Transcript
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Volume I, Issue 3 December, 2015

For Your Safety:

If you see a "Most Wanted" Fugitive or if you see a

Crime in Action, please DO NOT INTERFERE.

Call your local law enforcement professionals...

CALL 9-1-1

INSIDE:

Ask the Lawyer......................Page 5

Purple Gang..........................Page 7

Fugitives.............................Page 8-9

Vigilant Cop........................Page 10

Puzzles.................................Page 13

Law Enforcement Tribute.................................Page 15

Making your neighborhood safer begins with you... and your neighbors.

The top-most weapon against crime is a vigilant community and SE Michigan Law Enforcement officials are increasingly relying upon folks – like you and your neighbors – to be their eyes and ears on the streets.

By working with Crime Stoppers of Michigan, police are noting record-breaking successful apprehension of repeat offenders. In 2015 thus far, police report a 24% increase in successful prosecutions based on anonymous tips made through Crime Stoppers of

Michigan. More than 7,000 tips were reported to CSM during 2014.

Rewards to tipsters have increased too. Since Jan. 1, 2014, Crime Stoppers of Michigan has awarded more than $160,000 to its tipsters. Those rewards vary from $2,500 for homicides, fatal hit-and-runs, and missing, endangered people to $1,000 (maximum) for other crimes and law enforcement situations. In 2013, CSM

paid $88,230 in rewards for tips that led to arrests.

Although the cash rewards are given anonymously, many tipsters decline rewards. They tell Crime Stoppers their only reason for calling the tip line is to make their community safer for their families and friends.

When an anonymous tip is reported, CSM forwards that information to the law enforcement agency which has jurisdiction for the incident. After the investigation is completed and the agency confirms the tip led to the arrest, that anonymous tipster becomes eligible for the appropriate reward.

How Crime Stoppers’ success is growingto make SE Michigan communities safer

By: ED WILLIAMSEditor, MI Most Wanted

You can reap rewards

How you can report a tip:Call the anonymous tip line

1-800-SPEAKUPSubmit a web tip:

www.1800speakup.org

See Inside For More Wanted Fugitives

See SUCCESS on Page 3

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For advertising rates and policies, please contact:

Kim Dunn at 586-738-013738530 S. Groesbeck Hwy.

Clinton Township, MI 48036or by email at:

[email protected]

Publisher: Kim Dunn

Editor: Ed Williams

Designer: Casey Marie of Smoochal Designs

Contact at (586) 434-0188 [email protected]

Published in the interest of justice, law and order by

Michigan Most Wanted, LLC.

Every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of information

contained herein - all of which (unless otherwise noted) is public

information.

Michigan and Federal Law Enforcement agencies are

responsible for much of this content.

Should any information be incorrect or need updating, please

contact the appropriate agency.

Note that a criminal charge or warrant does not imply guilt; court

and prosecuting officials make decisions daily affecting status of charges, warrants rewards offered

for information.

MI Most Wanted does notguarantee rewards offered

by Law Enforcement Agencies,Civil, Groups, or other sources.

In America, everyone is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a

reasonable doubt!

Copyright 2015

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Tips reported from outside the immediate area are forwarded by Crime Stoppers of Michigan.

In addition to working closely with local police, CSM provides several other services to help combat crime and to bring criminals to justice. It creates posters and door-hangers to publicize crimes in specific areas or regions. It posts “wanted” photos and information on its website: www.1800speakup.org. Often Crime Stoppers directly informs the media and holds press conferences about specific cases. This can offer families and neighborhoods a way to personalize the crimes and ask for the community’s help.

Crime Stoppers’ programs include:• Project Safe Campus, which empowers the student body to monitor criminal activity within itwws school.• Project Good Samaritan, a faith-based program utilizing churches and congregations to spread the word about safer communities and the CSM mission.• Prison Program, a special tip line for prisoners to anonymously submit tips by routing around a monitored phone system. A DVD of unsolved cases runs in all 22 Michigan prisons and in many of the state’s 83 county lockups.

Michigan Crime Stoppers is growing its role with the law enforcement efforts in Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Genesee, St. Clair, Washtenaw, Livingston and Monroe Counties. (You’ll read more about the history of this Southeast Michigan organization in future editions of MI Most Wanted.)

