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And that’s part of the process

Graham « is a problem individual and Lindsay was trying to help her out, » Chris Sullivan told the New York Post.

Sullivan told the newspaper that Graham’s « mother got involved and became hysterical. »

« (Lindsay) may well have not been driving the car. This girl and her mother are letting Lindsay take the fall, but hopefully the truth will come out! That would get rid of most of the charges, » Sullivan said.

Now that Lohan is back in treatment, the method of treatment will have to be stepped up a notch, 부천 마사지 says Dr. Howard Samuels, executive director at the Wonderland rehab facility in West Hollywood.

« She’s becoming a professional, unfortunately, » Samuels said on The Early Show Thursday. « There are many people that we work with at wonderland that go in and out of treatment. We have so many people that have been to all the treatment centers. And that’s part of the process. So you can go at them harder because they’ve already been in so many treatment centers that you can start to identify their arrogance and their entitlement much more. »

Samuels says that Lohan will likely participate in group therapy, individual therapy and 12-step meetings.

« Really getting the individual to have an understanding that it’s not about them, that they are not the center of the universe. It’s not about « don’t you know who I am? »

Yanukovych Leads in Ukraine Election

Yanukovych went ahead and declared victory, but his opponent Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, a leader of Orange forces, rejected the exit poll data and said Sunday’s race was too close to call.

« It is too soon to draw any conclusions, » she said, urging supporters to fight for every ballot.

Ukraine’s Central Election Commission reported early Monday that opposition leader Yanukovych was leading Tymoshenko by 51.3 percent to 43.3 percent with 27.4 percent of the vote counted.

The National Election Poll exit survey predicted that after the count, Yanukovych would capture 48.5 percent of the vote to 45.7 percent for 부천 안마 Tymoshenko, with other voters mostly choosing « Against all. » The 2.8 percentage point gap is only slightly larger than the NEP’s margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percent.

The NEP poll initially showed Yanukovych with a 3.2 percentage point lead, but the later released revised figures. All other major exit polls had Yanukovych winning, some by larger margins.

The race narrowed sharply from the first round vote on Jan. 17, when Yanukovych held a 10 percent lead.

At the Yanukovych camp, top party officials broke into rapturous applause as they heard the exit polls announced, and Anna German, deputy head of Yanukovych’s Party of Regions, called on Tymoshenko to concede.

« The first rule for a true democrat is to accept defeat when that is the will of the people, » she said. « It is now Yulia Tymoshenko’s responsibility to do that. »

Tymoshenko has vowed to challenge a vote she claims was rigged by in Yanukovych’s favor, as it was in the 2004 elections that set off the Orange Revolution. After weeks of demonstrations, a court threw out the results of that 2000 vote contest and Yanukovych lost a court-ordered revote to Orange forces

Tymoshenko’s campaign chief Alexander Turchinov insisted Sunday there was evidence of fraud. « Intrigue still remains in place, we remain certain, » he said.

But Matyas Eorsi, head of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe’s election observation mission, called the balloting « calm » and « professional » and said there was no evidence the vote had been stolen.

« We are 100 percent sure that this election was legitimate, » Eorsi said. « All the international community, and even more important, the Ukrainian public can accept this result. »

A preliminary report by international monitors is expected later Monday.

Mikhail Okhendovsky, a member of Ukraine’s Central Election Commission, said the board had no evidence of large scale falsification but expects that the loser will challenge the results in court anyway.

« In keeping with the traditions of Ukrainian elections, the loser never accepts defeat, » he said before the polls closed.

The Central Election Commission projected the turnout among Ukraine’s 37 million voters at about 70 percent, 3.2 percentage points higher than the Jan. 17 first-round vote in which 18 candidates competed.

Early figures showed a heavier turnout in Yanukovych’s strongholds in Ukraine’s Russian-speaking east than in Tymoshenko’s districts in the country’s Ukrainian-speaking west.

