Monday, December 23, 2013
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Monday, December 16, 2013
When lenders sue, quick cash can turn into a lifetime of debt

Ace Cash Express in Chesaapeake Va, claims they will not tack high interest on their loans but the borrower will be charged a late fee if the loan payment isn't met 24 hours from its due date.
photo: abhi ahmadadeen/BMLTV©
(ProPublica) December 16, 2013 - Five years ago, Naya Burks of St. Louis borrowed $1,000 from AmeriCash Loans. The money came at a steep price: She had to pay back $1,737 over six months.
"I really needed the cash, and that was the only thing that I could think of doing at the time," she said. The decision has hung over her life ever since.
Labels:
AmeriCash
,
Borrowers
,
High-cost loans
,
Lawsuits
,
Lenders
,
Payday Loans
Christmas warning: Kaspersky Lab finds gamers attacked 11.7 million times in 2013
(PRN) ABINGDON, England, December 13, 2013 - Just days after the launch of the PlayStation 4 and the Xbox One, Kaspersky Lab experts have discovered that PC gamers across Europe were hit by a massive number of attacks in 2013.
Labels:
Gamers
,
On line Security
,
PlayStation 4
Friday, December 13, 2013
Survey conducted by social media-based recruitment specialists finds a staggering 87 percent of employees no longer trust their bosses
(PRN) NOTTINGHAM, England, December. 13, 2013 - Will your office have that empty feeling come the New Year? If so, it could be because most of your co-workers don't trust the boss and want to move on, says social media-based recruitment specialist staffbay.com.
A new survey by staffbay.com finds that over 87 percent of people will be looking for a new job in 2014 – and in what will come as unwelcome news to bosses and HR teams around the land, more than half of them find their current boss untrustworthy.
Labels:
Employees
,
Jobs
,
Work Ethics
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Mandela Dies: Remarks from the Nelson Mandela Foundation
(BMLTV) December 5th 2013 - It is with the deepest regret that we have learned of the passing of our founder, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela – Madiba. The Presidency of the Republic of South Africa will shortly make further official announcements.
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
The politics of preventing genocide

Human skulls at the Toul Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, where approximately 14,000 people were tortured and later executed under the Khmer Rouge.
photo: david longstreath/IRIN
(IRIN) NAIROBI, December 3, 2013 - The crisis in the Central African Republic has been deteriorating for the best part of this year. In the words of UN Deputy Secretary General Jan Eliasson, the international community has “watched from a distance” as the country descended into “virtual melt-down.” He called the decision to act, “a profoundly important test of international solidarity and of our responsibility to prevent atrocities.”
Labels:
Conflict
,
Early Warning
,
Security
Friday, November 29, 2013
World Aids Day: Secretary of State John Kerry: On World AIDS Day, we come together as a global community to honor the many lives we have lost
(BMLTV) November 29, 2013 - On World AIDS Day, we come together as a global community to honor the many lives we have lost, and to reaffirm our support for the millions of individuals and families who are still living with and affected by HIV/AIDS around the world.
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Attorney General Kamala D. Harris: All Americans have the right to access affordable - quality healthcare - including contraception
(BMLTV) SAN FRANCISCO, November 27, 2013 - Attorney General Kamala D. Harris yesterday issued the following statement in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s announcement that it will hear Kathleen Sebelius v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Archbishop Desmond Tutu advocates St John International Charity work on packed London visit

Pictured is Archbishop Desmond Tutu gets an HIV test on The Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation's Tutu Tester, a mobile test unit that brings healthcare right to your doorstep. photo: wiki commons
(PRN) LONDON, November 21, 2013 - The St John International team today hosted celebrated social rights activist Archbishop Desmond Tutu at their offices in London to discuss the development work of the global health charity and the maternal and newborn health work they are rolling out across Africa.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Violence in Tripoli: Libyan authorities and Libyan people are facing significant challenges in their democratic transition
(BMLTV) WASHINGTON,
November 17, 2013 - Secretary of State, John Kerry released a statement a day ago stating that the State Department is deeply concerned by the death and injury of
many Libyans in recent clashes in Tripoli.
We condemn the use of violence in all its forms and urge all sides to exercise
restraint and restore calm.
Labels:
Democratic Transition
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Libya
,
Politics
,
Tripoli
,
Violence
Sunday, November 10, 2013
2.1 million families affected by typhoon Yolanda
(DSWD) November 10, 2013 - The number of families affected by typhoon
Yolanda as of noon, November 10, has reached the two million mark, composed of
9.53 million persons as Local Government Units (LGUs) from Regions IV-A and B,
V, VI, VII, VIII, X, and CARAGA continue to assess the extent of the disaster.
Labels:
Phillipines
,
Typhoon Yolanda
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Homes in Compton, Bell Gardens, El Monte & Pasadena are searched for evidence leading to distribution of child pornography
(BMLTV) On Friday November 1, 2013, SAFE Team members served
search warrants at homes in Compton , Bell Gardens , El Monte and Pasadena where evidence
linking the people at those locations to the possession and distribution of
child pornography was seized.
Labels:
Child Abuse
,
Child Pornography
Friday, November 8, 2013
Typhoon impact fears in Philippines
(IRIN) MANILA, November 8,
2013 - Aid agencies are bracing for the worst after Typhoon Haiyan slammed into
the Philippines
in the early hours of 8 November, triggering landslides, heavy flooding and
affecting tens of millions of people.
“We are working closely in support of government and local authorities to assess the life-saving needs of the people affected by this typhoon,” said Julie Hall, acting resident and humanitarian coordinator in the Philippines.
Labels:
Disaster
,
Environmental
,
Typhoon Haiyan
Statement on typhoon Haiyan from Kristalina Georgieva, EU Commissioner for International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Response
(EU) PHILLIPPINES, November 8, 2013 - We have all watched
and listened with awe at reports of the destructive progress of Typhoon Haiyan
as it made landfall in the Philippines .
