Saturday, March 31, 2012

Reuters: U.S.: Trayvon lawyers want U.S. to review prosecutor's role

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Trayvon lawyers want U.S. to review prosecutor's role
Apr 1st 2012, 06:14

Sybrina Fulton, mother of slain Florida teen Trayvon Martin, listens to her lawyer Benjamin Crump (2nd L) during a public forum on Trayvon's death on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 27, 2012. Trayvon, 17, was shot on February 26 by George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer in a suburb of Orlando, Florida. Also seen is Trayvon's father Tracy Martin (R). REUTERS/Jason Reed

1 of 19. Sybrina Fulton, mother of slain Florida teen Trayvon Martin, listens to her lawyer Benjamin Crump (2nd L) during a public forum on Trayvon's death on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 27, 2012. Trayvon, 17, was shot on February 26 by George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer in a suburb of Orlando, Florida. Also seen is Trayvon's father Tracy Martin (R).

Credit: Reuters/Jason Reed

By Daniel Trotta

SANFORD, Florida | Sun Apr 1, 2012 1:52am EDT

SANFORD, Florida (Reuters) - Attorneys for the family of slain black teenager Trayvon Martin are asking the U.S. Justice Department to review reports that prosecutors undermined a police investigation of shooter George Zimmerman by overruling a detective who wanted to charge him.

The Justice Department's civil rights division had already agreed to review the local Florida investigation into the racially charged case that has riveted the country. Waves of demonstrations have called for Zimmerman's arrest.

Lawyers for Martin's family are preparing a formal request that the federal government also investigate the specific report that state attorney prosecutors interfered with a homicide detective who wanted to charge Zimmerman with manslaughter.

"We are asking the Justice Department to investigate that," attorney Benjamin Crump, who has been retained by the Martin family as it pressures authorities to arrest Zimmerman, told Reuters late Saturday. "We are concerned about interference in the investigation."

Zimmerman, 28, who is half white and half Hispanic, was a neighborhood watch captain who shot dead the 17-year-old in a gated community on February 26 after following him upon considering him suspicious.

Zimmerman has disappeared from public view but his father and brother have come to his defense in media interviews, saying Martin attacked Zimmerman and Zimmerman feared for his life when he shot the unarmed teen.

Police declined to arrest him, citing Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law, which permits citizens to use deadly force when they feel threatened with death or great bodily harm.

Sanford police detective Chris Serino, unconvinced by Zimmerman's story of self-defense, wanted to charge him with manslaughter but was overruled by the office of State Attorney Norm Wolfinger, the prosecutor whose district includes the city of Sanford, ABC News reported on Tuesday.

Wolfinger has declined all comment since removing himself from the case on March 22. Governor Rick Scott named a special prosecutor, Angela Corey, to replace Wolfinger on the Trayvon Martin investigation. Corey has yet to say if she intends to charge Zimmerman, who remains free but in hiding.

A law enforcement source who has been informed by Sanford police investigators told Reuters that Serino was eager to make a case but encountered resistance from the prosecutor.

"Chris would have made a recommendation for manslaughter but Norm Wolfinger's office wanted it to be a slam dunk," the source said. "They don't want to hear that this is wrong or that is wrong with the case. That's the way this county does business."

A separate report by TheGrio.com, unconfirmed by Reuters, said Wolfinger left his home the Sunday night of the shooting to meet with Sanford police in person.

"Why did he get out of his bed and go to the police station that night and overrule the lead investigator?" Crump said. "It doesn't fit well."

Crump said Justice Department lawyers investigating the case invited him to provide relevant updates, and that his team would forward its request soon.

Federal authorities could step into the case if they believe the state investigation is lacking, and the Justice Department periodically takes an interest in matters where there is a potential civil rights violation.

(Editing by Vicki Allen)

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Reuters: U.S.: Colorado wildfire claims third fatality, blaze nearly contained

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Colorado wildfire claims third fatality, blaze nearly contained
Apr 1st 2012, 01:59

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A burned car and trailer on Kuehster Road near Conifer, Colorado sits amongst burned trees March 28, 2012. REUTERS/Rick Wilking

A burned car and trailer on Kuehster Road near Conifer, Colorado sits amongst burned trees March 28, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Rick Wilking

By Keith Coffman

DENVER | Sat Mar 31, 2012 9:59pm EDT

DENVER (Reuters) - Remains believed to be those of a missing woman were found on Saturday at her home within a nearly-contained wildfire zone west of Denver, authorities said, the third death resulting from the blaze that was ignited by a controlled burn gone awry.

While identification is still pending, the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office said crews were suspending the search for Ann Appel, who was unaccounted for since the fire erupted on Monday.

"Possible human artifacts have been located within the Appel home," the sheriff's office said in a statement.

Earlier in the week, the bodies of Samuel Lucas, 77, and his wife Linda Lucas, 76, were found near their home within the fire zone.

