DOSSIER J) 7- "-/ , --5 L

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

DOSSIER J) 7- I ; ~ ..l .. ' . • .. DOSSIER j) 7- "-/ ,--5 l KBBP THIS SHBBT ON TOP CONTROL AND DISCLOSUBB SBBET SUBJBC'l' r ·'1- Iq, ' it .m 7 n1 (( j, , d JIATB } I OUT DATE RELEASED TO BY AUTHORI:ZBD BY .RB'1'URN DATE t• 000001 Cover Page Page I of 1 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY NAVAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICES RECORDS MANAGEMENT DIVISION LAW ENFORCEMENT RECORDS Pecbge 10#: 0021376-001538 Name: BOORDA JEREMY MICHAEL AKA: 7 Social Security Number: ~ b l( 6) . (bl( l(Cl I Context: Victim Date of Birth: 11126/1 938 State of Birth: IN Country of Birth: US - United States of America Case Number: 16MAY96DCWA0278 Dossier: 1274556 OCH INDEX CODE: RECORD SERIES t: Date Closed: K:: 50 years 5580/4a(2)(c)2 09/04/1996 RECORD SERIES (FILE PLAN) ety Sva - Provide Security Sva - Lmw Enforcemenl - NCIS Crimlnlll lnveetiQlllMI . (Hll!Oric:ml) Precedent Rltlng, publlc/CongnlSllOMI lnteruta Criminal Investigative Reports Comments: HISTORICAL • Fltea located• NCIS headquattera, Room K0368, Shelf 5, Section A, Column D, Row 2 - Relention: PERMANENT - TIW!Sfef to NARA Iller 50 ~ 8 Polygraph Examination Conducted 8 Sexual Offender Registry Completed - 8 Finger Prints Submitted to Code 2483 8 Final Disposition Report to FBI CIS- I 0 Closed Status Q DupTitle O DupCCN Dildoauf11/Account*>lllty St•~ lfthi1 invesllg81ion ii diueniMed outllde NCIS, complete NCIS Form 00911G-80, and ensl#'e" Is nitained In the c:me tlle. IllllUlllH I 1 2 I 7 1 8 I certify ttrat this document has been reviewed and is complete. Typed Name of SSA DATE SIGNATURE Undessffied when aeparwted from lllllKl\ment uni-atherw!M indicated FOR OFFICIA~SE ONLY PnvacyAd Privacy Sentit!Ye . Any llUU99 or ull8Uthorized dildos re lllllY 1'1111ult In both aVil or alrnlnll peMllles 000002 http://rims.ncis.navy .miVprintcoversheet.aspx?recnum= l 2/718&print=yes 5/29/2012 359151 14: 1 2 19980508 !Neff. A #1851 OUT:0023-7H #1884 RETRANSMIT OF (23HQ'S OS 4027 DATED 06:39 05/ 11/98 ConiRoL@ MSQ 359151 ) U.S. NAVAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICE 1(/;J7~1J5-6io REPORT OF INVESTIGATION (SUPP} 04MAY98 DEATH (II) CONTROL: 16MAY96 - DCWA- 0278-7HRR/C V/BOORDA, JEREMY MICHAEL/ADM USN M/W/N010/TQb)(6), (b)(7)(C) [;26NOV38/SOUTH BEND, INDIANA SUPP : CHI 1'' OF' NAVAL PERATIONS COMMAND/NOW WASHINGTON, DC/ 00171 MADE AT /DCWA/WASHINGTON I DC1b)(6), (b)(?)(C) SPECIAL AGENT REFERENCE (A) NCISFO WASHI NGTON, DC ROI (CLOSED)/04SEP96 1. Since the submission of refer ence (A}, when contacted, Detective tb)(6), (b)(7)(C) I Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) , Washington, DC, advised MPD would not enerate a final Report of Investigation involving V/ BOORDA . b)(6), (b)(7)(C) tated he would only be duplic ating the NCIS Report of Inves iga ion previously p r ovided to MPD . kb)(6), ~ndicated V/BOORDA' s death investigation is closed. ~ b )(7)(0) 2. On 28APR98, evidence belonging to the U.S. Navy that was still being retained NC Wa in D wa returned to a command representative, b)(6), (b)(7)(C) by Participating Agen sn onncc an epor ing gen . The items included the follow : BM Selectric III Typewriter, one typewriter r i bbon a n d corrective tape, seized from V/BOORDA' s work space, and various miscellaneous handwritten notes, (work related), taken from V/BOORDA' s official government vehicle. All items, excluding the typewriter, were destroyed by command in the presence of RA . 