The Battalion WORLD & NATION 8 Thursday, April 20,1989 North case lies in jurors’ hands Defense closes case by asking jury to ‘set him free’ WASHINGTON (AP) — Oliver North’s law yer, in an emotional final argument Wednesday, portrayed the former White House aide as a sac rificial lamb, a scapegoat and a hostage, and im plored jurors in his trial to “set him free.” “Oliver North never wanted to be a hero,” said Brendan Sullivan. “He just wants to go home.” But prosecutor John Keker, having the last word, asked the jury to “return a verdict of guilty in each and every one of the 12 charges.” With that, the nine women and three men who will decide North’s fate were sent to deliberate. They will return Thursday to begin their deliber ations after instructions from U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell. During deliberation, the jury will be sequestered for the first time since the Iran-Contra trial began. In his hour-long rebuttal, Keker said it had been an “unhappy, unpleasant, miserable crimi nal trial,” and dismissed Sullivan’s closing argu ment with a Shakesperian touch: “It was all sound and fury, signifying nothing.” “You have heard a lot about courage at this trial,” Keker said. “There’s another kind of cour age: courage to admit when you are wrong, co rage to admit personal responsibility, courage to admit guilt where appropriate. He (North) has not admitted any of those things; it’s time for you to do it for him.” Oliver North never wanted to be a hero. He just wants to go home.” — Brendan Sullivan, Oliver North attorney It was the end of two tough days for North, a former Marine lieutenant colonel whose power while he was at the National Security Council was substantial. His face paled and he busied himself with writing while Keker denounced him; he looked at the jury while Sullivan pleaded for him. “The government has not shown criminal be havior,” Sullivan said. “The man who held the lives of others in his hands now puts his life into yours.” The reference was to North’s protecting names of people he dealt with by shredding or al tering documents, which Sullivan saw as “a rea sonable thing to do.” Keker had another explanation: “He was de stroying documents deliberately so they wouldn’t find what he didn’t want them to find.” After the arguments, North’s mood bright ened and he joined his wife, w ho was speaking with a minister in the front row' of spectators. Sullivan, choked with emotion throughout much of his three-hour closing argument, men tioned President Reagan’s telephone call on the day North was fired, a call in which the president called North “a national hero,” and also a post card North got from then-Vice President Bush thanking him for his work. “All these people who went to Ollie North for help, where are they now?” Sullivan asked. Parents fetch kids after child-theft rumors MATAMOROS, Mexico (AP) — Rumors of child-stealing by fugitive leaders of a bloody cult that dealt in drugs and ritual killing sent worried parents to pick up their children at schools Wednesday, officials said. Traffic on the two Rio Grande bridges connecting Matamoros to its Texas sister, Brownsville, was again less than normal Wednesday, al though a Matamoros Chamber of Commerce official said it was “begin ning to pick up again.” Fear, created by the discovery of 13 bodies at a ranch nearby and the arrest of five members of the sect, persists in this city of nearly 500,000. Cult leaders Alfonso de Jesus Constanzo, a Cuban-American, and Sara Aldrete, a “priestess” from Brownsville, were still at large along with at least three other companions, authorities said. Reports that cult leaders had threatened to kidnap children for sacrifice if fellow cult members were not freed sent the parents to schools to pick up their children. Police said the threatening calls w'ere a hoax. “They (news media) are creating the psychosis with all these rumors,” said a telephone operator at the Fed eral Police office. “We have hun dreds of people calling to ask if the rumors are true.” Regional police commander Jesus Urquiza Martinez said special guards were being posted, especially at out lying schools. “We cannot hide reality,” Cham ber of Commerce director Andres Cahuigh told the Associated Press. “This happened here, but it could have happened anywhere. We must now start showing again the good things about Matamoros, and we must remind our visitors that this is a good city, quiet, with a healthy so ciety.” The Matamoros area has long been known as a corridor for drug smugglers, but the city clings to old Mexican traditions, including the Sunday and Thursday night con certs by the municipal band before thousands in the main plaza. Cahuigh said traffic and trade were beginning to pick up following a sharp drop last week. Officials said cross-border traffic dropped 80 per cent in March after the disappear ance of Mark Kilroy, a‘21-year-old U.S. college