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Man who threatened sheriff, Gov. Fallin's child has lost 'everything'
BY ANDREW KNITTLE aknittle@opubco.com |
Updated: 5 hr ago
Scott Neil Helling, 49, threatened the lives of Gov. Mary Fallin's child and several law enforcement officials in an email to a television station.
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Oklahoma County Sheriff hits the streets and tweets all about it
BY ROBERT MEDLEY Staff Writer rmedley@opubco.com |
Updated: 4 hr ago
A warrant sweep was all over Twitter on Wednesday. The Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office has one of the largest followings in the country for a sheriff's department
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FROM STAFF REPORTS | Published: Wed, Jun 19, 2013Vehicle, other items stolen from Bob Stoops' home early Wednesday
The home of University of Oklahoma football head coach Bob Stoops was burglarized early Wednesday while the family slept, police said.
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FROM STAFF REPORTS | Published: Wed, Jun 19, 2013One arrested in Edmond burglary
About 9:30 p.m., officers were called to a home on Craig Boulevard in the Westboro housing addition of Edmond after a 15-year-old girl reported someone was trying to break into the back of the house, police spokeswoman Jennifer Monroe said.
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Compromise among senators eyed on border security
Updated: 2 hr ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — After secretive talks, key senators expressed optimism Wednesday night that they were closing in on a bipartisan agreement to dramatically toughen the border security requirements in immigration legislation that also offers a path to citizenship to millions living in the country illegally. Lawmakers and aides alike said the goal was to assure passage of the sweeping legislation by a large bipartisan vote within a matter of days. Under the emerging compromise, the government would grant legal status to immigrants living in the United States unlawfully at the same time the additional security was being put into place at a cost of tens of billions of dollars.
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New Colo. wildfire prompts evacuations of homes
Updated: 3 hr ago
EVERGREEN, Colo. (AP) — A new wildfire in the foothills southwest of Denver forced the evacuation of dozens of homes Wednesday as hot and windy conditions in the West made it easy for fires to start and spread. The Lime Gulch Fire in Pike National Forest was small but devouring trees about 30 miles southwest of Denver in southern Jefferson County. More than 100 people were told to leave, but no structures appeared to be threatened, Jefferson County Sheriff Ted Mink said. "The good news is, it's a very sparsely populated area as far as houses go," Mink said. He said the fire might have been sparked by lightning a day earlier, then quickly grew in high winds Wednesday. The U.S. Forest Service estimated it was burning on
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Former TWA Flight 800 investigators want new probe
Updated: 3 hr ago
MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) — Former investigators are pushing to reopen the probe into the 1996 crash of TWA Flight 800, saying new evidence points to the often-discounted theory that a missile strike may have downed the jumbo jet. The New York-to-Paris flight crashed July 17, 1996, minutes after it took off from John F. Kennedy International Airport, killing all 230 people aboard. The effort to reopen the probe is being made in tandem with the release next month of a documentary that features the testimony of former investigators who raise doubts about the National Transportation Safety Board's conclusion that the crash was caused by a center fuel tank explosion, probably caused by a spark from a short-circuit in the wiring.
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FROM STAFF REPORTS | Updated: 3 hr agoA man died Wednesday after being shot by an Oklahoma City police officer
Police say the man shot at police with a rifle. Officers had arrived at the scene of a reported disturbance between two neighbors in northeast Oklahoma City on Wednesday, officials said.
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Best-selling author Vince Flynn dies at age 47
Updated: 4 hr ago
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Best-selling author Vince Flynn, who wrote the Mitch Rapp counterterrorism thriller series and sold more than 15 million books in the U.S. alone, died Wednesday in Minnesota after a more than two-year battle with prostate cancer, according to friends and his publisher. He was 47. Flynn was supporting himself by bartending when he self-published his first novel, "Term Limits," in 1997 after getting more than 60 rejection letters. After it became a local best-seller, Pocket Books, a Simon & Schuster imprint, signed him to a two-book deal — and "Term Limits" became a New York Times best-seller in paperback. The St.
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BY JULIANA KEEPING jkeeping@opubco.com | Published: Wed, Jun 19, 2013Man killed by police at Midwest City store made mention of 'Illuminati' as he held girl, 2, at knife point
Sammie Wallace died of a gunshot wound to the head, said Amy Elliott, a spokeswoman for the state medical examiner's office. Midwest City police Wednesday identified the officer who shot Wallace as 22-year police department member Capt. David Huff, a commander of the department's investigations unit.
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Will Oklahomans get on board with new water toy?
BY CARMEN FORMAN cforman@opubco.com |
Published: Wed, Jun 19, 2013
Management at David's Sport Center, 6301 NW 10, are still debating if they will sell the boards because each one comes with a nearly $6,000 price tag. They also are wary of stocking the boards because the technology is relatively new. If the store does decide to carry the boards, it would be the first Flyboard retailer in Oklahoma.
