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Inside today: More than $150 in coupon savings SpringHome Improvement Special Section History Spring Home Improvement Corinth’s Civil War era churches Inside today www.dailycorinthian.com Sunday April 21, 2013 $1.50 Page 1B Daily Corinthian Vol. 117, No. 96 • Corinth, Mississippi • Mostly sunny Today Tonight 68 47 0% chance of rain 28 pages • Two sections Police recover more Curtis in court: than 40 stolen signs ‘I didn’t do it’ BY HOLBROOK MOHR & JESSICA GRESKO Associated Press OXFORD — Federal authorities have produced scant evidence linking a Mississippi man to the mailing of ricinlaced letters to the president and a senator, his attorney says. Christi McCoy said after a court hearing Friday that the government has offered no evidence to prove her client, Paul Kevin Curtis, had Daily Corinthian Farmington Police Tony Holmes and Jerry Mayhall sort through the more than 40 road signs recovered on Friday. Investigation continues; charges will be filed BY BOBBY J. SMITH Farmington police recovered more than 40 stolen road signs on Friday afternoon. The signs included railroad crossing signs, speed limit and stop signs, “Do Not Enter” signs, county road markers, a sign warning motorists to look out for horseand-buggies (apparently from an Please see CURTIS | 2A Corinth tornado began one career Sunday April 21, 2013 Staff photo Bobby J. Smith bjsmith@dailycorinthian.com possession of any ricin or the seed from which it is extracted — castor beans. An FBI agent testified during the hearing that he could not say if investigators had found ricin at Curtis’ home, and McCoy said the evidence linking the 45-year-old to the crime so far has hinged on his writings posted online. He is adamant that he did not do this, and she said she Amish community), a “No Dumping” sign, a road construction barrel, a marker designating Brandi Road — and many, many more. All of the signs were confiscated at a residence in the Farmington community shortly after 3 p.m. on Friday, said Deputy Chief of Police Jerry Mayhall. “We went to the house looking for somebody we wanted and found all of those signs,” Mayhall said. The investigation is ongoing, Mayhall said, and charges are on the way. “To this extreme, it’s not going to be tolerated,” he said. While they know the signs were stolen, one of the biggest jobs will Please see SIGNS | 3A BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com As a young boy, Troy Kimmel Jr. was frightened by lightning and thunder. Now, as a meteorologist, big storms are his bread and butter. One tragic day in Corinth — April 19, 1970 — helped set him on his future path when a deadly tornado swept through the city. South Corinth took the brunt of the storm, which killed four or five people, depending on whether a man who had a heart attack at the time is included. A native of Kilgore, Texas, Kimmel and his family came to Corinth in the late 1960s with Pepsi Cola. “My dad came up and opened up the Pepsi plant that is the old white building that sits on the hill on Johns Street even today,” said Kimmel, who shared his memoKimmel ries on the 43rd anniversary of the storm. Please see TORNADO | 3A Alcorn County health Friends, family wish Bynum well officials offer free shots BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com The Alcorn County Health Department will be recognizing National Infant Immunization Week by offering free shots starting Monday. Free immunization for youngsters two months through the age of 18 begin at 8 a.m. Monday and continue through Friday. “We are hoping to have a big response,” said Alcorn County Coordinating Nurse Ellen Hendrix. “A free clinic is offered every year, but most of the time people wait to the last minute to get their child immunized.” Should individuals not take advantage of the free opportunity week, a $10 fee will be charged the rest of the year. “No appointment is necessary,” said Hendrix. The health department staff is providing free immunization from 8 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. Vaccinations during the promotion include protection for infants, children and adolescents against the following diseases: Diphtheria, Tetanus, Pertussis, Polio, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), Measles, Mumps, Rubella, Varicella (chicken pox), Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, Pneumococcal, Meningococcal, HPV and Rotavirus. The Mississippi State Department of Health recommends immunizations for infants and children from birth through 18 years of age for