Daily Nebraskan Thursday, November 4,1993 _ __- "■ Senate backs victim service By Matthew Waite Staff Reporter ASUN senators passed an emer gency resolution Wednesday in sup port of a new victim support service. The resolution, introduced by Gen eral Studies Sen. Mark Byars, sup ported the creation of the Victim Ser vices Center at the University of Ne braska-Lincoln. Byars said be cause of recent events—includ ing the assault of UNL student Boon-Chung Ong on Oct. 17 and the ongoing trial of Roger Bjorklund, who is charged with first degree murder in the slaying of UNL student Candice Harms — the ser vice needed recognition from the Association of Students of the Uni versity of Nebraska. “We need to realize that there are victims of these crimes, and they need our support,” Byars said. Lisa Cauble, coordinator of vic tim services, told ASUN senators the center provided a place for victims to talk about their experiences. She said all information given by victims and about victims would be confidential. Cauble said part of the reason she was heading up the program was be cause of her past experiences with crime. She said she was the first carjacking victim in Lincoln, and her brother was kidnapped. “At that time there were no sup port systems for families,” Cauble said. Byars brought the measure before the senate after listening to a presen tation by Cauble. Cauble said the service had helped between 35 and 40 people, and they had talked to hundreds more. “The presentation had an impact on me,” Byars said. He said the issue was fresh in the senators’ minds, which contributed to the measure be ing brought up on emergency status. Cauble said she appreciated ASUN’s support. The program is a pilot program and is up for review and renewal at the end of the aca demic year. “It’s nice to know that students arc aware of recent incidents and arc Pep Rally Today Broyhill Fountain 6:30 pm Sponsored by: r KLIN Husker Trivia win Orange Bowl T-Shirts \ Spirit Contest J win Whopper food coupons Club . • from Burger King Stay warm, Stay ouisde The Synchilla* Snap-T is a Patagonia i staple. Original (11-oz.) Synchilla A pile is an excellent insulation layer: it's exceedingly warm for its weight, and it's quick to dry. ModifiedY-Joint " sleeves keep the waist down when your arms go up. Nylon Lycra® trim at the cuffs and hem i dries quickly. THE MOOSE’S TOOTH 4007 O STREET, LINCOLN, NE 68810 Winter Hours: Mon.-Wed. 10-7; Thur. 10-8; Fri. 10-6 Lycra is a registered trademark of Dupont 489-4849 Photo by CASEY SHEAHAN C Patagonia, Inc. 1992 concerned enough to try to do some thing about them,” Cauble said. “With the support that I have so far from the campus community, (the program) will remain.” Byars said the resolution was ben eficial to both ASUN and victim ser vices. He said it helped get the word out about the service and it helped students, which Byars said was ASUN’s responsibility. “This was a simple and effective way to do that,” Byars said. The general education require ments bill that was scheduled for de bate was pulled off the agenda be cause ASUN President Keith Benes was unable to attend the meeting. Benes said he pulled the bill from the agenda because he had to attend the NU Board of Regents presiden tial selection committee meeting. He said the bill would be brought before the senate next week, when he would be able to answer questions about the bill. Benes said he was trying to get someone from the Academic Affairs Office to speak to senators about the bill. Bjorklund Continued from Page 1 Endacott adjourned the court shortly after the jury read a letter police say Bjorklund sent to Candice Harms’ father, Stan Harms, on Dec. 24. Bjorklund is on trial for the mur der of Candice Harms, a University of Nebraska-Lincoln student. In the letter, police say, Bjorklund expressed regret about what happened to Candice Harms and said he hoped to meet her parents in heaven. He asked the Harmses to forgive him in the letter, police say, but he did not specify what he needed to be forgiv en for. Stan Harms said when he received the letter, he did not read it. He said he turned the letter over to police the following day, and he received a pho tocopy to read. Prosecutors spent the afternoon session questioning those who were involved with delivering the letter, including James McKinney, former acting director of the Lancaster Coun ty Corrections Department. McKinney, now with the Iowa Department of Corrections, said he found out about the letter four days after it was dated. Helvie said because McKinney didn’t see the letter being written, he mTravis Heying/DN A fraternity member attempts to block the camera filming the scene of the accident Wednesday. Fall Continued from Page 1 UNL Police Chief Ken Cauble said Knoll was conscious and breathing when he was taken to Lincoln General Hospital. Cauble called the incident an accident. Details of Knoll’s injuries were not known Wednesday evening. As emergency teams placed Knoll in an ambulance, fraternity members attempted to use shirts and their bodies to block televi sion news cameramen from film ing their house and Knoll’s stretch er. After Knoll was taken to the hospital, university and Lincoln police officers walked around the inside and outside of the house, shining flashlights on the open third-floor bathroom window. could not know the circumstances under which it had been written or whether police influenced the writ ing process. Much