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The Net of Light Friday, October 25, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition By Ryan Kawailani Ozawa
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Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: CURB O`AHU CRIME OR LOSE VISITORS, CONSUL WARNS
Japan's top official in Hawai`i has beseeched top island officials to do
something about crime in Honolulu, warning that all it would take is one
heavily reported crime against a tourist to send Oahu's visitor industry into
a tailspin.
In a letter to Mayor Jeremy Harris, Japanese Consul General Kishichiro
Amae called for a more aggressive stance in the battle against what he
described as an increasingly visible rise in crimes against visitors.
"I would like to ask you, Mr. Mayor, to prioritize the patter," Amae
states in the letter, copies of which also went to Gov. Ben Cayetano, City
Prosecutor Keith Kaneshiro and Honolulu Police Chief Michael Nakamura.
As an example, Amae cited the drop of Japanese tourism and investment in
the Philippines when crimes against Japanese visitors were brought to light.
Although crimes against visitors are not a new problem, Amae's said his
letter was prompted by a Sept. 23 gunpoint robbery of three Japanese
businessmen at a golf course in Makaha.
Describing the visitor industry as "stagnant," Amae stressed that the
crime problem is a serious threat to Hawaii's economy.
"I'm not pessimistic about the future," he said, but added that
something must be done -- and sooner rather than latter.
"We agree wholeheartedly with Counsel General Amae," City Managing
Director Bob Fishman said today.
He said the city has already taken action on the Makaha incident.
"We've been working with the neighborhood around that golf course, and
we've identified some of the security weaknesses," he said.
The police department has increased the number of patrols in the Makaha
area as well as in Waikiki, Fishman said. He said new bicycle patrols in
Waikiki have also been very effective.
Fishman also said, however, that the city has several barriers to
overcome in fighting crime.
"We need to make it very difficult for criminals," he said. "The problem
we have is petty crime -- the problem we have is we can't take petty
criminals off the street for very long because there's no place to
incarcerate them."
Although Amae said he understood the state's ongoing troubles with
prison overcrowding, he urged that the city look into the "implementation of
innovative solutions" to the crime problem.
Some city officials have proposed one possible "innovative solution" --
a Honolulu volunteer citizen's patrol.
"We know the situation is serious," said City Councilman Andy
Mirikitani, who is backing a bill before the City Council that would initiate
a citizen patrol program.
"This will help to restore Oahu's image as a safe tourist destination,
particularly at a time when O`ahu is so dependent and reliant upon Japanese
and other visitors," Mirikitani said.
The proposed Honolulu citizen's patrol is modeled after one in place on
Maui, he said, where volunteers patrol popular tourist spots in cars donated
by rental car companies.
The patrol met some opposition at recent public hearings, however, as
HPD officers expressed concern that training a citizen patrol force would tax
police resources and take needed officers off the streets.
The council is expected to vote on the proposal on Nov. 13.
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Subject: MAUI JUDGE PIONEERS ROADSIDE PENANCE
While the law forbids cruel and unusual punishments, one Hawai`i judge
has taken a simply unusual approach to teaching criminals a lesson.
Like anyone else in an election year, residents on the island of Maui
drive past a variety of sign-holders when commuting to and from work. But
some signs aren't there to get votes of support.
"Beware -- I rip off cars," reads one. "I will not steal again," reads
another. A third: "Mother of seven -- done in by drugs."
The signs, made especially for those who hold them, are the work of Maui
Circuit Court Judge Boyd Mossman. He said he believes putting criminals "on
the street" may be more effective than putting them behind bars.
"My hope is that it will be more effective than a person having sat in
jail for 90 days," Mossman said.
Mossman stresses that roadside penance isn't so much a sentence rather
than a voluntary act he makes available to people convicted of crimes who
want to avoid jail time.
Public atonement is an option only to those convicted of non-violent
crimes -- such as burglary, drug possession and auto theft -- or those that
would otherwise face a jail sentence of a year or less, he said.
Public atonement allows people time to spend with their families, he
said, adding that he can still follow up with a jail stay if he feels the
defendants aren't sincere in their apologies.
"They got themselves in a predicament, I gave them an option to get
out," Mossman said. "Now they're getting out of it -- and hopefully they'll
never get back in it."
To date, Mossman said he has heard few complaints over his brand of
alternative sentencing.
He said: "I couldn't really think of a better way for someone to be
accountable to the public than to go and stand out there and say, 'Here I am,
I did it, I'm sorry.'"
"I don't look at it as humiliation," Mossman said. "I think
embarrassment is a closer term."
In addition to being a way to rehabilitate criminals, Mossman said his
sentences also carry a message for everyone else.
"When these people are out holding signs, I'm hoping the public will
recognize that it's not only young, long-haired unemployed people that commit
crimes," he said.
Mossman said the public needs more exposure to justice.
In Honolulu, City Prosecutor Keith Kaneshiro lauded Mossman for his
ingenuity.
"I think whenever you have anything creative, that's good," Kaneshiro
told KHON-TV2. "You should be creative."
"I agree with it," Kaneshiro said.
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Subject: VOTERS TO DECIDE WHETHER TO KEEP TRANSIT AUTHORITY
Honolulu residents will decide on election day who will be in charge of
running the O`ahu bus system -- an independent agency or the mayor.
The two candidates hoping to win the mayor's seat that same day have
taken opposite sides on the issue, which will be settled by voters along with
seven other proposed amendments to the Honolulu City Charter.
Since reports of government corruption culminated six years ago with the
theft convictions of seven city bus drivers, the Honolulu Public Transit
Authority has run Honolulu's award winning bus system and its beleaguered
sister program, the Handi-Van.
Problems experienced by the latter have prompted the City Council to
propose dissolving the HPTA, a move which they say will save as much as
$300,000 currently going to an administration some say isn't needed.
"The HPTA largely was a response to the corruption," said Councilman
John Holmes, who serves as the chair of the transportation committee.
"I think it was an overreaction, he said. "We've now had a chance to see
it work, and it's not working properly -- so why put up with it?"
It was a charter amendment vote that originally formed the HPTA.
Incumbent Mayor Jeremy Harris said he supports the elimination of the
transit authority, calling the switch to the independent agency a move in the
wrong direction.
"We shouldn't back up," Harris told KITV-4. "We shouldn't move backwards
in this whole transportation process."
With the proposed elimination of the HPTA, Harris said: "We have made a
step toward progress."
Harris has said he frequently hears complaints about the Handi-Van and
bus system, and that he has to tell residents he can't do anything and that
they have to call the authority.
"The people that run the bus should report directly to the city," he
said. "It'll put the accountability for the bus system directly where it
belongs -- on the mayor and on the City Council."
Mayoral candidate Arnold Morgado, however, contends the initial
reasoning behind the HPTA is still valid.
"I think the Honolulu Public Transit Authority did accomplish taking the
politics out of managing the bus system," Morgado said. "You don't have
politicians running the system -- you have experts running the system."
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Subject: OHA TO FUND HAWAIIAN LANGUAGE PROGRAM
The Office of Hawaiian Affairs announced today that it will fund half
the five-year cost of running the highest Hawaiian language educational track
in the state.
Earlier this year, the University of Hawai`i-Hilo won approval from the
Board of Regents to establish a master's degree program in the Hawaiian
language, the campus' first graduate program.
OHA has committed $300,000 to the graduate program, and the rest of the
funding will come from UH.
Without the help of OHA, university officials said the Hawaiian language
program would not have gotten off the ground.
"This is a program that would have probably lain on the table for some
time if the university had to find all of the money right now," said UH
President Kenneth Mortimer.
The announcement is being heralded as a first-of-its-kind partnership
between UH and the state's foremost Hawaiian agency.
"The investment that we're making today is a bargain, and it's an
investment that's long overdue," said OHA Chairman Clayton Hee. "I wish we
could do more."
UHH officials said the graduate Hawaiian curriculum will be taught
entirely in the Hawaiian language, and cover everything from literature to
music to mythology.
With OHA's support, Mortimer said students will be able to take their
first classes towards the new master's degree next Fall.
To date, there are a dozen students prepared to enter the program.
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Subject: BITS AND PIECES
HOTEL occupancy across the state has fallen for the fifth month in a row,
according to a private consulting firm. According to PKF Hawai`i, Island
hotels on average reported 75 percent occupancy last month, two percent lower
than last year. Meanwhile, the average nightly price for a room rose six
percent to $120. When broken down by island, only Hawai`i County numbers went
up. Hotels on the Big Island saw an unprecedented 40 percent increase in
occupancy over 1995, which industry officials say is largely due to direct
airline flights from Japan to Kona that began earlier this year...
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 85/72, Kaua`i 83/72, Moloka`i 84/73, Maui 85/73, Hilo 83/72
CASTS: Sunny, evening showers; trades to 15MPH; North shore surf to 4 feet.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: High -:-- p.m.; Low -:-- p.m.
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The Net of Light Wednesday, October 23, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: POLICE CITE PROSTITUTION, BRIBERY IN MASSAGE PARLOR RAIDS
Six Honolulu massage parlors were raided simultaneously this morning,
culminating a seven-month investigation into alleged prostitution, bribery
and practicing unlicensed massage.
In all, at least two dozen women ranging in age from 26 to 52 were
arrested in the 10 a.m. raids, all conducted in the Ke`eaumoku-Kapi`olani
district mauka of Ala Moana Shopping Center.
Honolulu police also seized a number of files and other items from the
businesses, including customers' names, telephone numbers and receipts.
Investigators say the items will be used to bolster ongoing money-laundering
and racketeering probes.
Eleven women were arrested for prostitution, and eight were arrested
for bribery. Twelve women, most of them owners or partners of the various
businesses, were also arrested for providing unlicensed massage. Only one of
the businesses raided today had a valid license to provide masseuse services.
Police officials say the bribery arrests come after the women offered
undercover officers $50,000 in bribes over a seven month period in the hopes
of convincing police to cut back on enforcement activities or giving them
advance warning of future investigations.
Most of the businesses advertised "Oriental relaxation therapy" or "body
shampoos," but HPD investigators said today the services offered were far
less mysterious.
"In the process of getting a massage -- in the process of being
shampooed -- sex is in fact offered for a fee; therefore we have
prostitution," said Maj. Mike Carvalho of the HPD narcotics vice division.
"We have investigated at least 20 locations," he added. "This has gone
on at each location."
Because such illegitimate massage parlors have only recently set up
shop, officials said, their aggressive -- and sometimes provocative --
advertising caught the eye of many O`ahu residents.
"We received complaints from the general public, and information and
complaints from customers, that a number of massage parlors had sprung up
around the Ke`eaumoku area," Carvalho said.
