6A - Wednesday October 3, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Detroit mayor suspends police chief during probe In this Aug. 24; 2012. file photo, an armored U.S. embassy vehicle is checked by military personalafter it was -attacked by unknown assailants on the highway leading to the city of Cuernavaca, near Tres Marias, Mexico. Official: U.S. car targeted in1Mexican police ambush Officer alleges she and Godbee had bad breakup DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Mayor Dave Bing suspended the city's top law enforcement offi- cer Tuesday amid allegations that the married police chief of police had a sexual relationship with a subordinate. Chief Ralph Godbee and Angelica Robinson, an internal affairs officer, had been in a rela- tionship that she eventuallytried to end, said her attorney, David Robinson. "There was a sexual rela- tionship between my client and Godbee," Robinson told The Associated Press on Tuesday evening. "She was trying to end the relationship, and Godbee didn't want to let it go." She posted a photo with her service weapon in her mouth on the social media site Twit- ter after learning Godbee was at a police conference over the weekend with another woman, David Robinson said. He said Godbee had other officers locate the 37-year-old Angelica Robinson and put her under surveillance. "Obviously, it raised the impli- cation of suicide," David Robin-. son added. "The story is that she was hurt he was at a conference with another woman. Certainly this has created a lot of pressure. Unfairly, her future is a little bit uncertain. She has to suffer the humiliation." Angelica Robinson has been reassigned from internal affairs to other duties. ! This is the second time in two years that a Detroit police chief has been embroiled in scandal. Godbee's predecessor, Warren Evans, was fired by Bing in 2010 partly because he was romantical- ly involved with a female officer. "After learning of the alle- gations regarding Chief Ralph Godbee, I have placed him on a 30-day suspension pending a full and thorough investigation of this matter," the mayor said in a statement Tuesday that did not specify the allegations. Godbee could not be reached Tuesday afternoon for com- ment, police spokeswoman Sgt. Eren Stephens said. Angelica Robinson, who is married, told her attorney the relationship with Godbee lasted about a year. Godbee is separat- ed from his wife. David Robinson said the rela- tionship was consenasual. Without being specific, Rob- inson said he will approach the city "and see what their posi- tion would be and hopefully (the city will) do the right thing" in regard to his client. "The chief of police exceeded his professional status," David Robinson said. "He's breached the trust of the department." Godbee and Bing have been assailed by officers in recent weeks over a 10 percent pay cut and implementation of 12-hour workdays to help cut millions of dollars from the police budget. Officers complain the cuts and new work rules are too much to take in a city with one of the highest violent crime rates in the country. The 287 murders committed through Sept. 23 in Detroit are 26 more than at the same point last year. Godbee was named chief in 2010 after Bing fired Evans. Evans, a former Wayne Coun- ty sheriff, was appointed chief by Bing in 2009 and fired after he raised the mayor's ire by tak- ing part in a promotional video for a cable police reality show. Bing later said he also fired Evans because the chief was romantically involved with Lt. Monique Patterson. Godbee, too, had a roman- tic relationship with Patterson before she began dating Evans and when she was Godbee's sub- ordinate. The prior relationship between Godbee and Patter- son was disclosed publicly after Godbee was named interim chief, and Bing issued a strongly worded statement after its dis- closure saying he wasn't consid- ering firing Godbee for having an affair with a subordinate. Godbee, 44, joined the department in 1987 and rose to assistant chief in 2007. He later retired only to be reappointed assistant chief in July 2009 when Evans was hired. 0 S 0 0 0 Evidence that police shooters were working for cartel MEXICO CITY (AP) - A senior U.S. official says there is strong circumstantial evidence that Mexican federal police who fired on a U.S. Embassy vehicle, wounding two CIA officers, were working for organized crime in a targeted assassination attempt. Meanwhile, a Mexican official with knowledge of the case con- firmed on Tuesday that prosecu- tors are investigating whether the Beltran Leyva Cartel was behind the Aug. 24 ambush. The Mexican official said that is among several lines of investigation into the shooting of an armored SUV that was clearly marked with diplomatic license plates on a rural road near Cuernavaca south of Mex- ico City. Federal police, at times battered by allegations of infil- tration and corruption by drug cartels, have said the shooting was a case of mistaken identity as officers were looking into the kidnapping of a government employee in that area. "That's not a'We're trying to shake down a couple people for a traffic violation sort of opera- tion. That's a 'We are specifi- cally trying to kill the people in this vehicle'," a U.S. official, familiar with the investiga- tion told The Associated Press. "This is not a 'Whoops, we got the wrong people.'" Photos of the gray Toyota SUV, a model known to be used by Drug Enforcement Admin- istration agents and other U.S. Embassy employees working in Mexico, showed it riddled with heavy gunfire. The U.S. Embassy called the attack an "ambush." When asked by the AP if the Mexican federal police officers involved in the shooting were tied to organized crime, the U.S. official said, "The circumstantial evidence is pretty damn strong." Both the U.S. and Mexican officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sen- sitivity of the diplomatic issue. A federal police on Tuesday maintained the position that their agents fired on the vehicle by mistake, thinking it belonged to a band of kidnappers they were pursuing, according to a spokesman who was not autho- rized to speak on the record. The U.S. State Department declined to discuss details. "We will not comment on an ongoing investigation," said William Ostick, a spokesman. "This is a matter of great sig- nificance to both our countries and we will continue to cooper- ate with Mexican authorities in their investigation." The Mexican official said one line of