Sunday, June 21, 2009

Time to start!


I believe that our new Mayor, Julian Castro, is up to the task facing us.

These are tough, and in many ways, perilous times. He will be tested and I hope he meets the challenges we all face. he is bright and personable.

He has my support and hopes. Let him lead.

My advice mayor, stay focused and don't let them distract you.


National attention on Castro
By Elaine Ayala - Express-News

In 2005, Julián Castro was compared to Barack Obama.

Back then, a story in the Los Angeles Times described talk about Castro and his twin, state Rep. Joaquin Castro, as bordering “on breathless.” The story drew parallels between them and a young senator from Illinois who the year before had wowed crowds at the Democratic National Convention and was being sized up as a presidential candidate.

Then Castro lost his mayoral race against Phil Hardberger, and reality set in.

Now, four years later, expectations remain high for the 34-year-old new mayor, who won 56 percent of the vote in a crowded field. But they are balanced by the knowledge that Castro has a job to do.

As he sits down this week for his first full-fledged meeting with the rest of the new City Council, the buzz has picked up again, although this time it's tempered with moderation.

Everything from here on out, Hispanic political scientists and others say, depends on performance.

Castro is still seen as a rising star among an emerging generation of Latino leaders. He's the beneficiary of Hispanic politicos, some legendary, who plowed the road before him. But unlike them, Castro enjoys a comfort level and broader acceptance among diverse constituencies.

His rise to lead the seventh-largest city in the U.S. is being celebrated and analyzed, and his future is being discussed in similar ways to that of former mayor and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Henry Cisneros. Cisneros himself sees Castro's future as limitless.

State Sen. Leticia Van de Putte was in Puerto Rico recently for a conference on immunizations with about 80 Hispanic and African American lawmakers. In between sessions, politicians from all over the U.S. had the same question: How's your new mayor doing?

“I haven't seen this kind of excitement over a Latino since Henry Cisneros,” Van de Putte said. “It's that type of buzz.”

Van de Putte, who was co-chairwoman of the last Democratic National Convention and has higher political aspirations of her own, describes Castro as a well-credentialed politician “who walks well” among various groups.

Castro holds membership in a small class that includes Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa; Albuquerque, N.M., Mayor Martin Chávez; Miami Mayor Manuel A. Diaz and state Rep. Rafael Anchía, D-Dallas, whom Texas Monthly magazine named “Rookie of the Year” in 2005.

The same youthful enthusiasm that elected Obama has paved the way for a new generation of young, well-educated ethnic candidates with broad appeal, said Luis Fraga, political science professor at the University of Washington. But, he said, “when I look around the country, I don't see that many.”

There's Cory Booker, the young African-American mayor of Newark, N.J., and a handful of others.

“I see Julián along those lines,” Fraga said. “There aren't very many young leaders who have attained this level of responsibility.”

According to the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, there are 5,670 Latino elected officials in the U.S., including 250 mayors. Of the mayors, only 10 serve cities with populations of at least 150,000.

Though it's too soon to assess, Latino political scientists and Hispanic officeholders say Castro could tap into the same energy that elected Obama.

Fraga, who taught both Castro brothers at Stanford, said, “He and his brother represent a new generation of leader who is not afraid of the corporate world and the business community.”

“He's a lot like President Obama,” Cisneros said. “He starts from a humanitarian perspective with great understanding of populist public issues.” But, the former mayor added, “He is an inclusive humanitarian with a pragmatic sense of how you make the system respond.”

While Castro didn't have to overcome as much prejudice as Cisneros in getting to the mayor's office in 1981, Cisneros said Castro confronts other dilemmas.

“I faced a city that had not elected a Latino mayor since Juan Seguín, or right after the fall of the Alamo,” Cisneros said. “My job when I came to office was to persuade the city I could be the mayor of all the city.”

In 2009, San Antonio is much more comfortable with its “multicultural reality,” Cisneros said. Castro also benefits in that Hispanics have held key posts, including county judge, university president, archbishop and president of the University of Texas Health Science Center, among others.

“There's much less of what might be called racial antagonism, racial skepticism or doubt,” Cisneros said. Cultural background is seen as a virtue.

What Castro does face is a bad economy, in spite of San Antonio having fared well in it. While promising to increase the city's police force by 100, with the help of federal stimulus dollars, Castro also faces big decisions on whether to invest in more nuclear power, the transformation of HemisFair Park and toughening City Hall's ethics, among other issues — all while balancing a budget, addressing deficits, and keeping taxes down and service levels steady.

