Pubdate: Sat, 17 Sep 2005 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2005 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Eric Lichtblau Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Note: See Oregon section WEST, NORTHWEST, SOUTHWEST, PLAINS, MIDWEST, SOUTH, AND SCIENCE AND HEALTH WASHINGTON FINANCIER GETS 18 MONTHS -- A Virginia financier was sentenced to 18 months in prison for running an illegal money-transmittal business that sent nearly $5 million to Iran, Pakistan and )Afghanistan. The defendant, Rahim Bariek, 46, was also ordered to forfeit $32,343 after pleading guilty to a single criminal count. Two months after the Sept. 11 attacks, he had testified before Congress about the importance of business people following American law to operate hawalas, or informal money-exchange systems common in many Islamic countries, but the federal authorities say he did not have a proper license to do so. Eric Lichtblau (NYT) WEST CALIFORNIA: BLACKOUT TIED TO MIX-UP -- An inaccurate work order led to the power failure that shut down elevators, traffic lights and A.T.M.'s across much of Los Angeles this week, the Department of Water and Power said. "It was a case of miscommunication," said Henry Martinez, assistant general manager of the department. The blackout, which affected about two million people, happened when a utility crew cut several control lines in the San Fernando Valley. Mr. Martinez said engineers had directed that the lines be left intact, but inaccurate work drawings called for the lines to be cut. The department was trying to determine who drafted the orders. (AP) NORTHWEST OREGON: MEDICAL MARIJUANA APPEAL -- The State Supreme Court will review a ruling that suggests employers must allow workers to use medical marijuana. The case was brought by Robert Washburn, a former worker at a Columbia Forest plant in Klamath Falls, who had a state-issued card allowing him to use marijuana to ease pain. The company, which banned employees from working with controlled substances in their system, fired him. Mr. Washburn sued, claiming an allowance should have been made for his disability. A circuit court dismissed the suit, citing a provision in the law that employers do not have to "accommodate the medical use of marijuana in the workplace." An appeals court disagreed, saying the company had not established that Mr. Washburn used the drug at work. (AP) SOUTHWEST TEXAS: JEB BUSH SON IS ARRESTED -- The youngest son of Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida was arrested in Austin and charged with public intoxication and resisting arrest, law enforcement officials said. The son, John E. Bush, 21, was arrested by agents of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission, said Roger Wade, a commission spokesman. Mr. Bush was released on $2,500 bond for the resisting arrest charge and on a personal recognizance bond for the public intoxication charge, officials said. (AP) SOUTH VIRGINIA: DNA TESTS REVIEWED -- An independent review of the state's central crime laboratory, prompted by its botched DNA testing in a capital murder case involving a retarded defendant, found that the laboratory did not make technical errors in its handling of DNA in 123 other cases, Gov. Mark Warner's office said. But Peter Neufeld, co-director of the Innocence Project, said the review was deeply flawed because the panel did not review trial transcripts to determine whether laboratory analysts had distorted test results in sworn testimony. Mr. Warner ordered the review in May because of mistakes by one of its top analysts in the case of Earl Washington Jr., who came within days of execution but has since had his sentence commuted. James Dao (NYT) NEW ENGLAND MASSACHUSETTS: NO CHARGES IN FAN'S DEATH -- Six police officers involved in the fatal pellet gun shooting of a Red Sox fan outside Fenway Park last fall were suspended, demoted or reprimanded but will keep their jobs, Commissioner Kathleen O'Toole said. The officers learned earlier this week that they will not face criminal charges in the death of the fan, Victoria Snelgrove, 21, who was killed as officers tried to quell an unruly celebration of the Red Sox's elimination of the New York Yankees in the World Series playoffs. (AP) - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman