On lam for three decades: Arrest in 1981 killing

LAPD / NBC Southern California

Abraham Tovar was arrested on Wednesday in connection with a 1981 killing. Left: Tovar in September 1975. Right: Tovar after his arrest.

By Samantha Tata, NBCLosAngeles.com

LOS ANGELES -- More than three decades after Charles McGhee was fatally shot in a vacant lot, an arrest has been made in the 36-year-old man?s 1981 New Year's Day death, police said.

Abraham Tovar, now 73, of Alhambra, was arrested Wednesday morning on an outstanding felony homicide warrant in connection with the killing, which happened shortly before midnight on Jan. 1, 1981, in the 2300 block of South Central Avenue.

Investigators said Tovar and his brother Andrew argued with someone in that vacant lot earlier in the day. When the brothers returned to the lot armed with a handgun and hatchet, they were unable to find the person with whom they fought, police said.


Read the original report at NBCLosAngeles.com

McGhee and Wayne Alexis became the target of the brothers? revenge, police said.

Abraham Tovar shot both men, police said. McGhee died at the scene.

Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

Alexis survived the shooting and later testified against Andrew Tovar, who served state prison time and has since died, police said.?But Abraham Tovar disappeared, only to be uncovered during a new look at cold cases. ?

The LAPD Due Diligence Team served two search warrants and poured through several days of surveillance and interviews before the months-long investigation ended with an arrest, according to a statement released Thursday.

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Wayne Newton sued over Las Vegas home museum plans

LAS VEGAS (AP) ? Plans to turn Wayne Newton's sprawling Las Vegas estate into a celebrity museum have shifted into an ugly legal battle citing mismanagement, animal abuse and sexual harassment.

The company that purchased the rights to convert Newton's home into "Graceland West" filed a lawsuit this week in Las Vegas against Newton, his wife and her 76-year-old mother that claims the family unreasonably delayed the project to ensure it never opens.

The Newton family claims the lawsuit is a preemptive strike because they had planned to sue the company for breach of contract after multiple construction delays. The family plans to file a counter lawsuit challenging the allegations made by CSD, LLC.

The legal wrangling paints an uncertain future for Newton's 40-acre estate featuring South African penguins, Arabian horses, Impressionist paintings by Pierre-Auguste Renoir and 17th-century antiques collected from European castles.

Newton's lawyer, J. Stephen Peek, dismissed CSD's allegations as "salacious" lies and said the Newtons had nothing to do with the project's delayed opening.

"The real substance will come out in time," he told The Associated Press in a brief telephone interview.

The lawsuit seeks to have the Newton family immediately vacate their lavish estate, Casa de Shenandoah, and allow the $50 million project honoring the Las Vegas legend's music career to move forward. Construction plans for the museum called for an exhibition space, theater, zoo, visitors' center and other attractions.

The lawsuit also claims Newton sexually harassed a young female employee hired to train his 55 horses by repeatedly kissing her on the mouth. The worker quit and has threatened to sue Newton and CSD, according to the lawsuit.

Peek said the woman had been fired and described the accusations as an attempt to "obtain financial gain."

Under the terms of the museum deal, Newton, his wife and his daughter agreed to move to a newly constructed $2 million home on the estate so their mansion could be converted into a museum initially scheduled to open in late 2011. The lawsuit claims the family refused to relocate or turn over personal memorabilia.

"It is quite clear that it was always their intention to remain in the Mansion regardless of the terms of the agreement," the lawsuit alleges.

The company claims Newton's home was in a "sad state of disrepair" when it purchased the land for $19.5 million in June 2010, with his horses uncared for and 6-feet-tall animal manure piles covering the grounds.

"The penguin ponds were disgustedly dirty, full of algae and were endangering the penguins, all of whom were sick and many had died," the lawsuit reads.

Peek countered that the home couldn't have been in disrepair because the TV show "The Amazing Race" filmed its season finale there in 2009.

He said CSD failed to obtain necessary building permits, causing emergency officials to halt construction of the visitor center. The company also allegedly bullied its employees.

The Newton family released a statement from Geneva Clark, a partial owner of the museum, who denounced the allegations made by CSD's manager, Steven Kennedy.

"He is wrongly accusing the Newtons and mismanaging his role of leadership," Clark said in the statement.

Newton allowed the AP to tour his estate in October 2010, just months after the deal with CSD was finalized. The property appeared to be clean and his animals seemed healthy and well-kept.

Newton faced various financial woes in recent years. He filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1992 to reorganize an estimated $20 million in debts, including a $341,000 Internal Revenue Service lien for back taxes.

In 2005, he disputed IRS claims that he and his wife owed $1.8 million in back taxes and penalties from 1997 through 2000.