Successcontinued from page 1

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Three most Common Questions:As a Criminal Defense Attorney, the three most common questions I get are: what happens if I am arrested, what is the right to remain silent, and can the police search. This article attempts to highlight the most important points of those difficult questions but is in no way comprehensive and it is important to note that each case is different. If you have questions on how the points in this article apply to the facts of you case please seek the advice of an attorney.

What happens if I am arrested?

When someone is arrested, it is always an unexpected event. Family members and friends are left to search quickly to answer questions and to help get their loved one out of jail.

A person can be arrested and then released with charges filed at a later date, or no charges filed at all (which can still leave a person with an arrest record). A person can also be arrested and formally charged. If you are arrested and charged with breaking a criminal law in Michigan, you will be taken for an initial appearance before a magistrate called an arraignment. This may occur in person or by video and it is when the court advises you of the formal charge and maximum possible penalties. Bond is then set to assure future appearances in court. This is not time to discuss the merits of your case with the Judge.

The bond may be a secured bond, where cash or property must be posted for release, or unsecured, requiring no cash or property to be posted for release. If a defendant cannot post a secured bond they may be incarcerated pending their next appearance in court. If

bond is posted or unsecured, they will remain free pending appearance at their next court date. In felony cases, the next appearance is a probable cause conference and generally must occur not less than 7 days and not more than 14 days of the arraignment. MCL 766.4(1). In misdemeanor cases, the next appearance is a pretrial conference and generally will occur within 2-3 weeks of your arrest.

Whether you are formally charged or not, it is important to take immediate action after an arrest to protect your rights. In most situations delay will lead to the destruction of valuable evidence and a less favorable outcome. Retaining an attorney to preserve evidence and conduct an investigation after an arrest will place you in the best position to challenge any future charges.

What is the right to remain silent?Just that. An absolute right to say nothing if a person is in custody and is being questioned by police. It is in your best interest to invoke that right and say nothing until you have a criminal defense attorney present. The police may legally use various tactics in this setting in an attempt to get a suspect to admit to a crime or make incriminating statements. These tactics may include appealing to a person’s guilt or conscience, engaging in ploys like ‘good-cop/bad-cop’, lying about the evidence against the person, making promises of leniency or release if the suspect confesses to a crime, or outright intimidation. This is such an inherently coercive setting for a person that the U.S. Supreme Court ordered that the now-famous Miranda warnings be read to a person before the questioning process begins. You have the right to remain silent. Everything you say will be used against you. You have the right to a lawyer. If you cannot afford a lawyer, one will be appointed to you.

Despite the warnings, people often ignore these rights and give incriminating statements

to police that they later say are false, inaccurate, or the result of abuse, coercion or intimidation. Also, people often forget that any communication or information given to police is a statement – not just a written and signed statement. These statements will be used against a person in anyway they can be– just like the warning says.

Can the police search me, or my property?

This is a common question that does not have an easy answer. Bottom line: sometimes they can, sometimes they can’t. Generally, police must have a search warrant, supported by probable cause and reviewed and authorized in advance by a magistrate, to search a person, a person’s home, office or car, or a person’s private belongings. Probable cause is evidence that would lead a reasonable person to conclude that a crime has probably been committed or illegal items (contraband) probably exists. However, there are many exceptions to this warrant requirement. The main exceptions are listed below:

Search After Arrest – The police are authorized to fully search a person and their belongings, and the area surrounding him without a warrant, if that person is legitimately placed under arrest.

Investigative Detention and Frisk – The police may temporarily stop a person and ask questions without a warrant if they have reasonable suspicion to believe that person may be committing a crime. Investigative detentions, while common, must be supported by evidence that the person is doing something wrong. Reasonable suspicion means the police can point to specific observations that would cause a reasonable person to believe that a crime or traffic violation may be occurring.

See LAWYER on Page 6

By: JOSEPH R. ARNONECriminal Defense AttorneyFormer Prosecuting Attorney

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This detention must be brief, only for the purpose of a short investigation. The person is not free to leave, and may be questioned regarding his identity and his purpose. The person may not be placed under arrest or transported to a station unless police are satisfied that probable cause exists to arrest the person. Also, if police have reasonable suspicion to believe that the person being detained is armed, the police can conduct a pat-down frisk of the person’s clothing to check for weapons.