In addition to the three fatalities, the Lower North Fork Fire, which burned through tinder-dry pine trees and grasses, has scorched 4,140 acres, destroyed 27 homes, and an unknown number of outbuildings.

The blaze, which has burned stubbornly for six days in the rugged foothills 20 miles west of Denver, is now 90 percent contained, and most evacuation orders have been lifted, fire officials said on Saturday.

The deadly fire was ignited when windblown embers from a controlled burn conducted by the Colorado State Forest Service jumped containment lines on Monday, and flames quickly spread through the narrow canyons in the area.

Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper this week ordered a suspension of controlled burns on all state-owned land pending an investigation into why the fire got away from crews.

The U.S. Forest Service likewise ordered a temporary ban on prescribed burns on federal land within Colorado due to the state's dry conditions.

(Editing by Mary Slosson and Greg McCune)

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Reuters: U.S.: Dead wolf photos stir tensions in West

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Dead wolf photos stir tensions in West
Apr 1st 2012, 00:54

An endangered gray wolf is pictured in this undated handout photo from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Photos of dead and maimed wolves have pervaded the Internet in recent weeks, raising tensions in the Northern Rocky Mountains over renewed hunting and trapping of the once federally protected animals. REUTERS/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service/Handout

1 of 3. An endangered gray wolf is pictured in this undated handout photo from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Photos of dead and maimed wolves have pervaded the Internet in recent weeks, raising tensions in the Northern Rocky Mountains over renewed hunting and trapping of the once federally protected animals.

Credit: Reuters/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service/Handout

By Laura Zuckerman

SALMON, Idaho | Sat Mar 31, 2012 8:54pm EDT

SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) - Photos of dead and maimed wolves have pervaded the Internet in recent weeks, raising tensions in the Northern Rocky Mountains over renewed hunting and trapping of the once federally protected animals.

Escalating rancor between hunters and animal rights activists on social media and websites centers on pictures of wolves killed or about to be killed. Many have text celebrating the fact that Western states are allowing more killing of the predators.

Commenting on a Facebook-posted image of two wolves strangled to death by cable snares, an individual who identified himself as Shane Miller wrote last month, "Very nice!! Don't stop now, you're just getting started!"

A person going by the name Matthew Brown posted the message, "Nice, one down and a BUNCH to go!" in response to a Facebook image of a single wolf choked to death in a snare.

Such pictures and commentary have intensified online arguments over the ethics of hunting and trapping wolves. The debate took a threatening turn this week with an anonymous email warning that animal rights advocates will "be the target next."

In Idaho and Montana, hundreds of the animals have been killed -- mostly through hunting -- less than a year after being removed from the U.S. endangered species list.

Stripping the wolves of federal protection last spring opened the animals to state wildlife management, including newly licensed hunting and trapping designed to reduce their numbers from levels the states deemed too high.

Since the de-listing last May, Idaho has cut its wolf population by about 40 percent, from roughly 1,000 to about 600 or fewer. Some 260 wolves have been killed in Montana, more than a third of its population, leaving an estimated 650 remaining.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has also proposed lifting the protected status for another 350 wolves in Wyoming.

The threatening note received by an anti-trapping group based in Missoula, Montana, this week has drawn scrutiny from federal and local law enforcement.

The group says it was likely singled out because it had criticized and widely circulated a snapshot of a smiling trapper posed with a dying wolf whose leg was caught in the metal jaws of a foothold trap on a patch of blood-stained snow.

VILLAIN OR VICTIM?

Once common across most of North America, wolves were hunted, trapped and poisoned to near extinction in the lower 48 states by the 1940s under a government-sponsored program.

Decades later, biologists recognized that wolves had an essential role as a predator in mountain ecosystems, leading to protection of the animal under the Endangered Species Act.

Wolves were reintroduced in the mid-1990s over the vehement objections of ranchers and sportsmen, who see the animals as a threat to livestock and big-game animals such as elk and deer.

Environmentalists say the impact of wolves on cattle herds and wildlife is overstated and that the recent removal of federal safeguards could push the wolf back to the brink.

Wolves have long been vilified in the region as a menace, symbolizing for some a distant federal bureaucracy imposing its rules on the West.

"They're putting us and our way of life out of business," said Ron Casperson, co-owner of Saddle Springs Trophy Outfitters in Salmon, Idaho. "It makes me sick every day I look at this country. These wolves ... I mean, come on."

State wildlife managers had predicted that such passions would ease once the wolves were de-listed and states gained control. But discourse on the Internet and social networks appears to have grown more hostile.

Some hunters have expressed discomfort at the apparent bloodlust unleashed on the Internet, which they see as tarnishing the reputation of a sport that attracts less than 15 percent of Americans.