This year has seen an exceptionally active tropical storm
period in the region with eleven typhoons in the last two months. It is still
too soon to establish Haiyan's impact but daylight will inevitably bring news
of widespread devastation.
Thursday, November 7, 2013
European Union and United States to hold second round of trade negotiations in Brussels
(BMLTV) November 7, 2013 - The EU and the US today announced they will hold a second round
of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) talks in Brussels from Monday 11th
– Friday 15th November 2013.
The teams of negotiators from either side of the
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Hundreds participate in civil disobedience to escalate pressure on house republicans to pass Immigration Reform
(BMLTV) November 6, 2013 - More than 500 people from faith, labor, elected officials and community organizations, including many undocumented families, joined the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (ICIRR) for a rally in front of the Chicago office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The rally was intended to pressure the Republican leadership of the US House of Representatives to quickly pass immigration reform, and demand that President Obama halt deportations that are destroying our communities and families.
The rally was intended to pressure the Republican leadership of the US House of Representatives to quickly pass immigration reform, and demand that President Obama halt deportations that are destroying our communities and families.
Labels:
Immigration Reform
Teamsters urge passage of Employment Non-Discrimination Act
Hoffa calls for senate house votes
(PRN/USN) WASHINGTON, November 6, 2013 - The
International Brotherhood of Teamsters yesterday called on Congress to pass the
Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) which would provide strong federal
protections against discrimination, making it illegal to base hiring decisions
or to fire someone because of their sexual orientation or gender identity
.
.
Labels:
Civil Rights
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
The poles are closed and now it is time to get the real hard numbers

(BMLTV) November 5, 2013 - Washington Bureau Chief of the Guardian, Dan.Roberts tweeted this image which read the following: Lots of hacks but not a sign of any politicians or supporters yet at McAuliffe party in Virginia.
by admin
MONTREAL: Cargo belt loader catch’s fire, 7 passengers received injuries while exiting Boeing 767
(BMLTV) November 5, 20 13 - According to the Aviation Herald , yesterday a Royal Air Maroc Boeing 767-300, registration CN-RNT performing flight AT-206 from Casablanca Marocco to Montreal,QC, Canada, had completed an uneventful flight. The aircraft reached the parking position, engines were shut down and passengers began to disembark.

Heavy black smoke is seen behind the tale of Boeing 767.
photo: Courtesy Aviation Herald/RL
A cargo belt loader was used to unload luggage from the left
aft cargo door but caught fire emitting a large plume of smoke and prompting
the crew to initiate an emergency evacuation via slides.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Country Artist Morgan Frazier launch’s music video that tackles the harsh reality of bullying
(PRN) NASHVILLE ,
Tenn. , November 3, 2013 - Sidewalk/Curb
recording artist Morgan Frazier announces that her debut music video,
"Hey Bully" world premieres on act.mtv.com.
The video addresses tough, real world issues and does not
shy away from the truth about bullying. Frazier, who was picked on herself, to
the point where she was taken out of school and put in home school, co-wrote
the impactful country tune with Sherrie Austin and Tiffany Goss.
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Mucho Macho Man gallops to win the 2013 Breeder Cup

Mucho Macho Man (left) entered with 7/2 odds and won the 2013
Breeders' Cup Classic in a close finish.
photo: jeff gross
(SBNATION) November 2, 20 13 - Mucho Macho Man and jockey Gary Stevens won the 2013 Breeders' Cup Classic Saturday evening in California. Favorite Game on Dude started strong but fell back as the race wore on to finish ninth.
In a close race throughout, Mucho Macho Man barely beat out
Will Take Charge, who came in with 12-1 odds. Declaration of War finished third
with last year's winner, Fort
Larned , coming in behind
them.
Friday, November 1, 2013
A film about a broken system “Still Standing”
(IRIN) NAIROBI ,
31 October 2013 - The gang rape of a 16-year-old Kenyan girl, and the laughable
punishment given to some of her attackers - they were made to cut grass for an
afternoon before being set free - has made headlines around the world.
Labels:
Film
,
Human Rights
,
Rape
Thursday, October 31, 2013
The Virginia Surpreme Court threw a constitutional blow at ‘Citizens Against Unfair Tolls’ and their attorney - Patrick McSweeney

(BMLTV) Attorney, Patrick McSweeney (left) Senator Kenneth Cooper Alexander of Virginia (right) seen leaving Portmouth Circuit Court after filing the lawsuit July 12, 2012 to stop the potential tolling of the Downtown and Midtown tunnels. On Thursday, October 30, 2013 the
Photo: abhi ahmadadeen/BMLTV©
Labels:
Attorney
,
Business
,
Lawsuit
,
No Tolls
,
Patrick McSweeney
,
Senator Kenneth Cooper Alexander
,
Virginia Supreme Court
Sandy One Year Later: AARP details the good, the bad & the ugly in New York and Long Island
Survey shows post-Sandy pains, problems and promise of the
50+ population hit by the superstorm
(PRN/USN) NEW YORK , October. 31, 2013 - This month marks the 1 year anniversary of Sandy ,
AARP New York is re-releasing a survey of 50+ New York
City and Long Island residents,
detailing their experiences, pains and struggles. From power outages and
storm damage to how their utility companies and elected officials handled it
all, to their ability to rise above it all and volunteer to help others, the
survey took a deep dive into the lives of some of those most impacted by Sandy .
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Treat gun violence as a public health problem says physicians
(PRN) HARRISBURG , Pa. , October
30, 2013 - Gun violence is a significant public health problem, according to
members of the Pennsylvania Medical Society, and research should be conducted
to better understand its sources and causes from a medical perspective so that
it can be properly addressed.
