Maui Community College degree to serve 'star wars' tracking station and supercomputer

New degree signals Maui CC name change

By Craig Gima

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, May 28, 2009

If the Board of Regents approves a proposal to offer a second bachelor’s degree at Maui Community College, it will likely mean a name change for the Kahului campus to the University of Hawaii-Maui, UH President David McClain said in a memo to the regents.

MAUI COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Established: 1964
Location: Kahului
Enrollment: 2,841
Student-to-Faculty Ratio 16:1

Programs offered
Bachelor’s: 1
Associate degree: 20
Certificates: 37

Source: University of Hawaii Institutional Research Office

Maui CC is asking the regents to allow the campus to offer a bachelor’s of applied science in engineering technology degree. The campus already offers a bachelor’s degree in applied business and information technology, and students can take distance learning classes there for bachelor’s and master’s degrees from UH-Manoa, UH-Hilo and UH-West Oahu.

If a second degree is approved at tomorrow’s meeting, McClain said he would support renaming the campus as UH-Maui. He said community college degrees would still be from Maui Community College, but the bachelor’s degrees awarded would be from a re-named Maui College.

If approved, the changes would likely take place after McClain leaves his post in July.

“We just want to take it one step at a time,” said Maui Community College Chancellor Clyde Sakamoto. “Having two bachelor’s degrees does not a university make, but it allows the university to continue to evolve.”

The proposal comes before the regents amidst some debate within the UH administration. Both UH Vice President for Community Colleges John Morton and UH Vice President for Administration Linda Johnsrud urged caution in moving forward with another bachelor’s degree on Maui.

A second bachelor’s degree would also trigger a move in accreditation from the Western Association of Schools and Colleges junior commission to the WASC senior commission, which accredits four-year colleges and universities, McClain said.

But after reviewing the concerns, Maui CC’s capabilities and work force needs on Maui, McClain said he concluded that the regents should approve the degree with the first upper-division courses offered in fall 2010.

Graduates of the program would fill a “critical need” for technicians at the U.S. Air Force observatory and supercomputer facilities on Maui, the UH Manoa Institute for Astronomy facility and high-tech firms on Maui, McClain said.

Sakamoto said the college eventually hopes to offer more than just two bachelor’s degrees.

“It’s simply a matter of our college meeting community needs,” he said.

“I think it’s exciting,” said Maui state Sen. Rosalyn Baker, who, along with other Maui legislators, has been pushing for a four-year college on Maui for decades. “I’m hoping the regents will support it because it is an important step for Maui, for higher education here.”

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/hawaiinews/20090528_new_degree_signals_maui_cc_name_change.html

Celebrate Malcolm X and International Workers' Day

Event: Stir it up!: Celebrating Malcolm X & International Workers’ Day

“Ho`okū`ē hui!”

What: Jam Session
Host: UHM Political Discussion Group
Start Time: Monday, May 4 at 11:00am
End Time: Monday, May 4 at 2:00pm
Where: UHM CAMPUS CENTER COURTYARD

To see more details and RSVP, follow the link below:
http://www.facebook.com/n/?event.php&eid=70957108156&mid=6075fbG4184e208G688284G7

Rock the Boat: A Consciousness-Rising Concert for Social Change

The Collective for Equality, Justice, and Empowerment (CEJE), will be hosting a concert and networking party for progressives/progressive orgs:

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Rock the Boat: A Consciousness-Rising Concert for Social Change

Saturday, April 4, 2009

4:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Hemenway Courtyard/ Manoa Gardens, University of Hawai’i at Manoa

It would mean very much to our collective to have each of you there, as the purpose of the concert/party is to create a safe, loving, and entertaining space to share stories, information, and awareness, on our given work, and to open up channels between us that will allow our energy and anti-oppression work to be become more powerful in connection with others.’

Thus, we welcome you to bring any and all information (brochures, literature, art, etc) on the issues that you/your orgs/departments/offices, address in the local/national/global community. We will have tables set up for you to make a safe educational enclave in the midst of the party 🙂

Lastly, if you are down to just come out, have fun, and share your light, by all means, come and do so! Your presence means the most. Attached is a flyer with details.

