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Groundhog Slay: Prosecutor seeks death penalty for Punxsutawney Phil - Fox News Posted: 22 Mar 2013 09:29 AM PDT Has Punxsutawney Phil given his last forecast? A prosecutor in Ohio is reportedly seeking the death penalty for the famous rodent who emerged from his home in Gobbler's Knob, Pa., on Feb. 2 and did not see his shadow, translating to an "early spring," according to his handlers. But Michael Gmoser, prosecuting attorney in Butler County, said Thursday that Phil's inaccurate forecast warrants capital punishment, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review reports. "Let's face it, Punxsutawney Phil has let us down," Gmoser said, tongue firmly in cheek, after filing the necessary court documents. "I awoke this morning to a snowstorm, low temperatures and howling wind." "Maybe it's time for a Phyllis instead." - Butler County (Ohio) Prosecutor Michael Gmoser Spring began Wednesday, but local forecasts in the Pittsburgh area and throughout Pennsylvania show a good chance of snow this weekend and into next week. "We in Butler County, like everyone in the nation, depend on Phil to give us a breath of spring in time," Gmoser said. "You know, Phil lives his life behind bars as it is. This is the only penalty available. Maybe it's time for a Phyllis instead." But Jeffrey Lundy, vice president of the Punxsutawney Ground Hog Club, said Gmoser will have a fight on his hands if he tries to arrest the famous groundhog. "He's going to have to go through 15 licensed hunters to get to Phil," said Lundy, referring to members of the club's inner circle."We'll find out how good of a prosecutor [Gmoser] is. If he doesn't know how to speak groundhog-ese, he'll never understand a word Phil says." Gmoser said a reprieve is possible. "There may be some mitigating circumstances I may not know about," he continued. "Phil may not know his rear from a hole in the ground. That might make a difference," said Gmoser, who decided to file the court papers to break the tension at the end of a hard day in the office. Lundy added: "There's a lot of things to get serious about. Groundhog Day is not one of them." The famous groundhog narrowly escaped death in the 1993 film "Groundhog Day," in which star Bill Murray, sentenced to relive the same day over and over until he became a better person, kidnapped Phil and drove off a cliff into a rock quarry with the terrified critter on his lap. However, the next day, Murray's character, Phil Connors, awoke unscathed - as did Punxsutawney Phil. |
Colorado shooting suspect dies in high-speed car chase with Texas police - The Guardian Posted: 22 Mar 2013 09:42 AM PDT Associated Press in Decatur, Texas A Colorado man who was under investigation regarding the death of the state's prisons chief died on Friday after a harrowing 100mph (160kph) car chase and shootout with police in Texas. His identity has not yet been officially confirmed by fingerprint analysis, but investigators believe he was Evan Spencer Ebel, 28, a Colorado parolee. Authorities are also trying to determine if the car Ebel drove was the one seen outside the home of Tom Clements, the prison official who was shot and killed when he answered his door on Tuesday evening. The Denver Post first reported Ebel's name, and that he had been in a white supremacist prison gang called the 211s. A federal law enforcement official confirmed his identity and gang affiliation to The Associated Press. The official was not authorized to speak publicly about the case and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity. Ebel is also a suspect in the killing of a Colorado pizza deliveryman who disappeared from work and whose body was found on Sunday evening. Ebel was not on the radar of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks extremist groups, but the center rates the 211s gang as one of the most vicious white supremacist groups operating in the nation's prisons, comparable to the Aryan Brotherhood of Texas. Founded in 1995 to protect white prisoners from attacks, it operates only in Colorado and has anywhere from between 200 to 1,000 members, SPLC senior fellow Mark Potok said on Friday. The gang has grown into a sophisticated criminal enterprise in which members are assigned military titles like "general" and extort money from fellow prisoners, regardless of race. Released members are expected to make money to support those still in prison, Potok said. He said members have to attack someone to get in and can only get out by dying. In 2005, 32 gang members were indicted for racketeering and the gang's founder, Benjamin Davis, was sentenced to more than 100 years in prison. The killing of Clements, 58, shocked his quiet neighborhood in Monument, a town of rolling hills north of Colorado Springs. Authorities wouldn't say if they thought the attack was related to his job; all Clements' recent public activities and cases have been scrutinized. The Texas car chase started when a sheriff's deputy in Montague County tried to pull over a Cadillac at around 11am local time on Thursday, authorities there said. They wouldn't say exactly why he was stopped, but called it routine. The driver opened fire on the deputy, wounding him, Wise County Sheriff David Walker said at an afternoon news conference in Decatur. He then fled south before crashing as he tried to elude his pursuers. After the crash, he got out of the vehicle, shooting at deputies and troopers who had joined the chase. He shot at Decatur Police Chief Rex Hoskins four times as the chief tried to set up a roadblock. The deputy who was shot was wearing a bulletproof vest and was at a Fort Worth hospital, authorities said. Officials had said he was not seriously injured but later said his condition was unknown. Legal records show Ebel was convicted of several crimes in Colorado dating back to 2003, including assaulting a prison guard in 2008. He was apparently paroled, but a Colorado Department of Corrections spokeswoman, Alison Morgan, said she could not release information on prisoners because of the ongoing investigation into Clements' death. Scott Robinson, a criminal defense attorney and media legal analyst, represented Ebel in 2003 and 2004. He said Ebel had been sentenced to a halfway house for a robbery charge in 2003 before he was accused in two additional robbery cases the following year that garnered prison sentences of three and eight years. |
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