Labels:
Gun violence
United Nations top official outraged over the murder of Somali Journalist
(PRN/ Africa ) NEW YORK ,
October 30, 2013 - The head of the
United Nations agency tasked with defending press freedom today denounced the
murder of Somali television journalist Mohamed Mohamud, who was gunned
down in the capital, Mogadishu .
“I deplore the murder of Mohamed Mohamud,” said the
Director-General of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO, Irina Bokova. “His name joins the long list of Somali media
professionals who have paid with their lives to defend the right to
information. Such acts must not remain unpunished.”
Mr. Mohamud, 26, was also known as Tima'ade. He worked for
Universal TV, a private television channel based in the United Kingdom that
serves Somali diaspora. He was shot six times by unknown assailants near his
home in the district of Wadajir, on October 26.
“Freedom of expression is the cornerstone of democratic
society. I call on the authorities to do everything possible to ensure that
journalists can work in the safest possible conditions,” Ms. Bokova said.
Labels:
UNESCO
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
New Mexico is declared a disaster by the President
(BMLTV) WASHINGTON, D.C. October 29, 2030 - The U.S.
Department of Homeland Security's Federal Emergency Management Agency announced
that federal disaster aid has been made available to the State of New Mexico to
supplement state and local recovery efforts in the area affected by severe
storms, flooding, and mudslides during the period of September 9-22, 2013.
The President's action makes federal funding available to
state and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit
organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or
replacement of facilities damaged by the severe storms, flooding, and mudslides
in Catron, Chaves, Cibola, Colfax, Eddy, Guadalupe, Los Alamos, McKinley, Mora,
Sandoval, San Miguel, Santa Fe, Sierra, Socorro, and Torrance counties.
Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis
for hazard mitigation measures statewide.
Nancy M. Casper has been named as the Federal Coordinating
Officer for federal recovery operations in the affected area. Casper said additional
designations may be made at a later date if warranted by the results of damage
assessments.
You might want to visit the FEMA Blog.
You might want to visit the FEMA Blog.
Twenty-two historically black colleges and universities to receive Toyota hybrid vehicles

Toyota Green Initiative Coalition members, actress Tatyana
Ali, 2010 TGI Campus Contest Winner Stephen Graddick, SMB Essentials CEO Lake
Louise, Earthseed Consulting co-founder Pandora Thomas, 2012 TGI Green Campus
Winner Corban Bell, Earthseed Consulting co-founder Zakiya Harris and Black and
Green author Jamal Ali, help announce the donation of twenty-two hybrid
vehicles to HBCUs. (PRNewsFoto/Toyota)
2013-14 Toyota Green Initiative Tour helps select CIAA and
SWAC schools improve campus environment
(PRN)
Each school will receive a vehicle in conjunction with the
2013-14 Toyota Green Initiative (TGI)
tour, an environmental stewardship program designed to empower the African
American community. The tour travels to participating HBCUs (Historically Black
Colleges and Universities) each fall to educate students and alumni on the
benefits of adopting a sustainable lifestyle.
Labels:
CIAA
,
SWAC schools
,
Toyota Green Initiative Coalition
Monday, October 28, 2013
Bomb squad investigating suspicious package found at UC campus
(UC BERKLEY )
October 28, 2013 - A suspicious package was found this afternoon at Bancroft and
Telegraph avenues, and is being investigated by the UCPD bomb squad. UC police
are advising people to avoid the area until it can determine the contents.
Another package was discovered earlier in the day at
Bancroft and Shattuck Avenue ,
and was determined not to be an explosive device by the Berkeley Police
Department, according to a Berkeley
city official.
Office of Norfolk Commonwealth’s Attorney responds to their boss’s arrest
Norfolk Commonwealths Attorney at his office during a interview by Melissa Troutman in 2009.
photo: brian callan
BMLTV) October 29, 2013 - The office of the
Currently there are 80 employees of this
Office and each person works hard to insure the efficient, effective and
ethical prosecution of the defendants and comprehensive representation of crime
victims and witnesses. That diligent work continues uninterrupted following the
arrest.
A Scary Pattern: Drinking increases when halloween falls closer to the weekend

The chainsaw man, Holloween 2011. photo: abhi ahmadadeen/BMLTV©
(PRN)
Labels:
Alcohol Monitoring Systems
,
NHTSA
Sunday, October 27, 2013
"The business case for racial equity" quantifies the cost of racism in the U.S.
(PRN/USN) BATTLE
CREEK , Mich. , October. 27, 2013 - Three days ago Altarum Institute and the
W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) released a report detailing the economic impact
of racism, and the benefits of advancing racial equity as the demography of our
nation continues to evolve. As businesses, policy makers and thought leaders
attempt to track, analyze and ultimately manage the impact of the U.S.
shift from a white majority to a minority majority, the availability of data on
the progress and pain points within health, education and crime and justice
will be even more important.
Friday, October 25, 2013
BREAKING: Statement by Ernie Allen on the global effort to identify "Maria," the young child found living in the Roma Camp in Greece
Why her story has become so important
"The publicity surrounding the discovery of the little
blonde-haired, blue-eyed girl called "Maria" in theRoma camp in Greece has
brought hope to tens of thousands of parents around the world who have children
that are still missing. However, her story is about more than one
child. Little Maria has become a symbol of a larger problem – the well
being of millions of children.
Maria was found resulting from the quick actions of law
enforcement in Greece .
Her extraordinary story has prompted a worldwide effort to determine who she
is, where her family is and whether she is an abducted or trafficked
child. Her story has awakened a global audience and she has millions of
people anticipating the resolution of her mystery. The search for her
identity is providing hope for many others as thousands of searching parents of
other missing children are hoping that their child might still be out there and
recoverable.