protection against childhood diseases. Seventh graders entering the eighth grade are required to have a Tdap shot. The shot protects against diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis (whooping cough). “We are planning for 150 doses of each age group and we can get more if needed,” said the coordinating nurse. “Parents need to see that their children get their shots now and out of the way before waiting just days before school starts.” “Immunizations are essential to give infants and growing children a healthy start in life,” added MSDH State EpiPlease see SHOTS | 2A Jim Bynum is enjoying a new chapter in life. Friends, family and associates gathered at City Hall Friday afternoon to wish him well after his recent retirement from the City of Corinth. Known for his jovial personality and 24/7 dedication to the job of street commissioner, Bynum enjoyed meeting a big crowd of well-wishers. He had managed Corinth’s streets and sanitation since 1999. “I enjoyed being able to help other people,” he said. “My biggest concern was the safety of the people, whether it was their home and property or the streets they drove on.” He worked a couple of years with the Corinth Street Department in the late 1980s. From there, he went to the Corinth Gas & Water Department for a couple of years and then the Corinth Housing Authority for seven years before returning to the street department. Whenever snow or ice struck in the middle of the night, a tree fell across the street or the underpass flooded, Bynum and his crew were on the case. Index Stocks......8A Classified......5B Comics Inside State......5A Weather......9A Obituaries......6A Opinion......4A Sports....10A Staff photo by Jebb Johnston Dorothy Hopkins congratulates Jim Bynum on his retirement at City Hall Friday. He admits it wasn’t always easy. “It was stressful at times, more so than I thought I could handle,” he said. A memorable challenge during his time was the May 2010 flood, which brought concerns about adequate drainage to the fore. As luck would have it, he was working with the street department on the two occasions in the past 25 years when Corinth had 8 to 10 inches of snowfall. He also dealt with animal control. “He gave everything each and every day,” said Mayor Tommy Irwin. “They don’t make them like Jim Bynum very often.” Please see BYNUM | 2A On this day in history 150 years ago Grierson’s Raid. After a skirmish at Palo Alto, Miss. Grierson splits his force and sends half the men back to LaGrange. The Confederates take the bait and follow the column heading north which leaves Grierson to continue south to Newton Station. Local 2A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, April 21, 2013 BYNUM CONTINUED FROM 1A Jerry Latch, former mayor, also had high praise. “He’s a dedicated employee that you just don’t find anymore,” he said. “Jim loved his job. That was his life.” Now, Bynum is enjoying working as a volun- teer at the Alcorn County Veterans Service Office. As a Vietnam veteran, he said he is happy to be able to help other veterans. He also might find time to do a little fishing or head down to Florida to visit one of his sisters. “I plan to enjoy life,” he said. Staff photo by Steve Beavers Alcorn County Health Department RN Haley Moore talks with 17-month-old brothers Camden (left) and Carter Hendrix. The local health department is observing National Infant Immunization Week by offering free shots starting Monday. Free immunization for youngsters two months through the age of 18 begin at 8 a.m. Monday. SHOTS CONTINUED FROM 1A demiologist Dr. Thomas Dobbs. “Statistics have shown dramatic declines in vaccine-preventable illnesses and deaths in Mississippi, thanks to appropriate immunizations … immunization is the best protection we can offer our children against often deadly diseases.” Staff photo by Jebb Johnston Many family members, including some who flew to Corinth, attended the retirement reception for Jim Bynum. In front is his grandson, Sean Phillip Colvert. The rest are, from left, brother-in-law Brian Peterman; sister Mary Allie Peterman; sister Vickie Lassiter; son Ward Bynum; Jim Bynum; daughter Dawn Colvert, and son-in-law Phil Colvert. CURTIS CONTINUED FROM 1A has seen nothing to prove him wrong. Curtis was ushered into the courtroom before the hearing began in an orange jail jumpsuit and shackles. He turned to face his daughter in the audience before the hearing and whispered, “I didn’t do it.” Prosecutors had wanted to delay the hearing because searches of Curtis home and car had not been completed and