truesee's Blog

Man Accused of Stealing Money From Blind, Deaf 98-Year-Old

Man Accused of Stealing Money From Blind, Deaf 98-Year-Old

John Thomas Windsor was on parole for domestic violence and fraud at the time.

John Thomas Windsor, 41. (Courtesy Orange County District Attorney's office)

John Thomas Windsor, 41. (Courtesy Orange County District Attorney's office)

KTLA News

6:10 p.m. PDT, April 13, 2011

VERMONT (KTLA) -- A man was arrested Wednesday on charges of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from a 98-year-old blind and deaf woman, authorities said.

John Thomas Windsor, a Vermont parolee from Costa Mesa, is accused of stealing as much as $280,000 from a woman he met through his mother, who was her caretaker.

The victim, identified as Edna M., was confined to her home and suffered from dementia.

According to the Orange County District Attorney's office, Windsor, 41, was currently on parole for domestic violence and fraud when he moved into the victim's home without her knowledge in 2008.

Windsor allegedly tried to use her credit cards to buy personal items including two cars and an engagement ring.

Windsor's mother The woman, identified as Edna M., eventually signed over power of attorney to Windsor.

Police were tipped to Windsor's activities when her bank became suspicious when he tried to take a loan out against her home.

Windsor was arrested Monday and charged for residential burglary, caretaker theft, fraudulently using an access card, as well as three counts of forgery.

He is currently being held on $280,000 bail.

Edna M. died in 2009 during police investigation.
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Barry Bonds found guilty of obstruction of justice

Bonds found guilty of obstruction of justice

Mistrial declared in three other charges against home run king

NBC Sports

5:42 p.m. ET April 13, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO - Barry Bonds was found guilty of obstruction of justice Wednesday, but a jury failed to reach a verdict on three other counts that the home run king lied to a grand jury in 2003 when he specifically denied that he knowingly used steroids and human growth hormone.

Following a 12-day trial and almost four full days of deliberation, a jury could not reach a unanimous vote on three of four counts, a messy end to a case that put the slugger in the spotlight for more than three years.

Bonds sat stone-faced through the verdict, displaying no emotion.

The case also represented the culmination of the federal investigation into the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative steroids ring. Federal prosecutors and the Justice Department will have to decide whether to retry Bonds on the unresolved counts.

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Liberty Teen Booted from School Over Gay Equality T-Shirt

Liberty Teen Booted from School Over Gay Equality T-Shirt
 
Tess Koppelman, edited by Jason Vaughn

6:02 p.m. CDT, April 12, 2011

LIBERTY, MO—
 
A Liberty High School student says that he was simply showing his support for equal rights for all. But a teacher and school official claimed that the shirt, which said "Queer + Straight = Equal" was offensive and forced him to go home.

Now, student Jesse Irey, who says that he is bisexual, and the American Civil Liberties Union are fighting back against what they say is illegal censorship by the school.

"Liberty is supposed to be a 'hate free zone,' that's one of our shirts," said Irey.

But a Liberty High teacher and an assistant principal said that the word "queer" is offensive, and when Irey refused to take off the shirt, he was sent home.

"What people are trying to do is take the word back so it's not an offensive slur," said Irey, who says that he is particularly upset because other students at the school were allowed to wear anti-gay shirts at school after the school's Gay-Straight Alliance wore shirts that read 'Gay-Fine by Me.'

"Kids wore shirts like this that said 'Straight - the only thing fine by me,'" said Irey.

"(School officials) didn't ask those students to turn their shirts inside out," said Kelly Smith, Irey's mother. She says that since her son came out as bisexual, he has been harassed at school by other students and teachers. 

"It's ignorance and prejudice and there's no place for that at school," said Smith.

In a statement, the Liberty School District says the word queer is "aligned with hate-drive remarks resulting in hostile physical reactions that are detrimental to a safe learning environment." The statement goes on to say that the district "embraces and promotes acceptance and tolerance."

Doug Bonney of the ACLU says that Irey's shirt doesn't rate as offensive, and he is now demanding that the school stop their censorship.

"Absolutely it's a freedom of speech issue, there's no doubt," said Bonney. "High school students have the right to express themselves on t-shirts."

The shirt came from a conference hosted by EQUAL, or Empowering Queer Activists and Leaders. EQUAL president Wick Thomas says that they are prepared to fight the school's ban of their shirt.