"As we investigated these complaints we found a number of these -- not
all -- were fronts for prostitution," he said.
The investigation was conducted jointly by state and city law
enforcement agencies. The State Regulated Industries Complaints Office got
involved after HPD notified them that most of the massage parlors did not
have necessary state approval to practice massage.
The businesses raided were Magic Hands and Rainbow Relaxation Therapy on
Makaloa Street; Aloha Stress Free on Ke`eaumoku Street; Oriental Stress Free
on Kalakaua Avenue; TLC on Kapi`olani Boulevard; and Greenfield Metro Massage
on South King Street.
State officials say both Magic Hands and Rainbow Relaxation Therapy have
two prior citations for operating without state licenses, and today's raid
will earn each a $5,000 fine. Each of the remaining businesses will be hit
with a first-offense fine of $500.
The fines, however, are independent of the bribery and prostitution
felony charges, which could carry prison terms.
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Subject: STUDY FINDS HAWAI`I TOPS ON TWO COUNTS
While Americans still consider Hawai`i the most appealing destination
for their "beach vacations," the islands are also number one when it comes to
choosing a "touring vacation," according to survey unveiled today.
Many people think it's too expensive to visit, the survey also found.
Longwoods International, a Canadian firm, polled a random sample of
nearly 2,000 Americans to divine the things they most associate with Hawai`i.
The study, commissioned by the Hawai`i Visitors and Convention Bureau, was
part of a larger, 200,000-person survey.
The HVCB had previously drawn from Longwoods International research to
engineer their most recent promotional campaign, which highlights the
cultural diversity of the state as well as its scenery.
The most recent findings of the agency, the result of a three-year
effort, is expected to give the bureau even more direction in its efforts to
bring in tourism dollars.
Although HVCB officials expected Hawai`i to top the list of vacation
spots for beach-lovers, the state's ranking among those looking to tour a
region is seen as a new hotpoint to focus on.
"Some people don't just plunk themselves down on a beach," Longwoods
International representative Bill Siegel told KITV-4. "They're there to
sightsee through a region -- in (Hawaii's) case it would be island hopping."
HVCB spokesman Richard Kelley said the finding was an eye-opener.
He said: "I think it's a little like an 'Aha!'"
"I think people had this in mind, but we've never really focused on it,"
Kelley said. "Too often we've been focusing on the beach."
One impression that the HVCB may have to work on changing is Hawaii's
reputation of being rough on the pocketbook.
"Sure you can spend $50 a person for dinner, and you can do all sorts of
things that are very expensive," Kelley said. "But there are thriftier ways
of getting around the islands and I think we need to bring that message to
the forefront."
Longwoods International's research found that people who'd actually been
to the islands generally had a better impression of the cost of a Hawai`i
vacation.
"We feel that the people who have actually visited Hawai`i will give you
a very positive comment on price," Siegel said. "It's the people who haven't
been here for a while who don't know."
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Subject: DISABLED ADVOCACY GROUP PLANS WEEKLY LAWSUITS
Six years after the federal Americans with Disabilities Act was passed,
there are still many businesses nationwide that have yet to meet its
requirements. In Hawai`i, one group said today it will wait no longer.
Claiming that several Honolulu health-care providers have failed to make
their offices accessible to the disabled, the Protection and Advocacy Agency
of Hawai`i has filed fifteen lawsuits against their respective property
owners.
Among the businesses named in the suit are the Aiea Shopping Center, the
Aiea Shopping Plaza and the Aiea Medical Building.
In its lawsuits, the group states that the businesses do not provide
enough handicapped parking spaces and do not have required wheelchair ramps.
"If you have a disability and you attempt to enter a building or a
business that is not accessible, there might as well be a 10-foot brick
wall," said agency spokesman David Rammler.
The health-care providers will not be the last to hear from the agency,
he said.
Each week, the group will file fifteen lawsuits against a different set
of businesses, Rammler said.
Among the businesses the agency plans to site are retailers, restaurants
and convenience stores, he said.
The lawsuits ask that the businesses bring their facilities into
compliance with the ADA within 90 days.
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DESPITE facing an attempted murder charge for allegedly burning his 3-year-
old son in a tub of boiling water two weeks ago, 24-year-old Ronald Betts,
Schofield Barracks soldier, will be spared a prison stay while he awaits his
January trial. Family Court Judge Dan Kochi yesterday granted Betts a
supervised release after his defense argued he needed to work to earn a
salary to avoid being a financial burden on his family. City prosecutors,
however, said Betts was a flight risk and posed a danger to the community.
His son Tavelle is now in Texas recovering from his injuries, including
serious burns to 30 percent of his body. If convicted Betts faces life in
prison. Because of the age of his victim, prosecutors say, Betts minimum
sentence for an attempted murder conviction would be 15 years...
CELEBRATION was unfortunately fleeting for friends and family of 2-year-old
leukemia patient Alana Dung. Many members of her family remain with her in
Seattle, now more than two months after she received a vital bone-marrow
transplant. On Monday, doctors said she had recovered enough to finally
return to her Pearl City home, far sooner than the pre-Thanksgiving date her
family was hoping for. Last night, however, the girl developed a fever.
Although doctors said her temperature returned to normal today, her family
has decided that they will not return to the islands until they can be sure
no infections have developed...
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 83/70, Kaua`i 82/70, Moloka`i 83/72, Maui 83/71, Hilo 82/70
CASTS: Mostly sunny; trades to 25MPH; North shore surf to 5 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High -:-- p.m.; Low -:-- p.m.
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The Net of Light Tuesday, October 22, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: LIFE SENTENCE IN ISLES' FIRST "THREE STRIKES" CASE
Brian Kaluna, 43, was sentenced to spend the rest of his life in a
federal prison without the possibility of parole today, becoming the first
person in Hawai`i to be sentenced under the "Three Strikes You're Out" law.
Kaluna was on trial for the September 1995 robbery of a McCully bank,
which led to a high-speed chase and a shoot-out with Honolulu police along
Kapahulu Avenue.
Six months prior in March, Kaluna had been convicted on two counts of
bank robbery. Kaluna's criminal record include eight robbery convictions in
all, dating back to 1974.
District Court Judge Helen Gillmor said Kaluna had more than enough
"strikes" to qualify for sentencing under the "Three Strikes" law, enacted
with the 1994 U.S. Crime Act.
The federal law mandates a life term for people whose prior record
includes two or more violent felonies. An earlier court hearing determined a
1978 knife-point robbery and the March robbery counted as Kaluna's two
"strikes."
In the eyes of the court, Gillmor said, Kaluna had at least two
opportunities to conform to live within the letter of the law and failed to
take advantage of them.
Federal Assistant Public Defender Alexander Silvert disagreed, however,
and said his client plans to appeal the life sentence.
"I'm not advocating that he be out on the streets, but I don't think a
man like Brian Kaluna should be in prison without even the possibility of
parole," Silvert said.
Silvert contends the March robbery, to which Kaluna pled guilty to
robbery in the second degree, was not a "violent offense." Although the final
indictment indicated Kaluna had a gun during that robbery, Silvert said, the
second-degree plea indicates no firearm was involved.
Silvert said prosecutors were likely using Kaluna and the "Three
Strikes" law to send a message to other violent felons.
"I think what they're trying to do is set an example," he said.
"They waited for the right case, in their minds, to set the example so
that in the future they can continue to use this law -- perhaps for
defendants who shouldn't be sent to prison for life without parole," he
added.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Elliot Enoki confirmed Silvert's assessment,
saying Kaluna's sentence carries a lesson for other potential career
criminals.
"If you have two prior strikes under the law," Enoki said, "you better
take the opportunity now to not commit a third or you will wind up with no
option except to serve life without parole."
Even so, he said, Kaluna got exactly what he deserved.
"We didn't single him out," Enoki said. "Anyone who has the same
objective criteria, which is just a matter of prior record, will qualify for
this."
Silvert said he and his client were not surprised by Gillmor's ruling.
"He's been prepared for this mentally and I think he's taking it rather
well," he said. "Of course he's upset, but we think we stand a good chance
with the appeal."
Prosecutors say Kaluna is likely only the third person in the country to
be convicted under the "Three Strikes" statute.
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Subject: UH PROF AWARDED IMPERIAL PRIZE FOR FERTILITY RESEARCH
A University of Hawai`i professor has been selected for an international
award for his thirty years of work in the field of reproductive biology,
making him the second UH researcher to garner the award and making UH one of
only two other institutions -- Cambridge and Harvard -- to host two awardees.
Yanagimachi will fly to Japan next month to receive the 1996
International Biology Prize, established by the Japan Academy of Sciences
eleven years ago.
"To me it is very important," Yanagimachi told KITV-4. "I'm pleased the
committee chose this area and I would like to receive this award on behalf of
all biologists working in this area."
Colleagues say Yanagimachi's work -- which incudes over 200 papers, an
encyclopedic review and a post-doctoral laboratory that hosts 70 researchers
from around the globe -- has been instrumental in understanding the process
of reproduction and advancing the field of in-vitro fertilization.
"I'm the black sheep," he said. "I'm the only scientist in the family."
With thirty years' worth of research in the field of reproductive
biology under his belt, the Japanese-born Yanagimachi has already received a
lot of recognition.
He received England's prestigious Marshall Medal in 1994 for his studies
of mammalian fertility. The UH Board of Regents gave him their Medal for
Excellence in Research in 1988, and the school followed up the next year with
a fertility symposium held in his honor.
Yanagimachi will be presented with a silver vase and 10 million yen
(approximately $90,000) at a Nov. 25 ceremony.
Only last year, UH biologist Ian Gibbons won the International Prize for
Biology for his work with the UH Pacific Biomedical Research Center.
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Subject: JOINT REPORT VOWS TO KEEP OUT PESTS
Ongoing efforts to keep the islands free of alien pests, seen as a major
threat to the island agriculture, environment and economy, have been given a
boost by a joint effort by the state and federal government.
"The Silent Invasion," authored by Gov. Ben Cayetano, Hawaii's
congressional delegation and federal agriculture heads, reaffirms the state's
commitment to several projects and launches a campaign to seek more federal
funding to step up defensive efforts.
"If left unchecked, these alien species -- these pests -- could place
our number one industry, tourism, at risk," Gov. Ben Cayetano said.
Cayetano stressed that it will take support from the federal government
in order for its efforts to be effective.
"The federal government will not be a silent partner in combating these
threats," said Richard Romiger, spokesman for the U.S. Agriculture
Department. "We will be a vocal and aggressive partner."
