Sunday, May 25, 2014

California gunman emailed plans minutes before killing spree began

from reuters

SANTA BARBARA, California Mon May 26, 2014 12:06am EDT
A frame grab from a video that was posted on You Tube by an individual who identified himself as Elliot Rodger is shown in this May 24, 2014 photo. REUTERS-Elliot Rodger-YouTube
1 OF 19. A frame grab from a video that was posted on You Tube by an individual who identified himself as Elliot Rodger is shown in this May 24, 2014 photo.
CREDIT: REUTERS/ELLIOT RODGER/YOUTUBE

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(Reuters) - A man who killed six people in a California college town emailed his deadly plans minutes before he went on a rampage, sending his parents racing to try to stop him and leaving a family friend wondering whether her son was an intended target, according to two interviews on Sunday.
Elliot Rodger, the 22-year-old son of a Hollywood director, stabbed three people to death in his apartment before gunning down three more victims on Friday night in the town of Isla Vista near the campus of the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB). He then shot himself.
In all Rodger killed two women and four men, and wounded 13 people, including eight who he shot as he sped through town in his black BMW, exchanging fire with police, authorities said.
Minutes before opening fire, the former community college student emailed a chilling manifesto to some 30 people including his mother, father and former teachers, said Cathleen Bloeser, 58, whose son was a childhood friend of the shooter and was included on the email chain.
In that document, Rodger said he planned to first kill his housemates, then lure others to his residence to continue the violence before slaughtering women in a sorority and continuing his spree in the streets of Isla Vista.
The manifesto, which details the fear Rodger felt that his guns might have been discovered when police visited him less than a month ago, was not the first indication that something was troubling him.
"We could see that he was turning," Bloeser said, adding that Rodger talked to her 22-year-old son and another friend about sexual crimes he wanted to commit against women. "He'd changed emotionally and he'd become very despondent and he wanted to get back at people."
'MENTALLY DISTURBED'
Bloeser said Rodger asked for Bloeser's son, Philip, and their mutual childhood friend to stay with him this weekend at his apartment in Isla Vista.
"I have a feeling that they would have been right there as a part of it and shot as well," she said.
Family friend Simon Astaire told Reuters that Rodger's mother, Chin, received a phone call on the night of the shooting from his therapist alerting her to the manifesto.
Chin Rodger called police and her ex-husband, Peter Rodger, and the two parents raced to Isla Vista, he said. Chin heard radio reports about the shootings as she drove, he said. Police in Santa Barbara told them their son was believed to be the gunman.
In a YouTube video posted shortly before he went on the rampage, Rodger bitterly complained of loneliness and rejection by women and outlined his plan to kill those he believed spurned him.
Santa Barbara County Sheriff Bill Brown has said that Rodger was seen by a variety of healthcare professionals and it was "very, very apparent he was severely mentally disturbed."
Brown said his department had been in contact with Rodger three times, including for a welfare check at the request of his family in which deputies found him to be polite and courteous. He did not appear to meet criteria to be held involuntarily on mental health grounds, and deputies took no further action.
Elliot Rodger had seen therapists off and on since he was nine years old, Astaire said. He was reserved to the point of seeming to have trouble communicating with "an underlying sadness about him, a frustration," he said.
"There was no suggestion that he had any interest, any liking for guns," Astaire said.
SHAKING AND CRYING
But Bloeser said Rodger, who was bullied as a child and was known to have Asperger's syndrome, talked to her son about wanting to hold down and rape women. Within the last year, his mental health deteriorated and he was under psychiatric care but not taking his medication, she said.
The Los Angeles Times published portions of Rodger's roughly 140-page manifesto, in which he detailed his fear that police would foil his plot when they visited him last month. He opened his door to a knock to find about seven officers looking for him.
"I had the striking and devastating fear that someone had somehow discovered what I was planning to do, and reported me for it," Rodger wrote.
"If that was the case, the police would have searched my room, found all of my guns and weapons, along with my writings about what I plan to do with them. I would have been thrown in jail, denied of the chance to exact revenge on my enemies. I can't imagine a hell darker than that."
He said the police left after he told them it was all a misunderstanding.
In the manifesto, Rodger said he did not think he was mentally prepared to kill his father, an assistant director on the 2012 film "The Hunger Games".
A lawyer for the family, Alan Shifman, said they offered sympathy to those affected by the tragedy. Authorities searched the homes of both of Rodger's parents on Sunday but neither appeared to be home at the time.
A neighbor of Elliot Rodger who asked not to be identified told reporters on Sunday that Rodger had attended parties in the courtyard of the building but would sit alone, looking sullen.
One night, the neighbor said, Rodger came home bruised and bloodied from a fight with some men at a party after he had aggressively approached a woman there.
"After the beating he was shaking, profusely crying, his eyes were like water faucets," the man said. "I've never seen anybody that mad, that upset in my life."
When police found Rodger dead in his car, apparently killed by a self-inflicted gunshot, they also discovered three legally purchased semiautomatic guns - two Sig Sauers and a Glock - and some 400 rounds of unspent ammunition, Brown said.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis, Eric Kelsey and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles, Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee, Jim Loney in Washington and Casey Sullivan in New York; Writing by Cynthia Johnston and Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Sophie Hares, Andrea RicciEric Walsh and Simon Cameron-Moore)

