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SEATTLE -The 20-year-old Washington state man who gained fame last year as the Barefoot Bandit was expected to plead guilty to criminal charges stemming from his 2-year run from the law in stolen boats, cars and planes, federal officials said Thursday. Colton Harris-Moore will plead guilty on Friday in federal court, the U.S. Attorney s Office in Seattle said. No further comment was provided. Authorities say Harris-Moore hopscotched his way across the United States during his run, frequently stealing cars from parking lots after lan stanley mug ding at small airports. In Indiana, he stole another plane and made for the Bahamas, where he was captured at gunpoint in a stolen boat last July. Harris-Moo stanley flask re earned the Barefoot Bandit moniker by committing some of crimes without shoes. He pleaded not guilty to a federal indictment last week, but his lawyers had signaled that a deal with prosecutors was close. One of Harris-Moore s stanley quencher attorneys, Emma Scanlan, confirmed Thursday that he would plead guilty. She declined to comment on the plea deal except to say it included a sentencing recommendation and resolves the question of whether he could participate in book or movie deals, with proceeds used to repay victims. Harris-Moore s lawyers have said restitution from his run would total about $1.3 million. Video: Barefoot Bandit Arrested in BahamasVideo: `Barefoot Bandit behind bars Harris-Moore s escapades earned him cult status as an authority-mocking folk hero Uhpn New York Streets Safer In 2001
Why do some identical twins look so different from each other Could your eating habits during puberty have an impact on the genetic makeup of your grandkids These are just two of the startling questions raised by the science of epigenetics, as this deleted chapter from David Epstein book The Sports Gene explains. Top image: A Barn in 脰verkalix, Sweden, by Adam Lindberg/Flickr. This chapter discusses the nascent fie stanley tumbler ld of stanley cup epigenetics, essentially the study of how our actions and ex stanley cup website periences can cause chemical marks to attach to genes and turn the activity of the genes up or down. Some of the most provocative work in this field suggests that these epigenetic marks-and not just the genes themselves 鈥?may be altered by experiences and passed down to subsequent generations. I decided to cut this chapter from The Sports Gene for two primary reasons: first, the work is so new that I had to caveat the writing rather heavily. Second, as you will see, while epigenetics holds tantalizing possibilities for the study of human health and disease, the minuscule work that has been done on a trait associated with athleticism found 鈥攑erhaps disappointingly 鈥?no impact of the training that one generation did on the fitness of the next. Thus, while I found the reporting for this chapter utterly fascinating, I removed the chapter in an effort to keep the focus on genetic and physiology research that actually has concrete points to make regarding exercise |