Monday, April 18, 1983/The Battalion/Page 5 Man overstays jail term by 10 months United Press International OUSTON — A three- [ember state appeals court has blasted a Harris County misdemeanor judge for allow ing a man serving a six-month ■spassing sentence to spend rtearly 16 months in jail, court [records showed. ■The First Court of Appeals Friday called the case “shock ing to our sense of justice,” and one member declared “this injustice was done inten tionally.” lS Conn -iveoffin, AM | -he Ye#,^criticize he appeals panel strongly d Ha Harris County r mapJurt-at-Law Judge Jimmie i.in ijl jDuncan for his handling of ■ case of Cleveland Hicks Jr, ofou, 24, a part-time student and ecutijsecurity guard. pmemfWDuncan, however, said the five-mr °P!' m<)n shows that the hem! appeals court “does not know duate |M? at t ^ e hHl they are talking ?isa(o!« ,ut -” >ah LiBHicks was released Iromjail Thursday after attorney Leta —| U g|, t , Moeller discovered he had [men Jbern “lost in the system,” hav ing served nearly three times his sentence on a misde- leanor trespassing charge. Attorney Moeller said she dis covered Hicks’ plight last week, took over the case and secured Hicks’ release on a personal recognizance bond. Duncan sentenced Hicks to 180 days in the county jail af ter a jury convicted him of trespassing for refusing a sec retary’s request to move out of a hospital personnel office to fill out a job application. At the time of sentencing, Hicks already had served more time than his sentence, and Duncan declared him free to go. But Hicks insisted on appealing thejury’s guilty ver dict and returned to jail be cause he was unable to post the routine $2,500 appeal bond set by Duncan. “(Duncan) had a clear and unmistakable ministerial duty to order that (Hicks) be dis charged from confinement,” the court said. The panel stated that Dun can was aware that Hicks had already served longer than his sentence and would be unable to post an appeal bond. The court said it would not tolerate situations in which judges force defendants to either give up their appeal or go back to jail. “That Cleveland Hicks should have served 494 days on a 180-day sentence is out rageous and unjustifiable,” wrote Associate Justice Murry Cohen. “This is not a case where the jailer forgot to release a prisoner at the end of his sent ence. This injustice was done intentionally,” Cohen wrote. Duncan Friday said he thought Hicks’ court- appointed attorneys, Ron Mock and Ben Durant, had paid the bond and Hicks was free pending his appeal. “Since he didn’t want to go home, I forgot about it,” Durant said. “He said he could get three square meals a day there, and that he would be all right.” “The kid should have been been released when he got credit for his back time. I don’t know whose fault that is. Perhaps I should have check ed to make sure the kid got out of jail,” Durant said. ' Fair Sryanli lives, i brents win damage after child’s death es,wiUH -U.™ -■WJnited Press International HOUSTON — A parent 2-year-old child was s3S« led on playground equip- ^ ‘ijwat a Houston daycare cen- . .JBiid he was “gratified” he one $300,000 damage suit be- | it might help prevent fu- layground losses. re happy and gratified be we have helped out parents,” said David one of the parents of the child killed while climbing on outdoor gym equipment at the Houston Montessori Chil dren’s Center. “But this was a horrible way to prove a point. There is no way to adequately express the loss of a child, our Howard.” He said attorneys were gener ally reluctant to handle his case because of its unusual nature. “The parents of children usually have little recourse in these cases,” he said. “But we feel this decision may set a major precedent. It may be a landmark in favor of children.” A jury ruled the center was negligent in the child’s death by failing to provide proper super vision, proper life-saving aid and proper emergency training for employees. Later state licensing officials examined the playground and recommended several safety changes, Nemon said. national^ orusli**************************** *********** ******% ■rt laslonR-' ill, nicler. Sprim Theta Would you know what to do !§|u)/f/i your leisure time if you ' had some? rhoiB , Tea® 'oundi velopi ps.’ his pro)® An Elective for You! Outdoor Recreation P&R 301 Open to All Students (no prerequisite) MWF 9:00 T Th 3:30-4:45 Wed 6:30-9:30 s esidenid |“Quality First’ Tax cut, deficit discussed United Press International DALLAS — House Majority Leader Jim Wright, D-Texas, said Saturday the elimination of the third year of President Reagan’s tax cut would chop $30 billion from the projected $204 billion budget deficit and help sustain the nation’s economic re covery. Wright, in a symposium on the budget, said national polls indicated 65 percent of Amer icans would rather see the deficit reduced than have a token amount of extra money in their paychecks. “The polls show Americans don’t believe they’ll ever see the money from a tax cut,” Wright said. “But they do want the de ficit reduced.” The symposium, organized by the Committee for a Respon sible Federal Budget and under written by the Kerr Foundation in Oklahoma, was a gathering of Republican and Democratic officials and members of the news media to explain the budget process to Americans and the hazards of continued . — Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods. 1 msc Each Daily Special Only $2.39 Plus Tax. 'w Cafeteria ) “Open Daily” o>: Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M ! 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He offered his econo mic recovery plan, and with very few excep tions Congress has fol lowed it. ” — House Ma jority Leader Jim Wright, D-Texas. previous administration) must be an embarrassment to the president. He offered his econo mic recovery plan, and with very few exceptions the Congress has followed it.” The result, he said, was a fed eral budget deficit reaching the $200 billion range instead of being balanced, with unemploy ment in the area of 9 percent and double digit interest rates. With the deficit so high, panel members said the govern ment was borrowing up to 80 percent of the money in Amer ican savings accounts — com pared with 50 percent in the Carter administration — mak ing it difficult for the private sec tor to compete for loan money. The result is that industries dependent on loans for survival may have to pay higher interest rates. Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said despite Wright’s warning that Reagan’s tax cut should be eliminated, there was little chance of that happening. He also said Reagan had pledged to veto any bill trying to kill the tax cut. Rudolph Penner, an econom ist with the American Enterprise Institute, said the ideal economy would be one with 5 percent annual growth through 1986, an unemployment rate no higher than 6 percent and an inflation rate in the neighborhood of 3 to 4 percent. Penner said, however, if the economy starts coming back too fast — raising the specter of in flation running 7 or 8 percent — the recovery could be aborted and turn down again. The One Stop Fun Shop! 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