Posted on 03/12/2008 3:42:41 PM PDT by blam
2 Charged in UNC Student Leader Slaying
Published: 3/12/08, 6:05 PM EDT
By ERIN GARTNER and MIKE BAKER
HILLSBOROUGH, N.C. (AP) - Two suspects were charged Wednesday with first-degree murder in the killing of the University of North Carolina's student body president. Demario James Atwater, 21, of Durham, was arrested and ordered held without bond. Police said they are still searching for the second suspect, 17-year-old Lawrence Alvin Lovett Jr.
Chapel Hill Police Chief Brian Curran declined to say whether Lovett was the subject of an intense police standoff Wednesday afternoon in nearby Durham. City Councilman Eugene Brown said it appears the standoff was resolved without an arrest.
Police in Durham refused to comment, referring all questions about the standoff to police in Chapel Hill.
Shackled at the ankle and waist and with a public defender at his side, Atwater whispered "yes" when asked whether he understood the charge against him. His next court appearance was scheduled for March 24.
"I hope the arrest can ease the minds of some in the community," District Attorney Jim Woodall said.
Messages left with the Orange County public defenders office were not returned Wednesday.
Curran would not say which of the suspects shot and killed Eve Carson, 22, of Athens, Ga., who was found a week ago lying on a street about a mile from campus. The biology and political science major had been shot several times, including once in the right temple.
In the day after Carson's death, police focused their investigation on a suspect pictured in several surveillance photos using her ATM card.
The Board of Trustees at North Carolina offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to an arrest in her death, and police received hundreds of tips after the first two photos were released over the weekend.
Carson was a prestigious Morehead-Cain scholar at North Carolina, where she was remembered by thousands who gathered Thursday at two campus memorial services. Hundreds of mourners filled the First United Methodist Church in Athens on Sunday at a memorial service in her hometown.
The university said Wednesday a third memorial service will be held next week at the campus basketball arena.
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Associated Press writer Erin Gartner reported from Chapel Hill.
Some of our cities are like third world countries.
I have looked high and low for an online version of the newspaper articles we had for this case back in 1993/1994.
I plan on making some time to go to the library to conduct my archival investigation so I can post something that really illustrates how Chapel Hill deals with this stuff.
Sarlac.
It is difficult finding anything on the internet about that case. Thanks for giving a more personal account.
It seems that the internet is failing us this time.
Well, it’s not that the internet fails us, per se.
I had no way of even remotely connecting with you back in 1994. Yet now we can seek a meeting of the minds on this topic. I don’t even know where you are. That is a powerful difference.
I can’t fault the New & Observer for not having everything at my fingertips. It’ll do me some good to remember how I was taught as a lad how to do research :-)
Seriously. If you absolutely have to be tried for a capital crime, make sure it’s in front of a Durham or Orange County jury.
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