"I hope the administration realizes that in this increasingly hostile climate towards LGBT youth that they need to support their students and be advocates for students, and not send them home because of a dispute over a t-shirt," said Thomas.
 
LINK TO VIDEO:

http://www.wreg.com/videobeta/09529d15-1a0b-41ef-8492-297974a01eec/News/Student-Booted-Over-T-Shirt

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Mexico's new plan to crack down on drug money: you can keep some

The Christian Science Monitor
 
Mexico's new plan to crack down on drug money: you can keep some

A new initiative offers those who tip off Mexican investigators to money launderers up to one-quarter of the value of whatever is seized.

 

Sara Miller Llana

Staff writer
April 6, 2011 at 5:13 pm EDT

Mexico City

Catch a criminal, keep his wallet.

In short, that's Mexico's newest plan to crack down on the annual flow of billions of dollars into the hands of drug gangs.

The attorney general's office announced the new initiative against money laundering this week, the latest in a series of government efforts to curtail the flow of money that finances drug gangs. Mexicans who tip off investigators to money launderers will receive up to one-quarter of the illegal funds seized.

But not everyone is enthusiastic about the new initiative, with some analysts cautioning that it shifts the burden of intelligence-gathering to the individual and is a risky gamble in a battle where revenge seems to know no limits.

“You have to take your chances,” says Enrique Cárdenas Sánchez, executive director of the Centro de Estudios Espinosa Yglesias, a public policy think tank in Mexico City that analyzes government laws. He supports the program but has reservations. “The risk involved is very high.”

And what if the new program unwittingly leads to more unsavory behavior? Drug gangs might use the program to undermine commercial rivals, for example, or it might give rise to insurance fraud-type schemes.

“I do not know to what extent it will provoke other sorts of behavior … or entail vendettas,” says Mr. Cárdenas.

Unrealistic risk for citizens?

Under the new reward plan, those who report crimes of suspected money laundering – by phone, e-mail, or face-to-face – could receive up to 25 percent of the value of whatever is seized, be it money or land or goods. The exact amount would be determined by a special committee.

Some say that it, like the money laundering law, places citizens in charge of functions that the police or prosecutors should be carrying out.

“This moves the burden to the individual,” says Arturo Pueblita Fernandez, a professor of law at the Iberamerican University in Mexico City. “It is not a frontal attack on money launderers.”

Some politicians have criticized the reward plan as too high-stakes. Legislator Raymundo Saldaña Ramírez told the local press in the increasingly violent state of Veracruz that the plan puts citizens at risk.

“We cannot as citizens denounce [money launderers] and expose our families,” he said.

An unwillingness to reach out to police and other authorities – as citizens fear they are either incompetent or corrupt – is a long-standing problem in Mexico, where the impunity rate is estimated at 98 percent. Only a quarter of Mexicans are believed to report crime in the first place – though that number might inch up if a cash reward is involved.

Calderón targets illicit funds

All agree that something must be done. Every year between $19 billion and $29 billion flow from the US to Mexico to fuel drug trafficking organizations, according to a recent US-Mexico investigation (pdf). Gangs then use the money to purchase arms, bribe politicians, buy off entire police forces, and intimidate anyone else who might stand in their way.

Some have criticized Mexican President Felipe Calderón for sending thousands of troops and federal police out to the streets to combat organized crime without simultaneously targeting the gangs' cash supplies.

But Cárdenas says the new program, along with several other proposals, has set the government looking in the right direction. Last June, Mexico began limiting anyone without Mexican bank accounts to exchanging a maximum of $1,500 in US dollars per month. President Calderón also proposed a law in August that includes a ban on any cash purchases exceeding $7,700. That proposal also requires businesses such as jewelers to report their largest sales.

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Not to be out done by Applebee's, 2-year old gets alcohol instead of juice

 Boy Gets Alcohol at Restaurant

Tuesday, 12 Apr 2011, 10:08 PM EDT

Steve Gehlbach

FOX 35 News

LAKELAND, Fla. (WOFL FOX 35) - Lakeland mom says toddler got drunk at popular restaurant.

