i W .1 6A Israeli on Jericho, Ramallah, Hebron by Michael Zielenziger and Nomi Morris November 02, 2000 Knight-Ridder Newspapers JERUSALEM Israeli helicopters unleashed a major assault on the Palestinian towns of Jericho, Ramallah and Hebron on Wednes day night after a day of fierce fight ing in which five Palestinians and three Israeli soldiers were killed. The bombing continued late into the night, apparently in retaliation for the deaths of the Israeli soldiers, who were killed in gun battles with Palestinian guerrillas. In Ramallah, which is about 10 miles from Jerusalem, the Israeli Army lobbed rockets at the head quarters of Tazim, a military branch of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat’s Fatah organization. In Jericho, Israeli helicopters tar geted a building being used as a training center for Palestinian secu rity forces. Witnesses said the build ing exploded into a ball of fire af ter rockets struck it. There was also heavy fire in Hebron, and the Israeli Army warned the Palestinian Broadcast ing Authority to evacuate its build ing there. Earlier in the day, Israelis were shaken as a bomb exploded in a wealthy section of West Jerusalem, near the home of Israeli President Moshe Katsav. “Today there was a very negative jump in the scope and severity of events,” said Danny Yatom, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s secu- rity aide. Thursday promises to hold more unrest. The Palestinian Authority has called on residents of the West Bank and Gaza to close shop schools on Thursday in a general strike. “We will not give up our politi cal negotiations for peace,” said Alu you can£AT IH/IMq-NITE BB^TUESPAye^W gStyavKrn»e.LV6£ helicopters launch major assault Mohammed Dahlan, head of Pre ventative Security Services in the West Bank. “But at the same time we will defend ourselves and our cities against the Israeli aggres sion.” Israelis bombed the Palestinian towns despite a meeting Wednesday night between Arafat and former Is raeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres that was called to explore ways to stop the fighting. Acting Israeli For eign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami met with Secretary of State Madeleine Albright in Washington on Wednes day. Palestinian negotiator Sacb Erekat is slated to meet with Albright on Friday in the United States. “We will act in exactly the nec essary way, the manner and measure in order to serve the needs of the state of Israel," Barak said before heading into a meeting of his secu rity cabinet, where he apparently approved the late-night strikes on Palestinian towns. It was a violent culmination to a violent day. Two Israeli soldiers and two Pal estinians were killed in a four-hour gun battle in El Khader, near Bethlehem. The two Israelis were among four soldiers who were am bushed. Israeli troops deployed a helicopter gunship to try to rescue the soldiers. The third Israeli soldier, on pa trol outside Jericho, was killed af ter he was attacked by armed Pal- estinians Fierce clashes erupted Wednes day near the Kami crossing in Gaza, killing three Palestinians, two of them aged 15 and the other 17, Pal estinian medical officials said. It was the same area where four Pal estinians were killed Tuesday. Near Jerusalem, the Jewish settle ment of Gilo again came under heavy fire from the Palestinian town of Beit Jala, on a neighboring hill side. Israeli return Fire slammed into a building in Beit Jala. There were no reports of casualties in that battle. One Gilo resident, Dalia Suleimani, told Israeli Radio that her family was trapped inside its house by the intense gunfire. “We are sitting in the small cor ridor between the kitchen and the bedroom, because there are win dows in all the other rooms,” she said, “t’s dark the whole time, be cause we are afraid to turn on the lights. It’s a terrible situation.” The death toll in Five weeks of un rest stands at 163, most of them Pal estinian. There was no immediate information on any deaths and in juries from Wednesday night’s bombings. After a day of some of the most intense clashes since efforts to fi nalize a Middle East peace deal ef fectively came undone, a glum faced Barak appealed to the Israeli people to persevere. “We are facing difficult days,” Barak said. “We find ourselves in a period in which the ability of the en tire society to endure . . . will de termine the results of this whole testing time.” Barak spoke to the nation only about an hour after the explosion in West Jerusalem jarred many Israe lis, as it showed that the unrest has reached into the heart of the city. Nobody was hurt in the explo sion. Michael Frischer, a 35-year old driving instructor, was teaching a student how to parallel park when the blast detonated some 12 feet away by the side of the road. “The other car saved us. It's full of holes,” said Frischer. “It’s a good thing my student hadn’t begun to re verse the car yet.” Debris from the explosion blew out one of Frischer’s tires. “This area is near the president’s house. There is tons of security //a. NEWS around here and still it happened,” lamented Yitzhak Gispan, a 46- year-old municipal employee who was riding his moped