The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 20, 2012 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT Jury picked in ex-Detroit mayor's corruption trial A jury was picked Wednesday in the corruption trial of former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpat- rick, ending a nine-day process peppered with legal wrangling over whether enough blacks were being considered for the panel. Five of the 12 jurors are black as well as three of the six alter- nates who also will sit in the box for a trial that could stretch into 2013. Kilpatrick, who quit the may- or's office in 2008 due to a dif- ferent scandal, is charged with a series of crimes related to an alleged scheme to pocket hun- dreds of thousands of dollars through racketeering and extor- tion. The government says many of his targets were contractors who did business with the city and were desperate to keep it. His father, Bernard Kilpat- rick, also is on trial, along with construction contractor Bobby Ferguson and former Detroit water boss Victor Mercado. PHOENIX Groups protest Ariz. immigration law's enforcement A day after the most conten- tious provision of Arizona's immigration law took effect, ral- lies were held around Phoenix to protest the mandate that civil rights activists say will lead to systematic racial profiling. More than three dozen activ- ists stood outside aU.S. Immigra- tion and Customs Enforcement building along a busy thorough- fare Wednesday evening. They chanted: "No papers, no fear." Carlos Garcia, an organizer with the immigrant rights group S the Puente Movement, said the strategy is to urge people not to cooperate with immigration enforcement efforts - whether they're in the country legally or not. Tempe resident Beatrice Jernigan said friends who are in the country illegally are scared. NEW ORLEANS, LA Texas town 's rental ban gets second hearing A Dallas suburb asked a fed- eral appeals court Wednesday to uphold an ordinance that would ban undocumented immigrants from renting homes in the town. The full 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed to rehear the case after a three-judge panel from the court ruled in March that Farmers Branch's ordinance is unconstitutional and imper- missibly interferes with the fed- eral immigration system. The court's 15 judges didn't indicate when they would rule after hearing arguments Wednesday from attorneys for the town and a group of land- lords and tenants who sued to block the ordinance's enforce- ment. GAZA CITY Palestinians: Two killed in Israeli strike in Gaza An Israeli airstrike on a vehi- cle in the southern Gaza Strip Wednesday killed two people, Hamas and health officials said. A Hamas security official said the strike hit a car that belonged to the group's interior minis- try driving east of the town of Rafah. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press. In a statement, the Israeli military confirmed the strike, saying it targeted "two terror operatives" - a man suspected of planning an attack against Israeli civilians and one accused of selling weapons. -Compiled from Daily wire reports Voters have mixed reactions to video of Mitt Romney BEATRICE RICHARDSON/AP Kent Terry Sr., father of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry, andRichard "Rick"Barlow, chief patrol agentof the Tucson sector, share a quietmoment. Justice Dept. faulted in gun-trafficking operati on 'Forty-seven percent' comments ripple across the country DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Mitt Romney's off-handed comment that as a candidate he doesn't worry about the 47 percent of Americans who pay no income taxes has quickly entered the bloodstream in the presidential campaign's most hard-fought states. His comment, in a video revealed this week, is prompting expressions of shock - but also shrugs - from Nevada to Flori- da to New Hampshire and the handful ofbattleground states in between. Will it sway an election expected to be close? There was much discussion in the relatively few states that are still considered competitive, likely to decide the race. Here, as elsewhere, the question was whether Romney was show- ing himself to be insensitive or merely delivering the hard truth a nation at an economic cross- roads must face. People's answers could make an Election Day difference in states where the race is tight. "It sounds like he's leaving out half of America, if you ask me," said Gary Gabriel, an indepen- dent from suburban Columbus, Ohio, who decided in light of Romney's comments to support President Barack Obama. But the remarks also reaf- firmed the opinions of some Romney supporters. "I worry a lot about the soci- ety we're turning into, more of an entitlement mentality," said Randy Schumaker, a Denver- area IT manager. It all underscored the cam- paign's focus on the economy. And it stoked deeper questions about voters' expectations about the government's role in Ameri- cans' daily lives. Outrage. Nodding approval. Both followed Romney's conten- tion that 47 percent of Ameri- cans support Obama and that they "are dependent