Sunday, June 30, 2013

Malaysia Airlines resumes daily Dubai service - Breaking Travel News

Malaysia Airlines will be adding Dubai back to its network effective 5 August 2013. The Kuala Lumpur-Dubai return service will be mounted daily via MH162 and MH163 using the Boeing 777-200 aircraft that offers a total capacity of 282 seats in each flight, equivalent to 3,948 seats weekly.

In conjunction with the re-introduction of service, the national carrier is offering super attractive promotional fares that start from only RM1,999 for an all-inclusive Economy class return travel. Business class starts from as low as RM5,999 for an all-inclusive return journey. Bookings start from 26 June 2013 till 15 July 2013 for the travel period of 5 August 2013 till 31 March 2014.

Beginning 5 August 2013, flight MH162 will depart Kuala Lumpur daily at 11.30pm to arrive at Dubai at 2.20am the next day. The return flight MH163 departs Dubai at 4.10am to arrive at Kuala Lumpur at 3.25pm.

Malaysia Airlines Group Chief Executive Officer, Ahmad Jauhari Yahya said, ?Dubai was one of the routes that were suspended in our route rationalisation exercise in January 2012. We continuously monitor market demand, and are happy to be able to add back Dubai into Malaysia Airlines network to extend our reach and strengthen our offering to customers?, he said.

Dubai is a tourism, trade and logistics hub which has earned itself the reputation as being the gateway between the east and the west. Home to just over 2 million people of more than 200 nationalities, Dubai is one of the most cosmopolitan cities in the world. With world-class shopping and leisure facilities, Dubai is a popular destination for business and leisure.?

Malaysia Airlines has been steadily growing its reach and capacity in the past year. The introduction of the A380 fleet in July 2012 now sees the new aircraft put on thick routes to London, Paris and Hong Kong.

Kathmandu was the airline?s new destination introduced in September 2012, first 3 times weekly, then increased to 5 times weekly, and now daily following strong market demand.

Malaysia Airlines regional footprint has also been deepened with increased frequencies, daily and weekly, to key business and leisure cities around Asia.?

In addition, Malaysia Airlines network is expanded through its various code share agreements and its membership in the oneworld airline alliance since February 2013.?

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Source: http://www.breakingtravelnews.com/news/article/malaysia-airlines-resumes-daily-dubai-service/

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Paramount announces plans for 'Terminator' trilogy

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The "Terminator" is coming back.

Paramount announced Thursday that it is rebooting the "Terminator" franchise and planning for a new trilogy of films, but it's keeping mum on whether Arnold Schwarzenegger would play a role.

Schwarzenegger starred as the title character in the original 1984 movie. It spawned a trilogy that earned more than $1 billion at the box office worldwide.

Paramount says it will release the new "Terminator" in July 2015.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/paramount-announces-plans-terminator-trilogy-000841755.html

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Commercial Real Estate News 6-25-13 | Arizona Builders Exchange

Sale Transactions

CRE 11. ?The pair of buildings totaling 232KSF, 25500 and 25600 N. NorTerra Pkwy., Phoenix, have sold for $54.5M ($234/SF) to Griffin Capital Essential Asset REIT, El Segundo, Calif. San Antonio, Tex.-based insurance provider USAA was the seller using Cushman & Wakefield. The buildings, 116KSF each, were developed by USAA and leased for ten years to Cigna Medical Group. Griffin just purchased the Avnet headquarters in Chandler (AZBEX, June 4). USAA has 578 acres for business park expansion.

2. ?A 432-unit apartment complex in the Arcadia neighborhood, Arcadia Cove, 2252 N. 44th St., Phoenix, has sold for $41M ($94K/unit). Bascom Arizona Ventures LLC, Irvine, Calif., is the new owner of the project on the corner of Oak Street. BRE Properties Inc., San Francisco, was the seller. Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services was broker on the deal.

3. ?In another deal with a San Francisco-based investor, The Reliant Group paid $30M ($177K/unit) for Art? Senior Living. The 170-unit senior housing project at 11415 N. 114th St. at Via Linda was sold by Avenir Group of Cos., Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Senior Lifestyle Corp., Chicago, is the new property manager.

