Sunday, August 31, 2014

New Mississippi record gator, 2 days into season - Mississippi News Now


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says there's a new state alligator record.


It reported Saturday that Robert Mahaffey of Brandon and two assistants hauled in a 756-pound 'gator. That broke the record by 14 ½-pounds.


Saturday was the second day of Mississippi's alligator season, which ends at noon on Sept. 8.


Mahaffey's gator was 13 feet, 1.75 inches long, 67.25 inches around the belly and 45.6 inches around the base of the tail.


Both that alligator and the previous record-holder were caught in the Southwest Alligator Hunting Zone.


The former record holder was caught last year by Lee Turner of Madison.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Boy calls police from inside carjacked SUV - Mississippi News Now

A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)



HOUSTON (KPRC/CNN) – A Houston boy is happy to be home after a frightening ride inside a carjacked vehicle.


Alex Veasley's actions helped police rescue him and other children who were in the car.


"He said hang on and I was like wait you're in the wrong car and he was like I know I'm stealing this car,” Alex said.


With his words, Alex, 9, and four other children were off on the most dangerous ride of their young lives.


“I hope that never happens again,” Alex said.


The carjacking happened in an instant.


“She was buying us tacos because some people were hungry,” Alex said.


He said his driver LaTonya Jackson stopped at a Jack-in-the-Box, but left the car running when she went in to grab another order for one of the kids. That's when police say 24-year-old Brenton Simmons jumped in the SUV.


“He just got in got the keys and drove away,” Alex said.


Simmons drove around with the kids for hours, speeding and swerving all over the road barely missing other cars.


“So he just – errr - car was coming he was like – errrr - the car almost flipped over,” Alex said.


Alex says most of the other kids were asleep, but Simmons' erratic driving finally woke up the oldest child in the car.


His head hit the ceiling and he said, ‘Is there somebody in this car?' and I was like, ‘Yep - we're getting car robbed,'” Alex said.


When Simmons stopped in Cinco Rancho, TX to get gas, Alex saw an opportunity a cell phone left behind by Jackson.


“It was in a cup holder in the back seat, so I grabbed it and called 911,” Alex said.


Alex and the 11-year-old boy told a dispatcher what was going on and where they were. Shortly after that call, they saw the flashing police lights that meant they would soon be free.


“I was like yes, and I was happy because I could finally go home, because I was exhausted,” Alex said.


By 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Alex was safely in the back of a patrol car – ready to be reunited with his mom.


Copyright 2014 KPRC via CNN. All rights reserved.



State to help stock, manage Amory pond - Mississippi News Now


AMORY, Miss. (AP) - An Amory pond has been added to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks community assistance program.


WTVA-TV reports (http://bit.ly/1vGG184 ) McAlpine Lake joins the list of places to provide fishing opportunities to young anglers in urban settings.


The Amory Parks and Recreation Department will get state help to develop and manage the 2.5-acre pond.


Wildlife and fisheries officials will stock the pond and provide assistance on catch limits and controlling aquatic plants.


More information about use of the pond is available by calling the Amory parks and recreation department at 662-256-3221.


Information from: WTVA-TV, http://www.wtva.com


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



New Mississippi record gator, 2 days into season - Mississippi News Now


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says there's a new state alligator record.


It reported Saturday that Robert Mahaffey of Brandon and two assistants hauled in a 756-pound 'gator. That broke the record by 14 ½-pounds.


Saturday was the second day of Mississippi's alligator season, which ends at noon on Sept. 8.


Mahaffey's gator was 13 feet, 1.75 inches long, 67.25 inches around the belly and 45.6 inches around the base of the tail.


Both that alligator and the previous record-holder were caught in the Southwest Alligator Hunting Zone.


The former record holder was caught last year by Lee Turner of Madison.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Boy calls police from inside carjacked SUV - Mississippi News Now

A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)



HOUSTON (KPRC/CNN) – A Houston boy is happy to be home after a frightening ride inside a carjacked vehicle.


Alex Veasley's actions helped police rescue him and other children who were in the car.


"He said hang on and I was like wait you're in the wrong car and he was like I know I'm stealing this car,” Alex said.


With his words, Alex, 9, and four other children were off on the most dangerous ride of their young lives.


“I hope that never happens again,” Alex said.


The carjacking happened in an instant.


“She was buying us tacos because some people were hungry,” Alex said.


He said his driver LaTonya Jackson stopped at a Jack-in-the-Box, but left the car running when she went in to grab another order for one of the kids. That's when police say 24-year-old Brenton Simmons jumped in the SUV.


“He just got in got the keys and drove away,” Alex said.


Simmons drove around with the kids for hours, speeding and swerving all over the road barely missing other cars.


“So he just – errr - car was coming he was like – errrr - the car almost flipped over,” Alex said.


Alex says most of the other kids were asleep, but Simmons' erratic driving finally woke up the oldest child in the car.


His head hit the ceiling and he said, ‘Is there somebody in this car?' and I was like, ‘Yep - we're getting car robbed,'” Alex said.


When Simmons stopped in Cinco Rancho, TX to get gas, Alex saw an opportunity a cell phone left behind by Jackson.


“It was in a cup holder in the back seat, so I grabbed it and called 911,” Alex said.


Alex and the 11-year-old boy told a dispatcher what was going on and where they were. Shortly after that call, they saw the flashing police lights that meant they would soon be free.


“I was like yes, and I was happy because I could finally go home, because I was exhausted,” Alex said.


By 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Alex was safely in the back of a patrol car – ready to be reunited with his mom.


Copyright 2014 KPRC via CNN. All rights reserved.



State to help stock, manage Amory pond - Mississippi News Now


AMORY, Miss. (AP) - An Amory pond has been added to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks community assistance program.


WTVA-TV reports (http://bit.ly/1vGG184 ) McAlpine Lake joins the list of places to provide fishing opportunities to young anglers in urban settings.


The Amory Parks and Recreation Department will get state help to develop and manage the 2.5-acre pond.


Wildlife and fisheries officials will stock the pond and provide assistance on catch limits and controlling aquatic plants.


More information about use of the pond is available by calling the Amory parks and recreation department at 662-256-3221.


Information from: WTVA-TV, http://www.wtva.com


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



New Mississippi record gator, 2 days into season - Mississippi News Now


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says there's a new state alligator record.


It reported Saturday that Robert Mahaffey of Brandon and two assistants hauled in a 756-pound 'gator. That broke the record by 14 ½-pounds.


Saturday was the second day of Mississippi's alligator season, which ends at noon on Sept. 8.


Mahaffey's gator was 13 feet, 1.75 inches long, 67.25 inches around the belly and 45.6 inches around the base of the tail.


Both that alligator and the previous record-holder were caught in the Southwest Alligator Hunting Zone.


The former record holder was caught last year by Lee Turner of Madison.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Boy calls police from inside carjacked SUV - Mississippi News Now

A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)



HOUSTON (KPRC/CNN) – A Houston boy is happy to be home after a frightening ride inside a carjacked vehicle.


Alex Veasley's actions helped police rescue him and other children who were in the car.


"He said hang on and I was like wait you're in the wrong car and he was like I know I'm stealing this car,” Alex said.


With his words, Alex, 9, and four other children were off on the most dangerous ride of their young lives.


“I hope that never happens again,” Alex said.


The carjacking happened in an instant.


“She was buying us tacos because some people were hungry,” Alex said.


He said his driver LaTonya Jackson stopped at a Jack-in-the-Box, but left the car running when she went in to grab another order for one of the kids. That's when police say 24-year-old Brenton Simmons jumped in the SUV.


“He just got in got the keys and drove away,” Alex said.


Simmons drove around with the kids for hours, speeding and swerving all over the road barely missing other cars.


“So he just – errr - car was coming he was like – errrr - the car almost flipped over,” Alex said.


Alex says most of the other kids were asleep, but Simmons' erratic driving finally woke up the oldest child in the car.


His head hit the ceiling and he said, ‘Is there somebody in this car?' and I was like, ‘Yep - we're getting car robbed,'” Alex said.


When Simmons stopped in Cinco Rancho, TX to get gas, Alex saw an opportunity a cell phone left behind by Jackson.


“It was in a cup holder in the back seat, so I grabbed it and called 911,” Alex said.