Consent Search – The police can always ask permission to search a person or his stuff without a warrant, and the person is always free to consent to – or give permission for – a search. Police are trained in getting a person to give consent even when there is no probable cause or reasonable suspicion to believe a crime has occurred. People often think that they cannot refuse an officer’s request to search. If the police ask for permission, they probably need it. If they had a warrant or if a different exception to the warrant requirement existed, they would not ask – they would go ahead and search.

Plain View – Police are authorized to seize illegal items without a warrant when those items are in the plain view of an officer, and that officer has the legal authority to be where he is. Example: police officer

stops a car for speeding and while talking to the driver, he sees a gun in the back seat – he may take the gun without a warrant.

Emergency Circumstances – Police are authorized to enter areas and conduct a search without a warrant when they have a reasonable belief that such aid is immediately necessary to protect the public from danger.

Automobile Exception – If the police have probable cause to belief that contraband is in a car, they may search the car without a warrant.

Conclusion:An encounter with law enforcement is an uncomfortable experience to say the least. If an arrest occurs, remember this is not the time to proclaim your innocence or make legal arguments. The arresting officer will most likely have audio and video recording of the event and the statements you make may be admissible in court regardless of whether or not you have been read your Miranda warnings. Be courteous to the officer and attempt to comply with their every request or you may face additional charges. Upon release contact a competent criminal defense attorney to assist you with the matter.

Lawyercontinued from page 5

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Nothing in this state’s history of crime compares with the Detroit Purple Gang in literature, newspapers and song. This “Detroit Jewish mob” terrorized the country, being blamed for the St. Valentine’s Day murders in Chicago, hits in Florida and the assassination of both a Michigan senator and a popular radio commentator.

Although police, prosecutors and some media wanted the public to believe the Purples were wiped out in the 1930s, “word on the street” and history shows the gang was never really eradicated… it just evolved by going underground and “straight.” (More on that in the next part of this series.

Certainly, the gang’s vicious reputation at the height of Prohibition was a precursor to the gang violence of Detroit in

the 1980s and 1990s. More than 500 murders were credited to the Purples alone in the five years between 1927 and 1932.

During Prohibition, the gang used illegal liquor profits to build an organization that was feared from California and Florida to New York and Chicago. The Purples were said to organize multi-vehicle convoys of hooch across a frozen Lake St. Clair and to peddle crime up into Canada.

Their ruthless protection of these rackets shocked citizens in Windsor, Ontario on May, 13, 1924, when The Border Cities Star announced that two prominent Canadians had been found dead in the Detroit River. A passing Windsor policeman reported seeing their car headlights on under water in the river.

Although the newspaper didn’t call the deaths of Ed Mullins and

Michigan’s colorful criminal past:How the Purple Gang set the stage

By W. EDWARD WENDOVER(Part 2 in a series on The Purples)

See PURPLE GANG on Page 11

This front page announced two deaths -- allegedly by the Purple Gang.

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NAME:Timothy Vigor

LOCATION:Monroe County

DETAILS:Wanted for Police Officer R&O, Habitual Offender -4th.

NAME:Brianne Smith

LOCATION:Wayne County

DETAILS:Wanted for Armed Robbery.

NAME:Deshawn Burell

LOCATION:Wayne County

DETAILS:Wanted for Assault w/Dangerous Weapon (5 counts).

NAME:Keisha Biglow

LOCATION:Detroit

DETAILS:Wanted for assault with intent to murder.

For Your Safety:

If you see a “Most Wanted” Fugitive or if you see a Crime in Action, please DO NOT INTERFERE.

Call your local law enforcement professionals...

CALL 9-1-1

How you can report a tip:Call the anonymous tip line:

1-800-SPEAKUPSubmit a web tip:

www.1800speakup.org

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MI MOST WANTED | Page 9

NAME:Jamie Nathan

LOCATION:Detroit

DETAILS:Wanted for Assault With Intent to Murder and Armed Robbery.

NAME:Saleena Laelar Smith

LOCATION:Detroit

DETAILS:Wanted for Assault with a Dangerous Weapon.

NAME:James Daniels

LOCATION:Detroit

DETAILS:Wanted for Robbery.

NAME:Raymond Harvey

LOCATION:Detroit

DETAILS:Wanted for Controlled Substance and Felony Firearm.

NAME:Salvatore Borgia

LOCATION:Wayne County

DETAILS:Wanted for Controlled Substance (Cocaine).