'SCREAMING FOR MERCY'

"There are two groups -- one supports fair chase and ethical hunting, and the other views the reintroduction of wolves and the recovery with venom," said veteran sportsman Rod Bullis of Helena, Montana.

Idaho Fish and Game Commissioner Gary Power said he was bombarded with letters and emails from people representing extremes on both sides of the debate.

"There are some folks out there stirring the pot: ‘Get rid of government, get rid of this, they shoved it down our throats, kill them all,' and they are adding to the contentiousness," he said.

Animal rights activists said they are sickened at the online flurry of pictures depicting wolf kills, and alarmed by comments suggesting a growing desire to shoot, trap and snare wolves.

"Roughly $40 million has been spent on wolf recovery, and now we are witnessing the second extermination of wolves in the West," said Wendy Keefover, director of carnivore protection for WildEarth Guardians.

Idaho and Montana are required to maintain about 150 wolves per state each year to prevent federal protection from being imposed again.

But Idaho plans to more than double the number of wolves a hunter may take in some areas for the 2012-13 season, raising their bag limit to 10.

Montana is seeking to raise its wolf-hunt quotas, and state wildlife managers are discussing allowing trapping, which is currently illegal there. At least one Montana county is considering a bounty for wolves killed by licensed hunters.

This week's email threat to the animal advocacy group Footloose Montana raised the acrimony to a new level.

The image posted on its Facebook page was taken from the Trapperman.com website, including text that joked about the wolf being shot and wounded by a passersby after it was caught -- "lucky they were not real good shots."

The photo went viral over the Internet last weekend, and on Monday Footloose Montana received the email threat.

The message said "I would like to donate a gun to your childs (sic) head to make sure you can watch it die slowly so I can have my picture taken with it's (sic) bleeding dying screaming for mercy body." Then the email, a copy of which Footloose gave to Reuters, said the recipients would be the next targets.

A Missoula Police Department detective, Sergeant Travis Welsh, confirmed this week that investigators were looking into a "report from a local institution about a malicious email."

Footloose Executive Director Anja Heister said FBI agents had interviewed a member of her group about the threat, but an FBI spokeswoman declined to comment.

By Tuesday, Trapperman.com, a site whose mission statement declares, "Always keep in mind that we are the true protectors of wildlife and the wild places in which the animals live," had removed pictures of dead or dying wolves and commentary.

(Editing by Steve Gorman, Cynthia Johnston and Sandra Maler)

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Reuters: U.S.: Former NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf arrested in Montana

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Former NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf arrested in Montana
Apr 1st 2012, 01:17

San Diego Chargers quarterback Ryan Leaf looks up after being sacked by Miami Dolphins defensive end Trace Armstrong in the fourth quarter November 12, 2000 in San Diego. Leaf entered the game in the third quarter to replace injured starter Moses Moreno. The Chargers lost 17-7. JTL/SV

By Laura Zuckerman

SALMON, Idaho | Sat Mar 31, 2012 9:17pm EDT

SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) - Former NFL quarterback Ryan Leaf, once a Heisman Trophy finalist and San Diego Chargers first round draft choice, was arrested in his hometown of Great Falls, Montana, on theft and drug charges, authorities said on Saturday.

Leaf was arrested on Friday on suspicion of felony burglary and drug possession as well as a misdemeanor theft charge, authorities said. Great Falls police were unable to provide further details on Saturday.

The arrest came just weeks after Leaf, 35, completed daily radiation treatments stemming from surgery last spring to remove a benign brain tumor.

The allegations come just months since publication of a book he co-wrote about his role in winning Washington State University's first Pac-10 title and leading the Washington State Cougars to the Rose Bowl in 1998.

Supporters of the one-time West Texas A&M quarterback coach are hopeful that the criminal charges are unfounded, said Greg Witter, who co-authored the book, "596 Switch," with Leaf.

Leaf has fought to conquer an addiction to painkillers brought on by a severe wrist injury that has plagued him since playing for the Chargers, he added.

"If the allegations are accurate, it's clearly disappointing. But, more than anything else, it speaks to you about how horrible addiction is and how difficult it is to overcome," said Greg Witter, who co-authored the book, "596 Switch," with Leaf.

"I know how hard Ryan has worked to get his life back," Witter said.

While Leaf was one of college football's brightest stars in the late 1990s, he lasted only four years in the NFL and was rated by a recent NFL films documentary and one of the biggest busts in the history of the professional football league.

After undergoing treatment for the addiction, Leaf returned to the national sports scene with publication of his book and book-signing tour. He also worked as a sports commentator for talk radio programs, Witter said.

Witter, a Seattle communications consultant, and three other Washington State boosters form what Witter called a "council of elders" for the former star quarterback.

The council has provided professional and personal support to Leaf as he battled a prescription painkiller habit, Witter said. Leaf's struggles with addiction came to public light three years ago when he faced drug charges in Texas.

