Ex-Navy officer gets year for videotaping stepdaughters undressing

Updated at 12:28 p.m., Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Retired Navy officer gets year for videotaping stepdaughters while they were undressing

Advertiser Staff

A retired Navy officer was sentenced to a year in jail this morning for secretly videotaping his stepdaughters while they were undressing.

Robert T. Franks, 49, pleaded guilty to the charge earlier this year and Circuit Judge Michael Town imposed the maximum sentence for the offense.

Town said he may consider releasing Franks from jail after he has served six months of his sentence, but ordered him to complete five years of probation.

Franks’ ex-wife and stepchildren wanted the defendant to be listed on the state’s registry of sex offenders, but Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Leilani Tan said the privacy-violation law does not allow such registration.

“It appears there might be some kind of a loophole” in the law as currently written, Tan said.

She said she will be working with her office on proposing an amendment to the law at the next session of the state Legislature.

But Tan did note that Town ordered Franks to complete sex-offender treatment as part of his sentence.

Franks was featured on the television show “America’s Most Wanted” after he left the jurisdiction to work as a construction manager in Louisiana.

He was arrested there in May 2008 and held on $500,000 bail before being extradited back to Hawaii.

Franks apologized to his family members during today’s court session.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090818/BREAKING01/90818052/Retired+Navy+officer+gets+year+for+videotaping+stepdaughters+while+they+were+undressing

Here’s more from America’s Most Wanted. http://www.amw.com/fugitives/case.cfm?id=54603

franks_large

Hawaii Dad’s Dirty Secret

In March 2007, the family of 48-year-old Robert Franks made a startling discovery in their home DVD player.  On a disc was a video of two of the Franks’ female children undressing.  The video looked to be shot unbeknownst to either victim, and seemed to be filmed at different times, on different days. Every scene took place in one of the bathrooms in their home.

When Franks’ wife searched the bathroom, she found a small video camera hidden inside a clock radio.  A second DVD of similar footage was also found.  Cops say when his wife confronted him, Franks confessed. But it didn’t take long for Robert Franks to leave Hawaii and go on the run.

Hawaiian authorities believed that Franks may be working construction and could be hiding out in Ohio or Louisiana.  Franks is described as a white male, 5’9″ tall, weighing 175 lbs., with brown hair and blue eyes.

On May 2, 2008, U.S. Marshals say that Robert Franks was arrested in New Orleans.

City Dumps Debris in Wai'anae Stream

Carroll Cox of EnviroWatch reported the City and County of Honolulu’s illegal dumping of concrete debris in Mailiili Stream in Wai’anae. On June 30, 2009, Cox spoke to students from the summer environmental justice institute Ka Makani Kai’aulu o Wai’anae and gave a tour of environmental justice impacts he has documented in the Wai’anae area.   One site the group visited was the Mailiili Stream dump site.

mailiili-stream

maililiili-rubble

Mailiili Stream dump site.  (Photos: Kyle Kajihiro)

You can see from the above photograph that concrete slabs and other debris were compacted along the shoreline and have filled much of the stream bed.   This stream flows through the 9000 acre Lualualei Naval Magazine and Radio Tower Facility, but most of the stream is dry.  The Navy tapped one of the water sources at the base of the mountain.  In this photo, there is a fence that cuts through the stream in the distance where the Navy occupied land begins, and antenna in the background.

_hawaiian-stilt

Source:  http://resources.edb.gov.hk/biology/english/images/bird/_hawaiian%20stilt.jpg

During the visit, several Ae’o (Endangered Hawaiian Stilt) were seen, obviously distressed.  The birds nest in the shallow water where the dumping occurred.  Below is an article from the Honolulu Star Bulletin about the illegal dumping by the City.

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City’s alleged dumping in stream investigated

By Gary T. Kubota

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jun 16, 2009

A number of government agencies are investigating the alleged illegal dumping of concrete by the city in a stream frequented by endangered Hawaiian stilts on the Waianae Coast.

State Health Department spokeswoman Janice Okubo said the dumping of construction materials requires a permit and there are no permits on record for the work in her department.

“We haven’t issued any permits for that dumping,” she said yesterday.

The alleged dumping occurred in Maili at the Mailiili Stream, about two miles mauka of Farrington Highway.