Van de Putte said Castro will “be tested in a way that Phil Hardberger wasn't.”

During crucial times, “real leadership appears,” Fraga said. “It will be interesting to see what style he uses to justify cuts and retrenchment the city will have to make. There are few good role models that he can learn from.”

Fraga predicts Castro's pragmatic nature will pay off. “He's not at risk of overextending himself. He's just a doer. He wants to get things done.”

Cisneros said Castro has to concentrate on the now. “I would say to him, as I did to Antonio Villaraigosa when I sat down with him before he assumed the mayorship of Los Angeles, that you have to just focus on this great opportunity that is before you. Because if you do a good job in this, other things will be possible.”

Cisneros advises Castro to pinpoint what he wants to accomplish. “The key discipline, I believe, that divides those who are successful from those who are not, is the ability to have a plan, test it, coalesce people around it, stick to it and deliver on it.”

“The nature of any public office, but particularly mayor of San Antonio, is that you're drinking water from a fire hydrant,” Cisneros said. “The volume is more than you can address.”

Castro vows to stay focused, and he plans to remain “as close to home as possible.” But he is expected to have a speaking role at NALEO's conference in Los Angeles this week.

To whatever degree there is state and national discussion about him, the mayor is grateful “to the extent that it raises San Antonio's profile.”

“But only if I do a good job here does any of that matter,” he said. “I'm certainly appreciative, but my focus is on San Antonio.”

Louis DeSipio, associate professor of political science at the University of California-Irvine, said Castro has the potential to go far. He needs to “do well at what he was elected to do. The danger with younger candidates is to move too quickly. Look at Mayor Villaraigosa. He got a little ahead of himself.”

Hardberger, not one to splash water on optimism, offers a straightforward wait-and-see assessment.

“He's got youth on his side, and eight years to prove himself,” he said. “His performance will have to be proved.”

Best County Clerk in By God, Texas!!


Congratulations Joyce! What an honor.

We are truly blessed here in Comal County with some fine folks.


Streater named top county clerk in Texas

-

Comal County Clerk Joy Streater was named the best county clerk in the state of Texas this week.

The County and District Clerks Association of Texas voted the longtime county employee as County Clerk of the Year Wednesday.

“It’s very humbling,” Streater said, after being honored by her peers at the association’s annual conference in South Padre Island. “Out of 254 counties, to be named the clerk of the year for 2009 is very special.”

A reception was held to honor Streater Friday morning in the Comal County Courthouse Annex, with dozens of people turning out to welcome the newly awarded county clerk.

“I’ve worked with Joy for 10 and a half years and I’ve always been impressed with her level of professionalism,” said Comal County Commissioner Jay Millikin. “I think (the award) is a wonderful accolade for someone that’s been at this level government as long as she has.”

Streater has served as Comal County Clerk since 1993.

“She’s been an excellent county clerk for all the years I’ve known her,” said Comal County Judge Danny Scheel. “What makes me so proud is that 254 other counties in the state of Texas don’t have a county clerk as good as Comal County’s.”

Split that Baby!


I too believe this was a fair resolution to the matter.

It seemed clear from the testimony that he may have been aware the putative buyer was selling drugs from the property and also may have warned him to be careful, that he was being watched.

End result? The property, already seized by the County, probably will be sold and he will receive a small proportion of the proceeds when the property is disposed of.

BTW Great job, Jennifer Tharp and Tiffany Groff as well as Judge Luitjen.

Judge grants Larssen nearly $29K in drug seizure

- The Herald-Zeitung

A Canyon Lake man was awarded half of the remaining rent owed on a property used to sell drugs the day after a Comal County jury denied him a cent.

San Antonio’s 144th District Judge Mark Luitjen awarded Roy Larssen, previous owner of Potters Creek store, $28,686.96 Friday.

The jury of seven women and five men ruled Thursday Larssen was not an innocent owner. They said he knew marijuana was being sold off the property at 2881 Potters Creek Road in Canyon Lake.

Larssen ran the convenience store with his wife for nearly 15 years before health complications and age forced them to search for a new owner.

Sam Ledbetter entered into a lease-to-own agreement for the property in 1997 and ran it until March 2008, when he was arrested on marijuana charges.

The Comal County Sheriff’s Office seized more than four pounds of marijuana from Potters Creek along with the 0.959 acres of land at 2881 Potters Creek Road.

Luitjen ruled Thursday the lease between Larssen and Ledbetter was an executory lease, since payments were not completed. This means both Larssen and Ledbetter had duties remaining to be performed.