DNA and other tests are pending. Curtis’ brother Jack Curtis and 20-year-old daughter Madison Curtis watched the court proceeding and said afterward they are not convinced he did what he is accused of, even though they tried to keep an open mind about what would be presented. “After hearing what I heard in this courtroom, it appears to me that the reason I haven’t been provided any evidence is there appears to be none that would link my brother directly to the charges that have been made,” Jack Curtis said after the hearing. So far, Paul Kevin Curtis is the primary focus for investigators and the only person arrested in connection with sending those letters and a third threatening letter mailed to a judge. But during a hearing Friday, FBI agent Brandon M. Grant testified that authorities were still trying to determine whether there were any co-conspirators. As the hearing went on for roughly two hours, Grant said under questioning by Curtis’ attorney that he could not say whether any ricin had been found at Curtis’ home because the investigation was ongoing. Investigators had found a WE INVITE YOU TO THE VERA BRADLEY STORY with Vera’s daughter, Joan! JOAN BRADLEY REEDY is visiting Ginger’s in Corinth! Joan will entertain & enlighten you with personal anecdotes about her mother’s history, the design and remarkable women behind it all! She is also a breast cancer survivor and will share with you how you can help support the breast cancer foundaon! Join us for a fun, casual event with food, games, prizes and wonderful giveaways! Call to reserve your spot today! Hors d’ oeuvres will be served at 5:30 p.m. Talk with Joan begins at 6:15 p.m. Monday, April 22, 2013 Limited Seang! RSVP: 286-2821 or kaseyanneatkins@yahoo.com GGGG CELEBRATING 25 YEARS! package they were interested in, but Grant said he did not know what was in it. Grant testified that there were indentations on the letters from where someone had written on another envelope that had been on top of them in a stack. The indentations were analyzed under a light source and turned out to be for Curtis’ former addresses in Booneville and Tupelo, Grant said. Grant also testified that there was one fingerprint on the letter sent to the judge but that it didn’t match Curtis. He said several people handled the letter, and DNA and other tests are pending. Curtis’ lawyer peppered the agent with questions in an attempt to show the government had little hard evidence, but Grant said people’s lives were at risk and it wasn’t like a fraud investigation in which authorities could gather more evidence before making an arrest. Family and acquaintances have described Curtis as a caring father and enthusiastic musician who struggled for years with mental illness and who was consumed by trying to publicize his claims of a conspiracy to sell body parts on the black market. Curtis is an Elvis impersonator and performed at parties. Friends and relatives also say he spiraled into emotional turmoil trying to get attention for his claims of uncovering a conspiracy to sell body parts on the black mar- ket. Grant testified that Curtis’ family had become increasingly concerned by his behavior. Grant said Curtis’ exwife told authorities that he fought with his daughter around Christmas and told her, “Maybe I should go ahead and kill you.” Madison Curtis said after the hearing that she loves her father and stands by him. Grant also testified that Curtis’ ex-wife said Curtis once told her that he was in hostage situation in Chicago after a breaking up with a former girlfriend, threatened suicide and shot a gun in the air. However, the agent said they haven’t been able to find a record of that. Grant’s testimony ended Friday evening, but the hearing is set to continue Monday morning. In court documents, Curtis’ attorney, Christi McCoy, gave some details of Curtis’ arrest. Curtis had gone to get his mail outside his home and was planning to go to his ex-wife’s home to cook dinner for her and their children when he was approached by officers in SWAT gear, she wrote. He was then interrogated at an FBI office for several hours, handcuffed and chained to a chair. Curtis cooperated to the best of his ability, but when he suggested he might need a lawyer, an agent discouraged that, McCoy wrote. According to an FBI affidavit, the letters he sent read: “Maybe I have your attention now even if that means someone must die.” Officials have confirmed that the letters contained ricin. While the toxin can be extremely lethal in its purest form, experts say more crude forms are relatively easy to