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Pakistani girl shot by Taliban has "potential" for full recovery

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 20 Oktober 2012 | 02.58

BIRMINGHAM, england — The Pakistani schoolgirl who was shot in the head by a Taliban gunman in Pakistan is out of a medically induced coma and has recovered enough to stand with assistance and communicate by writing, medical officials at the British hospital where she is being treated said Friday.

David Rosser, a physician who is treating her, said that while Malala Yousufzai, 15, had the "potential" for a full recovery, there was "some damage to the brain, certainly physical," although there was "no deficit in terms of function." She cannot speak yet because of a tracheotomy tube in her throat.

"She seems able to understand. She's got motor control. She's able to write," Rosser said. "Whether there's any subtle intellectual or memory deficits down the line is too early to say."

Rosser noted that her memory leapt from being on the bus in Pakistan where she was shot Oct. 9 to waking in a different country. Had the bullet been "a couple of inches more central," the doctor said, her injury would have been "unsurvivable."

"It's clear that Malala is not out of the woods yet," he told reporters outside the hospital, adding that she is showing some signs of suffering from an infection.

Rosser said the signs of infection were "probably related to the bullet track, which is our key source of concern."

Malala had become an icon of resistance against the Taliban, advocating that girls have access to education. The New York Times

Copyright 2012 The Denver Post. All rights reserved.
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CIA chief in Libya tells D.C. within 24 hours militants behind attack

WASHINGTON — Sensing a moment of political vulnerability on national security, Republicans pounced Friday on disclosures that President Barack Obama's administration could have known early on that militants, not angry protesters, launched the attack on U.S. diplomats in Libya.

Within 24 hours of the deadly attack, the CIA station chief in Libya reported to Washington that there were eyewitness reports that the attack was carried out by militants, officials told The Associated Press. But for days, the Obama administration blamed it on an out-of-control demonstration over an American-made video ridiculing Islam's Prophet Muhammad.

Paul Ryan, the Republican vice presidential nominee, led Friday's charge.

"Look around the world; turn on your TV," Ryan told radio station WTAQ in the election battleground state of Wisconsin. "And what we see in front of us is the absolute unraveling of the Obama administration's foreign policy."

As a security matter, how the Obama administration immediately described the attack has little effect on broader counterterrorism strategies or on the hunt for those responsible for the incident, in which the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans were killed. And Republicans have offered no explanation for why the president would want to conceal the nature of the attack.

But the issue has given Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney an opportunity to question Obama on foreign policy and national security, two areas that have received little attention in an election dominated by the U.S. economy. Obama's signature national-security accomplishment is the military's killing of terrorist leader Osama bin Laden.

Ryan was teeing up the issue for Monday's presidential debate on foreign policy.

"I'm excited we're going to have a chance to talk about that on Monday," Ryan said.

Obama, speaking Thursday on Comedy Central's "The Daily Show," insisted that information was shared with the American people as it came in. The attack is under investigation, Obama said, and "the picture eventually gets filled in."

"What happens, during the course of a presidency, is that the government is a big operation, and any given time something screws up," Obama said. "And you make sure that you find out what's broken, and you fix it."

The report from the station chief was written late Sept. 12 and reached intelligence agencies in Washington the next day, intelligence officials said. It is not clear how widely the information from the CIA station chief was circulated.

U.S. intelligence officials have said the information was just one of many widely conflicting accounts, which became clearer by the following week.

Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., who chairs the House Intelligence Committee, told CNN that the administration didn't understand the gravity of the situation in Benghazi and as a result bad decisions were made to promote the video as the root of the violence.

"By continuing to promote the video, by escalating the value and credibility of that video to a presidential level, by buying ads in Pakistan that actually fueled protests all across Pakistan — and so, this is what's so disturbing to me: Were those decisions based on intelligence? I think it's hard to say yes. So why did they do it? That's the question we need to get answered."

Democrats have spent the past week explaining the administration's handling of the attack. On Monday, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said a period of uncertainty typically follows attacks.

In their debate Tuesday in Kentucky, Obama and Romney argued over when the president first called it a terrorist attack. In his Rose Garden address the morning after the killings, Obama said, "No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that character or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for."

But Republicans said he was speaking generally and didn't specifically call the Benghazi event a terror attack until weeks later.

Until then, key members of the administration were blaming an anti-Muslim movie circulating on the Internet as a precipitating event.