Because of this, Larssen could only be awarded the nearly $57,000 Ledbetter had left to pay on the property.

Larssen’s property was seized and the jury did not award him any of the $57,000 Thursday.

Luitjen ruled Friday that the decision was excessive and granted Larssen $28,686.96, half of what Ledbetter owed him.

“I’m still not happy, period,” Larssen said. “I’m very down from the way I was treated. I lived here for 28 years and have always complied and tried to help out the cops.”

Comal County Chief Civil Prosecutor Jennifer Tharp said the judge made a good decision.

“I think the judge came to a fair disposition,” Tharp said. “He continued to uphold the jury’s verdict and sent an important message to the community.”

The jury was picked Monday and heard testimony through Thursday, when it came to a verdict. This was Luitjen’s first civil jury trial.

She said the jury’s decision proved the community does not tolerate drug dealers.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Gone to Tyler, Texas


No time this a.m. to post. Man o' Law and the o' Law family are going to Tyler, Texas to see Man o' Law's in-Laws.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Gone to pot?


Testimony continues today.


Larssen testifies he didn't know about drugs

- The Herald-Zeitung

A Canyon Lake man in risk of losing his property and retirement income took the stand Wednesday in his own defense.

A Comal County jury heard the story of Roy Larssen, the owner of a Canyon Lake convenience store seized in 2008 after sheriff’s deputies arrested a man leasing the store on a possession of marijuana charge.

The Comal County District Attorney’s Office hopes to seize Larssen’s Potters Creek store at 2881 Potters Creek Road in Canyon Lake.

Larssen ran the convenience store with his wife for more than 10 years before health complications and age forced them to search for a new owner.

Sam Ledbetter entered into a lease-to-own agreement for the property in 1997 and ran it until March 2008, when he was arrested on marijuana charges.

The Comal County Sheriff’s Office seized more than four pounds of marijuana from Potters Creek.

The jury of seven women and five men was selected Monday. They heard their second full day of testimony Wednesday.

Ledbetter was brought from Comal County Jail to take the stand. Chief Civil Prosecutor Jennifer Tharp asked him if Larssen had any knowledge of Ledbetter selling or smoking marijuana out of the store.

“It’s not a big secret what I do,” Ledbetter said. “I’m a pot smoker and a beer drinker since I got out of the military at 18 or 19. Pretty much everyone knew what I was doing.”

He testified Larssen must have known he was selling marijuana out of Potters Creek.

“People would come to the store and tell me Roy Larssen told them not to come here,” he said.

Larssen countered Ledbetter’s statements when his attorney, Mike Morris, called him to the stand. Morris asked Larssen if he knew Ledbetter was selling marijuana.

“I can only be like everybody else and think that he was,” Larssen responded. “I never seen him smoke it though. ... I never smelt it on him. ... I knew of nothing.”

Any knowledge he had of Ledbetter’s actions came from law enforcement asking him questions, he said.

“Several policemen asked me if I knew anything and I told them all I knew,” he said.

In a recorded call between Sheriff’s Office warrants clerk Teresa Simpson and Larssen, Simpson asked him if he knew “of anyone out there selling drugs.”

“Oh, of course,” Larssen replied, “you know Sammy (Ledbetter).”

Larssen told the jury the rent he and his wife were collecting from the property was the couple’s retirement fund.

“I get about $600 from Social Security,” he said. “Norma (Larssen) gets about $500. ... It was over half of our retirement money.”

The state rested its case but did not close Wednesday. The trial is set to continue at 9 a.m. today.

This ain't Las Vegas


What? Gambling machines here?


<=== New photo of New Braunfels at night.



3 arrested in gambling bust

- The Herald-Zeitung

Three local convenience store owners were arrested Wednesday for allegedly operating gambling equipment in their stores.

After a two-month investigation, New Braunfels Police Department officers confiscated 18 eight-liner gambling machines from three stores around the city, NBPD spokesman Lt. Michael Penshorn said.

“We had several complaints from citizens near the end of February and the beginning of April,” Penshorn said. “That’s when the investigation started.”

Around that time, he said, undercover officers started visiting Park Place Foods at 1289 W. San Antonio St., Rivercrest Food Mart at 995 Loop 337 and Pilot Travel Center at 4142 Loop 337.

Mohammed Abu-Swireh, 36, and Muin Soloman, 37, were both arrested from Rivercrest Food Mart. Rubin Friesenhahn, 57, was arrested from Park Place Foods.

Penshorn said there were no arrests made at Pilot Travel Center.

