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Blog and Media Roundup - Thursday, October 28, 2010; News Roundup
Topic Started: Oct 28 2010, 03:50 AM (373 Views)
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http://www.heraldsun.com/view/full_story_news_durham/10070724/article-Duke-campus-grieves--remembers-friend?instance=main_article

Duke campus grieves, remembers friend
The Herald Sun
10.27.10 - 10:17 pm
By KEITH UPCHURCH

kupchurch@heraldsun.com; 419-6612

DURHAM -- An overflow crowd gathered at a tear-filled Duke Chapel on Wednesday to say goodbye to a Duke student who died Sunday -- a student remembered as being the very essence of a loyal friend and lover of life.

Though it was a somber occasion, speakers also recalled how Drew Everson, a senior who apparently fell from steps at an East Campus building on Friday, loved his family, friends, fraternity brothers -- and his Scotch whiskey.

More than one speaker said Everson's love of life and the energy he showed as a student set an example that few could emulate. They said that although his life on Earth is now over, he lives on in the memories of those who knew him.

"He was a remarkable Duke student," said Steve Nowicki, one of Everson's professors. "Drew was smart, warm, generous, funny. He would have made a significant impact in the future."

Nowicki said Everson wouldn't hesitate to label as "baloney" something he disagreed with, although he often used "a more colorful phrase," and knew how to back up his stand.

"He had a wickedly funny sense of humor," Nowicki said. "How could you not love this guy?"

Classmate Zach Fuller said Everson was "always there for a friend." He said Everson loved life and understood what was important, always keeping things in perspective.

Matt Byrne, a fellow Duke Debate Team member, called Everson "a true, unyielding friend."

"I love you man, seriously," Byrne said. "I'm honored, humbled and lucky to be your friend. I'll miss you, Drew."

Classmate Lauren Haigler called Everson her best friend, and said he loved life "more than anyone I've known."

"He made everyone laugh," she said, and recalled the day he playfully tried to "steal" her car as she was hanging on the hood.

"He has forever changed my life," she said. "Through us, he can live on."

Duke President Richard Brodhead said the death of a student "goes against everything the university is here for. We get the beginning of the story, but not the fulfillment of the promise."

Brodhead said he'd known Everson since he was a freshman, and always found him interesting to listen to. He said the best way to honor his memory is to "use him as an image to make our lives significant."

The Rev. Sam Wells, dean of Duke Chapel, said "everyone wanted to be Drew's friend."

"He was bursting with life," Wells said. "His death is a door slammed in our face."

But Wells said that despite the sorrow his death brings, there is also hope -- that God will "remake our broken bodies."

"Remember Drew," Wells said. "It's the best thing you can do."
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http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/coach-k-leadership-conference-promotes-respect-humility

Coach K Leadership Conference promotes respect, humility
Faith Robertson/The Chronicle : Men’s basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski spoke in front of more than 200 of the world’s most prominent leaders at the ninth annual Fuqua/Coach K Leadership Conference Oct. 25-27.

Faith Robertson/The Chronicle

Men’s basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski spoke in front of more than 200 of the world’s most prominent leaders at the ninth annual Fuqua/Coach K Leadership Conference Oct. 25-27.
By Chinmayi Sharma [3]
October 28, 2010

Those who are the best at what they do want the respect of the world, but the best should also respect the world, men’s basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski told a room of some of the world’s most prominent leaders Tuesday.

A group of 207 business leaders, entertainment tycoons, sports celebrities and other notable figures congregated for the annual Fuqua School of Business Coach K Leadership Conference. The three-day event was titled “Leading in a Distributed and Transparent World: Lessons from the Front Lines of Change” and focused on the importance of adapting to a changing global climate.

“We’re all a product of our environments and our experiences, and in sports you’re a competitor,” said Jerry Colangelo, chairman of both USA Basketball’s Board of Directors and the NBA’s Phoenix Suns as well as a speaker at the conference. “You have to be willing to compete in any walk of life to be a true competitor.”

