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Bail denied for 4 teens charged in connection with shootings BY GREG HAMBRICK THE GAMECOCK The four teens charged in the shooting death of an assistant U.S. attorney near Five Points are being held without bail following hearings Monday morning where police clarified how the robbery occurred. Abram Braveboy, 18; Cichey Mayo, 17; Bryan Murray, 17; and Willie Murphy Jr., 16, were ex pected to appear at the bail hear ings, but waived their appear ances. i Fifth Circuit Solicitor Barney Giese said, “They were involved in this crime wave in our city. They caused the death of a visi tor to our city and the injury of another.” Giese used statements the teens made to police to illustrate to Judge Casey Manning what happened the night of the shoot ing. Braveboy picked up the three others in his mother’s gray Volvo about 9 p.m. Aug. 20, Giese said. The group planned to rob people in Five Points. “Braveboy told Cichey, ‘Let’s go down and get paid,”’ Giese said, reading from Braveboy’s statement to police. On that night, Giese said, Braveboy waited in the Volvo as Murphy and Mayo attempted to ’ rob Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael C. Messer and his co-worker Rob S. Ferguson at the 800 block of Laurens Street. Both men were visiting the National Advocacy Center on the USC campus. , . Instead of following directions to lie on the ground, Messer and Ferguson ran from the two men. Mayo fired seven to eight rounds from a .25-caliber hand gun, shooting Ferguson in the arm and Messer in the leg, Giese said. Murphy fired the fatal shot from a .380-caliber handgun, Giese said. The bullet went through one of Messer’s lungs and his heart be fore lodging in the other lung. Ferguson ran several blocks to the National Advocacy Center, where he contacted police. Messer fell just a few feet up the street from the incident and was pronounced dead at Palmetto Richland Memorial Hospital around 10:20 p.m. Murphy, Mayo and Murray, who was acting as a lookout, ran back to the car. Witnesses re ported seeing the vehicle heading up Gervais Street toward the campus with no lights on. The four then went to Northeast Richland and commit ted three robberies there, police said. Arrest and conviction records revealed in court show that Mayo received probation after he was convicted of assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature in 1999. Murphy was sentenced to serve time at the state Department of Juvenile Justice in January 2000 after he was con victed of assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature, Assistant Solicitor Johnny Gasser said. According to a Richland County sheriffs report, Bryan Murray was charged with break ing into a car in St. Andrews on Feb. 13,2000. He later pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of tampering with a vehicle and was placed on pro bation. Braveboy has no previous con victions, Gasser said. If convicted of murder in the state court, the four could face the death penalty, but Giese said it was too early in the case to make the decision. Want your name in print? Every day? THE GAMECOCK interest meeting. Sept. 5 at 7 p.m. in Russell House 205. West Quad New residence hall in the works CONTINUED FROM PAGE X and is accredited by the U.S. Green Building Council through their newest program, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating system. In order to be LEED certified, the strategy of USC’s new building will have to be documented and approved. The building then will be rated on a points scale. “To certain groups or owners, it’s important to be environmen tally friendly,” said Gleeson. “This [system] gives them the cred itability to say that, and it is veri fied. It’s a better building; it uses less energy. It just takes more time and effort to do it.” Housing is also working with the Sustainable University Initiative, a $5 million grant fund ed by a private foundation shared with Clemson and the Medical University of South Carolina. USC has $1.5 million to spend over a five-year period to “work together to become a “greener” campus and to educate all of our students on their impact on earth,” said Bruce Coull, dean of the School of Environment. One of the things set up by this initiative is the Environmental Advisement Committee (EAC), made up of faculty and staff with the power to make recommenda tions to the president and board of trustees. “Not all of our residence halls have been very energy efficient,” said Coull, chairman of the EAC. “They haven’t been environmen tally friendly, so we are looking at building the next dorm with ‘green’features.” Possible “green” features in the new residence hall include in creased insulation, motion-cen sored hall lights, low-flow toilets, energy-efficient washing ma chines and roof gardens to absorb more carbon dioxide gases. The university’s energy bill was about $10 million last year, Coull said. While the new “green” features would be more expensive, Coull is convinced that they would pay for themselves in the long run. “The money is important to the people who pay the bill,” said Coull. “But it’s taking some re sponsibility for global issues. This is not just Columbia, S.C., but we’re a part of this whole global earth.” Possible Quad locations O Between Blatt P.E. Center and South Quad G In front of Blossom Street Garage G Near parking lots at Bates House O By Greek village, behind rail road tracks G On Pickens Street, near old Benson Elementary School Timeline for West Quad NOVEMBER 2000: Financial modeling began, conceptual design presented to and approved by board of trustees building and grounds committee, $500,000 budget granted to hire architects MARCH 2001: Seven firms interviewed for project, committee selects Boudreaux company, which hires Little End Associates to help with building design JUNE 2001: Southern Management Group hired as project management team WEEK OF SEPT. 11: Student and faculty to meet with architects to discuss building design DECEMBER 2001: Finished budget to be submitted to board of trustees for approval SEPTEMBER 2002: Complete design work to be finished, contract documents (blueprints) available OCTOBER 2002: Begin taking bids from contractors NOVEMBER 2002: Hire a contractor DECEMBER 2002: Break ground for new facility, 65 weeks of construction begin JUNE 2004: Construction to be completed AUGUST 2004: "West Quad" to open to students Hlk Hl Mmgm ws? Ml ge| M IP K 8B IWBp &nB§HH ja|, JB 9 ppjjBr .|ffl| ▼ jfB8mf jdBBBtemr m||9 19 VbH ^^9^H ^9 Rf Mm jfiHB L^r I 19 1 ; ' ' #•!,, -If _. ?f ( ' ' » . . . § 1 ' *7 V \ 2 ^* », j < . - a V■ i^l BP ■ 9fl^P ■ IH b99 ■ ■ 1 <g __g ,, £H h_~^B Hhh jn JUftg/Kr ^- ■■■ HH jM J * 9| S ■ H You could score tickets to the Rose Bowl. 0 Hit our Web site or call I 877 COLLEGE to sign up for one of AT&T’s College Plans. And register for a chance to win one of two Grand Prize trips for you and three friends to the 2002 Rose Bowl. Winners get: ►► Game tickets, parade tickets ►► ABC hospitality party, game analyst meet ►► Airfare and ground transportation an£f greet,* production trailer tour* ►► Six days, five nights accommodations ^ Other great prizes include » $500 spending money* *250 '20-minute prepaid calling cards .. , , *250 Rose Bowl T-shirts ►► Kick-Off Luncheon passes / *actual winner only. — BOUNDLESS . No purchase necessary. Open to US. Residents who are registered fulltime or part-time college students, 18 years of age or older as of August 3,2001. Void where prohibited. For Officialaftules, visit www.att.com/college Sweepstakes ends Noveriber 9, 2001. * ©2001 AT&T. All Rights Reserved • f “