The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 1, 2009 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING Mich. Senate votes to cut prison funds The Republican-led Michigan Senate has voted to cut prison spend- inghours before adeadline to address a $2.8 billion state budget deficit. The 5 percent cut approved 23-14 last night would be met partly by completing a previously announced plan to close prisons and prison camps. Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm's administration has been paroling more inmates to save money. It costs more than $32,000 a year to incarcerate a prisoner. Lawmak- ers want the $2 billion Corrections Department to reduce costs by more than $800 per inmate by saving on things like prisoners' prescription drugs, educational classes, legal ser- vices and food. The bill already has passed the Democratic-controlled House. The Senate so far has put off votes letting budget bills take effect today. ALBANY, Ind. Small plane goes down after pilot loses control A single-engine plane crashed into an Indiana cornfield Wednes- day after the pilot, who was seen slumped over at the controls, lost consciousness and the aircraft flew out of control, officials said. Military officials do not believe the crash was terrorism-related but instead said the pilot may have had a health problem or been suffering from a lack of oxygen. F-16s under direction of U.S. North American Aerospace Defense Command inter- cepted the plane and followed it for about an houruntil it crashed. Indiana State Police Sgt. Rod Russell said the pilot, who was the only person aboard the plane, died in the crash but that the pilot's name would not be released until the body is positively identified. No oneonthegroundwas injured when it crashed. David Lykins, 54, of Muncie said he and his nephew were doing con- struction work on a nearby home when they saw the plane, its wings pointed down, fly in three circles overhead before it clipped some trees and crashed into the field. BOGOTA Gunman on horseback kills town councilman Colombian authorities say a gunman on horseback killed a town councilman and wounded an 11-year-old boy in the country's southeast. The president of the national councilman's federation, Fabior Estrada, says the slain politician, 41-year-old German Herrera, was the president of the town council in Castillo and a father of four. Authorities areofferinga$25,000 reward for information leading to the capture of the gunman. Estrada says Herrera had been threatened by leftist rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Co- lombia, or FARC, who are active in the area. According to the federation, nine town councilmen have been killed in Colombia this year, compared to 13 in all of 2008. TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras Coup supporters may change position, put Zelayabackin Business and political leaders who backed the coup overthrowing Presi- dent Manuel Zelaya now are consid- ering the unthinkable: returning him to office with limited powers. The reversal, and Zelaya's decision to consider it, reflect the growing desperationto resolve a three-month standoff that has turned this Central American countryupside down. John Biehl, special adviser to the organization of American States, said Wednesday he sensed some movement toward talks."The moment has arrived for tempers to cool and reason to reign, and that's when errors will start being cor- rected," Biehl said. "I have found a strong willingness for dialogue," adding he had heard of proposals to return Zelaya to office briefly. An advance team of the OAS is scheduled to arrive in Tegucigalpa on Friday to promote negotiations ahead of a visit by a delegation of foreign ministers from member S nations next week. - Compiled from Daily wire reports Quake kills more than 200 in Indonesia CHARLES DHARAPAK/AP With the addition of the Supreme Court's newest member, Justice Sonia Sotomayor (top row right), the high court sits tAr a new group photograph on Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2009, at the Supreme Court in Washington. High Court to decide state gun rights case Thousands more trapped in rubble following landslides PADANG, Indonesia (AP) - A powerful earthquake that struck western Indonesia triggered land- slides and trapped thousands of people under collapsed buildings - including two hospitals, officials said.Atleast200bodieswere found in one coastal city and the toll was expected tobe far higher. The temblor yesterday started fires, severed roads and cut off power and communications to Padang, a coastal city of 900,000 on Sumatra island. Thousands fled in panic, fearing a tsunami. Buildings swayed hundreds of miles (kilometers) away in neigh- boring Malaysia and Singapore. In the sprawling low-lying city of Padang, the shaking was so intense that people crouched or sat on the street to avoid falling. Children screamed as an exodus of thousands tried to get away from the coast in cars and motorbikes, honking horns. At least 500buildings in Padang, the regional capital, collapsed or were badly damaged, said Disaster Management Agency spokesman Priyadi Kardono, adding that 200 bodies had been pulled from the rubble there. The extent of damage in sur- rounding areas was still unclear due to poor communications, he said. Padang's mayor appealed for assistance on Indonesian radio sta- tion el-Shinta. "We are overwhelmed with vic- tims and ... lack of clean water, elec- tricity and telecommunications," Mayor Fauzi Bahar said. "We really need help. We call on people to come to Padang to evacuate bodies and help the injured." Hundreds of people were trapped under collapsed buildings in Padang alone, including a four- star hotel, he said. The magnitude 7.6 quake hit at 5:15 p.m. (1015 GMT, 6:15 a.m. EDT), just off the coast of Padang, the U.S. Geological Survey report- ed. It occurred a day after a killer tsunami hit islands in the South Pacific and was along the same fault line that spawned the 2004 Asian tsunami that killed 230,000 people ina dozen nations. A tsunami warning was issued Wednesday for countries along the Indian Ocean, but was lifted after about an hour; there were no reports of giant waves. The shaking flattened build- ings and felled trees in Padang, damaged mosques and hotels and crushed cars. Case could overturn local gun control laws across the country WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court said Wednesday it will consider a challenge to Chi- cago's ban on handguns, opening the way for a ruling that could set off a vigorous new fight over state and local gun controls across the nation. A victory for gun-rights propo- nents in the Chicago case is consid- ered likely, even by supporters of gun control. If the court rules that the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms doesn't allow the city's outright handgun ban, it could lead to legal challenges to less-restrictive laws that limit who may own guns, whether firearms must be registered and even how they must be stored. The court last year moved in the direction of voiding tough gun control laws when it struck down a prohibition on handguns in the District of Columbia, a city with unique federal status. Now the court will decide whether that rul- ing