Show C j 'i' ri E2 — er Sir-- 2 n It 1337 MetroUtah Public hearing to be held about SkyWest collision f AP) — The Na-Safety Board ana putlc it will ccrd-hear-- g hers to dctermre the cf a collsion between a January rnd-ai- r commuter airhrer and a private plane that killed ID people NTS3 mvestgator John said the agency’s four board members voted Thursday to hold the heanrg but a date lkelv won’t be scheduled for another three weeks -- V e will call witnesses" said “The list will be determined on the basis of isjues that have come up in the the investigation and where we think we reed to hear sworn testimony so that we SALT LAKE CITY tonal Trarsportaton nounced Friday can determine the cause and develop recommendations" The NTS3 is invest aatrg the Jax 15 collson between a SkyUest Airlines Metrokner on approach to Salt Lake International Airport and a private Moowith two experienced pilots ney aboard that strayed into restricted airspace only minutes before the crash Federal investigators continue to examine recorded radar data to get a better understandng of what hampered the air traffic controller's ability to determine the whereabouts of the Mooney Lauber sad “X e’ve pretty much wrapped up every thing else except that having to do with ar traffic control and radar" he sxd Federal Aviation Administration officials said Friday that rado communications between the air traffic controller and the Metroliner revealed "nothirg unusual" up to the une of the collision which showered the Salt Lake suburb of Kearns with bodies and debris The F AA has released a transcript of the conversation which records the unidentified controller's communications with SkyWest flight 1834 and five other aircraft he was handling at the time The transcnpt shows the SkyWest crew had been given headings to proceed on a visual flight rules landing pattern and had acknowledged the drections at 12:51 p m Six seconds later an expletive was recorded although investigators haven’t corfrmed it came from the cockpit “SkyWest 834 is cleared visual apr left" the conproach runway troller responded The bearings were repeated and then the controller called the plane’s flight number There was no response “Now we have lost radio contact and about this time we’re also losing radar contact" said Gene Mi nahan evaluation manager of air tratTic at the FAA regional office in Seattle “This is where the accident is suspected to have hap pened" Up untl the crash the controller had been “sequencing" or lining up planes coming m to land “There's nothing unusual at all about what's happening m terms of the controller’s activities" Monahan said The radar tape shows the Mooney had penetrated about I1': miles into the restricted Airport Radar Service Area when the crash occurred investigators have said To fly in the ARSA an aircraft must establish radio contact and be cleared The Mooney was never in radio communication with Salt Lake International Franklin’s trials not double jeopardy Blair Kooistra Standard Examiner The latest in plastic fashion Some people will go to great lengths — even the gutter ioned clothing accessories from them ’We call it the — to improve their wardrobe Alicia Nielsen (left) and “school hatred’ look’ said Shreve ’Our school hates at Highland Junior High anything to be different so we’re trying to be different’ Charity Shreve School found sheets of clear plastic in the gutter as said Nielsen ‘If a fashion model would wear this it’d be they walked home from school this week and soon fash worth about $1000' she said Investigation of alleged police brutality finished KAYSVILLE — Police Chief Larkins says he has received a written report from the Davis County Sheriffs Department about its investigation of a March I incident in which a family has accused a Kay sv ille officer of brutality Larkins told the he received the report Thursday but hadn’t had time to Lyle review it with Mayor Gerald Purdy and City Attorney Felshaw Kang Larkins said he is likely to issue a statement on the matter early next week Capt Jimmie Stewart of the county sheriff s office said Friday report was fairly extensive but he refused to discuss its con- tents “It’s their (Kaysville officials’) report now and I think it would be inappropriate to release the information without having given them a chance to review it for themselves" Stewart said Larkins requested the investi-th- e gation after an incident involving Kaysville Officer Harold Burner and Chris Reynard 18 of 570 E Center St Reynard’s family has accused Burner of using excessive force before arresting him for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest The incident happened in the Reynards’ driveway after the officer approached Chris Reynard’s older brother about a problem with his vehicle PROVO (AP) — A former Internal Revenue Sen ice employee pleaded innocent and innocent by