Tymoshenko’s impassioned leadership of the 2004 Orange protests made her an international celebrity, and she fought hard in recent weeks to rekindle the heady emotions those days. At one point she debated an empty lectern to dramatize her opponent’s refusal to debate her.

She sought to depict herself as a populist whose appeal crossed Ukraine’s east-west divide but she bore the scars of five years of political battles with Yanukovych and her sometime Orange ally, outgoing President Viktor Yushchenko, and has struggled to cope with Ukraine’s severe economic crisis.

Ukraine has been among the hardest-hit nations in the global credit crunch. Its currency crashed in 2008, wiping out almost half of people’s savings, and the International Monetary Fund had to step in with a $16.4 billion bailout. GDP plunged more than 14 percent in 2009 and the country is expected to have only anemic growth this year, according to the World Bank.

As the election approached, Yanukovych, awkward when speaking in public, tread carefully, sticking mostly with photo opportunities and bland statements to try to hang onto his lead.

He would not be drawn into a Russia-versus-West debate, and pledged to balance ties between Ukraine’s diverse neighbors.

« Ukraine will never be a friend with Russia at the expense of Europe, or Europe at the expense of Russia, » said Boris Kolesnikov, deputy leader of Yanukovych’s Party of Regions. « That will guide the foreign policy under the Yanukovych presidency. »

But Yanukovych represents the hopes of many Russian speakers in eastern Ukraine, who feel they have been relegated to second-class status behind the urban elite who favored the Orange reform forces.

Yanukovych supporters have been camped out in front of the Central Election Commission headquarters and other key points in Kiev in an apparent effort to prevent Tymoshenko supporters from staging mass demonstrations like those of the Orange revolt.

If Yanukovych wins, it will be an impressive reversal of fortune. During the 2004 protests, foes cast him as a Kremlin lackey. But he battled back, serving for a time as prime minister under his main Orange adversary, Yushchenko.

He gained ground as voters said they were weary of broken promises, a dysfunctional economy and political chaos under the Orange government.

Casting his ballot in Kiev, once an Orange bastion, Yanukovych said the election would mark the « first step in overcoming the crisis. »

« The people of Ukraine deserve a better life, so I voted for positive changes, stability and a strong Ukraine, » he said.

Tymoshenko voted in her hometown, the industrial center of Dnipropetrovsk, in Yanukovych’s stronghold of eastern Ukraine.

« I voted for a new Ukraine — a beautiful and European Ukraine — and for people to live happily. I will serve Ukraine with all my heart, » Tymoshenko said, standing next to her husband.

Sunday’s vote may shift the balance of power in Ukraine, but it will not heal the country’s deep divisions.

« I am voting against the return of our Soviet past, » 40-year-old businessman Vladimir Khivrenko said at a polling station near the Maidan, the central square in Kiev, the capital. « Tymoshenko has promised us a new path to Europe, and I believe her. »

Tatyana Volodaschuk, 60, said she was sick of political uncertainty.

« I want stability and order, » she said. « Yanukovych offers us the guarantee of a normal life. »

Coq said the case would be assigned a judge and a verdict could take three months

The missionaries were taken to a downtown courthouse Friday to appear before an investigative judge in a closed hearing, said Jean-Louis Martens, 부천 안마 a senior Haitian judicial official.

They were escorted into the building one by one by Haitian police who covered their heads with a blue sheet so that they could not be photographed. None of the Americans responded to reporters’ shouted questions.

Defense attorney Edwin Coq told reporters he would ask the judge to grant the missionaries « provisional release, » a type of bail without money posted, until their trial, a date for which has not been established.

« I hope that they will be released today, » Coq said.

Who is Laura Silsby?Haiti Earthquake – Latest CoverageHaiti Quake: How You Can Help

The investigating judge charged the Americans on Thursday with kidnapping for trying to take 33 children across the border into the Dominican Republic on Jan. 29 without documentation.

