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A martial arts enthusiast pulls a vehicle with a rope connected to his eye sockets during a performance in Hefei, Anhui province November 30, 2009. Picture taken November 30, 2009. REUTERS/China Daily

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    Man faces murder trial for 1966 shooting

    PHILADELPHIA
    Thu Feb 28, 2008 11:21am EST
    Police officer Walter T. Barclay Jr.in an undated photo courtesy of the Philadelphia Police Department. A Pennsylvania man who shot and wounded Barclay more than 41 years ago will stand trial for his murder following the officer's death last year, a judge ruled on Wednesday. REUTERS/Philadelphia Police Department/Handout

    PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - A Pennsylvania man who shot and wounded a police officer more than 41 years ago will stand trial for his murder following the officer's death last year, a judge ruled on Wednesday.

    Oddly Enough

    Prosecutors say the victim, Walter Barclay, died of injuries directly linked to the 1966 shooting.

    William Barnes, 71, who already served around 20 years in prison for the shooting and other offenses, was rearrested last year and charged with murder following Barclay's death.

    Prosecutors say a urinary tract infection that afflicted Barclay was a direct result of his paralysis. That in turn was caused when Barnes shot him in the spine during an attempted break-in on November 27, 1966.

    Judge Bradley Moss of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas sided with prosecutors, although he noted that he had not found any other case in the United States in which a suspect had been charged with murder so long after causing an injury.

    "It seems to me the Commonwealth has met its burden in this matter," Moss said after a two-hour hearing. He set a trial date of March 19.

    Defense attorney Bobby Hoof said prosecutors failed to prove the police officer had not died from intervening causes between the shooting and his death in August 2007 at age 64.

    He argued that Barclay had been involved in two car accidents after the shooting and also fell out of his wheelchair, all of which could have contributed to his death.

    Medical examiners did not perform an autopsy and had not ruled out possibilities he might have died from other causes, Hoof said.

    Medical Examiner Ian Hood told the court that an autopsy had not been carried out because medical records clearly indicated Barclay died from the urinary tract infection that stemmed from his paralysis. He reported the cause of death to be homicide.

    (Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Alan Elsner)



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