Israel and Saudi Arabia – alliance of interests
(BMLTV) October 25, 2013 - Recent remarks by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
have fuelled renewed speculation of behind the scenes links between Israel and the
Gulf monarchies.
Netanyahu, speaking at the UN, said that “The dangers of a
nuclear-armed Iran and the
emergence of other threats in our region have led many of our Arab neighbours
to recognize, finally recognize, that Israel is not their enemy.”
Labels:
Israeli
,
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
,
Saudi Arabia
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Commodities Future Trading Commission will be forced to furlough personnel for as many as 14 days in 2014
(BMLTV) WASHINGTON, D.C. October 24, 2013 -
Congresswoman Maxine Waters, Ranking Member of the House Financial Services
Committee, today released the following statement in response to news that the
Commodities Future Trading Commission will be forced to furlough personnel for
as many as 14 days in 2014 because of cutbacks in funding due to the sequester:
“I’m deeply troubled, though not surprised, to learn that
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission will need to furlough staff for as
many as 14 days during fiscal year 2014 because of the across-the-board cuts
known as sequestration, which has caused significant funding shortfalls.
Shooting at National Guard Facility
(NNS) WASHINGTON, October 24, 2013 - A
shooting occurred at approximately 12:47 (local time) today at a National Guard
facility located near Naval Support Activity (NSA) Mid-South, Millington , Tenn.
No fatalities were reported, but two National Guardsmen received non-life threatening
injuries.
U.S. Navy and Millington Police Department personnel responded to the incident. The suspect, a National Guardsman, was taken into custody. The Naval Support Activity was briefly put on lockdown as a precaution, but has since lifted that restriction.
The U.S. Navy and U.S. Army are working with local law enforcement to investigate the incident.
U.S. Navy and Millington Police Department personnel responded to the incident. The suspect, a National Guardsman, was taken into custody. The Naval Support Activity was briefly put on lockdown as a precaution, but has since lifted that restriction.
The U.S. Navy and U.S. Army are working with local law enforcement to investigate the incident.
Labels:
Army
,
Department of Defense
,
Navy
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Women’s participation, leadership crucial to peace process
(PRN Africa) NEW YORK, 24 October 2013 - The
United Nations Security Council and senior UN officials on October 18, 2013, issued a strong call on the international
community to strengthen its commitment to ensuring that women play a more
prominent role in conflict prevention, resolution and in post-war
peacebuilding.
Unanimously adopting a new resolution, the Security Council
reaffirmed that sustainable peace hinges on an approach that integrates
“political, security, development, and human rights, including gender
equality,” concerns and urged Member States and UN entities to ensure women's
full and meaningful participation in peace and security issues, and committed to
increase focus on their adequate access to justice in conflict and
post-conflict settings.
Many Americans predict short-lived housing recovery, but don't care
(PRNewswire) BLOOMINGTON ,
Ill. , October. 22, 2013 - The
housing market has been touted as helping to drive the economic recovery, but
Americans seem to feel that may be short-lived. According to the latestCOUNTRY
Financial Security Index ® survey, nearly half (48 percent) say the
country could be headed for another housing bubble in the next two years.
- Despite this pessimistic prediction for the housing market, it's not the top concern for many Americans.
- Forty-eight percent say that while they are concerned about the housing market, it is not one of their top national economic worries.
- One quarter say the housing market ranks among their top three concerns.
- Just 6 percent say it's their top concern.
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Haiti questions the findings of Walk Free Foundation's report on child labor and human trafficking conditions
(PRNewswire) PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti , October. 21, 2013 - The
government of Haiti questioned
the findings of a recent report by the Walk Free Foundation on the alleged
prevalence of "modern slavery" in Haiti . As the first nation to
free itself from slavery in 1804 and a supporter of several Latin American
countries in their own fight for freedom, Haiti is a proud nation that
is attempting to address the problems of child labor and human trafficking that
have long plagued the country.
Such reports, however, incorrectly inflate the prevalence of
child labor in Haiti and
do an enormous disservice to our government's efforts to address the
issue. This report supposedly arrives at its conclusions by
"multiplying the estimated proportion of the population enslaved in [Haiti ]
(derived from random sample surveys and secondary source estimates) by the current
population."
Labels:
Human Trafficking
Monday, October 21, 2013
Find out what are the hottest careers for college graduates
(PRN) LA JOLLA, Calif. , October 21, 2013 -
Bridging from college to career is not always easy, and this is especially true
for recent college graduates. In an effort to provide guidance and information
to assist with important decisions about career choices, University of California
San Diego Extension has assembled the fifth
annual edition of "Hot Careers for College Graduates." You can
download a complete copy of the report at extension.ucsd.edu/specialreports.
UC San Diego Extension initiated the hot careers list to
help new college graduates identify the most promising careers to bridge to
desirable positions which can be easily attained with minimal extra
preparation. This report notes up-to-date employment trends and projections.
Racketeers to face sentencing in the State of Florida
(BMLTV) TALLAHASSEE, Fla. October 22, 2013 - Attorney
General Pam Bondi’s Office of Statewide Prosecution and the Hillsborough County
Sheriff’s Office announced October 14,
2013, that three Tampa men have been
sentenced to 30 years in prison each for racketeering and conspiracy to commit
racketeering. Luis Rodriguez-Gomez, David Marin-Monroy, and John
Romero-Rodriguez were found guilty in August of committing 11 burglaries, all
of which involved burglarizing homes of members of the Indian community.
“Thanks to a strong partnership with the Hillsborough County
Sheriff’s Office, we were able to put these three criminals behind bars,”
stated Attorney General Pam Bondi. “My Office of Statewide Prosecution will
continue working to keep Florida ’s
communities safe.”
