The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, September 13, 2011- 3 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Tuesday, September13, 2011 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS EAST LANSING, Mich. MSU begins work on $40 million research facility Michigan State University is moving forward with plans to build a new $40 million bioengi- neering facility that is expected to be mostly funded by the state. A date for construction to start on the project hasn't yet been set, the Lansing State Journal report- ed. The East Lansing school's Board of Trustees on Friday authorized the administration to plan for the facility on the south end of campus. The building would be located near the school's Life Science building and the Clinical Center, and would connect to both. The idea is to place research in close proximity to potential collabora- tors, said Leo Kempel, associate dean for research in the College of Engineering. WILMINGTON, Del. Man sentenced to jail for attempting to sell jet to Iran A California man who admit- ted to trying to sell a fighter jet to Iran has been sentenced to nearly four years in prison. Marc Knapp of Simi Valleywas sentenced yesterday. He pleaded guilty earlier this year to violat- ing the International Emergen- cies Economic Powers Act and the Arms Export Control Act. Knapp admitted that he tried to sell an F-5 fighter jet to Iran. His attorney has said the jet was a relic that would be of no use to the Iranian military and was owned by a man who leases it for use in movies. Knapp faced a maximum of 30 years in prison, but attorneys agreed to ask for a sentence rang- ing from 30 to 57 months. KANSAS- Mo. Me Man charged for trying to bring fake bomb in airport A man accused of trying to take a fake bomb through a secu- rity checkpoint at Kansas City International Airport on the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks has a history of mental ill- ness and recently quit taking his medications, the man's mother told investigators. Anthony Falco Jr., 47, shook his head in disagreement repeat- edly yesterday as U.S. Magistrate Judge John Maughmer read an FBI agent's affidavit outlining actions that led to a two-count federal complaint. Falco, whose last known address is East Petersburg, Pa., mumbled the word "lies" at one point, prompting a court atten- dant to ask him to remain silent while the judge spoke. Falco is charged with making false statements to federal agents and trying to bring items simulat- ing an explosive device through security, then making statements that led agents to believe it was a bomb. BAGHDAD, Iraq 22 Shiite pilgrims murdered in desert Gunmen forced their way onto a bus of traveling Shiite pilgrims yesterday and shot all 22 men onboard as they traveled through western Iraq's remote desert on a trip to a holy shrine, security offi- cials said. The bodies were discovered late last night, hours after the gang of gunmen stopped the bus at a fake security checkpoint and told all the women and children to get off, according to one security official who interviewed a survivor. The gunmen then drove the bus a few miles (kilometers) off the main highway between Bagh- dad and the Jordanian border in Iraq's Sunni-dominated Anbar province. The pilgrims were ordered off the bus and shot one by one, the security officials said. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Soldier arraigned in alleged Army killing From left, Senior Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat, European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Palestin- ian president Mahmoud Abbas attend the Arab League foreign ministers meeting at the Arab League headquarters in Cairo, Egypt, yesterday. EU official pse Mideastpectak Platero accused of killing two roommates in Iraq FORT STEWART, Ga. (AP) - A U.S. soldier charged with kill- ing two of his Army roommates and wounding another after an argument in Iraq last fall is innocent and should be cleared of murder charges by forensic evidence, his defense attorney said yesterday. Army Spc. Neftaly Platero appeared yesterday before a military judge at Fort Stewart for his arraignment in connec- tion with the Sept. 23, 2010, shootings. The soldier deferred making a plea until a later hear- ing. But his civilian lawyer, Guy Womack, told The Associ- ated Press after Platero's brief appearance that the 33-year-old soldier didn't shoot anyone. _ Fort Stewart's commander, Maj. Gen. Robert Abrams, has decided not to seek the death penalty in a move that angered the family of one of the slain soldiers. Fort Stewart spokes- man Kevin Larson said Abrams reached his decision last week "based on the evidence pre- sented by legal counsel" to the general. "His arms and hands were completely clean and free of any gunshot residue" after the shootings, Womack said. "We know for a fact there was no blood on him at all and nothing tying him in any way to having fired a gun." Platero of Kingwood, Texas, is charged with two counts of premeditated murder in the deaths of Pfc. Gebrah Noon- an, 26, of Watertown, Conn., and Spc. John Carrillo Jr., 20, of Stockton, Calif. The Army also has charged Platero with attempted murder after a third soldier was shot and survived. The wounded soldier's identity was not released. For nearly a year, the Army has said little about the case. All four soldiers shared a room at their base camp in the Iraqi city of Fallujah. Prosecutors say the soldiers had gotten into an argu- ment before Platero grabbed a gun and opened fire, but have provided no other details. Womack, however, said the only arguing between the four roommates was over their room being too messy and which of them was to blame. "The chain of command had stepped in and said, 'We're going to start inspecting the room every day,"' Womack said. "The Army position was they think that was a motive and Spc. Platero shot everyone because of that. Of course that's absurd." Investigators found gun- shot residue on the hands and arms of the two slain soldiers, Womack said. He said the sol- dier who was wounded had a bullet crease in his scalp and later said