The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 7, 2010 - 3A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, October 7, 2010 - 3A NEWS IRIEFS 0 LANSING Bernero, state officials want freeze on foreclosures Two congressional members and gubernatorial candidate Virg Ber- nero say Michigan should be added to the list of states where mortgage companies have frozen home fore- closures. Three banks have halted fore- closures in 23 states after evidence surfaced that their employees or outside lawyers signed docu- ments without reading them or * filed inaccurate paperwork, rais- ing concerns about potential legal violations. Democratic U.S. Reps. John Conyers and Carolyn Cheeks Kil- patrick said yesterday the foreclo- sure moratorium for the 23 states that require foreclosures to go through judicial review should be extended to all states, including Michigan. Bernero agrees. Republican gubernatorial can- didate Rick Snyder says the banks should be investigated. He doesn't favor a statewide moratorium because he says that could affect the availability of credit. COLUMBIA, S.C. Prison faces legal trouble in book ban A South Carolina jail was sued yesterday over its policy barring inmates from having any reading material other than the Bible. The American Civil Liberties Union filed the federal lawsuit seeking to overturn the policy on behalf of Prison Legal News, a monthly journal on prison law. The 16-page complaint says officials at the Berkeley County jail in Moncks Corner, about 100 miles southeast of Columbia, are violating several of the magazine's and inmates' constitutional rights including free speech, freedom of religion and right to due process. Since 2008, the publishers of Prison Legal News have tried to send magazines, letters and self- help books about prison life to several inmates at the jail, the com- plaint says. "Our inmates are only allowed to receive soft back bibles in the mail directly from the publisher," First Sergeant K. Habersham noted in the e-mail. "They are not allowed to have magazines, newspapers, or any other type of books." MOSCOW Three Russians sentenced for terrorist attacks A Russian court has handed long sentences to three ultranationalists convicted ofhate killings and bomb- ings. The Moscow City Court said in a statement yesterday that the three were in a militant neo-pagan cult and preyed on labor migrants from ex-Soviet Central Asia and the Cau- casus. It said between 2008 and 2009 they killed 10 people and arranged bombings at a Russian Orthodox church, a McDonald's restaurant and a railway station that left one womanwounded. Itsaid twoofthe defendants were underage and received sentences of between 8 and 9 years. The third defendant was over 18 at the time of the murders and got a 21-year sen- tence. HILLSBORO, Ore. Suspect pleads guilty to murder of pregnant woman , An Oregon woman accused of murdering a pregnant woman from Maryland and cutting the unborn child from her womb pleaded guilty yesterday to a charge of aggravated murder and was sentenced to life in prison. The sentence prohibits parole for Korena Roberts. The battered body of 21-year-old Heather Snively was found in the crawl space of Roberts' home in June 2009 after Roberts' boyfriend cal led 911. Prosecutors say Roberts blud- geoned Snively in the bathroom with a collapsible police baton, then used a sharp instrument to cut the unborn baby from Snively's abdo- men. The baby was due a month later. For months before the killing, Roberts told neighbors was she was pregnant, going so far as to acquire a stroller, baby formula and parenting magazines. - Compiled from # Daily wire reports. U.S. accord with.[ . Mexico expands gun-tracing plan Officials say database that can trace the manu- facture, import, sale and owner- program is essential ship of guns. It will also expand access to to preventing eTrace to the Attorney General's intelligence and data-gathering weapons smuggling divisions across Mexico. About 20 people have been MEXICO CITY (AP) - U.S. . trained to use eTrace in Mex- and Mexican officials are just now ico. U.S. and Mexican officials fully employing a gun-tracing pro- announced in January 2008 that gram touted as a key deterrent to the system would be introduced in weapons-smuggling, nearly three Mexico, but it was not implement- years after it was first announced ed in Spanish until last December. in Mexico and weeks after an Melson said the system, when inspector general's preliminary used properly, can provide strate- report called it underused and gic and intelligence information unsuccessful. to fight gun-smuggling, establish- Not enough Mexican investiga- ing trafficking patterns as well as tors had been trained on or had identifying weapons sources. access to the electronic database "We're now at a point where we designed to trace illegally seized can process