3. This Supplemental Report of I nvestigation was submitted specifically to address the issues discussed above . This investigation remains closed. PARTICIPATING AGENT fb)(6), (b)(7)(C) I SA, NCISFO Washington, DC DISTRIBUTION NCISHQ: 0023 NCISFO: DCWA FOR OFFICI~ U~LY PAGE 1 115T ~ WARNING THLS DOCJ'\1L'fi IS TH[ rlOPEBD Of THf NAVA! Cl!M!'UI pm:mG&DyE SQYJO: ~ M" Y llE DISCLOSED Oi'LY TO l'f.ltSONS WHOSE OFFIClAL CX."TIES PEQl.laE " CCESS 000003 HERETO COi'TE.!>TS MAY NOT BE DISCLOSED TO THE PARTY1S1 CO'ICERl"ED WmlOVT SPECD'IC Al!TllORIZATION FROM TH EIOAVALCRIM~AL INVESTIQATIVE SERVICE. ·-- ' I CROOSlH //23/WA// U.S. NAVAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICE - . REPORT OF INVESTIGATION (CLOSED) 04SEP96 DEATH (II) CONTROL: 16MAY96-DCWA-0278-7HRR/C V/BOORDA, JEREMY MICHA ADM USN M/W/NOlO/T b)(6), (b)(7)(C) 26NOV38/SOUTH BEND, INDIANA SUPP: CHI PERATIONS COMMAND/NOW WASHINGTON, DC/00171 MADE AT/DCWA/WASHINGTON, DC ,~b~)(5=l.~(b~)(=?)~(C~)~~~~ SPECIAL AGENT REFERENCE (A) NCISFO WASHINGTON, DC ROI/09JUL96 case Summary 1. Since the submission of ref (a), V/BOORDA's treatment record for his emergency admission on 16May96, from Washin~t~o.....,_,.,,,...~c~~~~---. General Hospital (DCGH) was received from Detective b)(6), (b)(7)(C) Metropolitan Police Department, Washington, DC (MPD-..--. ~---c=c=o=r=-"'~n=g=---' to the OCGH Trauma Center-Initial Assessment Report, V/BOORDA' s vital signs were not responsive at the time of his arrival at DCGH. A copy of V/BOORDA's DCGH treatment record is exhibit (1). 2. On 01Aug96, a consultation Report from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathologf (AFIP) was received. The AFIP concurred \ with the Office of Chief Medical Examiner (OCME), District of Columbia, that the cause of V/BOORDA 's death was a contact wound to the chest and the manner of death as suicide. Details are contained in exhibit (2}. 3. on 16-17May96, as ~eported in ref (a), a death scene · examination was conducted at the East grounds of the residence of V/BOORDA, Quarters A/Tingey House, Washington Navy Yard (WNY), Washington, DC. Photographs of the death scene to include views of the recovered revolver were taken by MPDC, on 16May96. Death Scene photographs taken by MPDC personnel are provided as exhibit (3). A death scene examination photographic summary is provided as e:,(hibi t ( 4 '} • 4. As per ref (a), on 16May96< an examination of the study, (chamber 8}, of V/BOORDA's residence, was completed. Photograi;>hic coverage of the study to · t raphs of the two typewritten notes, one addresse to b)(6), (b)(7)(C) and "To M Sa · lors 11 , and a second addressed to b)(6), (b t?·J are contained in exhibi s . on 17May96, also reported in ref (a), an autopsy of V/BOORDA was conducted at the OCME, for the District of Columbia. Autopsy Photographs are provided as exhibit (6). 