A central Florida mother says her toddler got a little tipsy after accidently being served alcohol at a popular chain restaurant.
Jill Van Heest took her two and half year old son Nikolai to dinner at the Olive Garden on Highway 98 in Lakeland on March 31st.
The boy ordered orange juice and his mom says he drank most of what was in his child's plastic cup when a waiter came to the table. "We're eating our meals when the waiter came over and said there's been a mistake, I need to get you a new one and took the glass and kind of scurried away," Van Heest said.
She asked him what was in the cup and was told Tropical Sangria, a mixed drink of orange juice, pineapple juice and white wine.
Van Heest spoke to the restaurant manager. "He was very sympathetic, very apologetic, but no real explanation as to how it happened, just that it was a mistake," she said.
The mother says Niko was acting strangely and misbehaving throughout the dinner. "He was visibly drunk. His eyes were dilated, they were red. He was now getting loud."
She decided to take him to the Emergency Room and Lakeland Regional Medical Center to get checked out. Doctors there told her they couldn't immediately determine how much alcohol was in the boy's system. The gave him an I.V. of fluids and released him after a couple hours. Van Heest doesn't believe there will be any long term health affects and her son appears back to normal.
A spokesperson for Olive Garden, Rich Jeffers, gave FOX 35 News this statement about the incident:
"We take the responsibility that comes with serving alcohol seriously. This was an extremely regrettable accident caused by the failure of an employee to follow our strict operating procedures.
We take this situation very seriously, and we are especially grateful that the child involved was not seriously harmed. We have absolutely no tolerance for failure to follow our operating procedures and we took swift, appropriate action to deal with this situation. We are also taking immediate steps to reinforce our standards.
We offer our sincerest apologies to the family of the child, and to all of our guests, whose trust we work so hard to earn. We recognize that trust has been jeopardized by this isolated event, and we are focused on ensuring our guests experience the high standards of service that they've come to expect from us."
Van Heest has contacted an attorney and requested Niko's medical records to determine the exact level of alcohol that was in her son's system. She hopes the restaurant will make changes so a similar accident doesn't happen again.
 



Read more: http://www.myfoxorlando.com/dpp/news/local/041211-boy-gets-alcohol-at-restaurant#ixzz1JNZQYVDV
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30-second spots on Oprah finale fetching $1M

30-second spots on Oprah finale fetching $1M

4/11/2011 at 1:09 p.m.

Chicago Tribune

(Frederick M. Brown/Getty)

CBS Corp.’s syndication arm is asking $1 million for 30 seconds of national commercial time for the final week of Oprah Winfrey’s TV show in May, ad buyers say.

The stratospheric rate comes close to rivaling events like the Academy Awards, for which ad buyers said they paid between $1.7 million and $1.8 million for a 30-second spot earlier this year.

The rate is being asked without any guarantee of an audience, the buyers say. But they add that many times more viewers than Winfrey’s regular audience of about seven million are expected.

Winfrey’s asking price illustrates the gaping hole she will leave behind in daytime TV as she begins concentrating solely on her cable network, which she owns in a joint venture with Discovery Communications Inc.

Several well-known names are jockeying to grab even a part of her audience. Anderson Cooper will start a new talk show with Time Warner Inc.’s syndication arm this fall. CBS anchor Katie Couric is considering leaving her newscast to start her own talk show for the fall of 2012.

CBS declines to comment specifically on rates for Ms. Winfrey’s final episodes, but it says in a statement: “The final episode of ‘Oprah’ — in fact the final weeks of ‘Oprah’ — will be a TV event,” It compares the show’s end to the finales of “Friends” and “Frasier.”

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9 million U.S. adults say they live an alternative lifestyle

9 million U.S. adults say they are lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, study finds

Bisexuals slightly outnumber gays and lesbians, according to survey, which compiled data from other studies.

Ari Bloomekatz, Los Angeles Times

April 12, 2011

 

About 9 million people in the United States identify themselves as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, according to a UCLA study released Thursday.

The estimate, which translates to about 3.5% of adults as LGBT and 0.3% of adults as transgender, was created by the Williams Institute at UCLA's School of Law and argues that any estimate of the population is difficult because there are insufficient and inconsistent national surveys.

The study culled data and methods from nine surveys conducted over the last seven years and averaged results from five of those surveys to estimate sexual orientation and results from two surveys to estimate the transgender population.

Among other findings: Of the lesbian, gay and bisexual population, bisexuals were a slightly larger group, representing 1.8% of the adult population compared to 1.7% who were lesbian or gay.

It also found an estimated 8.2% of Americans reported participating in same-sex sexual activity; and an estimated 11% held some same-sex sexual attraction, but neither group necessarily identified as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.

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What got cut to avoid a government shutdown?

The Christian Science Monitor
 
Spending deal revealed: What got cut to avoid a government shutdown?

