March 30. 2005 Œlp ^Jortlanò ffîbseruer Page B2 L aw & J ustice Guilty Verdict Prompts Family Feud (AP) - A Multnomah County jury has found a man guilty ot murdering hischildhood friend. The jury decided Tuesday that Robert Wagner shot Lavell Matthews to death last year over a $100 drug debt. For years, the two extended fa m ilie s in P o rtla n d 's Humboldt neighborhood cel­ ebrated together and attended the same church. According to police, on March 23, 2004, Matthews, 35, was shot to d e a th on N orth W ebster Street. Wagner left the next day for Las Vegas. Two witnesses later told police they saw the shooting. When the judge read the verdict, a gasp was heard in the courtroom and then the families began shouting at each other. Due to the intense emo­ tions in the courtroom, a dozen sheriff s deputies were brought in to stand guard. OFF.: (5 0 3 )2 8 6 -1 1 0 3 STATE FARM FAX: (5 0 3 )2 8 6 -1 1 4 6 INSURANCE COMPANIES HOME OFFICESiBLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS ERNEST J. HILL, JR. Agent 6527 NE MLK, Jr. Boulevard Suite A Portland, OR 97217 TR Your Care Our First Priority Dr. Marceline Failla Chiropractic Physician Call for an appointment! (503) 228-6140 We are located at 1716 N.E. 42nd Ave., Portland, O R 97213 (Between Broadway and Sandy Blvd.) We specialize in: Automobile accident injuries Chronic headache and joint pain Workers Compensation injuries ^ Y o u e /f 421 SW 6,hAve located between Washington and Stark phone: 503-796-9250 website: www.avalonflowerspdx.com e-mail: avalonflowers @ msn.com Cori Stewart-Owner Snell-Des/g/ier C A N N O N 'S _ ^ = RJB EXPRESS Meth Most Wanted Arrested Bust made in north Portland A man described as one of M ultnom ah C o u n ty ’s 10 m ost wanted methamphetamine cooks was arrested March 23 after police raided his home on North Missouri Avenue in the historic Mississippi district. Terry Rae Dowell, 56 was de­ scribed by police as the county’s most notorious meth cook. He faces charges of violating terms of his parole. Since 1988, he twice has been convicted o f possessing and manufacturing a controlled sub­ stance. Dowell may also face charges of child and elder abuse after authori­ ties discovered that a 15-year-old boy and 18-year-old woman and 91 -year-old woman had been living at the north Portland house. Police said the home was used as a meth lab. A quarter of an ounce of crystal meth and m eth-cooking P hoto by M ark W ashington /T he P ortland O bserver equipment was seized from the home. One of the county's most wanted methamphetamine cooks was arrested and meth-cooking equipment was seized at this home on North Missouri Avenue. Portland May Pull Out of FBI Task Force ( AP) - Portland’s mayor is threat­ ening to pull the city out of the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force unless the federal agency gives him and the city police chief a higher security clearance. The FBI has created task forces with police departments in 100 cit­ ies across the country to investi­ gate potential terrorists and pre­ vent possible attacks. Portland would be the first city to remove itself from such a team, officials say. M ayor Tom Potter and other city officials want expanded over­ sight over any FBI anti-terror operations that include Portland police officers. A resolution in­ troduced W ednesday by Potter goes before the full C ity Council next week. Robert Jordan, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Portland di­ vision, said there is no precedent for granting top secret clearance to an elected municipal official. For now , the tw o Portland o f­ ficers assigned to the task force have higher security clearance than Potter or Police C hief D er­ rick Foxworth. Potter took office seven months after the arrest of a Portland lawyer whose fingerprints the FBI eventu­ ally determined had been mistak­ enly linked to the terrorist bom b­ ings that killed 191 people in Spain last March. The FBI issued a rare publ ic apol - ogy to attorney Brandon Mayfield, a convert to Islam who is suing the ( 5 0 3 ) 823-H ELP 111 S.W. 2nd Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97204 CRIME STOPPERS Man Mugged at ATM On the evening of Oct. 19 ,2(X)4 a man was standing outside of his northeast area busi­ ness when an unknown suspect approached from behind and struck the man in the back of the head. The suspect then told the victim to get down on the ground and bound the victim 's hands. The suspect took the victim’s car keys, picked him up and led him to the front of the business where the victim’s work car was parked. The suspect demanded the victim 's ATM card and personal identification number. In the victim 's car, the suspect went to the nearby Bank of America and ordered the man to withdraw money from the ATM. Luckily, the victim managed to escape and ran to a gas station to call police. The suspect was last seen at the Bank of America ATM on Northeast 101" and Sandy branch. A camera on the ATM took photos O ur S pecialty : R eal H ickory S moked B ar -B-Q Police need your