Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 21, 1983, Section A, Page 4, Image 4

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tame 4. Section A
inter/national
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Man claims
four killings
EUGENE — A murder warrant
has been issued for a former
orderly at a nursing home here
who is accused of killing three old
people and a young accident vic
tim with insulin injections in 1979,
police said.
Police in Nebraska say the man
told them he killed the people
because he wanted to put them
out of their misery and confessed
'so it wouldn't happen to anyone
else."
The warrant was issued
Wednesday for Otha Harrison
Hart, 33, who remains in custody
today in Lincoln, Neb., said Sgt.
Mike Cline of the Eugene Police
Department.
Cline added that the informa
tion gathered in the case so far
supports Hart’s claims.
Three of the victims died at the
nursing home. The fourth victim
died at his home, where Hart
worked as a nursing aide, Cline
said.
Cline said the fact that two of
the victims died on the same day
"adds more weight" to what Hart
said.
In his statement to police. Hart
said he felt sorry for the four pa
tients and described their deaths
as mercy killings, according to the
Lincoln Journal.
Hart had been working as an
orderly in a Lincoln nursing home
for about four weeks. He went to
police Tuesday morning and told
of his purported involvement in
the Eugene deaths, Lincoln Police
Lt. Ken Ideen said.
"There were no indications
whatever of foul play" in any
deaths at the Lincoln nursing
home since the man began work
ing there, Ideen said.
Deputy Lane County Medical Ex
aminer Ken Champion said the
deaths of the three elderly pa
tients and the younger person
were officially listed as being due
to natural causes.
Autopsies would not reveal any
traces of insulin, Champion said,
because the victims probably
were embalmed before they were
buried.
"The whole thing will hinge on
whether or not they can verify this
guy's story," Champion said,
"from what they get from local
charts and what they get from
local physicians."
CIA funds
cut by vote
WASHINGTON — A bitterly
divided House on Thursday voted
for the second time in three mon
ths to cut off CIA support for
Nicaraguan counter
revolutionaries. The 227-194 vote,
largely along party lines, was near
ly identical to the earlier tally.
Like the first cut-off proposal,
the new one is seen as unlikely to
win approval in the Republican
controlled Senate.
The House vote came after a
heated debate in which each side
acused the other of risking deeper
U.S. involvement in Central
America's wars.
"Military victory is the ad
ministration's bottom line,"
charged Rep. Edward Boland, D
Mass., chairman of the House In
telligence Committee, about the
expanding CIA backing for
Nicaraguan "contras" — or
counter-revolutionaries.
Boland, sponsor of the cut-off
amendment, said the Reagan ad
ministration must stop "waging
war in Nicaragua. And make no
mistake about it, this is exactly
what the United States is doing."
But Republicans said the covert
action had succeeded in pressur
ing the Nicaraguan Sandinista
government to curtail its support
for leftist guerrillas in El Salvador
and to accept new peace pro
posals from the so-called Con
tadora nations — Mexico, Colom
bia, Venezuela and Panama.
Further, declared Rep. C.
William Whitehurst, R-Va., an in
telligence committee member, if
the covert action is stopped,
"before this decade is out, you
will see American blood spilled in
ways no one can imagine." He
suggested that if the covert action
was stopped it could lead to direct
U.S. military intervention.
The amendment to the 1984 in
telligence authorization bill would
eliminate the covert aid and
replace it with $50 million in open
assistance to help pro-U.S. nations
in the region stop leftist gun
running.
Camping
on a budget
YAKIMA — Yakima County
Chief Criminal Deputy Marion
Baugher says the Brooks family of
Searcy, Ark., had enough money
with them to pay a $7.50 fee for
camping in a state park — and
avoid arrest.
The family was taken into
custody last weekend for failing to
pay the fee at Sportsman's Park
near Yakima.
When Freddie Brooks, 34, his
wife, Kathy, and his brother,
Gene, were booked into the coun
ty tail, they had $15 and some
change between them, Baugher
said.
When they were arrested, they
said they did not pay the fee
because of a lack of money.
Freddie Brooks later
acknowledged the family had a lit
tle more than $15 when members
got to town, but said if he had
paid the park fee, he wouldn't
have had enough money to buy
gas for a job search.
After the arrests, the Brooks'
10-year-old boy, Bobby, was turn
ed over to state Child Protection
officials, their dog was put in the
pound and their three vehicles,
two cars and a motorcycle, were
impounded. The Brooks tamily
later was released from jail, and
their boy and dog, a 1-year-old pit
bull named Smokey, were
returned.
"They were given every chance
to leave or go to the mission," said
Steve Middleton, Sportsman's
Park assistant ranger. Middleton
said Freddie Brooks used abusive
language and refused to leave.
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