Coq has said that the group’s leader, Laura Silsby, knew she couldn’t remove the youngsters without proper paperwork, but he characterized the other nine missionaries as unknowingly being caught up in actions they didn’t understand.

« They were naive. They had no idea what was going on and they did not know that they needed official papers to cross the border. But Silsby did, » he said.

Silsby waved to reporters Thursday but declined to answer questions as the missionaries were taken back to the holding cells where they have been held since Saturday. She had expressed optimism before the hearing. « We expect God’s will be done. And we will be released, » she said.

The missionaries’ detention has raised concerns among other countries including France, whose foreign ministry on Friday urged the Haitian government to quickly set up a bilateral commission to look into adoption procedures. French families have taken in 277 Haitian children since the quake.

Family members of the detained Americans released a statement late Thursday saying they were concerned about their relatives jailed in a foreign country.

« Obviously, we do not know details about what happened and didn’t happen on this mission, » the statement said. « However, we are absolutely convinced that those who were recruited to join this mission traveled to Haiti to help, not hurt, these children. »

A CBS News employee who witnessed Thursday’s court proceedings says Silsby told the judge: « We were trying to do what’s best for the children. »

When the judge asked, « Didn’t you know you were committing a crime? » Silsby quietly answered, « We are innocent. »

But CBS News correspondent Bill Whitaker reports there are serious questions tonight about Silsby’s motives. The 40-year-old business woman, who convinced members of Idaho’s Central Valley Baptist Church to follow her dream of an orphanage in Haiti, has a troubling financial history.

She’s been the subject of eight civil lawsuits, 14 for unpaid wages, Whitaker reports. Her Meridian, Idaho house is in foreclosure. She’s had at least nine traffic citations in the last 12 years including four for failing to register or insure her car.

The Baptist group, most of whose members are from two Idaho churches, had said they were rescuing abandoned children and orphans from a nation that UNICEF says had 380,000 youngsters in that plight even before the quake.

But at least two-thirds of the children involved in the case, ranging in age from 2 to 12, have parents, although the parents of some told The Associated Press they gave them up willingly because the missionaries promised the children a better life.

Each was charged with one count of kidnapping, which carries a sentence of five to 15 years in prison, and one of criminal association, punishable by three to nine years. Coq said the case would be assigned a judge and a verdict could take three months.

The magistrate, Mazard Fortil, left without making a statement. Social Affairs Minister Jeanne Bernard Pierre, who earlier harshly criticized the missionaries, declined to comment. The government’s communications minister, Marie-Laurence Jocelyn Lassegue, said only that the next court date had not been set.

« Obviously this is a matter for the Haitian judicial system, » U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told reporters Friday.

« We’re going to continue to provide support, as we do in every instance like this, to American citizens who have been charged and hope that this matter can be resolved in an expeditious way. But it is something that a sovereign nation is pursuing based on the evidence that it presented. »

Members of Idaho’s congressional delegation said in a statement Thursday that they are working to ensure the missionaries have access to legal help and medical attention.

Silsby had begun planning last summer to create an orphanage for Haitian children in the neighboring Dominican Republic. When the earthquake struck she recruited other church members, and the 10 spent a week in Haiti gathering children for their project.

Most of the children came from the ravaged village of Callebas, where people told the AP they handed over their children because they were unable to feed or clothe them after the quake. They said the missionaries promised to educate the children and let relatives visit.

Their stories contradicted Silsby’s account that the children came from collapsed orphanages or were handed over by distant relatives.

She also said the Americans believed they had obtained in the Dominican Republic all the documents needed to take the children out of Haiti.

The Dominican consul in Haiti, Carlos Castillo, told the AP on Thursday that the day the Americans departed for the border, Silsby visited him and said she had a document from Dominican migration officials authorizing her to take the children from Haiti.

Castillo said he warned Silsby that if she lacked adoption papers signed by the appropriate Haitian officials her mission would be considered child trafficking. « We were very specific, » he said.