help finding this suspect. of the suspect using the stolen card. Authori­ ties were able to determine that the suspect is a white male wearing a gray or bluejacket with baggy pants and possibly wearing a cap on his head. Detectives hope this information would allow someone to identify the suspect. Crime Stoppers is offering cash reward o f up to $1,000fo r information that would lead to an arrest in this case, or any unsolved felony. Those who contact Crime Stoppers with tips remain anonymous. Call Crime Stoppers at 503-823-4357. • Sandw iches • Salads • C hicken • P ork Ribs • Beef Ribs HOURS: CATERING ALL EVENTS Sunday M onday Tuesday Wed-Thurs Fri. & Sat. 11 am - 8 pm 11 am -9 pm closed 11 am -9 pm 11 am - 10pm Try our new healthy & vegetarian menu items * * * N ew L ocation * * * 5410 N.E. 33 rd r 503-288-3836 Gap Shows Economic Inequality Racial lines divided by the color green (AP) — Forty years after the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act and decades after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. made strides in racial equality, America remains split along racial lines - divided by the color green. Economic equality has become the para­ mount civil rights issue of the 21st century, according to many civil rights advocates. Fewer blacks than whites own their houses, get fair loans, invest in the stock market or sit on corporate boards, or have any real control over much of the trillions o f dollars flowing in mutual funds, pension plans and the financial markets, they said. “ Very real gains have been made on some parts o f the econom ic front and the educa­ tion front and m ost particularly on the job front.” said T hom as Shapiro, professor at I » Same Crime, Different Punishment Study shows blacks receive harsher judgement for gun laws (FORMERLY CHUCK HINTON'S) Catering & Take-Out government over the mistake. Both Potter and Public Safety Commissioner Randy Leonard said whatever the outcome of the reso­ lution, the city and the FBI should continue efforts to work together when there is a terrorism threat. “ It is absolutely critical to have their cooperation,” Jordan said. “I think that’s what the public expects from us.” Foxworth issued a statement also pledging cooperation with federal officials. the H eller School for Social Policy and M an­ agem ent at Brandeis Uni versity. “(B ut) those gains are being reversed through w idening racial w ealth g aps.” There is a difference between income and wealth, which the latter includes investments in stocks or pension plans, equity from paying a mortgage, and assets that can be used to pay for education or retirement. And wealth is where the biggest differences persist. In 1999, during a boom economy, Shapiro said, black middle-class families on average had one- fourth of the wealth of similarly educated, simi­ larly employed white middle-class families. The disparity was even starker across all income groups - black families as a whole had only 10 cents in wealth for every dollar white families had, according to government figures. There are historical reasons - generations ot poverty, a legacy o f slavery and laws that kept them from education, housing and good jobs. I I (AP) - A study o f C alifornia's weapons registration law found that blacks were far more likely to be charged with a felony than whites, who were more often charged with a misdemeanor for the same offense. The study conducted by state Attorney General Bill Lockyer prompted calls forchanges from the N.A.A.C.P(National Association for the Advancement o f Colored People); the law­ maker who authored the legislation defended The study examined data on how the law, which took effect Jan. 1.2000, is being applied. The law makes it illegal for anyone to possess a gun if they are not listed by the state as the firearm owner. Offenders can be charged with a felony or a misdemeanor, a lesser count. In 2003, less than 40 percent o f whites faced felony charges under the law; more than 70 percent of blacks and nearly 70 percent of Hispanics were charged with felonies. This study has lead black leaders seek change in law. The report shows that blacks were proportionately most likely to be filed on at the felony level, followed by Hispanics, other race/ethnic groups, and whites. This pattern was evident throughout the period shown. According to the law 's author. Democratic state Senator Jack Scott the option of a misde­ meanor charge is in the event an individual has a giwxl excuse for possessing a weapon not registered to him or her. For example if the weapon is properly registered in the name of a spouse or other close relative. Scott noted many o f those charged with felony possession of an illegal handgun also were charged with other felonies at the same time. “Perhaps more dangerous individuals are charged with a felony," he said. Alice A. Huffman, president of the Califor­ nia State Conference of the N.A.A.C.P. said her organization would work with the legislature s black caucus to change the law or its enforce­ ment.