NEW! THE BATTALIO! ee 13 idants nday Aggielife: Summertime warnings • Page 3 Opinion: Ethical dilemma* Page 5 Volume 109 • Issue 153 • 6 pages 109 Years Serving Texas A&M University www.thebatt.com Tuesday, June 17, 2003 ian was “simply i tie witness underoal' apman told the coi 1 that he was re®, ing the appeals cot irn the 38 convictions new trials. A :utor has said there new trials, late April, Coleman, te. was indicted onte :s of aggravated ling from his testim® the hearings Chape w. 14th defendant who i ed in the governor's hi igible for bond beca e is still pending ondiitii , said Vanita Gupta,asi >unsel with the NAA0 Defense and nd one of many attoiw :d in the cases, ota said she was “ora and relieved” that I ants who were “ripp reir families” finally# Thefts riddle KAMU, Rumours Te\i is incredible t tranches of the nient have recognizt! xi for action to recti? istice that took Gupta said. ‘‘1 ndividuals receive fit unplete relief, wheihe i a pardon or an ovtt of their conviclio tier is not resolved." parent of one defends?; ; homecoming was at! ling something st. ere’s been a part of® been missing,” i Brookins, whose sfl Brookins Jr. servedfw if a 20-year sente* tremely excited.” ie White, the mother the 13 being release : “tried to give up If e'd see both offe he end of her life. ow: ^ISC OPAS today 5 and reserve the dder Auditorium, rations to special be today! please call logon to the whole OPAS JR 2S GARBO mance! Only $24! /{/mate v/nc/A e Gatherings s kPELLA& EL SI MURPHEY! Only $40! By Melissa Sullivan THE BATTALION More than $112,000 worth of television equipment was taken from a parked KAMU-TV van June 6. Equipment stolen included three professional grade cameras and their cables, camera carry ing cases and switchers, said Angel Vaughn, assistant director for administration at KAMU. Vaughn said the burglary could have been prevented. “We had a perfect garage spot taken away because of the con struction of the new athletic complex,” she said. “This would not have happened if it was parked in the normal garage space.” The van was parked against a fence near the tennis courts. Vaughn said KAMU is sup posed to get the parking garage spot back by Saturday, but it does not look likely. KAMU employees discov ered the van had been broken into 48 hours after the last time it was driven, which was on June 4, Vaughn said. Bob Wiatt, University Police Department director said the sus pects broke through the passen ger side door and crawled through a very small space to get to the back of the truck. “Someone had some sore knees,” he said. The task must have taken sev eral trips, Wiatt said. Vaughn said KAMU estimat ed $89,000 of the equipment was insured and the insurance com pany cannot mail a check for another two weeks. “We don’t have this kind of money sitting around to buy new equipment,” she said. “I would rather have the equipment back than the money.” A similar burglary took place at Rumours Cafe outside the Memorial Student Center five days later, on June 11. Wiatt said someone knocked over a wall that separated the cafeteria and the entertainment area and took more than $10,000 worth of equipment, including the 42-inch flat panel television. “Someone was making out like Flynn,” he said. KAMU-TV Van $112,929 worth of property stolen Includes cameras, cables and switchers Rumours $10,000 worth of property stolen Includes 42-inch flat panel TV, portable speakers and light instruments Fuel your cells Senior manufacturing engineering technology major Bruce Witwer tightens down solid state relays on a hardware safety interlock machine Monday afternoon at Lynntech Industries. The SHARON AESCHBACH • THE BATTALION HSI machine is an emergency safety device that provides fuel cell users with a main shutoff switch. FBI: murder and rape rates increase By Jonathan D. Salant THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — Murders rose sharply last year in suburban communities, and rapes were up in mid-sized cities, the FBI said Monday. Still, overall crimes against people and property declined slightly. The biggest percentage increases in murders were recorded in subur ban counties, up 12.4 percent, the FBI’s preliminary crime statistics for 2002 showed. Murders declined Preliminary Crime Statistics from 2002 • Murders in Increased suburban 12.4 percent counties • Overall Decreased number 0.2 percent of crimes Violent crime Rapes Decreased 1.4 percent Increased 4 percent RUBEN DELUNA • THE BATTALION SOURCE: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS l.2 percent in rural counties and 14.7 percent in cities with fewer than 10,000 people. Some city problems are spilling over into adjacent suburbs that have become more urbanized, said David Muhlhausen, a criminal justice expert with the Heritage Foundation, a conservative Washington think tank. “The dis tinctions between cities and suburbs are sort of blurred now,” he said. But Penn State University pro fessor Darrell Steffensmeier said rates continue to be so low in subur ban areas that just a slight increase in murders could cause a huge per centage jump. “The homicide rate is very small, you have statistical blips,” said Steffensmeier, a professor of sociology and crime, law and justice. Overall, the FBI report showed a 0.2 percent decrease in the num ber of crimes reported to the police or other law enforcement agencies over the previous year, continuing a decade-long trend. Last year had been the only year since 1991 that crime rose over the preceding 12 months. The FBI statistics showed a con tinued decrease in violent crime, by l.4 percent in 2002 as compared with 2001. But the number of reported rapes rose by 4 percent and the number of murders grew by 0.8 percent, the FBI said. The largest increase in rapes was reported in small and medium-sized cities. Cities of less than 10,000 people and cities with between 100,000 and 250,000 people report ed increases of more than 7 percent in rapes. Jamie Zuieback, a spokeswoman for the Rape Abuse & Incest National Network, a Washington- based group that runs a national rape hotline and provides other services to victims of sexual assault, said women appear to be more will ing to report rapes. Several high- profile incidents, such as the Elizabeth Smart kidnapping in Salt