Alex and the 11-year-old boy told a dispatcher what was going on and where they were. Shortly after that call, they saw the flashing police lights that meant they would soon be free.


“I was like yes, and I was happy because I could finally go home, because I was exhausted,” Alex said.


By 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Alex was safely in the back of a patrol car – ready to be reunited with his mom.


Copyright 2014 KPRC via CNN. All rights reserved.



Incentives states can offer to get Tesla factory - Mississippi News Now


LOS ANGELES (AP) - Five states are on the short list for a $5 billion factory that Tesla Motors plans to build so it can crank out batteries for a new generation of electric cars.


The package of economic incentives that each state offers will help determine where Tesla builds the factory - Nevada, California, Texas, Arizona or New Mexico. Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said the winning state will shoulder about 10 percent of the total cost, meaning at least $500 million worth of incentives.


Tesla already has done initial preparatory work on a potential site near Reno, Nevada, and plans to prepare one other site in coming months. A final decision is expected by year's end.


While officials in each state are keeping confidential the specifics of their packages, here is a look at the types of incentives and advantages each state can offer.


NEVADA


- Few taxes: No personal income tax, franchise tax, estate tax, inheritance or gift tax, and no taxes on corporate shares. No corporate income tax, although voters will decide in November whether to implement one to finance education - a move U.S. Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., said could undermine efforts to attract Tesla


- Other tax credits or breaks: Up to a 50 percent abatement on personal property taxes for up to 10 years; a partial abatement on sales and use taxes on capital equipment purchases; and a deferral of sales and use taxes on capital equipment.


- Worker training subsidies: Up to $1,000 per employee for job training if the company provides a 25 percent match, makes a five-year business commitment and pays at least hourly minimum wages.


- Other advantages: Proximity to the assembly plant in Fremont, California, where Tesla makes its cars; significant deposit of lithium, which is essential to making the batteries.


CALIFORNIA


- Tax and hiring credits: Legislation passed this year offers a tax credit of 17.5 percent of wages for full-time employees for 15 years, totaling up to $31 million a year that could be split between a battery manufacturer and other industries including aerospace manufacturing. A hiring credit of 35 percent of wages is available if Tesla locates in a region that has high unemployment and poverty, for wages above certain benchmarks, until 2029.


- Sales tax exemption: New legislation waives the state's share of sales tax, 4.19 percent, on the first $200 million in equipment purchased.


- Waiver of environmental rules: Some lawmakers are advocating waivers on a host of California's complex environmental review laws that would allow for much quicker building permitting.


- Other advantages: Tesla already has its headquarters and car assembly plant in the San Francisco Bay area.


TEXAS


- Incentive funds: The Texas Enterprise Fund regularly gives companies incentives worth tens of millions of dollars to open facilities in the state, including $15.3 million to SpaceX, a commercial rocket company where Tesla CEO Elon Musk is also chief executive. The Texas Emerging Technology Fund, also run out of Gov. Rick Perry's office, has given $205 million to fund scores of technology startups.


- Other incentives: The state also offers tax refunds, exemption from state sales and use tax on electricity and natural gas in manufacturing.


- Other advantages: Cities and counties have made direct pitches to Tesla, highlighting for example how San Antonio owns its own utility and can provide solar and wind energy.


NEW MEXICO


- Various tax credits or breaks: For investments by manufacturers, and the creation of high-wage jobs and renewable energy.


- Worker-training subsidies: The state pays up to 75 percent of new worker salaries for up to six months.


- "Closing fund": Local governments can tap public money to finance infrastructure improvements, such as roads and utilities, around a factory. The Legislature provided $15 million for the current fiscal year.


- Other advantages: State officials also tout a diminishing corporate income tax rate, low property taxes, rail connections to California and competitive electricity rates.


ARIZONA


- Job training grant: The state may provide new employers up to 75 percent of the cost of employee training.


- Tax credits: A company can receive tax credits of up to $30 million for new manufacturing facilities, and a separate tax credit of $3,000 per new employee in each of the first three years. Tesla could qualify for a $5 million tax credit if it installs at least $300 million worth of renewable power capacity.


- Property tax breaks: A factory that is placed in one of seven foreign trade zones in the state gets a break of up to 80 percent.


- Sales taxes are waived for machinery or equipment used directly in manufacturing, and electricity or natural gas used for businesses engaged in manufacturing.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



State to help stock, manage Amory pond - Mississippi News Now


AMORY, Miss. (AP) - An Amory pond has been added to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks community assistance program.


WTVA-TV reports (http://bit.ly/1vGG184 ) McAlpine Lake joins the list of places to provide fishing opportunities to young anglers in urban settings.


The Amory Parks and Recreation Department will get state help to develop and manage the 2.5-acre pond.


Wildlife and fisheries officials will stock the pond and provide assistance on catch limits and controlling aquatic plants.


More information about use of the pond is available by calling the Amory parks and recreation department at 662-256-3221.


Information from: WTVA-TV, http://www.wtva.com


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



New Mississippi record gator, 2 days into season - Mississippi News Now


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says there's a new state alligator record.


It reported Saturday that Robert Mahaffey of Brandon and two assistants hauled in a 756-pound 'gator. That broke the record by 14 ½-pounds.


Saturday was the second day of Mississippi's alligator season, which ends at noon on Sept. 8.


Mahaffey's gator was 13 feet, 1.75 inches long, 67.25 inches around the belly and 45.6 inches around the base of the tail.


Both that alligator and the previous record-holder were caught in the Southwest Alligator Hunting Zone.


The former record holder was caught last year by Lee Turner of Madison.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Boy calls police from inside carjacked SUV - Mississippi News Now

A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)



HOUSTON (KPRC/CNN) – A Houston boy is happy to be home after a frightening ride inside a carjacked vehicle.


Alex Veasley's actions helped police rescue him and other children who were in the car.


"He said hang on and I was like wait you're in the wrong car and he was like I know I'm stealing this car,” Alex said.


With his words, Alex, 9, and four other children were off on the most dangerous ride of their young lives.


“I hope that never happens again,” Alex said.


The carjacking happened in an instant.


“She was buying us tacos because some people were hungry,” Alex said.


He said his driver LaTonya Jackson stopped at a Jack-in-the-Box, but left the car running when she went in to grab another order for one of the kids. That's when police say 24-year-old Brenton Simmons jumped in the SUV.


“He just got in got the keys and drove away,” Alex said.


Simmons drove around with the kids for hours, speeding and swerving all over the road barely missing other cars.


“So he just – errr - car was coming he was like – errrr - the car almost flipped over,” Alex said.


Alex says most of the other kids were asleep, but Simmons' erratic driving finally woke up the oldest child in the car.


His head hit the ceiling and he said, ‘Is there somebody in this car?' and I was like, ‘Yep - we're getting car robbed,'” Alex said.


When Simmons stopped in Cinco Rancho, TX to get gas, Alex saw an opportunity a cell phone left behind by Jackson.


“It was in a cup holder in the back seat, so I grabbed it and called 911,” Alex said.


Alex and the 11-year-old boy told a dispatcher what was going on and where they were. Shortly after that call, they saw the flashing police lights that meant they would soon be free.


“I was like yes, and I was happy because I could finally go home, because I was exhausted,” Alex said.


By 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Alex was safely in the back of a patrol car – ready to be reunited with his mom.


Copyright 2014 KPRC via CNN. All rights reserved.



Costco Moving Ahead, Despite Pushback - Jackson Free Press


UPDATE: Jackson Planning Board voted against the city's zoning request on Aug. 27. Read more here.


Despite some community concern, Mayor Tony Yarber is moving forward in pursuit of a Costco on Lakeland Drive where Smith-Wills Stadium and the Michael D. Johnson Memorial Ballpark currently sit. To do so, the city must rezone the area to allow commercial development.


The state originally deeded Jackson the land under the condition that it would be used for "park purposes," which is why Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann sent Yarber a letter Aug. 8 saying the state would become involved if the city tried to commercialize the area.


"Please know the Secretary of State, as State Land Commissioner, will exercise the State's right of reversion to any property that is rezoned and utilized for any purposes other than a park," Hosemann wrote.


In an Aug. 22 interview, Yarber told the Jackson Free Press that the state's position and their threat of reversion is simply a "non-legal opinion"—one he is not worried will stop the development, which he said would bring about 235 jobs to Jackson, all of which start over $11 an hour.