of the morning testimony centered on handwriting analysts, who were asked to conclude whether Bjorklund wrote the letter. Marlin Rauscher, a handwriting and fingerprint expert with the Lin coln Police Department, testified he thought Bjorklund wrote the letter. “It is my opinion no one other than Roger Dale Bjorklund wrote the letter and the envelope,” he said. Rauscher compared the writing in the letter with a sample of Bjorklund’s handwriting police obtained Sept. 29 through a court order. Helvie objected to the handwrit ing sample being entered as evidence because he said pol ice did not inform Bjorklund of his Miranda rights be fore he was instructed to fill out the form. The jury was removed from the court for a special hearing about the issue. Endacott then overruled Helvie’s objection. During the hearing, Lincoln Po lice Department Sgt. Sandy Myers said she and Detective Greg Sorensen met Bjorklund the evening of Sept. 29 at the county jail. Bjorklund agreed to fill out the court-ordered handwriting form, but only after the Country Music Awards television show was over. “He said he lived for this one show, this time of year,” Myers said, “and he wasn’t going to miss it.” When officers came back at 10 p.m., Myers said Bjorklund told them he wanted to fill out the form at the Lincoln Police Department, where he could have a soda and cigarettes. Bjorklund also wrote down vari ous sentences and phrases the offic ers dictated to him. Myers said after one sentence, Bjorklund wrote, “Scott Barney is a liar.” Police say Barney, another man charged in the slaying of Candice Harms, told them Bjorklund killed Harms. On another section, Bjorklund was instructed to write a particular pas sage from the letter police say he sent to Harms’ parents: “I hope to meet you and your family in God’s kingdom.” Instead, Myers said, Bjorklund wrote, “I hope to meet you and your family and not Scott Barney in God’s kin r >m.” trial will resume Thursday at 8:30 a.m. Bjorklund trial attracts crowds By Dionne Searcey Smior Reporter___ Each day a steady stream of trial watchers drifts in and out of Court room No. 2 on the third floor of the County-City Building. City employees drop in to hear 10 minutes of testimony during their coffee breaks. Lincoln residents con ducting legal business carry new li cense plates and parking ticket re ceipts into the courtroom. Law stu dents observe how the real-world le gal system works. Roger Bjorklund’s first-degree murder trial has drawn a daily crowd of ordinary people, all hoping to ful fill their own needs by attending. Tracey Williams, a University of Nebraska-Lincoln junior in pre-nurs ing, said she went to the trial because the death of UNL student Candice Harms made her face reality. “It could happen to anyone,” Wil liams said. ‘This could be a trial for my sister.” Williams had never been to a mur der trial, she said, and didn’t know what to expect. “It seemed like it was kind of slow,” she said. Terri Teuber, a reporter for KOLN/KGIN-TV, said many people expected to sec an action-packcd tri al. “They expect it to be glamorous and fast-moving like what they see on TV,” she said. Instead, she said, spectators find a meticulous process of foundation testimony. -M They expect It to be glamorous and fast moving like what they see on TV. __ Teuber reporter, KOLN/KGIN -f» ~ Nonetheless, Teuber said the trial was well-attended by Lincoln resi dents. “As far as the courts go, it’s gained more attention than any trial in 10 years,” Teuber said. Ryan Osentowski, 19, went to Tuesday’s hearing with other clients of the Nebraska Services for the Vi sually Impaired. Osentowski said he had been keeping up with the latest radio and TV reports of the trial. Jeremy Webster, a 17-year-old senior at Lincoln High School, expe rienced his first murder trial Tuesday as he watched Bjorklund sit in the courtroom. “He’s kind of scary, that guy is,” he said. Webster’s criminal justice class attended the trial to get a firsthand view of the legal system. Webster said he thought most high school students didn’t know much about the case. “They know what happened,” he said, “but they don’t know the de tails." On UNL’s campus, student aware ness about the Harms incident has increased since the trial began, Judith Kriss, director of the UNL Women’s Center, said. Kriss said several students had called the Women’s Center with con cerns about the trial. “As a result of Candi’s disappear ance and the horrible details of the murder, all of our lives are differ ent,” she said. “I don’t know anyone who walks with the same sense of safety as before.” Women are more afraid to walk to their cars, she said, and even feel threatened in their own driveways. “I’ve talked to women who have this kind of heightened sense of fear,’ Kriss said. The UNL Women’s Center offered a support group Monday for students with concerns about the trial. The group was to discuss safety and self defense, she said, but no one came. “It’s not one of those programs you offer with the hope of filling the room,” Kriss said. Women, she said, probably were meeting their emotional needs with friends or family members. Still, Kriss said, a counselor will be available from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. every Monday during the trial. “We wanted to have a place where people could come with any concern —Tear for their own personal safety, concern about the senseless violence against women,” she said.