4. ?Wasatch Property Management, Logan, Utah, sold the Painted Trails Apartments, 4255 E. Pecos Rd., Gilbert, for $25.7M ($131/unit). The 196-unit, Class A community was sold to RK Properties?its first East Valley acquisition. RK?s other market properties are in the Northwest Valley. Wasatch has no plans to sell its other area communities. ORION Investment Real Estate was the broker for both sides. Painted Trails is in the Power Ranch master planned community and residents have amenity privileges.

5. ??Mercado at Scottsdale Ranch was picked up by Whitestone REIT for $21.3M ($179/SF). The shopping complex, Via Linda and Mountain View Road, is anchored by AJ?s Fine Foods and Walgreens. Whitestone has nine other shopping centers in the Valley totaling 1.4MSF.

6. ?Larkspur, Calif.-based Aukum Management LLC paid $20.6M ($123K/unit) to buy the 168-unit Scottsdale Meadows apartments, 10888 N. 70th St., Scottsdale. The seller was Equity Residential Trust, Chicago. Apartment Realty Advisors was the broker on the deal for both sides.

7. ?After its $20.5M ($250/SF) sale, buyer Talia Jevan Properties, also in Vancouver, appointed Plaza Companies as the new manager of Lifeprint Health Center, 2044 N. 27th Ave., Phoenix. The 82KSF, 5-story MOB and 4-level parking garage is anchored by United Health Care and Central Garden & Pet Company. Winthrop Financial Associates, Boston, Mass., was the seller. Colliers International was broker for the buyer; Cassidy Turley represented the seller.

8. ?Cassidy Turley closed three office and industrial sales totaling $20.5M, reports AZRE:

  • Warehouse, Glen Harbor Blvd., Glendale; $4.5M ($57/SF, 79KSF). Barron Lighting Group, Glendale, buyer; Bixby Land Company, Irvine, Calif., seller.
  • Surprise Commerce Center II, 13128-13200 W. Foxfire Dr., Surprise; $6.8M ($51/SF, 132KSF). Presson Corporation, Phoenix, buyer; Dexia Real Estate Capital Markets, Issquah, Wash., seller.
  • Ford Motor Credit Building, 1355 S. Clearview Ave., Mesa; $3.7M ($65/SF). Larch Street Capital Management Corporation, Vancouver, buyer; Bixby Land Company, Irvine, seller.

CRE 29. ?Mesa?s?Lucera Apartments, 2940 E. Broadway Rd., sold for $11.5M ($60K/unit) to?New City Financial Group, Vancouver, British Columbia. The community has 192 units and was 93 percent occupied when sold. The apartment has 1- to 3-bedroom units and recreation amenities.?Colliers International?was the broker for both sides, the seller was?Principal Real Estate Investors.

10. ?In its roundup of CRE activity in Pima County, the Arizona Daily Star reported on $15.6M in sales and Inside Tucson Business caught a couple of others worth close to $5M. The largest deals included:

  • Oracle Village Plaza, 6251 and 6261 N. Oracle Rd., Tucson; $2.5M. Volk Company Commercial Real estate represented the buyer, Vidin Metelov. Horvath Family Limited Partnership III LLP and ABT Inc. were the sellers.
  • A flip-deal with Arizona Equity II LLC, Tucson, saw the company buy two undeveloped parcels in Santa Rita Ranch, Sahuarita and Houghton roads, from P.I. Holdings No. 4 Inc., Phoenix for $850K and then reselling one of the parcels to Santa Rita Ranch III LLP, New York City, for $1.7M.
  • 10129 E. Speedway Blvd., Tucson; $1.7M. Capara LLC, Tucson, buyer; Mise-en Scene Entertainment LLC, Tucson, seller.
  • 12350 N. Vistoso Park Rd., Tucson; $1.7M. IP Building LLC, Tucson, buyer; VWI Vistoso Development LLC, Tucson, seller.
  • The Tucson business publication reports that Lennar Homes paid a group of sellers $3M ($28K/lot) for 102 finished lots, Camino Verde and Los Reales Road, Tucson. Miamonte Holdings, Miamonte Homes and Borderland Star Valley, all Tucson, were the sellers; Land Advisors was their broker.
  • North of Oro Valley in Pinal County, the magazine says Richmond America Homes picked up another 125 residential lots in Eagle Crest V?33 finished, the remainder platted?for $1.9M ($15K/lot). Cypress Real Estate Advisors, Austin, Tex., was the seller.

11. ?Toll Brothers, Inc. is joining the residential land rush with $13.1M in zombie subdivision acquisition. In the far North Valley, the builder acquired a $3.7M ($247K/acre; $129K/lot) parcel of 15 acres in Carefree. In the Southeast Valley, it spent $9.4M ($118K/acre; $84K/lot) in Queen Creek. The 29-home Carefree project is located in the Reserve at Tranquil Trail community, Cave Creek Road and Tranquil Trail will feature homes in the neighborhood of $1M. The recession-abandoned 112 lot Vaquero Estates, Recker and Ocotillo roads, is graded and entitled. Cassidy-Turley brokered the Carefree deal with the receiver. In that community, there are 27 individually-owned lots remaining. Vaquero is part of Dorado Estates in the Southeast Valley.

12. ?Dunlap Square Apartments, 19th and Dunlap avenues, Phoenix, is slated to be one of the first apartments on the northwest light rail extension to be purchased and upgraded. Weidner Apartment Homes, the buyer, will use its in-house design team and GC, Complete Construction, to make improvements at Dunlap and La Palma, the complex it owns across the street. No budgets have been set, but the company spends the summer remodeling units in cold-weather climes. It plans to start construction in Phoenix during the winter 2013-14. ?The 192 unit complex remodel reflects similar improvements to existing properties along the Mesa light rail extension in the East Valley. The Weidner Class B complex cost $8.8M ($46K/unit) from a private party in Sacramento, Calif. The nearly 30-year old Class B complex is within walking distance of a light rail station. ORION Multifamily Group worked both sides of the deal.

CRE 313. ?Walgreens, 9800 S. Estrella Pkwy., Goodyear, sold to a private investor for $9.094M ($613/SF). The 15KSF building is fully occupied with Arizona?s first of Walgreen?s new ?Wellness Experience? prototype.?Marcus & Millichap?was the broker for both sides. The building is Walgreen?s second LEED-certified building in the U.S. A private LLC was the seller.

14. ?Renue of Orange LLC plans to start remodeling Campus Walk and Campus View apartments near Terrace Road and Orange Street, Tempe. The company paid $5.6M to pick up two circa-1968 student housing complexes near ASU. The company considered the older units a good investment and plan to upgrade them to be competitive with the new high-rise units currently under construction in the area. Colliers International represented buyer and seller, Steve Heimler, in the deal.

Lease Transactions

15. ? A collection of a half dozen leases locked up 80KSF at the Avondale Commerce Center, a 13-building industrial project, 1050 and 1250 N. El Mirage Rd. Two tenants, OmniSolv Inc. and Amware Fulfillment of AZ, LLC, signed lease expansions. ServPro of Litchfield, Miner Southwest, LLC, Hawk Fitness LLC and Joel Grimes Photography took on new spaces. Cassidy Turley represented owner iStar Financial in these deals?iStar also closed a major lease at its Westgate property (see below)

16. ?Burlington, a national chain, is opening a 76KSF outlet in Tucson. The second area store for the retailer, is in the Santa Cruz Plaza, 4640 S. 16th Ave. The new location will hire about 90 people, and becomes the eighth Burlington store in Arizona.

17. ?Allred Airport Center locked down a 36KSF lease with ClearCall Solutions, a national sales and marketing company, 2150 E. Germann Rd., Chandler. CBRE was the broker for both sides at the 225-acre mixed-use commercial complex near Chandler Municipal Airport. The office will open with more than 200 employees. ClearCall is relocating from a small office in Gilbert to accommodate a tripling of its space.

18. ?Glendale and iStar Financial Inc. scored a goal in the Westgate Entertainment District with a 32.8KSF office lease for Terminix International Co. The Memphis-based corporation inked a deal with the district?s new owner to take over an entire floor in the complex for its 300-worker office. This represents the first big deal following the start of iStar?s $1M upgrade project (AZBEX, April 2). The Glendale selection came after site considerations in Denver and Salt Lake City. CBRE handled the lease for the landlord; Newmark Grubb Knight Frank was broker for Terminix. Permits are under review, and a fall move-in is expected.