According to the report, a key goal is to continue to keep the islands
free of the brown tree snake, a pest that has adversely affected commercial
agriculture in Guam and is also responsible for decimating several bird
species.
Further, the state wants to intensify work to fight the papaya ring-spot
virus and fruit flies, already responsible for millions of dollars in lost
revenue for island farmers.
Aggressive weeds, such as banana poka and ivy gourd vines, are also on
the hit list. The vines, which slowly smother and kill trees, are already
prevalent in Hawaii's forests, especially on the Big Island.
A public information campaign is also proposed, aiming to stop visitors
from bringing illegal animals into the state as pets.
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 86/73, Kaua`i 83/72, Moloka`i 88/74, Maui 84/73, Hilo 85/72
CASTS: Partly cloudy; gusty trades to 30MPH; All shore surf to 4 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High 1:41 p.m.; Low 8:03 p.m.
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The Net of Light Monday, October 21, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: BUS FALLS INTO PIT FROM WAIKIKI MAIN BREAK
About 24 Japanese visitors had a noontime adventure worthy of a theme
park today when the front left wheel of their tour bus fell through the
asphalt as it tried to cross a section of road hit by a water main break.
The bus crossed paths with the water hazard at the intersection of
Kalakaua Avenue and Kapiolani Boulevard, fronting the site of the up-and-
coming Hawai`i Convention Center.
Right in the middle of the lunch-hour rush, right in the middle of what
is called the busiest intersection on O`ahu, a 12-inch water main broke,
sending thousands of gallons of water gushing up through a crack it created
in the roadway.
Honolulu police said the Roberts Hawai`i tour bus was in the wrong place
at the wrong time. Others hinted, however, that the bus driver made a
questionable call.
Witnesses said the bus momentarily stopped as it approached the uplifted
section of road where water was fountaining, but proceeded forward,
collapsing the cracked asphalt. The front end of the bus stopped its fall,
the wheel sitting in a newly created hole measuring about 12 feet across.
The passengers were evacuated, some carrying others to safety through
the rushing water. No injuries were reported. A crane had to be used to lift
the front end of the bus out of the flooded crater.
Traffic in the area was snarled through the afternoon rush-hour, as
Board of Water Supply repair crews worked to shut off the water and repair
the main. The lane closures and water shutdown forced many area businesses --
including the nearby Hard Rock Cafe -- to close.
Nearly 10 hours after the water line broke, it was repaired and water
service was restored shortly after 9:20 p.m.
Although the Hard Rock Cafe opened for business, spokesman Wade Wilson
said the late opening and ongoing roadwork will hurt the customer turnout.
"It's going to be a substantial amount of revenue loss," Wilson said.
Board of Water Supply spokesman Denise DeCosta said it will take at
least another six or seven hours for workers to backfill the hole and repair
the road. She said all lanes should be open by the morning rush-hour.
Water officials said tonight that age and corrosion were most likely the
reasons for the main break.
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Subject: GANG RIVALRY SUSPECTED IN BEATING DEATH
A 17-year-old resident of Kuhio Park Terrace died of massive head
injuries on Friday after being beaten by a group of youths believed to be
from a rival gang based at Mayor Wright Housing.
Sam Talo was at the corner of Vineyard Boulevard and Liliha Street when
he attacked by a group of youths, who police say struck him with rocks and
bottles and beat him unconscious.
Talo is the second Kuhio Park Terrace youth to die in gang-related
violence this month.
In fact, police say, Talo may have been in the area because he was
looking for the people responsible for the beating death of fellow Kuhio Park
resident Taftlele Mika, 22, who was attacked outside an Iwilei nightclub two
weeks ago.
Police say Mayor Wright Housing residents are suspects in both deaths,
and have already arrested 18-year-old Enele Ili in connection with the
earlier case.
McKay Schwenke, a counselor with Adult Friends for Youth, said Talo's
friends are barely able to talk about what happened.
"The kids are in total shock, it's like the kids are numb right now,"
Schwenke told KHON-TV2. "They talk to us but they're like totally numb."
Schwenke, a case worker at Kuhio Park Terrace, said that he fears gang
members from Kuhio Park Terrace may soon be looking to seek revenge from
their Mayor Wright rivals.
Adult Friends for Youth spokesman Sid Rosen said he is also very
concerned about what will happen as soon as the shock wears off.
"I think we're going to have to do a lot of work with those kids -- we
certainly are frightened by what could happen," Rosen said.
While Honolulu police keep an even sharper eye on activity at both
housing projects, youth counselors are looking to step up their outreach
efforts.
Tana Alualu, a former gang member now working with the counseling
program, said she's worked with gang members at both Kuhio Park and Mayor
Wright. Although the members tell her they want to get out of gangs, pride
often keeps them locked in, Alualu said.
So far, police have no murder suspects in Talo's case.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: SEPTEMBER ELECTION WINNERS, LOSERS REPORT SPENDING
In the aftermath of the primary election last month, Honolulu Mayor
Jeremy Harris had more than $27,000 left in the bank while his remaining
challenger Arnold Morgado was over $205,000 in debt.
As required by the Campaign Spending Commission, candidates for public
office today reported their campaign fundraising and spending activities
through Sept. 21.
Out of the three main candidates who ran for mayor, Morgado spent the
most -- over $1,042,000 -- in order to remain in the race against incumbent
Harris for the Nov. 5 general election. Although he raised $1,125,270, nearly
$300,000 in loans left him in debt.
Harris raised $1,027,500 and spent $905,100, leaving him with nearly
$27,500 to fight to keep his seat.
Fasi, meanwhile, raised and spent the least. He had $1,002,000 in his
campaign war chest and spent $893,500. Because of a $200,000 loan from his
personal funds, Fasi's report closed with debt of nearly $93,000.
In the race for city prosecutor, the one candidate that was voted out of
the general election spent the most. Randal Yoshida, who came in third,
raised and spent about $222,000. Factoring in a loan to himself, Yoshida was
knocked out of the running $62,000 in debt.
David Arakawa raised $191,200 and spent $173,175, and after $10,000 in
loans has about $8,000 in the ban. Peter Carlisle, meanwhile, raised $182,200
and spent $172,200, but is $19,900 in debt after a $30,000 loan.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
DAMNED if you do, damned if you don't -- that's how Waikiki Neighborhood
Board spokesman Sam Bren describes the bind GTE Hawaiian Tel is in. In
installing a major underground conduit, the company has been closing off
lanes of busy Kapi`olani Boulevard. Currently, work is being done during the
day, but traffic congestion caused by the roadwork has the state Department
of Transportation concerned -- especially since the next phase will involve
the Kalakaua Avenue intersection, one of the busiest on the island. The
company wants permission to work at night, but that would violate noise
limits set by the state Department of Health. A public hearing on the matter
is scheduled for tomorrow at Washington Intermediate...
LOIHI, the youngest member of the Hawaiian Island chain, is giving birth to
life. University of Hawai`i researchers say they have found a substantial
biological community on the summit of the submerged volcano, located about 25
miles off the southeast coast of the Big Island. Recent earthquakes, which
have been frequent since late summer, have been observed stirring up clouds
of bacterial life which apparently thrive in the warm, sulfur-rich waters
around its summit. One form of life studied last week, archaea, are said to
be drawing their energy from the volcano's chemical output, rather than solar
or other traditional sources of sustenance. A recent undersea expedition has
also found a 1,000-foot deep pit crater, which geologists previously thought
developed much later in a volcano's life cycle...
COUNSELORS are not obligated to prevent clients from committing suicide,
according to what is being called a precedent setting ruling by the state
Supreme Court earlier this month. The court decided to uphold the ruling by a
Kaua`i judge who said a state veteran's counselor was not responsible for the
July 1991 death of Wayne Perreira, who told the counselor he was going to
commit suicide less than a day before he did. Perreira's family sued the
counselor and the state, claiming it was their duty to prevent the suicide.
The three majority justices said the counselor's relationship with Perreira
wasn't one that carried such a responsibility...
SUCCESSFUL seizures and arrests for illegal drugs at the Honolulu Airport
have been many, due in part to what Honolulu police call the "walk-and-talk."
Last week, however, the state Supreme Court ruled the practice -- in which
undercover officers walk up to suspects and engage them in casual
conversation -- was unconstitutional. The ruling upholds an appeal from a man
arrested in 1993 after he was the subject of a "walk-and-talk" and was found
to be carrying about one pound of cocaine. While the county prosecutor's
office mulls an appeal, law enforcement officials are looking to take the
remaining ten or so "walk-and-talk" cases to federal courts, where they say
laws concerning the gathering of evidence are not as strict...
DESPITE being a valid law for nearly four months, the city has not enforced
the collection of a $250 legal fee from people convicted of felonies and
driving under the influence. The city council last week decided to postpone
implementation of the fee until December after nobody came to testify at a
public hearing on the law held on Wednesday. The city prosecutor's office has
also had some difficulty setting up the citation system. Introduced in May,
the fee was intended to make criminals pay for some of the burden they create
for the system, and was expected to bring in $500,000 this year...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 83/71, Kaua`i 82/70, Moloka`i 83/71, Maui 84/72, Hilo 81/69
CASTS: Mostly sunny, morning showers; 20MPH trades; North shore to 4 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High -:-- p.m.; Low -:-- p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Monday, October 14, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: TEACHERS UNION HOLDS OUT, MAY STRIKE WITHOUT NEW CONTRACT
The Hawai`i State Teachers Association has finally put its foot down
after what it calls 18 months of stalling by the state administration in
establishing a new union contract.
The union's Board of Directors voted on Saturday against another
extension of the current contract, which expires Oct. 31. Union officials say
the vote should make it clear that Hawaii's 12,000 public school teachers are
prepared to strike if neccessary.
"Of course they're a little afraid," said HSTA president June Motokawa,
"But they're knowingly saying, 'We're tired of waiting -- we want to get on
and have a contract in hand.'"
HSTA director George Yamamoto said board members are only answering to
the concerns of teachers, which he said are heard loud and clear.
"They are angry, and frustrated, and they feel they are not being
treated as professionals," Yamamoto said.
"We are very serious about working conditions and unhappy with the
situation," he said.
The board's decision to let its contract extension with the state expire
comes the day after Gov. Ben Cayetano appointed former school superintendant
Charles Toguchi as mediator in an effort to move talks along.
Although Yamamoto said he was encouraged by Toguchi's arrival at the
bargaining table, he said HSTA boardmembers will not give the state any more
breaks.
"They want to send a message to the governor, to the Board of Education,
that they are very serious about really finishing up a contract," he said.