All seven members of the city council were copied on Hosemann's letter. Jackson's Planning Board will meet Aug. 27 to discuss the rezoning of the land surrounding the intersection of Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55, which is currently used for museums and parks.


Mayor: Museums Will Survive


Yarber expressed his support of the LeFleur Museum District—including the Mississippi Children's Museum, the Mississippi Museum of National Science, Mississippi agricultural Museum and the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum—when it was established in May 2014. "I know we are working towards that goal so that we can ensure that the history, the richness of our city and state is being displayed every time someone comes into the city of Jackson," Yarber said at the May press conference.


Yet, at press time, Yarber had not communicated with Ward 7 City Councilwoman Margaret Barrett-Simon, who represents the district in which the Costco will be built if the mayor succeeds with his efforts.


"I was told that they really didn't have much information," Barrett-Simon told the JFP. "It's so unusual that there has been no public engagement here."


Yarber said that such matters are dealt with in his branch of government, however.


"The councilmen are aware and they are briefed, but negotiations happen on the administrative side of the table," Yarber told the JFP last week.


Instead, Yarber said he is doing everything he can to make sure "Jackson gets what it deserves, and in this case, that's a Costco."


Yarber said Costco developers have found a way to build Costco without tearing down Smith-Wills Stadium.


The Costco would replace the nearby baseball field, which Yarber said is inadequate and lacking resources. Murrah High School currently uses the field.


Barrett-Simon doesn't see how that plan is plausible. "There's no way that you could have a Costco go in this property without taking that stadium down," Barrett-Simon said. "Nobody had to tell me; I can just look at a map and figure out that it would have to come down."


A Win for Workers?


Yarber did admit that the rezoning could threaten Smith-Wills in the future, which he said would benefit the city since the stadium costs $200,000 to maintain while only garnering $20,000 in revenue.


"While we're saying we're not tearing it down now, at some point if we or the management there can't find a way to better impact the bottom line, it may be something that the city can't continue to maintain anyway," Yarber said.


But that's not Barrett-Simon's concern. "The issue is this is contrary to our land-use plan," she said. "I don't care if it's 1944 or 2014 ... our forefathers had some idea about what would be appropriate there."


Another concern with the proposed site has to do with the infrastructure of the area. Approximately 59,000 vehicles travel through the Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55 intersection each day, and the addition of a big-box retailer could increase the congestion along the thoroughfare.


But it is precisely the Lakeland Drive traffic that makes it a desired location for Costco, which plans to build its first store in Mississippi.


Initially, Costco, one of the top three largest retailers in the nation, reportedly showed interest in three potential locations on Lakeland Drive—one in Jackson and two in Flowood. However, the big-box retailer is unlikely to choose to develop on either of the Flowood sites because Rankin is a dry county. Liquor is a crucial source of revenue for Costco. A Jackson location also means that the city would benefit from its sales-tax collections, which some see as a boon after Sam's Club's decision to move to Madison.


In the world of big-box retailers, Costco is considered the best when it comes to employment treatment and satisfaction. The jobs site Glassdoor conducted an employee survey this summer that, as reported by The Huffington Post, ranked Costco only slightly behind Google for companies with best employee compensation and benefits. CEO and President Craig Jelinek is publicly in favor of a national minimum wage of $10.10 and said in 2013 that Costco has a "starting hourly wage of $11.50 in all states where we do business."


Glassdoor reported that Costco cashiers makes $15.20 an hour on average, while they average $9.37 an hour at Sam's Club and $8.18 an hour at Target. And about 88 percent of Costco employees have company-sponsored health insurance.


'Pandora's Box'


If the Costco is to be built on the Jackson site, it will be directly next to the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. Rick Cleveland, the hall of fame and museum director, said a Costco would not match the atmosphere of the area.


Susan Gerrard, the director of the nearby Mississippi Children's Museum, also believes the proposed zoning will not promote appropriate use of the land and that "a big box store doesn't really fit the long-range growth and development for a travel and tourism district."


Not to mention, Cleveland said the area has not changed enough to warrant a rezoning.


To rezone the property for commercial use, the city must prove that the "character of the neighborhood has changed to such an extent as to justify reclassification." But the establishment of the LeFleurs Museum District arguably reinforces the area as a cultural and historical site, Cleveland said.


Yarber said there is enough proof that the area has changed, but would not give specific examples for fear of revealing his "legal strategy."


Cleveland wrote a letter to Jackson's Planning Board on behalf of the Hall of Fame board urging the planners to refuse the rezoning.


Because the proposed area of rezoning is larger than the land the Costco would be built on, Cleveland fears that "this rezoning effort would open a Pandora's Box of commercialization. What's next?" he wrote in the letter.


It is also unclear if Costco knows that the Jackson site is on top of a landfill, which would require adhering to additional regulations, accumulating more costs for the retailer.


Cleveland, who just facilitated the construction of a storage-unit addition to the sports museum, said the construction costs were double due to the landfill underneath.


Yarber said the city is working with planners to make sure the Costco "marries its environment" and doesn't "stick out like a sore thumb," in order to keep the area's current character.



New Mississippi record gator, 2 days into season - Mississippi News Now


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says there's a new state alligator record.


It reported Saturday that Robert Mahaffey of Brandon and two assistants hauled in a 756-pound 'gator. That broke the record by 14 ½-pounds.


Saturday was the second day of Mississippi's alligator season, which ends at noon on Sept. 8.


Mahaffey's gator was 13 feet, 1.75 inches long, 67.25 inches around the belly and 45.6 inches around the base of the tail.


Both that alligator and the previous record-holder were caught in the Southwest Alligator Hunting Zone.


The former record holder was caught last year by Lee Turner of Madison.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Boy calls police from inside carjacked SUV - Mississippi News Now

A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)



HOUSTON (KPRC/CNN) – A Houston boy is happy to be home after a frightening ride inside a carjacked vehicle.


Alex Veasley's actions helped police rescue him and other children who were in the car.


"He said hang on and I was like wait you're in the wrong car and he was like I know I'm stealing this car,” Alex said.


With his words, Alex, 9, and four other children were off on the most dangerous ride of their young lives.


“I hope that never happens again,” Alex said.


The carjacking happened in an instant.


“She was buying us tacos because some people were hungry,” Alex said.


He said his driver LaTonya Jackson stopped at a Jack-in-the-Box, but left the car running when she went in to grab another order for one of the kids. That's when police say 24-year-old Brenton Simmons jumped in the SUV.


“He just got in got the keys and drove away,” Alex said.


Simmons drove around with the kids for hours, speeding and swerving all over the road barely missing other cars.


“So he just – errr - car was coming he was like – errrr - the car almost flipped over,” Alex said.


Alex says most of the other kids were asleep, but Simmons' erratic driving finally woke up the oldest child in the car.


His head hit the ceiling and he said, ‘Is there somebody in this car?' and I was like, ‘Yep - we're getting car robbed,'” Alex said.


When Simmons stopped in Cinco Rancho, TX to get gas, Alex saw an opportunity a cell phone left behind by Jackson.


“It was in a cup holder in the back seat, so I grabbed it and called 911,” Alex said.


Alex and the 11-year-old boy told a dispatcher what was going on and where they were. Shortly after that call, they saw the flashing police lights that meant they would soon be free.


“I was like yes, and I was happy because I could finally go home, because I was exhausted,” Alex said.


By 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Alex was safely in the back of a patrol car – ready to be reunited with his mom.


Copyright 2014 KPRC via CNN. All rights reserved.



Ferguson's flashpoint sparks national outrage - Mississippi News Now

By BRIAN MELLEY

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (AP) - They were killed in Wisconsin, New York and California. Some were shot on the street. One was killed in a Wal-Mart. Another died after being placed in a chokehold. All died at the hands of police and all have been united by one thing: the killing of Michael Brown.


Details may differ, circumstances of their deaths may remain unknown, but the outrage that erupted after the Aug. 9 fatal shooting of the unarmed, black 18-year-old by a white officer in Ferguson, Missouri, has become a rallying cry in protests over police killings across the nation.


While there's been nothing approaching the violence seen in the St. Louis suburb, demonstrations fueled by a sense of injustice and buoyed with the help of social media have rolled across cities, regardless of whether the shootings took place last week or last month.


