The Delaware Gazette

Amid evidence cache in Martin case, questions nag

DG298175_web_Neighborhood-Watch_Hoew

ORLANDO, Fla. — Pros­e­cu­tors in the Trayvon Mar­tin case dumped a moun­tain of evi­dence on the pub­lic this week. In many crim­i­nal cases, that would bring clar­ity, start answer­ing the basic questions.

Documents shed new light on Trayvon Martin killing

ORLANDO, Fla. — Trayvon Mar­tin had mar­i­juana in his sys­tem. He was shot through the heart at close range. George Zim­mer­man had a bro­ken nose, bruises and bloody cuts on the back of his head.

Zimmerman apologizes for shooting; gets $150K bail

SANFORD, Fla. — A rou­tine bail hear­ing for George Zim­mer­man took a sur­pris­ing turn into remorse and expla­na­tion Fri­day when the neigh­bor­hood watch vol­un­teer got on the wit­ness stand and told Trayvon Martin’s par­ents: “I am sorry for the loss of your son.”

The library is the place for pupils

With the hol­i­days now pleas­ant mem­o­ries, many folks have returned to their reg­u­lar school sched­ules. The Delaware County Dis­trict Library offers a wide menu of sup­port for stu­dents of all kinds — tra­di­tional, non­tra­di­tional — and ages — chil­dren, teens and adults.

Consultant: Former 911 director created hostile work environment

While con­clud­ing there is evi­dence that for­mer Delaware County 911 Direc­tor Bob Green­law cre­ated a hos­tile work envi­ron­ment in the 911 cen­ter through repeated “sex­u­ally charged” com­ments, three female 911 cen­ter employ­ees who were laid off last August were not tar­geted after report­ing them, a human resources inves­ti­ga­tor hired by the county has found.

Murdochs to be questioned in UK; FBI opens review

LONDON — Rupert Mur­doch and his son James first refused, then agreed Thurs­day to appear before U.K. law­mak­ers inves­ti­gat­ing phone hack­ing and police bribery, while in the U.S., the FBI opened a review into alle­ga­tions the Mur­doch media empire sought to hack into the phones of Sept. 11 victims.

Study says 1 in 13 US children have food allergy

CHICAGO — Food aller­gies affect about one in 13 U.S. chil­dren, dou­ble the lat­est gov­ern­ment esti­mate, a new study sug­gests. The researchers say about 40 per­cent of them have severe reac­tions — a find­ing they hope will erase mis­con­cep­tions that food aller­gies are just like hay fever and other sea­sonal aller­gies that are trou­ble­some but not dangerous.

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