The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_9378
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT2) LUBBOCK, Texas -- Oct. 18, 2003 -- PLAGUE-RESEARCHER -- Dr. Thomas C. Butler, left, then chief of Texas Tech University's infectious diseases division, was charged in January with lying about 30 vials of plague bacteria. Butler and with his lawyer, Jonathan Turley, right, who says Butler is not guilty. According to court documents, Butler now asserts that while he may have accidentally destroyed the vials, he has no memory of doing so. But while the fate of the vials remains a mystery, two things are clear. First, Butler, 62, is in serious legal and professional jeopardy. Butler and Turley in Lubbock during a consultation in Texas, Oct. 17, 2003. (David C. Bowser/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2003-10-18
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
David C. Bowser/The New York Times/Redux
15373654
0,62MB
25cm x 17cm by 300dpi
17, 18, 2003, 30, 62, A, ABOUT, ACCIDENTALLY, ACCORDING, AND, ARE, ASSERTS, BACTERIA, BOWSER, BUT, BUTLER, CHARGED, CHIEF, CLEAR, CONSULTATION, COURT, DAVID, DESTROYED, DISEASES, DIVISION, DOCUMENTS, DOING, DR, DURING, FATE, FIRST, GUILTY, HAS, HAVE, HE, HIS, IN, INFECTIOUS, IS, JANUARY, JEOPARDY, JONATHAN, LAWYER, LEFT, LEGAL, LUBBOCK, LYING, MAY, MEDIAXPRESS, MEMORY, MYSTERY, NEW, NO, NOT, NOW, NYT2, OF, PLAGUE, PLAGUE-RESEARCHER, PROFESSIONAL, REDUX, REMAINS, RIGHT, SAYS, SERIOUS, SO, TECH, TEXAS, THAT, THE, THEN, THINGS, THOMAS, TIMES, TO, TURLEY, TWO, UNIVERSITY, VIALS, WAS, WHILE, WHO, WIECK, WITH, YORK,