The spending deal to avoid a government shutdown had been agreed to last Friday, but the details of the $39 billion in cuts were not released until Tuesday.

Temp Headline Image
Linda Feldmann, Staff writer
April 12, 2011 at 5:43 pm EDT
Washington

The Environmental Protection Agency will lose $1.6 billion in funding, a 16 percent reduction from last year. Agriculture programs are being cut by $3 billion. President Obama will lose $1.5 billion out of his new $8 billion high-speed rail initiative. And for the first time, the Department of Homeland Security faces a budget cut, to the tune of $784 million, or 2 percent below 2010’s level.

It’s all in the fine print of the House Appropriations Committee roster of budget cuts, released Tuesday. The total $38.5 billion reduction from 2010 levels was the headline late Friday, following a last-minute budget deal that averted a government shutdown. Now the details are coming out.

But even as Democrats lament the spending reductions – some to a point where they will vote against the deal – the bottom line could have been a whole lot worse for those who support federally funded programs. For example:

Funding for the preschool program Head Start will be increased by about $300 million, to $7.6 billion. Funding for Pell Grants, which aid low-income college students, and the president’s “Race to the Top” education initiative was preserved.
  • The Food and Drug Administration got an increase in funding, to $2.45 billion. The federal food inspection program faces only a $10 million cut, far less than what Republicans wanted.
  • Two programs funded under health-care reform – the Consumer Operated and Oriented Plan and the Free Choice Voucher program – were eliminated, but funding to implement the reform was spared. Money to implement the new financial regulatory reform was also spared.

But Republicans aren’t putting out press releases about government programs that escaped the ax. They’re all about the sea change in Washington’s approach to spending since the GOP took control of the House.

“Never before has Congress made dramatic cuts such as those that are in this final legislation,” said Rep. Hal Rogers (R) of Kentucky, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, in a statement Tuesday. “The nearly $40 billion reduction in non-defense spending is nearly five times larger than any other cut in history, and is the result of this new Republican majority’s commitment to bring about real change in the way Washington spends the people’s money.”

In fact, the House committee scored the bill as cutting $39.9 billion in spending compared with the fiscal year 2010 budget. In the estimation of Senate appropriators, the cuts came to $38.5 billion.

Some of the cuts also belong under the heading “budgetary sleight of hand” – unspent funds that can just be wiped off the books in the name of “savings.” Some examples: $1.7 billion that was left over from the 2010 census, $2.5 billion in highway spending that cannot be used anyway due to legislative restrictions, and $3.5 billion in children’s health-insurance funds that were left unspent.

“Taking away student aid – that’s real,” says Peter Davis, an investment adviser with years of Capitol Hill budget experience. “When you’re taking money out of things that weren’t going to happen anyway, that’s not real.”

On aid to students, he’s referring to the budget provision that bars students from using two Pell Grants in one year – one for the regular school year, and one for summer school. That change is projected to save $35 billion over the next decade.

For some advocates who held their breath during the budget negotiations, and wound up with cuts but not complete elimination of funding, the final result is a glass half full.

One example is international family-planning money. The bill cuts US funding for the UN Population Fund to the 2008 level of $40 million. But Republicans wanted no funding. And they also did not reinstate the so-called Mexico City Policy, which withholds US funds from foreign aid organizations that use their own money to support abortion services.

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New growth industry: Marijuana State University

Posted: April 12
Updated: Today at 10:27 AM

New growth industry:  Marijuana State University

The latest business offshoot of a new law teaches medical cannabis cultivation at home.

John Richardson

Staff Writer

PORTLAND — Ray Logan has been growing marijuana for 30 years.

 

Instructor Ray Logan talks about the germination process during a Marijuana State University class held earlier this month. Students Bill Lessard of Saco, left, and Rick Adjutant of Kennebunk look on.

Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Staff Photographer

Logan uses a cayenne pepper plant for demonstrations.

Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Staff Photographer

 

Visit the Marijuana State University website at http://marijuanastateuniversity.com

When he started, it was a purely recreational -- and illegal -- hobby, and one he naturally kept as quiet as possible.

Now, Logan is turning his experience and knowledge of the plant into a very public business: Marijuana State University.

Logan is offering three-hour workshops for people who want to learn how to grow high-quality marijuana in their homes. It is the latest business to sprout from Maine's medical marijuana law, which allows registered patients, caregivers and dispensaries to grow the drug to treat specific medical symptoms and conditions, from intractable pain to AIDS.