he remembered noth- ing of what happened the day of the shooting. The attorney said the infor- mation came out at Platero's Article 32 hearing, similar to a civilian grand jury proceeding, which was held in Baghdad last March. Fort Stewart's legal offi- cials have not made reports and documents from that hearing available for review. And mili- tary prosecutors did not imme- diately respond to Womack's statements when asked for com- ment by AP. Platero is tentatively sched- uled to stand trial by court- martial Feb. 6, the judge said Monday. Platero faces a maxi- mum sentence of life without the possibility of parole. Word that the death penalty was off the table in the case angered relatives of Noonan. Palestinians aim for statehood while European Union urges negotiation CAIRO (AP) - European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton yesterday urged a return to Israeli-Pales- tinian negotiations, according to a statement, as Palestinians pressed ahead with an initiative to win recognition of statehood from the United Nations. Ashton discussed the issue with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Amr and said Euro- pean countries have differing views on the Palestinian U.N. initiative, according to Egyp- tian government spokesman Amr Rushdi. Ashton- said the EU has not formulated a position because there is no Palestinian resolu- tion on the table, the statement said, She added, "What we're very clear about from the European Union is that the way forward is negotiations." Rushdi said Amr told Ashton that Arabs support the Palestin- ian drive because negotiations have not resulted in peace. The Palestinian Authority is pushing for statehood recog- nition after years of fruitless peace talks. The most recent round of negotiations came to a standstill a year ago year in a dispute over Israeli settlement construction. Arab League foreign minis- ters, scheduled to meet today, have long criticized what they see as unilateral steps taken by Israel to continue settlement construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem. Qatar's Foreign Minister Hamad bin Jassim told a late Monday night consultation ses- sion he hoped the gathering would support the Arab plan to take the Palestinian bid for statehood to the U.N. General Assembly. He did not mention the option of taking a resolu- tion to the Security Council. and forcing the U.S. to fulfill its pledge to cast a veto. "We will review in this meeting the steps taken to go to the U.N., because this is an Arab demand," he said. The EU chief is in Cairo meeting with Arab foreign ministers and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas ahead of the Arab League meeting. She is expected to urge Abbas to relaunch negotiations with Israel. Earlier this month Ashton said the EU's 28 members were united "over the most critical issue, which is to try to get the talks moving," and reiterated the bloc's position that Israeli settlement building in the occu- pied territories is illegal under international law. Israel and the U.S. oppose the Palestinian U.N. initiative, say- ing a state must be established through negotiations. The U.S. said it would veto a Palestin- ian membership request at the Security Council. Without a Security Council recommendation to the General Assembly, Palestinians cannot be admitted as a member state in the U.N. DELI'It ailyeeks for M - ,RPERSONNw, Fear of Greece default hurts stock markets Dow Jones fell 1.5 percent, European stocks down 2.6 LONDON (AP) - Fear that Greece will default on its debt, perhaps triggering a financial chain reaction that will cause another global recession, hurt European stocks yesterday and sent American stocks lower for a time. The market tension came after a German politician sug- gested Greek finances are so bad the nation might have to leave the coalition of'17 coun- tries that use the euro as their common currency. In addition, the German economy minister published an op-ed arguing that an "orderly bankruptcy" of Greece must be an option. Greece has been relying on international bail- outs to keep it solvent. Germany's opinion on the Greek crisis is taken serious- ly because Germany has the strongest economy in Europe. A spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel played down both suggestions, but financial markets were spooked anyway. The Stoxx 50 index of blue- chip European stocks fell 2.6 percent. In the United States, the Dow Jones industrial aver- age was down 167 points, or 1.5 percent, before turning around late in the day to close up almost 70. "With German officials seemingly in destructive over- drive, as per all the public talk of preparing for a Greek default and even a Greek euro exit, markets can hardly be blamed for the latest charge for the bunker and tin hats," said Marc Ostwald, market strate- gist at Monument Securities. Bank stocks were hit hard. In Europe, Deutsche Bank of Germany and BNP Paribas of France were down 11 per- cent each at one point. Socie- te Generale, another large French bank, closed down 10.8 percent. Investors are worried because banks have lent bil- lions of dollars to Greece and other troubled European nations. And American banks have lent money to their Euro- pean counterparts, so the United States could be hurt if European countries go broke. In addition, a new recession in Europe would hurt the U.S. because American companies rely on Europe for a big portion of their exports. The Ameri- can economy is already grow- ing so slowly that it wouldn't take much to push it back into recession. The stock sell-off "reflects heightened investor fear that Greece is on the verge of defaulting, which could plunge the weak global economy back into another Lehman-esque recession," said Lee Hard- man, an analyst at the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ. He was referring to the col- lapse of Lehman Brothers, the American investment bank, in 2008. When it failed, banks tightened lending severely, and panic swept the financial mar- kets. Kurt Karl, chief U.S. econo- mist at Swiss Re, puts the chanc- es of a chaotic Greek default at only 10 percent. S a