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had a few more advantages -- involved adults, good
schools, a supportive community and a safe neighborhood."That was the difference
between growing up and becoming a lawyer, a mother and first lady
of the United States and being shot dead at the age of
15," Mrs. Obama said, her voice gripped with emotion.The speech was Mrs.
Obama's first public remarks on gun violence since the Sandy Hook shooting
in December took the lives of 20 students and six faculty and
reignited a national debate over gun control. But with the fate of
the administration's efforts still uncertain, the White House was mounting
an all-hands-on-deck push to keep the public engaged.The president delivered
a speech Monday in Connecticut, and 12 family members of Sandy Hook
victims joined him on the return flight to Washington and have since
been lobbying members of Congress. Vice President Joe Biden and Attorney
General Eric Holder promoted the plan Tuesday at the White House, and
Biden was set to make the case again Thursday on MSNBC's "Morning
Joe."The Senate was planning an initial vote Thursday to begin debating
gun legislation, with some Republicans attempting to block consideration
of the measure. Two pivotal senators announced a bipartisan deal Wednesday
to expand background checks to more gun sales, which could build support
for President Barack Obama's drive to tighten firearms laws. But the ultimate
fate of the legislation remains unclear with strong oppositio
This photo provided by the Denver Police Dept. shows deputy Matthew Andrews,
a Denver sheriff's deputy arrested after he was accused of helping an
escapee who left the county jail wearing a deputy's uniform, the sheriff's
department said Monday, April 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Denver Police Dept)The
Associated PressDENVER A Denver sheriff's deputy reportedly told co-workers
that he helped a felon escape the downtown jail because he had
been threatened and told there was a contract out on him and
his family.The new information was in court records obtained by The Denver
Post (http://tinyurl.com/cp3r525 ).Deputy Matthew Andrews faces felony charges
that he aided in Sunday night's escape of Felix Trujillo, who spent
three days on the run after walking out of the jail in
a sheriff's deputy's baseball cap and jacket.Trujillo was in court Thursday
morning and remained in jail on $100,000 bond.The court records obtained
by the Post show he faces charges of escape and kidnapping. Court
officials refused to turn over the court records Thursday, saying they have
been sealed by a judge.
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