He was still on probation for those violations when he was arrested in Montana. He was released from the Cascade County Detention Center in Montana on Friday after posting a $76,000 bond, authorities said.

Witter said the advisors had dinner with Leaf in Seattle less than a month ago. Leaf had lost a significant amount of weight and showed other signs of his battle with the brain tumor and nearly two months of daily radiation treatments. That therapy ended in December.

"Addiction is a lifelong affliction and you can never let your guard down," he said. "The bottom line is we want Ryan to get all the help he needs."

Leaf is scheduled to appear before a Montana judge on Monday to face the charges.

(Editing by Mary Slosson and Greg McCune)

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Reuters: U.S.: Three winning tickets sold in record $656 million U.S. lottery

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Three winning tickets sold in record $656 million U.S. lottery
Apr 1st 2012, 01:23

Store owner Jean Shin places a sign with the updated jackpot at the Town & Country news stand in Los Angeles, California March 30, 2012. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

1 of 4. Store owner Jean Shin places a sign with the updated jackpot at the Town & Country news stand in Los Angeles, California March 30, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Mario Anzuoni

By David Beasley

ATLANTA | Sat Mar 31, 2012 9:23pm EDT

ATLANTA (Reuters) - The largest lottery jackpot in U.S. history - a whopping $656 million - will be shared by the buyers of three winning Mega Millions tickets in Illinois, Kansas and Maryland - but their identities remained a mystery, lottery officials said on Saturday.

A pre-dawn call alerted Denise Metzger, manager of a Motomart convenience store, to news from lottery officials that her store had sold a winning ticket in the tiny farming community of Red Bud in southern Illinois, with less than 4,000 residents, about 30 miles southeast of St. Louis.

"I screamed, I woke my husband up," said Metzger, whose retail outlet will receive $500,000 for selling a winning ticket.

The Mega Millions lottery created a stir across the country, with people rushing to buy the $1 tickets in time for a shot at the humongous jackpot. In all, more than a billion tickets were sold.

At least two of the winners' tickets were "quick picks" - meaning all six numbers of the Mega Millions lottery computer selected the lucky numbers announced at the drawing Friday night in Atlanta: 2-4-23-38-46 and Mega Ball 23.

Lottery officials said winning tickets were purchased at a 7-Eleven store in Milford Mill, Maryland, near Baltimore, and the Motomart convenience store in Red Bud. The Kansas Lottery said a winning ticket was sold in the most populated northeastern part of the state but did not give the precise location.

Winners could receive either a one-time payment of their share or take it in 26 annual installment payments.

The three tickets each were worth more than $213 million before taxes, if the payout was over 26 years. If taken in a lump sum, the windfall would be about $105.1 million, officials said.

"Each of the winners gets $105.1 million in cash after taxes roughly, but who cares about pennies at this point?" said Carole Everett, spokeswoman for the Maryland Lottery.

No matter who wins the jackpot, one certain winner is the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. The tax-collecting agency subjects lottery winnings of more than $5,000 to a 25-percent federal withholding tax.

'EVERYONE IN TOWN'

Metzger said residents swarmed the store within hours of the announcement to check their tickets, although no winner had yet emerged, she said.

"I think everyone in town has been here already," she joked.

Though that winner - who had not yet contacted Illinois lottery officials - may want to remain anonymous, in Illinois the state is required to eventually list his or her identity in public records.

The winning Maryland ticket was a single quick-pick ticket sold on Friday at the 7-Eleven franchise in Milford Mill, Everett said.

"They are shocked they are getting the $100,000 bonus," Everett said of Ethiopian immigrants Abera and Mimi Tessema, who have owned the 7-Eleven for 10 years and learned they would get a winning seller's bonus.

In addition to the three jackpot winners, there were three tickets that matched the Mega Ball number to win $1 million each and 158 tickets that picked five of the six chosen numbers to win $250,000 each, said Kelly Cripe, spokeswoman for the Texas Lottery, which oversaw the Mega Millions game.

The previous largest Mega Millions jackpot was $390 million in 2007, which was split between two ticket holders in Georgia and New Jersey.

About half the lottery money goes back to ticket holders in the form of winnings, 35 percent to state governments and 15 percent to retailer commissions and lottery operating expenses.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles, Barbara Goldberg in New York, Teresa Carson in Portland, Keith Coffman in Denver and Laura Zuckerman in Idaho; Editing by Philip Barbara and Will Dunham)

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Reuters: U.S.: Gunmen kill two outside Miami funeral of shooting victim

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Gunmen kill two outside Miami funeral of shooting victim
Mar 31st 2012, 21:49

MIAMI | Sat Mar 31, 2012 5:49pm EDT

MIAMI (Reuters) - Gunmen opened fire on mourners outside a Miami funeral home, killing two people and injuring 12, including a young girl, police said on Saturday.

The gunmen escaped after firing from a car into a crowd of mourners who had gathered on Friday night for the funeral of a 21-year-old man, who was himself the victim of a deadly shooting.

"I was on my way out of the chapel when I heard the shots," the pastor who officiated at the service, A.D. Lenoir, told The Miami Herald. "I told people to look for cover. It was chaos."

A 43-year-old man and a 27-year-old man were killed, police said. One of the injured was a 5-year-old girl, who was shot in the leg. She was listed in stable condition at a Miami hospital on Saturday, police said.

Police were looking for at least six men, and said a white car may have been involved in the shooting.

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Reuters: U.S.: Cape worn by Elizabeth Taylor in "Cleopatra" sold

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Cape worn by Elizabeth Taylor in "Cleopatra" sold
Mar 31st 2012, 20:41

The wax figure of actress Elizabeth Taylor in her role as 'Cleopatra' is pictured at Madame Tussauds Hollywood in Hollywood, California March 23, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Fred Prouser

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Reuters: U.S.: Dead wolf photos stir tensions in West

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Dead wolf photos stir tensions in West
Mar 31st 2012, 20:25

By Laura Zuckerman

SALMON, Idaho | Sat Mar 31, 2012 4:25pm EDT

SALMON, Idaho (Reuters) - Photos of dead and maimed wolves have pervaded the Internet in recent weeks, raising tensions in the Northern Rocky Mountains over renewed hunting and trapping of the once federally protected animals.

Escalating rancor between hunters and animal rights activists on social media and websites centers on pictures of wolves killed or about to be killed. Many have text celebrating the fact that Western states are allowing more killing of the predators.

Commenting on a Facebook-posted image of two wolves strangled to death by cable snares, an individual who identified himself as Shane Miller wrote last month, "Very nice!! Don't stop now, you're just getting started!"

A person going by the name Matthew Brown posted the message, "Nice, one down and a BUNCH to go!" in response to a Facebook image of a single wolf choked to death in a snare.

Such pictures and commentary have intensified online arguments over the ethics of hunting and trapping wolves. The debate took a threatening turn this week with an anonymous email warning that animal rights advocates will "be the target next."

In Idaho and Montana, hundreds of the animals have been killed -- mostly through hunting -- less than a year after being removed from the U.S. endangered species list.

Stripping the wolves of federal protection last spring opened the animals to state wildlife management, including newly licensed hunting and trapping designed to reduce their numbers from levels the states deemed too high.

Since the de-listing last May, Idaho has cut its wolf population by about 40 percent, from roughly 1,000 to about 600 or fewer. Some 260 wolves have been killed in Montana, more than a third of its population, leaving an estimated 650 remaining.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has also proposed lifting the protected status for another 350 wolves in Wyoming.

The threatening note received by an anti-trapping group based in Missoula, Montana, this week has drawn scrutiny from federal and local law enforcement.

The group says it was likely singled out because it had criticized and widely circulated a snapshot of a smiling trapper posed with a dying wolf whose leg was caught in the metal jaws of a foothold trap on a patch of blood-stained snow.

VILLAIN OR VICTIM?

Once common across most of North America, wolves were hunted, trapped and poisoned to near extinction in the lower 48 states by the 1940s under a government-sponsored program.

Decades later, biologists recognized that wolves had an essential role as a predator in mountain ecosystems, leading to protection of the animal under the Endangered Species Act.

Wolves were reintroduced in the mid-1990s over the vehement objections of ranchers and sportsmen, who see the animals as a threat to livestock and big-game animals such as elk and deer.

Environmentalists say the impact of wolves on cattle herds and wildlife is overstated and that the recent removal of federal safeguards could push the wolf back to the brink.

Wolves have long been vilified in the region as a menace, symbolizing for some a distant federal bureaucracy imposing its rules on the West.

"They're putting us and our way of life out of business," said Ron Casperson, co-owner of Saddle Springs Trophy Outfitters in Salmon, Idaho. "It makes me sick every day I look at this country. These wolves ... I mean, come on."

State wildlife managers had predicted that such passions would ease once the wolves were de-listed and states gained control. But discourse on the Internet and social networks appears to have grown more hostile.

Some hunters have expressed discomfort at the apparent bloodlust unleashed on the Internet, which they see as tarnishing the reputation of a sport that attracts less than 15 percent of Americans.

'SCREAMING FOR MERCY'

"There are two groups -- one supports fair chase and ethical hunting, and the other views the reintroduction of wolves and the recovery with venom," said veteran sportsman Rod Bullis of Helena, Montana.

Idaho Fish and Game Commissioner Gary Power said he was bombarded with letters and emails from people representing extremes on both sides of the debate.

"There are some folks out there stirring the pot: ‘Get rid of government, get rid of this, they shoved it down our throats, kill them all,' and they are adding to the contentiousness," he said.

Animal rights activists said they are sickened at the online flurry of pictures depicting wolf kills, and alarmed by comments suggesting a growing desire to shoot, trap and snare wolves.