The Collective for Equality, Justice, and Empowerment, a.k.a. CEJE (pronounced “siege”), is a student-run Registered Independent Organization based in Honolulu , at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. CEJE is an open collective which welcomes and encourages intergenerational and inter/intracultural activism among a wide range of anti-oppressive groups, both on campus and in the larger local, national, and international community.

This collective serves as a safe space for individual and community decolonization, critical discussion, and creative, holistic exploration of liberatory art and activism.

We aim to utilize our resources in the university community to in order to serve as a bridging mechanism between academia and activism. We are currently engaged with two primary internal committees, the LGBTQIA Committee, and the Reproductive Justice/End Structural Violence Committee.

Founded by US women of color, third world women, indigenous women, and allies of these communities- CEJE is an egalitarian collective that works to illuminate and nurture networks of community organizations and individuals, who share common progressive visions while advocated for through specific issue areas. Our goal is to bring people together in solidarity, while engaging our own social locations and identities-in order to non-violently challenge and dismantle the politically, economically, biologically, culturally, and environmentally-ecologically oppressive and violent systems and institutions that have kept us divided, and nearly conquered, for generations. Through recovering genealogies, sharing our narratives, and moving forward as agents on behalf of our ancestors and future descendants-our hope is for a better world.


UH makes moves to seize control of Mauna Kea

The University of Hawai’i (UH) is responsible for the illegal, haphazard and destructive overdevelopment of Mauna Kea, one of the most sacred sites for Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiians).  But UH has always been the tenant of the mountain, which gave some degree of independent oversight by a separate state agency.  Kanaka Maoli have successfully fought off the massive expansion of Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea (which violated the management plan).  But UH now wants to build the largest telescope in the world – the Thirty Meter Telescope – on Mauna Kea and the Air Force wants to build the PanSTARRS telescope there.   So UH is pushing for legislation and approval of a management plan that turns the authority for Mauna Kea over to UH itself – the  proverbial fox guarding the hen house.  Time to stop the desecration! See the following article from the Hawai’i Independent about the current state of the struggle over Mauna Kea.

King of the mountain?

Posted March 18th, 2009 in Hawaii Island by Alan McNarie

It’s become a familiar pattern in recent years: a developer gets the go-ahead for a project from various state and/or county agencies. Then the developer and the government agencies get sued by citizens’ groups for not following the state’s own laws. The courts side with the activists. Then, instead of complying with the court ruling, the developer asks the state Legislature to change the law it broke.

It happened with Hokulia. It happened with the Hawaii Superferry. And now, according to some environmentalists and native Hawaiians, it’s happening again-only this time, the developer is the University of Hawaii, and the property in question is the top of Mauna Kea.

For decades, the university has been paying the state’s Department of Land and Natural Resources a dollar a year for the mountaintop, then subleasing sites there to various institutions that erect huge telescopes. The telescope consortiums pay the university a dollar plus telescope viewing time for UH Institute for Astronomy’s professors and students. For decades, activists have been complaining that the university has been damaging the mountain’s environment. They complained that the university’s own development plan had called for no more than 13 scopes on the mountain-yet that number had already been exceeded and the university was still considering applications for even more and bigger facilities. Native Hawaiians argued that the big scopes were desecrating their sacred mountain, damaging ancient cultural sites and interfering with their religious and cultural practices. Environmentalists noted that telescope construction had destroyed much of the native habitat for the wekiu bug, an endangered insect that lives only in the cindery upper regions of Mauna Kea.

The activists point to a federal environmental impact statement that found “cumulative and significant adverse impacts generated by the astronomical activities on the summit,” in violation of the state’s mandates for management of a conservation district. They note that the dollar-a-year leases violated Hawai`i Revised Statutes 171-18, which requires the Board of Land and Natural Resources (BLNR) to collect “fair market value” rents from lessees of state lands.