6. On 09Aug96, a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Special Search Techniques (SST} Team report regarding assistance rendered FOR OFFICIAL u:!r. ONLY PAGE 1 I WARNING TitlS DOCUMENT 1$ Tlif PROPfl'TY OF THE NAVAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE SEllV1CE CONUHTS MAY ac COSCl.OSCD OM.Y ro I'[-WH06l OfflCIAI. DUTIES REOUC ACCtse H(ft£TO. CONTTNISMAY NOT If ~()$(0 ro nt( "'"TYISI CONCtllHlO WITltOllT Sl'(CIFIC AUTHOIVATION FllOM THE NAVAi. C- IHV(SllGATI\/( $(11\/IC(. 000004 16MAY96-DCWA-0278-7HRR/ C 04SEP96 V/BOORDA, JEREMY MICHAEL/ ADM USN U.S. NAVAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICE on 17May96, was received. The report documents methods utilized via graphs and plots exactly where a spent round, suspected .38 caliber bullet, was located in the East lawn area near V/BOORDA's residence. A copy of the SST Team report is exhibit (7) . AGENT'S NOTE: Although page 1 of the FBI report states a spent bullet was successfull¥ located, paragraph 47 of ref (a}, exhibit (69} pertains, the MPDC Laboratory report concluded it (the bullet) had insufficient individual microscopic markings present to identify or eliminate it as havin~ been fired from the recovered revolver. Additionally, pages 6 and 7, (Plot I and Plot II), of the FBI report, state that a .38 caliber bullet was recovered. The aforementioned MPOC Laboratory report concluded the recovered bullet was either a . 38 Special or .357 Magnum bullet. 6 . On 26Au~96, a FBI Laboratory Report of Examination was received regardin nitric acid swabs taken from V BOORDA's hands and the hands of b)(6), (b)(?)(C) The FBI L~a~-o-r-a~o-r-y~c-o_n_c~u~-e~~-a~-s-w-a~-s-p~e-c~i-m_e_n_s~~~~~~~~e~~~ left hand of V/BOORDA contained barium, antimony, and lead. As a result, the FBI Laboratory reported certain swab specimens from V/BOOROA were found to contain chemical elements consistent with him having handled and discharged a firearm using his left hand or that hand otherwise being in close proximity to a fire~ it discharged. After e ><amini1t;;ai specimens taken from bX6l. it could not be determined if b)(6), was in an environment e gunshot primer residue was ent. The weapon seized from the scene, a .38 caliber Smith and Wesson revolver, Model 649, serial number AYV2602 was test-fired in the FBI Laboratory. Significant amounts of barium, antimony, and lead were deposited on the test­ shooter's hand(s) in all tests. Amplifying details are contained in exhibit (8), a FBI Laboratory Report of Examination. 7. After completion of all logical leads this investigation is closed. The MPDC was the lead investigative agency. Exhibits (2), (4), and (6), were previously provided to MPOC . When completed, the final MPDC Report concerning V/BOORDA's death will be contained in a Report of Investigation (SUPP}. EXHIBITS (1) A copy of V/BOORDA's DCGH treatment records/ 16May96 .•• (Copy all/less MPDC FBI) (2) IA: Receipt of AFIP Consultation Report/02Aug96 •.• (Copy all/less FBI) (3) IA: Death scene Examination Photographs/MPDC/undated ••• (Copy 0023 only) (4) IA: Death Scene Photographic summary/undated .•• (Copy 0023 Only) (5} IA: Photo, aphs of Study/undated .. • (Copy 0023 only) FOR OFFICIAL US ONLY WARNING PAGE 2 THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PllOPUnY OF THE NAVAL CRIMINAi.
