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...Nazis occupied his hometown in Ukraine, raised another family in the U.S. but was so saddened by America's role in Vietnam that he killed himself at 87. And there's Aunt Lily, the clan's career woman, who sold lingerie door to door and married a bookish man, suspect in the family because he "seemed to have no politics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Unsentimental Journey | 3/19/2001 | See Source »

...Anderson does the analysis herself, but in most cases she depends on police to collect the specimens--which means training the officers to do it properly and thoroughly. "One maggot doesn't help me," she says. DNA technology promises greater advances in her field. Recently, the FBI matched a suspect to his dead rape victim by the blood contained in a single louse that had migrated from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Justice: The Pathologist: Dead Men Tell No Tales--But Bugs Do | 3/19/2001 | See Source »

Next, officers are invited to talk about the things they have done that violated the dignity of others. Role-playing exercises require them to step into a suspect's shoes. Over the course of three days, the cops, most of whom are shift commanders, are forced to confront themselves and their past. In one session, a police officer from El Salvador admitted that his superiors told him a prisoner he was escorting should be killed. "I got a hero's medal for murder," he told the stunned class...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Justice: Teaching Cops Right from Wrong | 3/19/2001 | See Source »

...almost every measure, Paul Pfingst is an unsentimental prosecutor. Last week the San Diego County district attorney said he fully intends to try suspect Charles Andrew Williams, 15, as an adult for the Santana High School shootings. Even before the tragedy, Pfingst had stood behind the controversial California law that mandates treating murder suspects as young as 14 as adults...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Justice: The Prosecutor: Going Back And Getting It Right | 3/19/2001 | See Source »

...course, a conservative administration. But I suspect that in starting to abandon the middle and seeming to move breezily and callously right on certain issues (the environment comes to mind, and pro-business policies that look to some like simple, blatant payoffs), Bush, who is not Ronald Reagan, may be misjudging American tolerances and setting himself up for more trouble than his ideology knows how to handle. I hate to bring this up, but the congressional elections of 2002 are not that far away. An excess of ideology gives Americans the creeps, especially when they suspect it is a smokescreen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is Bush Treading the Path Paved by Gingrich? | 3/19/2001 | See Source »

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