19. ?Michael?s is moving from Foothills Park Place into the Ahwatukee Foothills Towne Center. The craft store is expanding into 27KSF, an increase for its new concept design. The space was not available in the old location. Michael?s will co-anchor the center next to a new Sprouts. DDR is the manager for Ahwatukee Foothills. Zell Commercial Real Estate manages the Foothills.

20. ?AZ Air Time Tucson LLC leased 26KSF, 3931 W. Costco Dr., Tucson, for an indoor trampoline park. Volk Company Commercial Real Estate represented the landlord, D.D. Dunlap Trust and Dorothy Dunlap Trust. Realty One Group represented the tenant.

21. ??Dollar Tree is moving into a 12KSF store at San Tan Gateway North shopping center, Loop 202 and Arizona Ave., Chandler. The store is reported open in its setting next to Walmart and 24 Hour Fitness. SRS Real Estate Partners was the broker on the deal for the retailer.

Closures and Foreclosures

CRE 422. ?VA officials are looking at two options to keep open the Buckeye medical clinic it plans to close. The administration could either reopen bids to find a provider or lease a building to be staffed by the VA. If the clinic closes, West Valley residents would have to travel 35 to 50 miles to the nearest clinic in Surprise. About 100 veterans attended a hearing to oppose the planned closure. The clinic serves about 400 vets. A previous attempt to turn the facility over to a private provider elicited no bids in 2012.

23. ?Petrus Partners, Ltd., New York City, has defaulted on a $54M loan applied to the Phoenix Corporate Center, 3003 N. Central Ave. The 445KSF high rise was 1960s tallest building and underwent several renovations over the years. Fennimore Craig had been the anchor tenant in the building, but relocated in February to 24th Street and Camelback Road, Phoenix. The auction is set for September 18.

24. ?The Passages of Tucson, Vail, is in default for a second time on a $7M loan. The mixed-use complex, I-10 and Sonoita Highway were set for sale in 2010, but fought off the effort. Hoffman Development, Inc., Burnsville, Minn. is the trustee for the hoped-for 6.2MSF of retail and commercial space, plus hotels, MOB, and 2,400 residential units. The planned development was supposed to start in 2009, but no construction has started at the site.

25. ?A unique combination saved the Moon Valley Golf Course from a condo development threat by its largest creditor. A Hong Kong-based investor, C-Bons Group, put up $4.5M and golf course neighbors raised $100K more than the $1.5M they needed to save the property from development. The bankruptcy court approved the reorganization, placing a $6M value on the course property. Largest creditor Dimension Financial Realty Investments Inc. is appealing the decision. It wanted to take the land and sell off a portion for development. In the interim, the reorganization plan is in effect and Moon Valley is paying off creditors.

26. ?Old Navy Ahwatukee is moving to the Phoenix Premium Outlets on the Gila River Indian Community. The retailer is closing at Ahwatukee Foothills Towne Center today and will open in the premium outlet mall in the next month.

Source: http://azbex.com/commercial-real-estate-news-12/

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

AP IMPACT: Bites derided as unreliable in court

At least 24 men convicted or charged with murder or rape based on bite marks on the flesh of victims have been exonerated since 2000, many after spending more than a decade in prison. Now a judge's ruling later this month in New York could help end the practice for good.

A small, mostly ungoverned group of dentists carry out bite mark analysis and their findings are often key evidence in prosecutions, even though there is no scientific proof that teeth can be matched definitively to a bite into human skin.

DNA has outstripped the usefulness of bite mark analysis in many cases: The FBI doesn't use it and the American Dental Association does not recognize it.

"Bite mark evidence is the poster child of unreliable forensic science," said Chris Fabricant, director of strategic litigation at the New York-based Innocence Project, which helps wrongfully convicted inmates win freedom through DNA testing.

Supporters of the method, which involves comparing the teeth of possible suspects to bite mark patterns on victims, argue it has helped convict child murderers and other notorious criminals, including serial killer Ted Bundy. They say problems that have arisen are not about the method, but about the qualifications of those testifying, who can earn as much as $5,000 a case.

