On the eve of the B2B-style Summit of the Americas in Trinidad authorities in Brazil have ordered the re-arrest and retrial of a rancher accused of arranging the killing of American nun and rain forest activist Dorothy Stang.  There are no double jeopardy laws in Brazil and the justice system hopes not to leave the intellectual author of this $50 contract killing behind.  Dayton, Ohio native Stang was murdered in Para State, where Rain Forest martyr Chico Mendes also met his maker.  In his lame duck year, Brazil's president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva hopes to bring a modicum of social justice to the shoot first ask questions later cowboy culture of northern Para State, where values skew more toward ranch life in Colombia and along the US-Mexican Rio Grande Valley, than the gauchos of southern Brazil.  The Stang case should serve as a wake up call to interested parties who have limited their focus to Brazil.  Much worse goes on and never gets reported in Indonesia, where the rain forest is as large in size and strategic significance as that of Brazil.