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To: Hillary's Lovely Legs
Hillary's Lovely Legs, I respect you opinion and though we do not always agree I consider you honest and intelligent. I have not kept up on this trial or the "facts".

Having seen #93 do you still think this was a simple case of one man trying to impress his boss and things getting out of hand - manslaughter and nothing else? Allot does seem fishy and we are talking about billions of dollars.

I am not baiting you, I just don't want to waste my time learning more if it is an open and shut case. You seem to know something of it so I ask.
105 posted on 01/22/2003 10:26:31 AM PST by CyberCowboy777 (Extremism in the Pursuit of Liberty is no Vice!)
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To: CyberCowboy777
Thank you for your kind words and I don't consider your questions as baiting. I hope you had a case of tinfoil while reading post 93.

Man convicted in arson death of banker in Monaco captured after prison escape MONACO (AP) — An American fugitive convicted in the arson death of billionaire banker Edmond Safra was captured in southern France after an overnight escape from a Monaco prison, authorities said Wednesday.

Ted Maher, a former Green Beret originally of Auburn, Maine, was captured in the resort town of Nice after a daring escape from a jail in the principality of Monaco, where he had began serving a 10-year sentence for arson late last year.

Maher was convicted in December of arson in a 1999 fire in Monaco that also killed one of Safra's other nurses, Vivian Torrente.

Maher apparently escaped overnight from the Monaco jail with another prisoner by sawing through the bars of their cell, French police said. Monaco authorities blocked off routes leading into the principality and launched a wide manhunt for the escapees.

The case was a sensation for Monaco, a tiny Mediterranean principality better known for sumptuous casinos, Formula One racing and tax breaks that attract the world's rich and famous. The enclave's leading newspaper, Monaco Matin, dubbed it Monaco's "Trial of the Century."

Safra, the 67-year-old founder and principal stock owner of the Republic National Bank of New York, had Parkinson's disease and required constant care. He paid Maher $600 a day.

During his trial, Maher confessed to setting the blaze but said he never expected the fire to rage out of control.

Maher admitted that the fire was part of a bizarre plan to ingratiate himself with Safra, who died in the Dec. 3, 1999 blaze in his Monaco penthouse.

During his testimony, Maher said he started the blaze in a small wastebasket, expecting it to set off a fire alarm that would bring help and allow him to reap the credit for saving his employer.

Donald Manasse, a Monaco lawyer who represented Maher in the trial, said he could not immediately comment on reports that his client had been captured after escaping from prison.

116 posted on 01/22/2003 11:09:45 AM PST by Hillary's Lovely Legs (Happy people live longer.)
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