The campaigners won a significant victory in August of 2002, when Circut Court Judge Glenn Hara ruled that the university and the BLNR could not approve any new telescope development until the BLNR had developed a truly comprehensive land-management plan for the Mauna Kea summit area. The BLNR recently dropped its appeal of that case, but the activists’ motion for court costs is still under consideration. Meanwhile, in response to that case, a draft Comprehensive Management Plan came out last month-but it was written under the aegis of the university’s Office of Mauna Kea Management (OMKM), not the BLNR. The draft plan is currently available for review online at www.maunakeacmp.org. According to OMKM Director Stephanie Nagata, the BLNR may vote on the plan in April.

Even before the plan is approved, the university is pushing bills in the Legislature to give the OMKM the power to enforce the plan’s provisions. House Bill 1174 and Senate Bill 502 would grant agents of the university’s Mauna Kea Management Board and OMKM the right to make and enforce regulations governing visitors to the mountain, to restrict visitor access to daylight hours, to charge fees and levy fines on those visitors, and to keep the proceeds from those fees and fines in a special fund for managing the lands on the mountain top.

OMKM and its supporters claim that the bills and the management plan are simply giving the activists and the public what they’ve been asking for: better protection for Mauna Kea and its resources. But the bills’ opponents see it as a power grab by the university.

“The university and its attorney, Lisa Munger [also attorney for the Hawaii Superferry Inc.], recognize that they are unlikely to prevail on an appeal of the current laws protecting Mauna Kea. Thus, they are seeking to drastically change those laws to better favor their interests,” read a joint letter of testimony signed by plaintiffs in the court case.

“The Board of Land and Natural Resources and their staff should by law be writing that management plan-not the Board of Regents and not [UH-Hilo Chancellor] Rose Tseng,” believes Nelson Ho, who signed the letter for the Sierra Club. Ho says that if the bills pass as written, the groups will be back in court to challenge them.

“I do know that the Sierra Club has this position that the DLNR is abrogating their responsibility,” responds OMKM’s Nagata. But she maintains, “They’re not, for the very reason that they’re doing their own independent review and they’re approving the plan.”

Dodging Issues

Ho claims that the draft plan is “seriously flawed.”

“It repeats several lies again and again, in the hope that the Legislature and the BLNR see that as the truth,” he maintains. One of those “lies,” he says, is “that the industrial activities of international astronomy are not the problem on Mauna Kea. The problem is unrestricted access of people who bring up their plate lunches and leave their hamburger wrappers as debris.”
Nagata, not surprisingly, disagrees.

“I think he’s quite misguided in his interpretation of the management plan,” she says. “The major focus of the plan is a recognition particularly of the cultural significance, as well as the environmental significance of the mountain, and the plan is to provide us with guidelines for how to protect the cultural and natural resources from all kinds of uses and activities, including construction….”

The truth lies somewhere between their viewpoints. The plan does, in fact, address impacts from both observatory construction and from visitors. It requires an environmental monitor and an archeologist to be present at any future construction, for instance, with the power to halt construction if they see the need. It recommends that all visitors, telescope personnel and construction workers undergo an orientation session so that they will be more culturally and environmentally aware. It suggests a wash station to remove foreign seeds and insects from vehicles traveling up the mountain.

But the plan also deliberately avoids many of the issues that are among the sorest points for the community. Among the issues that it claims are “beyond the scope of this CMP”:
• Termination of the state lease between the university and the BLNR
• Use of ceded lands for $1 a year or nominal consideration
• Subleases between the university and the observatories
• Extension of the state lease beyond 2033
• Decommissioning [of obsolete telescopes]
• Proposed new development on Mauna Kea, including the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) and Pan Starrs
• Community benefit package with increased educational benefits
• Guaranteed employment opportunities for native Hawaiians and the people on the Island of Hawai‘i”

While the plan lists guidelines and recommendations for future construction, it leaves the question of whether more telescopes should be built to the university’s Board of Regents, with the guidance of a “2000 Master Plan” that was never approved by the BLNR.