City spokesman Bill Brennan said the city is also looking into the incident.

Brennan said his understanding is that concrete rubble from sidewalk repairs was placed in the stream area to restore an access road along the bank that was used to cut brush.

He said the city employees were unaware that a permit might have been needed for the work.

Brennan said heavy equipment removed material from the area Saturday and put it in a landfill.

“Apparently the area had not been maintained for some time and neighboring properties had used the city flood-control area and access roads along the top of the flood-control bank as storage and for their personal use and to let their horses run free,” Brennan said.

He said the city removed only the sidewalk material not in the stream.

He said the city might need a permit to remove the sidewalk material in the stream.

Other agencies investigating the dumping include the state Department of Land and Natural Resources and the Army Corps of Engineers.

Corps spokesman Dino Buchanan said his agency is investigating whether there was a violation and what, if any, fines might be levied.

The investigations were prompted by requests last week from the group EnviroWatch Inc.

EnviroWatch founder Carroll Cox said he received a complaint from city workers who told him that the dumping had been occurring on weekends for the past two years.

Cox said at least one high-ranking official in the city Department of Facility Maintenance was aware of the dumping and had told him some 100 truckloads had been dumped in the area.

“You can’t mistakenly dump something for two years,” Cox said.

Cox said he’s familiar with the area and knows of about 20 endangered Hawaiian stilts that built their nests in the wetlands area of the stream.

He said the concrete has narrowed the area of nesting and allowed predators such as mongoose and feral cats to have an easier time crossing wetland areas to get to the endangered birds.

Cox said although the city has accepted responsibility, he’s worried that city workers will try to clean the area without proper supervision.

He said the city needs to consult with a number of agencies and seek the proper permits for removal.

Cox said he was upset that the city was the violator and he felt officials needed to be held accountable.

“What kind of example are they setting for other people?” he asked.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090616_Citys_alleged_dumping_in_stream_investigated.html

Navy Seeks Ferry Vessel for Pacific Operations

Brad Parsons posted this interesting information on his Hawaii Superferry blog.  It shows that the Navy is shopping for ferry vessels to charter for use in Guam and the Northern Marianas.

http://hisuperferry.blogspot.com/2009/06/latest-from-coconut-wireless-on-this.html

Monday, June 29, 2009

Latest from the Coconut Wireless on this

Forwarded:

Navy Seeks Ferry Vessel for Pacific Operations

The U.S. Navy’s Military Sealift Command (MSC) has issued a Market Survey to ask about the cost and availability of U.S. ferry vessels. Anticipated delivery will occur on October 1, although the vessel owner may propose alternate delivery dates. The location of proposed usage will be Guam, Saipan, and adjacent Pacific Ocean waters. The time charter will be for 12 months, with the possibility for three additional year-long renewals.

The closing date for responding to the Market Survey is July 14, 2009.

For more information, contact Ms. Jessica Chu of MSC at 202-685-xxxx (phone) or Jessxxx.xxx@navy.mil.

PVA has a copy of the Navy’s full document with the Market Survey. For a copy, contact Ed Welch at PVA Headquarters at 1-800-807-xxxx ext. xx or ewxxxx@passengervessel.com

Two Hawai'i-based USS Greeneville sailors held for brutal beating

Updated at 1:15 p.m., Friday, June 5, 2009

Hawaii sailor still held on high bail in N.H. attack

Associated Press

PORTSMOUTH, N.H. – Two nuclear submarine sailors, including one assigned to help crewmates stay out of trouble, continue to be held on high bail, accused of brutally beating a man and leaving him near death on a Portsmouth, N.H., street.

One of the accused crew members of the USS Greeneville was on duty and driving a Navy “safe-ride” van, a shuttle service that picks up sailors, including those who might have had too much to drink while off duty.

In court Thursday, Seamen Gerald Smith of Hawaii and Sandy Portobanco of Inglewood, Ca., did not contest that police had probable cause to arrest them in last month’s beating of Stephen Huntress, a former town councilor in bordering Kittery, Maine.

Huntress still is hospitalized.