More recently, sheriff's deputies were turned away from the ranch home in February 2010 while trying to collect a $500,000 court judgment stemming from back pay owed to a former pilot. That same month, Newton's billionaire buddy Bruton Smith tried to seize Casa de Shenandoah for repayment of a $3.35 million loan.

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Emanuel: Chicago NATO summit is already paying off

CHICAGO (AP) ? Two days before Chicago hosts a summit of NATO leaders, Mayor Rahm Emanuel said the wide-ranging security measures and months of preparations that went into the event are already starting to pay off.

Motioning to a conference table in his office, the mayor said the president of Latvia had recently joined him to discuss a possible deal in the transportation industry ? an example, he explained, of the kind of partnership that might happen between Chicago and other countries whose leaders are spending the weekend here.

"Do I have a contract signed today? No. Did the conversation about a possibility of that happen? Yes," the former White House chief of staff said in an interview. "Many of those conversations happen around these conferences."

The mayor acknowledged the possibility that "some situations" surrounding the summit could be disruptive, apparently referring to potentially large protests. But, he added, "I wouldn't do this if I didn't think this was a great opportunity for the city."

The gathering involving 60 heads of state and another 2,500 journalists offers a rare opportunity to show off Chicago to the rest of the world. For Emanuel, the summit is also perhaps his biggest chance yet to display the connections to business and political leaders that helped convince voters to elect him last year.

At the same time, if the city experiences the kind of confrontations that erupted during similar events in other cities, most notably Seattle in 1999, it could be a setback for Chicago's long-running effort to distance itself from a gritty, sometimes brutal past.

Emanuel dismissed any concerns that police might act as they did at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, when officers clashed violently with demonstrators, or more recently in 2003, when large numbers of people protesting the Iraq War were arrested. The city later settled a related lawsuit for more than $6 million.

Instead, the mayor pointed to the Occupy movement protests last fall and a May Day protest a few weeks ago ? neither of which were marred by significant violence.

There have been two "moments in time in the national conversation where Chicago's police department and Chicago have stood out," he said. "And I think that deserves to be noted."

Emanuel has made it clear that he intends to keep the peace, sometimes in ways that raised concerns among members of the City Council. He pushed, for example, to dramatically increase fines for resisting arrest, explaining that the fines were long overdue to be raised.

He backed down after some aldermen worried that the fines might suggest Chicago was intent on curbing First Amendment expression.

If protesters "do it right, they'll get heard. If they do it wrong, nobody will hear it," Emanuel said. "We are going to do our job to allow them to express themselves but not lose control of the public safety."

In fact, many people are bracing for vandalism and violence. Businesses and residential towers downtown have hired security forces and stockpiled plywood that can be quickly fitted over broken windows. Many commuters are avoiding the Loop.

If all those foreign leaders and journalists return home with good reviews of Chicago, it could ultimately mean thousands of jobs and hundreds of millions of dollars to a city that the mayor acknowledges is still eclipsed by New York and Los Angeles.

"We're the third-largest city in America and yet we rank 10th in tourists," he said. "If we become ninth in tourism, that's 25,000 jobs and a billion dollars' worth of economic activity."

While much of the summit's focus will be on what happens inside the McCormick Place convention center, the gathering is also part of a narrative of which Emanuel is the star.

"This is his chance to shine," said Dominic Pacyga, a Columbia College history professor and author of "Chicago: A Biography."

"This is his chance to say, 'Look, I'm the mayor of a major city. I'm the mayor of a city that's a major world player."

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FACEBOOK IPO LIVE: The social network goes public

Electronic screens inside the Nasdaq stock market announce the listing of Facebook shares before the start of trading, Friday, May 18, 2012 in New York. The world's definitive online social network raised $16 billion in an initial public offering that values the company at $104 billion. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Electronic screens inside the Nasdaq stock market announce the listing of Facebook shares before the start of trading, Friday, May 18, 2012 in New York. The world's definitive online social network raised $16 billion in an initial public offering that values the company at $104 billion. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

It's Facebook's big day.

The site, which was born in a dorm room eight years ago and has grown into a worldwide network of almost a billion people, is making the most talked-about stock market debut in years.

Here's some of what Associated Press reporters are finding. Check back all day for updates. All times EDT.

___

8:54 a.m.

THE RIPPLE EFFECT: CALIFORNIA CASH

Besides minting Internet billionaires, the Facebook IPO should provide a little help for the cash-starved state of California.

The state's nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office says the IPO will generate $1.6 billion to $2.6 billion for the state through the middle of next year as shareholders cash in their stock.

California badly needs the money: Gov. Jerry Brown said over the weekend that the projected state deficit has swelled to $15.7 billion for the coming fiscal year. In January, it was projected at $9.2 billion.

