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KATHY MATHESON, Associated Press
MICHAEL RUBINKAM, Associated Press

MILFORD, Pa. (AP) — 

For 48 days, Eric Frein was everywhere and nowhere, supposedly sighted again and again, only to melt back into the woods in a dangerous game of cat-and-mouse.

So on Friday, as state police paraded the gaunt and battered-looking former fugitive in front of a courthouse, residents were relieved to see him in the flesh.

It was proof that the harrowing seven-week manhunt in the Pocono Mountains for the suspected cop-killer was finally over, and things could start getting back to normal.

"It's just been nerve-wracking, not knowing where he was, what his next step was, what he was going to do," said Jody Welsh.

Onlookers shouted "Are you sorry?" and "Why did you do it?" as the survivalist and marksman was led from court the morning after his capture near an abandoned hangar. Hundreds of local, state and federal law officers had taken part in the manhunt.

Frein, 31, had a gash on the bridge of his nose and a scrape over his left eye as he listened to charges that he killed Cpl. Bryon Dickson and critically wounded Trooper Alex Douglass in a sniper attack outside their state police barracks Sept. 12.

He did not have a lawyer and was not asked to enter a plea to first-degree murder and other charges, including possession of two pipe bombs discovered during the search. He remained jailed without bail. A preliminary hearing was set for Nov. 12.

Pike County District Attorney Raymond Tonkin, who said he would seek the death penalty, told reporters that Frein's capture Thursday evening brought a measure of comfort to the region after an "unimaginable loss of unspeakable proportions."

"We have now started to find the answers that the community desired in this case," Tonkin said.

Troopers questioned Frein, but authorities would not disclose what he told them or discuss a possible motive. Authorities have said Frein had expressed anti-law enforcement views online and to people who knew him.

Joe Fagan was the first in line to enter the courtroom.

"To be honest, I just wanted to see what evil looked like," he said. "He had zero emotion."

Until his capture, Frein had some people beginning to wonder if law enforcement was up to the task, given the rugged terrain and the evident skill with which he eluded dogs, thermal-imaging cameras and teams of heavily armed officers.

Sporadic sightings of the fugitive kept entire communities on edge: A woman claimed to have seen him outside a high school. A local cop spotted a mysterious man in green, prompting an intensive search that came up empty. There were other sightings in which Frein supposedly made himself visible to law enforcement, then vanished.

"To see him just walk past me was just a sigh of relief that he's not in the woods," said Welsh, who made sure she was on hand Friday as state police led Frein from his arraignment. "That everybody can continue on with their lives."

In fact, with Frein behind bars, plans for trick-or-treating in Barrett Township were back on.

A team of federal marshals stumbled across Frein during a sweep about 30 miles from the barracks where he allegedly opened fire, authorities said. He did not put up a fight and had no gun on him, but had weapons stashed in the hangar, state police said.

Authorities placed Frein in Dickson's handcuffs and put him in Dickson's squad car for the ride back to the Blooming Grove barracks.

Asked about Frein's wounds, state police Lt. Col George Bivens said that there was no struggle with law enforcement and that Frein got hurt while he was on the run.

Bivens put the cost of the manhunt at about $10 million.

Authorities said they were trying to reconstruct his time on the run. They believe Frein broke into cabins and other places for food and shelter, and he evidently found time to shave — he had a neatly trimmed goatee when he was caught.

With the manhunt over, officials began calculating the economic toll to motels, restaurants, shops and other businesses that lost money as tourists avoided the search area and locals stayed home.

Monroe County asked business owners to fill out a "snapshot of their losses" — a possible prelude to a disaster declaration and state and federal aid.

Peggy Fylstra, whose crafts and florist shop in the village of Mountainhome suffered during the manhunt, said it "felt like I hit the lottery" when Frein was caught. "That's what an impact it's made on business owners."

 

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ASTRID GALVAN

TUCSON, Arizona (AP) — 

 

The number of people who died trying to cross the U.S.-Mexico border has dropped to the lowest level in 15 years as more immigrants turned themselves in to authorities in Texas and fewer took their chances with the dangerous trek across the Arizona desert.

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By Tania Carrizales,

Diana Carrizales,

Adriana Vidaurri,

Paloma Rios.

Andres Garza

 

Subburaj Kannan

Biology, SWTJC, EP

 

 

Students taking Biology for Non - Science Majors and Biology for Science Majors, classes at Southwest Texas Junior College at Eagle Pass have conducted a study on the current state of drought in the southwest region of Texas. 

The rationale is to empower the students to realize the global standing of students in the United States pursuing Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) and inspire, motivate and provide opportunities for proactive attitude and active engagement in their studies along with social awareness and responsibilities. 

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