Then Wednesday, Senate Intelligence Committee chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., put the blame on director of national intelligence James Clapper.

"I think what happened was the director of intelligence, who is a very good individual, put out some speaking points on the initial intelligence assessment," Feinstein told San Francisco television station KPIX. "I think that was possibly a mistake."

Congress is asking the administration for documents about the attack, in hopes of building a timeline of what the government knew and when.

"The early sense from the intelligence community differs from what we are hearing now," Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said. "It ended up being pretty far afield, so we want to figure out why."

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Coffman, Miklosi spar over ads, issues in Denver Post-9News debate

U.S. Rep. Mike Coffman and Democratic challenger Joe Miklosi squared off Friday in a fiery debate , accusing each other of false attacks but finally agreeing on a favorite Bronco: quarterback Peyton Manning.

Miklosi ripped Coffman for ads attacking him for votes in the state legislature on bills designed to protect children from predators. The ads portray Miklosi as lax on public safety.

"Both ads are despicable and you know it," Miklosi said angrily. "The Colorado Fraternal Order of Police endorsed me for my strong public safety track record and my strong support of lifetime sentences. Who are you going to believe in this debate? His political handlers or Colorado cops?"

Coffman said it's wrong to say that he's not willing to compromise or that he is focused on social issues.

"I've been focused on jobs and the economy, small business and on defense issues,"the Aurora Republican said.

"I've broken with my party when it comes to defense spending because I believe as somebody who has served in the Army and the Marines Corps and as a combat veteran that we can responsibly cut defense spending without compromising our national security."

Miklosi argued Coffman is obsessed with social issues, and he reeled off the congressman's support for earlier measures dealing with rape and abortion.

Coffman is running for a third term but in a newly drawn 6th Congressional District that is a nearly equal mix of Republicans, Democrats and unaffiliated voters. His previous district was a sure thing for the GOP.

The candidates sparred on a variety of issues, including health care, taxes and immigration during their debate sponsored by The Denver Post and 9News. Coffman was calm and measured as he answered questions, while Miklosi spoke rapidly and aggressively.

The candidates also were asked whether they supported reinstating a federal assault-weapons ban in light of the Aurora movie theater shooting in their district on July 20.

Coffman doesn't support the reinstatement. He said he agreed with Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper, who told CNN after the shooting that, "If there were no assault weapons available and no this or no that, this guy is going find something, right?"

But Coffman said he doesn't believe criminals or the mentally unstable should have weapons, and when the facts come out in the theater case it is time to determine "where we can do a better job."

The suspected gunman, James Holmes, is accused of killing 12 people and injuring another 58 after he opened fire in the packed theater.

Miklosi supports a ban.

"I strongly believe in the 2nd Amendment for reasons like hunting and personal protection. My own mother owns a Glock," he said. "But why do we need 100-round clips? That's like allowing tanks to drive down Colfax Avenue."

The debate, along with debates for the 4th and 7th Congressional districts, will be aired at 8 p.m. Saturday on Channel 20.

Lynn Bartels: 303-954-5327, lbartels@denverpost.com or twitter.com/lynn_bartels

Copyright 2012 The Denver Post. All rights reserved.
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Records show Boy Scouts officials covered up abuse allegations for decades

PORTLAND, Ore. — An array of local authorities — police chiefs, prosecutors, pastors and town Boy Scout leaders among them — quietly shielded scoutmasters and others who allegedly molested children, according to a newly opened trove of confidential files compiled from 1959 to 1985.

At the time, those authorities justified their actions as necessary to protect the good name and good works of Scouting. But as detailed in 14,500 pages of secret "perversion files" released Thursday by order of the Oregon Supreme Court, their maneuvers protected suspected sexual predators while victims suffered in silence.

The files document sex abuse allegations across the country, from a small town in the Adirondacks to downtown Los Angeles.

At a news conference Thursday, Portland attorney Kelly Clark blasted the Boy Scouts for their continuing legal battles to try to keep the full trove of files secret.

"You do not keep secrets hidden about dangers to children," said Clark, who in 2010 won a landmark lawsuit against the Boy Scouts on behalf of a plaintiff who was molested by an assistant scoutmaster in the 1980s.

The files were shown to a jury in a 2010 Oregon civil suit that the Scouts lost, and the Oregon Supreme Court ruled the files should be made public. After months of objections and redactions, the Scouts and Clark released them.