Although marijuana can grow like a weed under the right conditions, cultivating medicinal-quality plants indoors takes some know-how, Logan said.

"There's a huge need for (knowledge), and some people aren't sure where to get it," he said.

Logan, 56, taught the first Marijuana State University class earlier this month in Portland. About 15 men attended, most of them registered medical marijuana patients who want to grow their own drugs instead of paying hundreds of dollars an ounce to registered caregivers or licensed dispensaries.

"We'd like to double that (class size), but we were very happy. It was our first time out," he said.

His second workshop is scheduled for May 7 in Auburn, and he plans to hold future classes in Augusta, Biddeford and Portland.

Marijuana State University is mostly a one-man show, although an indoor garden shop -- HTG Supply in Portland -- provides equipment for the demonstrations.

The class costs $79, or $59 for students, senior citizens and veterans. It will be a while before Marijuana State University becomes a self-supporting business, even if class sizes do double, Logan said.

"For right now, I just enjoy doing it (and) helping people learn how to grow," he said.

To prevent conflicts with police, he uses basil and other legal household plants to teach the class. State regulators and police took note of his recent class in Portland, but nothing more.

Although medical marijuana does create some gray areas for police, "it is possible, certainly, to grow marijuana legally," said Portland police Lt. Gary Rogers.

Education itself is not a concern for the state, although there is some concern that marijuana entrepreneurs could push the law's limits.

"This program was designed to get patients access to quality medical marijuana; it wasn't intended as a business for people to make money," said Cathy Cobb, director of the licensing division for the Department of Health and Human Services. "We don't want to set up a supply network that exceeds the demand of registered patients."

So far, the state has issued 982 registration cards for medical marijuana patients. Each patient must have a medical condition specified in the state law, and a recommendation from his or her doctor.

Logan is one of the 982.

He has been a legal marijuana user for years under Maine law, he said, because of a skydiving accident in 1996 that nearly paralyzed him and left him needing daily prescription painkillers that have various side effects.

"I still get a small amount of the meds, but I don't like being on them," he said. "I usually just use (marijuana) at nighttime. It helps me sleep, takes the pain edge away."

Rick Adjutant, one of Marijuana State University's first students, can relate to that.

The 48-year-old Army veteran has been disabled for seven years because of herniated discs and degenerative disc disease. Doctors prescribed a range of prescription painkillers, which he said gave him violent mood swings.

"It didn't help with the pain, it just messed my head up," he said.

Two weeks after trying marijuana, he got rid of the addictive painkillers, Adjutant said.

"I haven't touched the narcotics in almost two years now," he said.

Adjutant attended Logan's first workshop because he wants to grow a few of his own plants and save money. The class answered all of his questions, such as how to raise the humidity in his growing room, he said.

"Anybody can grow it, but to grow a good, medical-quality marijuana you've got to know the tricks and you've really got to do your research," Adjutant said.

He hopes the school will show people that there is a legitimate use for the drug. "This isn't just fun and games for a bunch of drug addicts," he said.

Marijuana State University is based somewhat on Oaksterdam University in Oakland, Calif., known as America's first "cannabis college."

The school, which offers a range of courses for growers, has enrolled more than 17,000 people since 2007. The money it has made for its founder, Richard Lee, helped finance last fall's unsuccessful referendum campaign to legalize recreational marijuana use in California.

Logan said he doesn't see himself becoming the Richard Lee of the East Coast, financially or politically.

"My political views are definitely not attached to this class. I don't talk about the politics of it or the laws or anything," he said. "Yes, I'd like to see it legal, but that's not our focus."

Logan does share Lee's goal of making medical marijuana more public and more respectable. He recently took a reference to "higher learning" off the Marijuana State University website (http://marijuanastateuniversity.com), saying it didn't promote the right image.

"Because of things like my school, people will say, 'Oh, wow, maybe there is something more to this medical marijuana,'" he said. "I think folks are going to see what an amazing plant cannabis really is."

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Robbers couldn't shatter jewelry cases with hammer or shotgun blast

Police seek robbers who couldn't shatter jewelry cases

Star-Advertiser Staff

04:27 a.m. HST, Apr 12, 2011

 

Honolulu police are asking the public for help in catching two would-be robbers who attempted a smash-and-grab robbery of a Waikele jewelry store.

Honolulu CrimeStoppers posted on its website yesterday security video from the attempted robbery of the Zales jewelry store at the Waikele Premium Outlets in hopes of generating tips to catch the suspects.