___

8:48 a.m.

POP AND DROP

Several of last year's must-have IPO stocks aren't exactly must-haves anymore.

Pandora, an Internet radio company, went public June 15 at $20 a share. You could have bought the stock during the day for $26. It's now trading under $11.

Groupon, the online daily deal company, priced its stock at $20 a share on Nov. 4. It traded above $31 the first day and is now under $13.

And LinkedIn, a social network for professionals, more than doubled from its $45 offer price within minutes of hitting the market last May 19. It reached $122.70 on the first day before closing at $94.25. It's back to about $105.

? Dave Carpenter, Personal Finance Writer

___

8:41 a.m.

THE KID BILLIONAIRE

CEO Mark Zuckerberg is selling about 30 million shares of Facebook as part of the initial public offering. At $38 each, he pockets $1.15 billion. He will remain Facebook's largest shareholder, will more than 32 percent of Facebook's total shares. At the $38 share price, his stake in the company is worth $19.1 billion.

Zuckerberg will control the company with 56 percent of its voting stock as a result of agreements he has with other shareholders who promise to vote his way.

Here's his bio:

AGE: 28. Born May 14, 1984.

RESIDENCE: Palo Alto, Calif. Grew up in Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.

EDUCATION: Philips Exeter Academy, class of 2002. Studied computer science at Harvard University before dropping out.

PROFESSIONAL CAREER: Co-founded Facebook in his Harvard dorm room in 2004. Has served as CEO since.

FAMILY: Mother, Karen; father, Edward; sisters Arielle, Donna and Randi Zuckerberg.

___

8:30 a.m.

NEXT STOP: 1 BILLION

Have a look at how explosively Facebook has grown. According to the company, this is when the site passed milestones for its number of active users, defined as someone who logs on at least once a month:

1 million ? End of 2004.

5.5 million ? End of 2005.

12 million ? End of 2006.

20 million ? April 2007.

50 million ? October 2007.

100 million ? August 2008.

150 million ? January 2009.

175 million ? February 2009.

200 million ? April 2009.

250 million ? July 2009.

300 million ? September 2009.

350 million ? End of 2009.

400 million ? February 2010.

500 million ? July 2010.

608 million ? End of 2010.

750 million ? July 2011.

800 million ? September 2011.

845 million ? End of 2011.

901 million ? March 2012.

___

HEDGE FUND VIEW: HE'S IN

Andrew Schneider, a hedge fund adviser and CEO of San Francisco-based Schneider Family Office, was busy selling shares of Apple and LinkedIn on Thursday to free up cash for buying Facebook.

He planned to spend at least $20 million, or 8 percent of his firm's liquid assets.

"You've got 900 million users, and you've got real solid revenue, and the company is earning money," Schneider says.

He's not concerned about plowing such a large proportion into one company: "We feel very strongly and very comfortably about this." Nor is he rattled by General Motors' announcement that it would stop buying display ads on Facebook. He calls that "a very, very small amount."

Schneider points out that there were naysayers when Google went public in 2004, priced at $85 a share. It closed Thursday at $630.

"A lot of people went on the short side of Google when it opened," says Schneider, who is also CEO of Global Hedge Fund Advisors. "And boy, were they wrong."

?Christina Rexrode, AP Business Writer

___

HEDGE FUND VIEW: STEERING CLEAR

Whitney Tilson says his hedge fund, T2 Partners, avoids newly public companies as a rule because companies tend to go public only when things are going well.

T2 Partners prefers to look for battered stocks that it can scoop up cheaply. It bought more stock in JCPenney this week. Tilson admits, though, that avoiding initial public offerings doesn't always work. Google, he says, "turned out to be a great deal."

Tilson said he expects Facebook's stock will rise over the long term. Facebook, he says, "does look and smell a lot like Google."

? Christina Rexrode, AP Business Writer

___

INSTEAD OF A RED CARPET, RED INK

Facebook isn't getting much of a welcome to the neighborhood.

Thursday was one of the worst days of the year for stocks. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 156 points and has fallen 11 of the past 12 days, mostly because investors are nervous about turmoil in debt-burdened Greece.

The Nasdaq composite, representing the stock exchange where Facebook will trade, fell 2 percent on Thursday. The composite was up almost 20 percent for the year at the end of March, but that gain has withered to 8 percent.

? Erin McClam, Financial Markets Editor

Associated Press

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We may not trust Facebook, but we don't quit it either, shows poll

16 hrs.

We've long known more than a few Facebook users don't trust the social network to keep their personal information private. We know this because each and every time a?new Facebook privacy kerfuffle hits the news, that's all we talk about in our status updates ... on Facebook. You know, that social network we don't trust with our information. Now,?a new AP-CNBC poll?has the statistics to support our long-held supposition.