The Associated Press obtained copies of the files weeks ahead of Thursday's release and conducted an extensive review of them, but agreed not to publish the stories until the files were released.

The new files are a window on a much larger collection of documents the Boy Scouts of America began collecting soon after their founding in 1910. The files, kept at Boy Scout headquarters in Texas, consist of memos from local and national Scout executives, handwritten letters from victims and their parents and newspaper clippings about legal cases. The files contain details about proven molesters, but also unsubstantiated allegations.

On many occasions the files succeeded in keeping pedophiles out of Scouting leadership positions — the reason they were collected in the first place.

But in many instances — more than a third, according to the Scouts' own count — police weren't told about the alleged abuse.

And there is little mention in the files of concern for the welfare of Scouts who were allegedly abused by their leaders. But there are numerous documents showing compassion for suspected abusers, who were often times sent to psychiatrists or pastors to get help.

In 1972, a Pennsylvania Scouting executive wrote a memo recommending a case against a suspected abuser be dropped with the words:

"If it don't stink, don't stir it."

In numerous instances, alleged abusers are kicked out of Scouting but show up in jobs where they are once again in authority positions dealing with youths.

In a statement Thursday, Scouts spokesman Deron Smith said: "There is nothing more important than the safety of our Scouts."

He said there were times when responses to sex abuse allegations were "plainly insufficient, inappropriate, or wrong" and the organization extends its "deepest and sincere apologies to victims and their families."


20

Names of Colorado men who volunteered with Boy Scouts who appear in the released records from the early 1960s through the 1980s

In Colorado

The released records show that local Boy Scout leaders had an evolving attitude toward pedophilia in the ranks. Cases in the 1960s resulted in immediate removal from contact with children, and the creation of a "confidential" file to prevent a suspected pedophile from volunteering anywhere with the Boy Scouts, but there is only occasionally an indication the alleged assaults were reported to police.

By the 1980s, scouting officials in Colorado were both removing accused scoutmasters from contact with children and immediately referring the cases to law enforcement officials, the files show.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Mark Wiley interviews, remains favorite for Rockies' pitching boss

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 19 Oktober 2012 | 02.59

 Multiple interviews in Scottsdale and Denver went well, leaving Mark Wiley likely to accept the Rockies newly created director of pitching operations position, according to an MLB source.

The Rockies said Thursday that there will be no announcement on any personnel moves until next week.

Wiley met with owner Dick Monfort, general manager Dan O'Dowd and assistant GM Bill Geivett this week. The job is the equivalent of a coordinator position, allowing Wiley to oversee the pitching throughout the organization. He's expected to have heavy influence on the Rockies' big league pitching coach.

The organization was pleased with Bo McLaughlin's performance after he took over for Bob Apodaca in June, but McLaughlin could

be reassigned if the Rockies bring in former Triple-A pitching coach Bob McClure.

Wiley is currently working as a scout for the Marlins. He has ties to O'Dowd dating to their days in Baltimore and Cleveland. He has served as a pitching coach, most recently for the Marlins. When the Rockies realigned their front office on Aug. 1, O'Dowd indicated that he would add a new pitching supervisor. En route to a franchise-worst 98 losses, the Rockies ranked last in baseball in ERA (5.22) and average against (.290).

The Rockies continue looking for a manager following Jim Tracy's resignation, but won't interview outside candidates until talking with Jason Giambi. No date is known yet on when Giambi will discuss the job.

The Rockies have been tight-lipped about external possibilities. Tim Wallach and Sandy Alomar Jr. are expected to be on Colorado's list. Brad Ausmus' name has surfaced as well. Like Wallach, he has interviewed for Boston's managerial opening. Oakland's Mike Gallego, a third base for the Rockies under Clint Hurdle, is another possibility, according to Fox Sports.

Colorado is moving methodically in its search given the lack of competition. Boston is the only other team with a vacancy.

Troy E. Renck: 303-954-1294, trenck@denverpost.com or twitter.com/troyrenck

Copyright 2012 The Denver Post. All rights reserved.
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Database: Search the Boy Scouts of America's 'Perversion Files' 1959-1985

Search by state, city or name to see those included in the Boy Scouts of America 'ineligible volunteer' files that were released on Oct. 18, 2012.