Motokawa said union members would rather settle than strike, but said
it's about time the state offered something more tangible.
"There's a lot of anger and anxiety out in the field," she said. "We
want to conclude the bargaining and come up with a contract that is fair, and
that is equitable for our members."
Union officials say they are holding out for a 14 percent pay raise over
two years, noting that Hawai`i ranks 49th out of 50 states in public school
teacher salaries.
However Cayetano said the state simply can't afford such an increase,
which he said would cost the state an additional $40 million it doesn't have.
Even so, Cayetano agreed Hawaii's teachers deserve more.
"I anticipate in the next contract, unless the roof falls in for the
state, we'll be able to give the teachers a pay increase of some kind," he
said.
HSTA leaders contend that the 14 percent raise isn't an unreasonable
request, noting that an independent panel commissioned by the Hawai`i Labor
Relations Board concluded that Hawaii's teachers should be given an annual
raise of 10 percent -- and that the state does has enough money to do so.
Other issues yet unresolved in the negotiations include terms of leaves
of absences and overtime compensation.
If the two sides fail to reach an agreement, the HSTA will be able to
declare a strike anytime after Halloween with 10-days notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TWO HANGGLIDERS SURVIVE KA`A`AWA CRASH
Two hanggliding enthusiasts from Maui ran into turbulence while soaring
over the Ko`olau mountains yesterday, hitting treetops and eventually
crashing in a remote forest area above Sacred Falls.
A friend who was following the hanggliders in a car called 911 as soon
as the gliders went down shortly before dusk.
Rescue officials arriving on the scene saw the two gliders -- 42-year-
old Mike Benson and 37-year-old Maik Darley -- walking away from the crash
site and called in the Fire Department's rescue helicopter, which lifted the
men out of the dense forest and lowered them to safety.
Both Darley and Benson escaped major injuries and refused medical
treatment, fire department officials said.
Benson said he was probably going about 30 miles per hour when he
crashed into the treetops.
The pair was with a group of four hanggliders from Maui who told
rescuers they regularly come to the Windward side of O`ahu to take the scenic
flight from Makapu`u Point to Laie.
The other two gliders made a safe landing after the pair crashed.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: FERRY LOSES POWER, COLLIDES WITH PIER
A ferry boat carrying spectator's from Ford Island lost power last night
as it approached its pier at Halawa Landing, and had to stop the hard way --
striking the dock at a speed of about about 3 knots.
About 25 passengers were returning from the Hydrofest watersport
exhibition aboard the 500-ton ferry when the captain told them to brace
themselves for impact.
Although no one was seriously injured, seven people were taken to the
hospital as a precaution and several more were treated at the scene for minor
cuts and bruises.
Navy officials said some type of malfunction caused two of the ferry's
motors to fail. As a result, operators couldn't reverse its propellors to
slow the vessel for docking.
Substantial damage was done to both the boat and the pier. Pearl Harbor
investigators are still looking into the incident.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: CHILD CRUSHED BY MOTHER'S CAR, DIES
The family of prominent Honolulu attorney David Schutter is mourning the
loss of his three-year-old grandson Bronson after he was killed in an
accident this weekend.
Police say Bronson, his five-year-old brother and four cousins had just
attended a high school football game at Aloha Stadium and were returning to
the family's Noela Street home when the accident occurred shortly after 11
p.m. Saturday night.
The child's mother had stopped her car for a security gate at their
Diamond Head residence when Bronson apparently managed to get out of his
safety seat and then fell out of the vehicle's right rear door.
Bronson's mother accidentally ran him over, investigators said, unaware
that the boy had fallen out of the car until it was too late.
The child was taken to Queen's Medical Center where he was pronounced
dead a short time later.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
AFTER three car dealerships on O`ahu were closed unexpectedly last Friday,
Mainland officials today confirmed the worst fears of the outfit's more than
250 employees. Representatives of Chrysler Corp. are overseeing the shutdown
of Pacific International Service International Service Corporation, which
owns Car World, O`ahu Chrysler and South Seas Jeep-Eagle. The closure comes
less than a week after employees say they were assured that the automaker
would bail Pacific International out of unspecified financial problems.
Although Pacific International officials could not be reached for comment,
Chrysler Spokesman Scott Hogle told KHON-TV2 that the company felt it "was
not appropriate to loan any additional money" to Pacific International...
ALTHOUGH Honolulu police statistics have found pepper spray to be used 10
times more often in the commission of crimes than in deterring them, City
Councilman John Henry Felix last week introduced a bill that would legalize
the popular self-defense devices permanently. Pepper sprays have been legal
on O`ahu for 15 months now as part of an 18-month trial period in which law
enforcement officials were to test how they would be used by the public.
Felix said despite the reported instances of abuse, the sprays are a
preferrable alternative to having residents carry other weapons to protect
themselves. Mayor Jeremy Harris has said he has had some doubts that it would
be appropriate to permanently legalize pepper spray...
CONTRARY to national trends, the crime rate in Honolulu increased for the
fourth year running, according to a report released yesterday by the FBI.
Robberies and thefts fueled a 10 percent overal increase in Honolulu's crime
rate last year. Across the U.S., crime was down 1 percent. Both robberies and
motor vehicle thefts on O`ahu were up 29 percent in 1994. While the number of
rapes reported in Honolulu was down 18 percent, rates for other violent
crimes went up -- including an 8 percent jump in the number of murders and a
7 percent increase in aggravated assaults. Nationally, violent crimes fell 3
percent overall...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 84/71, Kaua`i 83/70, Moloka`i 84/72, Maui 85/73, Hilo 81/70
CASTS: Sunny and clear, trades to 25MPH; Islandwide surf to 3 feet.
TUESDAY'S TIDES: High 5:44 p.m.; Low 12:50 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Friday, October 11, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: PLANE EVACUATED, PEPPER SPRAY SUSPECTED
Passengers arriving on a flight from Maui were evacuated from their
plane as soon as it stopped on a taxi way at Honolulu International Airport
tonight after crew members reported the cabin was filled with some sort of
noxious gas.
Medical attention was required for three of 119 passengers that were
aboard Hawaiian Airlines flight 547, each reporting trouble breathing and eye
and throat irritation.
Two were immediately taken to Queen's Hospital where they were treated
and released. The third became dizzy after being bused to the terminal with
the other passengers and was treated by airport medical personnel.
Airline officials said the flight crew handled the situation well.
"One of the passengers reported shortness of breath or irritation in the
throat just before landing," said Hawaiian Airlines spokesman Keoni Wagner.
"Immediately when the plane touched down they went through their normal
procedures and got everybody out of the cabin quickly and safely."
Honolulu police have turned the investigation over to the Federal
Aviation Administration as officials try to determine if the incident was
caused by someone discharging pepper spray in mid-flight.
"At this point we don't know exactly what it was," Wagner said. "Some
people thought it was pepper spray but it hasn't been confirmed."
A preliminary inspection found no canisters aboard, Wagner said, but
investigators have taken statements from several passengers who said the odor
was pepper-like.
Although pepper-spray has been legal in Honolulu for 15 months, bringing
canisters aboard a plane is illegal under Federal law. Doing so carries a
fine of up to $1,000. Since January, airport officials have confiscated four
pepper-spray canisters from passengers.
Hawaiian Airlines said the plane will be out of commission for no longer
than a day.
Some passengers complained that although two sets of stairs were set up
during the evacuation, they were only allowed to leave through the front of
the plane -- extending the amount of time some were exposed to the gas.
However using a single exit was standard procedure, airline officials
said.
"The number of passengers on board didn't require it," Wagner said in an
interview with KHNL. "As I understand it the evacuation was very quick and
orderly -- there was no panicking."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: REGENTS ADVANCE UH LIBRARY EXPANSION
Long-sought relief for Hamilton Library, said to have run out of space
more than 15 years ago, moved one step closer to reality today.
The Board of Regents moved Hamilton Phase III to the top of the list of
pending campus improvements in its Capital Improvement Project list, fifth
overall in system-wide construction priorities.
The Regents' construction wish list now goes to Gov. Ben Cayetano, who
will decide which projects will be submitted to the state legislature for
funding.
The University of Hawaii's flagship graduate research library, now 28
years old, was originally designed to hold 1.7 million volumes. That capacity
was exceeded years ago, and today the facility houses at least 3 million
volumes.
In 1994, over 300,000 volumes were moved from Hamilton to Sinclair
Library in an effort to reclaim a few years' worth of growing space. The move
was made despite Sinclair Library's shortage of study space and its lack of
archive-friendly air-conditioning.
Since first conceived in 1975, Hamilton Phase III was to be built at the
site of the old Hamilton Snack Bar, expanding the capacity and services of
the 28-year-old library.
Over the years the expansion has moved its way up the Regents' CIP list.
Hamilton Phase III was ranked 10th last year, as well as in 1994, but its
construction was not funded.
Construction of the Special Events Arena and a 900-stall annex to the
parking structure, although ranked lower, received funding -- the former
through the discretion of then-Governor John Waihee.
Although funding is still not guaranteed, associate librarian Jean
Ehrhorn said she hopes the higher ranking will make it clear to Cayetano how
badly the library needs the space.
Ehrhorn said the library's accreditation with the Western Association of
Schools and Colleges could be in jeopardy if its space problems aren't
resolved before the next inspection.
The library expansion still ranks below health and safety projects, as
well as those intended to make university facilities accessible to the
disabled.
The Regents' approved $1.4 million for the planning and design of
Hamilton Phase III two years ago. According to the plan, the extension will
be a separate six-story building connected to the library with breezeways.
Total construction costs are expected to be at least $36 million.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
ATLANTIS Reef Divers announced today that it is shutting its doors
permanently. The dive company's tour operation has been suspended since Aug.
14 when a Japanese tourist died while on one of its introductory dives.
Investigators say it took Atlantis staff nearly an hour to realize that 24-
year-old Akemi Hoshino was missing. She was pulled from waters off the Hilton
Hawaiian Village an hour later. Atlantis Spokesman Terry O'Halloran said
Hoshino's death wasn't the only reason behind the closure, saying dive tours
no longer fit the company's overall plan. Tour employees are going to be
given positions elsewhere within the company, O'Halloran added...
DESPITE expressing doubts that it exceeds the city's authority, Honolulu
Mayor Jeremy Harris today signed into law an ordinance banning the sale of
ephedrine, known more widely as "Herbal Ecstasy." The drug is often sold and
used at dance clubs. In signing the law, Harris said he had been advised by
the county's corporation counsel that the city has no jurisdiction over
regulating such sales. Although law enforcement officers will try to enforce
the ban, Harris said he wouldn't be surprised if the city will be challenged
with a lawsuit as soon as it tries to prosecute under the new law...