"Every individual in Hillsborough County and the State
should be encouraged by this successful prosecution and know that Sheriff Gee
stands with all law enforcement agencies to bring justice to those who
victimize our citizens," stated Major Raymond Lawton, District Commander
at the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office.
The defendants were arrested for stealing possessions such
as family heirlooms and jewelry brought to the United
States from India . The burglaries took place in
Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco , Marion
and Alachua Counties .
Saturday, October 19, 2013
DUPAGE COUNTY CHILD PORNOGRAPHY ARRESTS PUSH TOTAL TO 50 SINCE STATEWIDE CRACKDOWN BEGAN
(BMLTV) Chicago -
Two arrests on child pornography charges following separate raids this week in DuPage County bring to 50 the total
arrests since 2010 in Operation Glass House, Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s
statewide initiative to apprehend the most active offenders who download and
trade child pornography online.
“Our work, in partnership with local law enforcement, has
resulted in identifying and arresting 50 offenders who have possessed and
traded some of the vilest images imaginable,” Madigan said. “Online child
pornography is a real and significant threat to children who are victimized
each time an image is downloaded or traded.”
Steven Friesen, 45, of Villa Park ,
has been charged with 10 counts of possession of child pornography, a Class 2
felony punishable by three to seven years in the Illinois Department of
Corrections. He is being held in the DuPage County Jail on $250,000 bond.
Madigan’s investigators, with the assistance of the DuPage
County Sheriff’s Office, Villa Park Police and the DuPage County State ’s
Attorney’s Office, conducted a search of Friesen’s Michigan Ave. (Villa
Park ) townhouse Wednesday and found evidence of alleged child
pornography.
“Apprehending sex offenders is a high priority for the
DuPage County Sheriff’s Office and we are willing to assist any agency in
accomplishing it,” DuPage County Sheriff John Zaruba said.
Brian Gondek, 54, of Elmhurst ,
has been charged with one count of possession of child pornography and also
being held by DuPage County authorities on $200,000
bond. Gondek was arrested after Elmhurst Police and Madigan’s office’s
investigators executed a search warrant at his apartment on Arlington Ave. in Elmhurst yesterday
and found evidence of alleged child pornography.
“Elmhurst Police are committed to protecting all our
residents, particularly our children, in the community and when they go
online,” said Elmhurst Police Chief Michael Ruth.
“Every year, child pornography claims millions of victims
one image at a time,” Berlin said.
“I would like to thank Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s ICAC Task Force for
their continued efforts in protecting our children from those who would do them
harm.”
The public is reminded that the defendants are presumed
innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
In 2010, the first year of Operation Glass House, Madigan’s
investigations revealed a disturbing trend of offenders trading extremely
violent videos of young children being raped. As a result, Operation Glass
House has focused on apprehending offenders who are seen trading and watching
extremely violent videos involving children, including infants and toddlers.
Madigan’s office, with a grant from the U.S. Department of
Justice, runs the Illinois Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force,
which investigates child exploitation crimes and trains law enforcement
agencies.
Since 2006, Madigan’s ICAC Task Force has been involved in
622 arrests of sexual predators. The Task Force has also provided Internet
safety training and education to more than 302,000 parents, teachers and
students and more than 16,000 law enforcement professionals. Currently, 186
agencies are affiliated with the Illinois ICAC.
Labels:
Arrests
,
Attorney General
,
Child Pornography
Friday, October 18, 2013
Governor Scott kicks off Florida’s second statewide Human Trafficking Summit
This summary is not available. Please
click here to view the post.
Labels:
Florida
,
Human Trafficking Summit
Attorney General Schneiderman acknowledges victory for New York State's Campaign Finance Laws
(BMLTV) NEW YORK – On October
15, Judge Paul A. Crotty of the Southern
District of New York denied a preliminary injunction request by the New York
Progress and Protection PAC against New
York State 's
restriction on individual political contributions exceeding $150,000. The New
York Attorney General's office, representing the State Board of Elections,
argued against the injunction and in defense of New York 's campaign finance laws.
In response to today's ruling, Attorney General Eric T.
Schneiderman said:
"Todays ruling is a clear victory for those who believe
that every voter should have an equal voice in our democracy, and that New York 's campaign
finance law is unquestionably constitutional. Campaign finance laws protect the
integrity and fairness of elections and help ensure that individuals - not
wealth or corporations - are represented in our system of government."
Nursing Home owner arrested for $395,000 in Medicaid fraud, Miami-Dade
(BMLTV) TALLAHASSEE, Fla. October 18, 2013 – Miami-Dade nursing home owner Julius
Ast was arrested today by the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit
and the Miami-Dade Police Department for allegedly using the billing names of
four non-existent businesses to submit fraudulent invoices to his business,
Pines Nursing Home, which were then paid with Medicaid funds.
This fraudulent
scheme ultimately resulted in more than $395,000 in payments to Julius Ast. He
is charged with one count of Medicaid fraud, one count of grand theft, and one
count of organized fraud, all first-degree felonies.
“Thanks to our partnership with the Agency for Health Care
Administration and the Miami-Dade Police Department, we were able to stop this
fraudulent billing scheme," stated Attorney General Pam Bondi. "We
will continue to protect Florida ’s
Medicaid program."
Allegedly, Ast recorded forty-seven fraudulent operating
expense charges and submitted the cost report to the Agency for Health Care Administration.
Ast allegedly then wrote checks to these businesses to “pay” the expense
charges when in reality he was paying himself. The Agency for Health Care
Administration referred this case to the Attorney General’s Medicaid Fraud Control
Unit for further investigation.
If convicted, Ast faces up to 90 years in prison and more
than $1.9 million in fines. The case is being prosecuted by the Attorney
General’s Office of Statewide Prosecution.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Congress passes bill reopening Federal Government
(NNS) WASHINGTON ,
October 17, 2013 - President Barack Obama signed legislation late yesterday
night bringing federal employees back to work after Congress finally resolved
the budget logjam which led to a 16-day shutdown.