The event aimed to remind attendees that in order to compete in an international market of inventions, innovations and information, one must respect the leaders we compete against and let go of hubris, said Sanyin Siang, managing director and senior research associate for the Fuqua/Coach K Center on Leadership and Ethics.

Several attendees said the event showcased speakers with unconventional leadership abilities that appealed to the diverse audience from various countries and professions.

“These are different perspectives from different types of leadership,” said Marvel Studios Chairman David Maisel. “We learn so much at these kinds of events because it’s very easy to get fixed with one way of doing things, pigeonholed in your own niche in society. You come here and learn from an outlier, like Coach K, and rethink everything.”

Maisel called Krzyzewski an example of a leader that transcends sports, adding that he values the way Krzyzewski bridges the gap between sports and society.

Aaron Master, an employee at industrial supply provider MCS, was an attendee at the conference and said the speeches showed that there are many paths to take to become a leader in society and do what you love.

“I went to music school for two years but didn’t last a complete semester in college,” he added. “It didn’t give me the hands-on experience I was looking for. I had an opportunity to leave and join the real world, and it felt right so I took it.”

President of Daredevil Strategies Allison Levine, Fuqua ’00, gave the keynote speech Monday night and emphasized the importance of pursuing one’s dreams. Levine told the audience about her experiences climbing to the highest peak on every continent and skiing across the North and South Poles, a feat achieved by few people worldwide and called the “adventurers’ grand slam.”

Colangelo spoke with Krzyzewski Tuesday night at Scharf Hall about realizing his dream of reestablishing the global image of American basketball as something to be respected.

“I am very proud to be an American. I am very proud to have the opportunities that I have had,” he said. “What can happen in one or two generations in this country can only happen here, and I was very upset how people looked at us several years ago as Americans and how we looked at ourselves.... The pride that we saw around the world, we were losing here.”

Krzyewski and Colangelo recounted the program’s revival since losing in the Olympics in 2004. USA Basketball has since won the Olympics in 2008 and the FIBA World Championship in 2010.

“I’m a risk taker, a calculated risk taker,” Colangelo said about reviving the program after such a daunting defeat. “I’m willing to walk out on the plank if I believe in something. I know I may get shoved.”

He told the audience to do the same because you never want to live with the regret of never having tried.

“Sometimes you have to get your butts kicked, and it has to hurt,” Krzyzewski said at the end of the night. “But from losses, you learn.”
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http://www.dukechronicle.com/article/duke-celebrates-everson-s-brilliant-curiosity

Duke celebrates Everson’s 'brilliant curiosity'
Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle

Zachary Tracer/The Chronicle
By Matthew Chase [2]
October 28, 2010


For his family and friends, Drew Everson’s possessions embodied his unique characteristics.

His designer jeans and cardigans represented his class, they said at Wednesday’s memorial service. His “full and colorful” Google calendar exemplified his involvement on campus, his favorite bottle of scotch whiskey stood for both his simplicity and passion and his Viking hat was emblematic of his love for Duke basketball.

It was with a “wickedly funny sense of humor” and a “brilliant curiosity” that Everson made his mark on the Duke community, said those who knew him.

“Is there anybody at Duke who did not know him?” President Richard Brodhead asked at the Oct. 28 service honoring Everson’s life, which was held at the Duke Chapel.

The teary-eyed mass of friends, fraternity brothers, family members and professors that packed the Chapel signaled that Drew’s impact was widespread. Some have estimated that as many as 1,200 people attended the memorial service.

Although Everson’s death has provoked a somber atmosphere on campus, those closest to him are taking this time to commemorate his lasting legacy.

“You changed my world, you changed Duke’s world and you changed the world,” said senior Matt Byrne at the service.

Everson, a 21-year-old senior, passed away the night of Oct. 23, after an accidental fall last week left him with two collapsed lungs and severe head trauma. An employee found Everson unconscious around 11:30 a.m. Oct. 22, at which point he was transported to the Duke University Emergency Department. Everson was in an induced coma until the time of his death.

Passion, intellect and wit

From toting a Play-Doh key chain for three years to his wide range of academic interests, Everson’s friends and professors described him as a dynamic person.