Sixty percent of the 1,004 polled by AP-CNBC had a Facebook account ? even though more than half of the respondents also said?they "have little or no faith in the company to protect their privacy," according to the poll, some details of which were shared Tuesday?in msnbc.com's Business section.

Perhaps you think the lion's share of distrust belongs to those respondents who who don't use Facebook ? after all,?they made up 40 percent of the?people polled. However,?only 21 percent of non-Facebook users claimed privacy concerns as their reason for not joining the social network.?And another 21 percent of the non-Facebook users said they "dislike it," perhaps for privacy reasons.

So it breaks down like this: A large number of people who ? voluntarily ??put their personal information on Facebook claim that they do not trust the social network with their personal information. In fact, they trust Facebook?a whole lot less than people who avoid it altogether. ?Maybe Facebook would worry about it's upcoming IPO if 59 percent of U.S. users quit the social network out of mistrust, but as the numbers reveal, nobody's going anywhere.?

Here's what we're talking about:?

A majority of Americans say they have a Facebook page (56 percent), up from 48 percent in a Gallup/USA Today poll last fall.

  • About 3 in 10 say they use Facebook every day.
  • Younger adults are the heaviest users, with a third (32 percent) of those under age 35 saying they visit Facebook several times a day. Most in this age group (55 percent) report using Facebook daily.
  • Among senior citizens, 73 percent do not have a Facebook page, and 47 percent of baby boomers say they don?t have one.

Very few people who use Facebook say they trust the site with their personal information.

  • Just 13 percent say they trust Facebook completely or a lot to keep their personal information private.
  • A large majority (59 percent) say they have little or no faith in the company to protect their privacy.

Among those who do not have a Facebook page, 35 percent said they simply lack interest in it, preferring to spend their time on other activities.

  • Twenty-two percent avoid it because they think it?s a bad thing, inappropriate, or not for people their age.
  • Another 21 percent said they are not on Facebook because of computer issues; the same percentage of people opt out due to privacy concerns.
  • Demographic breakdowns of those who do not use Facebook are very similar to the results to those who have Facebook accounts.

VOTE: Privacy concerns? Why are you still on Facebook?

So why are we still on Facebook if we don't trust it? Overt?maladaptive?narcissism? Versions of that delightful old chestnut populate much of the comments on?msnbc.com's?Market Day report on Facebook's public offering (the largest Internet deal in history, in case you somehow missed it.)

"Facebook is a testament to the inflated human ego," wrote one such commenter. "Yes I had an account and instead of network with friends I was blasted with endless idiotic posts about where people are having dinner. Every picture of their children ever taken and personal 'moonbeam' beliefs. Now I don't want to talk to a majority of people I once considered friends."

And according to another,?"Facebook is absolutely the most useless space on the Internet. The fact that anything so ridiculous will be valued at billions of dollars shows how pathetic this society is rapidly becoming."

Hey, I'm as much a?misanthrope?as the next?hermit, but I've seen enough to know we all don't fit the narcissistic personality disorder diagnosis.?In a Red Tape Chronicles report on the?social media divide,?Alessandro Acquisti, an economist who studies privacy at Carnegie-Mellon University, told Bob Sullivan, "The privacy issue may be polarizing because the penalty for avoiding social networks is becoming more severe over time."

Acquisti continued:?"Not having a mobile phone now would dramatically cut you off from professional and personal life opportunities.?It's the same story with social networks."

We all are inevitably locked in, he says.?"The more people use them for socializing and for their professional life, the more costly it becomes for others (who aren't members) to be loyal to their views."

One msnbc.com?commenter weighed the cost and benefits, and like many, found it worthwhile. "I live in Europe, and my family is in the U.S., all over in fact. Not to mention the friends I have around the world. It is much easier for everyone who is important to me to be on one site, where I share information ONCE and its done. I am happy many of you seem to have so much time (and money) to individually email or call or visit all the people you care about in your life, but many of us don't."

Facebook. It's like every hinky?relationship you've ever had ? you sense something is up, but ultimately, you're not?going to do a thing about it (until maybe?it's too late). So consider the upcoming IPO like your couples counselor. Once the company goes public, every privacy?investigation or court?subpoena?becomes a matter of public record. So your privacy may not be more secure, but at least Facebook will be held a bit more accountable for its behavior.?

VOTE: Privacy concerns? Why are you still on Facebook?

Helen A.S. Popkin goes blah blah blah about online privacy, afterwards asks we to join her on?Twitter?and/or?Facebook. Also,?Google+.?Because that?s how she rolls.

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Iran vows never to renounce nuclear 'rights'

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