"The problem lies in the analyst or the bias," said Dr. Frank Wright, a forensic dentist in Cincinnati. "So if the analyst is ... not properly trained or introduces bias into their exam, sure, it's going to be polluted, just like any other scientific investigation. It doesn't mean bite mark evidence is bad."

The Associated Press reviewed decades of court records, archives, news reports and filings by the Innocence Project in order to compile the most comprehensive count to date of those exonerated after being convicted or charged based on bite mark evidence. Two dozen forensic scientists and other experts were interviewed, including some who had never before spoken to a reporter about their work.

The AP analysis found that at least two dozen men had been exonerated since 2000, mostly as a result of DNA testing. Many had spent years in prison, including on death row, and one man was behind bars for more than 23 years. The count included at least six men arrested on bite mark evidence who were freed as they awaited trial.

Two court cases this month are helping to bring the debate over the issue to a head. One involves a 63-year-old California man who is serving a life term for killing his wife, even though the forensic dentist who testified against him has reversed his opinion.

In the second, a New York City judge overseeing a murder case is expected to decide whether bite mark analysis can be admitted as evidence, a ruling critics say could kick it out of courtrooms for good.

Some notable cases of faulty bite mark analysis include:

? Two men convicted of raping and killing two 3-year-old girls in separate Mississippi crimes in 1992 and 1995. Marks on their bodies were later determined to have come from crawfish and insects.

? A New Mexico man imprisoned in the 1989 rape and murder of his stepdaughter, who was found with a possible bite mark on her neck and sperm on her body. It was later determined that the stepfather had a medical condition that prevented him from producing sperm.

? Ray Krone, the so-called "Snaggletooth Killer," who was convicted in 1992 and again in 1996 after winning a new trial in the murder of a Phoenix bartender found naked and stabbed in the men's restroom of the bar where she worked. Krone spent 10 years in prison, three on death row.

Raymond Rawson, a Las Vegas forensic dentist, testified at both trials that bite marks on the bartender could only have come from Krone, evidence that proved critical in convicting him. At his second trial, three top forensic dentists testified for the defense that Krone couldn't have made the bite mark, but the jury didn't give their findings much weight and again found him guilty.

In 2002, DNA testing matched a different man, and Krone was released.

Rawson, like a handful of other forensic dentists implicated in faulty testimony connected to high-profile exonerations, remains on the American Board of Forensic Odontology, the only entity that certifies and oversees bite mark analysts. Now retired, he didn't return messages left at a number listed for him in Las Vegas.

Rawson has never publicly acknowledged making a mistake, nor has he apologized to Krone, who described sitting helplessly in court listening to the dentist identify him as the killer.

"You're dumbfounded," Krone said in a telephone interview from his home in Newport, Tenn. "There's one person that knows for sure and that was me. And he's so pompously, so arrogantly and so confidently stating that, beyond a shadow of doubt, he's positive it was my teeth. It was so ridiculous."

The history of bite mark analysis began in 1954 with a piece of cheese in small-town Texas. A dentist testified that a bite mark in the cheese, left behind in a grocery store that had been robbed, matched the teeth of a drunken man found with 13 stolen silver dollars. The man was convicted.

The first court case involving a bite mark on a person didn't come until two decades later, in 1974, also in Texas. Two dentists testified that a man's teeth matched a bite mark on a murder victim. Although the defense attorney fought the admissibility of the evidence, a court ruled that it should be allowed because it had been used in 1954.

Bite mark analysis hit the big time at Bundy's 1979 Florida trial.

On the night Bundy went on a killing spree that left two young women dead and three others seriously wounded, he savagely bit one of the murder victims, Lisa Levy. A Florida forensic dentist, Dr. Richard Souviron, testified at Bundy's murder trial that his unusual, mangled teeth were a match.

Bundy was found guilty and executed. The bite marks were considered the key piece of physical evidence against him.

That nationally televised case and dozens more in the 1980s and 1990s made bite mark evidence look like infallible, cutting-edge science, and courtrooms accepted it with little debate.

Then came DNA testing. Beginning in the early 2000s, new evidence set free men serving prison time or awaiting the death penalty largely because of bite mark testimony that later proved faulty.

