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FEBRUARY 19 - IN THE HISTORY Calender Search
 
2005
In Trinidad security chiefs from 34 countries in the Americas outlined broad strategies for fighting money laundering, passport fraud and drug smuggling, warning that Islamic terrorists could exploit lawlessness in the region to raise money and slip through borders.
2005
The $3.2 billion USS Jimmy Carter entered the Navy's fleet as the most heavily armed submarine ever built, and as the last of the Seawolf class of attack subs that the Pentagon ordered during the Cold War's final years.
2005
In Arkansas a train slammed into an ambulance that apparently tried to get out of its path, but stopped at a rail crossing, killing all three paramedics on board. The patient in the vehicle survived.
2004
The AFL-CIO endorsed Democrat John Kerry for president.
2004
After sanctioning more than 2,800 gay marriages, the city of San Francisco sued the state of California, challenging its ban on same-sex marriages.
2004
Jeffrey Skilling, former CEO of Enron, pleaded not guilty to 35 felony charges and was released after posting a $5 million bail.
2004
It was announced that Philip Anschutz (64), Denver billionaire and founder of Qwest Communications, purchased the Fang newspapers including the SF Examiner for $20 million.
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