The spark, said Garrett Duncan, an associate professor of education and African-American studies at Washington University in St. Louis, was how Ferguson police bungled the aftermath of Brown's killing, leading to rioting and looting in the face of a heavily armed police force and, later, the National Guard.


"When you leave an 18-year-old boy's body in the street for four hours in a Missouri summer, that's going to trigger something," Duncan said. "The reason it's politicized is we still don't know what's going on. The boy is buried and we still don't know the circumstances."


"Folks exploit these things for one thing or another," he said. "Whether to loot - or get their 15 minutes of fame."


In a culture where the 24/7 news cycle dissects events and often fills the information void with opinion, the topic of police shootings has become polarizing - from the White House to cable shows to Asia.


Brown's name and Ferguson have become synonymous with police killings. They have been splashed on signs by protesters, added to hashtags on Twitter and referred to on T-shirts that sport the refrain heard in the city: "Hands up! Don't shoot."


In Albuquerque, New Mexico, a city facing federal-ordered reforms over excess police force, protesters have begun invoking Brown's name at rallies connected to the city's string of police shootings.


David Correia, a critic of city police, said protesters invoked Brown's name because they believe minorities have been targeted in some excessive force cases. Around half of the 41 police shootings involved Hispanic suspects in a city where about half of the residents are Latino.


"Although it is true that many of the victims of police shootings here have been the homeless and those struggling with mental illness, that element of racialized police violence is there," Correia said.


Brown's name has been spoken loudly in Los Angeles where demonstrators peacefully marched, held vigils and confronted police leaders over the Aug. 11 killing of Ezell Ford, a 25-year-old unarmed black man who family members said was mentally ill.


Police said he tackled an officer and reached for his gun. News media have reported that witnesses did not see any struggle.


With LA's long history of racial tensions between police and the black community - including the deadly violence that followed the acquittal of officers who beat Rodney King - the Los Angeles Police Department has taken a more proactive approach, releasing information and holding public forums.


"They've gone on a charm tour with the community," said Earl Ofari Hutchinson, president of the Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable. Still, he said, the same tensions that boiled over in Ferguson lie just beneath the surface in Los Angeles.


"While you didn't see the looting and mass demonstrations that you saw in Ferguson, the hostilities, distrust and mistrust between the African-American community and LAPD is still there," he said.


Brown's death has refocused attention on race in some killings or renewed interest in older cases.


The Aug. 5 shooting of a black man holding an air rifle in an Ohio Wal-Mart didn't become a racial issue until after Ferguson blew up with violence. The family of John Crawford III has since called on the U.S. Department of Justice to launch a civil rights probe.


In Milwaukee, demonstrators have taken to the streets three weeks in a row to call for federal officials to investigate police brutality against minorities after Dontre Hamilton, a 31-year-old black man who was shot and killed by a white Milwaukee police officer four months ago.


In New York, the City Council will review police procedures after a black man suspected of illegally selling cigarettes on the street died after being placed in a chokehold by a white officer.


Gina Thayne's nephew, Dillon Taylor, 20, was fatally shot by Salt Lake City police within days of Brown's death. Protesters decried the use of lethal force in Taylor's shooting and others, including Brown's, as well as the outfitting of officers around the nation with military-style gear.


Thayne said she participated in the demonstrations, but was reluctant to make a connection between the two cases.


"I just want to find out the truth, no matter what it is," she said.


___


Associated Press writers Lindsay Whitehurst in Salt Lake City and Russell Contreras in Albuquerque, New Mexico, contributed to this report.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Costco Moving Ahead, Despite Pushback - Jackson Free Press


UPDATE: Jackson Planning Board voted against the city's zoning request on Aug. 27. Read more here.


Despite some community concern, Mayor Tony Yarber is moving forward in pursuit of a Costco on Lakeland Drive where Smith-Wills Stadium and the Michael D. Johnson Memorial Ballpark currently sit. To do so, the city must rezone the area to allow commercial development.


The state originally deeded Jackson the land under the condition that it would be used for "park purposes," which is why Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann sent Yarber a letter Aug. 8 saying the state would become involved if the city tried to commercialize the area.


"Please know the Secretary of State, as State Land Commissioner, will exercise the State's right of reversion to any property that is rezoned and utilized for any purposes other than a park," Hosemann wrote.


In an Aug. 22 interview, Yarber told the Jackson Free Press that the state's position and their threat of reversion is simply a "non-legal opinion"—one he is not worried will stop the development, which he said would bring about 235 jobs to Jackson, all of which start over $11 an hour.


All seven members of the city council were copied on Hosemann's letter. Jackson's Planning Board will meet Aug. 27 to discuss the rezoning of the land surrounding the intersection of Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55, which is currently used for museums and parks.


Mayor: Museums Will Survive


Yarber expressed his support of the LeFleur Museum District—including the Mississippi Children's Museum, the Mississippi Museum of National Science, Mississippi agricultural Museum and the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum—when it was established in May 2014. "I know we are working towards that goal so that we can ensure that the history, the richness of our city and state is being displayed every time someone comes into the city of Jackson," Yarber said at the May press conference.


Yet, at press time, Yarber had not communicated with Ward 7 City Councilwoman Margaret Barrett-Simon, who represents the district in which the Costco will be built if the mayor succeeds with his efforts.


"I was told that they really didn't have much information," Barrett-Simon told the JFP. "It's so unusual that there has been no public engagement here."


Yarber said that such matters are dealt with in his branch of government, however.


"The councilmen are aware and they are briefed, but negotiations happen on the administrative side of the table," Yarber told the JFP last week.


Instead, Yarber said he is doing everything he can to make sure "Jackson gets what it deserves, and in this case, that's a Costco."


Yarber said Costco developers have found a way to build Costco without tearing down Smith-Wills Stadium.


The Costco would replace the nearby baseball field, which Yarber said is inadequate and lacking resources. Murrah High School currently uses the field.


Barrett-Simon doesn't see how that plan is plausible. "There's no way that you could have a Costco go in this property without taking that stadium down," Barrett-Simon said. "Nobody had to tell me; I can just look at a map and figure out that it would have to come down."


A Win for Workers?


Yarber did admit that the rezoning could threaten Smith-Wills in the future, which he said would benefit the city since the stadium costs $200,000 to maintain while only garnering $20,000 in revenue.


"While we're saying we're not tearing it down now, at some point if we or the management there can't find a way to better impact the bottom line, it may be something that the city can't continue to maintain anyway," Yarber said.


But that's not Barrett-Simon's concern. "The issue is this is contrary to our land-use plan," she said. "I don't care if it's 1944 or 2014 ... our forefathers had some idea about what would be appropriate there."


Another concern with the proposed site has to do with the infrastructure of the area. Approximately 59,000 vehicles travel through the Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55 intersection each day, and the addition of a big-box retailer could increase the congestion along the thoroughfare.


But it is precisely the Lakeland Drive traffic that makes it a desired location for Costco, which plans to build its first store in Mississippi.


Initially, Costco, one of the top three largest retailers in the nation, reportedly showed interest in three potential locations on Lakeland Drive—one in Jackson and two in Flowood. However, the big-box retailer is unlikely to choose to develop on either of the Flowood sites because Rankin is a dry county. Liquor is a crucial source of revenue for Costco. A Jackson location also means that the city would benefit from its sales-tax collections, which some see as a boon after Sam's Club's decision to move to Madison.


In the world of big-box retailers, Costco is considered the best when it comes to employment treatment and satisfaction. The jobs site Glassdoor conducted an employee survey this summer that, as reported by The Huffington Post, ranked Costco only slightly behind Google for companies with best employee compensation and benefits. CEO and President Craig Jelinek is publicly in favor of a national minimum wage of $10.10 and said in 2013 that Costco has a "starting hourly wage of $11.50 in all states where we do business."


Glassdoor reported that Costco cashiers makes $15.20 an hour on average, while they average $9.37 an hour at Sam's Club and $8.18 an hour at Target. And about 88 percent of Costco employees have company-sponsored health insurance.


'Pandora's Box'


If the Costco is to be built on the Jackson site, it will be directly next to the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. Rick Cleveland, the hall of fame and museum director, said a Costco would not match the atmosphere of the area.


Susan Gerrard, the director of the nearby Mississippi Children's Museum, also believes the proposed zoning will not promote appropriate use of the land and that "a big box store doesn't really fit the long-range growth and development for a travel and tourism district."


