Copyright 1998 The Atlanta Constitution
The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
November 25, 1998, Wednesday
CONSTITUTION EDITION
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 08A
LENGTH: 571 words
SERIES: Home
HEADLINE: NATION IN BRIEF;
Mail
Bomb probe suit rejected
BODY:
A federal judge in Birmingham ruled Tuesday that the FBI owes nothing to a junk
dealer whose $ 50 million lawsuit claimed a misdirected mail
Bomb investigation in 1990 ruined his health, reputation and livelihood. U.S.
District Judge Harold Albritton said the government is shielded from such
damage claims and did not recklessly disregard the truth when search warrants
were issued for Robert Wayne O'Ferrell's home and surplus store in January
1990. During the investigation of O'Ferrell, agents looked for a typewriter
with keys to match the typed labels on mail
bombs that killed U.S. Circuit Judge
Robert Vance of Mountain Brook, Ala., and civil rights lawyer Robert Robinson of Savannah
in 1989. The typewriter was never found, but FBI investigators determined the
mail
Bomb labels matched letters that O'Ferrell had
previously written to the courts. O'Ferrell, 55, and his former wife, Mary Ann
Martin, said in their lawsuit that agents pursued O'Ferrell despite knowing
that Walter Leroy Moody of Rex, Ga., was the bomber. They sought $ 25 million
each. Moody was convicted and sentenced to death in the mail bombing that
killed Vance.
Late-term abortion law thrown out A federal judge in Miami threw out a Florida
law banning a controversial type of late-term abortion Tuesday, ruling that the
measure is unconstitutionally vague. The 1997 law
"has the unconstitutional purpose and effect of placing a substantial obstacle
in the path of women seeking an abortion prior to the fetus attaining viability," said U.S. District Judge Donald Graham. The law outlawed a procedure described
by opponents as
"partial-birth abortion," in which a fetus is partly delivered and destroyed. Graham ruled that the law
prohibited some early abortions and failed to protect a pregnant woman's health.
Sleepwalker awakens surrounded by gators A 77-year-old Florida man with a
habit of sleepwalking awoke to find himself up to his
armpits in alligators. James Currens wandered behind his Palm Harbor home early
Monday and stumbled into a pond. He woke up in several feet of water, his legs
stuck in the mud. He said several alligators, some longer than 3 feet, came
around. Currens said he poked at them with his cane to try to keep them away. A
neighbor heard him yelling and called police, who used lights to scare off the
gators and freed Currens. The retired maintenance supervisor suffered only
minor cuts on his legs and arms from the fall.
Viagra to get new warning label Since last spring, 130 Americans who took
Viagra, the popular impotence drug, have died. The Food and Drug Administration
says the majority of the deaths were from heart attacks, but it stresses there
is no proof the drug caused the deaths.
Even so, the FDA has notified doctors that manufacturer Pfizer is changing the
drug's label to add more explicit warnings that Viagra users have reported
cases of heart attacks and high blood pressure to the FDA.
180 tons of beef recalled in Southeast About 359,000 pounds of various beef
products shipped to discount stores in Georgia and three other Southeastern
states have been voluntarily recalled because they may be contaminated with E.
coli bacteria, the U.S. Agriculture Department announced Tuesday. The beef was
processed by Colorado Boxed Beef Co. of Auburndale, Fla. It was sold at
Winn-Dixie, Albertson's and Wal-Mart stores in North Carolina, Florida, Georgia
and South Carolina.
GRAPHIC: Photo DEADLY_CRASH_N20.JPG_2285843:
Emergency workers examine the scene of a five-vehicle crash on I-65 in
Alabaster, Ala., that left two people dead Tuesday. The crash involved
three tractor-trailer rigs and two cars. / PHILIP BARR / Birmingham News