"Roughly $40 million has been spent on wolf recovery, and now we are witnessing the second extermination of wolves in the West," said Wendy Keefover, director of carnivore protection for WildEarth Guardians.

Idaho and Montana are required to maintain about 150 wolves per state each year to prevent federal protection from being imposed again.

But Idaho plans to more than double the number of wolves a hunter may take in some areas for the 2012-13 season, raising their bag limit to 10.

Montana is seeking to raise its wolf-hunt quotas, and state wildlife managers are discussing allowing trapping, which is currently illegal there. At least one Montana county is considering a bounty for wolves killed by licensed hunters.

This week's email threat to the animal advocacy group Footloose Montana raised the acrimony to a new level.

The image posted on its Facebook page was taken from the Trapperman.com website, including text that joked about the wolf being shot and wounded by a passersby after it was caught -- "lucky they were not real good shots."

The photo went viral over the Internet last weekend, and on Monday Footloose Montana received the email threat.

The message said "I would like to donate a gun to your childs (sic) head to make sure you can watch it die slowly so I can have my picture taken with it's (sic) bleeding dying screaming for mercy body." Then the email, a copy of which Footloose gave to Reuters, said the recipients would be the next targets.

A Missoula Police Department detective, Sergeant Travis Welsh, confirmed this week that investigators were looking into a "report from a local institution about a malicious email."

Footloose Executive Director Anja Heister said FBI agents had interviewed a member of her group about the threat, but an FBI spokeswoman declined to comment.

By Tuesday, Trapperman.com, a site whose mission statement declares, "Always keep in mind that we are the true protectors of wildlife and the wild places in which the animals live," had removed pictures of dead or dying wolves and commentary.

(Editing by Steve Gorman, Cynthia Johnston and Sandra Maler)

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Reuters: U.S.: Marchers again demand arrest in Trayvon Martin case

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Marchers again demand arrest in Trayvon Martin case
Mar 31st 2012, 17:49

Ann Flowers holds her grandson, Devon Mitchell, on her shoulders as they take part in an NAACP march and rally in front of the Sanford Police Department for Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida, March 31, 2012. Sanford is the town where Martin, 17, was shot dead on February 26 after George Zimmerman, 28, a Hispanic neighborhood watch captain, believed the young man walking through the gated community in a hooded sweatshirt looked suspicious. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

Ann Flowers holds her grandson, Devon Mitchell, on her shoulders as they take part in an NAACP march and rally in front of the Sanford Police Department for Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida, March 31, 2012. Sanford is the town where Martin, 17, was shot dead on February 26 after George Zimmerman, 28, a Hispanic neighborhood watch captain, believed the young man walking through the gated community in a hooded sweatshirt looked suspicious.

Credit: Reuters/Lucas Jackson

By Barbara Liston

SANFORD, Florida | Sat Mar 31, 2012 1:49pm EDT

SANFORD, Florida (Reuters) - Thousands of protesters marched through Sanford, Florida, on Saturday demanding an arrest of the neighborhood watch volunteer who shot and killed an unarmed black teen a month ago.

"We want arrests ... shot in the chest," they chanted, referring to 17-year-old victim Trayvon Martin, who was shot in the chest.

Ben Jealous, president of the NAACP which organized the march, and civil rights leader the Rev. Al Sharpton denied media reports that Sharpton planned to call for an economic boycott of Sanford or the surrounding central Florida area, calling it a "media fabrication."

"Put to rest the rumor that there is any discussion of a boycott of the community," Jealous told reporters.

Demonstrators called for the arrest of George Zimmerman, the 28-year-old neighborhood watch captain who admitted shooting Martin with a semiautomatic handgun. Zimmerman, a white Hispanic, had called 911 to report a "suspicious" person and followed Martin against the dispatcher's advice.

Zimmerman said he shot in self defense during a fight with Martin, and his family have said the reports Zimmerman was the aggressor are misleading and false. Local police declined to arrest Zimmerman citing Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law allowing violence in self defense.

The ensuing public outcry has prompted ongoing state and federal investigations and charges of racial bias.

"We're here to say 'save our sons.' Bring Mr. Zimmerman to justice," Jealous said before the march began.

With gospel music playing in the background, protesters were marching from a technical high school campus through a predominantly black neighborhood to the Sanford Police Station. The throng stretched for blocks, weaving past homes, churches and small businesses, many of them boarded up.

It was one of the largest demonstrations yet in Sanford, where Martin was killed on February 26. Organizers said they were committed to non-violence and noted there had been no arrests or disturbances at any of the marches.

NAACP chapters from South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama arranged buses to bring participants to the rally, while others traveled by car.

"Because of the age of the young man and because of the circumstances of his death, every community can identify with that," said Bernard Simelton, president of the Alabama state conference of the NAACP. "We've had things like that happen in Alabama where somebody gets killed and the police just sweep it under the rug. It just touches everyone."