make. The FBI has not yet revealed details about how the ricin was made or how lethal it may have been. It was in a powdered form inside the envelopes, but the FBI said no one has been sickened by it so far. A senate official said Thursday that the ricin was not weaponized, meaning it wasn’t in a form that could easily enter the body. More than a dozen officials, some wearing hazardous materials suits, were searching the home Friday where Curtis was arrested in Corinth. FBI spokeswoman Deborah Madden would not say if authorities have found ricin or materials used to make it in Curtis’ home, and officials have not provided details about how Curtis may have either obtained or made the ricin. Curtis’ ex-wife has said he likely didn’t have the know-how to make ricin, and she did not know where he would buy it because he was on disability. But ricin was once known as “the poor man’s bioterrorism” because the seeds are easy to obtain and the extraction process is relatively simple, said Murray CoPlease see CURTIS | 3A Local 3A • Daily Corinthian Sunday, April 21, 2013 TORNADO Today in History CONTINUED FROM 1A Today is Sunday, April 21, the 111th day of 2013. There are 254 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On April 21, 1836, an army of Texans led by Sam Houston defeated the Mexicans at San Jacinto, assuring Texas independence. On this date: In 1509, England’s King Henry VII died; he was succeeded by his 17-yearold son, Henry VIII. In 1649, the Maryland Toleration Act, which provided for freedom of worship for all Christians, was passed by the Maryland assembly. In 1789, John Adams was sworn in as the first vice president of the United States. In 1910, author Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, died in Redding, Conn., at age 74. In 1918, Baron Manfred von Richthofen, the German ace known as the “Red Baron,” was killed in action during World War I. In 1930, a fire broke out inside the overcrowded Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus, killing 332 inmates. In 1955, the Jerome Lawrence-Robert Lee play “Inherit the Wind,” inspired by the Scopes trial of 1925, opened at the National Theatre in New York. In 1960, Brazil inaugurated its new capital, Brasilia, transferring the seat of national government from Rio de Janeiro. In 1962, the six-month Century 21 Exposition, also known as the Seattle World’s Fair, opened. In 1980, Rosie Ruiz was the first woman to cross the finish line at the Boston Marathon; however, she was later exposed as a fraud. (Canadian Jacqueline Gareau was named the actual winner of the women’s race.) In 1992, Robert Alton Harris became the first person executed by the state of California in 25 years as he was put to death in the gas chamber for the 1978 murder of two teen-age boys, John Mayeski and Michael Baker. Ten years ago: His father is Max Kimmel, and his mother is Diane Kimmel, both now retired and living in New Braunfels, Texas. She taught at Alcorn Central High School before moving to Corinth High School and Corinth Junior High. Kimmel is chief meteorologist at KOKE FM in Austin, Texas, and a senior lecturer in Studies in Weather and Climate at the University of Texas Austin. He recalls teachers at East Corinth Elementary picking up on his fear of storms and having him read books from the library about weather. “If you talk to people that are involved in weather, a lot of people have those stories in their past, the things that they remember that they say kept them interested in weather,” said Kimmel. “The one thing I always remember growing up as a kid is I always did not like lightning and thunder. I really credit what I’m doing nowadays a lot for what happened in the Corinth School District in the late ‘60s. They helped me realize where I wanted to go.” Then came the fateful spring Sunday that would seal Kimmel’s fate as a future weather man. Many people were just getting home from church when the tornado touched down just south of Highway 72 at 12:55 p.m. It had already touched down in a section of Ripley as it began an intermittent path that wound continue to Counce, Tenn. The Kimmels lived on Pine Road in the north part of the city. “I remember it being real stormy and kind of watching what was going on,” he said. “I think there was a phone call or two that came to my mom, people saying something’s happened. The biggest thing that I remember is the initial panic. We were hearing that the tornado had moved over South Corinth, so the initial thought was, what about the Pepsi Cola plant?” His father had decided to see if the fish