LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 7, 2000 - 11A Judge throws out c arges against se DEARBORN (AP) - A judge threw out an " * " againstuasecurityguardcwhowae accued mR Ju involuntary manslaughter charge yesterday u the death of a man who was nuit in a hold out- igctslc fe ie c n.~ side a Lord & Taylor department store. Dennis, Richardson was accused of choking ! Frdrick Finley on June 22. after Richardson and other guards confronted him in the park- ing lot of the Fairlane Town Center in this Detroit suburb. If he had been charged and convicted, he would have faced up to 15 years in prison. District Judge Virginia Sobotka ruled there was insufficient evidence for Richardson to stand trial. Richardson showed little emotion as the judge issued her ruling. He shook hands with his attorney and hugged some . family members. "His family's very grateful. His mother prayed a lot about it," defense attorney Gerald Evelyn said after the ruling. "It was a very thorough, clear, well thought-out decision and I think it would be very hard to appeal." Sobotka found that the medical evidence choking death at Lord & Taylor sto was not enough to say Finley died of asphyxi- ation. She said the confrontation may have triggered heart failure because Finley had an enlarged heart. A Wayne County medical examiner testi- fied that internal bruising and discoloration of the head and neck led him to conclude Finley died of asphyxia. But another medical examiner testified Finley died of heart fail- Ure. He based his conclusion on Finley's abnormally large heart and lungs, which were filled with fluid, a sign of the heart fail- ing as a pump. Assistant Wayne County Prosecutor Kevin Simowski said he would appeal the judge's ruling. "We respectfully disagree with Judge Sobotka's opinion," Simowski said. "Both medical examiners said this was a homicide." The guards suspected Finley's girlfriend's 11-year-old daughter of shoplifting. Accord- ing to police reports, the guards said Finley threw a punch, was dropped to the ground and put in a choke hold by Richardson. Activists have alleged that the incident had racial overtones: Since Finley's death, they have staged protests against Lord & Taylor, accusing it of having black security workers scrutinize minority shoppers to avoid the appearance of discrimination or racial profiling. Richardson is black, as was Finley. The company has denied engaging in ar racial profiling. Attorney Geoffrey Fieger, who is ing Finley's family in a lawsuit ag & Taylor's parent company, said refused to follow the law in issuing1 "You strangle a man jo death ar away with it. That's ridiculous," Fief Detroit radio s'tation WWJ shortl ruling. Joi Cobb, a social worker who isl she was surprised Sobotka thre charge. "I think they should have look into it. There should be someone his murder," Cobb, of River Rouge urityguard side the department store where Finley ied. ie 1 have no idea why the judge threw it t. I don't think there was nothing racist ab t it. Actually, I thought he would be fend re guilty." ) Bob Humphres, who is white, said Ric rd- son was just doing his job. "All he was doing was holding th uy ny form of back. He wasn't choking shim. Do yo uow how much you have to choke a guy t kill represent- him?",said Humphres, of Dearborn. ' ainst Lord At the guard's preliminary hearjn last the judge week, Simowski said that Richardson eld her ruling. Finley in the hold after Finley became re- nd you get sponsive. ger said on But Evelyn said nobody testifiedihat y after the Richardson choked Finley. Evelyn said seguri- ty guards were reacting to Finley, whi the black, said defense attorney said was the aggressor. 0 w out the Richardson was charged July 6, a day fter an estimated 5,000 to 10,000 protesters IV by ed further the Rev. Al Sharpton rallied outside thel ord guilty of & Taylor department store at Fairlane %wn , said out- Center. Third Detroit casino unveiled DETROIT (AP) - Its Mediter- ranean theme evident from the two beauties parading as Greek god- desses to a glowing Olympic torch, Greektown Casino was unveiled to reporters yesterday by investors with Herculean expectations. Never mind that the gambling hall could be two months from opening as the city's third tempo- rary casino. Those behind the Greektown site insist the casino's more or less a go, and worked yes- terday to prove it. "We have something for every taste," William Paulos, head of the management firm overseeing the casino, told Mayor Dennis Archer while leading a tour. "We wanted to give Detroiters as much of a potpourri as they can have." On Tuesday, the regulatory Michi- gan Gaming Control Board ruled the casino's investors suitable, paving