NAME:Unknown Suspect

LOCATION:Southfield

DETAILS:Wanted for Robbery.

NAME:Unknown Suspect

LOCATION:Detroit

DETAILS:Wanted for Armed Robbery and a Non-Fatal Shooting.

NAME:James Edelen

LOCATION:Flint

DETAILS:Wanted for Murder – 1st Degree – Premeditated and Felony Firearm.

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Detective Greg MacAleese, in Albuquerque, N.M., was frustrated that in six weeks of investigation, no solution was in sight for a senseless murder at a gas station.

In July, 1976, Michael Carmen was working an extra night shift for a colleague and friend who needed the night off. Michael was a University of New Mexico student who wanted the extra hours – he was two weeks away from marrying his high school sweetheart.

That dark Friday night proved fateful. Two men robbed the gas station and – for no apparent reason – fired a shotgun into Michael’s abdomen. The UNM student fought to survive; he lived four hours before he died on the hospital’s operating table. He struggled

to describe to police officers who it was that shot him, but he never got the chance.

It was one of the most senseless murders he’d ever seen, thought Detective Greg MacAleese who was one of the detectives assigned to the case. He told Carmen’s mother that he would avenge her son’s death and bring the killer or killers to justice.

But six weeks of investigation brought police no closer to solving the murder.

Then, MacAleese got an idea.

He approached the general manager of KOAT-TV in Albuquerque and asked if they could re-enact the crime for one of their news casts. Somewhere, there must be an eyewitness to the murder, MacAleese explained to the television exec. If such a witness existed, using the media to locate him or her would be the best idea.

The detective reasoned that a reenactment might trigger the witness who might have seen something but not understood fully the importance of what he or she saw. On Sept. 8, 1976, the first Carmen-murder reenactment was aired.

The next morning, a young man called to say he had seen the newscast and remembered some very important information…

Carmen’s murder was solved!

Using that tip, the two culprits were brought to justice. In addition, the broadcast triggered a number of other citizens to volunteer information to help solve other recent crimes. Local businesses and other police agencies followed up and formed what became Crime Stoppers throughout the U.S.A. and 21 other countries.

Culprit nabbed at last!Senseless murder, pursued by vigilant cop,gave rise to Crime Stoppers idea for U.S.A.

By: ED WILLIAMSEditor, MI Most Wanted

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W. C. Stuart murders at that time, another headline on the same front page says, “High liquor cost proves incentive to bootleggers.” Mullins Family lore claims the men were victims of the Purple Gang’s rum running across the Detroit River.

Gerald Buckley was a popular Detroit radio commentator of that era. His “anti-mob” campaign drew a large following. On July 23, 1930, Buckley was gunned down while sitting in Detroit’s LaSalle Hotel. Purple associate Joe “Scarface” Bommarito was tried ---- but acquitted of that murder. The public was outraged.

Then, a triple murder at the Collingswood Apartments on Detroit’s East Side on Sept. 16, 1931 drew further condemnation in the city’s three newspapers. The shootings were said to be over rivalry for rum running across the Detroit River. Three Purples were convicted in that gangland dispute and sentenced to prison in the Upper Peninsula.

Also called the “Sugar House Gang,” The Purple Gang’s name stuck when Eddie Fletcher – a.k.a. “Public Enemy No. 2” – boxed in bright purple trunks and wore a bright purple robe when he fought at Harry Harris’ Fairview Club, according to The Detroit Times. According to that newspaper’s article on Nov. 27, 1933, Fletcher and Abe Axler – “Public Enemy No. 1 – had been found shot to death the night before on a lonely Oakland County road. Each gangster had been shot five times. The slayings have never been solved.

“Purple Gangsters Mowed Down in Gang Ride” and “Purples Left Leaderless” screamed headlines

in The Times during that double-slaying coverage. Police and prosecutors claimed it was the end of the Purples and some media signed on.

But was it the end?

Fast forward to Clare, in mid-Michigan, on May 20, 1938.

The rapid growth of the oil and gas business in mid-Michigan (from Alma to Montcalm County) was centered in Clare. The buying and selling of mineral rights and of fledgling-oil-company stocks drew lots of entrepreneurs -- and con-men -- to the area.

One of them was truly a “mystery” man in state history… Isiah Leebove. Good friends with Governor William Comstock, Leebove became chairman of the board of Mammoth Producing and Refining Corporation. He also was often seen with Purple Gang members at his usual hangout – Clare’s Doherty Hotel.

