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<center>This email was intended for abel-tasman@coredump.buug.de
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Jan. 30, 2014: Family and friends watch as Dewey Jones, left, speaks
to the media after a hearing before Summit County Common Pleas Court
Judge Mary Margaret Rowlands in Akron, Ohio.Michael Chritton/APAKRON, Ohio
Charges were dismissed Thursday against a northeast Ohio man who served
about 20 years in prison for a 1993 killing but maintained his
innocence.A judge ordered a new trial last year for Dewey Jones of
Akron after tests showed his DNA didn't match evidence at the scene.Prosecutors
filed to dismiss the charges, noting that witnesses have died and evidence
has degraded."We basically looked at the case as it stands today and
determined that we didn't think that we could, for the second time,
prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt," said Jill Del Greco, a
spokeswoman for the Ohio attorney general's office.Jones told WEWS-TV he
felt overwhelmed and said he knew such a day would come."I just
never thought it would take this long," said Jones, 51. "The truth
is the truth, and it always comes out."Until late last year, Jones
was imprisoned for the robbery and slaying of 71-year-old Neal Rankin, a
Goodyear retiree who Jones said was a family friend. Jones said he
wasn't involved in the killing and had no knowledge about it."I sure
would like to know who I did 20 years for," he told
WEWS. "I wish I knew what the whole truth was."The judge hasn't
decided whether to dismiss the charges with or without prejudice, the latter
of which w
n Emily, who lives in Indiana. She
was prescribed generic Xanax at age 25, a few months after she'd
had a baby. She was filled with anxiety, often irrational."I worried that
someone would feed her something she might choke on," she recalled.When
the drug didn't help and she became desperate, she admitted herself to
a psychiatric ward; during the week she was there, relatives cared for
her little girl.Emily was taken off alprazolam and put on the generic
form of Klonopin, which is slower-acting. After being released, she followed
up with her doctor, who continued her on that drug, but Emily
didn't feel much better on it. Her anxiety attacks persisted."Every day
was a struggle," she said.After several months, she started looking for
other doctors to get her off the pills. One wanted her to
go cold turkey, but she'd been reading up online and knew the
dangers of benzo withdrawal."Once you've been on Xanax or similar drugs
for a month or more, you may need to taper off them
gradually," Birndorf explained.Tapering is a stepladder approach that involves
slowly decreasing your dose by tiny increments. It may also include switching
from a faster-acting benzo like Xanax to a slower one, such as
Klonopin, as the hospital had Emily do."If you've been on a high
dose for years, tapering from benzos can possibly take much longer than
with other drugs, like SSRIsmaybe even a full year," Birndorf said.Sometimes,
she points out, patients don't comply
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