the way for the panel's consideration in early November whether to license the gambling hall. Such a vote won't come until the 2,400-worker casino is deemed ready to open. Confident the license is immi- State hears argument fo privatized mentalhealth * State's revised plan would open "The danger with open competition would be splitt competition if current providers cannot services under different providers," said Glenn St meet new requirements director of the state Bureau of Quality Manageme Service Planning. LANSING (AP) - Sandy Libstorff told state health Under the revised plan, the state will fully open co officials yesterday about the educators and mental tion in areas where county mental health boards'c health advocates in Monroe County who helped bring meet new requirements, including the ability to s home her 15-year-old autistic son after two years of least 20,000 Medicaid recipients. treatment, Mark Reinstein, public policy director for the ' A private company providing mental health services Health Association, called the department's plan disap in Monroe would not have been able to offer the ser- ing and inadequate. He said open competition vices Libstorff's son, Dustin, requires to live at home, improve mental health services. she told state Department of Community Health offi- "Our public mental health system will not improv cials at a public hearing about its revised mental health time if its service managers continue to have a guar plan. or quasi-guaranteed monopoly over that function, kn "The bottom line is that care must be there for the next performance problems will have little practicalc Dustin who comes along," she told the auditorium filled quence," Reinstein said. with mental health officials and advocates. Although the plan covers substance abuse servi Libstorff supports the state's revised plan for mental number of people complained at the public hearing health services that would open competition to outside the absence of information about changes to the state' providers if county boards, which currently provide ser- stance abuse network in the plan. vices, cannot meet new requirements. Mary Kronquist, an advocate for substance abuse She joined dozens of other speakers who questioned ment and a recovering addict, said she wants to mak( whether the department would be able to convince the fed- women today have access to the same services that' eral Health Care Financing Administration that open com- her 16 years ago. petition is not a good idea in Michigan. "My hope is that today if a young woman ... want The federal government has asked the state to open com- range of services I had for the length of time I need petition beyond the 49 county-sponsored Community Men- would find it available for her," said Kronquist, o tal health Services Programs currently providing prepaid Lansing. health plans for Medicaid recipients. Several people said the final version of the state's The state revised its original plan, which would have which has to be submitted by Oct. 1, should include allowed open competition, after hundreds of people testified kind of oversight for the county boards and mandate at public hearings last year about being uncomfortable increase for mental health care givers. receiving mental health care outside the county mental The Department of Community Health will conti health boards. take written comment about its plan until Sept. 22. I .w tln off tagon, and cwnot eve at M ntal pint- IAOUld elover ra~eed sure oming C~nse- Y ay ns, a 'aout "S "sub- e eat- kesure hlped tegl the e4( she f East 's plan, some wpay nve to AP PHOTO Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer (right) gets a tour of the Greektown Casino from William Paulos of Millennium Management during a media tour yesterday. nent, the casino's investors have scheduled the opening for Nov. 10. It "took many turns along the way, but the end result is we're here," said Bernard Bouschor, chairman of the Upper Peninsula's Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippe- wa Indians, the S147-million casi- no's principle owner. "This is a great day for the city of Detroit." Said Archer; "I think anyone see- ing this facility for the first time would have to acknoledge how' attractive it is, inside and out." As the 75,000-square-foot casino's neon lights dazzled outside, visitors of the site's interior yesterday got a feel for its Mediterranean charms, reflected in murals, detailing and ornamentation. There's the typical casino fare, from the 2,400 slot machines -- many for now bearing only blue- screen "Out of Service" displays -- to 104 table games from craps to blackjack and Roulette. 4 J -.--a Bare Wa S Dr( A d " '.-