Case grows against sex assailant

Case grows against sex assailant

DNA links Mark Heath to an unsolved crime that occurred in 2007

By Gene Park

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Dec 18, 2008

A man who has already pleaded guilty to burglary and sexual assault at the University of Hawaii at Manoa pleaded no contest yesterday to another sexual assault case.

After Mark Heath, 21, pleaded guilty on April 30 to breaking into University of Hawaii dormitories and taking underwear and other objects, his DNA sample was taken.

That DNA was linked to an unsolved 2007 sexual assault case. Heath has been in custody on a $1 million bail.

Deputy Prosecutor Thalia Murphy said she hopes to get a maximum of 60 years total for Heath’s crimes, including the university incidents.

“He’s a predator and he’s indiscriminate,” Murphy said. “This defendant knows no bounds. And yet if you were to look at him, he looks like someone you’d want your daughter to marry.”

In April 2007, Heath followed a woman unknown to him to her Ala Wai Boulevard apartment. The woman shut the door on him and went to sleep.

She awoke to find Heath raping her, chased him out but could not catch up to him.

Heath’s DNA was linked to that case. Yesterday he pleaded no contest to first-degree burglary and second-degree sexual assault.

On Aug. 19, 2007, Heath tried to cut off the panties of a female student at the Hale Mokihana dormitory on the Manoa campus. He also was accused of stealing women’s underwear and an iPod in November 2007.

Heath’s sentencing is scheduled for March 4.

A man who has already pleaded guilty to burglary and sexual assault at the University of Hawaii at Manoa pleaded no contest yesterday to another sexual assault case.
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After Mark Heath, 21, pleaded guilty on April 30 to breaking into University of Hawaii dormitories and taking underwear and other objects, his DNA sample was taken.

That DNA was linked to an unsolved 2007 sexual assault case. Heath has been in custody on a $1 million bail.

Deputy Prosecutor Thalia Murphy said she hopes to get a maximum of 60 years total for Heath’s crimes, including the university incidents.

“He’s a predator and he’s indiscriminate,” Murphy said. “This defendant knows no bounds. And yet if you were to look at him, he looks like someone you’d want your daughter to marry.”

In April 2007, Heath followed a woman unknown to him to her Ala Wai Boulevard apartment. The woman shut the door on him and went to sleep.

She awoke to find Heath raping her, chased him out but could not catch up to him.

Heath’s DNA was linked to that case. Yesterday he pleaded no contest to first-degree burglary and second-degree sexual assault.

On Aug. 19, 2007, Heath tried to cut off the panties of a female student at the Hale Mokihana dormitory on the Manoa campus. He also was accused of stealing women’s underwear and an iPod in November 2007.

Heath’s sentencing is scheduled for March 4.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/hawaiinews/20081218_case_grows_against_sex_assailant.html

Army settles Hawaii culture lawsuit

The Associated Press
Posted : Tuesday Nov 18, 2008 6:09:54 EST

HONOLULU — The Office of Hawaiian Affairs and the Army announced Monday that they have settled an OHA lawsuit filed in 2006 over the establishment of a Stryker brigade and its impact on Native Hawaiian cultural resources.

OHA representatives and a neutral archaeologist accompanied by Army representatives will survey certain Army training areas, the announcement said. Read More »

Settlement lets OHA access some Stryker training areas

November 18, 2008

Settlement lets OHA access some Stryker training areas

Deal with Army aims to ensure protection of cultural resources

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer

The Office of Hawaiian Affairs and the Army have settled OHA’s 2006 federal lawsuit claiming the Army failed to protect Native Hawaiian cultural resources when it brought the Stryker brigade to the state.

OHA representatives, along with an archaeologist, will be able to survey certain Stryker training areas at Schofield Barracks, Kahuku and Pohakuloa as a result of the agreement, the state agency announced yesterday.

Through the surveys, OHA said it and Army representatives “aim to ensure the appropriate identification and treatment of cultural and historic resources located in Lihu’e, the traditional name for the Schofield Barracks region,” as well as other parts of Hawai’i.

The settlement means the Army can put behind it another legal case involving the $1.5 billion Stryker brigade of 4,000 soldiers and about 328 of the armored eight-wheeled vehicles.

