Business, before she was killed. She suffered multiple deadly injuries during the attack including severe wounds to the upper body, hands and forearm.

Cox described how the man stared at his victim "just cutting away" with a "blank and determined" look.

Within minutes, Virginia Tech Police Officer, Nicole Irvine, arrived on the scene and immediately saw Hiyang Zhu walking toward her, carrying the victim's head by the hair at his side.

"Put your hands in the air," yelled Irvine as she reached for her weapon. Zhu dropped the head and immediately complied before Irvine placed him under arrest.

After the hearing, Commonwealth's Attorney Brad Finch would not comment on his court presentation, which ended with Finch clearly indicating pre-meditation was a factor in this crime because the knife they say Zhu used did not come from the cafe.
He also pointed to the fact that Zhu had additional weapons in a backpack. Pre-meditation is a factor that must be met in order to seek the death penalty.

The defense did not put on any evidence, but did lead a line of cross examination that focused on statements made by Zhu following his arrest. The statements included a reference of Zhu asking for his Miranda Rights.

Police have said that Zhu and Yang did know each other. Both were new to the Virginia Tech campus. Zhu listened to Friday’s testimony through an interpreter.

Zhu has been in jail since the January 21 attack, but was just recently declared competent to stand trial. The judge certified his case to the grand jury and is set to meet July 14.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Three Wounded In Hampton University Shooting

(CNN) -- The campus of Hampton University in Hampton, Virginia, was locked down for several hours Sunday morning after a former student shot two people in a dormitory and then shot himself, university and police officials said.

The former student entered Harkness Hall shortly before 1 a.m. by following a pizza deliveryman, said the university's president, Dr. William Harvey, at an afternoon news conference.

The former student shot the deliveryman and the night manager of the dorm, who came into the hall after he heard shots, Harvey explained. The man then shot himself.

No one was killed in the incident, which prompted the evacuation of the dorm and a lockdown of the campus, the president said.

The three wounded were taken to area hospitals, Harvey said. The dormitory night manager was treated and released, he said.

Hampton city police said they had the shooter in custody.

The motive for the shootings is not clear, university and law enforcement officials said.

Harvey praised the first-responders to the incident, saying their quick action likely averted further tragedy. He also lauded the school's system of text messages, e-mails and phone messages that warned students about the situation and the campus lockdown.

Hampton is about 70 miles southeast of Richmond, Virginia.