The files were evidence in an Oregon lawsuit in 2010 that resulted in the largest judgment ever against the Boy Scouts in a molestation case. The Boy Scouts tried to keep the files secret, but media outlets opposed the move and in June the Oregon Supreme Court ruled that they should be made public after victim information had been redacted.

Copyright 2012 The Denver Post. All rights reserved.
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Jury deliberates in Summit County man's trial

BOULDER, Colo.—Jurors are resuming deliberations in the trial of a Summit County man accused of killing a former city of Boulder employee.

Jurors in the trial of Michael Clark started deliberating Thursday and were due to resume deliberations Friday.

Clark is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Marty Grisham, who was shot after answering a knock at the door on Nov. 1, 1994. Clark was friends with Grisham's daughter and pleaded guilty at the time to theft and forgery for stealing and using Grisham's checks. He has denied killing Grisham.

The Daily Camera reports ( http://bit.ly/TgfbEt) that in closing trial arguments, a prosecutor said Clark is the only person who had the motive and means to kill Grisham.

Clark's lawyer says police haven't found concrete evidence.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Gessler gave self $1,400 to cover expenses without receipts

Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler took what was left in his own discretionary fund in 2011 and used it to give himself a $1,400 payout, a sum that a spokesman says was for "day-to-day" expenses even though Gessler submitted no receipts to explain what those costs were.

Critics say the payout to the Republican secretary of state looks a lot like a self-given bonus, and the revelation comes as two Democratic state senators are calling for an audit of Gessler's spending in response to reports he used state funds to attend the Republican National Convention.

The $1,400 payout occurred at the close of the state's 2010-11 fiscal year, which ended in June 2011. Gessler submitted a request to his chief financial officer

"for any remaining discretionary funds," which swept what Gessler had not already spent from the $5,000 fund.

But unlike other requests Gessler submitted for reimbursement, there were no receipts or documentation attached to this request.

"It was to cover general costs — day-to-day meals and travel, general reimbursement — that weren't itemized," said Rich Coolidge, a spokesman for Gessler. "That was his (Gessler's) first six months in office and probably still getting the hang of things. I don't know why they weren't itemized."

Yet Gessler did submit numerous receipts for expenses within his first six months as secretary of state and for expenses after that point.

"I think some of those receipts simply weren't itemized and weren't collected," Coolidge said. "It's just like the legislators' per diem: They just have to show up to work, and they get that dollar amount. It's for expenses in office, and that's what that discretionary fund was for."

Gessler likely had even more in unreimbursed costs, Coolidge said.

Luis Toro, director of the left-leaning Colorado Ethics Watch, said his group had added the news of Gessler's $1,400 payout to a request it had submitted to Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrissey to investigate the secretary of state for possible embezzlement of state funds. The group first asked for an investigation after learning Gessler used his discretionary fund for a trip that included a stop at a GOP lawyers meeting and the Republican National Convention.

"The discretionary fund is supposed to be used for state business, not to pay yourself a bonus," Toro said, noting the state controller's office recorded the payout as "other employee benefits."

Meanwhile, state Sens. Pat Steadman, D-Denver, and Lois Tochtrop, D-Thornton, have sent a letter to the Legislative Audit Committee requesting a state audit of Gessler's expenditures. However, state Rep. Cindy Acree, R-Aurora, the committee chairwoman, has delayed consideration of the request until December.

Tim Hoover: 303-954-1626, thoover@denverpost.com or twitter.com/timhoover

Copyright 2012 The Denver Post. All rights reserved.
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Missing Centennial son arrested with body parts in back seat

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 18 Oktober 2012 | 02.58

 After a car that was eluding Greenwood Village police crashed at East Orchard Road and South Dayton Street early Wednesday, officers made a shocking discovery in the back seat: the dismembered remains of a woman.

After a short chase on foot, Ari Misha Liggett, 24, of Centennial was arrested.

The woman whose body was found in the car has not yet been identified, but before the crash, Liggett and his 56-year-old mother had been reported missing. Their family had asked people to check on them Monday, the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Department said Wednesday night.

His mother's name was not released, but public records show the home is owned by Beverly A. Liggett, a registered nurse.

Authorities used credit-card information to learn that at least one of the two had traveled to Colorado's Western Slope early Tuesday.

About 30 minutes before Wednesday's crash, a vehicle similar to the one driven by the family was seen driving past their home in the 6200 block of East Peakview Drive, and area law enforcement was alerted.