Not to mention, Cleveland said the area has not changed enough to warrant a rezoning.


To rezone the property for commercial use, the city must prove that the "character of the neighborhood has changed to such an extent as to justify reclassification." But the establishment of the LeFleurs Museum District arguably reinforces the area as a cultural and historical site, Cleveland said.


Yarber said there is enough proof that the area has changed, but would not give specific examples for fear of revealing his "legal strategy."


Cleveland wrote a letter to Jackson's Planning Board on behalf of the Hall of Fame board urging the planners to refuse the rezoning.


Because the proposed area of rezoning is larger than the land the Costco would be built on, Cleveland fears that "this rezoning effort would open a Pandora's Box of commercialization. What's next?" he wrote in the letter.


It is also unclear if Costco knows that the Jackson site is on top of a landfill, which would require adhering to additional regulations, accumulating more costs for the retailer.


Cleveland, who just facilitated the construction of a storage-unit addition to the sports museum, said the construction costs were double due to the landfill underneath.


Yarber said the city is working with planners to make sure the Costco "marries its environment" and doesn't "stick out like a sore thumb," in order to keep the area's current character.



49er Ray McDonald accused of domestic violence - Mississippi News Now


SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - San Francisco 49ers defensive tackle Ray McDonald was arrested early Sunday on felony domestic violence charges after officers responded to a home in an upscale neighborhood, San Jose police said.


Sgt. Heather Randol, a police spokeswoman, declined to discuss the circumstances that led to McDonald's arrest, saying only that officers had probable cause to take him into custody.


McDonald, 29, was later released from Santa Clara County Jail after posting $25,000 bail.


He wouldn't discuss what happened with television news reporters who approached him after he posted bail.


"I can't say too much, not right now, but the truth will come out. Everybody knows the kind of person that I am," McDonald said. "I'm a good-hearted person."


NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announced tougher penalties this past week for players accused of domestic violence. The move followed scrutiny over Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice's two-game penalty stemming from his arrest on an assault charge in February.


"The 49ers organization is aware of the recent reports regarding Ray McDonald and we take such matters seriously," general manager Trent Baalke said in a statement. "As we continue to gather the facts, we will reserve further comment."


McDonald has been playing for San Francisco since he was drafted as a third-round pick in 2007.


The incident is the latest blow to what has been one of the NFL's fiercest defenses. On Friday, linebacker Aldon Smith received a nine-game suspension for what the league called violations of its substance-abuse and personal-conduct policies.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



New Mississippi record gator, 2 days into season - Mississippi News Now


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says there's a new state alligator record.


It reported Saturday that Robert Mahaffey of Brandon and two assistants hauled in a 756-pound 'gator. That broke the record by 14 ½-pounds.


Saturday was the second day of Mississippi's alligator season, which ends at noon on Sept. 8.


Mahaffey's gator was 13 feet, 1.75 inches long, 67.25 inches around the belly and 45.6 inches around the base of the tail.


Both that alligator and the previous record-holder were caught in the Southwest Alligator Hunting Zone.


The former record holder was caught last year by Lee Turner of Madison.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Boy calls police from inside carjacked SUV - Mississippi News Now

A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)



HOUSTON (KPRC/CNN) – A Houston boy is happy to be home after a frightening ride inside a carjacked vehicle.


Alex Veasley's actions helped police rescue him and other children who were in the car.


"He said hang on and I was like wait you're in the wrong car and he was like I know I'm stealing this car,” Alex said.


With his words, Alex, 9, and four other children were off on the most dangerous ride of their young lives.


“I hope that never happens again,” Alex said.


The carjacking happened in an instant.


“She was buying us tacos because some people were hungry,” Alex said.


He said his driver LaTonya Jackson stopped at a Jack-in-the-Box, but left the car running when she went in to grab another order for one of the kids. That's when police say 24-year-old Brenton Simmons jumped in the SUV.


“He just got in got the keys and drove away,” Alex said.


Simmons drove around with the kids for hours, speeding and swerving all over the road barely missing other cars.


“So he just – errr - car was coming he was like – errrr - the car almost flipped over,” Alex said.


Alex says most of the other kids were asleep, but Simmons' erratic driving finally woke up the oldest child in the car.


His head hit the ceiling and he said, ‘Is there somebody in this car?' and I was like, ‘Yep - we're getting car robbed,'” Alex said.


When Simmons stopped in Cinco Rancho, TX to get gas, Alex saw an opportunity a cell phone left behind by Jackson.


“It was in a cup holder in the back seat, so I grabbed it and called 911,” Alex said.


Alex and the 11-year-old boy told a dispatcher what was going on and where they were. Shortly after that call, they saw the flashing police lights that meant they would soon be free.


“I was like yes, and I was happy because I could finally go home, because I was exhausted,” Alex said.


By 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Alex was safely in the back of a patrol car – ready to be reunited with his mom.


Copyright 2014 KPRC via CNN. All rights reserved.



Costco Moving Ahead, Despite Pushback - Jackson Free Press


UPDATE: Jackson Planning Board voted against the city's zoning request on Aug. 27. Read more here.


Despite some community concern, Mayor Tony Yarber is moving forward in pursuit of a Costco on Lakeland Drive where Smith-Wills Stadium and the Michael D. Johnson Memorial Ballpark currently sit. To do so, the city must rezone the area to allow commercial development.


The state originally deeded Jackson the land under the condition that it would be used for "park purposes," which is why Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann sent Yarber a letter Aug. 8 saying the state would become involved if the city tried to commercialize the area.


"Please know the Secretary of State, as State Land Commissioner, will exercise the State's right of reversion to any property that is rezoned and utilized for any purposes other than a park," Hosemann wrote.


In an Aug. 22 interview, Yarber told the Jackson Free Press that the state's position and their threat of reversion is simply a "non-legal opinion"—one he is not worried will stop the development, which he said would bring about 235 jobs to Jackson, all of which start over $11 an hour.


All seven members of the city council were copied on Hosemann's letter. Jackson's Planning Board will meet Aug. 27 to discuss the rezoning of the land surrounding the intersection of Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55, which is currently used for museums and parks.


Mayor: Museums Will Survive


Yarber expressed his support of the LeFleur Museum District—including the Mississippi Children's Museum, the Mississippi Museum of National Science, Mississippi agricultural Museum and the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum—when it was established in May 2014. "I know we are working towards that goal so that we can ensure that the history, the richness of our city and state is being displayed every time someone comes into the city of Jackson," Yarber said at the May press conference.


Yet, at press time, Yarber had not communicated with Ward 7 City Councilwoman Margaret Barrett-Simon, who represents the district in which the Costco will be built if the mayor succeeds with his efforts.


"I was told that they really didn't have much information," Barrett-Simon told the JFP. "It's so unusual that there has been no public engagement here."


Yarber said that such matters are dealt with in his branch of government, however.


"The councilmen are aware and they are briefed, but negotiations happen on the administrative side of the table," Yarber told the JFP last week.


Instead, Yarber said he is doing everything he can to make sure "Jackson gets what it deserves, and in this case, that's a Costco."


Yarber said Costco developers have found a way to build Costco without tearing down Smith-Wills Stadium.


The Costco would replace the nearby baseball field, which Yarber said is inadequate and lacking resources. Murrah High School currently uses the field.


Barrett-Simon doesn't see how that plan is plausible. "There's no way that you could have a Costco go in this property without taking that stadium down," Barrett-Simon said. "Nobody had to tell me; I can just look at a map and figure out that it would have to come down."


A Win for Workers?


Yarber did admit that the rezoning could threaten Smith-Wills in the future, which he said would benefit the city since the stadium costs $200,000 to maintain while only garnering $20,000 in revenue.


"While we're saying we're not tearing it down now, at some point if we or the management there can't find a way to better impact the bottom line, it may be something that the city can't continue to maintain anyway," Yarber said.


But that's not Barrett-Simon's concern. "The issue is this is contrary to our land-use plan," she said. "I don't care if it's 1944 or 2014 ... our forefathers had some idea about what would be appropriate there."


Another concern with the proposed site has to do with the infrastructure of the area. Approximately 59,000 vehicles travel through the Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55 intersection each day, and the addition of a big-box retailer could increase the congestion along the thoroughfare.


But it is precisely the Lakeland Drive traffic that makes it a desired location for Costco, which plans to build its first store in Mississippi.


