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 An internal Justice Department review of the Wen Ho Lee spy investigation finds the FBI failed to provide enough resources and supervision to the case, and focused so narrowly on the Los Alamos scientist that it may have missed other national security breaches, officials say.The findings were presented to Attorney General Janet Reno in the past week. The report echoes prior congressional findings about the government s investigation into possible espionage at its nuclear labs.If the officials  assertions are true, the report would join a list of doubts about the conduct of the Wen Ho Lee probe. For reasons she would not disclose, Reno recently replaced the top prosecutor in the case.At her weekly news conference Friday, Reno said she had been briefed on the report 151;which was written by federal prosecutor Randy Bellows 151;but was still reading  stanley quencher the nearly 800-page document and its three appendices. It is detailed, it is comprehensive, it stanley cup  is thoughtful,  Reno said stanley uk .  The Federal Bureau of Investigation has been very forthcoming and cooperated.           ArchivesCBS News coverage of the Wen Ho Lee case:Scapegoat Or Spy Lee To Stay In JailA Problematic PolygraphScientist Denied BailSpy Suspect Files Suit The FBI and Justice Department have battled for months in public over whether the department s decision to decline an electronic surveillance warrant for the Lee case hampered agents  work.The Bellows report, according to officials who have seen it and spoke to The Associated Scrn Philadelphia jury set to weigh murder counts against abortion doctor
 Poaching could be the greatest threat facing Africa   dwindling rhinoceros populations. Wildlife officials, for their part, are fighting back 鈥?often in unconventional ways. Their latest tactic  Microchip implants.     https://gizmodo/africas-western-black-rhino-has-been-declared-extinct-5858564 https://gizmodo/in-south-africa-rhinos-could-soon-become-agents-of-che-5838472 Top photo by digitalART2 via flickr. Via The Verge: Kenya is planting a microchip in the horn of every rhinoceros within its borders, as part of a bold plan to crack down on poaching. The WWF has provided the country with more than 1,000 microchips and five scanners, which will allow officials to track Kenya   fragile rhino populations, the Kenya Wildlife Service  KWS  said in a statement this week. The idea is that tracking each rhino will allow authorities to moni stanley thermobecher tor the animals more closely, while supporting anti-poaching and trafficking measures. Officials hope this surveillance will further deter poach stanley cup ers from slaughtering rhinos, which, like elephants, have been targeted for their ivory horns. The 1,000 chips and five scanners were donated at a cost of $15,000, marking the latest efforts by international groups to stamp out poaching across the continent. In July, President Barack Obama launched a $10 million campaign to help combat poaching in Kenya, South Africa, and the sub-Saharan region, drawing praise from conservationist groups. The i stanley mug ssue drew renewed attention last month, after it w