Senate leaders championed bipartisan legislation to reopen the government and remove the threat of government default on its debts. All federal government employees - including some 4,000 Defense Department employees - will report to work tomorrow.
The legislation is a continuing resolution that will provide federal government spending at fiscal year 2013 levels. This keeps the sequester-level budget in effect.
The act will keep the government open through Jan. 15 and raises the debt limit through Feb. 7. The act contains a provision for a joint Senate-House committee to work on a budget recommendation for fiscal year 2014. Those recommendations are due Dec. 13.
The legislation includes the provision to pay all furloughed employees for the period of the lapse in appropriations. The act calls for those employees to be paid "as soon as practicable."
Even before the House of Representatives voted, President Obama signaled his intent to sign the bill. "We'll begin reopening our government immediately," he said in a White House appearance. "And we can begin to lift this cloud of uncertainty and unease from our businesses and from the American people."
Obama asked that all political officials take the lesson of the gridlock to heart and work together to solve the nation's problems.
"My hope and expectation is," Obama said, "everybody has learned that there is no reason why we can't work on the issues at hand, why we can't disagree between the parties while still being agreeable, and make sure that we're not inflicting harm on the American people when we do have disagreements."
"So hopefully that's a lesson that will be internalized, and not just by me, but also by Democrats and Republicans, not only the leaders, but also the rank-and-file," he said.
As he was leaving the Brady Press Room at the White House, a reporter asked the president if the shutdown might not be duplicated in January. "No," the president said and left.
Sylvia Matthews Burwell, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, said in a release federal employees "should expect to return to work in the morning."
Senate leaders championed bipartisan legislation to reopen the government and remove the threat of government default on its debts. All federal government employees - including some 4,000 Defense Department employees - will report to work tomorrow.
The legislation is a continuing resolution that will provide federal government spending at fiscal year 2013 levels. This keeps the sequester-level budget in effect.
The act will keep the government open through Jan. 15 and raises the debt limit through Feb. 7. The act contains a provision for a joint Senate-House committee to work on a budget recommendation for fiscal year 2014. Those recommendations are due Dec. 13.
The legislation includes the provision to pay all furloughed employees for the period of the lapse in appropriations. The act calls for those employees to be paid "as soon as practicable."
Even before the House of Representatives voted, President Obama signaled his intent to sign the bill. "We'll begin reopening our government immediately," he said in a White House appearance. "And we can begin to lift this cloud of uncertainty and unease from our businesses and from the American people."
Obama asked that all political officials take the lesson of the gridlock to heart and work together to solve the nation's problems.
"My hope and expectation is," Obama said, "everybody has learned that there is no reason why we can't work on the issues at hand, why we can't disagree between the parties while still being agreeable, and make sure that we're not inflicting harm on the American people when we do have disagreements."
"So hopefully that's a lesson that will be internalized, and not just by me, but also by Democrats and Republicans, not only the leaders, but also the rank-and-file," he said.
As he was leaving the Brady Press Room at the White House, a reporter asked the president if the shutdown might not be duplicated in January. "No," the president said and left.
Sylvia Matthews Burwell, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, said in a release federal employees "should expect to return to work in the morning."
by jim garamone
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
'Voices of Survivors' tells the stories of survivors of violence against women
(BMLTV) UNITED NATIONS,October 16,2013 - Every year, millions of women and girls worldwide suffer some form of violence, be it domestic violence, rape, female genital mutilation/cutting, dowry-related killing, trafficking, sexual violence in conflict-related situations, or other manifestations of abuse.
Launched in 2008, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s UNiTE to End Violence against Women campaign is a multi-year effort aimed at raising public awareness and increasing political will and resources for preventing and ending violence against women and girls in all parts of the world.
The campaign calls on governments, civil society, women’s organizations, young people, the private sector, the media and the entire UN system to join forces in addressing this global pandemic.
More information can be found at:
UNite to end violence against women.
Stop, teach children not to engage with a bully online
Cyber bullying: put an end to the tragedy of suicide by bullying
(PRNewswire) LOS
ANGELES, October. 15, 2013 - Is your child cyber bullied? The statistics
are scary: Suicide is the third leading cause of death among young people, and
victims of bullying are two to nine times more likely to consider
taking their own lives than non-victims (Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention). Sadly, another name was added to the death toll with
the tragic passing of a 12-year-old girl in Florida who was the victim of extreme cyber bullying.
This incident of extreme bullying resulted in the arrest of a 14-year-old girl
and a 12-year-old girl.
So, what do you do? How can you help?
Kids in the House: The Ultimate Parenting Resource expert Lori Getz says the most important thing to teach our
kids is to stop, block, and report.
"Stop, teach children not to engage with a bully
online. Then you want to teach them to block. Then they need to report. They
need to tell an adult."
Kids in the House: The Ultimate Parenting Resource is an educational website with the goal of helping parents and caregivers become better at parenting by educating, inspiring and entertaining. The 8,000 videos on the website feature interviews with over 450 top experts in parenting, including physicians, psychologists, researchers, educators and best-selling authors, as well as leaders of national organizations. The videos also feature parents who have dealt with particular issues and can share their hard-earned wisdom. Parents have the opportunity to hear and share different perspectives and get solutions for parenting challenges that range from pregnancy through getting into college. Kids in the House aims to be the most comprehensive resource for parenting advice, one which respects the fact that there is no on-size-fits-all solution.
Labels:
Bullying
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Cyber Bullying
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Former San Diego Mayor entered his guilty plea today in San Diego County Superior Court
(BMLTV) SAN DIEGO, October 15 2013 - Attorney General Kamala D. Harris today announced that former San Diego Mayor Bob Filner has plead guilty to one count of felony false imprisonment and two counts of misdemeanor battery.