The sailors are being held on $200,000 bail.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090605/BREAKING01/90605043/Hawaii+sailor+still+held+on+high+bail+in+N.H.+attack

Sex assault in military up 8 percent

April 12, 2009

Most Hawaii Army sex assaults go unreported, but military better in raising awareness of problem

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer

A female sailor reported being raped aboard the Pearl Harbor-based cruiser USS Port Royal while it was docked in the United Arab Emirates. A male enlisted sailor accused of the crime was found not guilty at a court-martial.

An Air Force lieutenant colonel was accused of making wrongful sexual contact with a male staff sergeant in Afghanistan. The officer received punishment of forfeiture of $3,704 pay a month for two months, and a reprimand.

A female enlisted Marine said she was fondled by a male service member while sleeping on the floor at another Marine’s house. Civilian authorities declined to prosecute, and the accused was acquitted at court-martial.

Those are just three of the 2,923 reports of sexual assault involving U.S. service members received by the Pentagon during fiscal 2008, which ended last September.

Required by Congress, the recently released annual statistics on sexual assault in the military showed an 8 percent increase in reports over the year before – a rise officials say reflects an increase in awareness and reporting of such crimes, but not necessarily a jump in assaults themselves.

Over a five-year period, the Army has seen a general increase in the numbers of confirmed sexual assaults involving Schofield Barracks soldiers, with six in fiscal 2004, seven in 2005, 26 in 2006, nine in 2007 and 10 in 2008, according to the post.

The year 2006 was an anomaly because a change in reporting procedures and laws resulted in a much higher number, officials said.

“We believe the increased number in reporting (across the Defense Department) means service members feel more comfortable reporting the crime and are getting the care they need,” said Gail McGinn, the Pentagon’s deputy undersecretary of defense for plans.

There were 165 sexual assault reports in Iraq and Afghanistan. President Obama declared April as Sexual Assault Awareness month.

Pete Geren, the secretary of the Army, expressed regret over the 4 percent increase in reported Army sexual assault cases in 2008 – for a total of 1,584 – saying the trend indicates “the Army still has much work to do to succeed in creating a climate where soldiers treat each other with dignity and respect.”

most unreported

Treatment professionals say the military is doing a much better job of acknowledging, responding to and trying to prevent sex assaults within its ranks, but there is little debate that such crimes are still highly unreported.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office last August found that the Defense Department still faced some challenges in implementing sexual assault prevention and response programs, for reasons that included a failure of a minority of commanders to support the programs.

Additionally, the GAO reported that at the 14 installations where it did its survey, 103 service members said they had been sexually assaulted in the preceding 12 months, but only 51 had reported it.

The government agency found that factors that discouraged service members from reporting a sexual assault included the belief that nothing would be done, fear of ostracism, harassment or ridicule, and concern that peers would gossip.

The Army in Hawai’i acknowledged that “as it stands now, most of these crimes go unreported.” The service said that as the Army’s campaign to reduce sex assault gains more momentum, it expects that increasing reports of sexual assault will continue.

In abstracts of the reported sexual assaults across the military, alcohol use often is an accompanying factor. Military officials say an attacker often is an acquaintance.

“We look for that rapist as being the guy or gal in a black mask with a knife hiding around the corner, when in fact, for the most part, it’s somebody you know,” said Col. Dean Wolford, the 15th Airlift Wing vice commander at Hickam Air Force Base.

Wolford said the issue of sexual assault “is not centered solely on the Air Force or Army, Navy or Marines. It’s in our society in general and that’s something that we as a society need to combat.

“It’s that attitude of date rape being date-light rape. A rape is a rape. An assault is an assault, and our society has to have a better awareness of that.”

The Navy said it recorded 418 sex assault cases service-wide in fiscal 2007, and 489 in 2008.

In the majority of 188 Navy investigations completed in 2008, the suspected attackers were mostly male active-duty members under age 35, according to reports.

“A significant number” could not be prosecuted because of issues, including the attacker not being known, the victim recanting, or a victim asking that charges not be brought.

Of 42 allegations of rape or aggravated sexual assault, nine resulted in court-martial charges, nine went through non-judicial punishment, and no action was taken in 24 cases due to lack of evidence, the Navy said.

Hickam’s Sexual Assault Prevention and Response Office said it handled 14 sexual assault cases in fiscal 2007, nine cases in 2008, and seven cases so far this fiscal year, which began in October.

