8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 13, 2005 NEWS Feds say thousands may have lied for Mich. licenses DETROIT (AP) - Thousands of people may have exploited a recently closed loophole in Michigan regula- tions to fraudulently obtain state driver's licenses, a federal investiga- tor says. Federal agents are investigating what they say are criminal rings that helped people get licenses without proof of residency in Michigan. Last month, secretary of state offices began requiring adults apply- ing for their first driver's license or personal identification card to pro- vide documentation showing they live in the state. Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land said the change offered a new defense against identity fraud. State and federal authorities requested the change to help prevent people from falsely obtaining state licenses and ID cards. "We saw an alarming amount of ... cases where groups were bringing criminals or illegal aliens to Michi- gan for the sole purpose of obtaining a Michigan driver's license," Brian Moskowitz, head of the Detroit office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, told The Detroit News for a story yesterday. In July, the Portuguese language Brazilian Voice newspaper in New- ark, N.J., ran an ad offering Michi- gan driver's licenses for $1,000, and similar ads appeared in other for- eign-language publications. Land spokeswoman Kelly Chesney said her office had no idea of the seriousness of the problem until a meeting with Justice Department officials in October. She said the state continues to work with the federal government to further reduce fraud. Michigan law had long required that applicants for driver's licenses and ID cards be state residents. Before last month's change, the law required that applicants pro- vide at least three documents to help prove identity. Now applicants have to provide at least one document that shows the applicant's name with a Michigan address. That would include items such as utility bills, bank statements, insurance policies, government documents, valid student IDs or paycheck stubs. The requirement applies to all first-time Michigan applicants who are 18 or older. The new policy does not apply to renewals or to residents under 18. "Michigan is well known among the illegal immigrant population and among other groups," Moskowitz said. "It was one of the easiest places to get one." *I (Top) Technicians work on the Deep Impact spacecraft. in the clean room where the spacecraft was being. processed in Titusville, Fla., Dec. 23, 2004. n (Right) A Delta I rocket carrying the Deep Impact spacecraft lifts off from Cape Canaveral, Fla. Scientists are counting on Deep Impact to carve out a crater ranging in size anywhere from two to 14 stories deep, and perhaps 300 feet in diameter in comet Tempel 1. It will be humanity's first look into the heart of a comet, a celestial snowball still preserving the original building blocks of the sun and the planets. NASA launches rocket on comet- smashing mission High schooler accused of planning attack to stand trial CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - A NASA spacecraft with a Hollywood name - Deep Impact - blasted off yesterday on a mission to smash a hole in a comet and give scientists a glimpse of the frozen primordial ingredients of the solar system. With a launch window only one second long, Deep Impact rocketed away at the designated moment on a six-month, 268-million-mile journey to Comet Tempel 1. It will be a one- way trip that NASA hopes will reach a cataclysmic end on the Fourth of July. "We are on our way," said an excit- ed Michael A'Hearn of the University of Maryland, the mission's chief sci- entist. Minutes later, the spacecraft shot out of Earth's orbit and onto its collision course. "We'll be there July Fourth," NASA launch director Omar Baez said. It was not until later in the after- noon - much later than expected - that scientists learned that Deep Impact's energy-producing solar panel had deployed properly. Although the spacecraft appeared to be healthy, it placed itself in a protective "sleep" mode because of an unknown prob- lem, and flight controllers were reviewing strange sensor data, NASA said. The problem was not believed to be critical. Scientists are counting on Deep Impact to carve out a crater in Comet Tempel 1 that could swallow the Roman Coliseum. It will be humans' first look into the heart of a comet, a celestial snowball still containing the original building blocks of the sun and the planets. Because of the relative speed of the two objects at the moment of impact - 23,000 mph - no explosives are needed for the job. The force of the smashup will be equivalent to 4 1/2 tons of TNT, creating a flash that just might be visible in the dark sky by the naked eye in one spectacular Fourth of July fireworks display. Nothing like this has ever been attempted before. Little is known about Comet Tem- pel 1, other than that it is an icy, rocky body about nine miles long and three miles wide. Scientists do not even know whether the crust will be as hard as concrete or as flimsy as corn flakes. "One of the scary things is that we won't actually know the shape and what it looks like until after we do the encounter," said Jay Melosh, a plan- etary geologist at the University of Arizona. CLINTON TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) - A judge ruled yesterday that Internet messages written by a teen- ager accused of planning an attack on his high school are reason enough for him to stand trial on a charge of threatening terrorism. District Court Judge Linda Davis said the messages, which include threats against a liaison officer assigned to Chippewa Valley High School and led authorities to close the facility while searches were con- ducted, illustrate Andrew Osantows- ki's intent. "He does talk about bringing a gun to school," Davis said. Following testimony from inves- tigators and others during Osan- towski's preliminary examination, he also was ordered to stand trial on charges stemming from a burglary at a gun shop, the theft of golf carts and stolen power tools. But a charge of intimidating a wit- ness, related to the liaison officer, was thrown out because Davis said the officer didn't know about the alleged threat until after Osantows- ki's Sept. 16 arrest. Osantowski is set to be arraigned Feb. 7 in Macomb County Circuit Court. Defense lawyer Brian Legghio, who argued that the messages should be protected speech under the First Amendment, said similar statements are made via the Internet every day. He plans to challenge Davis's rul- ings in circuit court. "He made some unwise state- ments, he made some foolish state- ments and some statements that we wouldn't want people to repeat," Legghio said. "It is unfortunate to think that they would be criminalized just because you said you wanted to kill somebody." Steve Kaplan, a Macomb County assistant prosecutor, told the court that Osantowski's plot was stopped by good police work. Not only had he made threats, Kaplan said, but he had the weapons to carry them out. Lt. Bruce Wade testified that Osantowski admitted after his arrest to taking two shotguns and an AK- 47 from the gun shop, taking the golf carts, stealing the tools and writing the Internet messages. When asked about the messages, Wade said Osantowski told him he was upset at the liaison officer, who had worked on the golf cart case. "Now I'm more than ever deter- mined to blow her head off," one of the messages read. Authorities arrested Osantowski after they received a tip from an Idaho girl with whom he had been exchanging the messages. During a search of Osantowski's home, police found the firearms, "It is unfortunate to think that they would be criminalized just because you said you wanted to kill somebody." - Brian Legghio Defense lawyer hundreds of rounds of ammunition, bomb-making materials and instruc- tions, and the power tools. Police also found Nazi flags and books about white supremacy and Adolf Hitler. Dozens of Chippewa Valley stu- dents attended Wednesday's hearing as part of a government class at the high school. One of them, student government president Tom Novik, said he and his fellow students could have sat in on another case. But the 17-year-old said it was important to come to Osantowski's hearing. "I took it personally when it hap- pened," Novik said. "I was worried for everyone. ... As of now, I think it's behind us." so... whatcha gonna do with all that cash? 01