Recommended publications
  • Performinq CPR on Admiral Boorda. I Made My Way to the Scene to See If I Could Provide Assistance by Way of CPR/First Aide
    - l.llA- ..... STATEMENT PLACE: :... """U , -;~ nr DATE: 'au.a yqg b)( 6), (b )(7)(C) ,_J_______ .1-. ____ ...v.;b :vi)(6Ri'JI,(h'ib )'7(7v;)(Ci"i);-----,...___ , make the following free and voluntary statement to_'\.._______ _,_ __________ _ whom I know to be a Special Agent of the United States Naval Criminal Investigative Service. I make this statement of my own free will and without any threats made to me or promises extended. I fully understand that this statement is given concerning my knowledge of the death of Admiral Jeremy Michael Boorda, USN. For the purpose of identification, I am a male, D inches tall, weighing approximately pounds. I have h~;,.. ~nd eyes. My social s ecurit v nnmhP.l'" ;ct and I was born on on or about 1330 hours, while I was sitting in my office at the Naval Historical Center, I observed from the window, a white male in civilian attire (suit) running out from Admiral Boorda's driveway in a full sprint. I then saw the same gentleman, with a white male Navy Lieutenant who I later learned was running back toward the driveway of the Admiral's resiaence. At that point, I notified a coworker, that something didn't look right. I proceeded to leave the Historical Center and head over to the Admiral's residence. I heard a commotion (men yelling) coming from the garden located in the Admiral's residence. I made my way back to the garden and observed performinq CPR on Admiral Boorda. I made my way to the scene to see if I could provide assistance by way of CPR/First Aide.
    [Show full text]
  • “Revolutionary Change at Evolutionary Speed”: Women and the United States Naval Academy
    A Global Forum for Naval Historical Scholarship International Journal of Naval History Volume 1 Number 1 April 2002 “Revolutionary Change at Evolutionary Speed”: Women and the United States Naval Academy H. Michael Gelfand On the evening of 4 May 1972, the Brigade of Midshipmen at the United States Naval Academy hurriedly left their mess hall.1 As they usually did every night, many midshipmen took pieces of fruit for evening snacks.2 But that night, instead of returning to their rooms or going to study, the midshipmen filed in to the Academy’s Field House. There, Superintendent James Calvert introduced a guest lecturer, feminist leader Gloria Steinem.3 Steinem approached the podium, and began her speech by remarking that “women have been much too docile and too law abiding for too long, but I think that era is about to end.”4 Once the laughter subsided, Steinem declared that “there are very few jobs that require a penis or a vagina, and all other jobs should be open to everyone.”5 Some midshipmen reacted to these comments, “tossing fruit in the air.”6 Others threw oranges onto the stage, but as one alumnus recalled, “we were just yanking her chain.”7 Steinem, in fact, enjoyed the “excitement and high spirits” of the midshipmen.8 She concluded by telling them that the Academy would be a different place in ten years; “some day,” she predicted, “there will be 50 percent female cadets here and some day the mystique will have changed.”9 Although her estimated percentage was off, Steinem was correct in her prophecy: by the early 1980s, women were indeed both midshipmen and Naval Academy graduates.