While insisting there was no call for a boycott, Sharpton said there could still be unspecified action against national corporations that support the "Stand Your Ground" laws like the one police cited when they declined to arrest Zimmerman. The law gives wide latitude to use deadly force when a threat is perceived.

Sharpton declined to identify those corporations but said, "We take nothing nonviolent off the table."

(Additional reporting by Harriet McLeod, writing by Jane Sutton; Editing by Greg McCune)

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Reuters: U.S.: Slain Iraqi-American woman buried in Iraq

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Slain Iraqi-American woman buried in Iraq
Mar 31st 2012, 17:01

BAGHDAD | Sat Mar 31, 2012 1:01pm EDT

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - An Iraqi-American woman who was beaten to death in her U.S. home in a possible case of hate crime was buried in her native Iraq on Saturday.

Relatives wept as the casket of Shaima Alawadi, a 32-year-old mother of five, was taken to the Valley of Peace cemetery in the holy Shi'ite city of Najaf, 160 km (100 miles) south of Iraq's capital Baghdad.

Alawadi was found unconscious in the dining room of her rented home in California last Wednesday by her 17-year-old daughter. She was taken to a trauma centre with a severe head injury and died last Saturday after being taken off life support.

The killing is being investigated as a possible hate crime because of a threatening note that was found near her, police say.

"The martyr (Alawadi) used to love all, she made no distinction between religions," Alawadi's father, Nabil, told Reuters.

"Her husband told me that someone threw a note saying 'go back to your own country, you're a terrorist'... Who is the real terrorist, Shaima, or them," he said.

Alawadi's casket, draped in an Iraqi flag, was flown into Iraq on Saturday. A police convoy transported the coffin to the shrine of Imam Ali, a central figure of Shi'ite Islam, where prayers were held for Alawadi before she was buried.

Mourners carrying a banner calling for legal action.

"The motives behind the crime are racial ... We call on concerned Iraqi institutions such as the Human Rights Ministry, parliamentary committees and the Foreign Ministry to follow up on the crime and find the criminals," Alawadi's nephew, Haider Kadhim, said.

Alawadi lived in the San Diego suburb of El Cajon, which, along with nearby areas, is home to some 50,000-60,000 immigrants and refugees of Middle Eastern descent.

If hate is confirmed as a motive in the killing, it would be the worst bias crime committed against Arabs or Muslims in years in the area, according to Sadaf Hane, civil rights director of the San Diego chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Police say the region has not experienced violent hate crimes in the past.

The FBI is assisting the El Cajon Police Department in the investigation, and has provided agents from a squad that is specifically trained to conduct hate crime investigations, FBI spokesman Darrell Foxworth said.

(Reporting by Baghdad newsroom; Writing by Serena Chaudhry; Editing by Alison Williams)

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Reuters: U.S.: With U.S. okay, Cuban agent returns home to see brother

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With U.S. okay, Cuban agent returns home to see brother
Mar 31st 2012, 14:26

By Jeff Franks

HAVANA | Sat Mar 31, 2012 10:26am EDT

HAVANA (Reuters) - A Cuban agent on parole in the United States after 13 years behind bars for his activities in an espionage ring has returned temporarily to the communist island to visit his critically ill brother, state television reported on Friday.

Rene Gonzalez, one of what Cuba calls the "Five Heroes," returned on Friday "on a private family visit," it said.

U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard granted Gonzalez his request for the visit on March 19 with the proviso that he had to obtain permission from the U.S. government and return within 15 days.

Gonzalez's brother is said to be dying of lung cancer.

Similarly, jailed American contractor Alan Gross has requested that Cuban President Raul Castro allow him a temporary return to the United States to visit his 89-year-old mother, who has inoperable lung cancer.

Gonzalez, 55, is one of the so-called Cuban Five convicted of conspiring to spy on Cuban exile groups and U.S. military activities in Florida. Their organization was known as the "Wasp Network."

One of them is serving a double life sentence for his part in the shooting down of two U.S. planes in 1996 flown by an exile group that dropped anti-government leaflets over Havana.

In the United States, the case is little known outside the Cuban exile community, but is a major issue in Cuba where the government repeatedly says they were wrongly convicted and demands their release.

It says the agents were only collecting information on Cuban exile groups planning actions against the island 90 miles from Key West, Florida

Gonzalez, who has dual U.S.-Cuban citizenship, was the first of the five to be released from jail when he finished his sentence last year, but was ordered to stay in the United States for a three-year probation.

WELCOMED BACK TO THE HOMELAND

His U.S. lawyer, Phil Horowitz, assured Lenard in a February hearing he would return from Cuba to complete his probation. He has been living at an undisclosed location in Florida.