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Updated: 6 hr agoHouse votes to cut food stamps by $2 billion
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House voted on Wednesday to cut food stamps by $2 billion a year as part of a wide-ranging farm bill. The chamber rejected 234-188 a Democratic amendment to the five-year, half-trillion-dollar farm legislation that would have maintained current spending on food stamps, now called the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. The overall bill cuts the $80 billion-a-year program by about 3 percent and makes it harder for some people to qualify. The food stamp cuts have complicated passage of the bill and its farm-state supporters were working to secure votes Wednesday. Many conservatives have said the food stamp cuts do not go far enough since the program has doubled in cost in the last five ye
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Updated: 7 hr agoHBO and James Gandolfini's managers say the actor famous for "The Sopranos" has died in Italy
LOS ANGELES (AP) — HBO and James Gandolfini's managers say the actor famous for "The Sopranos" has died in Italy.
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Men's Wearhouse ousts founder, pitchman Zimmer
Updated: 7 hr ago
NEW YORK (AP) — Men's Wearhouse doesn't like the way its founder looks anymore. The men's clothier said Wednesday that it fired executive chairman and face of the company George Zimmer, 64, who has appeared in many of its TV commercials with the slogan "You're going to like the way you look. I guarantee it." The company announced the move in a terse statement that gave no reason for the abrupt firing of Zimmer, who built Men's Wearhouse Inc. from one small Texas store using a cigar box as a cash register to one of North America's largest men's clothing sellers with 1,143 locations. The firing appears to end the career of one of TV's most recognizable pitchmen.
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By BILL BRAUN - For Tulsa World | Updated: 8 hr agoTeen charged with murder to be prosecuted as 'youthful offender,' judge rules
A Jenks teenager will be treated a “youthful offender” and not as an adult on a murder charge linked to a woman's fatal shooting in Jenks.
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US tries saving Taliban talks after Karzai objects
Updated: 8 hr ago
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Hopes dimmed for talks aimed at ending the Afghan war when an angry President Hamid Karzai on Wednesday suspended security negotiations with the U.S. and scuttled a peace delegation to the Taliban, sending American officials scrambling to preserve the possibility of dialogue with the militants. What provoked the mercurial Karzai and infuriated many other Afghans was a move by the Taliban to cast their new office in the Gulf nation of Qatar as a rival embassy. The Taliban held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday in which they hoisted their flag and a banner with the name they used while in power more than a decade ago: "Political Office of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan." U.S.
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FBI ends Michigan search for Hoffa's remains
Updated: 9 hr ago
OAKLAND TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) — Beneath a swimming pool, under a horse farm and now a weed-grown field north of Detroit. For at least the third time in a decade, FBI agents grabbed shovels and combed through dirt and mud in the search for Jimmy Hoffa's remains or clues to the disappearance of the former Teamsters boss. Once again, the search was futile. "Certainly, we're disappointed," Detroit FBI chief Robert Foley told reporters Wednesday as federal and local authorities wrapped up another excavation that failed to turn up anything that could be linked to Hoffa, who has been missing since 1975. Many people interested in the mystery assume Hoffa ran afoul of the mob and was whacked. "Right now the case remains o
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FROM STAFF REPORTS | Published: Wed, Jun 19, 2013Injury accident reported on Interstate 240
An accident on eastbound Interstate 240 near Shields Boulevard was reported. The vehicles involved were a tractor-trailer and a motorcycle, trooper Betsy Randolph said.
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Obama urges 'bold' nuclear cuts in Berlin speech
Updated: 10 hr ago
BERLIN (AP) — Summoning the harsh history of this once-divided city, President Barack Obama on Wednesday cautioned the U.S. and Europe against "complacency" brought on by peace, pledging to cut America's deployed nuclear weapons by one-third if Cold War foe Russia does the same. The president also declared that his far-reaching surveillance programs had saved lives on both sides of the Atlantic, as he sought to defend the controversial data-mining to skeptical Europeans. Speaking against the soaring backdrop of the Brandenburg Gate, Obama said that "bold reductions" to the U.S. and Russian nuclear forces were needed to move the two powers away from the war posture that continues to seed mistrust between their governments.
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UN says 45.2 million refugees and displaced people
Updated: 11 hr ago
GENEVA (AP) — The Syrian civil war contributed to pushing the numbers of refugees and those displaced by conflict within their own nation to an 18-year high of 45.2 million worldwide by the end of 2012, the U.N. refugee agency said Wednesday. Those are the highest numbers since 1994, when people fled genocide in Rwanda and bloodshed in former Yugoslavia. By the end of last year, the world had 15.4 million refugees, 937,000 asylum seekers and 28.8 million people who had been forced to flee within the borders of their own countries, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said in a report. Of those, 17 percent were new to their situations in 2012: 1.1 million new refugees and 6.
