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(KGTV) - A San Diego oceanographer helped solve the 74-year-old mystery of a missing World War II B-24 Bomber that disappeared in the Pacific Ocean.The crew of the plane “Heaven Can Wait” was on a mission to bomb Japanese anti-aircraft batteries in March 1944 when it was shot down by enemy fire.For decades, the plane’s location and the remains of the 11 troops on board were unknown. Project Recover, which finds the underwater resting places of fallen Americans, worked with family members who wanted closure for their lost relative.Eric Terrill of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at University of California, San Diego, led the team of marine scientists, archaeologists, and volunteers. They started the project in October 2017.The group used scanning sonars, high-definition imagers, advanced diving, and unmanned aerial and underwater robotic technologies. They also tracked data including historical eyewitness narratives from official military reports, mission documents, and diary entries from crew members on other aircraft in formation with the B-24 during its flight.The search for “Heaven Can Wait” covered nearly 27 square kilometers of sea floor. 11 days after the search started, the group found the wreckage under 213 feet of water on the north shore of Hansa Bay, off Papua New Guinea. "This is an important step toward our ultimate goal of identifying and returning home the crew of 'Heaven Can Wait' who bravely served our country during the battle at Hansa Bay," said Dan Friedkin, team member of Project Recover and chairman and CEO of The Friedkin Group. "Our search efforts for the more than 72,000 missing American service members from World War II will continue as we seek to bring closure to the families impacted by their loss."Project Recover turned over the details of the crash site to the U.S. government for review and possible recovery efforts."The results from our efforts in Hansa Bay have stirred a mix of lasting emotions within our team and drives home the need to recognize the sacrifices that service members and their families make in protecting our freedoms,” said Terrill.Project Recover: The Finding of 'Heaven Can Wait' B-24 from Kyle McBurnie on Vimeo. 2220
(KGTV) - A truck driver narrowly missed a boy stepping off his school bus in Norway.Video from another truck’s dash cam shows the boy running straight into the path of the oncoming vehicle.The truck driver slammed on the brakes and missed the boy by centimeters.The dash cam owner said he flashed his lights to help alert the truck driver. 347
(CNN/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP) - Twenty-four hours after local news reports first shined the spotlight on the giant swastika carved in his front yard, Steven Johnson just doesn't get the commotion. But what Johnson calls a "design" sure does look like the Nazi symbol -- and it has set his East Bay neighbors on edge."That Nazi (stuff) happened like 80 years ago," Johnson said Wednesday, sitting on his Harley Davidson motorcycle in front of his home in this out-of-the-way neighborhood where a narrow road separates houses tucked together on both sides. "Get over it, I guess."That's not about to happen.Aerial footage from local news stations on Tuesday captured the cement swastika, which measures about 10 feet by 10 feet and sits adjacent to the walkway of Johnson's home, taking up half of the front yard of the modest one-story house. A day later, media and gawkers continued to show up on the street, and drone used by a photographer for a national news company hovered above the house, snapping images of Johnson's yard.The uproar over the swastika comes just as the world is commemorating the 75th anniversary of D-Day, when Allied Forces landed in Normandy, France on June 6, 1944, a battle considered one of the major turning points of World War II.Speaking to a reporter and photographers after pulling up to his home Wednesday morning, Johnson was polite — and also showed zero remorse for his Nazi stone garden."I like swastikas," he said. "I think they look cool. ... I didn't do it to get attention. I'm not a worshiper of Nazis. I just thought it'd be a cool thing to put in there."Calling the design a "Tibetan symbol," Johnson said the swastika symbolizes "peace, tranquility and harmony." But while the ancient symbol used in many eastern religions traditionally faced counter-clockwise, the symbol used by Nazi Germany -- like the one in Johnson's yard -- turns to the right.That swastika is widely recognized as a symbol of hatred, associated with the persecution and systematic murder of millions -- including about 6 million Jewish people -- under the Third Reich.Johnson's decision to build one has not inspired good feelings from neighbors, two of whom privately Wednesday expressed their disgust with his decision. And as images of the giant Nazi lawn art spread, others outside the community said they were deeply offended"Personally, and professionally, I find it deeply deeply offensive," said Nancy Appel, a spokesperson for the Anti-Defamation League. "The thing is huge, it's in concrete and symmetrical. It appears that a lot of effort went into it."Anti-Semitic incidents -- including the appearance of swastikas in plain view of the public -- have been on the rise in California since 2016, according to data from ADL, which tracks bias incidents nationwide. The group recorded 341 anti-Semitic events statewide in 2018, up from 278 the year prior and more than any other state in the U.S."This is 2019 and it's California," Appel said. Addressing Johnson's swastika, she added, "Despite the long heritage, I think we all know what that symbol has come to mean. It's not just offensive to Jews, it's offensive to African-Americans, it's offensive to Asian Americans, Mexican-Americans. It's offensive to pretty much everybody and has come come to be seen as a symbol of hate for everyone."To which Johnson's response seems to be: Tough darts."I don't feel bad about putting it in," he said. "I feel bad about everybody making such a big deal about it."He also said he doesn't plan to remove it.'It's what America stands for. It's my property, my choice," he said. "A few people don't like and now I have to remove it? I enjoy it." 3671
(KGTV) - Authorities in Northern California have issued an arrest warrant for a former Southwestern College football player after he failed to appear in court in a sexual assault case.The Humboldt County Sheriff's Office said 25-year-old Raul Sierra failed to show up for two hearings, including one on March 7.The former Southwestern College and Humboldt State University student-athlete was arrested in 2016 for a sexual assault that officials say occurred in a campus residence hall at HSU in 2015.Sierra was charged originally with acquaintance rape “by use of drugs” in 2016 after taking a plea bargain. However, subsequent court records show that Sierra pleaded no contest to lesser charges of felony false imprisonment and misdemeanor assault in 2016.Court records show that Sierra is supposed to serve community service and undergo counseling through a court program.Sierra attended Castle Park High school before playing at Southwestern College and walking-on at Humboldt State University. 1031
(CNN) -- President Donald Trump announced Friday that he will "temporarily hold off" designating Mexican drug cartels as terrorist organizations as he said he would last week. "All necessary work has been completed to declare Mexican Cartels terrorist organizations. Statutorily we are ready to do so," the President tweeted.But Trump said he would hold off the designation at the request of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who he called "a man who I like and respect, and has worked so well with us."RELATED: Death toll put at 19 for Mexico cartel attack near US borderMarcelo Ebrard, the country's foreign minister, thanked Trump via his Twitter account for postponing the designation. CNN has reached out to López Obrador's office for comment.He wrote that the US and Mexico would "step up our joint efforts to deal decisively with these vicious and ever-growing organizations!"Designating cartels as foreign terrorist organizations could lead to tougher financial penalties and legal ramifications in the US against those involved.RELATED: Mexico's security strategy called into question after Mormon killings and other violenceTrump told conservative radio host Bill O'Reilly last week that he would "absolutely" designate the cartels and "start hitting them with drones and things like that.""I don't want to say what I'm going to do, but they will be designated," Trump said, adding that the US had offered the Mexican government "to let us go in and clean it out and (the President of Mexico) so far has rejected the offer. But at some point, something has to be done."The President did not specify last week which cartels would be targeted. He said designating cartels would be justified over "losing 100,000 people a year" from drugs coming into the US and human trafficking. 1808