Saturday, May 24, 2014

INVESTIGATORS: Drowning is silent

from fox






KMSP-TV





In the past four months, four young people have drowned or nearly drowned in pools even though there were adults nearby. So, how do children drown in plain sight? A first-of-its-kind test shows why.

WARNING: You are about to watch a child drown in plain sight. It is real. Two more children will then drown in plain sight, but this time, it is not real. Rather, it is a life-saving Fox 9 demonstration that is as stunning as it is unsettling.

"It was the same thing that happened to me," Tyler Lazerte, who slipped under water at a friend's pool, told Fox 9 Investigator Trish Van Pilsum. "Under the water, no one heard nothing -- not even the guy in the pool with me."
The day a 4-year-old slid from the synthetic tropical island at the Shoreview Community Center and wandered into deep waters, he couldn't have known that he would become the fourth child in as many months who would show that most people have no idea what a drowning person looks or sounds like.
It is a fatal misunderstanding that even the media is perpetuates at times.
"There is not going to be that yelling and screaming," Jon Foss, of Foss Swim School, explained. "He is only perpetuating that myth."
At a local water park, the Fox 9 Investigators found parents' eyes were glued everywhere but the pool.
"I think they think they'll hear if their kids are in trouble," Foss said. "This is a big mistake."
If a deluge of drownings and near-drownings can't convince parents to be more watchful, perhaps this will:
"If you want zero drownings, it's going to have to have a massive change in the idea of how drownings happen," Foss said.
That's why to begin Fox 9's drowning demonstration, longtime swim coach and instructor Foss has to teach very experienced swimmers how to look like they are drowning.
"It happens very quickly, so are you willing to try?" Foss asked 9-year-old students Will and Ella.
The Fox 9 Investigators put three cameras on deck and two in the water. The divers carry cameras and heavy water safety credentials to make sure the children stay safe.
"You're going to start to drown," Foss said. "It doesn't take very long, does it?"
The point of the test is to see whether anybody in a busy pool would see them drown -- or, rather, pretend to drown. So, the children were put in the middle of a water polo game played by members of the Foss Fastjets Swim Team. The parents of all the children involved knew what was going on.
"I think this is great," Jennifer Duncan assured.
However, parents bringing in younger children for swimming lessons did not know -- and they were invited poolside.
"Right in front of you, a little boy just drowned," Van Pilsum said to a parent.
The Fox 9 Investigators explained it's just a test to the parent who had been looking above the water and not below and found that parents generally don't notice because they don't know what they're looking for.
Most expect head bobbing, arms up in the air, a struggle and some splashing -- but that is not what drowning looks or sounds like. The reason is part biology and part physics.
"Our nose is a very special thing in that it allows us to swim," Foss said.
Since human nostrils point downward, the air stays inside as long as the head is upright underwater -- but a struggling swimmer's first instinct is to lean their head back.
"If he looks up, it would be like uncorking the bottle. Then, the air will come out," Foss explained. "If a child is swimming in a position like this, the hydrostatic pressure will force the air out very quickly."
Not only will a drowning victim have lost their buoyancy in the process along with all of their reserve of oxygen, but Foss points out that means a child would have no air in their lungs to yell. That makes drowning a mostly silent event.
"In a matter of a minute or two, it's over," he cautions.
Not a single parent -- despite being safety-minded, swimming-lesson buying caregivers -- spotted the children who pretended to drown.
"What it tells me is that almost 100 percent of the population believes that drowning is a loud, raucous thing," Foss said.
In fact, it took the other kids playing water polo 24 minutes to report to a coach that something was wrong.
"It's weird no one would notice," Ella reflected. "You would think someone would notice, even if you pretend drowning."
When Tyler Lazerte slid silently underwater in a friend's pool five years ago, his friend didn't spot him until he'd been under for about 2 minutes -- long enough to hurt his brain. He knows what he wants to say, but struggles to make the words come out right.
"This happens a lot and it sucks," he said.
When the Fox 9 Investigators asked Tyler Lazerte's father, Rick, whether he was surprised no parents saw the drowning demonstration, he admitted that he was.
"Hopefully, people take something away from that and realize it's important to keep your eye on your kid," he said.
In the end, somebody was keeping an eye on the little boy whose struggle in the Shoreview pool was real. A 10-year-old family friend spotted him at the bottom of the pool, lifted him up and carried him out. A nurse and rescue workers revived him and so far, he seems fine -- but not surprisingly, nobody heard a thing.
"I think a deaf lifeguard is probably the best lifeguard," Foss admitted.
One who learns to rely on their eyes and not their ears.
"It is just a matter of seconds," Rick Lazerte said. "Someone could easily drown."
FOX 9 SAFETY POSTERS
For boys: Drowning is silent [PDF]
For girls: Drowning is silent [PDF]
WATER SAFETY TIPS
1. Never swim alone: Even a teenager or adult should swim with a buddy.
2. Pick a look-out: Designate an adult to be close enough to reach out and touch a child under 4 years old whenever they are in the water.
3. Don't waste time: If your child is missing, look in the pool first.
4. Keep a cell phone nearby: Every second counts when you have to call 911, but keep it turned off or silenced while you watch swimmers in the pool.
5. Install alarms: Any door or window leading to a pool area can be outfitted to alert adults to unexpected access.


Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Cops: Jace confessed to killing wife on 911 call