“We never dealt with the same person at Pilot,” he said. “There were so many employees there that we never saw the same one twice.”

He said the case is still being investigated.

“We’re checking on the serial numbers from each machine,” he said. “What happens to them depends on what happens in court.”

The machines could be auctioned or destroyed, Penshorn said.

Employees at Park Place and Pilot declined to comment.

Rivercrest Food Mart employees did not want to comment other than saying they want their boss back.

Abu-Swireh and Soloman remain in Comal County Jail each with bonds of $9,000. Jail officials said Friesenhahn bonded out Wednesday afternoon.

All three were charged with gambling promotions, keeping a gambling place and possession of a gambling device, equipment of paraphernalia. All offenses are class A misdemeanors and, if found guilty, are punishable by up to one year in county jail and a fine up to $4,000.

This is the first time the New Braunfels Police Department has busted stores in the city for illegal gambling, Penshorn said.

The Comal County Sheriff’s Office busted three illegal gambling rings on April 3 and confiscated more than 100 eight-liner gambling machines around the county. Sheriff’s deputies also issued 60 citations to people using the machines.

Those warrants were served after busts at the Crazy Coconut at 12422 Farm-to-Market 306, The Lucky Dog at 18059 FM 306 and at 7200 U.S. Highway 281.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

What are/were they thinking?


This is just wrong.

WTF?

What were they thinking? No one helped, no one checked the clerk.

At least one called 911.

Store Clerk Murdered; Customers Keep Shopping

GARY, Ind. (CBS) - A 26-year-old convenience store clerk is shot and killed in broad daylight in Gary, Indiana. Police say witnesses stood by and did nothing. CBS 2's Pamela Jones shows us critical clues that may help crack the case.

Police say one of the men bursting into the clerk's booth at this convenience store is about to commit murder. In the video on the left side of the screen, you can see a man in red run up an aisle and kick in the door to the booth. Within seconds, the clerk, Gurjeet Singh, is shot in the neck.

"It was senseless. And really all homicides are senseless but what we gather from this, there was very little resistance," said Gary Police Department Commander Anthony Titus. "It didn't have to end the way it did."

But Titus says what's even more senseless, is the apparent inaction of bystanders standing near the front door almost the whole time.

Police asked that we conceal their identity.

Police say there were several customers walking around the store after the crime. But only one called 9-1-1 for help.

When asked what he finds most disturbing about the surveillance footage, Titus said, "The fact that people went in and out of the store and didn't call police. There is a man laying there. Nobody thinks to dial 9-1-1 or check to see if he's okay or anything."

Police want to talk to people who saw the four men at this mini-mart on 15th and Grant just before 5:20 p.m. Sunday.

Investigators say two were dressed in black shirts, like one man who's apparently holding a gun. The other two, including one man, had red shirts. Police think they were driving a burgundy compact car.

"It's clear enough to the point that if you're familiar with that person, you'd be able to look at it and go, that's someone I know," Titus said.

Investigators hope someone who sees this video will be able to help bring the family of 26-year-old Gurjeet Singh some closure. A man who was doing his job one minute and losing a fight for his life seconds later.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Hungry?


What?

He wanted a burger.

I'm just sayin'


11 year old steals church van

A Saturday afternoon joyride involving an 11 year old boy and a church van turns into a chase, spanning two counties, ending with a crash in a McDonald's parking lot.

Police say he was a young man on a mission that they have never seen before.

"No, not like this. But nothing surprises me, but never seen anything like this," said Joe Engle with the Hazard Police Department.

Hazard Police say an 11 year old boy was at Carr Creek State Park with his family when he hijacked a church van and decided to go for a spin.

"Fish and Wildlife evidently was trying to get him to stop and maybe some of his family members from what we know."

A Fish and Wildlife official followed the boy down Highway 15 North on a 20 mile chase through Knott and Perry Counties, that is when Hazard Police got involved, chasing him through town.

"The child struck several vehicles with the church van, come in here in the McDonald's parking lot on East Main and began ramming vehicles and officers with the Hazard Police had to fire several shots into the tires of the vehicle to get the vehicle stopped."

The whole ordeal caused a bit of a traffic jam, and onlookers came to try and get a peak at the little man that crashed the van. Overall, it was a thrill ride for the boy that had police saying their prayers and counting their blessings.

"Everyone's safe, thank goodness."

The boy struck six vehicles in all. Police say they are turning the matter over to the juvenile court.

Hardy har har


Maybe he will think jail is funny too.