(Photo: Evan Agostini/Getty Images) Lindsay wins acclaim for her work in the 2006 drama « Bobby. » Her second album, « A Little More Personal, (Raw), » goes gold

She’s only 21 years old, but Lindsay Lohan already has a long string of creative accomplishments and troubled times behind her. Take a look at some of the events in the life of the young star.

(Photo: Getty Images)

Lindsay Dee Lohan, first child of Michael and Dina Lohan, 청주 마사지 is born in New York.

Lindsay, age 3, debuts as a model. The adorably freckle-faced redhead was to pose in 100 print ads for Toys « R » Us.

Lindsay appears in many commercials, including Bill Cosby’s Jell-O ads, while growing up on Long Island’s tony North Shore. Her family is affluent but troubled: her father was to serve time in prison for securities fraud.

Lindsay joins the cast of the soap « Another World » as little Ali Fowler.

Lindsay wins critical notice in twin roles in a movie remake of « The Parent Trap. »

(Photo: Walt Disney Pictures)

With « Mean Girls, » Lindsay graduates from child star to teen sensation. « Rolling Stone » magazine notes that, due to rumors that she has had her breasts enlarged, photographers are aiming at her cleavage and editors are poring over the pics « as meticulously as the Zapruder film. »

(Photo: CBS)

Lindsay hosts the 2005 MTV Music Video Awards.

(Photo: Evan Agostini/Getty Images)

Lindsay wins acclaim for her work in the 2006 drama « Bobby. » Her second album, « A Little More Personal, (Raw), » goes gold. It features a song dramatizing her pain at her father’s treatment of his family. A spokesman acknowledges that she is attending Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.

(Photo: The Weinstein Company)

(Photo: Evan Agostini/Getty Images)

After leaving Hollywood’s Les Deux club at 3:30 a.m., Lindsay crashes a Mercedes convertible into a curb on Sunset Boulevard. Police may have found cocaine at the scene. She is arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence, and enters rehab again.

(Photo: Getty Images)

Lohan’s latest movie, « I Know Who Killed Me, » is set for release.

(Photo: AP)

©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.

They said the missionaries promised to educate the children and let relatives visit

The missionaries were taken to a downtown courthouse Friday to appear before an investigative judge in a closed hearing, said Jean-Louis Martens, a senior Haitian judicial official.

They were escorted into the building one by one by Haitian police who covered their heads with a blue sheet so that they could not be photographed. None of the Americans responded to reporters’ shouted questions.

Defense attorney Edwin Coq told reporters he would ask the judge to grant the missionaries « provisional release, » a type of bail without money posted, until their trial, a date for which has not been established.

« I hope that they will be released today, » Coq said.

Who is Laura Silsby?Haiti Earthquake – Latest CoverageHaiti Quake: How You Can Help

The investigating judge charged the Americans on Thursday with kidnapping for trying to take 33 children across the border into the Dominican Republic on Jan. 29 without documentation.

Coq has said that the group’s leader, Laura Silsby, knew she couldn’t remove the youngsters without proper paperwork, but he characterized the other nine missionaries as unknowingly being caught up in actions they didn’t understand.

« They were naive. They had no idea what was going on and they did not know that they needed official papers to cross the border. But Silsby did, » he said.

Silsby waved to reporters Thursday but declined to answer questions as the missionaries were taken back to the holding cells where they have been held since Saturday. She had expressed optimism before the hearing. « We expect God’s will be done. And we will be released, » she said.

The missionaries’ detention has raised concerns among other countries including France, whose foreign ministry on Friday urged the Haitian government to quickly set up a bilateral commission to look into adoption procedures. French families have taken in 277 Haitian children since the quake.

Family members of the detained Americans released a statement late Thursday saying they were concerned about their relatives jailed in a foreign country.