“The dude was incredibly smart,” senior Pat Rutter, who was Everson’s roommate for the last two years, said in an interview. “It was hard to argue against him, especially when he was so passionate about something.”

A political science major who also planned to receive a markets and management certificate, Everson explored other fields as well—even particle physics. He once took “Translating Science” with Steve Nowicki, dean and vice provost for undergraduate education. Nowicki said he has used Everson as an example of a model student since then because of his warm personality and performance in the classroom.

“He could tell you that he thought you were completely wrong and make you feel good about it,” Nowicki said at the memorial.

Everson’s passion for debate extended outside of the classroom. A member of Duke Debate, Everson also served as an extemporaneous speaking coach for the East Chapel Hill High School Speech and Debate Team.

“He mentors [the students] as a coach, he mentors them as a person. They want to be Drew, be like Drew or become something like Drew,” the high school’s debate coach William Warren said in an interview, adding that the team has slightly changed its schedule to honor Everson.

And although Everson was involved in many facets of the University, his friends said his interests were genuine.

“He gave himself completely to the things he loved,” senior Lauren Haigler said at the memorial. “There is hope in this tragedy. Through it we can move on and do those amazing things he would have done.”

At the time of his death, Everson was deciding between job offers. He interned with Goldman Sachs this summer, and many said Everson was heading toward a career in finance.

“If any student here had a promise, it was Drew,” Brodhead said.

Despite his academic accomplishments—he maintained a 3.8 GPA—Everson “had an incredible ability to keep things in perspective,” senior Zach Fuller said at the service.

Everson published a series of columns titled “Why so serious?” for The Chronicle in 2008-2009 in which he expressed his desire to embrace his experiences.

“It’s fun to love life,” Everson wrote in an Oct. 16, 2008 column. “So join me every day in celebrating whatever it is you want to celebrate.”

Defining Duke

Although not every student knew him, many would be able to point out Everson’s notorious Viking hat in the crowd of Cameron Crazies at every home basketball game.

Everson served as a line monitor last year and was accepted to be a monitor for the 2010-2011 season. His passion for Duke basketball extended to his “hell of a record” at home games. According to Rutter, Everson only missed three home men’s basketball games in his time at Duke. The third game Everson missed was the Oct. 23 game against St. Augustine’s College, when Everson was hospitalized for his injuries.

“What Drew would bring to the table... was a communal spirit,” Austin Boehm, Trinity ’10, said in an interview. Boehm served as a line monitor with Everson last season and is a former editorial page managing editor for The Chronicle. “His level of intensity at those basketball games was out of control. K-ville was an extension of him.”

Everson even showed up to a constitutional law class still sporting his Mohawk from the UNC game the night before, Byrne said at the memorial.

A member of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity, Everson was quick to become involved in the brotherhood, said Pi Kappa Phi President Jordan Stone, a junior.

“He was definitely one of the guys always at events, always at meetings,” Stone said in an interview. “He provided good constructive criticism to everything we proposed. It’s times like these that not only the fraternity realizes, but everyone realizes, how important it is to have a support system.”

Everson was also involved in the facilities and services Campus Council committee and served as the Campus Council liaison to the Duke University Student Dining Advisory Committee. He also wrote sketches for the Inside Joke comedy troupe.

Friends said Everson embodied the “work hard, play hard” phrase that has come to represent Duke. At the memorial, Haigler described Everson as an “insomniac” who was “very social, involved in everything and still made As.”

To honor Everson, some of his friends gathered late Tuesday night to paint “notes of love” on the East Campus bridge. Those students sprayed beer to the sounds of Katy Perry while painting and remembered Everson’s enjoyment of Tailgate.

“I know he would have loved it,” Haigler said.

A friend’s legacy

In addition to Everson’s heavy involvement in and out of the classroom, many described him as a true friend.

Recounting memories with Everson, Haigler told the crowd at the Chapel of the time they jumped into a fountain in Indianapolis, Ind., after the men’s basketball championship in the spring and of times when Everson would hold her on his couch while she cried.

Friends also described the “goofy” Everson, a vegetarian whose only vegetables were in pasta sauce. At a previous job at Applebee’s Restaurant, Everson once spoke in a British accent for a week just for fun, friends said.

