Sign in | Register View Today's Print Edition · Reader Rewards · Buy Photos · Place an Ad · Subscription Rates · Forms · Contact Us · About Us
The Sentinel-Record Buildings Header Art
Browse Categories  (Add your business to the Hot Springs Business Directory)
159

Nation & world briefs

3 NJ mayors, lawmakers arrested in corruption case

NEWARK, N.J. – An investigation into the sale of black-market kidneys and fake Gucci handbags evolved into a sweeping probe of political corruption in New Jersey, ensnaring more than 40 people Thursday, including three mayors, two state lawmakers and several rabbis.

Even for a state with a rich history of graft, the scale of wrongdoing alleged was breathtaking. An FBI official called corruption “a cancer that is destroying the core values of this state.”

Federal prosecutors said the investigation initially focused on a money laundering network that operated between Brooklyn, N.Y.; Deal, N.J.; and Israel. The network is alleged to have laundered tens of millions of dollars through Jewish charities controlled by rabbis in New York and New Jersey.

Prosecutors then used an informant in that investigation to help them go after corrupt politicians. The informant – a real estate developer charged with bank fraud three years ago – posed as a crooked businessman and paid a string of public officials tens of thousands of dollars in bribes to get approvals for buildings and other projects in New Jersey, authorities said.

Ancient mammal tracks found at national monument

The Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY – Hundreds of tiny footprints left by mammals some 190 million years ago have been found on a canyon wall in a remote part of Dinosaur National Monument, park officials said Thursday.

The tracks are a rare find, mostly because they were left at a time when the area was a hostile, vast Sahara-like desert where towering sand dunes seldom preserved signs of animal life.

“It’s just astonishing,” Dan Chure, a paleontologist at the monument, said Thursday. “We were giggling like kids.”

He and paleontologist George Engelmann of the University of Nebraska at Omaha spotted the tracks July 8 while scouring the area for fossils and other evidence from the early Jurassic period. Dinosaur National Monument, founded because of its rich and plentiful supply of dinosaur bones, straddles the Utah-Colorado border.

Deposed Honduran leader prepares risky return

The Associated Press

MANAGUA, Nicaragua – Honduras’ deposed president headed toward his nation’s border Thursday to prepare a risky return home, an attempt to reverse an ouster that is testing the vitality of democracy in Latin America.

The interim government that sent Manuel Zelaya into exile vows to arrest the president if he sets foot in Honduras. Zelaya said he would make a second attempt to return home Saturday, saying U.S.-backed attempts at mediation had broken down.

Accompanied by Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro, Zelaya drove a white jeep out of the Honduran Embassy in Nicaragua, heading toward the northern town of Esteli, where he planned to set up camp and plan his next move. Honduran Embassy officials broke into applause and chants of “Long live Mel!” using his nickname.

It was unclear exactly how Zelaya planned to enter the country – spokesman Allan Fajardo said he could travel by air, sea, or land from any of Honduras’ three neighboring countries. He said Zelaya would be accompanied by family, supporters and journalists.

Zelaya, wearing a black leather vest and his trademark white cowboy hat, said he hoped soldiers would stand down when they see him return.

“I think the guns will be lowered when they see their people and their president,” Zelaya said at a news conference shortly before leaving.

All governments in the Western Hemisphere have condemned the coup, in which soldiers acting on orders from Congress and the Supreme Court arrested Zelaya and flew him into exile. Nations on both sides of the political spectrum say Zelaya’s return to power is crucial to the region’s stability.

Latin America expert Vicki Gass said that if Zelaya’s opponents succeed in driving him from power, it could have a ripple effect in a region where left-leaning elected governments are challenging elites that have ruled many countries for decades.

“Coups could then happen in Peru, where President (Alan) Garcia has a very low approval rating, or in Argentina or in Guatemala,” said Gass, an analyst at the Washington Office on Latin America which promotes human rights and democracy. “Constitutional order and rule of law have to be restored.”

Zelaya said the mediation efforts, led by Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, had failed after representatives of the interim government flatly rejected the possibility that he might return to the presidency. They say they cannot overturn a Supreme Court ruling forbidding Zelaya’s reinstatement.

But Jose Miguel Insulza, secretary-general of the Organization of American States, held out hope that the two sides might still reach a settlement – and called Zelaya’s attempt to return without an agreement “hasty.”

“He has always wanted to return to his country, but it’s important to make an effort to avoid a likely confrontation,” Insulza said.

He said that neither delegation had officially responded to Arias proposal, which calls for Zelaya’s reinstatement, amnesty for the coup leaders and early elections.

The United States warned of tough sanctions against Honduras if Zelaya is not reinstated, but also said Thursday it does not support Zelaya’s plan to return on his own.

“Any step that would add to the risk of violence in Honduras or in the area, we think would be unwise,” State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington.

Zelaya dismissed the concerns of Insulza and the U.S., saying he waited nearly two weeks for the negotiations in Costa Rica to achieve his reinstatement. “Defending our rights is not an act of violence ... we are going to seek dialogue,” he said.

In Honduras, Zelaya supporters turned up the pressure, blocking roads throughout the country Thursday and occupying several government buildings in peaceful protests.

The Honduran military thwarted Zelaya’s first attempt to return home July 5 by blocking the runway at the airport in the capital, Tegucigalpa. The flight sparked clashes between Zelaya’s supporters and security forces in which at least one protester was killed.

Lorena Calix, a spokeswoman for Honduras’ national police, said Thursday that officers were ready to detain Zelaya if he makes another attempt to come home.

“When he comes to Honduras, we have to execute the arrest warrant,” she said.

Honduras’ Supreme Court ordered Zelaya’s arrest before the June 28 coup, ruling his effort to hold a referendum on whether to form a constitutional assembly was illegal. The military decided to send Zelaya into exile instead – a move that military lawyers themselves have called illegal but necessary.

Zelaya’s opponents, who objected to his populist and socialist policies, have argued the president was trying to change the constitution to extend his term. Zelaya denies that.

If he is arrested, Zelaya faces four charges of violating governmental order, treason and abusing and usurping power that could bring 43 years behind bars. Prosecutors say they are investigating a raft of other allegations ranging from misappropriation of public funds to drug smuggling – accusations Zelaya says are purely political.

–––

Associated Press writers contributing to this report included Juan Carlos Llorca in Tegucigalpa, Honduras; Marianela Jimenez in San Jose, Costa Rica, and Matthew Lee in Washington.





Local News Archive Calendar
Sponsor Advertisements
Featured Business
Featured Business
 
 
Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Place an Ad | Resources

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional

visitors since March 13th, 2009

2009 (c) Copyright The Sentinel-Record

Web design by: Joe Regan
Owner of: WebProJoe.com Web Design Company