Initially, Costco, one of the top three largest retailers in the nation, reportedly showed interest in three potential locations on Lakeland Drive—one in Jackson and two in Flowood. However, the big-box retailer is unlikely to choose to develop on either of the Flowood sites because Rankin is a dry county. Liquor is a crucial source of revenue for Costco. A Jackson location also means that the city would benefit from its sales-tax collections, which some see as a boon after Sam's Club's decision to move to Madison.


In the world of big-box retailers, Costco is considered the best when it comes to employment treatment and satisfaction. The jobs site Glassdoor conducted an employee survey this summer that, as reported by The Huffington Post, ranked Costco only slightly behind Google for companies with best employee compensation and benefits. CEO and President Craig Jelinek is publicly in favor of a national minimum wage of $10.10 and said in 2013 that Costco has a "starting hourly wage of $11.50 in all states where we do business."


Glassdoor reported that Costco cashiers makes $15.20 an hour on average, while they average $9.37 an hour at Sam's Club and $8.18 an hour at Target. And about 88 percent of Costco employees have company-sponsored health insurance.


'Pandora's Box'


If the Costco is to be built on the Jackson site, it will be directly next to the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. Rick Cleveland, the hall of fame and museum director, said a Costco would not match the atmosphere of the area.


Susan Gerrard, the director of the nearby Mississippi Children's Museum, also believes the proposed zoning will not promote appropriate use of the land and that "a big box store doesn't really fit the long-range growth and development for a travel and tourism district."


Not to mention, Cleveland said the area has not changed enough to warrant a rezoning.


To rezone the property for commercial use, the city must prove that the "character of the neighborhood has changed to such an extent as to justify reclassification." But the establishment of the LeFleurs Museum District arguably reinforces the area as a cultural and historical site, Cleveland said.


Yarber said there is enough proof that the area has changed, but would not give specific examples for fear of revealing his "legal strategy."


Cleveland wrote a letter to Jackson's Planning Board on behalf of the Hall of Fame board urging the planners to refuse the rezoning.


Because the proposed area of rezoning is larger than the land the Costco would be built on, Cleveland fears that "this rezoning effort would open a Pandora's Box of commercialization. What's next?" he wrote in the letter.


It is also unclear if Costco knows that the Jackson site is on top of a landfill, which would require adhering to additional regulations, accumulating more costs for the retailer.


Cleveland, who just facilitated the construction of a storage-unit addition to the sports museum, said the construction costs were double due to the landfill underneath.


Yarber said the city is working with planners to make sure the Costco "marries its environment" and doesn't "stick out like a sore thumb," in order to keep the area's current character.



49er Ray McDonald accused of domestic violence - Mississippi News Now


SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - San Francisco 49ers defensive tackle Ray McDonald was arrested early Sunday on felony domestic violence charges after officers responded to a home in an upscale neighborhood, San Jose police said.


McDonald, 29, was released from jail after posting bail, Santa Clara County sheriff's Sgt. Kurt Stenderup said.


NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announced tougher penalties this past week for players accused of domestic violence. The move followed scrutiny over Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice's two-game penalty stemming from his arrest on an assault charge in February.


"The 49ers organization is aware of the recent reports regarding Ray McDonald and we take such matters seriously," general manager Trent Baalke said in a statement. "As we continue to gather the facts, we will reserve further comment."


McDonald has been playing for San Francisco since he was drafted as a third-round pick in 2007.


The incident is the latest blow to what has been one of the NFL's fiercest defenses. On Friday, linebacker Aldon Smith received a nine-game suspension for what the league called violations of its substance-abuse and personal-conduct policies.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



New Mississippi record gator, 2 days into season - Mississippi News Now


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says there's a new state alligator record.


It reported Saturday that Robert Mahaffey of Brandon and two assistants hauled in a 756-pound 'gator. That broke the record by 14 ½-pounds.


Saturday was the second day of Mississippi's alligator season, which ends at noon on Sept. 8.


Mahaffey's gator was 13 feet, 1.75 inches long, 67.25 inches around the belly and 45.6 inches around the base of the tail.


Both that alligator and the previous record-holder were caught in the Southwest Alligator Hunting Zone.


The former record holder was caught last year by Lee Turner of Madison.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Boy calls police from inside carjacked SUV - Mississippi News Now

A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)



HOUSTON (KPRC/CNN) – A Houston boy is happy to be home after a frightening ride inside a carjacked vehicle.


Alex Veasley's actions helped police rescue him and other children who were in the car.


"He said hang on and I was like wait you're in the wrong car and he was like I know I'm stealing this car,” Alex said.


With his words, Alex, 9, and four other children were off on the most dangerous ride of their young lives.


“I hope that never happens again,” Alex said.


The carjacking happened in an instant.


“She was buying us tacos because some people were hungry,” Alex said.


He said his driver LaTonya Jackson stopped at a Jack-in-the-Box, but left the car running when she went in to grab another order for one of the kids. That's when police say 24-year-old Brenton Simmons jumped in the SUV.


“He just got in got the keys and drove away,” Alex said.


Simmons drove around with the kids for hours, speeding and swerving all over the road barely missing other cars.


“So he just – errr - car was coming he was like – errrr - the car almost flipped over,” Alex said.


Alex says most of the other kids were asleep, but Simmons' erratic driving finally woke up the oldest child in the car.


His head hit the ceiling and he said, ‘Is there somebody in this car?' and I was like, ‘Yep - we're getting car robbed,'” Alex said.


When Simmons stopped in Cinco Rancho, TX to get gas, Alex saw an opportunity a cell phone left behind by Jackson.


“It was in a cup holder in the back seat, so I grabbed it and called 911,” Alex said.


Alex and the 11-year-old boy told a dispatcher what was going on and where they were. Shortly after that call, they saw the flashing police lights that meant they would soon be free.


“I was like yes, and I was happy because I could finally go home, because I was exhausted,” Alex said.


By 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Alex was safely in the back of a patrol car – ready to be reunited with his mom.


Copyright 2014 KPRC via CNN. All rights reserved.



Costco Moving Ahead, Despite Pushback - Jackson Free Press


UPDATE: Jackson Planning Board voted against the city's zoning request on Aug. 27. Read more here.


Despite some community concern, Mayor Tony Yarber is moving forward in pursuit of a Costco on Lakeland Drive where Smith-Wills Stadium and the Michael D. Johnson Memorial Ballpark currently sit. To do so, the city must rezone the area to allow commercial development.


The state originally deeded Jackson the land under the condition that it would be used for "park purposes," which is why Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann sent Yarber a letter Aug. 8 saying the state would become involved if the city tried to commercialize the area.


"Please know the Secretary of State, as State Land Commissioner, will exercise the State's right of reversion to any property that is rezoned and utilized for any purposes other than a park," Hosemann wrote.


In an Aug. 22 interview, Yarber told the Jackson Free Press that the state's position and their threat of reversion is simply a "non-legal opinion"—one he is not worried will stop the development, which he said would bring about 235 jobs to Jackson, all of which start over $11 an hour.


All seven members of the city council were copied on Hosemann's letter. Jackson's Planning Board will meet Aug. 27 to discuss the rezoning of the land surrounding the intersection of Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55, which is currently used for museums and parks.


Mayor: Museums Will Survive


Yarber expressed his support of the LeFleur Museum District—including the Mississippi Children's Museum, the Mississippi Museum of National Science, Mississippi agricultural Museum and the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum—when it was established in May 2014. "I know we are working towards that goal so that we can ensure that the history, the richness of our city and state is being displayed every time someone comes into the city of Jackson," Yarber said at the May press conference.


Yet, at press time, Yarber had not communicated with Ward 7 City Councilwoman Margaret Barrett-Simon, who represents the district in which the Costco will be built if the mayor succeeds with his efforts.


"I was told that they really didn't have much information," Barrett-Simon told the JFP. "It's so unusual that there has been no public engagement here."


Yarber said that such matters are dealt with in his branch of government, however.


"The councilmen are aware and they are briefed, but negotiations happen on the administrative side of the table," Yarber told the JFP last week.


Instead, Yarber said he is doing everything he can to make sure "Jackson gets what it deserves, and in this case, that's a Costco."


Yarber said Costco developers have found a way to build Costco without tearing down Smith-Wills Stadium.