They also described him as “messy”—Everson would go weeks without cleaning his room, Rutter said.

Although his apartment no longer has all three tenants, Rutter said Everson’s legacy lives on.

“It was amazing being with someone who was not only dedicated to life but took any excuse to be happy,” he said. “That’s something that we kind of get lost at Duke. It was really refreshing to be with someone who enjoyed life for what it was.”
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http://www.avoiceformen.com/2010/10/27/criminal-injustice/

Criminal Injustice

By Paul Elam

In the wake of the second Kevin Driscoll rape trial, in which he was acquitted by jurors in less than an hour, it is fitting that USA Today has reported that they have uncovered over 200 cases of prosecutorial misconduct in which state officials subverted justice by any means necessary, including lying to juries and judges, hiding evidence, breaking plea bargains and enticing testimony from felons by promising early release from prison.

Those abuses, often criminal in nature, not only imprisoned the innocent but set guilty people free. And it happened to the tune of millions of dollars in taxpayer money.

Judges involved in the cases were livid, condemning the misconduct as "outrageous" and "flagrant."

But the problem is not by any means isolated. Says Pace University law professor Bennett Gershman, an expert on misconduct by prosecutors, "It's systemic now, and … the system is not able to control this type of behavior. There is no accountability."

That statement is buttressed by the fact that of all these documented cases, not one prosecutor lost their license to practice law, or even their job as prosecutor. In fact, there was only one case where a prosecutor was temporarily suspended.

Remember Mike Nifong of the infamous Duke Lacrosse Rape Case? It took a story that had saturated the media, and public criminality on his part to create enough pressure to get him disbarred. And he spent one day in jail.

This story is a reminder, though, that the travesty of sending innocent men to prison is not just a symptom of feminist governance. It certainly plays into their hand, and I am sure that the Catherine MacKinnon’s of this world would gladly don cheerleader outfits at sentencing hearings if it would not so egregiously violate our sense of the aesthetic. But the fact remains that the entire criminal justice system is now in the hands of criminals. Either by action or omission, they are all complicit.

The rape industry is just an offshoot enterprise of a much larger and successful parent company. And the parent company, after all, makes men its stock in trade.

I recall the first Kevin Driscoll rape trial. I sent an email to Deschutes County Prosecutor Michael Dugan, asking him why his office would so fervently pursue the conviction of a man on nothing more than the accusation of a woman who had passed herself around at a party like a bowl of chips, and who also had a documented history of false rape accusations. I let him know in no uncertain terms that the world was watching, and that a growing number of people were taking a dim view of this kind of prosecution.

He wrote me back, his message saturated with the smugness of a criminal who just knows he can’t be caught. And he said something quite interesting as well.

He quoted Shakspeare. “Truth will out,” he said.

Indeed it will, Mr. Dugan. And it has. Driscoll’s jury didn’t buy your fraud, and were last seen hugging the man and shaking his hand.

And now, even a major player in print media isn’t buying the fraud, either.

Truth will out. And it will out more in the future.

In regards to the second Driscoll trial and acquittal, Deputy Assistant District Attorney Jody Vaughn, who actually prosecuted the case is quoted as saying, “I have no idea what happened back in the jury room.”

I do, Ms. Vaughn. Justice. And justice has a way of finding even the most well heeled of criminals.

So I hope all these prosecutors remain smug and sanctimonious. I hope they think they don’t need their raincoats. Because in the days ahead, the bills will all be coming due. It is becoming increasingly evident, in the immortal words of Bob Dylan, that “A Hard Rains Gonna Fall.”
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http://www.heraldsun.com/view/full_story/10065973/article-Duke--UNC-graduation-rates-for-athletes-outpace-national-figures?instance=breaking_news

Duke, UNC graduation rates for athletes outpace national figures
The Herald Sun
10.27.10 - 03:29 pm
By STEVE WISEMAN

swiseman@heraldsun.com; 419-6671

DURHAM — Football and men’s basketball players at Duke and North Carolina are graduating at a higher rate than their counterparts around the nation, according to updated information released by the NCAA Wednesday.

