PATRICK EDWARD MYERS: HICCUP ‘CURE’ LEADS TO DEATH OF A US SOLDIER

A soldier trying to scare another soldier out of hiccups shot his comrade in the face, killing him, authorities said Tuesday.

Both soldiers, joined by a third man, were drinking alcohol and watching football at the time of the Sunday night incident, authorities said.

“The victim had the hiccups. The suspect pulled out a gun to scare him in order to stop the hiccups,” said spokesman Carroll Smith of the Killeen, Texas, Police Department.

Pfc. Patrick Edward Myers, 27, was charged on Tuesday with manslaughter, and Justice of the Peace Garland Potvin set his bond at $1 million, police said.

Killed was Pfc. Isaac Lawrence Young, 22, of Ash Grove, Missouri, a motor transport operator at the Army base, the military said. Young entered active duty in May 2011 and arrived at Fort Hood in October 2011, the Army said.

Myers is a soldier at the base, as was Young at the time of his death, said Fort Hood spokesman Chris Haug.

Police responded to a shooting shortly after 10 p.m. Sunday and found a man shot in the face and two other men at the residence, Killeen police said.

Myers allegedly “produced a handgun and while handling it in an unsafe manner, discharged the handgun striking the victim in the face,” police said.

Young was pronounced dead during the ambulance transport to Skylark Field, where he had been scheduled for an airlift to a hospital, authorities said.

Young received the National Defense Service Medal and Army Service Ribbon, the military said.

EBOLA VIRUS OUTBREAK KILLS 14 IN UGANDA

Teams in Uganda are trying to track down anyone who came into contact with patients infected with the Ebola virus, which has killed at least 14 people there this month, authorities said Monday.

“This is very, very important, to trace every contact and to watch them for an incubation period of 21 days,” World Health Organization spokesman Gregory Hartl said.

The teams — consisting of officials from Uganda’s ministry of health, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the WHO — are part of an aggressive approach to try to stamp out the outbreak of the highly infectious virus.

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni spoke on state and private television Sunday urging his countrymen to be cautious.

“I therefore appeal to you to be vigilant. Avoid shaking of hands; do not take on burying somebody that has died from symptoms which look like Ebola. Instead, call the health workers to be the ones to do it. And avoid promiscuity because these sicknesses can also go through sex,” he said.

This month’s outbreak in western Uganda initially went undetected because patients did not show typical symptoms, Health Minister Dr. Christine Ondoa told CNN on Sunday. Patients had fevers and were vomiting, but did not show other typical symptoms, such as hemorrhaging.

The Ebola virus is a highly infectious, often fatal agent spread through direct contact with bodily fluids. Symptoms can include fever, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, headache, a measles-like rash, red eyes and, at times, bleeding from body openings.

But diagnosis in an individual who has only recently been infected can be difficult since early symptoms, such as red eyes and skin rash, are seen more frequently in patients who have more common diseases, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Uganda’s Ministry of Health declared the outbreak in Kibaale district Saturday after getting confirmatory results from the Uganda Virus Research Institute identifying the disease as Ebola hemorrhagic fever, Sudan strain.

The fatality rate for those infected with that strain is about 65%, Hartl said.

“One can recover, but there’s no medicine that can help one recover, so you just have to pray that your own body is strong enough,” he said.

Patients with symptoms of Ebola infection had been reported early in the month in Kibaale district.

Some people delayed seeking treatment, in part, because they believed that “evil spirits” had sickened them, according to a report from district health authorities.

“This caused civil strife among the community, requiring police intervention to quell the animosity,” the Health Ministry said.

An emergency team of 100 volunteers was undergoing training Monday to help spread the word in vulnerable communities about the disease and its transmission, the Uganda Red Cross Society said in a statement.

Medecins Sans Frontieres, also known as Doctors Without Borders, was helping set up an isolation center at Kibaale’s hospital.

National health authorities say that in addition to the 14 deaths, at least six other people have been infected. Nine of the deaths were from a single household in the village of Nyanswiga, according to WHO.

A medic who had treated other victims is among the dead, Ondoa said.