Man leads Fla. police on high-speed chase for fun

BRONSON, Fla. (AP) - Authorities said a 22-year-old man told investigators that he led them on a high-speed chase through two north Florida counties for fun. According to the Levy County Sheriff's Office, Philip Pennypacker is facing charges of high-speed fleeing and eluding and three counts of aggravated assault on law enforcement officers with a deadly weapon.

He has been released on bond. A message left with the Public Defender's Office was not immediately returned Saturday night.

Deputies said Pennypacker led authorities on a chase that ended Thursday night in southern Levy County. According to a sheriff's office report, Pennypacker told investigators: "Once I knew I was going to jail, I decided to have some fun."

Pennypacker was arrested without incident after the car he was driving ran out of gas.

Biting the helping hand


I hope the paramedic will be okay.

Talk about under-appreciated folks these guys are it. My hat's off to them.

Paramedic assaulted responding to call
By Michelle Mondo - Express-News

Little information was available on what led a man to allegedly assault a paramedic who was trying to help him Monday evening.

EMS called police to the Sierra Apartments in the 6100 block of Whitby around 5:30 p.m. for help after the paramedic was assaulted by a man who was the intended recipient of EMS care, said San Antonio Police Sgt. David Pruitt. It appeared that the man — who was allegedly assaulted during an earlier altercation — possibly pushed or hit the paramedic after the team arrived.

No information was available on the condition of either men. Both were taken to a hospital, Pruitt said.

Such a deal


Sounds like a heckuva deal for the defendant.

Sometimes you've gotta plead low if you there are evidentiary problems in your proof, which is what the article seems to imply here.

Watch, he'll file a 11.07 writ and complain that his attorney was ineffective.

Murder defendant takes 20 year deal
By Craig Kapitan - Express-News

A 23-year-old San Antonio man pleaded no contest Monday to murder, right before he was to stand trial for fatally shooting a teenager in the back of the head last year.

In exchange for Jesse Gonzales' plea, prosecutors agreed to ask visiting State District Judge Pat Priest to sentence Gonzales to 20 years in prison for the slaying of 18-year-old Paul Anthony Gonzalez. The judge accepted the agreement.

Gonzalez was pronounced dead several hours after emergency responders found him in the passenger seat of a friend's vehicle on Jan. 9, 2008. The friends drove to the Churchill Park Apartments on the North Side to pick up another friend when someone shot at their car, witnesses told police.

Police initially believed the shooting was part of a gang-related turf war that had spilled over into Winston Churchill High School, according to court documents. But the first suspect, a 16-year-old who attended the school, was later cleared after his mother told police she watched him run from the scene and hide behind a nearby trash bin as the shooting occurred.

The teen later led authorities to Gonzales. “I'll never forgive you for what you did to my son, because my son was innocent,” Gloria Gonzalez told the defendant during a brief victim-impact statement.

While prosecutors would have preferred a lengthier sentence, the resolution was good considering the evidence available, said First Assistant District Attorney Cliff Herberg. He said there were conflicting witness accounts on who fired the fatal shot.

But despite the discrepancies, Herberg said, prosecutors were confident the defendant took part in the shooting and, under the state's law of parties, it was enough to sentence him for murder.

“If you get in a fight and start shooting, you're going to suffer the consequences,” Herberg said.

Defense attorney Scott McCrum could not be reached for comment.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Shouldn't have happened to a dog much less a person


This is just pretty bad.

BTW what the heck is drink driving?

Man 'cooked' to death in Australian prison van
Breitbart.com


The family of an Australian Aboriginal elder who died after being "cooked" in the back of a prison van on a scorching hot day is considering suing, they said.

A coroner Friday dismissed treatment of the 46-year-old man as inhumane and a "disgrace," saying he would ask prosecutors to consider criminal charges over his death from heatstroke in Western Australia in January 2008.

The elder, known only as Mr Ward as his first name was withheld for cultural reasons, was transported 360 kilometres (225 miles) to jail in temperatures of up to 50 degrees Celsius (122 F) in a van with faulty air conditioning.

Ward, who was arrested a day earlier for drink driving, spent four hours in the searing heat between the mining towns of Laverton and Kalgoorlie, suffering third-degree burns where his body touched the metal floor, the inquest heard.

Western Australia Coroner Alastair Hope found that Ward was effectively "cooked" to death and heavily criticised the state prisons department, the private security firm that operated the van and the two guards who escorted Ward.