    [Show full text]
  • Act II, Signature Xvii - (1)
    We can also trace that peculiar social movement which led some factories, ships, restaurants, and households to clean up their backstages to such an extent that, like monks, Communists, or German aldermen, their guards are always up and there is no place where their front is down, while at the same time members of the audience become sufficiently entranced with the society's id to explore the places that had been cleaned up for them [Erving Goffman, The Presentation of Self (New York: Anchor Press, 1959), p. 247]. II — xvii — What Was That Good For? Coalition forces pour into Ossian. In Las Vegas, Roveretto Messimo ponders taking on a new client to pay his bills. A U.S. detachment breaks into the Impersonal Terrace while Fuald, deported back to Ossian, plots revenge by organizing the looting of the Hermitage. Charles, drugged by Ferguson’s alien soporifics, agrees to print an article exposing the eco– terrorist aims of the Founder’s League. In the 13th century, the fanatical inquisitor Conrad prepares to declare anathema against Fr. Anselm. ~ page 215 ~ This is the cover art for the single "War" by the artist Edwin Starr. The cover art copyright is believed to belong to the label, Gordy, or the graphic artist.* "War" Act II, Signature xvii - (1) *[Image & caption credit and following text courtesy of Wikipedia]: "War" is a soul song written by Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong for the Motown label in 1969. Whitfield first produced the song — a blatant anti-Vietnam War protest — with The Temptations as the original vocalists. After Motown began receiving repeated requests to release "War" as a single, Whitfield re-recorded the song with Edwin Starr as the vocalist, deciding to withhold the Temptations ' version so as not to alienate their more conservative fans.
    [Show full text]
  • Vietnam to the Gulf War by Fred Dupont
    STORIES OF WAR: Vietnam to the Gulf War By Fred DuPont Copyright 2017 1 DEDICATION To all of those who have given their lives so that we may live in freedom. 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This humble work could not have been possible without the assistance of many people: Peter “Stash” Guinta, USMC 67-69 who applied his expert wordsmithing skills to make it more readable. Eric Kenny who gathered the names of 9th Engineers as he traveled the country for 20 years as an insurance inspector for the State of Illinois. Mike Cummins, Sr. who compiled those names in a usable data base with the help of his son. Mike Cummins, Jr., who also hosts the website: 9thEngineers.com All of my fellow Marines and Shipmates who contributed their inputs to these stories. And especially my wife, Diane, for supporting me all these years. Like the bumper sticker says, “Navy Wife, The Toughest Job in The Navy.” 3 PREFACE Although I served with many brave men, I am no hero. While many around me were wounded or disabled, I was not. 9th Engineers Reunion Association meets once a year somewhere in the U.S. and serves to keep us in touch. This year I was privileged to have the reunion in my home town of St. Augustine. It was not until the 2008 reunion that I began to write this after finding most of the official records from Vietnam were destroyed when the battalion pulled out in 1970. Many phone calls, emails and interviews were necessary to ensure accuracy. Research about the Navy stories was far easier because every time we deployed a Cruise Book was printed replete with names and photos of all hands.
    [Show full text]
  • House-UT-97-7 Educational Assistance Act Is an Updated GI Bill
    'DOCUMENT RESUME ED 206 847 \ CE 02994 TITLE 1400--The Veterans' EducationalAssigt;;CeAct of 1961. Hearings before the Subcommitteeon ' Education, Training and Employment of theCommittee \.,on Veterans'' Affairs, House of Representatives, Ninety'Seventh Congress, first Session (March 17,19, 1981)'. Vol. I. INSTITUTTON \Congress of the U.S., Washington, D.C. House \Committee on Veterans' Affairs. REPORT NO House-UT-97-7 . ___PUE,DkTE -------81 NOTE I39p.; Not available in papercopy due to stall print. For a related doquientsee CE' 029 933. EDRS PRICE `t1L,,gp01 PlusPostage. PC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS ' Access to Education ArmedForces; *Federal Legislation;Financial Support; Hearings; Higher Education; Labor Turnover;*Military.Personvet; Military service; Postsecondary Education; Recruitment; *Student financial Aid; TuitionGrants; Veterans; *Vdterans Education IDENTIFIERS Congress 97th; *Veterans. Educational Assistance Act -:- 1981, . ABSTTECT- lr . This document is the first volume ofa transcript of hearings before a U.S. House of RepresentativesSubcommitt e of the Committee on Veterans' Affairs concerning 'proposedH.R.1400--the Veterans' Educational AssistanceAct of 1981. The Proposed Educational Assistance Act isan updated GI Bill, which wld provide the following educational benetits: 80 percentof college/tuition'up to $2500 plus k$250 -living allowancefor 36 months for, three years' military serviceor two'years' military service plus four 'ears in the active ReserVe or National Guard;a two-for-one savings plan for educatioAal benefits for career military personnel;an educational', leave-ofi-absenceprogram; and transferability of educational;benefits to a spouseor.schildren for career militarypersonnel with 16, or in %some cases 12, years of service. The" benefitsare structured with the goal of increasing military service enlistment'sof high s6hool graduates and retention of experienced middle-levelpersonnel.