The Costco would replace the nearby baseball field, which Yarber said is inadequate and lacking resources. Murrah High School currently uses the field.


Barrett-Simon doesn't see how that plan is plausible. "There's no way that you could have a Costco go in this property without taking that stadium down," Barrett-Simon said. "Nobody had to tell me; I can just look at a map and figure out that it would have to come down."


A Win for Workers?


Yarber did admit that the rezoning could threaten Smith-Wills in the future, which he said would benefit the city since the stadium costs $200,000 to maintain while only garnering $20,000 in revenue.


"While we're saying we're not tearing it down now, at some point if we or the management there can't find a way to better impact the bottom line, it may be something that the city can't continue to maintain anyway," Yarber said.


But that's not Barrett-Simon's concern. "The issue is this is contrary to our land-use plan," she said. "I don't care if it's 1944 or 2014 ... our forefathers had some idea about what would be appropriate there."


Another concern with the proposed site has to do with the infrastructure of the area. Approximately 59,000 vehicles travel through the Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55 intersection each day, and the addition of a big-box retailer could increase the congestion along the thoroughfare.


But it is precisely the Lakeland Drive traffic that makes it a desired location for Costco, which plans to build its first store in Mississippi.


Initially, Costco, one of the top three largest retailers in the nation, reportedly showed interest in three potential locations on Lakeland Drive—one in Jackson and two in Flowood. However, the big-box retailer is unlikely to choose to develop on either of the Flowood sites because Rankin is a dry county. Liquor is a crucial source of revenue for Costco. A Jackson location also means that the city would benefit from its sales-tax collections, which some see as a boon after Sam's Club's decision to move to Madison.


In the world of big-box retailers, Costco is considered the best when it comes to employment treatment and satisfaction. The jobs site Glassdoor conducted an employee survey this summer that, as reported by The Huffington Post, ranked Costco only slightly behind Google for companies with best employee compensation and benefits. CEO and President Craig Jelinek is publicly in favor of a national minimum wage of $10.10 and said in 2013 that Costco has a "starting hourly wage of $11.50 in all states where we do business."


Glassdoor reported that Costco cashiers makes $15.20 an hour on average, while they average $9.37 an hour at Sam's Club and $8.18 an hour at Target. And about 88 percent of Costco employees have company-sponsored health insurance.


'Pandora's Box'


If the Costco is to be built on the Jackson site, it will be directly next to the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. Rick Cleveland, the hall of fame and museum director, said a Costco would not match the atmosphere of the area.


Susan Gerrard, the director of the nearby Mississippi Children's Museum, also believes the proposed zoning will not promote appropriate use of the land and that "a big box store doesn't really fit the long-range growth and development for a travel and tourism district."


Not to mention, Cleveland said the area has not changed enough to warrant a rezoning.


To rezone the property for commercial use, the city must prove that the "character of the neighborhood has changed to such an extent as to justify reclassification." But the establishment of the LeFleurs Museum District arguably reinforces the area as a cultural and historical site, Cleveland said.


Yarber said there is enough proof that the area has changed, but would not give specific examples for fear of revealing his "legal strategy."


Cleveland wrote a letter to Jackson's Planning Board on behalf of the Hall of Fame board urging the planners to refuse the rezoning.


Because the proposed area of rezoning is larger than the land the Costco would be built on, Cleveland fears that "this rezoning effort would open a Pandora's Box of commercialization. What's next?" he wrote in the letter.


It is also unclear if Costco knows that the Jackson site is on top of a landfill, which would require adhering to additional regulations, accumulating more costs for the retailer.


Cleveland, who just facilitated the construction of a storage-unit addition to the sports museum, said the construction costs were double due to the landfill underneath.


Yarber said the city is working with planners to make sure the Costco "marries its environment" and doesn't "stick out like a sore thumb," in order to keep the area's current character.



New Mississippi record gator, 2 days into season - Mississippi News Now


JACKSON, Miss. (AP) - The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says there's a new state alligator record.


It reported Saturday that Robert Mahaffey of Brandon and two assistants hauled in a 756-pound 'gator. That broke the record by 14 ½-pounds.


Saturday was the second day of Mississippi's alligator season, which ends at noon on Sept. 8.


Mahaffey's gator was 13 feet, 1.75 inches long, 67.25 inches around the belly and 45.6 inches around the base of the tail.


Both that alligator and the previous record-holder were caught in the Southwest Alligator Hunting Zone.


The former record holder was caught last year by Lee Turner of Madison.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Boy calls police from inside carjacked SUV - Mississippi News Now

A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)A boy calls 911 from inside a carjacked vehicle with four other kids. (Source: KPRC/CNN)



HOUSTON (KPRC/CNN) – A Houston boy is happy to be home after a frightening ride inside a carjacked vehicle.


Alex Veasley's actions helped police rescue him and other children who were in the car.


"He said hang on and I was like wait you're in the wrong car and he was like I know I'm stealing this car,” Alex said.


With his words, Alex, 9, and four other children were off on the most dangerous ride of their young lives.


“I hope that never happens again,” Alex said.


The carjacking happened in an instant.


“She was buying us tacos because some people were hungry,” Alex said.


He said his driver LaTonya Jackson stopped at a Jack-in-the-Box, but left the car running when she went in to grab another order for one of the kids. That's when police say 24-year-old Brenton Simmons jumped in the SUV.


“He just got in got the keys and drove away,” Alex said.


Simmons drove around with the kids for hours, speeding and swerving all over the road barely missing other cars.


“So he just – errr - car was coming he was like – errrr - the car almost flipped over,” Alex said.


Alex says most of the other kids were asleep, but Simmons' erratic driving finally woke up the oldest child in the car.


His head hit the ceiling and he said, ‘Is there somebody in this car?' and I was like, ‘Yep - we're getting car robbed,'” Alex said.


When Simmons stopped in Cinco Rancho, TX to get gas, Alex saw an opportunity a cell phone left behind by Jackson.


“It was in a cup holder in the back seat, so I grabbed it and called 911,” Alex said.


Alex and the 11-year-old boy told a dispatcher what was going on and where they were. Shortly after that call, they saw the flashing police lights that meant they would soon be free.


“I was like yes, and I was happy because I could finally go home, because I was exhausted,” Alex said.


By 9:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Alex was safely in the back of a patrol car – ready to be reunited with his mom.


Copyright 2014 KPRC via CNN. All rights reserved.



Ferguson's flashpoint sparks national outrage - Mississippi News Now

By BRIAN MELLEY

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES (AP) - They were killed in Wisconsin, New York and California. Some were shot on the street. One was killed in a Wal-Mart. Another died after being placed in a chokehold. All died at the hands of police and all have been united by one thing: the killing of Michael Brown.


Details may differ, circumstances of their deaths may remain unknown, but the outrage that erupted after the Aug. 9 fatal shooting of the unarmed, black 18-year-old by a white officer in Ferguson, Missouri, has become a rallying cry in protests over police killings across the nation.


While there's been nothing approaching the violence seen in the St. Louis suburb, demonstrations fueled by a sense of injustice and buoyed with the help of social media have rolled across cities, regardless of whether the shootings took place last week or last month.


The spark, said Garrett Duncan, an associate professor of education and African-American studies at Washington University in St. Louis, was how Ferguson police bungled the aftermath of Brown's killing, leading to rioting and looting in the face of a heavily armed police force and, later, the National Guard.


"When you leave an 18-year-old boy's body in the street for four hours in a Missouri summer, that's going to trigger something," Duncan said. "The reason it's politicized is we still don't know what's going on. The boy is buried and we still don't know the circumstances."


"Folks exploit these things for one thing or another," he said. "Whether to loot - or get their 15 minutes of fame."


In a culture where the 24/7 news cycle dissects events and often fills the information void with opinion, the topic of police shootings has become polarizing - from the White House to cable shows to Asia.


Brown's name and Ferguson have become synonymous with police killings. They have been splashed on signs by protesters, added to hashtags on Twitter and referred to on T-shirts that sport the refrain heard in the city: "Hands up! Don't shoot."


In Albuquerque, New Mexico, a city facing federal-ordered reforms over excess police force, protesters have begun invoking Brown's name at rallies connected to the city's string of police shootings.


David Correia, a critic of city police, said protesters invoked Brown's name because they believe minorities have been targeted in some excessive force cases. Around half of the 41 police shootings involved Hispanic suspects in a city where about half of the residents are Latino.