The unit is deployed to Iraq. The soldiers and vehicles are expected back in Hawai’i in February or March.

“This agreement will afford OHA the opportunity to have a firsthand look at important cultural resources that would not otherwise be accessible to the general public, and to determine whether they were fully addressed in the Army’s prior surveys of areas affected by Stryker activities,” OHA chairwoman Haunani Apoliona said in a statement yesterday.

Col. Matthew T. Margotta, commander of U.S. Army Garrison, Hawai’i, said the Army values the “spirit of cooperation and communication with OHA.”

Margotta added that the agreement will “build upon our existing robust programs to identify and care for these cultural and historical resources, while balancing the need for soldier training.”

When it filed the lawsuit, OHA said cultural monitors had been partly responsible for the discovery of historically significant sites and burial grounds that were overlooked by the military’s archaeologists.

On July 22, 2006, an unexploded-ordnance removal crew bulldozed across a buffer protecting Hale’au’au heiau at Schofield, according to cultural monitors hired by the Army.

OHA also said there were other incidents involving displacement and damage of petroglyphs, the filling of a streambed known to contain Native Hawaiian sites and the construction of a road over burial grounds.

The Army in 2001 decided to base a Stryker unit in Hawai’i, and started about $700 million in construction projects.

Based on a separate federal lawsuit, a federal appeals court ruled in 2006 that the Army had not adequately examined alternative locations outside Hawai’i for the fast-strike unit, and ordered the Army to do so.

The decision temporarily halted one of the biggest Army projects in the Islands since World War II.

The end of that lawsuit brought the resumption of about six construction projects related to the Stryker brigade. Work is projected to continue through 2017.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20081118/NEWS01/811180360/1001

Don't choke – here comes more Stryker pork

October 20, 2008

Stryker project will create jobs in Hawaii

1,000 or more will be employed, officials say, for massive project

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer

SCHOFIELD BARRACKS – The massive Stryker brigade project, one of the biggest Army efforts in
Hawai’i since World War II, is getting back on track after four years of litigation.

Approximately six construction projects related to the Stryker brigade are expected to begin in coming months, employing 1,000 or more workers, officials said.

“The timing is really good,” said Paul Brewbaker, chief economist for the Bank of Hawai’i, who noted the Stryker projects come as the state’s economy is slowing.

The number of construction jobs in Hawai’i, which stood at about 39,600 in August, is projected to drop to about 37,000 in 2010. Even that outlook may be too optimistic, and Brewbaker said the Stryker work, which wasn’t included in the job total, is a welcome addition to a struggling economy.

“A project that’s worth an extra 1,000 jobs for a year, or two or three, is a significant offset to what may be the risk that’s unfolded,” he said.

$1.5 billion effort

The Stryker is an eight-wheeled troop carrier. The Schofield-based Stryker brigade, which consists of 328 Stryker vehicles and 4,000 soldiers, is deployed in Iraq and is expected back in Hawai’i around March.

As part of the overall $1.5 billion effort to base the brigade here, the Army plans to build 71 miles of private trails on O’ahu and the Big Island for Stryker vehicles, as well as new firing ranges.

Land purchases included $21 million for 1,402 acres south of Schofield for a firing range and motor pool, and $30 million for 24,000 acres of Parker Ranch land next to the 109,000-acre Pohakuloa Training Area for Stryker maneuvers on the Big Island.

The Army plans to also conduct Stryker training at Kahuku and Kawailoa training areas and Dillingham Military Reservation on O’ahu.

Additional projects, some still unfunded by Congress, are expected to continue as far into the future as 2017, officials said.

Among the projects coming up is construction of a Battle Area Complex in the back reaches of Schofield for Stryker vehicle maneuver and live fire.

MASSIVE RANGE

The nearly 1-by-2-mile range will have roads and pop-up targets for Strykers firing big 105 mm guns as well as .50-caliber machine guns and Mk 19 grenade launchers.

Soldiers in as many as 30 Strykers will maneuver and disperse from the back of the 19-ton troop
carriers and also practice firing at targets.

The $32 million contract for the job, held by Parsons Inc., is expected to employ 50 to 60 people on the site at any given time for up to the two years the project is expected to take, officials said.

The Army Corps of Engineers, which manages the Stryker brigade projects, said it and Parsons are still in the process of negotiating an “equitable adjustment” for the work stoppage caused by the past court injunction.

The Schofield Stryker brigade has been gone since late 2007, when the unit deployed to the Taji and Tarmiya areas of Iraq, just north of Baghdad.

In April, the Army decided Hawai’i was still the best place to station one of its seven Stryker brigades after legal action forced a review of the stationing.

“Hawai’i is the right place for the 2/25 Stryker brigade – strategically, economically and environmentally,” said Col. Wayne Shanks, a spokesman for U.S. Army Pacific at Fort Shafter.

“Completing these projects, which will allow our soldiers to train here in Hawai’i, is vital to our ability to meet our national security requirements in the Pacific.”

HAWAIIAN GROUPS SUED

The Army in 2001 decided to base a Stryker unit in Hawai’i, and started about $700 million in
construction projects, including upgrades that were also needed for non-Stryker troop training.
Three Native Hawaiian groups filed a lawsuit in 2004 against the Stryker brigade, claiming it would harm the environment.

In 2006, a federal appeals court ruled that the service had not adequately examined alternative
locations outside Hawai’i for the unit, and ordered the Army to do so.

Bases in Alaska and Colorado were considered before the Army again chose Hawai’i, saying it was
selected primarily because of the ability to meet strategic defense and national security needs in the Pacific.

Some of the Stryker construction projects already had been completed, but some others, like the Battle Area Complex at Schofield, weren’t allowed to go forward.

LOCAL IMPACT CITED

David Henkin, an Earthjustice attorney who represented the three Hawaiian groups in their lawsuit, said an additional infantry brigade of about 3,500 soldiers, which Schofield would have received if the Stryker unit had been moved elsewhere, would have had less of an impact in Hawai’i.

“No question, even based upon the Army’s own analysis, that the potential destruction of critical sites, the likely destruction of endangered species, the noise, the impacts on neighboring communities, all of that is substantially greater with the Stryker brigade than an infantry brigade,” Henkin said.

The state Office of Hawaiian Affairs filed a separate lawsuit against the Army in 2006 over the cultural impacts of the Stryker brigade at Schofield. That suit still is pending. Shanks, the U.S. Army Pacific spokesman, said the parties are in negotiation over the suit.

Qualification Training Range 2 at Schofield, a rifle and pistol marksmanship range, was about 80 percent complete when the injunction halted the project, said Ron Borne, the director of transformation for the Army in Hawai’i.

Workers for the Niking Corp., one of the subcontractors at the range, are now finishing the job. Carpenter Dave Cavanaugh, who has worked for Niking for almost 25 years, last week said the work stoppage didn’t affect him much.

“We do a lot of military work, so when this job shut down, fortunately, we were able to go to another project that our company had already started,” he said. “It was an inconvenience, but we’re glad to be back and completing the job.”

Source: HonoluluAdvertiser.com

Schofield soldier who broke into UH dorms now linked to Waikiki rape

HonoluluAdvertiser.com

August 26, 2008

Schofield soldier who broke into UH dorms now linked to Waikiki rape

By Jim Dooley
Advertiser Staff Writer

The soldier convicted in a series of dorm-room invasions at the University of Hawai’i-Manoa has been linked by DNA to an unsolved Waikïkï rape, according to an indictment returned this morning.

Mark Heath, 21, a Schofield Barracks soldier awaiting sentencing in the UH cases, faces a new charge of raping a woman during a burglary of her Ala Wai Boulevard apartment April 7, 2007.

The prosecutor’s office said the new charge was brought after a DNA sample taken from Heath following his guilty plea in the UH case in May was matched with biological evidence collected by Honolulu police in the Waikïkï case.

Heath is scheduled to appear in court tomorrow for a request that he be released on bail pending sentencing next month in the UH cases.

But bail in the new case was set by Circuit Judge Derrick Chan at $1 million.

Prosecuting Attorney Peter Carlisle said the new charge will be used tomorrow to oppose release before sentencing.

In May, Heath admitted burglarizing female students’ dorm rooms and sexually assaulting one student.

He told police that he entered a Hale Mokihana dorm room on Aug. 19, 2007, and used a pair of
scissors to cut off the underwear worn by a sleeping 18-year-old female student.

The victim woke up and screamed and Heath told police he pushed the woman away and escaped through a fire escape door.

He also admitted breaking into two rooms at Lokelani dormitory on Nov. 25, 2007, and stealing items while the students in the rooms slept.

The crimes created “a climate of fear” on the campus, according to Deputy Prosecutor Thalia Murphy.

Heath faces a maximum of 40 years in prison for the UH cases.

Heath is a father of two children. He was divorced in June.

Heath’s lawyer, Dean Young, could not be reached for comment on the new charge this morning.

The 25th Infantry Division said today that Heath was “administratively separated” from the Army in April of this year.

Air Force won't fly low over Big Isle

http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2008/Apr/26/ln/hawaii804260329.html

Posted on: Saturday, April 26, 2008

Air Force won’t fly low over Big Isle

Advertiser Staff

The Air Force has dropped a plan to establish a low-altitude flight path over the Big Island as a training route for C-17 cargo transport planes, U.S. Rep. Mazie K. Hirono said yesterday.

The decision came after Big Island residents raised concerns about noise, pollution and safety, as well as possible effects on area livestock, Hirono said in a news release.

The Air Force said it wanted to fly as low as 300 feet over unpopulated areas of the Big Island, and at 2,000 feet over populated areas.

“I am pleased and impressed that the Air Force took the concerns of the community to heart, and acted so expeditiously to address this situation,” Hirono, D-Hawai’i, said. “They should be commended for their work on this matter.”

Hirono said the proposed training route would have taken C-17 jets over the communities of Honoka’a and Waimea, as well as other populated areas.

Hirono said the decision came after Monday’s meeting of the Hawai’i County Council, where dozens of Big Island residents offered public testimony.

After evaluating the community input, Air Force commanders determined they will be able to satisfy their low-altitude training needs without using the proposed training route over the Big Island, Hirono said.

Hickam Air Force Base spokes-man Phil Breeze said the routing had not been finalized. Low-altitude terrain flying will continue during flights to Alaska, he said.

Col. Andy Hockman, the 15th Operations Group commander at Hickam Air Force Base, recently said, “Flying low and using mountains and ridgelines to keep us away from the threat is one of the tactics that we use in this (the C-17) aircraft, and we practice it everywhere except in Hawai’i.”

The flying corridor would have been four to seven miles wide and about 70 miles long, the Air Force said.

By year’s end, eight of the C-17 Globemaster transports will be based at Hickam. The $200 million jet is the U.S. military’s newest large-capacity transport, with the ability to carry 102 soldiers or three Stryker combat vehicles.

Budget crunch hits C-17 training

http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/p…./LOCALNEWSFRONT

Budget crunch hits C-17 training

Air Force needs new Kona practice strip but lacks money to build it

The Air Force is falling short of the C-17 cargo plane training it needs in Hawai’i for combat landings and takeoff practice and low-altitude terrain flying, an official said.

Already, an approximately 4,200-foot “assault landing zone” planned at Kona International Airport is at least two years late as a result of a budget crunch.

Air Force officials hope the 2009 Pentagon budget will include money for the $28 million practice strip.

The Air Force said it wants to incorporate low-level flying down to 300 feet over unpopulated areas of the Big Island, and at 2,000 feet over populated areas.

“Flying low and using mountains and ridge lines to keep us away from the threat is one of the tactics that we use in this (the C-17) aircraft, and we practice it everywhere except in Hawai’i,” said Col. Andy Hockman, the 15th Operations Group commander at Hickam Air Force Base.

The last of eight C-17 Globemaster IIIs assigned to Hickam arrived in July 2006. The active-duty Air Force and Hawai’i Air National Guard jointly operate and maintain the four-engine cargo jets.

The proposed training route over the Big Island avoids Captain Cook, Ocean View and Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park, the Air Force said.

But early information on the plan, which is expected to be detailed in a draft environmental assessment, caused concern that there would be flights over populated areas.

Efforts are being made to reach out to community officials, but the Air Force said it’s too soon to talk publicly about specifics.