About 1:50 a.m. Wednesday, a Greenwood Village police officer tried to pull over the vehicle.

Liggett is being held without bond in the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office Detention Facility on suspicion of first-degree murder.

The sheriff's department said an earlier search of the family's home turned up a quantity of what appeared to be potassium cyanide, a poisonous compound, although laboratory tests have not yet been concluded.

Liggett has been in the news before.

In March 2010, he caused a seven-hour evacuation of a homeless shelter in Boulder after bringing in a suspicious chemical in his suitcase. The chemical was never publicly identified, and Liggett was not charged with a hazardous-material violation. Instead he was arrested on a warrant alleging possession of a dangerous weapon from Arapahoe County.

He pleaded guilty to reckless endangerment in December and received a four-year deferred sentence and one year of probation, records show.

Joey Bunch: 303-954-1174, jbunch@denverpost.com or twitter.com/joeybunch

Copyright 2012 The Denver Post. All rights reserved.
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Fero's Bar & Grill owner treated customers as "almost family"

 For 28 years, Young Suk Fero met the demands of running a small neighborhood bar and restaurant that served breakfast early in the morning and Budweiser until 2 a.m.

"Customers were her life. They were her friends — people she knew and trusted. Her customers were almost family," said her estranged husband, Danny Duane Fero, 58, of Aurora. "She didn't have a mean bone in her body and I can't imagine who would do something like this."

Denver Police Chief Paul White said that the bodies of four women and one man were discovered inside Fero's Bar and Grill, 351 S. Colorado Blvd., at about 1:50 a.m. after a fire was reported at the

business.

Fero spoke with police, and they told him the people found in the bar have not been identified.

"We don't know anything yet — you know how it is," he said Wednesday as he surveyed the damage to Young Fero's restaurant. "But her car is in the parking lot, and I don't see her walking around."

Fero said Young Fero, 63, had a few employees, including her younger brother Tae Moon Park.

Fero said he met his wife when he was working as a spokesman and photographer for the U.S. Army in Seoul. He went to the Korean Ministry of Agriculture in 1977, where his wife-to-be was a clerk.

He was taking video of the office when he backed up and fell on her desk — and her lunch. He offered to take her to a restaurant to make up for destroying her meal.

"It didn't hurt that she was real cute," he said. "One thing led to another and we ended up getting married."

She insisted on buying him a three-piece suit so he could make a formal request to her grandfather for her hand in marriage. Young Fero's father imported and exported sweaters to and from other countries.

"We were married in Korea with a stamp at the U.S. consulate," he said.

They moved to the United States, and in 1980 Young Fero gave birth to a daughter, Kandice. The Feros were able to bring her parents, four brothers and one sister to the U.S., he said.

In 1984 they bought the Cinema Lounge at 351 S. Colorado Blvd. for $125,000. They changed the name to Fero's Bar and Grill. They later bought an adjacent restaurant. The restaurant and bar took up 2,200 square feet.

"We had our regulars. It was just a neighborhood bar," Fero said. "She was there all the time."

In 1988, after Fero left the Army and became an agent for the Federal Protective Service, Young Fero took over the bar and restaurant completely.

The restaurant opened for breakfast, sold sandwiches, pizzas, hamburgers and steaks. They even delivered meals, Fero said. They also served Asian food including tofu and a Korean favorite, kimchi.

She was so proud of a Westword award for the best "Martini and Tofu" dinner that she had it framed and mounted above a full-length bar. The restaurant had red carpet and light bluish grey walls. Recently she invested in new bar stools.

"It had a '70s look to it," Fero said.

Young Fero would greet customers at the door. She remembered their names, what they ate and drank. "She was the ultimate hostess," Danny Fero said.

They had live bands on Friday night and would hire DJs. Young Fero was known to sing Elvis tunes along with a karaoke machine, show bar towel tricks and crack corny jokes. She had a collection of unusual glasses she showed off to an entertainment writer once.

She would work from 2 p.m. to 2 a.m. seven days a week at the bar, Fero said. She was only 5-feet tall and weighed about 100 pounds.

"I called her the Energizer Bunny all the time, but of course she didn't know who the Energizer Bunny was," he said. "She cared about her customers."

She often would call a taxi when a client got too drunk.

Young Fero worked until closing and then cleaned the bar and restaurant and set up for the breakfast opening a few hours later. She banked at a Wells Fargo branch across the street and would sometimes bring the day's receipts home at night.