Some victims may have gone to security forces or the Office of Special Investigation and are not reflected in the totals.

There are about 7,200 airmen assigned to Hickam, officials said.

Hickam cases

Both the Navy and Marines would not provide Hawai’i data for sexual assault trends, with the Marines saying the information had to be obtained through a federal Freedom of Information Act request.

Wolford, the vice wing commander, said the Hickam numbers “are very concerning. One sexual assault is concerning – much less seven (so far this fiscal year).”

But he also said he thinks the Air Force, in general, is doing a very good job in making strides to combat sexual assault crime.

“We want to make sure we don’t lose sight of this from a leadership perspective, so this is what we consider a commander’s program,” he said.

In November, Wolford attended an Air Force sexual assault prevention response summit in Washington, D.C.

Victim advocates, who can be a civilian, officer or enlisted airman, are in place at Hickam as a source of support for sex abuse victims, Wolford said.

Newly arriving airmen – and their families – receive sex assault prevention briefings.

Author and filmmaker Angela Shelton – who was herself sexually abused – appeared on base last year. Wolford said the base is bringing in “Voices of Men,” a multimedia play that deals with sexual assault and consent.

The Army said it has increased staffing in Hawai’i, with additional victim advocacy/sexual assault prevention specialists to provide training and counseling.

The Army also said its “Sex Signals” tour will be in Hawai’i from June 8 to 11, with 12 performances using improvisation, humor and audience participation to discuss dating stereotypes, consent and sexual assault.

Confidential option

In 2005, in an effort to encourage sex assault victims to come forward, the Pentagon instituted “restricted reporting,” which allows a victim to confidentially receive help without the initiation of a criminal investigation.

Adriana Ramelli, executive director of the Sex Abuse Treatment Center in Honolulu, said the stress of combat deployments can play into domestic violence and sex assault, but she, too, said it is difficult to identify the main reason for the increasing reports in the military.

“In the civilian sector as well, sometimes the numbers go up, and we don’t have any idea why,” she said. “We hope we have created a safer environment for victims to come forward.”

Ramelli said the military has done a “very good job” of enhancing its sexual assault prevention and response in the past five years.

“I still think there is still a serious problem,” she said, “but I do think that the military is taking a serious look at what is going on and is trying to implement programs that are to the benefit of victims and families.”

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090412/NEWS08/904120375/1001/LOCALNEWSFRONT

Sonar study fails to explain strandings

Posted on: Thursday, April 9, 2009

Sonar’s effect on dolphins minimal

By William Cole
Advertiser Military Writer

In a study replicating Navy sonar, the Hawai’i Institute of Marine Biology found that a captive bottlenose dolphin had to remain relatively close to a high-intensity sonar source for a prolonged period to experience even temporary hearing loss – a finding the Navy seized upon to say it “may have vastly overestimated impacts of mid-frequency active sonar on marine mammals.”

“We are still reviewing the report, but the research indicates that higher decibel levels are required to cause a shift in hearing than in the Navy’s more conservative models,” said Mark Matsunaga, a spokesman for U.S. Pacific Fleet.

But the Natural Resources Defense Council, which has sued the Navy repeatedly over alleged harm by Navy sonar on marine mammals, said the Hawai’i Institute findings pertain to one bottlenose dolphin in captivity and don’t speak to sonar effects on other marine mammal species.

The findings by the Coconut Island-based institute, a research arm of the University of Hawai’i, were published online yesterday in the journal Biology Letters.

“At bottom, this paper does not address the central concerns that the scientific and environmental communities have had about mid-frequency sonar,” said Michael Jasny, senior policy analyst with the NRDC. “Those concerns involve types of impacts other than hearing loss – such as behavioral impacts and stress effects, and such impacts have been found to occur at vastly lower thresholds of sonar exposure.”

Jasny said the Hawai’i Institute study adds a “data point” to the ongoing study of sonar impact on marine mammals.

The biggest concern, Jasny added, is over injuries to deep-diving whales from sonar that can cause the animals to stop vocalizing, abandon habitat and, in worst-case scenarios, suffer hemorrhages or emboli similar to the “bends” sometimes experienced by divers.

