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ORLANDO, Fla. 151; An FBI forensic expert testified Saturday in Casey Anthony s murder trial that a hair removed from the woman s car showed s
stanley tumbler igns consistent with hair from a dead body.Anthony is charged with first-degree murder in the death of her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee.The single, 9-inch strand of light brown hair was the only hair of several collected by investigators to show signs of decomposition, Karen Korsberg Lowe told jurors.Lowe, who specializes in microscopic hair examinations, described a dark banding seen on hairs from people known
stanley termohrnek to be dead. She said the hair sample she examined showed this banding.Casey Anthony lying off the scale : AnalystCasey Anthony tapes had jury transfixed Photos: Casey and Caylee Anthony personal photos It has a darkened band at the root portion of the hair. This is consistent with apparent decomposition, Lowe said. The hair was similar to one pulled from Caylee s hair brush and was not similar to a hair sample from Anthony, she said.Before Lowe took the stand Saturday, Anthony s attorney, Jose Baez, challenged her qualifications and tried to block her testimony.Under cross-examination from Baez, Lowe said it was not unusual to find hairs in cars, as the average person loses 100
stanley website head hairs a day, and people can transfer hairs to other people. I couldn t say how the hair got there, Lowe said. It s consistent with transfer or contact of some sort, but I don t know from whom. When questioned again by prosecut Zfpa Thousands Suspected Of Katrina Fraud
The 4.5- million dollar question is: Should it be Above: Four Devils Hole pupfish, photographed in 2010 by Olin Feuerbacher for the U.S. Fish 038; Wildlife Service. Today, there are fewer than 100 left. The fish in question is the
stanley website Devils Hole pupfish. One of the first species to be protected by the Endangered Species Preservation Act now known as the Endangered Species Act , the unassuming, inch-long pupfish turned out to be a real rabble-rouser back in ;60s and ;70s, when defending the species and its hot, briny habitat 鈥?a 500-foot-deep aquifer in the Mojave Desert 鈥?led
botella stanley to water rights litigation that extended all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The pupfish won its SCOTUS case in 1976, solidifying its status as the nemesis of land developers who would see its habitat, and the subterranean channels of groundwater to which that habitat is linked, put to use in ways entirely unrelated to the fish survival , and the poster-fish of conservationists who
stanley thermos mug would see the species and its larger aquatic ecosystem protected . Today, close to 40 years later, there are fewer than 100 Devils Hole pupfish still alive, and the U.S. Government is spending millions to see that they or at least their offspring stay that way. In a recent piece for onEarth, the magazine of the Natural Resources Defense Council, journalist Jason Bittel presents a compelling case in favor of the conservation of this, he concedes, useless species: Long story short,