    [Show full text]
  • A M E R I C A's a M E R I C
    AMERICA’S TEAM A Report on the Relationship Between the Media and the Military FRANK AUKOFER WILLIAM P.LAWRENCE Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Vice Admiral, U.S.Navy, Retired AMERICA’S TEAM AMERICA’S TEAM A Report on the Relationship Between the Media and the Military FRANK AUKOFER WILLIAM P.LAWRENCE Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Vice Admiral, U.S.Navy, Retired Foreword i Dedicated to the memory of Les Aspin 1938-1995 Secretary of Defense Chairman, House Armed Services Commmittee ii America’s Team: The Odd Couple America’s Team; The Odd Couple— A Report on the Relationship Between the Media and the Military By Frank Aukofer and William P. Lawrence © 1995. The Freedom Forum First Amendment Center 1207 18th Avenue South Nashville, TN 37212 website: http://www.fac.org Publication number: 95-FO4 First Printing: September 1995 Second Printing: October 1995 Foreword iii Contents Foreword . v Introduction . vii PART I: OVERVIEW 1. Executive Summary . 3 2. Coverage of the Persian Gulf War . 9 3. Information Security and Military Culture . 23 4. The Military and the News Media: A Survey . 29 5. The First Two Centuries . 35 6. Grenada to Desert Storm: The Relationship Sours . 43 7. Legal Aspects of the Military-Media Relationship . 47 PART II: FOR THE FUTURE 8. Recommendations . 53 9. The Independent Coverage Tier Concept . 57 10. Can the News Media Be Trusted? . 63 11. News Media Education: Smart and Smarter, or Dumb and Dumber? 71 12. Military Education: Changes in Attitude . 79 13. Conclusion: Tweedledum or Tweedledee? . 85 PART III: OTHER VIEWS 14. Interview Excerpts . 89 Appendix I: Survey Results and Methodology .
    [Show full text]
  • Proquest Dissertations
    "Time, tide, and formation wait for no one": Culturaland social change at the United States Naval Academy, 1949-2000 Item Type text; Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Gelfand, H. Michael Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 10/10/2021 07:31:17 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280180 INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overiaps. ProQuest Information and Leaming 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 USA 800-521-0600 "TIME, TIDE, AND FORMATION WATT FOR NO ONE": CULTURAL AND SOCIAL CHANGE AT THE UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY, 1949-2000 by H.