The video shows the men — one armed with a shotgun, the other carrying a hammer — entering the store and attempting to break the jewelry cases. But the cases don't break.

The men kick the cases, smash them with a hammer and even fire a round from the shotgun, but the glass refuses to shatter.

The robbery happened at about 8:40 p.m. Saturday. Police said the men fled in a stolen silver Honda Civic, later found engulfed in flames on Lelepua Street and Leomana Place in Waipahu.

The suspects are described as being in their 20s, weighing about 140 pounds, wearing black masks and athletic shoes. One man wore a black, long-sleeve shirt and white pants; the other wore a gray, long-sleeve shirt with dark pants.

Some personnel in nearby stores say they are concerned for their safety.

Ryan Salazar, assistant supervisor at Brooks Brothers Factory Store, was working Saturday night but didn't know anything about the robbery until he left the store and saw police officers interviewing people.

"It's more of a common thing," he said. "It makes me a little nervous, just general safety around the area. Being a really popular tourist spot, they (visitors) probably feel the same way. Everyone's a little bit nervous."

 

LINK TO VIDEO:

http://youtu.be/A17gMX8vcj0

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Gas Stations Battle Each Other for Lowest Prices

 
 
York County gas stations battle for lowest prices
 
CHRISTINA KAUFFMAN
The York Dispatch
Updated: 04/12/2011 12:53:27 PM EDT

 

(Bill Kalina Photos)

 

The cornerstone of retail economics is the principle that one must sell goods or services at a greater price than he or she has paid for them.

The psychology of gas prices, though, makes business a little more complicated for area gas stations and convenience stores, several of which haven't been following that basic tenet for a couple of weeks.

Around York County, gas sellers are engaged in price wars with competitors, selling gas for several cents less per gallon than they're paying on the New York Mercantile Exchange to replace it.

And though regular unleaded is edging closer to $4 per gallon, nobody's ready to cry uncle.

Rutter's Farm Stores and Sheetz Convenience Stores throughout York County are among those vying for customers, selling gas as low as $3.36 per gallon.

According to AAA Fuel Gauge Report, the average price in the York area was $3.67 on Monday, up from $3.57 a week ago and $3.44 a month ago.

Battlegrounds:Rutter's president Scott Hartman said he has about 10 stores, from North Hills Road in Springettsbury Township to Hanover, in battle with Sheetz. He characterized the standoff as a David-and-Goliath-style showdown, with Rutter's playing on home turf.

"We're the small guy," Hartman said. "They've several times more stores than we do, but if a competitor lowers prices and we don't stand toe-to-toe, we lose our customers. That's the nature of the business."

He said most people prefer to go to Rutter's, a York-based business, if the price is comparable.

Neither he nor Sheetz spokeswoman Monica Jones could say who started the fight or when it will stop.

They both said they'll hold their

ground for as long as the other.

"We're just matching the competitor," Jones said. "As long as the competition stays in the price range, we'll be there until the end."

Both businesses are taking a loss on thousands of gallons of gas per day, but Jones said gas has never been a convenience store's "bread and butter."

"Gasoline has always been an inside-sales driver," she said. "We want people to come inside and buy food and drink."

Customers benefit:Consumers are taking advantage.

"Let 'em fight," said Bill Eberly of West Manchester Township. "You know the prices must be jacked up if they're willing to let it go for less."

Eberly, refueling his Ford Thunderbird, said he's going to take advantage of the gas war until the end.

"I'm saving 20 cents per gallon," he said. "That's a few bucks every time I fill up."

Though some people might be hesitant to characterize $3.40 per gallon as a bargain, it's all relative when they could be paying even more.

"A couple of larger marketers are trying to build volume at their locations, so they're pricing aggressively," said Bob Astor, wholesale fuels business manager with Shipley Fuels Marketing. "In this current market, that's very good for the consumer."

York-based Shipley Energy operates Tom's Convenience Stores, which aren't engaged in battle.

The lower prices at competitors have translated into a loss of volume sold at Tom's stores, he said.

"Certainly our customers would prefer that we were involved in that ... at those very competitive prices," he said. "It makes it very challenging. Folks in York County will drive out of their way to take advantage of that type of savings."

National analysts are predicting the price will hit $4 for the summer driving season, which starts around Memorial Day.

Astor said it would be likely for prices to reach that mark, especially if turmoil in the Middle East continues.

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