“Right now, there are a lot of folks very afraid of what we’re going to do,” Hockman said. “I think we’re going to provide some information that hopefully will get rid of some of that.”

The C-17 “military training route” corridor would reduce the area where the aircraft operate from 14,400 square miles to less than 500 square miles, the Air Force said.

The flying corridor would be 4 to seven miles wide and approximately 70 miles long “while avoiding populated and noise-sensitive areas,” the Air Force said.

Among the areas where low-altitude navigation would take place is Pohakuloa Training Area. The open air space is based on visual flight rules, and the C-17 pilots need to be able to fly under instrument flight rules as well, officials said.

As for combat landings and takeoffs, Hockman said C-17 pilots mainly practice the short-distance maneuvers at the Marine Corps base at Kane’ohe Bay.

A stripe has been painted at 3,500 feet so pilots can practice in the shortened space they need for combat landings.

Hockman said as a result, pilots don’t need to be as precise as they would be in a real-world situation.

“As naval aviators practice to land on an aircraft carrier, they learn to fly airplanes on a normal runway, then they fly into a painted zone on a runway, and then they graduate to an aircraft carrier where they’ve actually got to do it right,” he said. “If we don’t take it to the next level, then we are not practicing.”

In a hostile environment, there may not be the opportunity to “go around, try it again,” Hockman said. “In the combat zone, you’ve got to do it right the first time.”

Every six months, seasoned pilots are required to do four daytime combat landing and takeoff operations, while co-pilots and individuals who fly less have to do eight per month.

The maneuvers can’t be done at Honolulu International Airport because it is too busy, and the 5,000-foot runway on Lana’i can’t handle hard-impact landings.

The $28 million assault landing zone on the Big Island would be built makai of the existing runway and could be used by the state as a taxiway when not in use for C-17 training, the Air Force said.

Army pre-decides to station Strykers in Hawai'i – again

February 23, 2008

Critics claim politics steers Stryker plans

By Gregg K. Kakesako
gkakesako@starbulletin.com

Opponents of the Army’s plan to base its fifth Stryker Brigade Combat Team at Schofield Barracks disagree with the Pentagon’s conclusion that the move would fill strategic and national security needs.

The Pentagon’s reasoning is outlined in the final version of a court-ordered environmental study that the Army conducted on whether to base the brigade in the islands, Alaska or Colorado. Opponents sued to require the study several years ago, claiming the Army did not adequately weight alternatives to Hawaii.

Bill Aila, one of the plaintiffs in a long-standing legal case against permanently locating the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team at Schofield, contends that politics and not national defense is the driving force.

Another opponent, Earthjustice attorney David Henkin, questioned the Army’s wisdom in stationing 328 eight-wheeled, 19-ton vehicles in the middle of the Pacific since there would be no place to land if cargo planes transporting the Strykers developed mechanical problems.

In reviewing the two alternates — Alaska and Colorado — that the Army rejected, Henkin said it would be easier for transport aircraft to find places to land if mainland Army bases were used.

Henkin again questioned why the Army keeps rejecting the inclusion of Fort Lewis in Washington state in its deliberations as a federal appeals court ordered it to do two years ago.

He said Hawaii is farther away from “hot spots in Asia” than Washington and Alaska.

The Army estimates that “it would take 300 sorties of C-17s to mobilize this brigade,” Henkin added, “and Hawaii only has six to eight of these jet cargo planes at Hickam Air Force Base.”

“Where are all those planes?” Henkin asked. “They are on the West Coast.”

The 743-page supplemental environmental impact statement was released yesterday by the Army Environmental Command in Maryland. A final decision will be made by Pentagon leaders before the end of March.

The report said Lt. Gen. James Thurman, Army deputy chief of staff, selected Hawaii because keeping the brigade here would give the Army two Pacific outposts from which to deploy the eight-wheeled, heavy-duty vehicles and the soldiers who operate them. The Army already has one Stryker brigade in Alaska.

In October 2006 the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the supplemental environmental study because it believed that a 2004 study did not adequately analyze alternatives to Hawaii.

Last December the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team deployed to Iraq for 15 months after completing its training under a limited court exemption. When fully manned and equipped, the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team will include 4,105 soldiers and 1,000 vehicles, including 328 eight-wheeled, 19-ton combat vehicles.