    [Show full text]
  • Anthraxgate Escalates As Bush-Clinton-Mossad
    August 2, 2008 AnthraxGate Escalates As Bush-Clinton-Mossad “TRUE COLORS” Assassination Teams Remain Loose on American Soil by Tom Heneghan http://images.huffingtonpost.com/gen/32515/thumbs/r-ANTHRAX-large.jpg MAILED ANTHRAX LETTERS Israeli MOSSAD agent and dual Israeli-U.S. citizen Dr. Philip M. Zackerie aka Dr. Zack http://judicial-inc.biz/the_an19.jpg It can now be reported that the late Fort Detrick, Maryland U.S. military scientist, Bruce E. Ivins, who was being treated for depression, was murdered at Frederick Memorial Hospital in Maryland by an Israeli MOSSAD assassination team that smuggled rat poison into the hospital and spiked his cranberry juice. Bruce E. Ivins, a biodefense researcher at Fort Detrick, MD AP Photo/Frederick News Post, Sam Yu http://ap.google.com/media/ALeqM5hBRcp34Bso0_pAVCjgan5S3vueHw?size=s Ivins and his attorney, Paul F. Kemp, were actually negotiating a plea bargain with elements of the U.S. Justice Department that would have led to the indictment of former Fort Detrick laboratory scientist, dual ISRAELI- U.S. citizen, Dr. Philip M. Zackerie aka Dr. Zack, for sending the anthrax letters that led to the death of numerous people post 9/11. It was Zackerie, who had supervised Ivins, was photographed handling the strain of lethal anthrax that wound up in the envelopes sent after 9/11. A technician at the U.S. Army's Fort Detrick biomedical research laboratory in Maryland opens a letter suspected of containing anthrax on Dec. 5, 2001 AFP/Getty Images http://a123.g.akamai.net/f/123/12465/1d/media.canada.com/5b6e4c44-1c52-4892-9c05-6cb84120e9ce/080108anthrax.jpg?size=l Again, the use of DNA splicing enabled Zackerie to turn vaccines into the actual lethal strains of anthrax.
    [Show full text]
  • Congressional Record—Senate S5299
    May 17, 1996 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — SENATE S5299 SECTION 1. MULTIYEAR CONTRACTING AUTHOR- will occur on Monday; however, Sen- It is because of people like George ITY FOR THE C–17 AIRCRAFT PRO- ators are encouraged to offer their Courtovich that we are here today, Mr. GRAM. amendments prior to Tuesday. It is the President. The hard working people of (a) MULTIYEAR CONTRACTS AUTHORIZED.— The Secretary of the Air Force may, pursu- intention of the leadership to complete this country who contribute to their ant to section 2306b of title 10, United States action on the budget on Tuesday, and community, raise their families, help Code (except as provided in subsection numerous rollcall votes are expected to their neighbors, make this country (b)(1)), enter into one or more multiyear con- occur that day. what it is today. It is easy to find rea- tracts for the procurement of not more than The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without sons why one cannot participate in a total of 80 C–17 aircraft. objection, it is so ordered. their community or volunteer to help (b) CONTRACT PERIOD.—(1) Notwithstanding f others. It is much easier than it is to section 2306(b)(k) of title 10, United States become active in such endeavors. Code, the period covered by a contract en- ORDER FOR ADJOURNMENT George did not take the easy route and tered into on a multiyear basis under the au- Mr. LOTT. Mr. President, if there is thority of subsection (a) may exceed five for that he left this world as an exam- years, but may not exceed seven years.
    [Show full text]
  • SENATE-Monday, May 2, 1994
    May 2, 1994 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 8905 SENATE-Monday, May 2, 1994 The Senate met at 3 p.m., and was U.S. SENATE, the Senate floor, on December 6 I wrote called to order by the Honorable PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE, to the Director, John Magaw, of BATF, DIANNE FEINSTEIN, a Senator from the Washington, DC, May 2, 1994. and asked him to analyze your legisla­ State of California. To the Senate: tion to see if any other firearms might Under the provisions of rule I, section 3, of The PRESIDING OFFICER. Today's the Standing Rules of the Senate, I hereby be banned by that legislation. prayer will be offered by guest Chap­ appoint the Honorable DIANNE FEINSTEIN, a He analyzed it, and in a letter of De­ lain Richard C. Halverson, Jr. Senator from the State of California, to per­ cember 20, returned to me a listing of form the duties of the Chair. some 29 additional weapons that he felt PRAYER ROBERT C. BYRD, fall under your legislation and could The guest chaplain, Richard C. Hal­ President pro tempore. be, and more than likely would be, verson, Jr., offered the following Mrs. FEINSTEIN thereupon assumed banned based on their writing of rule prayer: the chair as Acting President pro tem­ and regulation and the interpretation As we go to pray, it would be fitting pore. of your legislation. to remember that at this very moment, I ask unanimous consent that that Nelson Mandela, the new President of letter and that list be made a part of the African National Congress, is ad­ RESERVATION OF LEADER TIME the RECORD.