from cbsnews






LOS ANGELES - Actor Michael Jace, who played a police officer on television, was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of fatally shooting his wife after calling 911 and telling an operator that he shot her, police said.
Detectives were investigating whether the couple's financial or other marital difficulties might have played a role in the killing.
Los Angeles police Detective Dean Vinluan said a printout of the incident history indicated that Jace called 911 and told the operator that he shot his wife.
Detectives intend to review multiple 911 calls placed after the shooting to determine what had happened before Jace is formally charged.
Jace, 51, who appeared on the hit FX series "The Shield," was being held on $1 million bail after being accused of shooting his wife multiple times during an argument in their home in the quiet, modest Hyde Park neighborhood of Los Angeles.
In a press release, police cited domestic violence as a motive for the murder. Neighbors reported hearing arguing coming from the home before shots rang out,reports KNBC. April Jace suffered gunshot wounds in the upper body, according to KNBC.
Next-door neighbor Shirley Harding said she heard at least three gunshots Monday night. She described Michael and April Jace as good, hands-on parents.
"They were just lovely parents," Harding said. "I never heard arguments, I just heard happiness over there."
Police responded to the report of shots fired around 8:30 p.m. Monday night to a home in the 5400 block of Byrnhurst avenue in Los Angeles' Hyde Park district, LAPD Sgt. Albert Gonzalez told Crimesider. The body of April Jace, 40, the actor's wife of 10 years, was found in a hallway of the home.
Police recovered a handgun believed to belong to her husband, Vinluan said.
The actor was seen walking out of the home when officers arrived. He was detained and later arrested.
"We don't know if he came out of fear or was trying to get out of there," Vinluan said.
Police told CBS LA the couple's two young sons were at home at the time of the shooting. The boys had reportedly just returned home from little league practice with their mother when the shooting happened, reports the station.
"When there's children involved, it's very sad. It's unclear if they saw the shooting, but they heard the shooting," LAPD Det. Sal LaBarbera told the station. "And now to be left with no mother and no father, it's a very sad situation for all the kids involved."
The children are both under 10 years old, reports the LA Times.
"They were not physically hurt, but obviously their emotions are running high," LaBarbera told the Times.
The District Attorney has not formally filed charges against Michael Jace, Gonzalez said. The actor was transported to a police station for questioning and later booked on suspicion of murder early Tuesday.
Jace will likely go before a judge for a preliminary hearing within 48 hours of his arrest, Gonzalez said.
Jace played police officers in the TV series "The Shield" and "Southland" and had roles in "Forrest Gump" and "Planet of the Apes." He also reportedly starred opposite Russell Crowe in the film "State of Play."
Records show Jace filed for bankruptcy protection in March 2011, listing debts between $500,000 and $1 million. Much of the debt appeared to be related to his home, which he owed more on than it was worth, and more than $22,000 he owed in state and federal income taxes. More than $20,000 of his tax delinquency was owed to the state of California for the year 2008.
April Jace had worked as a financial aid counselor at Biola University, a private Christian school, since March 2013.
"April's radiant personality brought great energy to the Financial Aid Office," Geoff Marsh, senior director of financial aid wrote in a statement. "Her love for helping students and families and her great work ethic earned the respect and love of her co-workers. Her smiling face and helpful spirit will be missed by all."
