BACK IN COURT: As swarms of lawyers...
- Share via
BACK IN COURT: As swarms of lawyers spent Monday dickering over the O.J. Simpson trial, prosecutors in Ventura moved briskly through their arguments for why convicted murderer Mark Scott Thornton should die (B6). . . . Raising issues that never came up in his trial, prosecutors told the jury that Thornton once sexually assaulted a former girlfriend and, more recently, has fashioned knives in jail and fought with guards. . . . Defense attorneys pleaded with the jury to spare the 20-year-old, citing mental problems and a bad childhood.
VIDEO DOCTOR: Physicians sat in a Westlake auditorium Monday, staring into the ear of a man in the Dominican Republic. From three continents came the unanimous diagnosis: a perforated eardrum. . . . Combining technology and medicine, GTE Telephone Operations beamed the ear exam to nine far-flung spots, where doctors could watch and advise each other on treatment. Ideally, the so-called “telemedicine” will be used to link specialists to remote areas or homebound patients. . . . “The doctors who saw it said it was actually easier to see,” GTE spokesman Mike Murray said, “because it was magnified.”
SUNKEN SHIP: When researchers dragged up two buoys from a missing shrimp trawler last week, they may have solved more than the mystery of the boat’s disappearance (B1). . . . They may also have resolved the real name of the vessel. Its Korean owners named it either the Vil Vana or the Nil Vana; registration and ownership papers were unclear. The Coast Guard goes with Vil Vana, but the name on the two rubber floats: Nil Vana.
BUSINESS FRIENDLY: Oxnard offers more incentives to lure new businesses than any other city in Ventura County. Thousand Oaks offers the least, but gives developers a good deal on upfront fees. So says a study by a Sherman Oaks consulting firm (Valley Business, Page 11). . . . The survey of California communities found wide disparity within Ventura County. “If there were uniformity, that alone would help business people a great deal,” consultant Larry J. Kosmont said.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.