investigation is that members of the Beltran Leyva Cartel were interested in attacking the people in the car because some of their lookouts had seen them passing through the area and presumed they were investigating the cartel. It's possible they didn't know they were Americans. The rural road near Cuer- navaca where the attack took place is known territory of the remnants of the Beltran Leyvas, a once-powerful car- tel now run by Hector Beltran Leyva since the Navy killed his brother, drug lord Arturo Beltran Leyva, in Cuernavaca in late 2009. Beltran Leyva was once aligned with Mexi- co's powerful cartel, Sinaloa, headed by fugitive drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman. But the groups split in 2008 and continued government hits on Beltran Leyva leadership since then have splintered that car- tel into small gangs warring for the area. Labor standoffs silence orchestras Many orchestras cancel shows amid difficult negotiations MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The Minnesota Orchestra was called the world's greatest not long ago, welcome recognition for musi- cians outside a top cultural cen- ter. Now its members are locked out of Orchestra Hall, stuck in the same kind of labor-manage- Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com RELEASE DATE- Wednesday, October 3, 2012 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 2 Cte d' French 38 ActivistGuevara 52 Berliner's eight 1 Hunger hint resotarea 39 Nonowner's 53 Leave out of the 5 Shorn shes 3 Padres boy property right freezer 9 Indonesian island 4 Mass reading 42 Commonly long 54 Pacific 13 Pinza of "South 5 Unworldly garment archipelago ! NORTH CAMPUS 1-2 Bdrm. ! ! Riverfront/Heat/Water/Parking. ! ! www.H RPAA.com 996-4992 ! ! STERLING 411 LOFTS - Reserve $$BARTENDING$$ $300/DAY PO- TENTIAL. No exp. nec., training avail. 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Across the country, sympho- ny and chamber orchestra exec- utives have cited flat ticket sales and slumping private support as they seek major pay concessions from musicians, who warn about a loss of talent and reputation. In Minneapolis, the Minnesota Orchestra has already cancelled concerts through Nov. 25 as negotiators argue over a propos- al to trim the average musicians' salary by $46,000 a year. A similar standoff is under- way across the Mississippi River at the St. Paul Chamber Orches- tra. The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra has canceled the first month of its season in a labor impasse, and labor troubles are also rumbling at orchestras in Richmond, Va., Jacksonville, Fla., and San Antonio, Texas. "It breaks my heart," said Christal Steele, a violinist and assistant concertmaster in Indi- anapolis, where she and fellow musicians have gone without pay and benefits for almost a month. "This is my 40th sea- son, and in that time, I have seen nothing but this orchestra rise in quality and in stature. Now in one fell swoop, they're trying to erase the last 30 years." Last week, musicians and management at the symphony orchestras in both Chicago and Atlanta reached new contracts after contentious negotiations. Atlanta's musicians went with- out pay for a month before accepting $5.2 million in com- pensation cuts over two years, plus reductions in their ranks. The Chicago deal came after a two-day strike that forced the cancellations of the season's first Saturday night show, with musicians wrangling salary increases but agreeing to pay higher health care costs. "It's shaking up a lot of orga- nizations right now," said Drew McManus, a Chicago-based con- sultant to orchestras and other arts organizations. "This world of orchestras is one that's always been defined by well-established strata - the best orchestras in the country, the second tier and so on - and that is very much in flux at the moment." The Minnesota Orchestra has seen its reputation grow in recent years under conductor Osmo Vanska. The Finnish-born Van- ska has become something of a celebrity in a state that treasures its Scandinavian heritage, and he's won international acclaim for pushing the orchestra to new heights. After seeing the Minnesota Orchestra play at Carnegie Hall in 2010, The New Yorker's clas- sical music critic Alex Ross wrote that they "sounded, to my ears, like the greatest orchestra in the world." But the' orchestra's leaders have said even as its reputation grows they've seen flat atten- dance, declining corporate and individual support, and poor results from investments. Mean- while, salaries grew by 3 to 4 percent annually under the pre- vious contract. "You couple that with one of the worst financial markets of the last 100 years, and obviously you have to reset our orchestra and our organization in terms of looking to a future that's sus- tainable," said Michael Hen- son, the orchestra's president. He said the orchestra has been forced to draw too deeply from its endowment to stay in the black. "A very significant part of our expenses are musicians' sala- ries, and that's a logical area for us to address to find a solution for long-term stability," Henson said. Management's proposal would trim average annual sala- ries for orchestra members from $135,000 to $89,000. Doug Wright, the Minnesota Orchestra's principal trombon- ist and a member of the musi- cians' negotiating team, said the wages reflect the skill involved in reaching the top level and big salary cuts would result in a loss of talent. "The musicians of a major American symphony orchestra live in a global marketplace," Wright said. "And if we're going to continue to attract and retain the best of the best, our compe- tition is not, you know, the local marching band. Our competi- tion is Boston, Chicago, L.A., San Francisco." McManus, the arts consul- tant, said the Detroit Symphony Orchestra took a big blow to its reputation after a six-month musicians' strike in 2010, during which many musicians quit. Musicians have demanded an open audit of the orchestras' finances, complaining about a $50 million renovationof Orches- tra Hall's lobby now underway. Henson said renovation funds come from dedicated donations and are needed to keep drawing audiences and big donors. Jesse Rosen, president and chief executive officer of the League of American Orches- tras, which doesn't take sides in labor-management disputes, said orchestras are struggling with the economy like many other businesses that depend on discretionary spending. a 0 4 4 a a 4 i ' 4 . f