It was believed the gang laundered illegally-gained money from its rackets into “legal” oil leasing, production and refining business in Clare. Later, it was learned that the Purples also hired Leebove to use his friendship with Governor Comstock to get the

Collingswood Apartment trio of killers’ sentences commuted. (The Governor declined to free the killers.)

Enter another Michigan “character.” John “Jack” Livingston was an outlandish promoter. He had worked for Leebove, but it was a rocky relationship. Living between the Doherty and the Leland Hotel in Detroit, Livingston was rarely sober, but could be charming to those he enticed into business deals. He was well-dressed and always wore a wide-brimmed white hat…

making him an excellent front-man for Leebove to convince farmers to sell off gas and oil rights to their farms in mid-Michigan.

But Livingston was usually broke. (Did this make him especially vulnerable?)

That quiet evening in Clare, the Doherty Hotel lounge entertained its normal “regulars” with Leebove holding court. Into the lounge walked Jack Livingston, fired three shots at Leebove, saying, “There you son-of-a-bitch.” While the victim died from two wounds on the hotel bar floor, the shooter calmly took the elevator up to his third-floor room. (Livingston’s third shot hit Pete Geller, sitting next to Leebove, in the leg.)

Clare’s Police Chief Bill Dunlop and Mayor John Dunlop brought Livingston down from the room and took him to the Clare County Jail in Harrison. He was put on suicide watch when he predicted “they’ll” come to shoot me now.

Clare County Circuit Judge Ray Hart’s courtroom had never seen such sensational drama.

Purple Gangcontinued from page 7

See PURPLE on Page 12

The Purple Gang.

Noted defense attorney Charles Goggin received his urgent summons to begin preparing for Jack Livingston’s trial for the murder of Isiah Leebove.

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Newspapers from around the country covered the Jack Livingston trial. Clare County Cleaver and The Clare Sentinel boosted page count – and circulation; The Detroit Times was said to have gotten a phone call about Leebove’s murder within 10 minutes of the shots and reported the entire trial closely.

The defendant announced that he would “tell all” at his trial.

Quickly, a crack legal team was put together… to defend Livingston who was broke. One of those attorneys, Charles H. Goggin, had made quite a reputation in central Michigan. While in Washington, D.C. he received an urgent telegram saying that Judge Hart had set a trial date and the defense team would meet and begin planning defense at the Leland Hotel in Detroit.

While the trail itself held many interesting twists, its outcome was so startling, it resulted in changes in Michigan law.

But the bigger question has always remained: how did Livingston afford this major legal braintrust and trial effort for his defense? Who paid for the high-priced lawyers and a legal office to be set up in a suite of rooms at the Doherty? Why?

(More in Part 3, in the next edition of Michigan Most Wanted.)

EDITOR’S NOTE: For more information on Michigan gangs’ role in crime, read: Paul R. Kavieff ’s “The Purple Gang,” William Kleinknecht’s “The New Ethnic Mobs,” Scott M. Burnstein’s “Motor City Mafia,” Richard Knapp’s “Mystery Man – Gangsters, Oil and Murder in Michigan,” and Bruce Rubenstein and Lawrence Ziewacz’s “Three Bullets Sealed His Lips” and “Payoffs in the Cloakroom – The Greening of the Michigan Legislature.” Research from those books contributed to this series and an earlier Michigan Most Wanted article on the assassination of State Senator Warren Hooper.

Much heretofore unpublished news about the Purples’ role in Michigan’s gas and oil business comes from the private scrapbook on Jack Livingston’s Murder Trial, owned by the family of the defendant’s attorney, Goggin. (Courtesy of Pat Goggin, of Cadillac, MI)

The author of this article and series on the Purple Gang, is a retired newspaper publisher and a former Chief of Staff at the Michigan House of Representatives. He wrote “MURDER AT The Penniman Deli” – the first of The Michigan Prepositional Murder series. His second murder mystery, “MURDER BY Lansing Kool-Aid” is due out soon; to be followed by “MURDER OF Crows” (set in northern Michigan).

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The Goggin scrapbook contains hundreds of press clippings from the murder trial’s extensive newspaper coverage.