CLAUDIO Suyat, chairman of the state's parole board, announced today that he
is going back into retirement. Suyat, 61, has served on the board for the
last 5 years, and was appointed chair for the last three. He had come out of
retirement to take the position with the Hawai`i Paroling Authority, but said
today that he'd like to spend more time with family. In announcing his
departure, Suyat praised Gov. Ben Cayetano for his latest efforts to relieve
the state's prison overcrowding problem, and expressed hopes that more
investment be made in drug treatment and other rehabilitative programs...
KANSAI Gaidai Hawai`i, the island campus of Japan's Kansai Gaidai University,
has accepted its last freshman class. The campus, located along Kalanianaole
Highway in Aina Haina, will close permanently in March 1998 after nearly 20
years in Hawai`i. School officials said the decision to close the local
campus was made after projections showed a dwindling number of eligible 18-
year-old students throughout Japan...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 88/73, Kaua`i 85/73, Moloka`i 86/74, Maui 90/74, Hilo 85/71
CASTS: Party cloudy, trades to 25MPH; North and East shore surf to 4 feet.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: High 3:15 p.m.; Low 9:31 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Thursday, October 10, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: ISLE TAXES TOO HIGH, COMMISSION SAYS
Instead of cutting into taxpayers' wallets, the state should cut its
spending, according to a draft report released today by the state Tax Review
Commission.
In its report, which now goes before public hearings beginning next
week, the commission states that it "fundamentally believes that Hawaii's
taxes are too high."
The commission also stated, "the state must boldly reduce the costly
delivery of government services."
Among its preliminary recommendations, the commission said the state
should work to eliminate at least $150 million in special tax exemptions,
such as those currently granted for federal research contracts, sugar
plantations, movie producers and residents with certain disabilities.
If it can do so, the report states, the state might be able to cut its
current 4 percent excise tax to 3.5 percent.
The tax burden on Hawai`i residents could be lightened through adjusting
the current slate of tax brackets, according to the report.
The commission recommends that the state raise the qualifications for
its highest tax rate of 10 percent, applying it to residents earning an
adjusted income of over $40,000 instead of the current $20,500. For families,
the lower boundary would be raised to $80,000 from $40,000.
Further, the report states, the standard tax deduction for families
should be increased from $1,900 to $2,600.
The state should also considering tax pensions larger than $60,000, the
commission's report states, and look into privatizing several services now
provided by the government.
The commission convenes every five years to review the state's tax laws
and the tax system's efficiency and equity. After undergoing public hearings
and a revision process, the current report will be submitted to the state
Legislature for its 1997-98 session.
The first series of public hearings begin Tuesday on Kaua`i, moving
through Wailuku, Hilo and Kona before concluding in Honolulu at Central
Intermediate School on Oct. 30.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: STAGGS HELD WITHOUT BAIL FOR PEARL HARBOR SHOOTING
Federal Magistrate Barry Kurren today found federal prosecutors had
enough evidence to hold Duane Staggs, 29, without bail as he faces a federal
murder indictment for the Oct. 5 shooting of 52-year-old Don Gillis.
Sid Fernandez, Gillis' son-in-law and a professional baseball player,
sat in the courtroom gallery during today's hearing, as did Staggs' 26-year-
old wife Malia and her parents, John and Kathi Cavaco.
FBI agent Jerry Bogard told the judge that Staggs confessed to killing
Gillis in a call he made to 911, telling the operator he had shot someone and
that an ambulance wasn't necessary.
According to Bogard, Staggs said: "I made sure he was dead."
Gillis, Staggs and his wife were all employees of Hawaiian Dredging Co.,
although Staggs had recently been suspended from his construction job for
undisclosed reasons.
After attending a company party near Arizona Memorial, Gillis and Malia
Staggs were sitting in a pick-up truck when Duane Staggs drove up at around 1
a.m. and shot Gillis through the windshield, Bogard said.
He said Staggs fired his 30-30 rifle at least four times, he said, then
discarded the weapon less than 30 feet away.
Gillis died instantly of multiple gunshot wounds to his lungs and heart.
Malia Staggs wasn't hurt in the shooting, but reportedly suffered minor
injuries after stumbling through barbed wire in an attempt to flee.
The case is being handled in federal court because the shooting occurred
on the grounds of a Naval reserve.
With today's ruling, the prosecution will now have to determine whether
to press a federal first- or second-degree murder charge against Staggs. A
first-degree, or murder one, charge means the judge could impose a death
penalty.
Federal Public Defender Peter Wolff said a first-degree charge shouldn't
apply, because the shooting was in the "heat of passion" and wasn't
premeditated.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Ron Johnson refused comment.
Malia Staggs and her 3-year-old son are now living in Kailua with her
parents. After the hearing, she told reporters she was still taking things
one day at a time, and that she felt for the Gillis family.
"He was a good friend," Malia Staggs said. "I didn't go to the funeral
out of respect, but my condolences go out to them."
Her parents, meanwhile, said they supported their son-in-law despite what
he may have done.
"It's just a family tragedy," Kathi Cavaco told _The Honolulu
Advertiser_, "Not only for one, but two families."
Cavaco said her daughter and Gillis couldn't have been romantically
involved, an allegation also refuted by Stacy Moniz, attorney for the Gillis
family.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: TOGUCHI TO STEP IN AS MEDIATOR FOR TEACHERS UNION
Gov. Ben Cayetano today appointed his chief of staff Charles Toguchi as
mediator in negotiations with the state teacher's union, which have been
stalled now for over a year.
"There is a sense of urgency and the governor asked me to jump in and
get it resolved," Toguchi said.
Halloween marks the end of the extended contract for Hawaii's 12,000
public school teachers, and with both sides still deadlocked, Toguchi said
the state Board of Education is spooked.
"I'm very concerned," Toguchi told KHON-TV2. "We all realize we have
very good teachers working out there -- we don't want negotiations to hamper
their effectiveness in the classroom."
The teacher's union is seeking a pay raise of at least 14 percent over
the next two years, although HSTA Chairman Mits Nagashima acknowledged
earlier that the state's financial condition might not be able to accommodate
such an increase.
"The governor is very anxious to resolve these various items," Toguchi
said.
Cayetano said Toguchi's experience in local education issues could prove
valuable in resolving the dispute.
Prior to his appointment to Cayetano's office, Toguchi served as the
state's school superintendent for seven years. Before that, he worked in the
public school system as a math teacher.
Union leaders say they now have renewed hope that things will get off
the ground.
"I think his involvement in the negotiation process will lend a better
balance," said HSTA spokesman George Yamamoto. "Hopefully we'll come to an
agreement."
Toguchi said his power goes only as far as the negotiating table, noting
that Cayetano will have to make any final decisions. Toguchi also said he is
not involved in the teacher's union's latest dispute with the state.
Last Friday, the HSTA -- in conjunction with the University of Hawai`i
Professional Assembly -- filed a labor complaint against the state over
Cayetano's proposed payroll lag.
The governor has since said he will try to rework the proposal so as to
not outright eliminate a paycheck from state workers' annual salaries.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 88/73, Kaua`i 85/73, Moloka`i 86/74, Maui 90/74, Hilo 85/71
CASTS: Party cloudy, trades to 25MPH; North and East shore surf to 4 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High 3:15 p.m.; Low 9:31 a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Wednesday, October 9, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: PRISON CHLORINE LEAK SENDS FIVE TO HOSPITAL
An inmate at Waiawa Prison was replacing a canister of chlorine this
morning when a hose came loose -- eventually exposing him, three other
inmates and a prison staff member to toxic fumes.
Inmate Bob Lievan was helping a delivery man change one of four 100-
pound chlorine canisters used in the prison's water purification system when
the incident occurred at about 9:15 a.m.
"The delivery man brought up a new canister and was in a hurry," Lievan
said "I happened to be there so I attempted to assist him."
Lievan said he was being shown how to turn off the canister's gas valve
when an attached hose came off by itself. Chlorine gas began to escape.
Although prison rules require anyone handling chlorine canisters to wear
a respiratory mask, Lievan said he did not have one on.
"The delivery man didn't have a mask on, so I thought it was standard
procedure," he said.
As a result, Lievan tasted the potentially deadly effects of chlorine
exposure firsthand.
"What hurt was mostly my lungs," Lievan said. "You could feel it going
down your lungs, it's almost like tear gas."
The delivery person, an employee with C. Brewer and Co., left the scene,
apparently unharmed.
Lievan said he immediately summoned a prison maintenance worker, 52-
year-old Robin Yokoyama, and three other inmates.
According to Lievan, Yokoyama donned a gas mask before entering the
water processing shed to try to shut off the gas flow.
Yokoyama collapsed, however, apparently overwhelmed by the chlorine gas.
Lievan pulled Yokoyama from the shed and the inmates carried him to the
prison infirmary.
All five had to be treated for a variety of symptoms, all the result of
their exposure to chlorine. Yokoyama remains in stable condition tonight at
Wahiawa General Hospital.
Prison officials contacted the fire department's Hazardous Waste
Management division, who in turn notified O`ahu Civil Defense officials.
According to prison officials, the water processing shed stands less
than 1,000 feet from the Waiawa Prison dormitory. Public safety experts
briefly considered evacuating the building, in which 184 inmates lived.
No evacuation was called, however, and the chlorine leak was contained
shortly before noon.
A preliminary investigation has found that the gas mask Yokoyama was
wearing had expired. According to a label on the mask, it should have been
pulled from service in March 1995.
Public safety officials said they will look into why Lievan was handling
the chlorine canisters and why the expired mask Yokoyama was using was still
in the prison's supply cabinet.
"We're looking into it now," said prison spokesman Gregg Takayama.
Takayama said the replacement of the chlorine tanks should have been
handled by Yokoyama, and not an untrained inmate. The mask also should have
been removed by the prison's safety inspector.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: GOVERNOR DEFERS TO CITY ON QUEEN'S BEACH DISPUTE
Although Gov. Cayetano is considering exercising his right to condemn a
160-acre parcel in Hawai`i Kai in order to build a waterfront park, he said
he will wait until the Honolulu City Council decides what it wants to do.
"I am going to wait until I have an indication of how this thing is
going to go," Cayetano said today. "The city council can solve this problem."
Landowner Bishop Estate and leaseholder Kaiser Corp. have applied for
two city permits that are required for them to go ahead with plans to build
an 18-hole golf course at Ka Iwi. The development is opposed by some
residents and environmental groups, however, and many have urged Cayetano to
stop the project by having the state condemn and buy the land outright.