In a statement of his assets, Jace checked off a box indicating he didn't own any firearms.
Jace had agreed to a payment plan in the bankruptcy, but by November 2013 had fallen behind by nearly $2,000. A trustee sought to dismiss the case over the late payments, but that petition was withdrawn on Dec. 24, 2013, records show.
There are no records of any criminal cases involving Jace in Los Angeles.
Coroner's Assistant Chief Ed Winter said April Jace's body had been removed from the home and an autopsy would not be performed until Wednesday at the earliest.
Calls from The Associated Press seeking comment from Jace's agents at SMS Talent were not immediately returned.

Monday, May 19, 2014

BlackShades malware bust ends in nearly 100 arrests worldwide

from cnet.com


Law enforcement agencies seize more than 1,000 computers, smartphones, and hard drives in a massive operation that goes after malware said to have "sophisticated" capabilities and "breathtaking" invasiveness.





filehijacker.jpg
BlackShades provides users with this sample letter to send to victims when they take over a computer.Europol/blog.malwarebytes.org
Law enforcement officials from 19 countries joined forces over the last two days to takedown nearly 100 alleged hackers. These purported hackers were said to be creating, selling, and using what the FBI calls a "particularly insidious" computer malware known as BlackShades.
Over the course of the operation, officials' searched 359 houses and confiscated more than 1,100 data storage devices, such as computers, laptops, cell phones, routers, external hard drives, and USB memory sticks. Law enforcement also seized "substantial quantities" of cash, illegal firearms, and drugs, according to the European Union's law enforcement agency Europol.
BlackShades is a type of malicious software that acts as a Remote Access Tool, or RAT -- letting users remotely control a victim's computer. Once a hacker installs BlackShades onto a victim's computer, they can see anything on the computer, such as documents, photographs, passwords, banking credentials, and more. They can also deny access to files, record victims' keystrokes, and activate the computer's webcam.
One case of BlackShades use documented by Europol involved an 18-year-old man from the Netherlands who allegedly infected roughly 2,000 computers to take photos of women and girls who were using the machines.
Since 2010, BlackShades has been distributed and sold to thousands of people worldwide in more than 100 countries and used to infect more than half a million computers, according the FBI. Certain versions of the malware can be bought for as little as $40.
"The RAT is inexpensive and simple to use, but its capabilities are sophisticated and its invasiveness breathtaking," Manhattan US Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement Monday. "As today's case makes clear, we now live in a world where, for just $40, a cybercriminal halfway across the globe can -- with just a click of a mouse -- unleash a RAT that can spread a computer plague not only on someone's property but also on their privacy and most personal spaces."
In the US, the FBI unsealed an indictment on Monday against two men it's claiming developed BlackShades -- Swedish national Alex Yucel and US citizen Michael Hogue. The agency has also charged and arrested three other men who it says either sold BlackShades or used it on unsuspecting people's computers. The FBI said the malware generated sales of more than $350,000 between September 2010 and April 2014.
Countries involved in the BlackShades takedown operation included the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Germany, UK, Finland, Austria, Estonia, Denmark, US, Canada, Chile, Croatia, Italy, Moldova, and Switzerland.




