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JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Race is roiling the Republican Senate runoff in Mississippi, a state with a long history of racially divided politics where the GOP is mostly white and the Democratic Party is mostly black.

National tea party groups say they are working to "ensure a free and fair election" by sending several dozen observers to precincts to watch who votes during Tuesday's GOP contest, concerned about six-term Sen. Thad Cochran's efforts to persuade Mississippi Democrats to cast ballots. Challenger Chris McDaniel and the tea party portray cross-party voting as dangerous and even illegal, though state law allows it.

"Thad Cochran and his establishment handlers are out trolling, begging for Democrats to cross over and vote in the Republican runoff," Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund chairwoman Jenny Beth Martin said in announcing that her group and two others have hired an attorney to watch Tuesday's primary.

While Cochran rarely mentions race, he readily acknowledges he's seeking support from black and white voters.

"I think it's important for everybody to participate," he says. "Voting rights has been an issue of great importance in Mississippi. People have really contributed a lot of energy and effort to making sure the political process is open to everyone."

Cochran's campaign staff believes he would get a boost if Mississippi voters who traditionally go for Democrats — black voters and union members — participate in the GOP runoff. The Republican nominee will be a heavy favorite in November, and several prominent black Democrats are supporting the incumbent as far preferable to his primary challenger.

At a Tea Party Express rally Sunday in Biloxi, McDaniel, a state senator, never mentioned race. But he received loud applause when he said: "Why is a 42-year incumbent pandering to liberal Democrats to get re-elected?"

A man in the crowd shouted: "Reparations!" McDaniel did not respond.

Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund and two other independent groups that are supporting McDaniel, FreedomWorks and Senate Conservatives Fund, say they have hired a former Justice Department attorney, J. Christian Adams, "to ensure a free and fair election in Mississippi on June 24."

Adams was the Justice Department attorney who handled a 2007 case in which Ike Brown, a black elections official, was found to have violated the rights of white voters in majority-black Noxubee County. It was the first time the Justice Department had used the 1965 Voting Rights Act to allege racial discrimination against whites.

"Election integrity is essential, and Mississippi has a long, documented and tragic history of lawlessness in elections," Adams said. "The outcome of the runoff should be determined by who gets the most votes, not by who manipulates the system the best."

FreedomWorks spokesman Adam Brandon said Monday that the groups will send several dozen volunteers to precincts Tuesday, but he would not say where.

Asked if the Justice Department is watching this year's runoff, Justice Department spokeswoman Dena Iverson said in an email: "The department is aware of concerns about voter intimidation and is monitoring the situation." Voters who experience problems are encouraged to report them, she said.

Mississippi voters do not register by party, and state law says the only people prohibited from voting in the Republican runoff Tuesday are those who voted in the Democratic primary June 3.

But there's potential for confusion because the tea party groups are citing another Mississippi law that says a voter can participate in a party primary only if he intends to support that party's nominee in the general election. A federal appeals court ruled in 2008 that the law is unenforceable. The ruling came in a case in which Democrats sought to block Republicans from crossing over in primaries.

Mississippi also has a new law requiring voters to show a driver's license or other form of government-issued photo identification at the polls. It was used for the first time in the June 3 primaries. Critics compare voter ID to poll taxes that were once used to prevent blacks and poor whites from voting, but supporters say the new law blocks people from masquerading as others to vote.

About 9 out of 10 white voters in Mississippi said they supported Republican nominee Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential election, and more than 9 of 10 black voters said they supported Democratic President Barack Obama, according to an exit poll conducted for The Associated Press and other news organizations. Still, Cochran is supported by some black Democrats, including Vicksburg Mayor George Flaggs and state Sen. Willie Simmons.

Simmons told the AP on Monday that he voted in the Democratic primary June 3 and can't vote in the GOP runoff Tuesday, but he has campaigned for Cochran by making phone calls and sending letters to black churches citing the former Appropriations Committee chairman's support of Head Start and historically black universities.

"Sen. Cochran himself did not even ask me to support him," Simmons said. "I volunteered to support him because of the things he has done in the Senate."

Simmons said that while some black Mississippians quietly vote for Republicans in general elections, they might be reluctant to publicly declare their intentions by going to a Republican table to request a ballot on primary day.

"This election is going to put them in a position where they have to do two things that is unusual for them," Simmons said. "First, they have to pull out an ID and show it. And, second, they have to vote in a Republican runoff."

Simmons said if a poll watcher cites the unenforceable law about not voting in a primary unless intending to support the nominee in the general election, "that could lead to intimidation."

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Associated Press Writer Eric Tucker contributed from Washington.