"If they don't want a golf course there, they need to come up with an
answer," Cayetano said. "They should not ask the state to buy the entire
parcel because we don't have the money."
Earlier this week, Cayetano had proposed that Kaiser set aside part of
the parcel for a public park, using the rest for the golf course.
The announcement angered some environmental groups, who had hoped the
governor's support of a park at the site would stop any talk of building a
golf course there.
For now, Cayetano said, the ball is in the city's court.
The Honolulu City Council holds the authority to deny or approve the
construction of new golf courses on O`ahu.
In addition to reviewing Kaiser's request for necessary permits,
however, the city is currently involved in other legal negotiations with
Bishop Estate. Those talks may complicate discussion of the golf course plan,
which some opponents believe was put together in an attempt to bolster Bishop
Estate's bargaining position.
Opponents say Cayetano should not wait for the city to approve the golf
course before acting, because the value -- and thus price -- of the parcel
would go up as soon as the approval comes through. That would make it even
harder for the state to buy the land.
Regardless of whether the city allows Kaiser to build the golf course,
Cayetano said the final plan should also include a park large enough to
provide beach access and public recreation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: CAYETANO MULLS COMPROMISE ON PAYROLL LAG
Facing strong opposition by public employee unions, Gov. Ben Cayetano
announced today that he is willing to rework his proposed "payroll lag" -- a
plan that is expected to save the state $47 million by eliminating one pay
period from the current fiscal year.
Under the governor's revised "payroll adjustment" plan, workers would
still get paid every two weeks, but paydays would be moved to the 5th and
20th of each month instead of the current 1st and 15th.
Originally, paydays would have been moved back one day each pay period,
eliminating one full pay period by the end of the fiscal year.
"We have developed a proposal that we think is very reasonable,"
Cayetano said. "We know that the employees are concerned about missing a
paycheck."
Either way, Cayetano said, the payroll system must be changed in order
to eliminate the ongoing problem of overpayments and keep more money in the
state's dwindling coffers.
Although the details of the adjustment plan must still be reviewed by
local unions, including some that had challenged the legality of Cayetano's
"payroll lag" scheme.
Members of the Hawai`i Government Employees Association today expressed
relief, calling Cayetano's announcement a sign that he is at least willing to
negotiate.
HGEA head Gary Rodrigues said he likes what he's heard so far, but noted
that many workers feel they don't have much job security.
"We have to have some level of comfort," he said. "That we can agree to
a payroll lag; that we'll see 47 million dollars so we won't have to be
getting up at midnight every day wondering if we have a job the next day."
Rodrigues told KITV-4 that the union wants Cayetano's guarantee that
people won't be laid off unless the state is in severe financial distress.
"We don't foresee a budget crisis," he said.
According to Rodrigues, Cayetano's final solution should also include
pay raises.
The governor's revised proposal is expected to cross the desks of union
leaders by next week.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
PORNOGRAPHY charges have been filed against a 71-year-old man who federal
prosecutors say was importing a video and photographs of nude boys. Steven
Meyer was detained at Honolulu International Airport late last month after
arriving on a flight from Thailand, reportedly to attend the upcoming Hawai`i
International Film Festival. A customs inspection recovered two photo albums
with several photographs depicting young male children in nude and partially-
nude poses. Investigators say a videotape was also seized that showed young
boys engaged in sexual acts. Meyer will appear in federal court on Friday
when prosecutors say they will request he be held without bail...
EDWIN Toilolo, a veteran state guard at Halawa Prison, pled guilty on Monday
to charges of accepting a $300 bribe to buy crystal methamphetamine (or
"ice") and smuggling it to an undercover agent who was posing as an inmate in
the prison. The defense filed a request that Toilolo's sentencing be delayed
until after April 1997, after which he will qualify for full federal benefits
for 18 years of service with the National Guard. Federal Judge David Ezra
told Toilolo that he will consider the request, but said he wouldn't bend the
rules to benefit someone who violated the public's trust. If convicted,
Toilolo faces a 20-year prison sentence...
AFTER a month of talks with the state consumer advocate, interisland cargo
company Young Brothers has been asked to pursue a rate increase considerably
smaller than the one initially proposed. Young Brothers had hoped to generate
an additional $3 million by raising its shipping rates by 9.9 percent.
Consumer Advocate Chuck Totto has reportedly advised the company that a 3.9
percent increase request would be more reasonable. The final figure will be
determined by the Public Utilities Commission...
ALTHOUGH seven of Honolulu's nine city council members said they will remain
impartial, two have taken sides in the race for mayor. Councilman John Henry
Felix said he wholeheartedly supports candidate Arnold Morgado, and has
recently been seen waving signs and speaking at public events on Morgado's
behalf. Meanwhile, Councilman Steve Holmes said this week that he favors
incumbent mayor Jeremy Harris in the Nov. 5 primary...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 90/75, Kaua`i 84/72, Moloka`i 86/73, Maui 89/74, Hilo 84/72
CASTS: Clear, morning showers, trades to 20MPH; North Shore surf to 4 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High --:-- a.m.; Low --:-- p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Tuesday, October 8, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: CAYETANO WANTS MAJOR PRISON EXPANSIONS
Prodded along by federal mandates and election-year campaigning, Gov.
Ben Cayetano today announced a plan to increase the capacity of the state's
prison system by more than 30 percent.
Cayetano made his announcement at the state's Waiawa facility, as prison
crews and Hawai`i National Guard workers there poured concrete for two tent-
like structures the governor described as "no frills" prison annexes.
The Waiawa expansion, which will eventually add a classroom for a drug-
treatment program and 100 beds to the minimum-security facility, is only the
first of several projects Cayetano said he hopes to set in motion over the
next two years.
With financial support from the state Legislature, Cayetano said, he
would like to see dormitories and more beds added to both O`ahu Community
Correctional Center and the Women's Community Correctional Center.
Under the governor's plan, an office building at OCCC would be converted
into a dormitory with room for 116 inmates. The center would also get two new
prison wards with 84 beds each.
At the women's prison, Cayetano said, he wants an 84-bed dormitory to be
built on what is now the facility's recreation field.
Recreational space would also be sacrificed at the Halawa Correctional
Facility under the governor's plan. The prison's gymnasium would be converted
into another medium-security 116-bed dormitory.
In order to get it all done, Cayetano said he will need the Legislature
to appropriate $10 million in next year's budget for construction costs
alone.
"This is the capital improvement cost -- it does not include the
operational cost," Cayetano said. "We probably will need additional staff."
The state prison system could need an annual operating budget of $8
million, he said.
Altogether, the state's existing eight facilities are designed to hold a
total of 2,600 inmates. For the last several years, however, the prison
system has found itself housing nearly 3,200 inmates.
Last year, the state sent 300 inmates to private facilities in Texas to
help ease prison overcrowding in the islands.
Cayetano also acknowledged today that the administration is considering
building a new prison on a 90-acre parcel at Campbell Industrial Park. That
plan is only at the conceptual stage, he said, and is complicated by limited
sewage service in the area.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: ISLAND LOCALES RANK HIGH IN TRAVEL SURVEY
The island of Maui has been named the top island destination in the
world by Conde Nast Traveler magazine -- a title it has held now for three
years running.
Maui's neighbors all ranked in the top 20 spots, with Kaua`i placing
second, the Big Island ninth, Lana`i took 10th and O`ahu 13th.
The list of top islands is one of several international travel rankings
compiled by the magazine for its October issue.
In polling its 35,000 subscribers on the best resort, Maui also came out
on top for its Four Seasons.
Hawai`i resorts dominated the category, with the Mauna Lani Bay Hotel,
the Halekulani, the Manele Bay Hotel on Lana`i, the Ritz-Carlton Kapalua and
Kauai's Hyatt Regency rounding out the top five.
The annual survey has traditionally translated into tangible results for
Maui's visitor industry.
"I receive calls all the time from visitors who call me to tell me they
are very happy that they chose Maui," Maui Visitors Bureau Chief Marsha
Weinert told KITV-4.
"They chose Maui because they read that we were rated the very best
island in the world, and they had a choice to go anywhere that they wanted
to," Weinert said.
In ranking major U.S. cities, the survey found Honolulu, Hawai`i to be
the eighth most popular urban destination. San Francisco ranked first,
followed by New Orleans; Charleston, S.C.; Santa Fe, N.M.; Boston, Seattle
and San Antonio. After Hawai`i, New York and Savannah, Ga. finished up the
top ten.
When pitted against all destinations worldwide, San Francisco placed
second behind Sydney, Australia.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: HUSBAND WAS STABBED IN SELF DEFENSE, WOMAN TESTIFIES
Although Tamara Reed, 21, doesn't deny that she delivered the knife
wound that killed her husband earlier this year, she said the stabbing was in
self defense and put an end to several months of domestic violence.
Reed took the stand in her own trial yesterday, and told Judge Richard
Perkins that her husband Richard had the knife first.
Reed said her husband had thrown her against the wall of their Waikele
apartment and held a knife to her throat.
"I looked up into his eyes and he said I am going to kill you," Reed
said. "I stood still -- I thought he was going to kill me."
Reed said she only wanted to get away; she said she panicked and grabbed
the knife, pushing it back at her husband.
"I was trying to scratch him," she said. "I wasn't trying to kill him."
Reed said she ran out of the house, and her husband followed. She kept
running, calling to her neighbors for help, she said
Her injured husband eventually collapsed to the ground. Medical
investigators said he died from a single stab wound that pierced his heart.
Reed said the incident was the ninth violent outburst she could remember
on the part of her husband, whom she married in February of last year. The
couple moved to Hawai`i in June 1995.
They fought often, Reed said, and her husband frequently got violent.
Although prosecutors acknowledge that Reed's husband had a record of
being abusive, they maintain that she didn't have to use deadly force.
Reed, who waived her right to a jury trial, is facing a murder charge.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
AFTER three large underground explosions blacked-out downtown Honolulu and
sent two women to the hospital on Friday, Hawaiian Electric officials are
mobilizing a special task force that will inspect the entirety of its
downtown network of underground lines and look for ways to make sure similar
incidents don't happen again. HECO spokesman Chuck Freedman said the company
will be bringing in a Mainland consultant who has experience investigating
similar explosions in other cities. Apart from hiring the consultant,
Freedman said the task force will be supported with the company's current
budget and will not tax the company's resources. The inspection teams will
work during the night, so as to not worsen downtown traffic, Freedman said...
