WATCHING the PORTS - Marshmallow Terrorist Nabbed



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Topic: Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus
User: "Su Zanne"
Date: 21 Jun 2004 01:38:47 AM
Object: WATCHING the PORTS - Marshmallow Terrorist Nabbed
By CATHERINE WILSON
Associated Press Writer
=A0 =A0
MIAMI - A shackled teacher's aide tried to explain her predicament to a
judge through tears Friday.
Vacationing from Riverton, Wyo., Hope Clarke said she had been rousted
by federal agents at her cruise ship cabin door at 6:30 a.m. She was put
in handcuffs on a bench warrant for failing to put away her marshmallows
and hot chocolate while staying at Yellowstone National Park last year.
The catch? Clarke said she had to pay the $50 fine the same day for the
federal offense of improper food storage before she was allowed to leave
the park. Nonetheless, a warrant claiming she had not paid went into the
federal law enforcement database.
Back in the United States from Cozumel, Mexico, on Carnival's
Fascination cruise ship, Clarke was awakened, cuffed, turned over to
federal marshals and brought to court in leg shackles and short shorts.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Peter Outerbridge conceded there were some
"discrepancies." But he astonished U.S. Magistrate Judge John O'Sullivan
by suggesting Clarke should be released to appear in court in Wyoming to
clear up the warrant.
O'Sullivan had a copy of her citation indicating the fine had been paid
and thought that her time in jail more than covered the offense even if
she hadn't paid.
"We apologize for what happened," the judge told Clarke. Turning to the
prosecutor, he said, "This is a serious matter." He wants the U.S.
attorney's office to follow up to determine what went wrong.
Customs agents meet all cruise ships arriving from foreign ports and run
random checks for warrants on passengers lists.
Zach Mann, spokesman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
called the arrest "an unfortunate set of circumstances." He added, "We
were acting on what we believed was accurate information."
Clarke was let go more than nine hours after her rude awakening.
.

User: "Marvin The Paranoid Android"

Title: Re: WATCHING the PORTS - Marshmallow Terrorist Nabbed 21 Jun 2004 05:27:55 AM
On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 02:38:47 -0400, Su Zanne overjoyed me with this news:

By CATHERINE WILSON
Associated Press Writer
   
MIAMI - A shackled teacher's aide tried to explain her predicament to a
judge through tears Friday.

Vacationing from Riverton, Wyo., Hope Clarke said she had been rousted
by federal agents at her cruise ship cabin door at 6:30 a.m. She was put
in handcuffs on a bench warrant for failing to put away her marshmallows
and hot chocolate while staying at Yellowstone National Park last year.

The catch? Clarke said she had to pay the $50 fine the same day for the
federal offense of improper food storage before she was allowed to leave
the park. Nonetheless, a warrant claiming she had not paid went into the
federal law enforcement database.

Back in the United States from Cozumel, Mexico, on Carnival's
Fascination cruise ship, Clarke was awakened, cuffed, turned over to
federal marshals and brought to court in leg shackles and short shorts.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Peter Outerbridge conceded there were some
"discrepancies." But he astonished U.S. Magistrate Judge John O'Sullivan
by suggesting Clarke should be released to appear in court in Wyoming to
clear up the warrant.

O'Sullivan had a copy of her citation indicating the fine had been paid
and thought that her time in jail more than covered the offense even if
she hadn't paid.

"We apologize for what happened," the judge told Clarke. Turning to the
prosecutor, he said, "This is a serious matter." He wants the U.S.
attorney's office to follow up to determine what went wrong.

Customs agents meet all cruise ships arriving from foreign ports and run
random checks for warrants on passengers lists.
Zach Mann, spokesman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
called the arrest "an unfortunate set of circumstances." He added, "We
were acting on what we believed was accurate information."

Clarke was let go more than nine hours after her rude awakening.

Well, I'm feeling much happier and more secure knowing that Federal Agents
are able to keep their priorities straight in this age of evil-doers,
outlaws, and CAHOOTIN' terrorists.
.


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