Cop guilty in robbery case: Detroit detective helped steal from bank.

From: Detroit Free Press (Detroit, MI) | Date: March 23, 2006 | Copyright information

Byline: David Ashenfelter

Mar. 23--A suspended Detroit homicide detective and his brother were found guilty Wednesday of plotting bank robberies in metro Detroit in 2002. A 12-member jury in U.S. District Court in Detroit deliberated nearly two days before convicting Walter Bates, 48, of Southfield and his brother, Albert Bates, 39, of Detroit. Both were convicted of conspiring to rob banks. They were found guilty of aiding and abetting the robbery of a Comerica ba...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Bank-robbing cop gets time: Detroit homicide sergeant protests.
Detroit Free Press (Detroit, MI) ; ... ASHENFELTER at 313-223-4490 or ashenf@freepress.com. Copyright (c) 2006, Detroit Free Press Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News. For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write ...
FOR THE RECORD
The Boston Globe ; * Correction: Because of an editing error, a photo caption in Globe South Oct. 12 incorrectly identified street minister Albert Bates.
Late, great geographers.(Henry Walter Bates)(Brief Article)
Geographical ; Henry Walter Bates (1825-1892) British naturalist and long-term insect-catcher in the Amazonian Basin, Bates first identified animal mimicry What is Henry Walter Bates famous for? Bates' most well-known discovery is the principle of Batesian mimicry -- when an animal disguises itself as another
Correction.(News)
The Boston Herald ; In a story about street preacher Albert Bates, the Boston Herald misidentified him, using another preacher's name in a paragraph about Bates' illness and absence from Boston's Combat Zone in recent years. The Herald regrets the error.
Albert Bates Lord, 78 Was Slavic professor at Harvard
The Boston Globe ; Albert Bates Lord, professor emeritus of Slavic languages, literature and folklore at Harvard University, died of pancreatic cancer on Monday at the New England Baptist Hospital. He was 78 and lived in Cambridge. Mr. Lord's books include "Serbo-Croatian Folk Songs" (with Bela Bartok, 1951), "The