'Honeymoon Killer' Gabe Watson Returns to U.S. to Likely Face Retrial
An American referred to in media reports as the "Honeymoon Killer" returned to the U.S. today, where he could face retrial for drowning his newlywed wife while scuba diving near Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Gabe Watson, 33, arrived denali jackets at Los Angeles International Airport today escorted by three Queensland police officers and was immediately taken into U.S. custody. Earlier this month, Watson, a U.S. citizen and Alabama native, completed an 18-month prison term in Australia after pleading guilty to the manslaughter of his wife Tina Watson, 26, in 2003. The cheap canada goose couple had been married just 11 days before the incident occurred. Australian prosecutors claim Watson shut the valve on his wife's air tank while scuba diving. Australia delayed Watson's deportation, because the country, a staunch opponent of capital punishment, feared that if reconvicted in north face down Alabama, Watson would face the death penalty. Only after the U.S. government pledged it would not impose a death sentence, did Australia agree to repatriate him. Alabama Attorney General Troy King said Watson will face two murder counts once he extradited to the state. Los Angeles police took Watson into custody upon clearing customs. California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, earlier this week signed an extradition order, which would send Watson to Alabama where he will likely face a new trial. Australian police said Watson turned off wife Tina's air during a scuba diving trip on their 2003 honeymoon. Because of the complexity of the crime, it took Australian authorities nearly north face denali jackets five years to charge Watson with murder in 2008. "It's been devastating," his wife's mother, Cindy Thomas, told ABC News early this month. "You never think your daughter will leave for her honeymoon and her husband will kill her." Underwater video captured her apparently lifeless body on the bottom of the ocean. At the time of the tragedy, Watson told authorities his north face bionic wife panicked underwater and he couldn't save her. But prosecutors said he was an experienced rescue diver with a motive for money: her life insurance policy. Autopsy results found no pre- existing medical condition that could have explained the women's death and tests indicated that there was nothing wrong with her diving gear. TSA officials say the procedures are necessary to ward off terror attacks like the attempted bombing of a Detroit-bound plane last Christmas, allegedly by a Nigerian man who stashed explosives in his underwear.And the procedures may be on 3 in 1 jackets the rise. Sen. Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, authored a bill in September that would allow testing of body scanners at certain federal north face sale buildings. Despite attempts online to organize Thanksgiving travelers for a protest dubbed "National Opt-Out Day" on one of the busiest days of the year, very few passengers opted out of the full-body scans.Napolitano has defended the women's jackets screening procedures and criticized the protests."I really want to say, look, let's be realistic and use our common sense," she said last week, explaining that the screening technology has been in development since before the failed Christmas Day bombing attack last year."This is not about the government itself," she said. "We all have a role to play in security.""And so I really regret some groups saying, 'Well, we don't want to be a part of that,'" she added. "I regret it because it's not north face fleece what we're all about. What we're all about is shared responsibility."SA