Officials were trying to determine the extent of the outbreak, CDC spokesman Tom Skinner said Sunday. The Atlanta-based organization was sending about five people to join CDC staffers permanently based in Uganda, he said.

“These outbreaks have a tendency to stamp themselves out, if you will, if we can get in and … stop the chain of transmission,” he said.

In Kibaale, a national task force has been mobilized in an effort to stem the outbreak.

As of Monday, two people with the virus remained hospitalized in stable condition, said WHO. One was a 38-year-old woman who had attended to her sister, the medic who died, and the other was a 30-year-old woman who had helped bury another victim.

Though both patients had symptoms that included fever, vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pain, neither had shown signs of hemorrhaging, the ministry said Sunday.

One patient suspected of being infected with the virus ran away from a hospital Sunday morning, but was tracked to her home and returned to the hospital in Kibaale, Catherine Ntabadde, a spokeswoman for the Uganda Red Cross in Kampala, told CNN in a telephone interview.

“The concern is where she could have gone to when she ran away,” she said.

MORE HEAVY RAINS KILLS 21 IN JOS, NIGERIA

Heavy rains in central Nigeria triggered a flood that washed away houses and killed at least 21 people, government officials said Monday.

Another 35 people are missing, according to the National Emergency Management Agency.

Search-and-rescue operations are under way in the Gangare and Rikkos areas of Jos, a city in central Nigeria, the agency said. The river that cuts through Rikkos overflowed, flooding nearby homes, it added.

It said two shelters were opened at schools to help those displaced by the water.

Rain in central Nigeria is not uncommon for this time of year, but it has been unusually heavy in the past week.

LIGHTNING STRIKES HOME AND KILLS TWO IN LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY

An elderly man and his granddaughter died after a bolt of lightning started a fire in a house in Louisville, Kentucky, on Thursday evening, officials said.

The lightning came from powerful storms that struck the area, causing auto accidents, flooding viaducts and stranding cars.

The 911 call from the people inside the house came in around 6:45 p.m., said Vince Luney, communications supervisor for EMA Metrosafe, a public safety agency. Amid a flurry of other emergency calls, firefighters were dispatched to the scene and arrived within minutes.

The elderly man was bedridden and his granddaughter was trying to get him out of the house, said Gregory Frederick, the Louisville fire chief.

It took “about 10 or 15 minutes to actually locate them because of the severity of the fire,” he said. “We had to knock some of the fire down to get firefighters in there to effect the rescue. The fire had a pretty good head start on us.”

Between them, the 30 firefighters on the scene pulled the two people out of the house.

“Those boys were brave — the flames were going, they were running straight to it, back up a bit, and run again,” Billy Ray Garrett, a resident of the neighborhood told CNN affiliate WAVE. “If anybody died in that house, it ain’t because of anything they could do, they were trying, they were fighting.”

The elderly man died of his injuries at the scene, according to Frederick, and the woman was declared dead at a Louisville hospital. Several family members were present at the time and were notified, he said.

Firefighters are investigating the blaze and are treating lightning as the preliminary cause.

“Lightning struck an 80-foot-tall tree, hit about 40 feet up, and it entered a phone wire that came in through the rear of the house,” Frederick said. Melted wire suggested the phone line had carried the lightning’s charge into the basement of the house, he added.

Fire crews reported smoke in the basement upon arrival.

“It was like having a blow torch coming out the side of the house,” Garrett said. “It was running all the way up the side of the other house, it was all coming through the bottom window, like a massive torch.”

The house is still standing, according to Frederick.

“It’s got pretty severe damage to the basement and the first floor,” he said. “It’s an older, probably 1940s-era house, so the fire traveled (through) sealed spaces and moved into other areas of the house.”

Severe thunderstorms that pushed through the area included winds that topped more than 60 mph, according to the National Weather Service. The storms knocked out power in thousands of homes across Kentucky.

Follow local coverage at WAVE-TV

The roof of Louisville’s Crowne Plaza Hotel was partially torn off, sending debris onto vehicles in the parking lot below, officials said. No injuries were reported to EMA Metrosafe.

“We probably made somewhere in the neighborhood of 300 other runs” to deal with problems caused by the storm, Frederick said. A multitude of those requests came within 20 to 30 minutes, he added.