Sunday, May 18, 2014

AT&T to acquire DirecTV in $48.5-billion deal

from latimes



Television IndustryDirecTV Group Inc.Comcast CorporationConsumersTime Warner Cable Inc.AT&T Corp.Radio Industry
AT&T strikes a $48-billion deal for DirecTV
Media consolidation continues as AT&T reaches agreement to buy DirecTV
The nation’s biggest phone company is about to become a giant in pay television.
AT&T Inc. reached an agreement to acquire satellite broadcaster DirecTV in a deal valued at about $48.5 billion, the two companies said Sunday.
“This is a unique opportunity that will redefine the video entertainment industry and create a company able to offer new bundles and deliver content to consumers across multiple screens – mobile devices, TVs, laptops, cars and even airplanes,” said AT&T Chairman and Chief Executive Randall Stephenson.
DirecTV Chief Executive Mike White said, “This compelling and complementary combination will bring significant benefits to all consumers, shareholders and DirecTV employees.”
Under the terms of the purchase, AT&T would pay $95 a share in cash and stock for DirecTV.
The sale comes just three months after cable giant Comcast Corp. said it was acquiring Time Warner Cable for $45 billion and could spark even further consolidation.
Media watchdogs and consumer activists, already critical of Comcast’s proposed takeover of Time Warner Cable, instantly blasted the AT&T-DirecTV news.
"The captains of our communications industry have clearly run out of ideas,” said Craig Aaron, president of the media reform organization Free Press. “Instead of innovating and investing in their networks, companies like AT&T and Comcast are simply buying up the competition. These takeovers are expensive, and consumers end up footing the bill for merger mania.”
AT&T and DirecTV have had on-again-off-again flirtations about combining for years, and it was an open secret in media circles that DirecTV and White were open to an an exit strategy. 
Soon after Comcast unveiled its plans to buy Time Warner Cable, AT&T reignited talks with DirecTV. The deal came together quickly, with both companies forming due diligence teams. Lawyers for both sides also researched the hurdles and scrutiny the sale would face from lawmakers and regulators.
If approved, the deal would potentially solve significant challenges facing AT&T and DirecTV.
For El Segundo-based DirecTV, which has more than 20 million subscribers around the country, being tied to AT&T would enable it to seamlessly package its television and high-speed Internet services. One of DirecTV's shortcomings in the fight for customers is its lack of a broadband service.
A combined AT&T and DirecTV could face off against Comcast, which has spent billions improving its broadband offering and is acquiring Time Warner Cable with an eye toward creating a nationwide cable and broadband behemoth.
By acquiring DirecTV, AT&T could shut down its much smaller U-Verse television service, which it delivers through its fiber lines. Doing that would enable AT&T to use DirecTV for television service and free up its fiber lines to increase broadband speeds to U-Verse customers.
There could be a backlash to winding down U-Verse as it would remove a competitor from the pay-TV arena.
“The industry needs more competition, not more mergers,” said John Bergmayer, a senior staff attorney at Public Knowledge. “We'll have to analyze this  carefully for potential harms both to the video programming and the wireless markets.”
Another reason DirecTV appeals to AT&T is the cash it generates. In 2013 the company posted $8 billion in profit on $32 billion in revenue.
DirecTV said it will keep its headquarters in El Segundo after the deal closes. The satellite broadcaster has 3,000 employees there.
Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times