« Obviously, we do not know details about what happened and didn’t happen on this mission, » the statement said. « However, we are absolutely convinced that those who were recruited to join this mission traveled to Haiti to help, not hurt, these children. »

A CBS News employee who witnessed Thursday’s court proceedings says Silsby told the judge: « We were trying to do what’s best for the children. »

When the judge asked, « Didn’t you know you were committing a crime? » Silsby quietly answered, « We are innocent. »

But CBS News correspondent Bill Whitaker reports there are serious questions tonight about Silsby’s motives. The 40-year-old business woman, who convinced members of Idaho’s Central Valley Baptist Church to follow her dream of an orphanage in Haiti, has a troubling financial history.

She’s been the subject of eight civil lawsuits, 14 for unpaid wages, Whitaker reports. Her Meridian, Idaho house is in foreclosure. She’s had at least nine traffic citations in the last 12 years including four for failing to register or insure her car.

The Baptist group, most of whose members are from two Idaho churches, had said they were rescuing abandoned children and orphans from a nation that UNICEF says had 380,000 youngsters in that plight even before the quake.

But at least two-thirds of the children involved in the case, ranging in age from 2 to 12, have parents, although the parents of some told The Associated Press they gave them up willingly because the missionaries promised the children a better life.

Each was charged with one count of kidnapping, which carries a sentence of five to 15 years in prison, and 청주 마사지 one of criminal association, punishable by three to nine years. Coq said the case would be assigned a judge and a verdict could take three months.

The magistrate, Mazard Fortil, left without making a statement. Social Affairs Minister Jeanne Bernard Pierre, who earlier harshly criticized the missionaries, declined to comment. The government’s communications minister, Marie-Laurence Jocelyn Lassegue, said only that the next court date had not been set.

« Obviously this is a matter for the Haitian judicial system, » U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told reporters Friday.

« We’re going to continue to provide support, as we do in every instance like this, to American citizens who have been charged and hope that this matter can be resolved in an expeditious way. But it is something that a sovereign nation is pursuing based on the evidence that it presented. »

Members of Idaho’s congressional delegation said in a statement Thursday that they are working to ensure the missionaries have access to legal help and medical attention.

Silsby had begun planning last summer to create an orphanage for Haitian children in the neighboring Dominican Republic. When the earthquake struck she recruited other church members, and the 10 spent a week in Haiti gathering children for their project.

Most of the children came from the ravaged village of Callebas, where people told the AP they handed over their children because they were unable to feed or clothe them after the quake. They said the missionaries promised to educate the children and let relatives visit.

Their stories contradicted Silsby’s account that the children came from collapsed orphanages or were handed over by distant relatives.

She also said the Americans believed they had obtained in the Dominican Republic all the documents needed to take the children out of Haiti.

The Dominican consul in Haiti, Carlos Castillo, told the AP on Thursday that the day the Americans departed for the border, Silsby visited him and said she had a document from Dominican migration officials authorizing her to take the children from Haiti.

Castillo said he warned Silsby that if she lacked adoption papers signed by the appropriate Haitian officials her mission would be considered child trafficking. « We were very specific, » he said.

He and the other main rival quickly conceded defeat

Laura Chinchilla had 47 percent of the votes after a quarter of the ballots were counted. The closest contender, Otton Solis of the Citizens Action Party, had 23 percent. He and the other main rival quickly conceded defeat.

Chinchilla, a protege of the current president, Nobel Peace Prize winner Oscar Arias, campaigned on a promise to continue the government’s free market economic policies.

Chinchilla, who served as vice president under Arias, needed 40 percent of the vote to avoid an April run-off.

Solis barely lost the presidential election to Arias in 2006, but many opposition voters went over to tax-bashing Libertarian candidate Otto Guevarra, who had just under 22 percent of the votes.

Solis congratulated Chinchilla on her apparent victory. « She is going to be the next president of Costa Rica, » he told supporters Sunday night. Guevarra offered congratulations to « our president, Laura Chinchilla. »

Arias’ economic policies brought Costa Rica into the Central American Free Trade Agreement with the United States and initiated trade relations with China after a 63-year association with Taiwan.