The Hawai’i Institute report, by T. Aran Mooney, Paul Nachtigall and Stephanie Vlachos, said there is increasing concern that human-produced ocean noise is adversely affecting marine mammals, with several mass strandings possibly caused by Navy mid-frequency sonar.

“However, it has yet to be empirically demonstrated how sonar could induce these strandings or cause physiological effects,” the report states.

Experiments were conducted in open-water pens at Coconut Island from August to October 2007 using a captive-born and trained Atlantic bottlenose dolphin accustomed to noise exposure experiments, according to the study.

The report said the “fatiguing noise” was an actual mid-frequency Navy sonar signal recorded in Puget Sound, Wash., in the summer of 2005 before a marine mammal stranding event.

Nachtigall said non-invasive electrodes were placed on the dolphin to detect brain wave patterns in response to the sound. According to the Hawai’i Institute, to get a temporary hearing loss, a dolphin would have to remain for five minutes within about 120 feet of a sonar source to receive the threshold 214 decibels of sound.

Navy sonar typically operates at 235 decibels at its source.

Nachtigall, the director of the Marine Mammal Research Program, said the study is groundbreaking in that it is the first to examine the direct effect of sonar on dolphins. It also shows Navy sonar is no different than other ocean sounds, and is similar to oil drilling noise or the underwater sounds from a tanker, which can be 220 decibels in a lower frequency, he said.

“So there are a lot of loud sounds in the ocean – not just Navy sonar,” Nachtigall said.

The study was funded by Congress through the Office of Naval Research.

Reach William Cole at wcole@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090409/NEWS10/904090342/1001

Loud sonar deafens dolphin

Loud sonar deafens isle dolphin in study

By Gregg K. Kakesako

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Apr 09, 2009
University of Hawaii and other scientists are suggesting that sonar used by the military can cause hearing loss in marine mammals, but only when it is extremely loud and close.

Marine biologist Aran Mooney of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and his colleagues at the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology at Coconut Island reported in the British journal “Biology Letters” yesterday that they exposed a 22-year-old bottlenose dolphin, named Boris, to a tape of the sonar sounds of sub “pings” from a Puget Sound, Wash., naval exercise — 15 sonar “pings” over two minutes — and recorded his reaction using a device that measured his brain waves.

An article in the Scientific American on Mooney’s study said the scientists could temporarily deafen the captive-born, trained Atlantic bottlenose dolphin if the sounds were top-volume (203 decibels or more) and unleashed relatively close to his pen in Kaneohe Bay.

“We had to expose him to very loud sounds repeatedly,” Mooney said in the Scientific American article, noting that Boris’ hearing returned within 20 minutes or so. “The animal would have to be relatively close to the sonar source, the equivalent of 40 meters (131 feet) from the Navy ship.”

And it’s not clear exactly how sonar would lead dolphins and whales to beach themselves, even if they lose their way because of temporary hearing loss, Mooney said.

“Even if we know how they react to sound, it doesn’t give us a good idea why they end up on the beach. We may never really know that answer.”

For years, the Navy has been fighting critics who charge marine mammals’ hearing becomes damaged by the powerful mid-frequency sonar used by submarines and warships causing them to become disoriented.

In response, the Pacific Fleet, in a written statement, saying it was “still reviewing the report.”

But the Navy noted that Mooney’s research indicates that higher decibel levels are required to cause a shift in hearing than in the Navy’s more conservative models.

“This would mean that the Navy may have vastly overestimated impacts of mid-frequency active sonar on marine mammals in its environmental planning documents,” the statement said. “Navy biologists look forward to reviewing the paper more completely, existing body of scientific knowledge.”

In a 2005 Puget Sound incident, a pod of whales apparently lost its way and washed ashore following naval training. Until now, no one had tested the actual impact of the sub “pings” on marine mammals.

The new data will allow those deciding the appropriate noise level under the sea, such as the National Marine Fisheries Service, to better understand what might help avoid any such situations, Mooney said. “It shows us that these sounds do have to be relatively loud and the animals close and that leaves a lot of room to mitigate the situation. It should be relatively easy to avoid problems.”