student kidnapped and killed by the sect. Federal investigators said the search for the missing sect members continued and was being coordi nated by the Mexico City office. The five men arrested here were arraigned before a federal judge Tuesday and were read the prelimi nary statements they had made be fore the district attorney, but they refused to make additional statements, saying their attorney was not present. They declined the serv ices of the court-appointed attorney. The federal judge has 72 hours to decide whether they should be kept in jail for trial or released for lack of evidence. Bush administration asks Supreme Court to ban ‘dial-a-porn’ WASHINGTON (AP) — The Bush administration urged the Supreme Court on Wednesday to protect the nation’s children by upholding a federal law that would shut down the $2 billion “dial-a-porn” industry. Congress was justified when it passed a law last year banning all sexually explicit telephone dial up message services to “protect children from hearing patently offensive speech,” Justice Depart ment lawyer Richard Taranto contended. But Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe, representing a major purveyor of dial-a-porn services, said Congress went too far. Saying most attempts by chil dren to reach the 976 numbers used by dial-a-porn companies can be frustrated by technological safeguards. Tribe said, “Their availability makes this fiat ban il legitimate.” The 976 exchanges also are used for other, non-controversial types of messages such as sport scores, time checks and weather reports. The total ban on dial-a-porn never was imposed because a fed eral judge in California ruled that the 1988 law could be applied only to obscene, not merely inde cent, phone messages. U.S. District Judge Wallace Ta- shima in Los Angeles said outlaw ing non-obscene messages, even though they may be inappro priate for minors, violates the free-speech protections of the Constitution’s First Amendment, The government appealed the ruling to the Supreme Court. Justice Sandra Day O’Connor said Wednesday she doubted whether the proposed ban meets the “least restrictive means” test the court has used when scruti nizing governmental interference based on speech content. She asked the governments lawyer why technological safe guards such as scrambling devices or access codes could not provide “a feasible and ef fective way to preserve the states’ compellingin- terest in protecting children while allowing adult access to such services. Taranto answered that the va rious safeguards contain “signifi cant loopholes.” Senate OKs record $157 billion bailout of S&Ls WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Wednesday approved a record $157 billion bail out and reform bill for the savings and loan in dustry after toughening provisions that would require S&L owners to put more of their own money at risk to stay in business. The 564-page bill was approved on a 91-8 vote two months after President Bush called for emer gency legislation to stop the hemorrhaging of the federal S&L insurance fund from the failure of 500 thrifts, more than 200 of them in 1988, and another 350 at or near insolvency. The legislation will be the biggest government financial rescue in history, dwarfing five times over the combined costs of the New York City, Penn Central, Chrysler and Lockheed bailouts of the 1970s and early 1980s. Similar S&L legislation is moving through the House but at a slower pace. Final congressional action is expected before .My- Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, had threatened to delay passage and force the Senate to cut short its 11-day recess for Passover if it did not adopt a tougher capital standard and man date that banks and S&Ls provide a series of free and low-cost consumer services. After lengthy negotiations, members of the Senate Banking Committee agreed to make S&Ls have at least 1.5 percent so-called “tangible” capi tal in relation to their total loans that could be seized in the future before federal insurance funds are tapped to pay off depositors in failed thrifts. Bush’s proposal would have required S&Ls to double their capital-loan ratio from the currently required 3 percent to 6 percent by 1991. Bulk would have allowed thrifts to meet the new re quirements entirely through the use of an ac counting technique that allow-s non-money “good will” as capital. 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I all vulnerable.” Bush WASHINGTO Jordan’s King H strive for “a serior die East peace, a monarch did not Palestinian electio After the two h hour at the White pressed satisfactii Bush that “I full’ forts.” Hussein’s visit round of Middle lowing talks earlie dent Hosni Muba Yitzhak Shamir. As he had dot played tour guide He took Hussei non, Va., to visit ton overlooking turned to the capi drug merchants at Standing along: ceremony, Bush s courage fresh thi ticketrc