At the core of critics' arguments is that science hasn't shown it's possible to match a bite mark to a single person's teeth or even that human skin can accurately record a bite mark.

Fabricant, of the Innocence Project, said what's most troubling about bite mark evidence is how powerful it can be for jurors.

"It's very inflammatory," he said. "What could be more grotesque than biting someone amid a murder or a rape hard enough to leave an injury? It's highly prejudicial, and its probative value is completely unknown."

Fabricant and other defense attorneys are fighting to get bite mark analysis thrown out of courtrooms, most recently focusing their efforts on the New York City case.

It involves the death of 33-year-old Kristine Yitref, whose beaten and strangled body was found wrapped in garbage bags under a bed in a hotel near Times Square in 2007. A forensic dentist concluded a mark on her body matched the teeth of Clarence Brian Dean, a 41-year-old fugitive sex offender from Alabama, who is awaiting trial on a murder charge.

Dean told police he killed Yitref in self-defense, saying she and another man attacked him in a robbery attempt after he agreed to pay her for sex; no other man was found.

Dean's defense attorneys have challenged the prosecution's effort to admit the bite mark evidence, and a judge is expected to issue a ruling as early as mid-June ? a pivotal step critics hope could eventually help lead to a ban on such evidence.

A dayslong hearing last year over the scientific validity of bite marks went to the heart of the debate.

"The issue is not that bite mark analysis is invalid, but that bite mark examiners are not properly vetted," Dr. David Senn, of San Antonio, testified at the hearing.

Another case gaining attention is that of William Joseph Richards, convicted in 1997 of killing his wife, Pam, in San Bernardino, Calif., and sentenced to life in prison.

Pam Richards had been strangled and beaten with rocks, her skull crushed by a cinder block, and her body left lying in the dirt in front of their home, naked from the waist down.

Dr. Norman Sperber, a well-respected forensic dentist, testified that a crescent-shaped wound on her body corresponded with an extremely rare abnormality in William Richards' teeth.

But at a 2009 hearing seeking Richards' freedom, Sperber recanted his testimony, saying that it was scientifically inaccurate, that he no longer was sure the wound was a bite mark, and that even if it was, Richards could not have made it.

Shortly after that, a judge tossed out Richards' conviction and declared him innocent. The prosecution appealed and the case went all the way to the California Supreme Court, which ruled in December that Richards had failed to prove his innocence, even though the bite mark evidence had been discredited. In a 4-3 decision, the court said forensic evidence, even if later recanted, can be deemed false only in very narrow circumstances and Richards did not meet that high bar.

Since April 27, Richards' attorneys have been on what they dubbed a two-month "innocence march" from San Diego to the state capital, Sacramento, to deliver a request for clemency to Gov. Jerry Brown and raise awareness about wrongful convictions. They are expected to arrive later this month.

The American Board of Forensic Odontology recently got a request from Richards' attorneys, who are affiliated with the Innocence Project, for a written opinion on the shoddy bite mark evidence used against him. The board declined.

Only about 100 forensic dentists are certified by the odontology board, and just a fraction are actively analyzing and comparing bite marks. Certification requires no proficiency tests. The board requires a dentist to have been the lead investigator and to have testified in one current bite mark case and to analyze six past cases on file ? a system criticized by defense attorneys because it requires testimony before certification.

Testifying can earn a forensic dentist $1,500 to $5,000 per case, though most testify in only a few a year. The consequences for being wrong are almost nonexistent. Many lawsuits against forensic dentists employed by counties and medical examiner's offices have been thrown out because as government officials, they're largely immune from liability.

Only one member of the American Board of Forensic Odontology has ever been suspended, none has ever been decertified, and some dentists still on the board have been involved in some of the most high-profile and egregious exonerations on record.

Even Dr. Michael West, whose testimony is considered pivotal in the wrongful convictions or imprisonment of at least four men, was not thrown off the board. West was suspended and ended up stepping down.

Among his cases were the separate rapes and murders of the two 3-year-old girls in Mississippi, where West testified that two men later exonerated by DNA evidence were responsible for what he said were bite marks on their bodies. The marks later turned out to be from crawfish and insects, and a different man's DNA matched both cases.

West now says DNA has made bite mark analysis almost obsolete.