Native Hawaiian Concerns

Among the thorniest issues on the mountain is the relationship between the university and native Hawaiians. The CMP devotes pages to the essential role that Mauna Kea plays in native Hawaiian beliefs and practices, and claims to model its recommendations on those beliefs and to consult native families with ties to the mountain. But the plan and the Legislative bills also call for university agents to have the power to regulate Hawaiian activities on Mauna Kea.

It became clear that the community had a number of issues and concerns related to past and future activities on Mauna Kea and specifically within the UH Management Areas that were beyond the scope of this CMP. These issues and concerns are cited below and policy makers are urged to consider them in their broader decision making related to Mauna Kea.

The plan calls for free access for native Hawaiian cultural uses, “except where safety, resource management, cultural appropriateness, and legal compliance considerations may require reasonable restrictions.” But it also calls for several restrictions on those practices. Hawaiians couldn’t be on the mountaintop after dark, for instance, without a special permit; they could only scatter the ashes of their dead with a special use permit. The MKMB and its Hawaiian advisory groups would have the authority to dismantle any ahu (stone cairns) or altars that it deems culturally inappropriate.

That last provision may strike an especially raw nerve with Kealoha Pisciotta, a native Hawaiian practitioner and former telescope technician who has become one of the university’s most adamant critics. Pisciotta once constructed an ahu on the mountain that contained a family pohaku (sacred stone). It was dismantled and the pohaku was hauled to the Hilo landfill.
Pisciotta see a multitude of problems with the university’s appointed officials defining and controlling Hawaiian practices.

“Now the university is determining not only when and how the ceremonies can be conducted, but who can be there…,” she notes. “I can get a permit to practice, but I can’t bring my mom or my sister or anybody else.”

Pisciotta says over a thousand opponents of the university’s plan have already sent their testimony to the legislature.

The authors of the CMP are very aware that the university has a public relations problem. The document begins by acknowledging that the “lack of cultural sensitivity engendered anger, hurt, and distrust towards the University of Hawai‘i for not being a good steward of Mauna Kea.” But the basic message seems to be, “We get it now.” The university is casting itself, through the CMP and the OMKM, as the solution.

“My interpretation of their [CMP opponents’] actions is that they prefer not to have the resources protected,” Nagata told the Independent.

But opponents obviously see it differently. For them, the bottom line is that the university continues to get free viewing time, the telescope consortiums continue to pay their one dollar rents, and if the mountain is going to be protected, all the other users will need to pay for it through fees and fines that the university gets to impose and spend. They see a “comprehensive management plan” that sidesteps some of the basic issues of planning, such as determining how many telescopes the mountain can support.

And no matter how good the plan is, many of its opponents just don’t trust the university, with its long record of ignoring its own recommendations, to police itself, much less the mountain’s other users.

“The CMP is not comprehensive. Even if it were a plan…the problem here is that they’re going to set a negative precedent with this bill by privatizing public land, putting it into the exclusive control of the developers,” believes Pisciotta.

Ho admits that if a body like OMKM were under the DLNR, it might meet some of his objections, at least “hypothetically.”

“But I would want to see the specific charges of that body, because, in fact the Board of Land and Natural Resources is that body, and they should be overseeing the writing of that plan,” he adds.
There is much in the CMP for its opponents to like. It does establish some guidelines for better supervision of telescope construction. It does endorse Hawaiian values in managing the mountain, and gives some Hawaiians a say in its management-if only Hawaiians appointed by the university. It does set up a framework for protecting Hawaiian cultural sites and the island’s wild denizens. But all of that may come to naught, because the plan doesn’t seriously address perhaps the biggest question of all: Should the University be king of the mountain?

Alan McNarie is a Hawai‘i-based journalist.