But the Feros drifted apart. Many years after their marriage, Young Fero told her husband the only reason she married him was so she could come to the U.S., he said.

"I maintained a relationship for the sake of my daughter," Fero said.

When their daughter graduated from high school in 1998 and went to the University of Colorado in Boulder, he moved into another home. Although they were separated they remained friends and never divorced.

Young Fero ran the restaurant by herself. She joined a Korean business association.

"When she would call me every so often, she would sound so tired," Fero said.

Her parents both died within the past five years.

Occasionally, Young Fero would call and talk about how the business was doing. She would complain about how much food costs or how slow business was. The business was her life.

When Danny Fero awoke early Wednesday morning, he heard what happened at his wife's restaurant. He immediately called his daughter, who lives in Maryland. She's a research scientist at the National Institute of Health.

Two weeks ago Kandice became engaged to her long-time boyfriend.

"I'm not so much worried about me, but my daughter. She is devastated," Fero said. "I didn't love (Young) any more. She was a friend. If I would have been there, though, I would have given my life to save her or whoever else was in there."

Police have said that the victims showed signs of trauma, indicating that they were killed before a fire was set to the bar and restaurant.

"The only thing I can think of is somebody went in there to rob them," Fero said sobbing. "I probably never will know the last few moments."

Kirk Mitchell: 303-954-1206, Facebook.com/kmitchelldp or twitter.com/kmitchelldp

Copyright 2012 The Denver Post. All rights reserved.
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Theater shooting prosecutors: CU police "probably" have file on Holmes

Prosecutors in the case against James Holmes, the suspect in the Aurora movie theater massacre, believe that the University of Colorado Police Department opened a file on him prior to the July 20 shootings.

The revelation comes in a newly released ruling by Judge William Sylvester, ordering that prosecutors be allowed access to numerous documents from Holmes' time in a neuroscience program at CU.

In deciding whether to release any police records or police intelligence files that CU had on Holmes, Sylvester wrote, "The People acknowledge that they 'probably have campus police records, but [they] don't know that for sure.' "

Prosecutors have previously alleged that Holmes made a threat to a CU professor. And Holmes' one-time psychiatrist, Dr. Lynne Fenton, testified at a hearing in the case that she approached a CU police officer about a patient around the same time as her last meeting with Holmes.

Sylvester ruled that police records on Holmes should be released to prosecutors except those that detail contacts Holmes had with Fenton, as that information would be protected by doctor-patient confidentiality.

"If the University of Colorado Police Department has a law enforcement investigation file about Defendant, that information is likely relevant," Sylvester ruled.

Sylvester also ordered that prosecutors be given access to certain parts of Holmes' application to CU, his transcript, records detailing his academic performance and reasons for withdrawing from the university. Sylvester denied, however, access to Holmes' class schedule and documents concerning an undescribed voice-mail message and a "database note."

Dan Meyers, a spokesman for CU Denver's school of medicine, which oversees the neuroscience program, said he could not comment on the records because of a gag order in the case.

Holmes began withdrawing from CU in June. The following month, he is accused of opening fire inside a movie theater during the premiere of the new Batman movie. Twelve people were killed and another 58 injured. He faces 166 counts of murder, attempted murder and other charges.

His next court hearing is scheduled for Oct. 25, but his attorneys —

who are expected to argue at that hearing that prosecutors should be sanctioned for leaks to the media over a notebook Holmes mailed to Fenton — have asked to postpone it so they can have more time to prepare.

John Ingold: 303-954-1068, jingold@denverpost.com or twitter.com/john_ingold

Copyright 2012 The Denver Post. All rights reserved.
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Cash incentives for Colorado students a study in progress

There's a reward waiting for Moises Banuelos if he passes the standardized tests in three Advanced Placement classes he's taking this semester at Denver's Abraham Lincoln High School : $100 for each qualifying score.

"It shows that hard work pays off," said Banuelos, 16, who hopes to receive the money from a program channeled through the Colorado Legacy Foundation. "If you really study your butt off and get a good turn out, it should be recognized with an incentive."

As educators continue to debate the effectiveness — or even the propriety — of using financial rewards to boost academic achievement, Colorado has moved forward, and the National Math and Science Initiative-backed program soon will operate in 30 schools.

It aims to increase participation among students who traditionally don't enroll in AP classes. Already, it has posted big gains in some schools that regard it as a cost-effective way to advance achievement.

