WEST HAWAII TODAY | TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2015 - page 3

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2015 | WEST HAWAII TODAY
NATION &WORLD
3A
IN BRIEF
Police shooting,
protests put
Ferguson on edge
FERGUSON,
Mo.
Ferguson was a community
on edge again Monday,
a day after a protest
marking the anniversary
of Michael Brown’s death
was
punctuated
with
gunshots
and
police
critically wounded a black
18-year-old accused of
opening fire on officers.
Police, protesters and
people who live and work in
the St. Louis suburb were
bracing for what night-
fall might bring following
more violence along West
Florissant Avenue, the
same thoroughfare that
was the site of massive
protests and rioting after
Brown was fatally shot last
year in a confrontation with
a white Ferguson officer.
The father of the suspect
who was shot called the
police version of events “a
bunch of lies.” He said two
girls who were with his son
told him he was unarmed
and had been drawn into
a dispute involving two
groups of young people.
St.
Louis
County
Executive Steve Stenger
declared a state of emer-
gency, which authorizes
county Police Chief Jon
Belmar to take control of
police emergency man-
agement in and around
Ferguson.
Clinton calls for
campaign finance
reform, group
backing her gets $1M
from untraceable
donors
WASHINGTON — Hillary
Rodham Clinton told a
cheering crowd at her larg-
est rally so far that “the
endless flow of secret,
unaccountable
money”
must be stopped. Two
weeks later, the main super
PAC backing her bid for the
Democratic presidential
nomination accepted a $1
million contribution that
cannot be traced.
The seven-figure dona-
tion, made June 29 to the
pro-Clinton Priorities USA
Action, came from another
super political action com-
mittee, called Fair Share
Action. Its two lone con-
tributors are Fair Share Inc.
and Environment America
Inc., according to records
filed with Federal Election
Commission.
Those two groups are
nonprofits that are not
legally required to reveal
information about their
donors. Such contributions
are sometimes called “dark
money” by advocates for
stricter campaign finance
rules.
Study that FAA
wouldn’t release
shows chronic
fatigue among traffic
controllers
WASHINGTON — Air
traffic controllers’ work
schedules often lead to
chronic fatigue, making
them less alert and endan-
gering the safety of the
national air traffic system,
according to a study the
government kept secret for
years.
Federal
Aviation
Administration officials
posted the study online
Monday, hours after The
Associated Press reported
the findings — and noted
that agency officials had
declined to furnish a copy
despite repeated requests
over the past three months,
including a Freedom of
Information Act filing.
TheAPwas able to obtain
a draft of the final report
dated Dec. 1, 2011. The
report FAA posted online
was dated December 2012,
although the findings
appear to be nearly identi-
cal to the draft.
The impetus for the
study was a recommen-
dation by the National
Transportation
Safety
Board to the FAA and
the National Air Traffic
Controllers Association to
revise controller schedules
to provide rest periods
that are long enough “to
obtain sufficient restor-
ative sleep.”
The study found that
nearly 2 in 10 controllers
had committed significant
errors in the previous year
— such as bringing planes
too close together — and
over half attributed the
errors to fatigue. A third
of controllers said they
perceived fatigue to be a
“high” or “extreme” safety
risk.
Day of heavy violence
in Istanbul: attack at
US consulate
ISTANBUL — Two female
assailants opened fire
at the U.S. Consulate in
Istanbul on Monday and
at least six Turkish securi-
ty forces were killed else-
where in a day of heavy
violence in Turkey, where
a government crackdown
has targeted Islamic State
militants, Kurdish rebels
and far-left extremists.
Turkey has seen a sharp
spike in clashes between
security forces and rebels
of the Kurdistan Workers’
Party, or PKK, in the a wake
of its campaign against
PKK targets in Iraq in tan-
dem with airstrikes against
Islamic State militants in
Syria. Hundreds of sus-
pected militants have also
been rounded up at home.
No one was hurt in
the attack on the U.S.
Consulate, which came just
weeks after Turkey agreed
to take a more active role
in the U.S.-led campaign
against the Islamic State
group and to allow the
U.S.-led coalition to use its
bases in the fight against
IS. On Sunday, the U.S.
military announced that
a detachment of six F-16
fighter jets and some 300
personnel had arrived at
Turkey’s southern Incirlik
Air Base.
A far-left group that
carried out a 2013 sui-
cide bombing on the
U.S. Embassy in Ankara
claimed it was involved in
the attack.
Both assailants fled, and
one was later shot and
taken into custody. The
Revolutionary
People’s
Liberation Army-Front, or
DHKP-C identified her as
51-year-old Hatice Asik and
said she was a member of
the group, which is consid-
ered a terrorist organiza-
tion by the U.S. and Turkey.
The other assailant was
still at large.
Some US rowers fall
ill at test event for
2016 Olympics
RIO DE JANEIRO —
Thirteen rowers on the
40-member U.S. team
came down with stomach
illness at the World Junior
Rowing Championships —
a trial run for next sum-
mer’s Olympics — and the
team doctor said she sus-
pected it was due to pollu-
tion in the lake where the
competition took place.
The event took place
amid rising concerns about
the water quality at ven-
ues for the Rio de Janeiro
Olympics, now less than a
year away.
The Americans were
by far the hardest hit at
the regatta that conclud-
ed over the weekend, with
reports of vomiting and
diarrhea. Other teams in
the competition reported
some illnesses, accord-
ing to World Rowing, the
sport’s governing body,
but those were about as
expected at an event that
featured more than 500
young rowers.
On
July
30,
The
Associated Press pub-
lished an independent
analysis of water quality
that showed high levels of
viruses and, in some cases,
bacteria from human sew-
age in all of Rio’s Olympic
and Paralympic water ven-
ues, including the Rodrigo
de Freitas Lake, where the
rowing competition took
place.
Wisconsin girls
accused of stabbing
classmate to be tried
as adults
WAUKESHA, Wis. — A
Wisconsin judge ruled
Monday that two 13-year-
old girls accused of stab-
bing a classmate to please
the online horror charac-
ter Slender Man will stay
in adult court, where they
could face a sentence of
decades in prison.
Waukesha
County
Circuit Judge Michael
Bohren said he was wor-
ried the girls would stop
receiving mental health
treatment and be released
into the community with
no supervision when they
exited the juvenile system
at age 18. Keeping them
in the adult system would
protect people longer, the
judge said.
“The real issue is what
happens in a few years,”
Bohren said. “They’ve
committed an offense that
was … frankly vicious.”
The two girls, both wear-
ing dresses and in shack-
les, said nothing during
the 45-minute proceeding.
One of them bounced in
her chair until a bailiff whis-
pered to her. She spent
the rest of the hearing
hunched over and glanc-
ing at the ceiling. The girls’
attorneys also said nothing
to the judge.
By wire sources.
St. Louis police arrest a protester outside the Thomas F. Eagleton Federal
Courthouse, Monday in St. Louis. Protesters have been arrested after
blocking the entrance to the St. Louis federal courthouse while calling for
more aggressive U.S. government response to what they call racist law
enforcement practices
.
JEFF ROBERSON/
AP PHOTO
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