"In spite of the conditions imposed, our people, with deep respect, welcomes our dear Rene to the homeland and do not cease in the struggle for his definitive return along with his four close brothers," state television said.

Cuba has hinted at a possible swap of the Cuban Five for Gross, who is serving a 15-year sentence in Cuba for illegally installing Internet networks for Cuban Jewish groups. He was working for a U.S. program that Cuba considers subversive.

The United States has rejected the idea, but Gross' attorney Peter Kahn recently sent a letter to Cuban President Raul Castro requesting that Gross, 62, be allowed to visit his family. His mother has inoperable lung cancer and has taken a turn for the worse, and his daughter has breast cancer.

His wife, Judy Gross, said she was pleased Gonzalez had been allowed to visit his ailing brother in Cuba and hoped her husband would be allowed to travel to Dallas for his mother's 90th birthday on April 15.

"I certainly empathize with his (Gonzalez's) family's suffering," Judy Gross said. "I pray that President Raul Castro will find it in his heart to reciprocate the U.S. gesture and give us a positive answer.

"This is Cuba's chance to show that they are serious about dealing with Alan's case on what they themselves have called a 'reciprocal humanitarian basis.'"

Both the Gross family and the U.S. government asked Pope Benedict to seek his release during his visit this week to Cuba.

A Vatican spokesman said "humanitarian requests" had been made to the Cuban government, but offered no further details.

Gross has been in Cuban custody since December 2009 and his family says he suffers from health problems.

The case has stalled modest progress in U.S.-Cuba relations under U.S. President Barack Obama.

(Editing by Kevin Gray and Todd Eastham)

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Friday, March 30, 2012

Reuters: U.S.: Prosecutors say two former Penn State officials lied multiple times

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Prosecutors say two former Penn State officials lied multiple times
Mar 31st 2012, 04:58

Former Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley walks through the press after his arraignment on perjury charges in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, November 7, 2011. REUTERS/Pat Little

1 of 2. Former Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley walks through the press after his arraignment on perjury charges in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, November 7, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Pat Little

By Mark Shade

HARRISBURG, Penn. | Sat Mar 31, 2012 12:58am EDT

HARRISBURG, Penn. (Reuters) - State prosecutors listed a number of instances on Friday in which they said two former Penn State University officials lied to a grand jury about their involvement in the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse scandal.

Former Athletic Director Tim Curley and now-retired financial officer Gary Schultz pleaded not guilty in January to charges of perjury and failing to report abuse allegations against Sandusky to police.

Former Penn State defensive football coordinator Sandusky, who has maintained his innocence and is under house arrest, was arrested in November and has been charged with 52 counts of molesting 10 boys over a period of 15 years. His trial is due to begin in June.

The explosive scandal focused national attention on child sex abuse and led to the firing of Penn State's legendary head coach Joe Paterno and university President Graham Spanier. Paterno died in January.

In response to a petition by Curley and Schultz to have the charges against them dropped, the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office provided a list of 15 times in which they said Curley lied to the grand jury, and 18 for Schultz.

For example, prosecutors said that when an attorney asked if then-graduate assistant Mike McQueary "did not specifically tell you there was anal intercourse occurring between Jerry Sandusky and this child," Curley lied when he responded with, "Absolutely not, that he did not tell me that."

When Schultz was asked if McQueary had related what he saw when Sandusky and a boy were allegedly showering together on campus, the former head of campus security responded: "No. My recollection was McQueary and Joe (Paterno) both only described what was observed in a very general way. There was no details."

Prosecutors also wrote that they believe the former Penn State employees were trying to "take advantage" of Paterno's death from lung cancer.

Curley and Schultz argued in their February motions to dismiss the perjury charges, saying Paterno was not available to support McQueary's testimony during their criminal trial and there was no one else to back up his claim.

"McQueary's testimony was corroborated by that of his father, John McQueary … (who) testified that he met with Defendant Schultz some time after the incident described by his son," wrote Bruce Beemer, the attorney general's chief of staff.

"At that meeting, Schultz's words and behavior indicated that he understood that Michael … had witnessed sexual contact between Sandusky and the boy. Because Schultz would have learned of such from Michael McQueary, the testimony of Michael McQueary is corroborated," Beemer said.

The attorneys for Curley and Schultz, Caroline Roberto and Tom Farrell, had little to say in response to the prosecution's rebuttal.

"We have received the prosecution's filings and look forward to reviewing their responses," they said in a joint statement.

(Editing By Cynthia Johnston)

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Reuters: U.S.: U.S. seeks life in prison for Russian arms dealer Bout

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U.S. seeks life in prison for Russian arms dealer Bout
Mar 31st 2012, 02:37

Suspected Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout (front C) is escorted by Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) officers after arriving at Westchester County Airport in White Plains, New York, in this November 16, 2010 file handout photo.

Credit: Reuters/U.S. Department of Justice/Handout/Files

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