Famiies of the live wii the Hartford Courant Sherry Cobb of Naugatuck, Conn., still feels the mix of grief, shock and fury that engulfed her eight years ago when her brother Ricky was accused of the murder of Julia Ashe. So when Cobb heard that Matthew Beck had killed four of his supervisors at the state's lottery headquarters before killing himself, and of the public apology Beck's father, Donald, offered, it summoned painful memories. She remembers the fear of having her name recognized and the misplaced anger she endured from others at the tech- nical school she was attending at the time. "They would leave newspapers out with the headlines fac- ing up," said Cobb. "When I walked by, there 'would he lit- the snickers. It was totally uncalled for" Cobb eventually dropped out of the technical program - "I didn't need that" and moved to California. "I wanted to go someplace where no one knew my name," she said. Often forgotten and almost unmentionable during the aftermath of a murder is the ordeal faced by the killer's fam- ily. Cobb and others know the trauma the Becks are just begin- ning to learn to live with. t a be Experts say that a murder is often as cataclysmic in the life of a perpetrator's family as in the life M of a victim's family. identityE 'these families are mired ina . confusing mixture of anger and love, of grief over the death of the Famr victim and over the loss of a nor- mal future for their loved one and of guilt that they didn't somehow prevent the crime. It can be hard for a community to acknowledge the needs or feelings of the offender or that person's family because it's not compatible with the understandable rage it feels about the crime, said Ann ldalist-Estrin, a Pennsylvania expert on family relationships and incarceration. "It's a double-whammy" for the family of the criminal, Edalist-Estrin said. "They have all these feelings ... but they rarely get any support." Often everything changes for these families. Even such simple, mundane activities as grocery shopping cause great anxiety. "From what we see in our work, you never go back to liv- ing your normal life again," said Susan Quinlan, who works with offenders and their families as executive director of Families in Crisis Inc. in Hartford, Conn. "From that point forward, that becomes a critical part of your identity. You're always known as the family of or the father of ..." For Margaret, it was all too debilitating; the sadness and grief resulting from her son's involvement in the murder of two people. She lives in a small Connecticut town and want- ed neither her real name nor her residence used in this story. "I went from being an outgoing person to becoming very withdrawn and afraid to go out," said Margaret. "It was ago- raphobia ... I never thought it could happen." Often families of offenders find that they are shunned by hannels cover NEW YORK (AP) School board booming, car radios meetings and park cleanups, high school teaching jobs at som sports and neighborhood prowlers. he rushes to Cape C This is the hometown news that shuttle began creepi viewers seek as they turn their eyes By afternoon, Wate from the world at large to the world colleague replaces at home, and this back-fence jour- blastoff. nalism is causing a quiet revolution On a daily basis, in television news. Smythe sets the sch Cable systems are rapidly adding her station is consiu channels all across the country that report competitors, the local news all day long. Even as these broadcast affiliates. upstart stations are proving themselves eager to take advan as businesses and news organizations, nesses. they are changing the way neighbors The battle abo learn about their communities. noise is the type The all-news channels promise view- important to Bre ers news when they want it, eschewing dents that mig the tabloid approach that is the longtime ing broadcast sta taple of local TV newscasts. It means their viewers mig crime and sex are often replaced by away from their n reports on tax rates and traffic. While many resid One of the newest local news channels et launches live, cc is Central Florida News 13 in Orlando, may not preempt "O which opened its newsroom only last fall. tainment shows fIor On one recent day, reporter David But time is no prob Waters is so busy that he barely had time has hours to fill, n to check his watch. dinner and before be Waters first reports on a proposed "Immediacy of i noise ordinance in nearby Brevard thing that people h (ounty, where residents are irked by she says. "Nobody Thursday, April 2, 1998 -The Michigan Daily - 9A killers say th shame friends and neighbors, who treat them as if they have a com- municable disease, according to the Rev. Gordon Bates, for- mer executive director of the Connecticut Prison Association, subsequently renamed Community Partners in Action. Bates said the families of offenders may feel so shamed and guilty that they withdraw from the world. "They can become very isolated and depressed," Bates said. Margaret, whose voice cracked at the memory of the ordeal more than a decade ago, said she finally was forced to overcome her fear of leaving home four years after the murder. 1 fer husband had gone away on a business trip and she needed groceries. After six tries, she finally got herself to the store. She went inside and caught the eye of some shoppers - --who turned away from her as soon as they recognized her. Despite this incident, Margaret says more people were sympathetic than not in the community and this slowly helped her recover. "I expected to be run out of town on a rail, but it . .. Comes a Iof your Susan Quinlan lilies in Crisis, Inc. was totally the opposite. People were kind and benevolent and compassionate." Cobb said that although she withdrew from her tecihnical pro- gram, neither she nor her family withdrew from life, perhaps because of all the support they, too, received. AP PHOTO E-Stamp Corp. President Sunir Kapoor takes part in a Washington, D.C. news conference Tuesday to unveil the U.S. Postal Service's e-stamp Internet software. U.S. Post Office unveils new electronic S-martStap It was very, very surprising," said Cobb, who since has felt comfortable enough to move back to Connecticut. "People that you don't even think rec- ognize you or know you" wrote to