The Indiana Gazette, Friday, July 31, 2015

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Indiana Gazette

The

www.indianagazette.com Vol. 111 — No. 338

20 pages — 2 sections

75 cents

Escapee accused in killing captured

July 2015

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Who’s in the news There is good news today in The Indiana Gazette about these area people: Beverly Lydick, Karen Gamble, Karen Kois, Abbie Okopal, Matt Rebyansky, Mike Panchik.

By The Indiana Gazette

Inside SURPRISING SUCCESS: A Seattle restaurant has raised wages and told customers they don’t have to tip after the eatery decided to institute the city’s $15-an-hour minimum wage two years ahead of schedule./Page 3 ANXIOUS CITY: Just eight weeks away, Pope Francis’ visit to Philadelphia is producing scant information, rumors and anxiety./Page 5 SUCCESSOR NAMED: The Afghan Taliban today praised their new leader a day after he was appointed and the group confirmed the death of its previous leader./Page 7 DENTIST SOUGHT: Zimbabwe intends to seek the extradition of an American who killed a lion that was lured out of a national park./Page 7 MOVING ON: West Lebanon bested Blairsville to advance to the Indiana County League baseball championship series./Page 11

Weather Tonight

63°

Tomorrow

78°

JAMIE EMPFIELD/Gazette

CHARLIE PETERS and his mules traveled on Indian Springs Road near PennDOT headquarters Thursday on his way toward the Shelocta area.

Vietnam veteran takes trek to thank those who served By JASON L. LEVAN

and Jerry, have been on the road since May 30, plodding along at 2 to 3 mph, about 20 miles a day, depending on the weather and terrain. Peters, 70, who served in the Navy during the Vietnam War, was inspired to make the trek simply to find and thank as many military veterans as possible after someone four years ago thanked him for his service. It was the first time in 45 years that anyone had done so, he said.

jlevan@indianagazette.net

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ou may have seen a large covered wagon pulled by two mules traveling — slowly — through Indiana on Thursday. That was Charlie Peters, of Owosso, Mich., who is headed home after touring parts of Pennsylvania this summer in a large, modern-day wagon. He and his pair of mules, Tom

Avian flu fears keep chickens from fair By RANDY WELLS

rwells@indianagazette.net

Patchy clouds tonight. Partly sunny tomorrow. See Page 2.

Deaths Obituaries on Page 4 FOLTZ, Allen Valgene ‘Tiny,’ 79, Indiana HELMAN, Dennis Floyd, 54, Indiana WOODRUFF, Joanne Esther (Spicher), 78, Marshall, Mo., formerly of Indiana Late death HARTMAN, Ronald E., 73, Indiana

Index Classifieds ...............18-20 Comics/TV....................17 Dear Abby .......................8 Entertainment ................9 Family ...........................16 Lottery.............................2 Sports.......................11-15 Today in History.............8 Viewpoint .......................6

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The 10 members of the Indiana County 4-H Poultry Club are busy preparing for the annual poultry showmanship competition at another Indiana County Fair. The club members, ages 9 to 18, will be required to explain to judges the various parts and characteristics of the fowl they’ve been raising as their club projects. But the club members face an extra challenge this summer: They’ll have to convince the judges they know their stuff while working with a stuffed bird.

There will be no live chickens this summer at the Indiana County Fair, or at any other stateapproved agriculture fair in Pennsylvania. Or at the 2016 Pennsylvania Farm Show. The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture has canceled all avian competitions at agricultural fairs this summer, and at the Farm Show in January, to help prevent the spread of potentially catastrophic highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI). Avian influenza, also called “bird flu,” is caused by an influenza type-A virus. Wild birds, including ducks, swans and geese, Continued on Page 10

Wing part fuels hope of finding lost plane By ANDREW MELDRUM and SYLVIE CORBET Associated Press

SAINT-ANDRE, Reunion — Searchers scoured Reunion’s shoreline for debris and investigators prepared to load a wing fragment onto a plane bound for France today to learn whether the aircraft remnant could help unlock the mystery of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. It will take at least another day to learn whether the plane missing for 16 months crashed into the sea. Though several officials have expressed confidence that the debris found on the Frenchowned Indian Ocean island of Reunion is from a Boeing 777, authorities are planning to send the piece to southern France for analysis. The part could arrive Saturday morning, according to the Paris prosecutor’s office. Officials, keenly aware that families of those on board Flight 370 are desperately Continued on Page 10

JAMIE EMPFIELD/Gazette

THIS SINGLE comb clean tagged bantam placed first at last year’s Indiana County Fair.

Intel: ISIS remains as strong as ever By KEN DILANIAN and BASSEM MROUE Associated Press

WASHINGTON — After billions of dollars spent and more than 10,000 extremist fighters killed, the Islamic State group is fundamentally no weaker than it was when the U.S.-led bombing campaign began a year ago, American intelligence agencies have concluded. The military campaign has prevented Iraq’s collapse and put the Islamic State under increasing pressure in northern

Syria, particularly squeezing its selfproclaimed capital in Raqqa. But intelligence analysts see the overall situation as a strategic stalemate: The Islamic State remains a well-funded extremist army able to replenish its ranks with foreign jihadis as quickly as the U.S. can eliminate them. Meanwhile, the group has expanded to other countries, including Libya, Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula and Afghanistan. The assessments by the CIA, the Defense Intelligence Agency and others

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“I didn’t think it would, but it affected me very deeply,” he said Thursday night by phone from McIntyre Farm off Route 422 near Shelocta, where he slept for the night. On Wednesday, he stayed on the farm owned by Susan and Scott Stutzman in the Penn Run area. Peters follows no itinerary. He generally leaves around 8 a.m. each day and travels until he Continued on Page 10

KITTANNING — State police reported this morning that troopers captured an escaped Armstrong County Jail inmate suspected of killing a woman. Police announced the capture on social media just before 9 a.m. but gave no other details of how Robert Crissman was taken into custody. Armstrong County officials said Crissman, 38, ran from the jail around 6:30 a.m. Thursday while delivering meals to other inmates. Sheriff William Rupert says Crissman walked outside to get the meals from a truck and took off. Investigators believe Crissman fled to the nearby home of two friends, Tammy Elizabeth Long and Jerry Slagle, and killed Long after Slagle left ROBERT the residence at 7:30 for work. CRISSMAN Long and Slagle didn’t know Crissman was in jail, authorities said. Armstrong County Coroner Brian Myers said he would oversee an autopsy on Long this morning at a forensic center at the Carlow College campus in Pittsburgh. He declined to comment on the possible cause of death. “It’s apparent it’s not a natural death,” Myers said. Slagle discovered Long dead about 2:45 p.m. Thursday and police named Crissman as the suspect because no one else had been in the home, Myers said. Long was 55. Continued on Page 10

appear to contradict the optimistic line taken by the Obama administration’s special envoy, retired Gen. John Allen, who told a forum in Aspen, Colo., last week that “ISIS is losing” in Iraq and Syria. The intelligence was described by officials who would not be named because they were not authorized to discuss it publicly. “We’ve seen no meaningful degradation in their numbers,” a defense official said, citing intelligence estimates Continued on Page 4

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