Filner entered his guilty plea today in San Diego County Superior Court. “This conduct was not only criminal, it was also an extreme abuse of power,” said Attorney General Harris. “This prosecution is about consequence and accountability.
No one is above the law.” Under the terms of the plea agreement, Filner must surrender his Mayoral pension from the date the felony was committed (March 6, 2013) until the date he resigned office (August 23, 2013). He will serve probation for three years and home confinement for three months.
The agreement also prohibits Filner from ever seeking or holding public office again. As a consequence of the felony plea, Filner may not vote, serve on a jury or own a firearm while he is on probation. Filner is required to undergo treatment as directed by a mental health professional throughout his probation.
If he violates the terms of his probation, he may face up to 6 months in jail. Fines including restitution, probation and court fees will be determined at Filner’s sentencing hearing, which will be announced today. The California Attorney General's office was assisted in this investigation by the San Diego County Sheriff's Department.
Filner entered his guilty plea today in San Diego County Superior Court. “This conduct was not only criminal, it was also an extreme abuse of power,” said Attorney General Harris. “This prosecution is about consequence and accountability.
No one is above the law.” Under the terms of the plea agreement, Filner must surrender his Mayoral pension from the date the felony was committed (March 6, 2013) until the date he resigned office (August 23, 2013). He will serve probation for three years and home confinement for three months.
The agreement also prohibits Filner from ever seeking or holding public office again. As a consequence of the felony plea, Filner may not vote, serve on a jury or own a firearm while he is on probation. Filner is required to undergo treatment as directed by a mental health professional throughout his probation.
If he violates the terms of his probation, he may face up to 6 months in jail. Fines including restitution, probation and court fees will be determined at Filner’s sentencing hearing, which will be announced today. The California Attorney General's office was assisted in this investigation by the San Diego County Sheriff's Department.
VA Union President blasts lawmakers on failure to reopen government and restore full services to veterans
(PRN/USN) WASHINGTON , Oct.
14, 3013 - American Federation of Government Employees National Veterans
Affairs Council President Alma Lee this week issued the following
statement regarding the lockout of Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA)
employees:
"Some of our lawmakers should be ashamed of themselves.
They have allowed for the lockout of vital public servants for now 11 days.
Added to the hundreds of thousands of employees who have been sent home are
7,000 Veterans Benefits Administration (VBA) workers who assist in the
processing of veterans' benefits claims.
"Historically, we have taken great pride in our ability
to serve our nation's heroes who have worn the uniform and fought valiantly for
our freedoms. To look at where we are today, with politicians more interested
in political posturing than providing support to our veterans, it is an
unspeakable travesty. With a record-high claims backlog and more of our
soldiers leaving military service, we need to make it our top priority to
ensure our service to America 's
veterans is fully funded and operational. We cannot do that under this current
government shutdown.
"The furlough of thousands of VBA workers means claims
processing will be delayed, quality review teams will not be on the job to
ensure that claims are completed accurately, appeals are not being processed,
and there is no access to in-person or over the phone consultations at VBA regional
offices. In many cases, veterans cannot access VA health care and other VA
services, or receive their preference for federal employment until their
benefits are awarded. In the wake of this shutdown, education and pension call
centers are also closed, hurting veterans who are looking for assistance with
their GI Bill benefits, and low income veterans and widows.
"Our elected leaders must end this lockout now. Our
employees want to be on the job providing service to our veterans and reducing
this backlog. AFGE VA activists from health care workers to
cemetery employees will continue to hold rallies and sound the alarm on the
mockery that is being made of our legislative system. At the rate we are going,
those who have escaped this round of furloughs will be the next ones to have
their jobs on the chopping block. We are all touched by someone who's been
impacted by this shutdown. The time is now to reopen the government and put all
public servants back to work."
The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) is
the largest federal employee union, representing 670,000 workers in the federal
government and the government of the District of Columbia . AFGE's National
Veterans Affairs Council represents 210,000 employees within the Department of
Veterans Affairs. For the latest AFGE news and information, follow us on Facebook and Twitter .
Please visit : http://www.afge.org
Top gun violence public health experts to discuss effective ways for communities to reduce gun violence
(PRN/USN) WASHINGTON, October. 15, 2013 - The Children's Defense Fund and Washington National Cathedral are hosting a forum on ending the gun violence epidemic at 10:10 a.m. on Sunday, October 20, 2013 followed by a Children's Sabbath Service at 11:15 a.m. with a sermon by Marian Wright Edelman, president of the Children's Defense Fund.
Everyone is asked to join in at Washington National Cathedral (3131 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC) the event is free and open to the public, but if you can't be there in person plan to join us virtually – the Forum and Worship Service will be streamed live and also posted after the event, on the homepage of the National Cathedral at www.cathedral.org.
To symbolize the theme of the Children's Sabbath celebration, Beating Swords into Plowshares: Ending the Violence of Guns and Child Poverty, blacksmiths will turn illegal guns confiscated by the police into garden tools starting at 12:45 p.m.
The transformation is meant to capture anew the biblical vision that speaks to our longing for a time when all children and families will know physical and economic security. These illegal guns will be transformed into life-affirming garden tools which will be used in community gardens to grow healthy food for families.
Marian Wright Edelman and Dean Gary Hall of the Washington National Cathedral will kick off the forum, a panel of experts on gun violence prevention who will discuss the impact of gun violence on children, families and communities and the roles faith communities and others can play in reducing gun violence.
Forum speakers include Dr. David Satcher, former U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. Mark Rosenberg, former director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, and Dr. Thomas McInerny, President of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Dr. Rosenberg and Dr. Satcher led the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) efforts to fund groundbreaking research showing that a gun in the home increased the risk of violence. The National Rifle Association and its friends in Congress then blocked funding of future government research into the prevention of gun injuries and fatalities.