Critics of the government argued that Arias’ administration catered to big developers to boost the economy at the cost of the nation’s fragile ecosystems.

Both Solis and Guevarra portrayed Arias’ centrist National Liberation Party as stagnant and ridden with old-school Latin American cronyism.

But most Costa Ricans appeared reluctant to shake up the status quo in a country with relatively high salaries, the longest life expectancy in Latin America, 강남 안마 a thriving ecotourism industry and near-universal literacy.

Chinchilla, a 50-year-old mother and a social conservative who opposes abortion and gay marriage, appealed both to Costa Ricans seeking a fresh face in politics and those reluctant to risk the unknown.

As a female president, she would follow an increasingly common trend in many Latin American countries: Nicaragua, Panama, Chile and Argentina have all elected women as presidents.

Even voters on the margins of society backed Chinchilla.

Heizel Arias, a 24-year-old single mother who voted at a prison where she is serving an eight-year sentence for trying to smuggle drugs into a jail, said she cast her vote for Chinchilla.

« I voted for Laura Chinchilla because she has promised to fight for women, » Arias said. « She was the only one who visited us and told us her plans and I believe in her. »

The singer was found not guilty of the DUI charge in July 2006 but guilty of driving on a suspended license

McCready, 31, was arrested last week in Fort Myers, Fla., her hometown, on misdemeanor 강남 마사지 charges that she scratched her mother on the face and then resisted sheriff’s deputies.

She was on probation for obtaining the painkiller OxyContin fraudulently at a pharmacy in 2004. Still pending was another probation violation charge resulting from a drunken driving arrest in May 2005.

Deputy District Attorney General Derek Smith told The Tennessean that she violated probation in three ways: by being charged in a new offense; not reporting those charges immediately to her probation officer; and by the nature of the new assault charges.

The Williamson County Court Clerk said McCready’s previous attorney, Lee Dryer, had withdrawn as her lawyer. It was not yet known whether she had a new attorney.

McCready had a hit in 1996 with « Guys Do It All the Time. » Her album « Ten Thousand Angels » sold 2 million copies that year.

The singer was found not guilty of the DUI charge in July 2006 but guilty of driving on a suspended license. She then pleaded guilty to violating her probation but has petitioned to withdraw that plea.

also wants North Korea to end its ballistic missile program and get rid of all of its biological and chemical weapons

NEW YORK — North Korea staged the destruction of its Punggye-Ri nuclear site last month for the cameras, but dismantling North Korea’s entire nuclear program begins with verifying what they actually have in their arsenal.

1 year agoU.S. intelligence wants inspectors to access roughly 100 other sites, including Yongbyon, the nation’s main atomic complex just 50 miles north of Pyongyang, 강남 안마 as well as a factory in Chongsu, near the Chinese border, suspected of producing nuclear material.

« The only way to know if North Korea’s declarations are accurate is to verify them through on the ground presence, » said David Albright, a former weapons inspector.

North Korea granted such access as part of a Clinton-era diplomatic deal and agreed to freeze its nuclear material production. But North Korea kicked out the inspectors after the Bush administration accused it of cheating.

This time, the Trump administration wants to destroy the weapons itself with assistance from other countries. Components would then be shipped to a research lab in Tennessee. Depending on how truthful Kim Jong Un is, that process could take anywhere from two to 10 years.

Another challenge is monitoring North Korea’s nuclear scientists.

« They could steal documents that are highly classified. You have to work with those people to make sure that they’re not encouraged to go out and sell their skills to others, » Albright said.

In addition to giving up its nuclear weapons, the U.S. also wants North Korea to end its ballistic missile program and get rid of all of its biological and chemical weapons.