reason of insanity Friday in the Christmas Day shooting death of his estranged wife Robert S Treff 30 of Orem accused of killing Jennifer Treff 34 entered the plea in 4th District Court Judge George E Ballif a June 22 trial on the scheduled murder charge The victim died of three gunshot wounds to the chest Her body was found the morning of Dec 26 near the front door of her Orem home the same offense to be twice put in jeopady of life or limb" The Utah Constitution also prohibits repeat charges “for the same offense” Defense attorney Martin argued on May 10 1985 that both federal and state prosecutors had built cases based on Franklin’s “knowingly killing" the men and that the violations should have been considered as the same offense However Assistant Attorney General Dave B Thompson said there were distinct differences in the elements for murder and civil rights violations The state Supreme Court agreed The court also rejected Franklin’s request that it abandon the “dual sovereignty” doctrine and rule the state should not have tried him because he already had been tried by the federal government However the justices ruled that abandoning the doctrine could amount to “surrendering state sovereignty in exchange for a more theoretical than real gain in individual rights” The court also rejected Franklin’s argument that the state trial judge erred in admitting testimony concerning the defendant’s flight from a Kentucky police station two months before his arrest in Florida determined that when “We there is ample evidence to justify a flight instruction it is not error to give one so long as it instructs the jury that there might be reasons for flight that are fully consistent with innocence” Durham wrote Franklin was acquitted in Indiana in 1982 of a federal charge of violating the civil rights of black civil rights leader Vernon E Jordan who was shot outside a Fort Wayne motel on May 29 1980 as he stepped out of a car driven by a white woman Labrum pleads guilty to lesser charge in killing Utah briefs Orem man pleads innocent to wife’s December murder SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — In ruling that Joseph Paul Franklin was not subjected to double jeopardy the Utah Supreme Court held that federal prosecutors had proved that he prevented his victims from using a city park because of their race while state prosecutors proved he intentionally killed them “The federal and state crimes do not constitute the same offense” the justices decided in an opinion written by Justice Christine Durham and issued Friday “Neither the state nor the fedclause is vieral olated when a defendant is tried for different offenses arising out of the same incident as long as each offense requires proof of a fact that the other does not" the opinion said Franklin an avowed racist was convicted of separate federal and state charges in the sniper murders of two black joggers Franklin was found guilty in federal and state courts in the Aug 20 1980 slayings of David Martin 18 and Theodore Fields 20 as they jogged near Liberty Park with two white girls He was arrested in Florida two months after the slayings returned to Utah and convicted in US District Court in 1981 of charges he violated the victims’ civil rights by killing them He was sentenced to two consecutive life terms Franklin then was convicted in Utah’s 3rd District Court of two murder and counts of sentenced to consecutive life terms after a jury could not unanimously agree to impose the death penalty Franklin had used the double jeopardy argument in asking the high court to vacate his federal sentence and grant a new trial on state charges of capital homicide The 5th Amendment of the US Constitution guarantees that be subject for no person “shall State delegates tour Utah chemical disposal site TOOELE ARMY DEPOT (AP) — Delefrom three states proposed for chemical weapons incineration plants gave a mixed reception Friday to the Army's assurances that its disposal techniques are safe About 50 delegates from Indiana Maryland and Colorado toured the Chemical Agents Munitions Disposal System a prototype on which future chemical incineration plants in eight states would be based CAMDS where nearly 38000 munitions from the nation’s aging chemical arsenal have been destroyed since operations began in 1979 is located at a remote western Utah desert site 55 miles southwest of Salt Lake Public Defender Michael Esplin said two City Prior to the afternoon tour leaders from psychiatrists would make independent examinations of the defendant to communities neighboring the Newport Ind determine his mental state evaluations which Army Ammunition Plant the Aberdeen may be used as the basis for an insanity de- “Proving Ground in Maryland and the Pueblo fense Colo Depot Activity were briefed at Tooele gates Army Depot where about 42 percent of the nation’s chemical