should apply to local and state laws as well. The court will hear arguments in the case early next year, and a ruling probably would follow in the spring. The court has said previously that most, but not all, rights laid out in the Constitution's Bill of Rights serve as checks on state as well as federal restrictions. Separately, 44 state constitutions already enshrine gun rights. Though faced with potential limits from the high court on their ability to enact laws and regula- tions in this area, 34 statesweighed in on the gun-rights side before the justices agreed to take the case Wednesday, an indication of the enduring strength of the National Rifle Association and its allies. The gun case was among sev- eral the court added to its docket for the term that begins Monday. Others include: - A challenge to part of a law that makes it a crime to provide financial and other aid to any group designated a terrorist orga- nization. - A dispute over when new, harsher penalties can be given to sex offenders who don't register with state sex offender databases. - Whether to throw out a human rights lawsuit against a former prime minister of Soma- lia who is accused of overseeing killings and other atrocities. The issue is whether a federal law gives the former official, Mohamed Ali Samantar, immunity from lawsuits in U.S. courts. In the gun case, outright hand- gun bans appear to be limited to Chicago and suburban Oak Park, Ill. But a ruling against those ordi- nances probably would "openup all the gun regulations in the country to constitutional scrutiny, of which there are quite a few," said Mark Tushnet, a Harvard Law School professor whose recent book "Out of Range" explores the often bitter national debate over guns. Already, Alan Gura, who led the legal challenge to the Washington law and represents the plaintiff in Chicago, is suing to overturn the District of Columbia's prohibition on carrying firearms outside a per- son's home. Illinois and Wisconsin have similar restrictions. In voiding Washington's hand- gun ban last year, Justice Antonin Scalia suggested that gun rights, like the right to speech, are limited and that many gun control mea- sures could remain in place. Ultimately, said Tushnet, the court will have to decide, possibly restriction by restriction, which limits are reasonable. "It's very hard to know where this court would draw the line between reasonable and unrea- sonable,"he said. NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre said he hopes the court rules that "core fundamental freedoms like speech, religion and, we believe, the right to keep and bear arms are intended to apply to every individual in the country." Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said the court's deci- sion to take up the new case was unsurprising in light of last year's ruling. These cases should "take the extremes off the table," Helmke said, referring to bans on guns and unlimited gun rights. "What's critical for us is how the court goes about fleshing out what the limits are." Mayor Michael Bloomberg of New York, which under state law requires handgun permits and a safety course, said he hopes the court brings clarity to gun laws. "My hope is that they will decide that reasonable restrictions, which I think is the way most reasonable people in this country think, are appropriate," Bloomberg said. The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago had upheld the gun bans as legitimate expressions of local and state rights. Judge Frank Easterbrook, an appointee of President Ronald Rea- gan, wrote in the ruling that "the Constitution establishes a federal republic where local differences are to be cherished as elements of liberty rather than extirpated in order to produce a single, nation- ally applicable rule." "Federalismis an older and more deeply rooted tradition than is a right to carry any particular kind of weapon," Easterbrook wrote. Evaluating arguments over the extension of the Second Amend- ment is a job "for the justices rather than a court of appeals," he said. Justice Sonia Sotomayor, then an appeals court judge, was part of a three-judge panel in New York that reached a similar conclusion in January. The high court took the sugges- tion Wednesday. Judges on both courts - Repub- lican nominees in Chicago and Democratic nominees in New York - said only the Supreme Court could decide whether to extend last year's ruling throughout the country. The New York ruling also has been challenged, but the court did not act on it Wednesday. Sotomay- or would have to sit out any case involving decisions she was part of on the appeals court. Although the issue is the same in the Chicago case, there is no ethical bar to her participation in its consideration by the Supreme Court. She replaced Justice David Souter, who dissented in the 5-4 Washington case, so the five-jus- tice majority remains intact. War council talks Afghanistan plan Military officials push for troop increases, division emerges WASHINGTON (AP) - "President wrack Obama sum- moned his war council to the White House Situation Room on yesterday for an intense, three-hour discussion that exposed emerging fault lines over Afghanistan - with mili- tary commanders pressing for more troops and other key offi- cials expressing skepticism. There was no discussion of specific troop levels dur- ing the meeting in the West Wing basement, according to a senior administration official. But the talks underscored the divisions throughout Obama's inner circle that must be navi- gated in the coming weeks, the official said. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and special Afghan and Pakistan envoy Richard Holbrooke appeared to be leaning toward support- ing a troop increase, said the offi- cial, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the discus- sions were private. The official, who attended the meeting, based the assessment on the tone and substance of their participation. White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and Gen. James Jones, Obama's natiha1 sedrity adviser, appeared to be skeptical of troop increases, the official said. No firm or final recommen- dations were offered to Obama, the official said, suggesting that views were still evolving. The differences are not new and they were aired civilly in the meeting, the official said. But for most of Obama's advisers, this was the first time they exchanged views in person - rather than via official channels and media leaks - and in a large group that included the president. The meeting, the second of at least five Obama has planned as he reviews his Afghanistan strategy, comes after Obama received a critical assessment of the war effort from Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the man he put in charge of the Afghan war earlier this year. EARN YOUR MPA IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLICY H,-,, 1K 1) J The Master of Public Administration Program in Environmental Science and Policy is a twelve-month program that combines Columbia University's hands-on approach to teaching public policy and administration with pioneering thinking about the environment, educating today's environmental leaders for a sustainable tomorrow. 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