(Pakistan was one of just three countries which recognized the Taliban regime — the others being Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — and maintained an embassy in Kabul.) Following the 9/11 terror attacks, Pakistan’s former military ruler, General Pervez Musharraf, abandoned his country’s closely-built ties with the Taliban movement

Commenting on a report published earlier today in The New York Times, the Pakistani official confirmed the offer made by General Ashfaq Parvez Kiyani (Pakistan’s army chief of staff) during a visit last month to NATO headquarters in Belgium.

(Left: Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kiyani presides at a meeting of top military commanders in Rawalpindi, 강남 마사지 Pakistan in this October 2009 file photo.)

Judge Bernard Saint-Vil finished questioning the Americans on Wednesday and now must transmit his recommendation to the prosecutor, lawyer Gary Lassade toldd the AP

A Haitian judge has decided to release 10 American missionaries accused of kidnapping children in Haiti, Reuters news agency reported Wednesday afternoon, siting a « judicial source ».

The judge decided the Americans had no « criminal intentions » when they tried to take the children out of Haiti, according to Reuters’ report.

A defense lawyer for the Americans, 청주 마사지 however, tells The Associated Press that the judge deciding whether the Baptist group should face trial for attempting to take a busload of children out of the country is probably ready to make his ruling, but has not yet decided what that ruling will be.

Judge Bernard Saint-Vil finished questioning the Americans on Wednesday and now must transmit his recommendation to the prosecutor, lawyer Gary Lassade toldd the AP.

The prosecutor could appeal if the judge recommended dropping charges, but the judge has the last say, the attorney told The Associated Press on Wednesday. He said he expected the judge to issue that final decision Thursday.

Haiti Earthquake – Latest CoverageHaiti Relief: How You Can Help

« The judge will not take a decision before he sends his finding to the prosecutor, » Lassade told the AP.

The Americans, most from an Idaho Baptist group, were charged last week with child kidnapping and criminal association after being arrested Jan. 29 trying to take 33 children, ages 2 to 12, across the border to an orphanage they were trying to set up in the Dominican Republic.

The day after the group’s arrest, its leader, Laura Silsby of Meridian, Idaho, told the AP that the children were obtained either from orphanages or from distant relatives. She said only children who were found not to have living parents or relatives who could care for them might be put up for adoption.

Who is Laura Silsby?

However, at least 20 of the children are from a single village and have living parents. Some of the parents told the AP they willingly turned over their children to the missionaries on the promise the Americans would educate them and allow relatives to visit.

Saint-Vil questioned at least two of the parents Wednesday as well as the 10 Americans.

In a brief conversation afterward through cell bars in the stuffy, grimy jail where they have been held, the missionaries refused to be interviewed by the AP.

« We’ve said all we’re going to say for now. We don’t want to talk now, » Silsby said. « Maybe tomorrow. »

The women were held separately from the men, who shared their cell with nine Haitian men, some of whom played checkers on the cell floor.

« We will not talk unless our lawyer is present, » said Paul Thompson, pastor of the Eastside Baptist Church in Twin Falls, Idaho. Lassade represents Thompson’s cousin, Jim Allen of Amarillo, Texas.

A Dallas attorney for Allen, Hiram Sasser, told the AP that his client was recruited just 48 hours before the group left last month for the Dominican Republic on what Silsby termed an emergency rescue mission.

« He did not know many of the other people who were on the mission trip, or what other people were going to do, or about paperwork, » Sasser said.

Silsby had decided last summer to create an orphanage in the Dominican Republic and in November registered the nonprofit New Life Children’s Refuge foundation in Idaho.

After Haiti’s catastrophic Jan. 12 earthquake she accelerated the plan and recruited her fellow missionaries. Silsby told the AP she was only interested in saving suffering children.

She told the AP after her arrest, however, that she did not have all the Haitian papers required to take the children out of the country.

A Dominican diplomat who said she visited him the same day the missionaries tried to take the children out of the country told the AP that he warned her that without those papers she could be arrested.