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Clues sought in student death, body at Texas park 

 

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — San Antonio police are seeking clues in the death of a graduate student found fatally stabbed at a park on New Year's Eve.

Nobody has been arrested in the death of 24-year-old Lauren Bump, who attended Harding University in Searcy, Ark.

A police report Thursday said Bump's body was discovered on a paved trail by two people walking nearby and the death has been ruled a homicide. Her family lives a few miles from O.P. Schnabel Park, where the woman's body was found Tuesday afternoon.

San Antonio police Chief William McManus has said investigators think Bump was exercising or just walking.

Officials with Harding University say Bump was scheduled to graduate in May from the physician assistant program. She received an undergraduate degree from McMurry University in Abilene.

 

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Winter storm brings snow, kills at least 9 
RODRIQUE NGOWI, Associated Press
SYLVIA WINGFIELD, Associated Press

 

BOSTON (AP) — A winter storm that dropped nearly 2 feet of snow just north of Boston, temporarily shut down major highways in New York and Pennsylvania and forced airlines to cancel thousands of flights nationwide menaced the Northeast on Friday with howling winds and dangerously cold temperatures. The storm was blamed for at least nine deaths in the eastern half of the country.

The nor'easter — which brought plummeting temperatures that reached 8 degrees below zero in Burlington, Vt., early Friday with a wind chill of 29 below zero — dumped 23 inches of snow in Boxford, Mass., by early Friday and 18 inches in parts of western New York near Rochester. Thirteen inches of snow fell in Boston, while Lakewood, N.J., got 10 inches and New York's Central Park got 6.

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2 newspapers call for clemency for Edward Snowden 
RAPHAEL SATTER, Associated Press

 

LONDON (AP) — The New York Times and Guardian newspapers have called for clemency for Edward Snowden, saying that the espionage worker-turned-privacy advocate should be praised rather than punished for his disclosures.

The papers — both of which have played a role in publishing Snowden's intelligence trove — suggested late Wednesday that the former National Security Agency contractor's revelations about the United States' world-spanning espionage program were of such public importance that they outweighed any possible wrongdoing.

"Considering the enormous value of the information he has revealed, and the abuses he has exposed, Mr. Snowden deserves better than a life of permanent exile, fear and flight," the Times said, calling either for a plea bargain, some form of clemency, or a "substantially reduced punishment."

The Guardian said it hoped "calm heads within the present (U.S.) administration are working on a strategy to allow Mr. Snowden to return to the U.S. with dignity, and the president to use his executive powers to treat him humanely and in a manner that would be a shining example about the value of whistleblowers and of free speech itself."

But the paper also said it was hard to envisage President Barack Obama giving the leaker "the pardon he deserves."

Both newspapers published their editorials online within a few hours of one another, but Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger said the papers' appeals weren't coordinated ahead of time.

"Complete coincidence," he said in an email. He credited the legal reverses suffered by the NSA's domestic dragnet, the spying reforms suggested by Obama's privacy review team and the Silicon Valley companies' recent summit at the White House with bringing things to a head.

"We both had the same thought — that, after the rather extraordinary events just before Xmas ... it (would) be (good) to say something at year end," he said.

Snowden is currently residing in Russia following an abortive attempt to travel to Latin America, where he'd been offered asylum. He faces espionage charges in connection with his leaks, which U.S. officials have described as damaging or even life-threatening, but talk of amnesty has been circulating for several weeks after it the idea was first floated by senior NSA official Rick Leggett.

Asked about the proposal in his year-end press conference on Dec. 20, Obama didn't explicitly rule it out, and at least one former member of the intelligence community suggested the idea had some traction. Eliza Manningham-Buller, the former chief of Britain's MI5, recently told the BBC she expected "some kind of deal" for Snowden — although she was careful to note that she was simply speculating.

U.S. officials did not immediately return calls seeking comment Thursday. Snowden's Russian lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, could not immediately be reached.

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Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this report.

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Online:

Raphael Satter can be reached at: http://raphae.li/twitter

 

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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