Graduation Success Rate reports showed 75 percent of football players who entered UNC in 2003 graduated while 95 percent of Duke’s football players from the same group graduated. The national average for Football Bowl Subdivision players rose three points to 69 percent, the NCAA said.

In men’s basketball, where the national average is 66 percent, the Tar Heels are at 88 percent while Duke is 83 percent.

The graduation rate for all Division I athletes who entered school in 2003 remained at 79 percent for the third consecutive year. In the nine years the NCAA has collected GSR data, the percentage has jumped four percent.

“If you ask people what their perception is of student-athletes versus general students, they say they are not doing very well,” NCAA president Mark Emmert said Wednesday. “But the reality is they’re doing just as well.”

Even though N.C. Central is in the process of becoming a Division I athletic program, Eagles athletes remain included in the Division II data for this reporting year. The national Academic Success Rate for all Division II athletes is 73 percent.

At N.C. Central, the football team came in a tick below the national average at 72 percent, while the men’s basketball team is 33 percent. N.C. Central’s bowling, track and softball teams had 100 percent scores.

At Duke, 14 of the 22 sports the school sponsors scored GSRs of 100 percent. In women’s sports, 10 of the 11 were at 100 percent. The only team that wasn’t, swimming, scored 97 percent.

The only men’s sport to score below 90 percent was men’s basketball. Golf, lacrosse, swimming and tennis scored 100 percent.

At UNC, fencing was the lone men’s sport to score 100 percent. Wrestling was the lowest Tar Heels program at 69 percent.

Seven of the Tar Heels women’s teams hit 100 percent, including women’s basketball.

The Tar Heels soccer teams, while successful on the field, struggled to keep up with the rest of the athletes in the classroom. UNC’s women’s soccer team had a GSR of 73 percent, while the men’s score is 74 percent.
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Quasimodo

http://www.voiceamerica.com/voiceamerica/vepisode.aspx?aid=49670

"Inside the Duke Lacrosse Case"

Oct. 28, 2010


PI’s Declassified! lets you listen in as authentic private investigators discuss their real-life cases.

Every week, private detectives spill the beans, -- discussing investigator specialties that you wouldn’t even imagine exist!

You’ll hear stories about lies and false confessions… tracking down missing persons… forensics… workplace violence… innocent people freed from prison… human trafficking… & other tantalizing cases.

Tune in to PI’s Declassified! every Thursday at 9 AM Pacific Time on the VoiceAmerica Variety

Duke Lacrosse Rape Case

Three Duke University Lacrosse Players Charged With Rape! Explosive headlines polarized the country. A top university with a prestigious athletic department was smeared and student Reade Seligman and two classmates were charged in the midst of racial insults and an atmosphere of race versus privilege. As the news unfolds, there are lies and alibis and the story of a prosecutor who crossed an ethical line to sort through. Facing 25 years behind bars, all three defendants were found to be falsely accused and their charges were dismissed. But in a surprising turn of events, Durham County Prosecutor Mike Nifong, who seemingly believed the accuser and withheld exonerating DNA evidence, was ultimately disbarred by the North Carolina State Bar for ethics violations. Tune in to hear acclaimed North Carolina lawyer, Duke University graduate and counsel to Reade Seligman, James P. Cooney III, tell the inside scoop.



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http://www.thenewsstar.com/article/20101028/UPDATES01/101028002/-1/UPDATES/More-experts-testify-in-Winnfield-Taser-death-case-

More experts testify in Winnfield Taser death case

By Bret H. McCormick • Louisiana Gannett • October 28, 2010

WINNFIELD — The defense team in the manslaughter trial of former Winnfield Police Officer Scott Nugent rolled out its first two expert witnesses on Wednesday in an attempt to convince the jury that Nugent was not responsible for the death of Barron “Scooter” Pikes.

Nugent, 24, is accused by prosecutors of using a Taser on Pikes, also known as Barron Collins, “eight or nine times,” which they say led to Pikes’ death following his arrest on an outstanding felony drug warrant on Jan. 17, 2008.