Lake City, the increased use of DNA to convict suspects and educa tional campaigns have all encour aged women to come forward, Zuieback said. “Our suspicion is absolutely this reflects an increase in reporting,” Zuieback said. “We have certainly seen an incredible amount of atten tion to sexual assault in the news. We’ve seen a number of very high- profile cases.” The figures in the preliminary Uniform Crime Report released See Crime on page 2 See Thefts on page 2 RUBEN DELUNA & SHARON AESCHBACH • THE BATTALION SOURCE: UNIVERSITY POLICE DEPARTMENT Cavalry injunction halts Corps punishment phase By Melissa Sullivan THE BATTALION Punishment proceedings for members of the Parsons Mounted Cavalry accused of haz ing last October have been delayed after the defense won a series of court order restraints. Attorneys for the students said Texas A&M’s punishment process is unfair and illegal. State District Judge Rick Davis recently agreed to a temporary injunction, which will briefly keep everything as “status quo.” Davis will rule in August on a permanent injunction, which would keep A&M from ever pursuing sanctions against the cavalry students accused of hazing. “A student’s right of due process cannot be undone,” said Ronald Hole, a McAllen attorney representing his son and another A&M student. The attorneys are not asking Davis to decide whether hazing occurred in the Corps, but for a permanent injunction Hole said. After Brazos County’ Attorney Jim Kuboviak declined to pursue Criminal charges, A&M moved forward with its own disciplinary procedures. Cadets went to court in April after being ordered to appear before A&M officials to face charges of rule violations. An internal Corps investigation, prompted when Unit Commander Ty Keeling reported hazing to the Corps Commandant Lt. Gen. John Van Alstyne last October, found that jun iors had been hazing sophomores by hitting them with axe handles and forcing them to per form exercises in a pit of urine and horse manure, Van Alstyne told The Battalion in March. Hazing is a Class A misdemeanor and is prohibited by University student rules. Hole said the University sent letters to the students stating the hearing dates, which were set near spring semester finals. They were not advised of any specific charges against them and only had two hours to prepare their case. “I took another attorney with me and we both could not go through all that in two hours,” Hole said. “There were no names and it didn’t say who said what.” A&M spokesman Lane Stephenson said it is A&M’s policy to not comment on pending litigations; however, the court documents filed by attorneys for A&M argue that the students Should not win an injunction, because "they have not used all the options and appeals under the University system, according the The Bryan-College Station Eagle. The court issued a temporary restraining order preventing A&M from enforcing a See Corps on page 2 U.S. seeks out Saddam loyalists By Nadia Abou El-Mag THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RAMADI, Iraq — Led by informants, U.S. soldiers swept into homes in Baghdad and several outlying towns Monday in pursuit of Saddam Hussein loyalists who have been ambushing American forces. At least 59 Iraqis were detained, most taken away blindfolded and handcuffed. The soldiers also dug up backyards in a search for heavy arms, but the U.S. mili tary announced no major weapons discoveries. Ten Americans were wounded in ambushes on two convoys despite the U.S. cam paign to put down resistance across Iraq’s Sunni heartland where Saddam’s support was strongest. The two rocket-propelled grenade attacks reinforced the belief that Saddam loyalists were reorganizing. Residents of homes raided over the past two days warned that the U.S. operations were only fueling U.S. military attacked mraq At least two { "SfL Americans were Baghdad seriously wounded when a convoy fended off an attempted ambush near Mushahidah on Sunday. Later, another convoy was attacked near Dujayl, lightly wounding two soldiers. SOURCES: ESRI; Associated Press hostility and anti-American attacks. For weeks, American forces have been targets of hit-and-run assaults, most in the central “Sunni belt” north and west of Baghdad. About a dozen U.S. soldiers have been killed by hostile fire since May 1, when President Bush declared major combat over. The latest ambushes came Sunday. In the first, the grenade fire set fire to a civil ian bus that was passing a military convoy near the town of Mushahidah, about 15 miles north of Baghdad, seri- Mushahidah • £ W( R ^allujah Euphrates ously wounding two soldiers and lightly wounding six oth ers. The second attack hit a U.S. convoy in Dujayl, a town 35 miles north of Baghdad, lightly wounding two sol diers, said Army spokesman Capt. John Morgan. Qusai Taha, 33, a grocery store owner from Dujayl, said he heard gunfire while in his store, ran outside and saw that the last vehicle in a 15-vehicle U.S. convoy had been hit. He said he saw two U.S. soldiers See Iraq on page 2 Suspected Victoria smugglers indicted By Juan A. Lozano THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HOUSTON — Authorities have arrested the suspected leader of an immigrant smug gling operation responsible for the botched trip last month that led to 19 deaths in a stifling truck trailer, federal prosecutors said Monday. In announcing the arrest of accused ring leader Karla Patricia Chavez, 25, U.S. Attorney Michael Shelby also unsealed a 58-count indictment naming her and 13 others for their roles in the smuggling mis sion that ended May 14 when a truckload of illegal immigrants was discovered in a trail er abandoned at a truck stop in Victoria, 100 miles southwest of Houston. Seventeen immigrants died at the scene, and two others died later. Twelve of those indicted could face the death penalty for transporting undocumented immigrants in a potentially fatal manner, although Shelby said his office hasn’t decided whether to pur sue a capital case yet. “People who smuggle human beings have thought that nobody really cares about this,” Shelby said. “Well, people really do care about this. (Smugglers) have got to know there are severe consequences to severe con duct and that greed carries with it a price.” See Smugglers on page 2