agent is stockpiled Former NFL football star delivers anti-dru- g keynote SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Bubba Smith a former NFL football player who relinquished a lucrative beer commercial contract to avoid sending the wrong message to youth has urged thousands of Utah teens to stay away from drugs Smith delivered the keynote speech Friday at the annual Utah Federation for Youth Conference at the University of Utah former defensive The lineman encouraged the teenagers to withstand peer pressure to use drugs or anything else that would disappoint their parents or others who depend on them Smith also introduced his parents Willie Ray Smith Sr and Georgia Smith and described his youth in football-craBeaumont Texas ST GEORGE (AP) — Robert W Labrum whose map helped authorities find the body of a woman missing since August on Friday pleaded guilty to manslaughter in a plea bargain agreement with Washington County prosecutors Labrum 23 had been charged murder in the with death of Becky Jo Jones 19 who was last seen in a St George parking lot on Aug 13 Jones’s body was found Thursday wrapped in a sleeping bag and buried in a shallow grave about seven miles northeast of St about 500 feet from US George 91 said Washington County Sheriff Glenwood Humphries The remains were taken to the state medical examiner’s office Labrum showed no emotion as he entered the plea in 5 th District Court as Jones’ family looked on The prosecution agreed to the plea bargain which was signed Wednesday because the state's evidence was complex and some may not have been usable because it came from Labrum’s wife Anne Feldsted Labrum said Washington County Attorney O Brenton Rowe Mrs Labrum signed an affidavit through the office of Salt Lake City attorney Ron Yengich stating she had seen a dismembered body in a trunk at the home of her husband’s grandparents two days after Jones disappeared Judge J Philip Eves said along with the murder charges prosecutors also dropped one count each of witness tampering and obstruction of justice against Labrum who in turn agreed to provide information on finding the body and to give prosecutors a truthful statement about the crime Benchmark Hospital hotline helps suicidal teens By CHERYL ARCHIBALD Eijriin j'jft WOODS CROSS — A hospital here has established a telephone "help line" to assist teenagers who may be contemplating suicide In less than a month the line at Benchmark Hospital has received at least 214 calls — nine from people seriously pondering suicide said Dr John Taylor director of psychology sen ices At least two calls were from teenagers talking about commuting suicide Many more calls have come from friends of suicidal teenagers said Tcggy Shimp referral coordinator One girl just elected cheerleader called the help line to say she felt undeserving of and of her fi lends’ praise Tay a leader thect being lor said The girl told a counselor that others expected her to be perfect and she knew she was not She was afraid others would learn she had faults and the burden was too great to bear She said she would take her mother’s pills “until they’re gone and then I II be gone too" said Taylor Taylor said the counselor talked the girl out of killing herself Parents students police teachers and social workers in Davis County became more concerned about teenage suicide after five adolescents in the northern end of the tounty and in Roy took their own lives late last year Although there are at least 10 similar help lines along the Wasauh Iront Tavlor said he contends the service at Benchmark is a needed avenue for teenagers and others to seek anonymous assistance in surviving suicidal episodes In Utah the annual suicide rate for all ages is 14 per 100000 population Taylor said For every adult suicide there arc 10 attempts Among teenagers there arc 40 or more attempts for cash suicide he said As could be expected the Benchmark line gets calls fiom people tn various walks of life and of all age groups One recent caller a mother with a successful career was bothered by months of frustration in dealing with a teenager’s drug abuse and a husband who didn't seem to care Taylor said She dialed the help line and tolJ a doctor she had incessant thoughts of killing herself She was at "moderately serious risk" of committing suicide Taylor said The woman thought she would be better ofT dead and her family would be better off without her Taylor said Taylor was able to persuade the woman and later her family to get into therapy About 120 of the 214 callers recorded as of this week were suffering depression and anxiety — some to the point of being suiudal — and 70 were calling about substance abuse problems of their own or of a family member Shimp said Other calls were for information About one of 10 callers needs “serious" help Taylor said Benchmark’s CounciILinc number is |