Source: http://www.thehawaiiindependent.com/hawaii/hawaii-island/2009/03/18/king-of-the-mountain/

UH begins search for chemical weapons dumped at sea

Starbulletin.com

Depth Chargers

The University of Hawaii will search the sea for chemical weapons dumped in 1944

By Gregg K. Kakesako

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Feb 25, 2009

The University of Hawaii’s two submersibles will spend 15 days beginning Monday filming and taking water and sediment samples south of Pearl Harbor as part of an Army project to determine the risks of nearly 600 tons of chemical weapons dumped there in 1944.

Tad Davis, the Army’s deputy assistant secretary for the environment, safety and occupational health, said yesterday 10 dives will be made by the Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory submersibles Pisces IV and V at an area dubbed “Hawaii-05” by the Army.

The two submersibles will make the dives in the area where the depth ranges from 900 to 2,000 feet during the day. The work is to continue at night using remotely operated underwater vehicles.

In the past, the Army has said 16,000 M47-A2 bombs containing 598 tons of mustard gas were dumped in the area about Oct. 1, 1944. Each chemical bomb weighs 100 pounds and is nearly 32 inches long. The practice of ocean dumping was banned in 1972.

Between 1932 and 1944, chemical weapons, such as blister agents lewisite and mustard gas and blood agents hydrogen cyanide and cyanogen chloride, were discarded in waters off Oahu. The largest dump is reported to be in area 10 miles west of the Waianae Coast.

Davis has described the job as “the most comprehensible effort to date to address this issue.”

He said the dives by the submersibles are part of the Army’s effort to determine the characteristics of the site.

“We are getting to a critical point in that effort,” Davis said.

All these facts will determine “what risks are associated with those materials remaining where they are.”

Davis also is involved in another long-term project on the Waianae Coast where the military already has spent $2.2 million to determine the long-term effects of the dumping of 2,000 World War II-era conventional weapons on the sediment, shellfish, limu and fish near Ordnance Reef. The term “conventional” refers to munitions that are not nuclear, biological or chemical.

The goal there is to clear the water from the shoreline to 120 feet away.

Davis said University of Hawaii and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientists will conduct two more studies of the water and the tides.

All the studies will eventually lead to an attempt to remove or destroy in place up to 1,500 conventional munitions near Pokai Bay, using remote underwater drones and other robotic techniques perfected by oil companies. The weapons range from .50-caliber or smaller ammunition to 50- to 100-pound bombs and 105 mm projectiles.

The Pentagon began work on the Pokai Bay Ordnance Reef problem in May 2006.

“I would like to move faster,” Davis said, “and I think we are moving at a deliberate pace. I would still like to move this process faster.”

Davis was to address the International Dialogue on Underwater Munitions Conference today at the Pacific Beach Hotel. He will meet with federal, state and community officials on the Pentagon’s action involving Ordnance Reef, chemical munitions, depleted uranium and flammable items known as propellant grains discovered off Maili Beach in Waianae.

Afflicted areas

Chemical weapons were reportedly dumped at two sites:

  • The largest amount of chemical weapons believed to have been dumped in island waters is in an area 10 miles west of the Waianae Coast. The Army thinks 2,000 tons of lewisite, mustard, hydrogen cyanide and cyanogen chloride were discarded in this area.
  • An additional 19 tons of mustard gas encased in 100-pound bombs and 155 mm and 75 mm projectiles were discarded 10 miles south of Pearl Harbor between 1932 and 1944.

Submerged danger

Types of chemical weapons that the Army dumped in waters off Oahu between 1932 and 1944.

  • Lewisite and mustard gas (blister agents): Effects are irritation and damage to skin and mucous membranes, pain and injury to the eyes and, when inhaled, damage to respiratory tract.
  • Hydrogen cyanide and cyanogen chloride (blood agents): When inhaled, will interfere with tissue oxygenation process, especially in the brain.

Source: U.S Army

Find this article at:
http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090225_Depth_Chargers.html

Action Alert from KAHEA to Protect Mauna Kea!

Please take action to Protect Mauna Kea!