"What we found was that the small cash incentive of $100 for each qualifying score will get your attention," said Heather Fox, spokeswoman for the Colorado Legacy Foundation. "But you have to want to do the work. It's a huge commitment on the part of the students."

But the basic question, says Tony Lewis of the reform-minded Donnell-Kay Foundation, is what constitutes the primary motivator in education.

"When students are provided rigorous, relevant, exciting curricula, that's the motivator, not money," Lewis said. "To think that we could turn it on its head through economics, I don't think is right — or fundamentally works."

More than money

NMSI has pumped nearly $80 million into the program in 462 schools in nine states, but the group's senior vice president, Gregg Fleisher, says incentives alone don't make it work. A mix of teacher training and student support, including weekend study sessions, constitute the majority of the investment. Students generally have the $89 per test cost covered, as well.

But incentives do drive students to make "appropriate choices" and ultimately help change the academic culture within a school, he said.

"We don't want to give the message that you get paid for doing what you're supposed to be doing — but for achieving something difficult," Fleisher said. "They have to work hundreds of hours to get $100 in August."

Incentive for achievement is "consistent in the academic landscape," he said. "We can do it the old-fashioned way, with trying to recruit students, encouraging them, having campaigns to get them to take this. But the incentives help us accelerate change in the culture in those schools.

"Once they're in those classes, it's all about the attainment. Nobody ever mentions the incentives."

Michaela Taylor, 17, and a senior at Widefield High School near Colorado Springs, jumped into the school's AP program — before she knew about the cash incentives — because she felt it gave her an edge in the college admissions process.

She recently received a check for $200. Although she plans to put it toward college books, she has seen classmates use the cash for everything from savings to a down payment on a car.

And this year, she's taking five AP classes.

Without the incentive, she said, "I feel there would not be as many kids taking, let alone passing, AP classes. I don't look at it as bribery."

As an economist who has turned her attention to education, Kristin Klopfenstein has no philosophical objection to incentives for students — as long as the incentives work.

But the problem with the cash payments in the AP program, which she has studied virtually from its inception in Texas in the late 1990s, is that the data don't show those incentives necessarily lead to better results.

Klopfenstein, now the executive director of the Education Innovation Institute at the University of Northern Colorado, examined the program in Texas expecting to publish a paper confirming the conventional wisdom that the incentives worked.

"But once I controlled for other courses that were taken, the resources of the school, other characteristics, it was quite easy to make the AP effect go away," she said.

The problem with research supporting the AP program, she added, is that most studies haven't controlled for other variables, so there's no way to know whether the incentives are responsible for the bump. Plus, the schools chosen for the AP program aren't randomly selected.

One study, by Harvard economist Roland Fryer, remains what she considers the "gold standard" of a randomized control trial. That study handed out $6.3 million to about 20,000 students at 261 urban schools to gauge the effect of incentives on achievement.

It found that achievement didn't improve as a result of direct payments, but students responded more favorably to "input" incentives. In other words, incentives that encouraged students to do the kinds of things that lead to better results — such as reading books — are more effective than incentives for an end result like test scores.

Although Klopfenstein says proponents of the AP program are "fighting the good fight," she remains unconvinced that the incentives work, or even that the professional development provided to teachers in the program is adequate.

"At heart, I'm an empiricist. Show me the data," she said. "And the data I've seen has yet to convince me that it's anything other than these are the kids who would have done well anyway, or they're in a setting where there were other reforms happening."

Teacher incentives

In the NMSI program, teachers also earn $100 per passing score. At Widefield, the average reward has been about $2,000, assistant principal for curriculum and instruction Megan Houtchins said.

But she adds that she considers the money a nice recognition for the extra hours they put in — not a game-changer.

Maureen Blunt, who has taught AP classes at Widefield for 12 years, sees the cash as an expression of commitment from the sponsoring organizations.

"But I can say for myself and those I know well," Blunt said, "the same work would be put in without the incentive."

In her AP literature and composition classes, Blunt sees a group of students already highly motivated. She figures that it isn't the cash that's driving the program.

"You don't win the tournament to get the trophy," she said. "That $100 is not going to be make-or-break for these kids, but it's a little trophy with their name on it."

Kevin Simpson: 303-954-1739, ksimpson@denverpost.com or twitter.com/ksimpsondp

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