Dear MI Most Wanted Readers,

We are working with Michigan’s Most Wanted to publicize unsolved cases and fugitives in their paper to work together towards safer communities. We are looking for sponsors to help us place these cases in the newspaper. Sponsors will also receive an ad for their support.

Crime Stoppers is the largest crime fightingorganization in the world operating in 22 countries. Crime Stoppers of Michigan is a nonprofit organization andoperates through funding of donations, memberships and an annual fundraiser. CSM operates in Genesee, Livingston, Macomb, Monroe, Oakland, St. Clair. Washtenaw, and Wayne counties.

The mission of CSM is to empower people to make their neighborhoods, schools, and businesses safer through anonymous reporting of crimes. The CSM tip line, 1-800-SPEAK-UP was created for citizens to anonymously report information about a crime. As an incentive, tipsters can receive a cash reward if their information leads to an arrest. A cash reward of up to $2,500 is paid for an unsolved homicide, hit and run or missing person. A cash reward of up to $1,000 is paid for all other felony crimes.

Last year, Crime Stoppers received nearly 7,000 tips, solving 26 homicides, shutting down 58 narcotics operations, and solving 14 armed robberies. $116.280 was awarded to anonymous tipsters. Engaging everyone from neighborhoods to schools to churches to businesses to prisons. Crime Stoppers is dedicated to making Southeast Michigan a safer place to live, work and play.

Just a few weeks ago, an 18 year-old woman was parking her car on a Saturday night near Greektown Casino - a part of town typically thought to be safe -when she was shot multiple times. Within several days, a community member called Crime Stoppers with an anonymous tip after viewing a surveillance video on the Channel 7 WXYZ website. The information provided enabled investigators to identify and arrest the shooter. Collaboration like this between the community, Crime Stoppers and law enforcement is what makes our community stronger. Thankfully, the young woman recovered from her gunshot injuries, and we can all rest easier knowing that another armed and violent criminal has been removed from streets.

Michigan’s Most Wanted is looking to provide Crime Stoppers with increased opportunities for publicizing unsolved crimes and wanted fugitives. We are looking for generous community sponsors to help cover the costs.

The success that Crime Stoppers has accomplished is all made possible by supporters. Many thanks to our members, board members and donors!

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Theme: World SeriesACROSS1. *Where bats are stored, pl.6. Sheep sound9. Biblical captain13. *Player’s rep14. Opposite of nothing15. Slow on the uptake16. Rock bottom17. *____ out a triple18. Twig of willow tree19. Pharmacy order21. *Game that determines home-field advantage23. Make bigger24. Team homophone25. Federal Communications Commission28. Per person30. Bank account transactions35. Bread quantity37. “Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me” band The ____39. Specialty40. 4,840 square yards41. Edward Teller’s baby43. Capital on the Dnieper44. Dandruff manufacturer46. Ship canvas47. Additional48. *H in DH50. Kind of math

52. Hankering53. Like a busybody55. Voluntary fee57. *Home of 1993 champion Blue Jays61. Popular flowering shrub64. Opera house exclamation65. Not lean67. Narcotics lawman69. Of the Orient70. However, poetically71. *Ty Cobb or Al Kaline72. Sushi wrapped in nori73. Small dog’s bark74. Mercantile establishment

DOWN1. Campaigned2. Petri dish gel3. Surrender4. Mack the _____5. *Reason for World Series cancellation6. *Opposite of strike7. Sierra Nevada, e.g.8. Pool problem9. Nessie’s loch10. “I’m ____ ____!”11. Away from port12. *All-Star 2nd baseman, ‘85 Cardinals champs

15. Neolithic tomb20. “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” host22. ____ Zeppelin24. Like Kathleen Turner’s voice25. *HOFer Frankie Frisch, “The Fordham ____”26. Spherical bacteria27. Jeweler’s unit29. *Last World Series win was 190831. Two-wheeler32. In a cold manner33. Not those34. *Best-of-____36. Matted wool38. Chieftain in Arabia42. The ____, against Britain45. Type of flag49. Break down51. *2014 World Series champs54. Sentimental one56. Braid57. Kind of ski lift58. Guesstimate phrase59. Iron horse track60. West Wing’s Office61. At the summit62. Therefore or consequently63. Maple, to a botanist66. Bingo!68. Miner’s bounty

Solutions for both puzzles are on page 14

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PuzzleSolutions

Puzzles can be found on page 13

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