    [Show full text]
  • 2 15 39 55 73 98 W Numerze 10 30 46 62 86
    Dwumiesięcznik Drodzy Czytelnicy Vol. XIX, Nr 3/2012 (113) ISSN‑1231‑014X, Indeks 386138 Oddaję w Wasze ręce kolejny, tym razem letni numer naszego magazynu. Jak zwykle staraliśmy się zawrzeć w nim ciekawe i niepublikowane materiały oraz fo- Redaktor naczelny tografie. Jarosław Malinowski Jednocześnie pragnę poinformować, że z dniem 1 lipca ukaże się w sprzeda- ży 41 numer specjalny „Z dziejów niszczycieli”. Na 160 stronach znajdziecie kil- Kolegium redakcyjne kanaście artykułów o tej klasie jednostek, od ich powstania do dnia dzisiejszego. Rafał Ciechanowski, Michał Jarczyk, Maciej S. Sobański Można go zamawiać w przedpłacie z racji jego ograniczonego nakładu. Życzę miłej lektury. Współpracownicy w kraju Jarosław Malinowski Andrzej S. Bartelski, Jan Bartelski, Stanisław Biela, Jarosław Cichy, Andrzej Danilewicz, Józef Wiesław Dyskant, W NUMERZE Maciej K. Franz, Jarosław Jastrzębski, Rafał Mariusz Kaczmarek, Jerzy Lewandowski, Oskar Myszor, Jan Tymiński Andrzej Nitka, Piotr Nykiel, Wojny morskie na Bałtyku w XIV i XV wieku 2 Jarosław Palasek, Jan Radziemski, w czasach świetności Hanzy Kazimierz Zygadło Współpracownicy zagraniczni BELGIA Krzysztof Krzeszowiak Leo van Ginderen 10 Małe torpedowce typu S (Schichau) CZECHY Division(s)torpedoboot, część II Ota Janeček FRANCJA Gérard Garier, Jean Guiglini Dmitrij Kisieliow HISZPANIA 15 Alejandro Anca Alamillo Krążownik pancernopokładowy „Jiyuan” LITWA Aleksandr Mitrofanov NIEMCY Richard Dybko, Hartmut Ehlers, Michał Jarczyk, Maciej S. Sobański Jürgen Eichardt, Christoph Fatz, 30 Zvonimir Freivogel,
    [Show full text]
  • Encyclopedia of Rape
    Encyclopedia of Rape MERRIL D. SMITH Editor GREENWOOD PRESS Encyclopedia of Rape Advisory Board Julie Campbell-Ruggaard Psychologist, private practice Oxford, Ohio Elizabeth Reis Department of Women’s and Gender Studies University of Oregon, Eugene Rickie Solinger Independent Scholar Lake Mohonk, New York Encyclopedia of Rape Edited by MERRIL D. SMITH GREENWOOD PRESS Westport, Connecticut • London Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Encyclopedia of rape / edited by Merril D. Smith. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0–313–32687–8 (alk. paper) 1. Rape—encyclopedias. I. Smith, Merril D., 1956– HV6558.E53 2004 362.883'03—dc22 2004044213 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright ᭧ 2004 by Merril D. Smith All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2004044213 ISBN: 0–313–32687–8 First published in 2004 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. www.greenwood.com Printed in the United States of America TM The paper used in this book complies with the Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National Information Standards Organization (Z39.48–1984). 10987654321 Contents Preface vii Introduction ix Chronology of Selected Rape-Related Events xiii Alphabetical List of Entries xix Topical List of Entries xxiii The Encyclopedia 1 Resource Guide 273 Index 277 About the Editor and Contributors 295 Preface This book takes a new approach to the examination and understanding of an old problem: rape. The subject of rape encompasses much more than the actual physical act.
    [Show full text]