NEW YORK (AP) — A special master was appointed Monday to preside over negotiations between Argentina representatives and U.S. bondholders aimed at ending a long battle over $1.5 billion in debts.

U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa in Manhattan appointed Daniel A. Pollack to conduct and preside over the talks. Pollack is a Harvard Law School-trained litigator with decades of experience in financial cases.

The appointment came after a lawyer for Argentina, Carmine Boccuzzi Jr., said in a letter to the judge that Argentina "wants to emerge from the litigation that has burdened both it and the courts."

"The republic is committed to a dialogue that will be followed by what the republic intends to be a resolution of this litigation and the entirety of its outstanding debt burden, which is a matter of public interest to all Argentine citizens," he said.

Boccuzzi said Argentina is willing to negotiate in good faith, but he asked the judge to suspend financial penalties during negotiations. The judge did not immediately rule on the request.

The plaintiffs in the New York litigation represent about 1 percent of Argentina's $100 billion of debt that went into default in 2001. About 92 percent of creditors joined 2005 and 2010 debt swaps, agreeing to accept less money. Another 7 percent of those who did not join the swaps did not sue Argentina and are not part of the U.S. court case.

Holdout bondholders from U.S. hedge funds that sued in Manhattan federal court were led by New York billionaire Paul Singer's NML Capital Ltd. A lawyer for NML did not immediately return a message for comment Monday.

Argentina was forced to the negotiating table after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected its appeals of Griesa's rulings that ordered the country to make payments on the debt.

Argentina's economy minister, Axel Kicillof, said the judge needs to suspend that ruling if Argentina makes payments to other bondholders as required on June 30.

"A suspension measure is essential so Argentina can continue to pay all of its restructured bondholders normally," Kicillof said. "And we can continue the dialogue that we need under equal conditions so that 100 percent of the creditors can be paid, especially those that we have restructured and that we need to pay in the coming date."

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Calatrava reported from Buenos Aires. Associated Press writer Luis Andres Henao in Santiago, Chile, contributed to the report.

A former Air Force non-commissioned officer was sentenced Monday to 120 years in prison after pleading guilty to child exploitation charges for producing sexually explicit images of children and sending them to an undercover federal agent last year.

In a two-year sting beginning in 2011, undercover agents chatted with William Gazafi, 44, of Lusby, Maryland, who worked in communications and maintained a security clearance with the Air Force. They talked with him in a chat room dedicated to incest, where he told them he molested young children and babies and drugged at least one victim. The Air Force has discharged Gazafi.

In August of 2013, Gazafi sent several images to an undercover agent, authorities said, three of which Gazafi said were produced after drugging a child.

According to Gazafi's indictment, the charges are based on six images Gazafi produced, including one of a prepubescent girl restrained at her ankles with handcuffs, and another of himself and a five-month-old baby.

Federal Bureau of Investigation special agent Jacqueline Dougher said it is the worst child exploitation case she's handled.

"You have the sadism, the tying of the kids, the drugging of the children, their ages, and you have him in the position he's in," Dougher said. "I've been an agent for 16 years and worked in this unit for 13 years, and this was the worst case I've ever had."

Gazafi's attorney, federal public defender Amy Steffan Fitzgibbons, did not return a call for comment on Monday.

Federal agents and task force officers arrested Gazafi in September at the Andrews Air Force Base as Gazafi was returning from a mission overseas.

In April, Gazafi pleaded guilty to six charges of exploiting children in order to produce child pornography.

An undercover federal agent first took notice of Gazafi in 2011, though the defendant didn't begin sending images until 2013.

The undercover agent told Dougher, "look, this guy is a hands-on offender and if he's telling the truth, we need to get on this."

"These images are horrific," Dougher said. "Once we figured out who he was, we put everything in hyper-drive."

After Gazafi's arrest federal agents searched his home, where they discovered more than 15,000 explicit images — including about 1,000 of infants — and a bottle of Ambien, Dougher said. That's the powerful sleeping aid Gazafi told an undercover agent he'd given to a child prior to molesting her. Agents also seized electronic devices Gazafi had been traveling with overseas, on which Gazafi kept thousands of images including those he sent to the undercover agent.

"We know he was taking them with him everywhere he went in an official capacity," Dougher said. "He was traveling with his collection."

Dougher said four victims have so far been identified but there may be more.

"We investigate cases every day that make us shake our heads, but for someone to sexually abuse a 5-month-old baby defies comprehension," said FBI Baltimore Division Special Agent in Charge Steve Vogt in a news release. "Cases such as this serve as a reminder that in this day and age, a person's status and position doesn't immediately make him trustworthy."

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