■je Battalion s TATE JPao£7MVednesda^^ovembet^/^^99 r o/Wdfasper defendant said e far Bik tried to stop attack s, co-producer Dir JASPER (AP) — The third white tan 10 stand trial in the dragging >ho restaurant named ea th of a black man testified yes- lerated meeting place, (r |3y that he tried to stop the at- ;ase at San Simeonu, lC k|but one of his buddies threat- 5 ancras railway statior^ed him, leaving him paralyzed ng back to the 1870si 'ith iear. ;hton House, a one-tir “j couldn’t move,” 24-year-old and gallery, doubledihw^n Allen Berry, who could get m. ieHeath penalty like his two com ic was found in the.'anions for the slaying last year of king for a scene imps Byrd Jr., said. >d into a swimmingpi; “I’ve never been in a position Mat ion was incredibli there I couldn’t move before.” " Djurkovic marvels. Berry said he was so scared he i an interview mo,Tet his pants beside the road, ing, director Rossv, Bvrd, 49, _ icular delight in oneS^s chained tic sleight-of-handth Y his ankles 30s insurance buildio. 3 J pickup s Bloomsbury Squaielhch an d es of Louis B. Mayer|«g ed to s had to be frosteds ' eces near al one of the city’s few as P or * n one ■ the na- “/Ve never been in a position where I could n't move before.' the street beyond, m very happy to te® sgiisliest world, people an :^ c ‘ a cnmes th king that for Souther Rmm ince the civil William Russell era 3C " , 0rwo avowed white supremacist SS-yeJi old Oxfo[Jt ti l d f B . first came acrossOtl^ 25 and , Lawrence V'T a 1 irewer, 32, separately were con- V-e'::'? tiled and sentenced to die. ne\ u ete alwaysterrf Kerry said he and the other men and Mime Med. , ave gy rc j a gf t) anc j t j iat a ft e r a ,r," Welle.s, is pro ^hile, King and Brewer tried to pull Wes Ciaven s ho. 3y rc j f rom t g e truck. Moon and Jakobwl®3 err y testified he tried to break hen ( itizen /utneope:jp t he scuffle, but King called him o look the part a lnigger lover” and said that he playing the part, Ii'Qould meet the same fate that say, ’ 1 his is an alter: awaited Byrd. I. "Like that 8 reate f'H“I couldn’t do anything more to e’s another Spock,: s top it,” Berry testified. said he then allowed King idying anoff-Broadw:a* Brewer to kick Byrd, spray- ility. His "Hamlet" op paint his face and chain his feet to or. the back of Berry’s truck, in the same year? “fBBerry said King then took the dri- ike,” Schreiber said, ver’s seat, while he was in the mid- f hubris ever!" die and Brewer was on the passen ger side, and "they started dragging * ;[him]. ” Afterward, Berry said, he helped wash blood off his truck and the logging chain because he believed he was guilty of murder. “In my mind I was just as guilty as they were for being there, ” Berry said. “And I didn’t want to go to the police.” Berry was driving when the men picked up Byrd. Berry testified that King suggested they “whip his ass.” Defense attorney Joseph “Lum” Hawthorn asked Berry why he would give a black man a ride after such a suggestion from King. “I just thought it was the same old Bill,” Berry said. He said King had a penchant for making al cohol-fueled threats with which he never followed through. Jasper County District Attorney Guy James Gray asked Berry — Shawn Allen Berry Third Jasper defendant ZIP. why he was so afraid if King indeed was such a blowhard. Berry ex plained he was afraid because this time, King seemed to be carrying out his threat against Byrd. Gray also needled Berry about his failure to notify authorities af ter Byrd was killed, but Berry stuck to his explanation. As to why Berry associated with King and Brewer, Berry said he did not realize the extent to which prison had changed his longtime pal King into a racist. Berry spent about four and a half hours on the stand before the prosecution began its rebuttal. State District Judge Joe Bob Gold en recessed at day’s end while con sidering whether to allow the state to admit pictures of King and Brew er’s racist tattoos. Gray wants to show the jury that Berry’s friends were so coated in hateful messages that he should have known they would be a threat to a Byrd. Drug trade down since gang arrest AUSTIN (AP) — Law en forcement officials said illegal drug trade in Austin has slowed since the arrest of the city’s top dealer and alleged leader of a vi olent prison gang. “For right now, it’s probably put a substantial dent in (drug trade),” Ralph De LaFuente, a detective with the Austin Police Department’s gang unit, said. Hector Soto, 34, of Austin and 21 others were indicted on federal drug conspiracy charges. The indictments were released Monday. “A lot of the peripheral people who were working with them didn’t get popped, but they aren’t getting supplied,” De LaFuente told the Austin-American States man. “Others are laying low.” According to the indictments, 11 pounds of cocaine and 440 pounds of marijuana were brought in from Mexico from July through October by the gang and sold in Austin. The street price for a pound of marijuana is $350 to $500, while the 1.1 pounds of cocaine sells for $8,000 to $9,000 and 2.2 pounds costs as much as $17,500. Police said nine of those in dicted are members of the Texas Syndicate, one of the state’s most famous and powerful gangs that has links with to criminal activi ties within and without the prison system. The others were believed to have been working for the gang. The arrests came after a year long multi-agency investigation of the gang and Soto, who police say joined the Texas Syndicate while serving drug and burglary sentences in state prison from 1994 to 1997. Man to be retried after jury’s uncertainty ■HOUSTON (AP) — A Houston man accused of ;i|ing his 55-year-old mother last year after he said he devil made him do it will be retried for the crime. ■A jury deadlocked last week over whether Steven iosenbaum, 27, slayed his mother March 31, 1998, ml then fled to South Dakota. Miriam Rosenbaum, ^TTENTlOls found stabbed 35 times in the apartment she ared with her son. lass of 20f Prosecutor Kaylynn Williford said Monday she >n’t be left out of the:' v f' retry Rosenbaum after a state district judge gici.iiui! Get your Fjjranted a defense motion for mistrial late Friday af- iiior picture taken ai er iurors failed to reach a verdict after three days of otography. kxtended deliberations. gs arc also available fori ITwo jurors told The Houston Chronicle that 10 of at 141o TexasAve.Soutll| m wanted to convict Rosenbaum for the murder, i 693-8183. Open 9-i2; )ut sa id two others were holding out for a plea of not l( )_5 Mm kilty by reason of insanity. ■Doctors testified in Rosenbaum’s defense that he AGG IELAND ndee d thought the devil had cast a spell that drove him insane and that voices convinced him to kill his mother because she was possessed — and evil enough to destroy the universe. But Williford told jurors the psychological assess ments of Rosenbaum were invalid because the physi cians didn’t have all the information they needed, such as letters written before his mother’s death that por trayed Rosenbaum as an angry Satan-worshipper but not insane. Williford also argued that Rosenbaum appeared well enough to try and hide his murderous actions: he fled Texas, he took crime-scene evidence and he drained his bank account before boarding a bus to South Dakota. He got off the bus in Wichita, Kan., and was ar rested after being spotted looking in the windows of several downtown businesses. It was not clear when the case would be heard again. Seamaster GMT Automatic chronometer. Water-resistant to Boom/ioooft. OMEGA - Swiss made since 1848. The sign of excellence John D. Huntley Class of '79 313B South College Ave. College Station, TX 77840 (409) 846-8916 ^4«&Ml3nV' ,c WHEN? 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