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Riley Troyer is a University of Iowa PHD candidate involved with an upcoming rocket mission which will probe pulsating aurora.
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The Number 1-ranked University of Alaska Fairbanks rifle team is headed into the final competitions of the season with a national title in its sights.
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A Fairbanks jury convicted Steven H. Downs, 47 guilty of raping and killing Sophie Sergie in a dormitory bathroom in 1993.This story will be updated.
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Lawyers in the Sophie Sergie murder trial stepped the jury through evidence and testimony in four hours of closing remarks on Monday. 47-year old Steven Downs is charged with 1st degree murder and 1st degree sexual assault. Judge Thomas Temple turned the case over to the jury, who started their deliberations Monday afternoon.This next story refers to violent acts and may be disturbing for some listeners.
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Another DNA expert examines a 2012 report and says it allows for the possibility of another man at crime. This story refers to violent acts and may be disturbing for some listeners.
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Defense attorneys for defendant Steven Downs raised many theories about alternative suspects who may have killed Sophie Sergie in a college dormitory bathroom in 1993.
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Law enforcement officers who arrested Steven Downs for the 1993 rape and murder of Sophie Sergie, testified at Downs’s trial in Fairbanks Wednesday, February 2. Downs was a University of Alaska Fairbanks student who lived in the UAF dorm where Sergie’s body was found. This story talks of violence and might be traumatizing to some listeners.
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Some of the stories from the Sophie Sergie murder trial are potentially traumatizing to listeners. Testimony about the bullet taken from the victim, fingerprints found on the scene, and DNA from the victim's chest. Expert witnesses noted tests were inconclusive to link to the defendant.
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Old college friends of Steven Downs, the defendant in the Sophie Sergie murder trial, testified they never thought he was a dangerous person capable of hurting anyone.
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Some of the stories from the Sophie Sergie murder trial are potentially traumatizing to listeners. Criminologists from the Alaska Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory reviewed their work to identify semen, and later DNA, on the victim.