the family. "I heard from teachers I had way back when, people who knew my par- ents and had worked with them. It was incredible." Ricky Cobb's crime had been highly publicized. Ile had raped Julia Ashe and then bound her hands and feet with packing tape before throwing her off a dam into icy water below. A Beck family member said the family has received expressions of sympathy and support from neighbors and the community. After his public apology and the funerals of his son and his son's victims, Donald Beck declined to talk to a reporter. In his apology, Beck said that while his son's "murderous act was monstrous ... he was not a monster."' in some cases, families continue close relationships with their offending member, while others are unable to. Of her own brother, Cobb said, "I think more than any other family member, I'm very upset with my brother. I haven't had any contact with him." Quinlan said the community's reaction to the family of an offender can depend oti the circumstances. If people "believe that the family somehow contributed to the crime in some way by either protecting or hiding" the perpetrator, the community can react angrily, she said. homletown news WASH INGTON (A P) No more licking and sticking, just clicking, for some folks, Postmaster General Marvin Runyon proclaimed Tuesday, unveiling the first electronic stamps. The e-stamps were approved for testing and, if all goes well, business- es and individuals will be able to print their own postage using personal computers and the Internet. "The (postage) we unveil today represents the most significant new form of postage payment in three- quarters of a century." Runyon said. I le then wielded a computer mouse to generate the first computer-gener- ated stamp at ceremonies at the National Postal Museum. The move toward electronic postage comes 78 years after approval of postage meters and 151 years after the United States issued its first postage stamps. "This is the future," said Runyon. "Postage directly from a personal com- puter." The system approved for testing was developed by 1E-Stamp Corp. of Palo Alto, Calif., but other companies are working on similar products, postal officials said. E-Stamp calls its system SmartStamp, while others are promot- ing the term "mouse-mail," after the computer pointing device users will click to generate the postage. For its part, the post office's uses "information-based indicia" to refer to the system. "Indicia" is the postal term for an indication on an envelope that postage has been paid. The new stamp prints out on a reg- ular computer printer as it puts the address on an envelope. The system is likely to appeal to small businesses and some individuals, though E-Stamp President Sunir Kapoor said he hoped it would be.used by everyone, perhaps with his software being included with standard programs. Most people use personal comput- ers and the Internet to generate con- tent that ultimately goes into the mail stream, he said. Those with a comput- er, printer and Internet connection already have what they need to print their own postage. While the systems of other compa- nies may vary, E-Stamp's provides a small piece of hardware that fits into a computer port and serves as an elec- tronic vault for stored postage. The customer has an account with the company and can download postage into this vault via the Internet when- ever needed, then can print it on envelopes as necessary. Customers will pay a transaction fee to download postage, but the amount of the fee has not been determined. Pam Gilbert, Postal Service vice president for retail, said security was the main concern in developing an electronic postage system, since the ability to print stamps is equivalent to printing money. The e-stamp will include the postage amount, name and ZIP code of the local post office, date the postage was printed and rate catego- ry, such as "First Class." In addition it has an electronic bar coding of the same information as well as the ID number of the printing device and a digital pattern that will make each envelope unique and hard to counterfeit. . Next: A story about ne local schools. Then anaveral as the space ing to the launch pad. rs catches a break: A him for a satellite news director Robin edule. She knows that dered a rookie by her news programs on So she's particularly rtage of their weak- lout neighborhood of story dry but yard County resi- ht slip by compet- tions. They worry ght yawn and click newscasts. dents want their rock- ommercial channels ?prah" or other enter- a routine space shot. leet for Smythe. She ot just 30 minutes at ed time. nformation is some- ave come to expect," watches it 24 hours a day, but they need it when they need it.' Central Florida News 13 is one of 27 members of' the Association of Regional News Channels. In 1992, with only four stations, the associa- tion was formed to share trade secrets. Now, association president Philip Balboni says cable news channels operate in seven of the nation's 10 largest cities, reaching nearly 20 million homes. "Every major market in the country will have one of these regional channels soon,' says Joseph Angotti, a University of Miami professor who researches local news. "They're just sprouting up all over. This rapid growth is as much a busi- ness strategy as a news strategy. Cable competes for customers with satellite dish systems, and a regional news chan- nel gives cable operators a selling point that their rivals cannot match. Consider the New York City area, something of a laboratory for new approaches to local-news. Ringing the city are Cablevision out- lets, devoted to such specific suburban areas as Long Island, New Jersey, Westchester County and southwestern Connecticut. JOIN THE DAILY. CALL 76-DAILY TODAY. WRITE FOR NEWS, SPORTS, ARTS OR OPINION. The Psychology Peer Advisors Present On Thursday, April 2, from 7-9 PM 4th Floor Terrace of East Hall SummerOpportunities Related To sychology Featuring: Mary Beth Damm from Community Service Learning Judith Lawson from Career Planning and Placement Plus Handouts with information about Summer Camps Enter through the Church street Entrance. The Elevator is to the left. Co to the 4th floor and Follow the signs to the Terrace. 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