Your help is needed right now. Lobbyists for the University of Hawaii, backed by powerful foreign telescope-developers, are pushing hard to take control of Mauna Kea’s public trust resources and override the conservation laws currently barring further development on our sacred summits. If successful, they will use this authority to write their own rules, approve their own permits, and shut-out the public. Public trust resources cannot be protected if the developers are allowed to police themselves. Don’t let the politics of special interests undermine the public’s best interests. Take action now to help prevent the University’s power-grab.

Click Here to Take Action!

You can help stop UH’s land-grab on Mauna Kea’s sacred summit. After 40 years of mismanagement, tell the State Land Board and the Legislature that enough is enough!
“The University’s lobbyists will say anything to get their way. I heard them tell Legislators they had community consent. I am from the community and tell you what, they have nothing of the sort.” — Kukauakahi Ching, Native Hawaiian Practitioner.

Our sacred summits — Mauna Kea and Haleakala — are protected by law as conservation districts. These are public trust ceded lands–Hawaiian lands–held by the state in trust for the people of Hawaii. Yet, today Mauna Kea’s public lands are exploited by foreign corporations and the University, who are profiting from telescope activities on the summit at the public’s expense.

“The rent from the foreign telescope-owners is 30 years past due–they have paid only $1 a year to misuse Mauna Kea. If the state had been collecting the $50 million dollars a year from these foreign telescope-owners, like we suggested to them years ago, we would not have these budget shortfalls now. Remember, $50 million in 1 year is $100 million in just 2 years. They owe the people of Hawaii for 30 years of back rent. How dare they suggest to short-change the taxpayers now.” –Kealoha Pisciotta, President Mauna Kea Anaina Hou.

Forty years of uncontrolled telescope construction has desecrated cultural sites, contaminated the ground above the primary aquifer, and destroyed 90% of the endemic Wekiu’s habitat. Today, developers are vying to build two new telescopes (along with roads, parking lots, office buildings, and gift shops) on undeveloped habitat around the summit area. One of them — owned by the California Thirty Meter Telescope Corporation — is larger than all the current telescopes combined and will bulldoze the last pristine peak near the summit.

The only thing stopping them is the law. That is why the University is working hard to overturn the laws that currently protect our sacred summits and limit telescope construction. Two courts of law and two state audits have already found that the telescope industry violated the state and federal laws meant to protect Mauna Kea. The only way their future telescope construction plans can go forward is for the University and the telescope developers to change and exempt themselves from these protective environmental laws.

This latest bid to take over Mauna Kea has two fronts:

1. Pressure the Land Board to adopt an illegitimate management plan that limits public access, dictates religious ceremony, and allows UH and telescope developers to pocket public money,

2. Lobby the Legislature to pass one of four bills that will hand-over authority for managing Mauna Kea to the primary developer of the summit, the University of Hawaii.

All of it comes down to the University’s same, long-sought goal: make it easier to exploit Mauna Kea for money. The latest proposal on the table would allow the University to restrict public access (including how and when Hawaiians may worship at the sacred summit), pocket all the money made on Mauna Kea, and exempt themselves from public oversight. This is a public policy and legal nightmare!

“The University wants to gate the road to Mauna Kea–the road was paid for by taxpayers, it’s a public road. The University wants to require Hawaiians to get a permit to worship–Mauna Kea belongs to Ke Akua, they cannot lock the people out of the temple. Even if Hawaiians could get a permit, it would mean they couldn’t bring their non-Hawaiian friends and ohana to ceremony. This is discrimination! Who is the University to say who can and cannot worship?” — Paul Neves, Alii Ai Moku, Royal Order of Kamehameha I.

Your voice can help preserve the sacred temple and delicate ecosystem of Mauna Kea. Take action now to tell the Legislature and the Land Board that Mauna Kea is still not for sale.

Mahalo nui,
Us Guys at KAHEA: The Hawaiian-Environmental Alliance

1149 Bethel St., #415
Honolulu, HI 96813
www.kahea.org
blog.kahea.org

local ph/fx: 808-524-8220
toll-free ph/fx: 877-585-2432
email: kahea-alliance@hawaii.rr.com

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.
Click Here For More Info!

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

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.

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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