Para la información y difusió de actividades de emergencia y desastres en la república dominicana.
orning on the Las Vegas Strip. Furlong believes the latter three fled Carson City on Friday after news broke of McCune's disappearance."At this point, we believe all four took part in his murder and disappearance," Furlong told The Associated Press. "We anticipate that the district attorney's office will amend the criminal complaint to also charge (Garcia and Blackmore) with murder."It wasn't immediately clear whether any of the four had an attorney, and the Las Vegas and Carson City jails don't make inmates available to the media for comment. The three suspects in Las Vegas are expected to be returned to Carson City within a week, Furlong said.McCune had held his position since December 2009 and worked similar jobs for two decades before that, said Nevada Division of Insurance spokesman Jake Sunderland.As head of the division's corporate and financial affairs section, McCune worked to ensure the solvency of insurance companies in the state. He was charged with ensuring each company had sufficient money in their reserves to cover all claims and obligations.McCune was single and without any known children, Furlong said, and there was no forced entry at his home.The sheriff said the suspects were spotted in the area of McCune's apartment. He credited their arrests to "relentless" detective work and "some great tips from a lot of people and a lot of businesses."While authorities have not found McCune's pickup truck, they located its licens A North Carolina lawmaker says he regrets any embarrassment caused by a resolution that was proposed and defeated - this week that would have given the state the right to declare an official religion.The resolution was filed Monday by two Republican legislators and co-signed by 11 others.The bill was filed in response to a lawsuit filed in March by the American Civil Liberties Union against the Rowan County Board of Commissioners, which court records show opened 97 percent of its meetings in 2007 with Christian prayers. The ACLU accused the panel of violating the First Amendment by routinely praying to Jesus Christ.One of the North Carolina bills sponsors, Rep. Harry Warren, said the now-dead resolution was poorly written. It declared that states are sovereign from federal oversight and could independently "make laws respecting an establishment of religion."Warren says he only intended to allow Rowan County officials to continue opening meetings with prayer, not to establish a state religion.The commissioners, who deliver the prayers themselves, routinely call on Jesus Christ and refer to other sectarian beliefs during invocations, the ACLU wrote in a statement.
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