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090409_loud_sonar_deafens_isle_dolphin_in_study.html

Navy tells Rep. Serrano that it has no plans to return to Vieques

This press release from Congressman Jose Serrano states that the Navy has no intention of resuming training in Vieques.

Congressman José E. Serrano

Representing the Sixteenth District of New York

PRESS RELEASE

-4361

Serrano Announces Navy Has No Intention of Reopening Training Range On
Vieques

March 20, 2009 – Washington, DC – This afternoon, Congressman José E. Serrano received confirmation from the Navy’s Congressional Relations office that the Navy has no intention of reopening Vieques as a training range.

“I am pleased to hear that the Navy has no plans to return to Vieques,” said Serrano. “The people of Vieques have suffered enough. I am glad that the Navy now realizes the harm that has been caused, and agrees that this painful chapter in the history of Puerto Rico must remain closed.”

###

Congressman José E. Serrano has represented the Bronx in Congress since 1990. He is the most senior Puerto Rican Member of Congress.

Military ignored conditions set by state regulators on undersea warfare exercises

The Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA) established a regulatory regime to create more consistency in regulating coastal resources, by delegating certain regulatory powers to approved state CZM agencies. This means that on matters of Coastal Zone Management, the federal government should be in accordance with the regulatory guidelines set by the Hawai’i CZM agency. However, in its 2008 annual report, the Hawaii Coastal Zone Management Program reported that in several instances, the U.S. military simply “issued a notice of intent to proceed over both the conditions and objection” of the Hawaii CZM Program. One instance involved the use of sonar and live fire exercises by the Navy undersea warfare exercises (USWEX). The other involved the Navy Hawaii Range Complex. There have been reports of massive fish kill off the island of Ni’ihau and Kaua’i and dead whales washing ashore on Ni’ihau and Kaua’i. It was reported by the Hawaii Independent that the Navy and the DARPA conducted classified exercises in the vicinity of Ni’ihau and Kaua’i during a USWEX event in the Hawaii Range Complex. Here’s an excerpt from the 2008 Hawaii CZM Program annual report:

Federal Consistency Program

The CZMA requires federal agencies to conduct their planning, management, development, and regulatory activities in a manner consistent with federally-approved state CZM programs. The informational and procedural requirements for CZM federal consistency reviews are prescribed by federal regulations.

Because there is a significant federal presence in Hawaii, federal consistency is a valuable State management tool. Federal planning, regulatory, and construction activities have direct and significant effects on land and water environments statewide.

The federal government controls vast tracts of land. The range of federal activities and permits reviewed is extensive and includes harbor projects, beach nourishment projects, military facilities and training exercises, fisheries management plans and regulations, open ocean aquaculture, and dredge and fill operations. In addition, projects funded by certain federal grant programs are reviewed for potential impacts to CZM resources.

Public notices for all federal consistency reviews are published in The Environmental Notice.

The following are noteworthy examples of federal consistency activities:

1. Makua Military Reservation Training Activities: The U.S. Army’s live-fire training exercises at Makua Military Reservation on Oahu were reviewed for impacts on resources in areas beyond the reservation. The reservation itself is a federal area that is excluded from CZM review. However, the CZM Program was concerned about the effects of live-fire training, particularly wildfire on State natural area reserves, critical habitat for endangered species, and historic and cultural resources. Federal consistency negotiations with the Army resulted in mitigation measures to ensure protection of natural and cultural resources.

2. U.S. Navy Undersea Warfare Exercises (USWEX): The CZM Program reviewed a series of USWEX, which are anti-submarine exercises involving the use of mid-frequency active sonar in waters around the State. The primary concern with sonar is its potential to harm marine mammals such as whales and monk seals. USWEX also involves land-based training exercises such as aerial bombing of Kaula Island off of Kauai and Pohakuloa Training Area on the Island of Hawaii. Operational conditions and mitigation measures were required for the sonar use for consistency with CZM enforceable policies. An objection was issued over the use of Kaula Island until a monitoring plan and baseline survey of birds is completed. In response to the Program’s consistency decision, the Navy issued a notice of intent to proceed over both the conditions and objection.