In nearby Oldham County, a man on a boat on the Ohio River was struck by lightning, said Don Dahl, the North Oldham deputy assistant fire chief.

The young man was in speedboat with about four other people when the storms rolled in from the Indiana side of the river, Dahl said.

The man appeared to have taken a direct hit from lightning and was “hurting pretty bad,” according to Dahl.

The emergency services got the man onto land and into a waiting ambulance, which took him to a Louisville hospital, he said.

The man’s latest condition was not immediately available. He was taken to the hospital with “unknown injuries,” said Jason Smiser, Oldham County dispatcher.

AND YET THEY CALL AFRICANS BARBARIC? INDIAN FATHER ACCUSED OF KILLING BABY FOR BEING A GIRL

You hear stories like this from around the world and yet we, Africans, are the ones being called barbaric? I don’t think so. If you think your life is hard, imagine if you were never given the chance to begin your life. This is the most dangerous place to be born a girl.

Read more…

Nineteen-year-old Reshma Banu sits on the stairs outside her parents’ home, staring at the tiny screen on her cell phone. The video on the screen has her mesmerized: a very short home video of her baby girl, Afreen. The moments captured are precious because they show Banu’s only child alive and well.  Afreen died in the hospital. She was three months old.

Authorities say the baby was admitted to the hospital with bite marks, cigarette burns and a dislocated neck. Police say she was killed by her father.

“After my delivery my husband had come to see me and the baby. He said, ‘It is a girl, why did you give birth to a girl?’”

He wanted a boy, an heir. Girls were too expensive, he said. A couple of days after giving birth, Banu says her husband gave an ultimatum.

“For her wedding we will require a hundred thousand rupees (about US$1,800 dollars) for all the expense. If you can get that amount from your mother, then keep her, but if you can’t, then kill her,” Banu recalled her husband as saying.

She didn’t believe he meant it and was sure he would change his mind once he held his soft, bright-eyed baby girl.

Three months later, her baby is dead, and her husband is under arrest, accused of beating the baby to death. Police say he confessed to the killing.

This is by no means the first case of its kind in India. Attitudes, traditions, and economics have come together to make being a girl a dangerous prospect in the country, doctors say. Most of the time girls are disposed of long before they are born.

How? Sex-selective abortions.

India has a growing gender gap: The 2011 census showed that for every 1,000 boys six years or younger there were only 914 girls. It is the lowest child sex ratio since India’s independence in 1947.

The United Nations has said India is the most dangerous place to be a girl. Dr. Anand Krishnan at All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), who has studied the gender gap for years, agrees.

“Yes, largely this is from the point of view of mortality statistics for girls versus boys,” Krishnan told CNN.

Sex-selective abortions are against the law in India but are still happening at an alarming rate, he said.

His study shows a surprising trend: Sex selective abortions among the educated and well-off seem to be more prevalent than among the desperately poor and uneducated. Despite greater prosperity, their mindsets have not changed and they have the money to pay for ultrasounds and abortions.

“A boy is seen as a better investment. They prefer boys,” Krishnan said.

The explanation goes something like this: In traditional Indian families the men marry and bring their bride home to live and take care of his parents.

Girls, on the other hand, marry and leave the home without providing extra financial support.

Moreover, a girl’s family can go broke trying to pay a dowry to get her married. Although outlawed in India, dowries are still common and take different forms throughout society.

Indian law also forbids doctors to tell a couple the sex of their child after an ultrasound, but many clinics break the law and do so anyway.

India has made an effort across the country to stop female infanticide.

CNN visited a village in Haryana state with one of the worst ratios of boys to girls, according to the Indian government. A campaign is under way to change villagers’ minds about girls.

Tiny placards above the doors of several homes say in Hindi: “If you get rid of your girls, where will you find your daughter-in-laws?”

A teenage boy wore a T-shirt that said, “Save our girls.”

Nonetheless, there were young boys everywhere and only a few young girls. Villagers only affirmed why there appeared to be an imbalance.

She had just come into the world. She was like a flower bud, and he killed her. I lost my daughter. What can be worse than this?
Reshma Banu

“Girls are mostly aborted here. The people want more boys. There is a shortage of girls,” Chandravati said without hesitation.