"Although it is true that many of the victims of police shootings here have been the homeless and those struggling with mental illness, that element of racialized police violence is there," Correia said.


Brown's name has been spoken loudly in Los Angeles where demonstrators peacefully marched, held vigils and confronted police leaders over the Aug. 11 killing of Ezell Ford, a 25-year-old unarmed black man who family members said was mentally ill.


Police said he tackled an officer and reached for his gun. News media have reported that witnesses did not see any struggle.


With LA's long history of racial tensions between police and the black community - including the deadly violence that followed the acquittal of officers who beat Rodney King - the Los Angeles Police Department has taken a more proactive approach, releasing information and holding public forums.


"They've gone on a charm tour with the community," said Earl Ofari Hutchinson, president of the Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable. Still, he said, the same tensions that boiled over in Ferguson lie just beneath the surface in Los Angeles.


"While you didn't see the looting and mass demonstrations that you saw in Ferguson, the hostilities, distrust and mistrust between the African-American community and LAPD is still there," he said.


Brown's death has refocused attention on race in some killings or renewed interest in older cases.


The Aug. 5 shooting of a black man holding an air rifle in an Ohio Wal-Mart didn't become a racial issue until after Ferguson blew up with violence. The family of John Crawford III has since called on the U.S. Department of Justice to launch a civil rights probe.


In Milwaukee, demonstrators have taken to the streets three weeks in a row to call for federal officials to investigate police brutality against minorities after Dontre Hamilton, a 31-year-old black man who was shot and killed by a white Milwaukee police officer four months ago.


In New York, the City Council will review police procedures after a black man suspected of illegally selling cigarettes on the street died after being placed in a chokehold by a white officer.


Gina Thayne's nephew, Dillon Taylor, 20, was fatally shot by Salt Lake City police within days of Brown's death. Protesters decried the use of lethal force in Taylor's shooting and others, including Brown's, as well as the outfitting of officers around the nation with military-style gear.


Thayne said she participated in the demonstrations, but was reluctant to make a connection between the two cases.


"I just want to find out the truth, no matter what it is," she said.


___


Associated Press writers Lindsay Whitehurst in Salt Lake City and Russell Contreras in Albuquerque, New Mexico, contributed to this report.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



Costco Moving Ahead, Despite Pushback - Jackson Free Press


UPDATE: Jackson Planning Board voted against the city's zoning request on Aug. 27. Read more here.


Despite some community concern, Mayor Tony Yarber is moving forward in pursuit of a Costco on Lakeland Drive where Smith-Wills Stadium and the Michael D. Johnson Memorial Ballpark currently sit. To do so, the city must rezone the area to allow commercial development.


The state originally deeded Jackson the land under the condition that it would be used for "park purposes," which is why Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann sent Yarber a letter Aug. 8 saying the state would become involved if the city tried to commercialize the area.


"Please know the Secretary of State, as State Land Commissioner, will exercise the State's right of reversion to any property that is rezoned and utilized for any purposes other than a park," Hosemann wrote.


In an Aug. 22 interview, Yarber told the Jackson Free Press that the state's position and their threat of reversion is simply a "non-legal opinion"—one he is not worried will stop the development, which he said would bring about 235 jobs to Jackson, all of which start over $11 an hour.


All seven members of the city council were copied on Hosemann's letter. Jackson's Planning Board will meet Aug. 27 to discuss the rezoning of the land surrounding the intersection of Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55, which is currently used for museums and parks.


Mayor: Museums Will Survive


Yarber expressed his support of the LeFleur Museum District—including the Mississippi Children's Museum, the Mississippi Museum of National Science, Mississippi agricultural Museum and the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum—when it was established in May 2014. "I know we are working towards that goal so that we can ensure that the history, the richness of our city and state is being displayed every time someone comes into the city of Jackson," Yarber said at the May press conference.


Yet, at press time, Yarber had not communicated with Ward 7 City Councilwoman Margaret Barrett-Simon, who represents the district in which the Costco will be built if the mayor succeeds with his efforts.


"I was told that they really didn't have much information," Barrett-Simon told the JFP. "It's so unusual that there has been no public engagement here."


Yarber said that such matters are dealt with in his branch of government, however.


"The councilmen are aware and they are briefed, but negotiations happen on the administrative side of the table," Yarber told the JFP last week.


Instead, Yarber said he is doing everything he can to make sure "Jackson gets what it deserves, and in this case, that's a Costco."


Yarber said Costco developers have found a way to build Costco without tearing down Smith-Wills Stadium.


The Costco would replace the nearby baseball field, which Yarber said is inadequate and lacking resources. Murrah High School currently uses the field.


Barrett-Simon doesn't see how that plan is plausible. "There's no way that you could have a Costco go in this property without taking that stadium down," Barrett-Simon said. "Nobody had to tell me; I can just look at a map and figure out that it would have to come down."


A Win for Workers?


Yarber did admit that the rezoning could threaten Smith-Wills in the future, which he said would benefit the city since the stadium costs $200,000 to maintain while only garnering $20,000 in revenue.


"While we're saying we're not tearing it down now, at some point if we or the management there can't find a way to better impact the bottom line, it may be something that the city can't continue to maintain anyway," Yarber said.


But that's not Barrett-Simon's concern. "The issue is this is contrary to our land-use plan," she said. "I don't care if it's 1944 or 2014 ... our forefathers had some idea about what would be appropriate there."


Another concern with the proposed site has to do with the infrastructure of the area. Approximately 59,000 vehicles travel through the Lakeland Drive and Interstate 55 intersection each day, and the addition of a big-box retailer could increase the congestion along the thoroughfare.


But it is precisely the Lakeland Drive traffic that makes it a desired location for Costco, which plans to build its first store in Mississippi.


Initially, Costco, one of the top three largest retailers in the nation, reportedly showed interest in three potential locations on Lakeland Drive—one in Jackson and two in Flowood. However, the big-box retailer is unlikely to choose to develop on either of the Flowood sites because Rankin is a dry county. Liquor is a crucial source of revenue for Costco. A Jackson location also means that the city would benefit from its sales-tax collections, which some see as a boon after Sam's Club's decision to move to Madison.


In the world of big-box retailers, Costco is considered the best when it comes to employment treatment and satisfaction. The jobs site Glassdoor conducted an employee survey this summer that, as reported by The Huffington Post, ranked Costco only slightly behind Google for companies with best employee compensation and benefits. CEO and President Craig Jelinek is publicly in favor of a national minimum wage of $10.10 and said in 2013 that Costco has a "starting hourly wage of $11.50 in all states where we do business."


Glassdoor reported that Costco cashiers makes $15.20 an hour on average, while they average $9.37 an hour at Sam's Club and $8.18 an hour at Target. And about 88 percent of Costco employees have company-sponsored health insurance.


'Pandora's Box'


If the Costco is to be built on the Jackson site, it will be directly next to the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum. Rick Cleveland, the hall of fame and museum director, said a Costco would not match the atmosphere of the area.


Susan Gerrard, the director of the nearby Mississippi Children's Museum, also believes the proposed zoning will not promote appropriate use of the land and that "a big box store doesn't really fit the long-range growth and development for a travel and tourism district."


Not to mention, Cleveland said the area has not changed enough to warrant a rezoning.


To rezone the property for commercial use, the city must prove that the "character of the neighborhood has changed to such an extent as to justify reclassification." But the establishment of the LeFleurs Museum District arguably reinforces the area as a cultural and historical site, Cleveland said.


Yarber said there is enough proof that the area has changed, but would not give specific examples for fear of revealing his "legal strategy."


Cleveland wrote a letter to Jackson's Planning Board on behalf of the Hall of Fame board urging the planners to refuse the rezoning.


Because the proposed area of rezoning is larger than the land the Costco would be built on, Cleveland fears that "this rezoning effort would open a Pandora's Box of commercialization. What's next?" he wrote in the letter.


It is also unclear if Costco knows that the Jackson site is on top of a landfill, which would require adhering to additional regulations, accumulating more costs for the retailer.


Cleveland, who just facilitated the construction of a storage-unit addition to the sports museum, said the construction costs were double due to the landfill underneath.


Yarber said the city is working with planners to make sure the Costco "marries its environment" and doesn't "stick out like a sore thumb," in order to keep the area's current character.