"People love to have a black-and-white, and it's not black and white," said West, of Hattiesburg, Miss., where he has a dental practice but no longer works on bite mark cases. "I thought it was extremely accurate, but other cases have proven it's not."

Levon Brooks, convicted of killing one of the girls, spent 16 years in prison. The other, Kennedy Brewer, was behind bars for 13 years, many of them on death row.

West defended his testimony, saying he never testified that Brooks and Brewer were the killers, only that they bit the children, and that he's not responsible for juries who found them guilty.

Other dentists involved in exonerations have been allowed to remain on the board as long as they don't handle more bite mark cases, said Wright, the Cincinnati forensic dentist.

"The ABFO has had some internal issues as far as not really policing our own," he said.

Wright and other forensic dentists have been working to develop guidelines to help avert problems of the past while retaining bite mark analysis in the courtroom.

Their efforts include a flow chart to help forensic dentists determine whether bite mark analysis is even appropriate for a given case. Wright also is working on developing a proficiency test that would be required for recertification every five years.

An internal debate over the future of the practice was laid bare at a conference in Washington in February, when scores of dentists ? many specializing in bite mark analysis ? attended days of lectures and panel discussions. The field's harshest critics also were there, leading to heated discussions about the method's limitations and strengths.

Dr. Gregory Golden, a forensic dentist and president of the odontology board, acknowledged that flawed testimony has led to the "ruination of several innocent people's lives" but said the field was entering a "new era" of accountability.

Souviron, who testified against Bundy in 1979 and is one of the founding fathers of bite mark analysis in the U.S., argued there's a "real need for bite marks in our criminal justice system."

In an interview with the AP, Souviron compared the testimony of well-trained bite mark analysts to medical examiners testifying about a suspected cause of death.

"If someone's got an unusual set of teeth, like the Bundy case, from the standpoint of throwing it out of court, that's ridiculous," he said. "Every science that I know of has bad individuals. Our science isn't bad. It's the individuals who are the problem."

Many forensic dentists have helped the Innocence Project win exonerations in bite mark cases gone wrong by re-examining evidence and testifying for the wrongfully convicted.

But a once-cooperative relationship has turned adversarial ever since the Innocence Project began trying to get bite mark evidence thrown entirely out of courtrooms, while at the same time using it to help win exonerations.

"They turn a blind eye to the good side of bite mark analysis," Golden told the AP.

One example is a case Wright worked on in 1998. He analyzed the bite marks of the only three people who were in an Ohio home when 17-day-old Legacy Fawcett was found dead in her crib. Of the three, two sets of teeth could not have made the bite marks, Wright testified; only the teeth of the mother's boyfriend could have. The boyfriend was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter and served eight years in prison.

Without the bite mark, Wright said, the wrong person might have been convicted or the man responsible could have gone free, or both.

"Bite mark evidence can be too important not to be useful," Wright said. "You can't just throw it away."

___

Myers reported from Cincinnati. Associated Press News Researcher Barbara Sambriski in New York and AP writers Eric Tucker in Washington, D.C., and David B. Caruso in New York contributed to this report.

___

Follow Amanda Lee Myers on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AmandaLeeAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-impact-bites-derided-unreliable-court-150004412.html

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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Woods likes his chances at Open on weekend

Rory McIlroy, left, and Tiger Woods, right, walk off the 11th hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion Golf Club Friday, June 14, 2013, in Ardmore, Pa. (AP Photo/The Express-Times, Matt Smith)

Rory McIlroy, left, and Tiger Woods, right, walk off the 11th hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion Golf Club Friday, June 14, 2013, in Ardmore, Pa. (AP Photo/The Express-Times, Matt Smith)

Tiger Woods watches his shot on the 13th hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion Golf Club Friday, June 14, 2013, in Ardmore, Pa. (AP Photo/The Express-Times, Matt Smith)

Caddie Joe LaCava, left, gives direction to Tiger Woods before teeing off on the 11th hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion Golf Club Friday, June 14, 2013, in Ardmore, Pa. (AP Photo/The Express-Times, Matt Smith)

Rory McIlroy, left, of Northern Ireland, and Tiger Woods walk across the 10th green after putting during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion Golf Club, Friday, June 14, 2013, in Ardmore, Pa. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

Tiger Woods reacts to a chip shot on the seventh hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion Golf Club, Friday, June 14, 2013, in Ardmore, Pa. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

(AP) ? History says Tiger Woods has little chance to win this U.S. Open. Not from behind, and certainly not with an elbow inflammation that seems to bother him most on his worst shots.