upon gov- ernment" and "believe that they are victims, who believe that government has a responsibility to care for them." In a Gallup poll taken Tues- day, about a third of the sur- veyed registered voters said they would be less likely to support Romney in light of the remarks, But more said the comments would not affecttheirvotes. And most voters have already made up their minds on whom they will support, according to this and other surveys. F r WA Justic watch ed th strate and r ing a probe garde ed in turnir the U A f ment' co, Fi a depi eral in in Wo ment - the and b In Inspe Horo a doe depar for th and earlie Recei the G tratio attorr of th critici sions: seque and F Th Attor but s shoul the in Th ast and furious that Holder was informed about the Fast and Furious operation eport results before Jan. 31, 2011, or that the attorney general was told about in official's the much-disputed gun-walk- ing tactic employed by the ATF. resignation Gun-walking was an experi- mental tactic, barred under kSHINGTON (AP) - The long-standing department e Department's internal policy. ATF agents in Arizona idog on Wednesday fault- allowed suspected "straw pur- e agency for misguided chasers," in these cases believed gies, errors in judgment to be working for Mexican drug management failures dur- gangs, to leave Phoenix-area bungled gun-trafficking gun stores with weapons in in Arizona that disre- order to track them and bring d public safety and result- charges against gun-smuggling hundreds of weapons kingpins who long had eluded ng up at crime scenes in prosecution, but they lost track .S. and Mexico. of most of the guns. ormer head of the depart- The experimental operations s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobac- were a response to widespread rearms and Explosives and criticisms of the agency's anti- uty assistant attorney gen- smuggling efforts. Because of nJustice's criminal division thin ATF staffing and weak ashington left the depart- penalties, the traditional strat- upon the report's release egy of arresting suspected first by retirement, the sec- straw buyers as soon as pos- y resignation. sible had failed to stop the flow the 471-page report, of tens of thousands of guns to ctor General Michael Mexico - more than 68,000 in witz referred more than the past five years. zen people for possible The inspector general found tment disciplinary action fault with the work of the eir roles in Operation Fast senior ATF leadership, the ATF Furious and a separate, staff and U.S. attorney's office r probe known as Wide in Phoenix and senior officials ver, undertaken during of Justice's criminal division eorge W. Bush adminis- in Washington. He also said n. A former acting deputy that poor internal informa- ney general and the head tion-gathering and drafting e criminal division were at Justice and ATF caused the ized for actions and omis- department to initially misin- related to operations sub- form Congress about Fast and nt to and preceding Fast Furious, beginning with a Feb. urious. 4, 2011, letter. e report did not criticize "The inspector general's ney General Eric Holder, report confirms findings by aid lower-level officials Congress' investigation of a d have briefed him about near total disregard for public vestigation much earlier. safety in Operation Fast and e report found no evidence Furious," said Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which has been investigating Operation Fast and Furious since early 2011. Horowitz is to testify before Issa's panel Thursday. During the investiga- tion President Barack Obama ordered Holder to withhold from the committee, under executive privilege, some documents describing how the department responded to the panel. The Republican- controlled House voted to hold Holder in contempt and has authorized a civil lawsuit to make the administration turn over the documents. Horowitz said he was not denied access to any of the documents. Two of the 2,000 weapons thought to have been acquired by illicit buyers in the Fast and Furious investigation were recovered at the scene of a shootout that claimed the life of U.S. border agent Brian Terry. About 1,400 of the total have yet to be recovered. Holder noted in a statement that the report confirmed his assertions that the flawed strategies were driven by field agents without his knowledge or approval and that depart- ment did not set out to misin- form Congress. He said the report's disci- plinary recommendations are being pursued and "we now have two men in custody and we will continue to aggressive- ly pursue the remaining fugi- tives to ensure justice for Agent Terry, his family and his fellow law enforcement agents." Fast and Furious has pro- duced charges against 20 gun traffickers, 14 of whom have pleaded guilty so far. After strike, Chicago teachers return to work Students missed seven days of school because of work stoppage CHICAGO (AP) - Mayor Rahm Emanuel secured an extension of Chicago's school day and empowered principals to hire the teachers they want. Teachers were able to soften a new evaluation process