The two expert witnesses – one who took the stand in the Winn Parish Courthouse and the other who appeared via a videotaped deposition – attempted to poke holes in the testimony of one of the prosecution’s key witnesses.

That witness, renowned New York City medical examiner Michael Baden, testified earlier that Pikes, 21, died from cardiac arrest suffered from the repeated Taser shocks.

“He was healthy. He was Tasered. He died,” Baden testified. “There was no other reason for his death.”

Mark Kroll, a biomedical engineering professor at the University of Minnesota whom the defense submitted as an expert in bioelectricity, and Dr. Hugh Calkins, a cardiology professor at Johns Hopkins University, both disputed Baden’s theory.

Kroll and Calkins were the first two defense witnesses called by defense attorney Jerry Glas, a New Orleans attorney who also represents Taser International.

Dressed in a long-sleeve white shirt and black dress pants, Nugent sat stoically between his Pineville attorneys, George Higgins and Phillip Terrell, while Glas presented the defense’s case.

Calkins particularly took Baden to task, saying his statement “was not consistent with anyone who has any knowledge of the Taser device.” Calkins’ deposition was recorded Monday night because he was unable to attend the trial.

The defense’s two experts testified that research shows Tasers, particularly the TaserX26 model used by Nugent and the “drive stun” method of using the Taser directly against a suspect’s body, cause pain but would not lead to the death of a 6-foot, 250-pound, 21-year-old like Pikes.

“It hurts, but there’s zero negative effect on the body,” Kroll said.

“That’s what the drive stun does,” Calkins said. “It doesn’t cause arrhythmia. It causes discomfort.”

Winn Parish chief prosecutor Steve Crews tried to punch holes in the experts’ credibility by showing their close relationships with Taser International, which is paying for their appearance at the Nugent trial.

Both Kroll and Calkins have paid positions on Taser International boards, while Kroll has received nearly $800,000 in compensation over the past three years for his role on the board of directors and as a consultant for Taser.

Those relationships, Crews said, show “bias and prejudice” on the experts’ part.

The experts said they haven’t hidden their relationships with Taser International, but those relationships give them a unique perspective and knowledge on the effects of the devices.

Crews said Pikes’ combination of sickle cell trait, an enlarged heart, high blood pressure from trying to escape arrest and being Tased eight or nine times over a 15-minute span formed a lethal combination that could have led to his death.

Calkins, however, said there is “no evidence” that Tasers can lead to someone’s death because the electricity only causes blood pressure to rise “a trivial amount,” and the electricity charge is “very superficial.”

“The Taser ECD (Electronic Control Device) played no role, did not cause or contribute to the death of Mr. Collins (Pikes),” Calkins said.

Judge John Joyce, who earlier in the day seated one of the two alternate jurors because one of the jurors was dismissed “due to unusual circumstances,” recessed the trial early Wednesday afternoon as the defense’s third witness was not in town yet.

The trial will continue at 9 a.m. today with more defense testimony, and the defense could rest its case as early as this afternoon.
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http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/8529071/
Woman pleads guilty to grabbing infant from Duke hospital
Posted: 3:36 p.m. today
Updated: 4:18 p.m. today

Durham, N.C. — A Louisburg woman has been placed on probation after pleading guilty to trying to abduct a newborn from the Duke University Hospital nursery six months ago.

Tanisha Weaver, 29, of 18 Shannon Road, pleaded guilty Wednesday to a charge of abduction of children. She was sentenced to 12 to 15 months in prison, which was suspended to three years of intensive probation.

Duke University Hospital officials said a woman tried to take a newborn from her mother's room on April 19. Hospital staff recognized that the woman wasn't authorized to take the child, called police and detained her until investigators arrived, officials said.

snip.....
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http://www.wral.com/news/news_briefs/story/8530400/
Two injured in Durham shooting
Posted: 15 minutes ago

Durham, N.C. — Two men were taken to the hospital after being shot at a Durham home on Thursday evening, police said.

The shooting happened at 1316 N. Alston Ave. just before 6:30 p.m.

The men were taken to Duke University Hospital for non-life-threatening injuries.

Police said no arrests have been made and they are searching for a black four-door Toyota that was involved in the shooting.

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