January 1, 2004 In Memoriam In Memoriam John Royce Agner, Ft. Lauderdale Admitted 1962, Died September 6, 2003 Jon Harmon Anderson, Lakeland Admitted 1975; Died September 26, 2003 George S. Barnard, Pompano Beach Admitted 1978; Died September 23, 2003 Jerome C. Berlin, Ft. Lauderdale Admitted 1969; Died April 29, 2003 Joseph John Brune III, North Las Vegas, NV Admitted 1951; Died September 25, 2003 Thomas E. Byrd, Ft. Lauderdale Admitted 1959; Died October 28, 2003 Frederick R. Carson, Winnetka, IL Admitted 1973; Died July 1, 2002 Israel Cohen, Santa Monica, CA Admitted 1992; Died December 26, 2002 Zahid Hafeez Chaudhry, Tallahassee Admitted 1994; Died October 11, 2003 Robert Hayes Crawford, St. Petersburg Admitted 1974; Died August 30, 2003 Philip G. Delduke, Bethesda, MD Admitted 1995; Died September 26, 2003 Fred M. Dellapa, Miami Admitted 1974; Died August 30, 2003 Charles Jeffrey Dorfman, Port St. Lucie Admitted 1975; Died September 22, 2003 Walter Benton Dunagan, Edgewater Admitted 1970; Died March 3, 2003 Jane Rogers Feaster, Knoxville, TN Admitted 1991; Died April 27, 2003 David Feldman, Miami Admitted 1973; Died June 7, 2003 James Craig Fisher, Altamonte Springs Admitted 1967; Died July 19, 2003 William Allan Graham, Deland Admitted 1987; Died July 26, 2003 Nard Stephen Helman, Miami Admitted 1965; Died September 13, 2003 Samuel B. Hornstein, Doylestown, PA Admitted 1973; Died September 5, 2003 Mark George Jochem, Ipswich, MA Admitted 1989; Died August 5, 2003 Martin Leslie Kahn, Los Gatos, CA Admitted 1980; Died June 16, 2003 Barbara Ellen Knapp, Longwood Admitted 1987; Died December 8, 2002 B. Gregory Kroger, Jr., Boca Raton Admitted 1985; Died December 23, 2002 W. Sperry Lee, Jacksonville Admitted 1948; Died July 24, 2003 Fernando Lievano, Miami Admitted 1989; Died September 13, 2002 Clifford M. Lind, Stuart Admitted 1973; Died September 1, 2003 Allan Steven Maisel, Miami Admitted 1974; Died August 12, 2003 John M. Marees, Jacksonville Admitted 1949; Died October 8, 2003 Irving Laurence Mazer, Palm Beach Admitted 1976; Died December 20, 2002 William Simmonds Marshall, Miami Admitted 1959; Died September 8, 2003 Marlene G. Mitchell, Sarasota Admitted 1980; Died February 17, 2002 Robert F. Moss, Metuchen, NJ Admitted 1970; Died February 1, 2002 Jack A. Nants, Orlando Admitted 1948; Died January 6, 2003 William John Nelson, Ft. Myers Admitted 1968; Died September 19, 2003 Richard P. O’Connor, Miami Admitted 1955; Died July 21, 2001 Daniel S. Pearson, Miami Admitted 1959; Died September 9, 2003 J.B. Rodgers, Jr., Zellwood Admitted 1939; Died September 20, 2003 L. Michael Roffino, Coral Gables Admitted 1976; Died September 5, 2003 Jay Cecil Salyer, Jr., Boca Raton Admitted 1975; Died August 27, 2003 Marian A. Schweiger, Pembroke Pines Admitted 1985; Died September 26, 2002 James Ronald Shelley, Pensacola Admitted 1966; Died June 22, 2003 Sam I. Silver, Sarasota Admitted 1937; Died June 6, 2003 Robert J. Stinnett, Sarasota Admitted 1962; Died December 27, 2002 David H. Thomas, Montgomery, AL Admitted 1975; Died August 7, 2002 Raul E. Valdes-Fauli, Miami Admitted 1975; Died August 26, 2003 Eugene L. Wilpon, Woodmere, NY Admitted 1958; Died July 28, 2003 Gary G. Wolding, Tampa Admitted 1984; Died February 21, 2003 In Memoriam
He highlighted four academics on the team whom he believed represented these qualities: I Dewa Gede Palguna, Apolo Safanpo, Makarim Wibisono and Bambang Purwoko.Established under a ministerial decree signed by Mahfud on Oct. 2, the team comprises ministry officials, members of state institutions, intellectuals and several Papuan figures including church pastors and indigenous leaders.The government-sanctioned team said on Monday that it had concluded its field investigation into the alleged shooting of Papuan pastor Yeremia Zanambani last month, despite naming no suspects.“The team has now reported all cases and it just has to combine them into a structured report. They are given until Oct. 17 to make the report and to discuss their findings before drawing a conclusion,” Mahfud added. Topics : Read also: Body of slain Intan Jaya pastor to be autopsied, says fact-finding teamHe also said that the team had managed to “break the existing barrier” of extracting information from armed criminal groups in Papua, something he claimed that no one had ever successfully done until now.“The family used to be very reluctant in giving their statements. Now, the team can easily meet the family. They want to give statements and share facts, even sign an agreement letter for pastor Yeremia’s body autopsy,” he said, claiming the success was a result of cultural diplomacy with the help of local figures.Head of the fact-finding team, Benny Mamoto, said the team had questioned approximately 25 eyewitnesses, including the victim’s wife, members of the medical team who provided care to the victim and several security personnel who happened to near the area at the time of the incident.Benny, who also heads the National Police Commission (Kompolnas), said the team would continuously monitor the case, even after it is dismissed after 14 days – the amount of time it was given to investigate the death of the Papuan pastor.“So, please, rest assured that we will monitor the process so that it will unfold in accordance with the law,” Benny said.According to the Indonesian Communion of Churches, the Indonesian Evangelical Christian Church (GKII) and local media in Papua, Yeremia was shot by Indonesian Army (TNI) personnel on his way to his pigpen on Sept. 19.The TNI denied the allegation, claiming that an armed group was responsible for the incident. In addition to Yeremia’s death, the team also investigated other deaths that took place in Intan Jaya at around the same time, including the shooting of civilian Badawi and TNI soldiers Chief Sgt. Sahlan and First Pvt. Dwi Akbar.
Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Mahfud MD has defended a joint fact-finding team sanctioned by the government to conduct probes into recent killings in Intan Jaya regency, Papua, saying the team is full of professionals with unyielding independence.He asserted that the team operated based on facts and dismissed accusations that it only followed the government’s orders.“The team has people whose perspectives can’t be bought. They cannot be dictated. If they say no, that means no and everyone will believe them,” he said in a press conference on Tuesday.