and win some job protections. As students returned to the classroom Wednesday after a seven-day teachers strike, both sides found reasons to cel- ebrate victory. But neither the school-reform movement nor organized labor achieved the decisive breakthrough it had sought. And whether the impli- cations extend beyond Chicago may depend on the next case having a similar cast of charac- ters and political pressures. Unions hoped the walkout would prove they were still rel- evant, and some reform groups were disappointed with the city's concessions. At times, the contract talks seemed overshadowed by per- sonalities, with the mayor and union leaders occasionally trad- ing insults and questioning each other's motives. Still, everyone involved in the dispute emerged with an achievement to trumpet: Teach- ers said the strike sparked an important national conversa- tion about school reform. Union activists said it helped inspire public employee unions that have been losingground. Eman- uel declared it a boon for stu- dents trapped in failing schools. The president of the Ameri- can Federation of Teachers said the strike showed that teach- ers want a voice in improving schools rather than shouldering the blame for those that are fail- ing. "The bottom line is ... you had teachers standing up for what they need to teach and what students need to learn," Randi Weingarten said, citing concerns about school closings, standardized tests and a lack of classroom resources that are common across the U.S. But in lots of places, the cir- cumstances that led to Chica- go's walkout don't apply. For one thing, many states forbid strikes by teachers and other public- employee unions. Some teachers unions and school districts have been able to work collaborative- ly to achieve changes, in sharp contrast to the clash in Chicago, a union-built town where orga- nized labor still wields consid- erable power but new mayor is seeking more control over edu- cation. "I think alot of what went on to a certain extent is peculiar to Chicago," said Martin Malin, director of the Institute for Law and the Workplace at the Kent College of Law in Chicago. French magazine publishes crude cartoons of prophet Muhammad Images could incite outrage in the Middle East PARIS (AP) - France stepped up security Wednesday at its embassies across the Muslim world after a French satirical weekly revived a formula that it has already used to capture attention: Publishingcrude, lewd caricatures of Islam's Prophet Muhammad. Wednesday's issue of the pro- vocative satirical weekly Char- lie Hebdo, whose offices were firebombed last year, raised concerns that France could face violent protests like the ones tar- geting the United States over an amateur video produced in Cali- fornia that have left at least 30 people dead. The drawings, some of which depicted Muhammad naked and in demeaning or porno- graphic poses, were met with a swift rebuke by the French government, which warned the magazine could be inflaming tensions, even as it reiterated France's free speech protec- tions. The principle of freedom of expression "must not be infringed," Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said, speaking on France Inter radio. But he added: "Is it perti- nent, intelligent, in this con- text to pour oil on the fire? The answer is no." Anger over the film "Inno- cence of Muslims" has fueled vio- lent protests from Asia to Africa. In the Lebanese port city of Tyre, tens of thousands of people marched in the streets Wednes- day, chanting "Oh, America, you are God's enemy!" Worried France might be tar- geted, the government ordered its embassies, cultural centers, schools and other official sites to close on Friday - the Muslim holy day - in 20 countries. It also immediately shut down its embassy and the French school in Tunisia, the site of deadly protests at the U.S. Embassy last week. The French Foreign Ministry issued a travel warning urging French citizens in the Muslim world to exercise "the great- est vigilance," avoiding pub- lic gatherings and "sensitive buildings." The controversy could prove tricky for France, which has struggled to integrate its Muslim population, West- ern Europe's largest. Many Muslims believe the Prophet Muhammad should not be depicted at all - even in a flat- tering way - because it might encourage idolatry. Violence provoked by the anti-Islam video, which por- trays the prophet as a fraud, womanizer and child molester, began with a Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, then quickly spread to Libya, where an attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi left the U.S. ambas- sador and three other Ameri- cans dead. In Washington, White House spokesman Jay Carney said the Obama administration believed the French magazine images "will be deeply offensive to many and have the potential to be inflammatory." "We don't question the right of something like this to be pub- lished," he said, pointing to the U.S. Constitution's protections of free expression. "We just question the judgment behind the decision to publish it." *5I1OUMII