Woods says otherwise, and after a marathon stretch of play Friday that helped him creep into contention at Merion Golf Club it's still possible he could be the one having the last say.

Trying to break a winless streak in major championships that now spans five full years, Woods played 25-plus holes in a respectable 1-over 70 to move up the leaderboard on a day when many other players were going the other way.

It wasn't good enough to get under par, or even crack the top 10. But he was just four shots back and in prime position to make a move over the weekend on an Open course that is playing much tougher than a lot of people expected.

Asked if he liked his chances, Woods didn't hesitate to answer, "Yes."

Woods had some issues on a day that began for him in the early morning and didn't finish until midafternoon. He missed some putts he might ordinarily expect to make, barely moved a chip a few inches forward, and guessed wrong on a couple of shots.

But that's U.S. Open golf, and the best player in the world stood at 3-over 143 after two rounds ? the same as playing partner and budding buddy Rory McIlroy.

"I just made a couple of mistakes out there today, but I really played well," Woods said. "Maybe I could have gotten one or two more out of it, but it was a pretty good day."

The night before, Woods underwent some treatment on his left elbow, which he shook several times after hitting bad shots in the first 11 holes of a rain-delayed round. He said he hurt the elbow at the Players Championship and that it was painful at times, though on his good shots it didn't seem to bother him at all.

"It is what it is," Woods said.

McIlroy said he didn't even notice Woods was having difficulty with the elbow.

"I haven't seen anything wrong with him," McIlroy said after finishing with his own 73-70.

More worrisome than the elbow for Woods might be the fact he's never won a tournament after playing over par for the first two rounds. He's also never won a major championship coming from behind in the final round.

And then there's that winless streak in major championships that now stretches back to the 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines.

But while Woods remains stuck at 14 in his chase of the record of 18 majors won by Jack Nicklaus, it doesn't mean he's forgotten how to win in conditions favored at the Open.

"Just keep grinding," he said. "You don't ever know what the winning score is going to be. You don't know if the guys are going to come back. We have a long way to go, and these conditions aren't going to get any easier."

The conditions Friday were challenging enough, though Woods and McIlroy got the better of the weather. For the most part, they avoided winds that started to pick up in the afternoon as the rain-saturated course began drying out.

The two are the main golf stars for Nike and have become increasingly friendly over the past few years, though they are 13 years apart in age. Woods has 12 more major titles than McIlroy, but the star from Northern Ireland has won his two during Woods' winless drought.

McIlroy said he and Woods chatted during the round, though both tried to keep focused on the task at hand. After missing a final birdie putt on their last hole, the 10th, McIlroy told Woods that he was trying to make the putt so he didn't have to play with Woods on Saturday.

"So he's got the pleasure of playing with me," McIlroy said. "But, no, we had a good laugh out there and just because it's the U.S. Open doesn't mean anything."

McIlroy, the 2011 Open champion at Congressional who has struggled this year after switching to Nike equipment, had his moments, including an iron shot to the eighth hole that gave him a tap-in birdie and put him under par for the day. But he gave it back on the next hole and had to hit a great shot out of the deep rough on his final hole to finish off his even par second round.

The kind of challenge Merion has been so far was reflected in the score of both players. They made six birdies apiece during the first two rounds, but both also made nine bogeys ? an average of one in every four holes.

"It tests every aspect of your game," McIlroy said, referring to Merion. "You've got to drive it well. Where these pins are, you got to hit great iron shots. You got to be very tactical. You got to be mentally really well there and have a good game plan."

Like Woods, McIlroy was comfortable with where he was midway through the championship.

"There were people talking about 62s and 63s at the start of the week and, I mean, I never saw that at all," he said. "I still think that something very little under par is going to win this week. If or if not that, around even par."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-06-15-GLF-US-Open-Tiger-Woods/id-91fcc79fa55a43079c289cc4cb654c1c

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