when the blast occurred. “This is a terrible feeling of fear and insecurity.” Meeting in Washington before the attacks, Albright and Ben-Ami dis cussed the agreement Barak and Arafat reached with Clinton two weeks ago in Sharm el-Sheik, Egypt to stop the fighting. They also dis cussed the controversial fact- find ing commission that is supposed to determine the causes of the violence and how to prevent a recurrence. In her meeting with Erekat, U.S. officials said Albright will stress the importance of avoiding inflamma tory public comments. Both she and President Clinton have been criti cal of recent comments by Arafat who, among other things, said that Barak could “go to hell” unless he recognized Palestinian sovereignty over east Jerusalem. Despite the diplomatic shuttles, few hold out any hope that the United States will be able to do any thing to stop the violence. “The Israeli and Palestinian lead ership have to talk to each other,” said Jon Alterman, a Middle East expert at the U.S. Institute of Peace in Washington. “Simply bringing them together in a formal way doesn’t cause them to either solve their internal problems or move for ward together on their joint prob lems.” Alterman said the United States may well be taking serious moves to try to curtail the violence. “The truth is I don't know what the U.S. is doing and you don’t know what the U.S. is doing. The things that are helpful now are not the things that should be made pub lic. They’re really dull but they're important. And ultimately they save a lot of people's lives.” ™ H fj) fr ${ vaLJSsSS^-rtT^/ flf I M I PJ w. g D to fflgl!’® IFM 4 m/?6l§ a if Toil Kappa Epsi CHampioNS Grandmother accused of directing crime ring from her wheelchair by Nicole Sterghos Brochu October 27, 2000 Knight-Ridder Tribune Frail and wracked by arthritis, Ernestine Williams spends her days in a wheelchair. But that didn’t stop the Boynton Beach grandmother from com manding a multistate racketeering operation for 10 years, state agents said this week. In that time, authorities said, she built a highly organized crime ring based in southern Palm Beach County. Williams’ group allegedly picked hundreds of elderly victims’ pockets and used their stolen credit cards to buy merchandise that was later sold for a substantial profit. The group left a trail of victims from Miami to Atlanta, Florida De partment of Law Enforcement offi cials said. A good day netted the group $52,000, which agents said amounted to hundreds of thousands of dollars since 1998. A two-year investigation ended early Wednesday morning when the 63-year-old Williams and three fam ily members son Timothy Butts, 42, daughter Tomeka Williams, 31, and grandson Jessie Williams, 19 were rustled from their beds and charged with racketeering and con spiracy to commit racketeering. If convicted of racketeering, they each face 15 to 20 years in prison. A first-degree felony, racketeering charges are typically used to attack organized patterns of criminal ac tivity. They were held in lieu of $lOO,OOO bond. All eight suspects have extensive arrest records, mostly for theft and drug charges. “You don’t have to be a Mafia don to do organized crime,” said Michael D. Washam, special agent supervisor of FDLE’s West Palm Beach office. "This is as organized as they get.” The grandmother was smooth, gradually building up a sophisti- AND FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2000 cated 15-person operation and get ting a cut of the profits, authorities said. Williams also personally tu tored each of her charges and went along on almost all of the pick pocket missions that she called “shopping trips,” they said. To avoid detection, the time from a wallet theft to the merchandise sale of the merchandise was short usually one or two days, agents said. Most of the thefts and pur chases were in Georgia and other parts of Florida, but Washam said the goods were resold in the area. As yet, agents have identified no buyers. Many members of Williams’ core group were enticed to join the en terprise with crack cocaine, Washam said. The so-called “shop pers” told agents they earned up to $l,OOO a day and later spent much of it buying drugs from Ernestine Williams, known on the street as “the drug lady.” Her arrest record dates back to a 1960 shoplifting charge and in cludes at least 28 theft and drug charges. Agents said it was Ernestine Wil liams’ son, Timothy Butts, who was responsible for providing the opera tion with drugs and vehicles, spend ing more than $3,000 for rental cars and trucks in seven months. Butts also bragged to group mem bers that he was able to provide sto len credit cards from professional athletes, including Tennessee Titans player Kenneth Holmes. But it was his mother who Washam said was the most enterprising and elusive. Suspicious officers investigating retail robberies often stopped her car after the thefts, he said. But, seeing a frail woman and a wheelchair in the car, they promptly let her go. “Nobody thought that a 60-some thing-year-old lady in a wheelchair would be involved in something like this, when, in fact, she was the ring leader," Washam said. jv-n Va /O /Tv ip mV » V'\ i \\ Vi y \i