What We've Found: Violent sugar fiends, reservist suicide, DNA exoneration, oldest hominid, La Ronda demolition and a housing surge

Julia Harte with your mid-morning fix.

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What We've Found: Violent sugar fiends, reservist suicide, DNA exoneration, oldest hominid, La Ronda demolition and a housing surge

POSTED: Thursday, October 1, 2009, 4:34 PM
Filed Under: What We've Found

Julia Harte with your mid-morning fix.

Children who eat sweets every day are significantly more likely to be convicted of a violent crime by age 34, researchers at Cardiff University have found.

An army reservist who stabbed a stranger in broad daylight over the weekend committed suicide by electrocuting himself in a West Philadelphia bath. In his suicide note, he wrote, "I hope this shows that the system is not built to fix a person."

A prisoner was exonerated by DNA evidence after spending more than 27 years in prison -- the longest sentence that any ultimately-exonerated inmate has served.

Paleontologists found a fossil skeleton of a hominid 1.2 million years older than Lucy, making it the oldest human specimen yet.

A 90-year-old Spanish-style mansion near Bryn Mawr, the historic La Ronda estate, was demolished today to make room for a new 10,000-square-foot house.

Housing activity in the United States was up 5 percent in August, boosting a 0.8 percent increase in construction spending, according to new figures from the Commerce Department.

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