THE BATTALION MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1981 State Page 7 \udge, attorney targets of scheme Man arrested in death plot United Press International )ALLAS — An investment ^ipany executive, recently re ed from a federal psychiatric llity, was arrested on a charge of eatening a federal judge and an Liey, the FBI said Saturday. [William Chester Carr, facing a rge of conspiring to commit td in a bogus gold transaction IHeme and recently released ir$n a Springfield, Mo., facility after undergoing psychiatric eva- ll ion, was arrested Friday by a U; . Marshal. 11 Dallas FBI agents said the mar- sljal had a warrant for the Tyler ^■iness executive’s arrest for an alleged plot to kill U.S. District ;]iKge Robert Hill and an uniden- p|id assistant U.S. attorney. 1 According to FBI, Carr was taken before U.S. Magistrate John Tolle, who increased his bond from $50,000 — set earlier on the fraud charge — to $1 million and ordered Carr sent to the federal correction institute in Fort Worth. Carr’s attorney appealed the bond increase and another federal judge took that motion under advisement pending receipt of transcripts of Carr’s hearing be fore Magistrate Tolle, agents said. Carr will be held at the Fort Worth facility pending another evaluation by a psychologist to de termine if he is competent to stand trial on the new charge, agents said. In an affidavit, FBI agent Eugene Gee said Carr, who suf fered from cancer of the larynx. patent charged in teen deaths allegedly tried to have Hill and the unnamed attorney killed “because they had taken him from a hospital in Houston, Texas, where he was receiving good care and placed him in the (federal) medical facil ity (at Springfield) which he thought had shortened his life.’’ Judge Hill had sent Carr to the Springfield institution in early July for a six-week psychiatric eva luation to determine whether Carr would be able to prepare his case for the fraud trial. The fraud charges filed against Carr and three others said they tried to swindle three investors out of $725,000 in the bogus gold trans action. The other three were found guilty in May and sentenced to oooooooooooooooo I CAMPUS 8 846-6512 prison terms ranging from 3 to 25 years. In his affidavit, Gee accused Carr of contacting Robin Lee Col eman, an inmate at the federal facility in Springfield, and asking him if he would kill Judge Hill. Coleman was awaiting sentencing on a conviction of conspiring to commit murder. Gee said another inmate “heard Carr tell Coleman he would furnish Coleman the weapons to commit the murders and heard Carr tell Coleman that Carr would pay Coleman’s bail to get him out of prison while await ing sentencing.’’ Carr told Coleman he would pay him more than $100,000 to kill Judge Hill, Gee’s affidavit said. ‘NewlyDead’ quiz show to educate young drivers United Press International OKLAHOMA CITY — In an effort to cajole younger drivers to obey the 55 mph speed limit, Oklahoma’s Highway Safety Office is going into show busi ness with “The NewlyDead Game” — a quiz show with a “Wizard of Oz” theme. Bruce Shults, producer of the show and spokesman for the safety office, said the 30-minute show is an educational parody on quiz shows and will follow three young Oklahoma drivers down a Yellow Brick Road where all the questions and answers are about the 55 mph speed limit, Shults said. And no parody of the “Wizard of Oz” would be com plete without the Wicked Witch of the West as the game show host, and a little dog named DoeDoe, he said. Two state troopers and an Oklahoma City actor play the characters, who are given per sonalities of Oz’ Scarecrow, Tin Man and Cowardly Lion. “The NewlyDead Game” was written, produced and directed by the Oklahoma Highway Safety Office and Oklahoma State University’s Educational Television Services. “The 16-to 29-year-old group comprised about 85 percent of all speed-related traffic fatalities on 55 mph-posted roads in Oklahoma last year,” Shults said. Shults said viewers at home can play along, but there’s a hitch. People scoring poorly on the quiz receive the admoni tion: “Turn yourself in to the nearest Highway Patrolman and ask to be taken downtown.” A below-average score: “Use your driver’s license for identifi- ' cation only, until you learn how to drive.” “We feel the audience of the NewlyDead Game can be both humorously entertained and still relate to the common sense rationale of the 55 mph speed limit,” Shults said. P I United Press International JUSTIN — The Texas Emanci- fjon Association agreed Satur- Jto support a citizen’s commit- a pushing for an investigation it!) the drowning deaths of three ieqnagers in Mexia during a uifeteenth celebration earlier : "^David Echols of Mexia and Young of Dallas, who serve [he Commanche Three Com- ee, said the organization 1 Is to raise funds to assist in the ve hm| 'in? 1 . Man- rights violation charges can be brought against the three officers. But the federal government, she said, will let state courts pro ceed with their case before it gets involved. Young also said that U.S. attorneys will require that the Commanche Three Commit tee provide them with enough facts in the case to warrant a feder al investigation. M OPEN TODAY 8:00 A. stigation of the drowning inci- larl Baker, Anthony Freeman Steve Booker drowned when )at they were riding in with e law enforcement officials ized in Lake Mexia. The three lers, Kenny Elliot, Kenneth lie and David Drummond ived and have been indicted lisdemeanor charges of negli- homicide. Che case has been moved to Jin in nearby Falls County, .[yfei chols said the charges are not ire enough and Mexia’s black munity wants the investiga- to continue. Ve do not accept these ges,” he said. “We plan to e there was some degree of jjjlfl it (by the three officers).” nung said the committee has erred with U.S. Justice De- ^• es i merit officials to see if civil idy, TmcApeIHAN BO DEREK-RICHARD HARRIS J25,000 bond. err was ambushed Nov. 21, 5, by several gunmen who 1 automatic rifles into his car. he prosecutor survived the ck uninjured, and although r later picked out three mem- of the Bandidos motorcycle ? from a lineup, charges have er been filed. arrelson also wanted a pres- tial pardon for his former mey, Bob Tarrant, who was icted in 1971 on federal Urns charges and has since barred from practicing law in ! ral courts. bp-level Justice Department ials vetoed the exchange, tly because it involved the ident in a plea bargain ex- ge. ATTENTION OFF CAMPUS STUDENTS SBISA AND COMMONS DINING CENTERS are open to off campus students \ desiring to purchase a board plan. Contact the Fiscal Department to pay pro rated fee and Sbisa Office will validate your I.D. for your choice. * ■*> v» drive