"It is a disgrace that a prisoner in the 21st century, particularly a prisoner who has not been convicted of any crime, was transported for a long distance in high temperatures in this pod," Hope said.

The hearing was told that when Ward eventually arrived unconscious at hospital in Kalgoorlie, his body was so hot that staff were unable to cool him down. After an ice bath, which failed to save him, he had a body temperature of 41.7 degrees Celsius as opposed to a normal temperature of 37 degrees Celsius.

Ward's cousin, Daisy Ward, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Saturday the family was considering filing a civil lawsuit against GSL, which ran the prison van fleet, for breaching its duty of care.

"The community wants to see that they are punished... for what they have done, for what they have not done," she said.

The transport company offered to travel to Ward's home town of Warburton to apologise to the family, but the family has declined the offer.

"We all said that it was too late and that... they could have come forward to us and apologised to us earlier on," Daisy Ward said.

Quick work


Pretty quick work.

For the robbers and SAPD.


Two suspects in 4 robberies in hour
Express-News

Police arrested one man and are searching for another who authorities believe stole an SUV on Saturday night, and then used it to rob four individuals at gunpoint on the North and West sides early Sunday morning.

At 6:20 a.m., two employees at Chacho’s in the 7800 block of Callaghan Road were taking out the trash when two men in a silver SUV drove up and pointed a gun at the employees, according to a San Antonio Police Department incident report.

The suspects, described as Hispanic males in their 20s, demanded the employees’ wallets, but the workers only spoke Indian, which upset the would-be robbers and caused them to drive away, the report states.

About 20 minutes later, a 49-year-old woman was getting out of her car to go to work at Wal-Mart in the 8900 block of West Military Drive when the same vehicle pulled up to her, the report states.

One of the men inside rolled down the window, pointed a gun at her and said, “Give me your (expletive) purse, (expletive), or I’m going to shoot you,” the report states.

At 7 a.m., a 33-year-old man was reportedly held up at gunpoint by two men with black bandanas over their faces at an H-E-B in the 10600 block of Culebra Road, an incident report states. The men drove up in the same silver SUV, pointed a gun at the man and one man said, “Hey bro, I don’t want any problems, just hand over your wallet and cell phone,” according to the report. The man complied and the vehicle drove away.

Less than 10 minutes later, the two suspects allegedly robbed a 41-year-old man in the parking lot of a Wal-Mart in the 11200 block of Potranco Road, an incident report states. The men, wearing bandanas, pointed a gun at the man in the parking lot and demanded his wallet and his female passenger’s purse, then after receiving the items, they drove away once more.

San Antonio police officers found the stolen SUV at a home on Ash Field Drive.

Police arrested Christopher Garay, 20, who will face charges of aggravated robbery.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Pay as you go


Some folks will resort to anything to avoid paying more transit tolls apparently.

I mean these women went on as one and left the train or bus as two.

Bill them for the free rides; New York City needs the revenue

Baby Born On NYC Mass Transit For 2nd Straight Day

Passenger Plays Doctor As Brooklyn Bus Becomes Makeshift Delivery Room Friday After 'R' Train Childbirth On Thursday

Believed To Be Nation's First Back-To-Back Mass Transit Births

NEW YORK (CBS) ― For the second day in a row a newborn girl has been born on New York City's mass transit system.

A Brooklyn bus became a makeshift delivery room on Friday morning. A woman passenger helped the mother deliver the baby that just couldn't wait to come aboard.

Paramedics took the new mother and baby to a hospital. Their names were not released.

On Thursday, conductor Bretta Sykes helped a mother deliver a girl in a subway car. The mother of two says she used information from her own chilbirth classes to coach the woman through her seven-minute delivery.

A New York City Transit spokesman says it could be the system's first consecutive births on a subway train and a bus.

Sykes was waiting for an incoming train in lower Manhattan on Thursday afternoon when a woman in a subway train at the station went into active labor.

The conductor and mother of two says she used information from her own childbirth classes to coach the woman through her seven-minute delivery.

Sykes says the emerging newborn girl just slid right into her hand.

A passenger in the subway car took out her cell phone and recorded the birth — which landed on the local evening news.

Transit officials say mother and child are doing well at a hospital. Their names were not released.

The last mass transit birth was a girl born on a Manhattan subway platform last June.

MTA subways, buses, and railroads provide 2.6 billion trips to New Yorkers annually.

Lil' Kim


I suggested to my boss that we file involuntary commitment papers on Kim Jung Il.

He is clearly a danger to himself or others and I personally think he is certifiable.


NKorea warns of nuclear war amid rising tensions


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