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Among them is 21-year-old Christopher Newton, who broke his right foot in three places when a cow outside Leunig's Bistro
-- a French waiter in tuxedo, pencil-thin mustache and black beret -- fell on him as he and co-defendant Christopher T. Healy, 23, allegedly knocked it over. "Instant justice," said Newton's lawyer, Jasdeep Pannu. On Wednesday, Newton -- who made his first court appearance wearing a protective boot over his broken foot
-- was ordered to serve a two-day jail term and pay up to $3,500 restitution for his part. He will plead guilty Friday in exchange for a deferred sentence. Kyle Valway, 22, of Pottstown, Pa., who police say was "heavily inebriated" when he vandalized a cow May 30, is also expected to change his not guilty plea Friday, according to prosecutor T.J. Donovan. The fourth suspect is James C. O'Neal, Jr., 25, of Proctor. Organizers aren't ready to surrender. This week, "Cow Tender" lapel buttons were distributed to bartenders, servers and merchants along the Marketplace in hopes they will discourage people from harming the cows and keep their eyes out for the bovine hooliganism. The fear is that the resumption of classes next month at the University of Vermont could spell more vandalism. "To have what I call overprivileged and underdisciplined kids out there ruining it for everybody, it's sad," said Torti. "But we're not going to let this ruin it for everybody."
[Associated
Press;
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