much more informa- weapons to origins in the U.S., a tion quickly, information that will top official at Bureau of Alcohol, be more accurate and more com- Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives plete," Melson said. said yesterday. More than 28,000 people have "It doesn't mean the system is died in drug violence since Presi- not working. It's not working as dent Felipe Calderon launched a well as it can," said ATF deputy crackdown on organized crime in director Kenneth Melson. "The late 2006, a battle that Calderon information was being submitted says is fueled by a flow of illegal by people who didn't know how to weapons coming from the United trace guns." States. He and Mexico Attorney Gen- From September of last year to eral Arturo Chavez Chavez signed July 31, 2010, the Mexican gov- a memorandum of understanding ernment seized more than 32,000 on Tuesday that will increase to illegal weapons, though fed- 30 a month the number of peo- eral statistics don't indicate how ple trained to use the program, many were submitted for tracing known as eTrace, an electronic to the U.S. U .S apologizes for recent helicopter attacktt in Pakistan Apology could lead to key border crossing reopening ISLAMABAD (AP) - The U.S. apologized yesterday for a recent helicopter attack that killed two Pakistani soldiers at an outpost' near the Afghan border, saying American pilots mistook the sol- diers for insurgents they were pursuing. The apology, which came after a joint investigation, could pave the way for Pakistan to reopen a key border crossing that NATO uses to ship goods into land- locked Afghanistan. Pakistan closed the crossing to NATO sup- ply convoys in apparent reaction to the Sept. 30 incident. Suspected militants have taken advantage of the impasse to launch attacks against stranded or rerouted trucks, including two yesterday where gunmen torched at least 55 fuel tankers and killed a driver. "We extend our deepest apol- ogy to Pakistan and the families of the Frontier Scouts who were killed and injured," said the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson. Pakistan initially reported that three soldiers were killed and three wounded in the attack, but one of the soldiers who was criti- cally injured and initially report- ed dead ended up surviving, said Maj. Fazlur Rehman, the spokes- man for the Frontier Corps. Pakistani soldiers fired at the two U.S. helicopters prior to the attack, a move the investigation team said was likely meant to notify the aircraft of their pres- ence after they passed into Paki- stani airspace several times. "We believe the Pakistani border guard was simply firing warning shots after hearing the nearby engagement and hearing the helicopters flying nearby," said U.S. Air Force Brig. Gen. Tim Zadalis, NATO's director for air plans in Afghanistan who led the investigation. "This tragic event could have been avoided with better coalition force coordina- tion with the Pakistan military." The head of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, Gen. David Petraeus, also expressed his con- dolences, saying in a statement that "we deeply regret this tragic loss of life and will continue to work with the Pakistan military and government to ensure this doesn't happen again." Pakistan moved swiftly after the attack to close the Torkham border crossing that connects northwestern Pakistan with Afghanistan through the famed Khyber Pass. The closure has left hundreds of trucks stranded alongside the country's highways and bottlenecked traffic heading to the one route into Afghanistan from the south that has remained open. There have been seven attacks on NATO supply convoys since Pakistan closed Torkham, includ- ing those yesterday. NATO officials have insisted that neither the attacks nor the border closure have caused sup- ply problems for NATO troops since hundreds of trucks still cross into Afghanistan each day through the Chaman crossing in southwestern Pakistan and via Central Asian states. But reopening Torkham is definitely a priority for NATO because it is the main crossing in Pakistan, the country through which NATO ships the majority of its supplies into Afghanistan. Other routes are more expensive and logistically difficult. Both U.S. and Pakistani offi- cials have predicted Torkham would reopen soon, and the apol- ogies issued yesterday could pro- vide Pakistan with a face-saving way to back down. Reopening the border could reduce the frequency with which militants have attacked NATO supply convoys in recent days, although such attacks occurred regularly even before Torkham was closed. 9 f 14* , O u A, . ~ Pe 0 P, 'O Ci,/eJat 9t00 ~ ' apt w0'4~~go~ ~ bePI 9ejS /OYouP~d 4440 *1" Welcome Back Students! Cut more than half of your commuting time around campus with a bike! Come down to Campus Student Bike Shop, Ann Arbor's Bike Headquarter. I