3. U.S. Navy Hawaii Range Complex (HRC): The HRC is one of the Navy’s range complexes used for training operational forces and military systems. The HRC covers 235,000 square nautical miles around the Main Hawaiian Islands, and a 2.1 million square nautical mile Temporary Operating Area of sea and airspace. The biennial Rim of the Pacific naval exercise is included as one of the major activities covered by the review. One of the primary concerns was the Navy’s use of mid-frequency active sonar and its impacts on marine mammals. The CZM Program required mitigation measures for the sonar use to be consistent with CZM enforceable policies. An objection was issued to the use of Kaula Island for bombing until a monitoring plan and baseline survey of birds is completed, and the development and operation of a directed energy (laser) weapon facility at the Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai, until potential hazards are identified and operating procedures and safety requirements are developed. The Navy declined to agree and issued a notice of intent to proceed over the conditions requiring sonar mitigation and the objection to the bombing of Kaula Island. However, the Navy is developing a management plan for seabirds at Kaula in response to the CZM review and also agreed to submit a separate CZM review for the directed energy facility when the details are developed.

4. Hawaii Superferry Security Zones: The CZM Program issued federal consistency concurrences for the U.S. Coast Guard to establish security zones for the Hawaii Superferry at Nawiliwili Harbor, Kauai and Kahului Harbor, Maui. The security zones were necessary in consideration of the large number of protestors who prevented the Superferry from entering Nawiliwili Harbor. The Program’s consistency concurrence ensured that public access was maintained by requiring that canoe and boating clubs, small commercial businesses, and Native Hawaiian cultural practitioners be given consideration for access to resources during the activation of the security zone. The Program also required that when the security zone is inactive, public access to and use of established public areas in and around Nawiliwili Harbor and Kahului Harbor be allowed.

The Hawaii CZM Program facilitates cooperation among government agencies in reviewing applications for federal, State, and County permits. Also, pre-application consultation is highly encouraged. Consultations occur by telephone and email, as well as through meetings involving applicants and agencies.

The CZM Program continued its involvement with the federal and State agency coordination initiative involving quarterly meetings with regulatory and resource agencies, and various branches of the military. The meetings are hosted by the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command and the U.S. Navy. This forum provides the participating agencies an opportunity to discuss and coordinate on current and future projects, activities, and issues.

Navy vet sentenced to life for murder of stepfather

Timothy Adarna, who took an early discharge from the Navy, was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of his stepfather Robert Ramos. Adarna stabbed Ramos numerous times then set the body on fire.   Here are a couple of earlier articles:

http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2006/Nov/17/ln/FP611170359.html

http://starbulletin.com/2008/07/19/news/story10.html

====

March 13, 2009

Man who killed stepfather in Ewa Beach sentenced to life in prison

By Jim Dooley
Advertiser Staff Writer

Timothy Adarna was sentenced to life in prison this morning for killing his stepfather, Robert Ramos, two years ago in Ewa Beach.

Relatives of Ramos waited in court for Adarna to apologize for his actions or explain them, but he said nothing.

Adarna remained silent as Circuit Judge Michael Town imposed a life sentence with the possibility of parole for the murder and 20 years for a related arson charge.
The two prison sentences will be served simultaneously. Under terms of a plea agreement, both the prosecution and defense agreed that Adarna will not seek parole until he has served at least 20 years behind bars.
Robin Turner, niece of the victim, spoke for Ramos’ family after the hearing.

She said the family was “dumbfounded that something like this, in such a gruesome manner, could happen.”
She described Ramos, 55, as “a great person.”

“We don’t have any ill wishes toward anyone, toward Timmy,” Turner said. “It’s just a loss for everyone.”
But she said the Ramos family hoped for an apology and an explanation from Adarna, 23.

“When you accept responsibility but you can’t say you’re sorry or apologize, that makes it much more difficult,” she said.

Adarna was convicted in a jury trial last year of first degree arson for setting fire to the house in which Ramos’ body was found. But the jury couldn’t reach a verdict on the murder charge.

Adarna pleaded guilty to that charge in January.

Adarna, a Campbell High School graduate and military veteran, has said previously that he didn’t remember the circumstances of the crime.

After Adarna pleaded guilty in January to second degree murder, defense lawyer David Hayakawa called the case a “mystifying” one that will apparently never be fully explained.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090313/BREAKING01/90313054/-1

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