From CNN.com

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WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON IN OHIO? MAN KILLS EX-WIFE, TELLS SON TO CALL 911

Crazy news alert!! Ohio has been making the rounds in media outlets lately. Unfortunately, it hasn’t been for positive reasons. There have been so much murder news coming out of different areas of Ohio. I think that this one takes the cake. No matter what this woman did, no one deserves to be killed this way, in front of her children. Read more….

(CNN) — Barely holding back his sobs, a 13-year-old boy makes a heart-rending 911 call to the Grove City Police Department in Ohio.

“My dad just killed my mom. He just told me to call you guys,” the boy is heard telling a 911 dispatcher. “He just ran outside and killed my mom. And she’s laying in the grass in front of the apartment.”

The boy’s father, Jeremy Roberts, had the boy make the call, police said, after allegedly stabbing his ex-wife to death outside his apartment.

Despondent dads driven to kill loved ones

Roberts then calmly got on the phone himself, giving the apartment’s address and informing police that the “only” weapon — a knife — was outside with his ex-wife, Candice Roberts.

“What did you do?” the dispatcher asks him.

“She’s covered in a blanket. You guys will see,” Roberts responds in an even tone.

He can then be heard, on the nearly five-minute 911 call, telling his children that they have a “good big sister (who) will take care of you guys.”

“I told you that there’s a lot of things that you don’t understand, and you don’t know. And now there’s no choice for them to come out,” Roberts said in the recorded call, without detailing what he meant.

Before going to the front door — and handing the phone back to his 13-year-old son — Roberts says, “One more hug. I love you guys.” A small child can be heard crying in the background.

The 13-year-old boy can be overheard telling his father, “I don’t want to see you right now.”

Roberts, 38, is in custody and will be charged with murder in connection with his ex-wife’s death, police said.

The victim had gone to the suspect’s apartment in Grove City, about 10 miles southwest of Columbus, before 9 a.m. Sunday to pick up their two children, police said.

Afterward, the 13-year-old boy phoned police to tell them his mother was dead and his father was responsible.

Candice Roberts’ 16-year-old daughter told CNN affiliate WCMH she feels “incomplete and abandoned” after the death of her mother, who she said “was always there for me.”

Her brother is haunted by what he saw, she said.

“My brother says that every time he opens his eyes, he sees my mother’s face and her yelling, ‘Help me!’ ” the teenager said. “And he sees my dad standing there with the blood all over him, and the knife in his hand.”

The daughter added that she “would do everything for him to be held accountable.”

“You don’t just get to murder somebody and get away with it,” she said.

WE ALL SAY WE WILL DO IT, THIS DAD ACTUALLY BEATS HIS DAUGHTER’S ATTACKER TO DEATH

SHINER, Texas — A father beat to death with his hands a man who tried molesting his 4-year-old daughter after the little girl was heard screaming on the family’s rural Texas ranch, authorities said Monday.

Lavaca County Sheriff Micah Harmon said the father, whose name has not been released, is unlikely to be arrested for Saturday’s killing and that no evidence so far has led investigators to doubt his story.

“There doesn’t appear to be any reason other than what he told us,” Harmon said.

Harmon said the victim was a 47-year-old man from Gonazles with no apparent prior criminal history. His name continued to be withheld Monday because authorities still hadn’t tracked down any of his family.

The victim was an “acquaintance” of the father who had come to help care for some horses, Harmon said. He did not know how long the two men may have known each other. The girl was taken to a hospital to be examined and has since been released, Harmon said.

The father called police late Saturday afternoon and told them he attacked a man caught trying to sexually assault his daughter, Harmon said. The alleged attack happened near a barn where some horses were being kept.

“In the course of trying to get her away from him, and protect her, he struck the subject several times in the head and the subject died,” Harmon said.

Harmon said a grand jury will decide what, if any, charges the father will face.

The victim’s body was sent to the Travis County medical examiner for an autopsy.

The ranch near Shiner is about 130 miles east of Houston. Killings are rare in rural Lavaca County: Harmon said his office has only investigated six since in his eight years as sheriff.

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