The entire study is available at www.aec.army.mil.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2008/02/23/news/story07.html

Soldier held in alleged dorm thefts

Soldier held in alleged dorm thefts

By Gene Park
gpark@starbulletin.com

An Army specialist about to be deployed to Iraq went into the University of Hawaii dormitories Sunday and allegedly pilfered panties and an iPod, police said.

Spc. Mark Heath, 20, was charged Monday night with first-degree burglary and unauthorized entry into a dwelling. He was arrested Sunday after he was caught in the Hale Aloha Lokelani dorms on Dole Street on the university’s Manoa campus.

According to court documents, at about 9 a.m. Sunday, Heath allegedly opened the door to a dorm room and stuck his head inside as he peered in. When he saw a male witness, Heath allegedly fled.

The witness ran after Heath and asked him why he was trying to get into his girlfriend’s room. Heath said he was looking for a male student in another room.

Heath was escorted to security. Police said officers who responded smelled alcohol on his breath. Heath was arrested on suspicion of unauthorized entry into the dorm.

When police patted Heath down, they found a 30- gigabyte iPod in his right pants pocket, the court documents say. Police also found women’s lingerie in his pockets.

A female student approached the officers later and said she was missing an iPod. The student confirmed the iPod and some of the lingerie belonged to her. Heath was arrested on suspicion of first-degree burglary.

Heath belongs to the 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, which is based at Schofield Barracks and is preparing to deploy to Iraq next month.

Heath is being held in lieu of $100,000 bail and has no prior arrests.

Source: http://archives.starbulletin.com/2007/11/28/news/story05.html

Stryker soldier charged with UH dorm break-in

Army man charged with UH dorm break-in

By Rod Ohira

Advertiser Staff Writer

A 20-year-old man assigned to the Army’s Stryker brigade at Schofield charged in connection with Sunday’s alleged break-in at a University of Hawai’i at Manoa dorm room was in possession of stolen property, which included women’s underwear and an iPod, according to a court document. Mark Andrew Heath, accused of unauthorized entry into a dwelling and first-degree burglary, was being held in lieu of $100,000 bail awaiting a preliminary hearing Thursday at District Court on his warrantless arrest following his initial appearance at court today.

High bail was requested and granted because Heath presents a “danger to the community,” prosecutors said.

According to Schofield public affairs, Heath is a scout with Alpha Troop 2nd Squadron 14th Cavalry. The spokesperson was not sure if Heath is scheduled for deployment to Iraq with the Stryker brigade in coming weeks.

The soldier was arrested at 9:35 a.m. Sunday in the lobby of the Lokelani Dorm building at 2579 Dole St. by police investigating a reported break-in.

The unauthorized entry charge stems from Heath allegedly opening the door and entering a fourth-floor unit, according to an affidavit filed at District Court. A woman resident and her boyfriend were in the unit.

The boyfriend chased down Heath after he allegedly fled from the room.

When asked why he trying to enter the room, Heath allegedly said he was looking for a friend, “Travis Ford in dorm room 453,” the affidavit stated. Police and Campus Security said a check of the name and room number met with negative results, the document said.

According to witnesses, Heath appeared intoxicated, the affidavit said.

The woman resident of the dorm room Heath allegedly entered is the complainant in the unauthorized entry case.

Another 18-year-old female student and Lokelani Dorm resident identified a pink Nano iPod and
ingerie allegedly found in Heath’s possession as belonging to her, leading to the burglary charge.

The student told authorities the items were stolen sometime between Thanksgiving day and Sunday from her dorm room, the court document said. Her’s is a different room than the one in the unauthorized entry case.

UH spokesman Gregg Takayama said school officials are investigating how Heath gained entrance into Lokelani Dorm, which is part of the cluster of Hale Aloha campus dorms.

Takayama said the dorms have around-the-clock front desk check-in where guests are admitted only if escorted by a resident. Takayama declined comment when asked if Heath was a registered guest.

Dorm residents were also advised to lock their doors from the beginning of the current school year, Takayama said.

According to investigators, the dorms are not equipped with security surveillance cameras.

Source: http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2007/Nov/27/br/br8193742056.html

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