were biting at Pickwick Dam that day and was not home at the time the storm hit. As the menacing storm rolled over the waters from the southwest, Max Kimmel knew it was a bad one, that it had come from Corinth and that he needed to get back home right away. Kimmel, his mother and younger sister Kathy piled into the station wagon and tried to make their way toward the Pepsi plant. “I remember driving downtown and very distinctly on Cass Street, where the shopping centers are now, which wasn’t much there then, I remember people walking out that had blankets over them,” he said. “I remember the people looked like they were in shock. It looked like it was the only thing they had left in the world.” At the nearby South Corinth school, where Kimmel was part of the first integrated student body, they could see part of the roof was gone on the southeast side. As they reached the highway, a liquor store near the intersection was “laid wide open.” “It was at that point we looked up on the hill, and I’ll always remember the plant was still there,” he said. The storm went on to cause lesser damage in the 43 years ago on Friday the tornado hit Corinth, as detailed in the Daily Corinthian the next day on April 20, 1970. northeast part of the city. The Fujita scale for assessing tornado damage did not exist at the time, but the storm was later rated an F4, which has estimated wind speeds of 207 to 260 mph and causes devastating damage. In the aftermath, school was out for a week. The Kimmel family left Corinth in 1972, although he returned for one year in the late 1970s, working with WKCU radio and as a reserve dispatcher for the sheriff’s department. Kimmel keeps in touch with a number of friends in Corinth. His only other brush with a tornado came while fishing near Brownsville, Texas, when he saw a waterspout. Now, when bad storms are happening, he tracks them on radar for his radio audience and leaves the tornado chasing to others. “When it gets bad, I’m doing other things,” he said. “I don’t know if I trust myself out chasing tornadoes.” around the world; they are often used to make medicinal castor oil, among other things. However, using the seeds to make a highly concentrated form of ricin would require laboratory equipment and expertise to extract, said Raymond Zilinskas, a chemical and biological weapons expert. “It’s an elaborate process,” he said. CURTIS CONTINUED FROM 2A hen, the founder of the Atlanta-based Frontline Foundation, which trains workers on preparedness and response to bioterrorism and epidemics. “Any kid that made it through high school sci- ence lab is more than equipped to successfully make a poison out of this stuff. Any fool can get recipes off the Internet and figure out how to do it,” Cohen said. Those seeds, which look a bit like coffee beans, are easy to buy online and are grown PROaddNAILS DAY SPA & SALON that special touch to your Special day. Manicures ures Pedicures Ped SIGNS CONTINUED FROM 1A be figuring out just where they all came from. Police Chief Tony Holmes said stealing road signs affects everybody. Nails All Tips $25 “It costs a lot of money to replace these,” said Holmes. There are also the safety issues. Missing stop signs can easily cause wrecks. Stolen road markers could Military officials in Iraq announced the arrest of Muhammad Hamza alZubaydi, a key figure in the bloody suppression of the Shiite Muslim uprising of 1991. ( French, Pearl, Color, & Glitter) hamper emergency crews from finding their destinations. The Farmington police were assisted by Alcorn County Deputy Mackie Sexton. Pedicure Signature Pedicure $10 off Luxury Pedicure $5 off Monday- Saturday: 9:00a.m.-8:00p.m 101 Hwy 72 East • Corinth MS 662-287-5020 Gift Certificates Available • Walk-ins Welcome Attention Rebel Fans GET TICKETS NOW! Hosted by: COLLECTORS O 712 Taylor St. Corinth, MS R PH 662-293-0068 Tues - Fri 10 - 5 & Sat 10-3 N OPEN:Closed: Sun and Mon E R Tri-State Rebel Club Guest Speaker: Head Coach Antiques, Flea Market & Consignments Betty K. Robertson, Owner Come in and enjoy a unique shopping experience. Our booths are filled with gifts, antiques, home decor, dolls, hand-crafted items, quilts, coins, vintage and new jewelry. We also have Avon, Tupperware, new and vintage ladies clothing and so much more. You never know what our vendors may bring in! We are conveniently located in the downtown area, one block north of the courthouse. There is plenty of parking. Come by and bring a friend. You are always welcome at Collectors Corner! P.O. 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