■UNITED STATES
Man jailed over laser beam
A California man who aimed a laser beam at two aircraft as they approached an airport has been sentenced to two-and-a-half years in federal prison for disrupting the flights. The US Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles said Dana Christian Welch, 37, of Orange, who was sentenced on Monday, was the first person in the US to be convicted at trial of interfering with pilots by aiming lasers at their planes. Authorities said Welch aimed a handheld laser at two Boeing jets as the passenger planes were about to land at John Wayne Airport on the night of May 21 last year. The laser beam struck one pilot in the eye, causing “flash blindness,” and interfered with the pilots’ ability to land the other plane.
■UNITED STATES
Maine rejects gay wedding
Maine voters have torpedoed a state law that would have allowed gay couples to marry. With 84 percent of the precincts reporting, gay marriage foes had 53 percent of the vote on Tuesday. The outcome amounts to a defeat for the gay rights movement — particularly since it occurred in a northeastern New England state, the corner of the country most supportive of gay marriage. At issue was a law passed by the Maine legislature last spring that would have legalized same-sex marriage. The law was put on hold after conservatives launched a petition drive to repeal it in a referendum. Gay marriage has now lost in all 31 states in which it has been put to a popular vote.
■UNITED STATES
No bids for ‘Monroe’ crypt
An auction for the crypt above the final resting place of Marilyn Monroe has ended without receiving a single offer. The unusual item at the Westwood Village Memorial Park was offered for sale on auction site eBay for a minimum of US$500,000. But the listing ended over the weekend without a single bid, in sharp contrast to an earlier auction, which closed for US$4.6 million before the winner pulled out. The crypt had been owned by Monroe’s ex-husband Joe DiMaggio, who later sold it to entrepreneur Richard Poncher.
■UNITED STATES
Mom, daughter admit theft
In exchange for jail time, a woman and her daughter agreed to stand outside a courthouse for four-and-a-half hours on Tuesday holding signs saying they stole a gift card from a nine-year-old girl on her birthday. Because Evelyn Border, 56, and Tina Griekspoor, 35, agreed to hold the signs, Bedford County District Attorney Bill Higgins said he would ask for probation instead of jail when they plead guilty to the theft.
■GUATEMALA
Horse race turns rowdy
Despite a drinking ban, mayhem erupted at a traditional Mayan horse race on Sunday, with riders falling off their horses and drunken spectators stumbling through the mountain village. Hundreds of tourists and locals gathered for the annual spectacle in Todo Santos Cuchumatan to cheer the dozens of riders charging back and forth along a 100m length of road for up to seven hours. But the macho test of stamina was marred, as it has been in the past, by the copious amount of homemade spirits the riders consume. At least two Mayan riders fell off their horses during this year’s race, and one was carried away by bystanders after being trampled in the mud. Another man walked away from the track with a bloody face. “People here aren’t able to hold their drink, if they have one drink, they just continue until they’re so drunk they want to hit someone,” village Mayor Modesto Mendez said.