PUNA Geothermal Venture on the Big Island reported the largest volume of
hydrogen sulfide to leak into the atmosphere since its volcano-driven power
plant went online in 1993, according to Hawai`i County Civil Defense
officials. Early Friday morning, a malfunctioning pump valve allowed a large
amount of gas to escape. Scheduled air-quality tests performed that day found
hydrogen sulfide levels near the plant averaging over 45 parts-per-billion,
at one point reaching nearly 300 parts-per-billion. State health department
regulations, however, only allow for up to 25 parts-per-billion only under
special conditions. Officials say the geothermal plant will be cited for the
violation some time this week...
WALTER Dods, chairman of First Hawaiian Bank's board of directors, was
elected president of the 8,000-member American Bankers Association yesterday.
The national group is currently holding its annual convention in Honolulu.
Dods, who previously served as the association's first vice president, is the
first island banker to head the association, which claims a membership in
excess of 8,000. In accepting the post, Dods said his first priority will be
to improve the public image of banks as the industry heads into the next
millineum. Diversification and lobbying are his other top goals, he said...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 88/71, Kaua`i 84/71, Moloka`i 85/71, Maui 86/73, Hilo 83/70
CASTS: Sunny, trades to 20MPH; North and West shore surf to 4 feet.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: High --:-- a.m.; Low --:-- p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Friday, October 4, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: DOWNTOWN ROCKED BY UNDERGROUND EXPLOSIONS
Shortly before 11 a.m. today, a series of underground explosions in the
heart of downtown Honolulu blew manhole covers more than 30 feet into the
air, knocking out power over a twelve block area and injuring at least two
pedestrians.
Several explosions were reported before and after the major blasts,
which occurred in underground electric vaults at the corner of Merchant and
Richards streets.
According to Hawaiian Electric officials, the explosions were caused by
when gases created by the burning of heavy-duty wire insulation ignited.
Police, fire and civil defense officials mobilized after the first 911
calls came in at 10:50 a.m.
The major explosions were loud strong enough to shake the ground, and
many witnesses said they thought a bomb had been set off.
Smoke and flames billowed out of three open manholes along Richards
street, and city traffic was thrown into chaos as downtown workers flooded
out of their darkened buildings and collected on sidewalks.
The resulting electrical outage affected the state Capitol, City Hall
and the Municipal Building, as well as dispatch centers for both the police
and fire departments. Backup systems allowed the emergency centers to remain
operational.
One 47-year-old woman who was standing near one of the manhole covers
when it was blown into the air suffered minor injuries, and a 38-year-old
woman had to be treated for smoke inhalation.
Although most downtown electrical service was restored by 1:30 p.m.,
many businesses called it a day by noon. Some traffic lanes are still closed
tonight as HECO employees worked to figure out what happened and repair the
damage.
According to HECO spokesman Chuck Freedman, the trouble started when a
fail-safe overload system -- comparable to a basic fuse -- failed.
For reasons yet unknown, Freedman said, the downtown electrical system
overloaded this morning. He said major low-voltage wires began to heat up,
and the material used to insulate them began to vaporize.
As the vapors began to accumulate in underground concrete and steel
cable vaults in which major electrical junctions are housed, he said, they
ignited, causing the explosions.
Despite the flammable nature of the vapors they create, HECO Safety
Director Jim Beaver said the wire insulation used in their system is made
from the best material available.
The wires are about 10 years old, he said, and their life expectancy is
at least 30 years. In addition, according to HECO, the entire downtown
electrical system was thoroughly inspected this past summer.
Although today's incident left many people shaken, safety officials
acknowledge that similar things have happened before and are common in many
metropolitan areas.
Fire Battalion Chief Craig Matthew said that it wasn't the first time
underground explosions were reported downtown, although he said the previous
incidents weren't as serious.
"This particular section, over the course of the last 10 years, I've
seen at least two or three other times where we've had manhole covers pop,"
Matthew said.
Less than a week ago, the same three manhole covers blasted in today's
incident were found dislodged, he said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: OFFICER TO SPEND YEAR IN PRISON
A Honolulu Police Department officer was sentenced to a year in prison
yesterday in connection with the beating of a suspect at the Pearl City
police station in January of last year.
Russell Won, a police academy instructor and ex-police officer, will
begin serving his sentence at a federal detention center in January, allowing
him to spend the holidays with his family.
Although Won was not fined, U.S. District Judge David Ezra ordered him
to pay the victim, Ivan Folau, $2,300 in damages.
"A badge is not a license to beat prisoners," Ezra said.
Two other officers -- Clyde Hayami and Keith Flynn -- have already been
sentenced to five years and three months respectively for their role in the
beating incident.
Prosecutors said the case was a difficult one.
"It is extremely difficult for police officers to testify against other
police officers," said U.S. Attorney Steven Alm. "The difficult work they do,
the life threatening work they do, creates a bond between the officers that
is critical to their success and critical to saving each other's lives."
Nevertheless, Alm said, the public's trust cannot be compromised in the
name of police camaraderie.
Lani Garcia, Won's attorney, described her client as a decent man.
Although she said she recognized Won needed to be punished, she said he
should have gotten a more lenient sentence.
"This is a good man," Garcia said. "He made a mistake, but it's not
worth 12 months in jail."
Garcia said she is considering appealing the sentence.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: BITS AND PIECES
FAIRWEATHER fans might not be there for the struggling University of Hawai`i
Rainbow football team, but former mayor Frank Fasi is. So is Panda Travel, a
Honolulu travel agency. At a press conference yesterday, Fasi was recognized
by UH officials and Gov. Ben Cayetano for a $50,000 gift to the university's
athletics department. Panda Travel was acknowledged for their $50,000
contribution. Starr Seigle McCombs also announced that it would assemble a
comprehensive advertising campaign for the university's athletics program,
free of charge. The donations helped kicked off the department's first fund-
raising drive, prompted by recent budget cuts...
MARK Siegel, 35, is counting his blessings tonight after he was rescued --
dehydrated and fish-bitten -- from the channel between Maui and the Big
Island. Siegel, a resident of Kula, Maui, was flying a single-engine plane
from Kona to Kahalui when its engine apparently failed. Siegel told Coast
Guard rescuers that he barely had enough time to get out before the plane
sank. Officials say he had been floating in a life vest for at least 24 hours
before he was spotted by a search helicopter. Friends say Siegel, a
helicopter pilot, rents and flies planes on his time off...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 89/73, Kaua`i 86/72, Moloka`i 87/72, Maui 88/73, Hilo 84/72
CASTS: High humidy, trades to 15MPH; North and West shore surf 8 to 15 feet.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: High 11:32 a.m.; Low 6:50 p.m.
SUNDAY'S TIDES: High 12:20 p.m.; 7:19 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Net of Light Thursday, October 3, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: GRAHAM CONVICTED, FACES LIFE IN PRISON
Circuit Court Judge Wendell Huddy today convicted Garreth Graham, 34, of
second-degree murder, kidnapping and attempted extortion in connection with
the May 1994 death of 41-year-old Ming Li Chang.
Graham had admitted in court to kidnapping Chang in the hopes of
collecting a $45,000 ransom from her husband, Ker Min Chang. The woman's face
and body was bound with tape and put in the trunk of the couple's car, where
she was found dead by police hours later.
"It's just like a nightmare haunting me for the past two and a half
years and I'm glad, finally, that this is over," Ker Min Chang said.
Earle Partington, Graham's attorney, had been fighting for a lesser
charge of manslaughter, claiming Graham's judgment was impaired by cocaine
use and that he never intended to kill Chang.
Prior to the kidnapping, the Changs had hired Graham to help remodel
their Waialae Iki home.
In levying his judgment, Huddy said Graham demonstrated that he was
"indifferent" to the value of a human life. The murder conviction means
Graham faces a sentence of life in prison with the possibility of parole.
Prosecutors may request an extended sentence, however, making the
maximum penalty two life terms plus an additional 20 years.
Deputy Prosecutor Maurice Arrisgado said he was pleased with the
outcome, characterizing Graham as a danger to the community.
Partington said he was not surprised by the conviction. He said Graham
regretted Chang's death and told him that he deserved to be locked up
forever, they key to his cell thrown away.
Despite Graham's remorse, the victim's husband said he had no sympathy
for the man he once employed as a personal favor.
"Just for $45,000 he took someone's life," he said. "This is not
forgivable."
Partington said he will most likely appeal Huddy's decision, saying the
prime criteria for handing down a murder conviction -- an apparent intent to
kill -- was not proven in Graham's case.
Graham's sentencing is scheduled for Dec. 13.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: MAINLAND BOOK WHOLESALER CONTRACT DEFENDED
Librarians from several island libraries this week complained that the
state's $500,000 contract with a Mainland company has led to their receiving
too many books they don't need and not enough of those they don't -- none of
which they had a say in choosing.
State Librarian Bart Kane said at a press conference today that the
problems are being worked out, and defended the arrangement as one that gives
library staff more time to serve the public.
Under the current arrangement, the state has given North Carolina-based
Baker & Taylor Co. the job of choosing which books to purchase to fill the
shelves of Hawai`i libraries.
Although there have been some problems with miscategorization, Kane
said, the company has since received a more detailed profile indicating which
books they want for their particular clientele.
The accidental delivery of several hundred books that libraries already
have will not be repeated either, he said.
The state has directed the book wholesaler toward the library system's
comprehensive catalog of books at all locations, Kane said. The catalog has
been accessible on the internet for several years.
The arrangement saves the state money, Kane said, as it pays a flat rate
of $20.94 per book for the company's comprehensive slate of selection and
delivery services.
The wholesaler previously hired by the state charged about 60 percent
more for the same arrangement, he said.
Kane said "it doesn't take a genius" to figure out that operations would
be much more expensive if library staff members -- who are paid up to $20 an
hour -- had to select, order, process and ship every book.
In addition to the economic benefits, he said, the five-year contract
will also directly benefit the public because librarians now have more to
spend assisting library patrons.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: SUGAR ERA DRAWS TO CLOSE ON O`AHU
After nearly a century of operation, the Waialua Sugar Mill -- the last
of seven O`ahu sugar plantations that once formed a vital part of Honolulu's
economic and cultural landscape -- closed down today.
In a scene reminiscent of the one that marked the close of McBryde sugar
on Kaua`i just over a month ago, cane-hauling trucks decorated with signs,
flowers and signs formed a convoy and honked their horns as they brought in
the last harvest the mill will ever process.
As the trucks crawled through the North Shore towns of Haleiwa and
Waialua early this morning, residents lined the road and waved good-bye to
the island's sugar era.
""That was beautiful," said Waialua Sugar Mill superintendent Ralph
Rego. "I had to cry."
By 7:10 a.m., the last load of sugar cane had been delivered, and many
of the mill's 147 employees paused to reflect on the company's 97-year
history, and their own future.
"This is the last time I'm going to see these haulers running," Rego
told KHON-TV2. "I'm old enough to retire, but not the way I wanted to."
"I'm just hurting inside -- sad," he said.
Dole Co., which owns the mill, said that although their Honolulu sugar
operations are a thing of the past, the now-barren sugar land will be used to
plant other crops such as papayas and bananas.
The company said it will try to retain as many Waialua Sugar Mill
employees as it can.
Meanwhile Bishop Estate, which owns about 6,000 acres of the land used
for sugar, said today that it plans to continue to use the land for
agriculture.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Subject: STRAUB TO SEE $80 MILLION IN MEDICAL MERGER
Straub, the largest Hawai`i-based health care provider in the state,
officially announced a multi-million dollar merger with a mainland physician
management company yesterday.
PhyCor, Inc. of Nashville, Tenn., will invest $80 million in the island
medical company -- $50 million of that interest-free.
Under the arrangement approved earlier this week by Straub's board of
directors, privately-held Straub stock will be exchanged for PhyCor's stock,
which is traded publicly.
A new company, PhyCor Hawai`i, will be formed to handle business
operations, and a new Straub corporation will manage its facilities.
"We believe we can do better more quickly with PhyCor," Straub board
chairman William Montgomery told the _Honolulu Star-Bulletin_.
With Straub already turning a healthy profit, the arrangement is
especially beneficial because it will bring operational support, advanced
computer resources and increase the value of Straub's services, Montgomery
said. It would also allow Straub to open more clinics, hire more physicians
and offer more health plans, he said.
Straub, which manages 10 clinics across the state, saw a $5.5 million
profit in 1995, and reports net revenues of over $441 million. PhyCor,
meanwhile, runs several clinics in 22 states, and reported a net profit of
about $22 million in 1995.
The merger has yet to receive a thumbs-up from shareholders and is
awaiting regulatory approval by government agencies, but it is expected to be
finalized in January 1997.
Officials said the deal will not affect Straub's 2,000 employees, and
its patients will not notice anything different.
Similar mergers between health care agencies is a trend already
established on the mainland, Montgomery said.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------==:]>-
Editor's Note: In an article published in the Oct. 20, 1996 edition of Ka
`Upena Kukui, Straub's financial condition and several aspects of the Straub-
PhyCor merger were inaccurately reported. Ka `Upena regrets the error.
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 87/71, Kaua`i 85/70, Moloka`i 86/71, Maui 87/71, Hilo 82/70
CASTS: Mostly sunny, trades to 15MPH; Islandwide surf under 3 feet.
FRIDAY'S TIDES: High 10:33 a.m.; Low 6:14 p.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
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The Net of Light Wednesday, October 2, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
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Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: DEATH PENALTY MAY COME IN PEARL HARBOR SHOOTING CASE
Duane Staggs, 29, appeared in Federal Court on Monday and said he would
not contest the prosecution's request that he be held without bail for the
fatal shooting of 59-year-old Don Gillis.
Gillis died of gunshot wounds to his chest after Gillis allegedly shot
him at least four times with a long-barreled rifle on Saturday.
Staggs and Gillis both worked for Hawaiian Dredging, and Gillis was a
company foreman and supervisor for Staggs.
Company officials clarified yesterday that Staggs had recently been
suspended -- not fired -- by the company for unspecified reasons.
Following a late-night crew picnic, Gillis was sitting in his pickup
truck with Staggs' wife, Malia. Staggs allegedly drove up in his own truck
and shot Gillis through the front windshield.
Following the shooting, Honolulu police say Staggs called 911 to report
that he had killed Gillis. Investigators say Staggs had to be treated at
Queen's Medical Center for a hand injury he suffered while trying to reach
through the cracked truck window to punch the man he'd just shot.
Prosecutors say they will seek a court order to obtain blood samples
obtained during Staggs' medical treatment to determine whether alcohol or
drugs were in his system at the time of the shooting.
Because the shooting took place on the grounds of the Pearl Harbor Navy
Reservation near the Arizona Memorial Visitors Center, the case will be heard
in a federal court.
Federal jurisdiction also means Staggs may face a death penalty
according to federal public defender Peter Wolff.
""The classification depends on circumstances which haven't been alleged
yet, one way or the other," Wolff said.
Stacy Moniz, attorney for Gillis' family, said that Staggs may have been
suspended because he failed a company drug test. Officials with Hawaiian
Dredging would neither confirm nor deny Moniz's information.
Moniz also maintained that Gillis and Staggs' wife were not romantically
involved.
"I just don't believe some kind of romance or illicit affair is part of
the set of circumstances," Moniz said. "I think it's conceivable as anything
else that there was an argument between Mr. and Mrs. Staggs that evening, and
that Mr. Gillis was just trying to assist Mrs. Staggs."
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Subject: HPU MOVES TO FIGHT OFF MEASLES OUTBREAK
Two cases of measles have turned up at the downtown campus of Hawai`i
Pacific University in the last week, and the discovery has prompted the
school to require its more than 5,000 students to prove they've been
inoculated against the disease or else be kept from attending classes.
A female student contracted the disease last week, and HPU officials
initially urged the approximately 120 students in all of her classes to get
immunized. Another student developed measles over the weekend, however, and
now every student will have to be immunized, school administrators announced
yesterday.
The possibility of a measles outbreak has officials with the state
Department of Health getting involved, helping to provide vaccinations at
both the downtown campus and the Hawai`i Loa campus in Kane`ohe.
Vaccinations will be mandatory for any student without medical
documentation of having received them in the past.
"You have to have an immunization card," said HPU president Walter
Fleming. "We're going to require all students to have that card filled out by
the Department of Health if they've had the immunization."
"If they come to class and that's not completed we're going to send them
directly over to have it done," he said.
Under state guidelines, all Hawai`i residents must be inoculated against
measles twice -- once at birth and once at age five or six.
However, since HPU boasts a strong population of international students,
many may not have received vaccinations before attending school in Hawai`i,
Fleming said.
"We are also looking at providing the opportunity for our faculty and
staff to be inoculated as well," he said.
Health officials say the last reported cases of measles in Hawai`i were
discovered last summer on Maui, contracted by a single family in which none
of the members received required vaccinations.
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Subject: HOUSE GIVEAWAY HITS NEW SNAG
Last week, Honolulu police told Sharon Kidwell that she was violating
state gambling laws by trying to raffle off her Maunawili mansion. At the
time, she said she'd heed police orders and call off the contest, refunding
the voluntary $1 donation she asked of entrants.
Instead, she turned the drawing into an essay competition.
Now, the U.S. Postal Service said Kidwell may be engaging in mail fraud.
"A lot of times people who run these types of contests tend to give
prizes to friends, relatives or somebody that they like instead of to the
general public," said Byron Dare, a Honolulu postal inspector.
"We're very concerned about whether, even if there was a legitimate
contest, whether the public would have an opportunity to actually receive the
prize," he said.
Dare said his concern is separate from those raised by HPD, focused more
on the unregulated prize winner selection process rather than the collection
of money.
Kidwell said she was appalled at the postal service's charges.
"(The USPS) has no right to censor my mail -- I'm not doing anything
illegal," she said.
Kidwell said yesterday that she would not call off the contest, adding
that the police department's contention that she cannot ask entrants to
submit a donation is also unfounded.
"If I want to ask you for a dollar, I have a perfect right to ask you
for a dollar," Kidwell said.
Dare said if the postal service decides to charge Kidwell with mail
fraud, she faces a seven-year prison sentence as well as a $10,000-per-day
fine for every day the contest continues after a cessation order is issued.
Under Kidwell's revised "Hawai`i Home Giveaway" rules, entrants must
submit an essay explaining why they want to live in the four-bedroom luxury
home.
Kidwell said she hasn't been able to sell the Pu`ualoha St. estate nor
afford its $1.8 million mortgage for several months.
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Subject: BITS AND PIECES
HONOLULU police yesterday arrested a convicted child molester after they say
he sexually assaulted a group of six children. Investigators say Robert
Maurice Fox, 56, took a group of children -- ranging in age from five to 11
years -- to Ala Moana Beach Park on Sunday. Then, police say, Fox brought
them to his Mo`ili`ili home where he allegedly fondled them and forced the
them to view pornography on his computer. He now faces 13 counts of sexual
assault and two charges of promoting pornography. According to police, Fox
was convicted in 1984 for the sexual assault of a minor in Nevada. After an
early release, Fox moved to Hawai`i and enrolled in a sex abuse treatment
program. Fox had been attending treatment program sessions, police say...
JEFFREY Pang, 16, may be tried as an adult for charges that he abused his 27-
day old daughter on Aug. 6. A grand jury is expected to hear the case
tomorrow. Doctors say the infant's injuries have left her blind and likely
brain damaged, consistent with "Shaken Baby Syndrome." In addition to having
detached retinas in both eyes, Pang's daughter also suffered leg and rib
fractures as well as bite marks on her arms and legs. The infant was injured
Aug. 6 when Pang was left to baby-sit her for several hours while Pang's
girlfriend was not home...
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Subject: KA `UPENA ALMANAC
TEMPS: O`ahu 88/72, Kaua`i 86/72, Moloka`i 86/72, Maui 88/73, Hilo 83/72
CASTS: Mostly sunny, trades to 15MPH; North and West shore surf to 4 feet.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: High -:-- p.m.; Low --:-- a.m.
<> ----------[ K A ` U P E N A K U K U I ]---------- <>
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The Net of Light Monday, September 30, 1996
Hawai`i News -- Internet Edition Compiled by Ryan K. Ozawa
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summarized from various island news sources, including independent interviews
and research, radio and television broadcasts and local papers. No material
is duplicated directly unless otherwise attributed. Intended for personal use
only -- please obtain permission from author before redistributing. Aloha!
=============================================================================
Subject: THOUSANDS HEAR CALL OF THE LOST CONTINENT
Over 3,000 Honolulu residents turned out this weekend for a casting call
for "Atlantis: The Lost Continent" -- a made-for-television movie that
industry analysts say could pump nearly 3 million dollars into the local
economy.
The movie, which producers say will be filmed almost entirely on O`ahu,
will debut on an new Mainland cable network yet to begin broadcasting.
"We have 39 speaking parts and we've cast 31 here in Honolulu," said
production spokesman Garrison True.
"I know a lot of people are going to get work out of this call," True
said. "The movie calls for 450 extras to play a part."
The arrival of "Atlantis" in the islands is being heralded as a much-
needed windfall for the state, as unemployment figures continue to linger %0