For additional information, visit:
www.childrensdefense.org
Everyone is asked to join in at Washington National Cathedral (3131 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC) the event is free and open to the public, but if you can't be there in person plan to join us virtually – the Forum and Worship Service will be streamed live and also posted after the event, on the homepage of the National Cathedral at www.cathedral.org.
To symbolize the theme of the Children's Sabbath celebration, Beating Swords into Plowshares: Ending the Violence of Guns and Child Poverty, blacksmiths will turn illegal guns confiscated by the police into garden tools starting at 12:45 p.m.
The transformation is meant to capture anew the biblical vision that speaks to our longing for a time when all children and families will know physical and economic security. These illegal guns will be transformed into life-affirming garden tools which will be used in community gardens to grow healthy food for families.
Marian Wright Edelman and Dean Gary Hall of the Washington National Cathedral will kick off the forum, a panel of experts on gun violence prevention who will discuss the impact of gun violence on children, families and communities and the roles faith communities and others can play in reducing gun violence.
Forum speakers include Dr. David Satcher, former U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. Mark Rosenberg, former director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, and Dr. Thomas McInerny, President of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Dr. Rosenberg and Dr. Satcher led the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) efforts to fund groundbreaking research showing that a gun in the home increased the risk of violence. The National Rifle Association and its friends in Congress then blocked funding of future government research into the prevention of gun injuries and fatalities.
For additional information, visit:
www.childrensdefense.org
Monday, October 14, 2013
Government shuts down Catholic services on Navy Base; church locked; priest threatened with arrest; Thomas More Law Center files federal lawsuit
(PRNewswire) ANN ARBOR, Mich., October 14, 2013 - In the wake of the government shutdown, despite provisions in the Pay Our Military Act, Catholics at Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base in Georgia are being denied religious services, according to the complaint filed by the Thomas Moore Law Center.
The Catholic priest who serves this community has been prohibited from even volunteering to celebrate Holy Mass without pay, and was told that if he violated that order, he could be subject to arrest. Protestant services continue to take place.
Only Catholic services have been shutdown. This is an astonishing attack on religious freedom by the federal government, and the latest affront towards the military since the beginning of the shutdown. As a result, the Thomas More Law Center (TMLC), a national public interest law firm based in Ann Arbor, MI, today, filed a federal lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Father Ray Leonard, a Catholic priest contracted to serve as base chaplain and Fred Naylor, one of Father Leonard's parishioners and a retired veteran with over 22 years of service.
Fr. Leonard is a civilian Catholic Pastor contracted by the Department of Defense (DoD) to serve as a military chaplain at Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base in Georgia. Fr. Leonard who served Tibetan populations in China for 10 years, informed the court in an affidavit; "In China, I was disallowed from performing public religious services due to the lack of religious freedom in China.
I never imagined that when I returned home to the United States, that I would be forbidden from practicing my religious beliefs as I am called to do, and would be forbidden from helping and serving my faith community." On October 4, 2013, Fr. Leonard was ordered to stop performing all of his duties as the base's Catholic Chaplain, even on a voluntary basis.
He was also told that he could be arrested if he violated that order. The approximately 300 Catholic families, including Fred Naylor's, served by Fr. Leonard at Kings Bay have been unable to attend Mass on base since the beginning of the shutdown. Additionally, Fr. Leonard was locked out of his on-base office and the chapel.
Fr. Leonard was also denied access to the Holy Eucharist and other articles of his Catholic faith. The order has caused the cancellation of daily and weekend mass, confession, marriage preparation classes and baptisms as well as prevented Fr. Leonard from providing the spiritual guidance he was called by his faith to provide.
The submarine base is remotely located. It consists of roughly 16,000 acres, with 4,000 acres comprised of protected wetlands. There are approximately 10,000 total people on the base. A Catholic Church is located off base in the town of St. Mary's. However, many of the parishioners both live and work on base and do not own a car and cannot otherwise access transportation.
Therefore a sixteen (16) mile journey to and from the off-base church is simply not possible. Moreover, many of the sailors have an extremely limited amount of time off. With their time highly regimented, they are not given a long enough break time for this exceptionally long walk and the Mass service. Defendants in the lawsuit are the Department of Defense (DoD), Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, the Department of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Department of the Navy, Ray Mabus.
Currently, about 25% of the US Armed Forces is Catholic and due to a shortage of active duty Catholic Priests, the DoD contracts Catholic Priests to provide religious services, sacraments and support for other religious practices for military base communities.
Catholic Priests serve the Military Archdiocese. For active duty service members, on base religious services are extremely important given issues associated with off base transportation, extremely limited time off and the highly scheduled lifestyle of active military duty. Additionally, as service members tend to have high rates of divorce, depression and suicide, the need for readily available spiritual encouragement and guidance is critical.
The Pay Our Military Act, which was enacted before the beginning of the government shutdown, provides provisions for the funding of employees whose responsibilities contribute to the morale and well-being of the military. The government has previously been criticized for interpreting the Act to not include military death benefits. Now, in yet another bizarre interpretation of the Act, some chaplains are not considered covered by these provisions, leaving Catholic members of some military facilities without spiritual guidance.
The Thomas More Law Center defends and promotes America's Judeo-Christian heritage and moral values, including the religious freedom of Christians, time-honored family values, and the sanctity of human life. It supports a strong national defense and an independent and sovereign United States of America. The Law Center accomplishes its mission through litigation, education, and related activities. It does not charge for its services.
The Law Center is supported by contributions from individuals, corporations and foundations, and is recognized by the IRS as a section 501(c)(3) organization.
You may reach the Thomas More Law Center at (734) 827-2001 or visit their website at www.thomasmore.org.
The Catholic priest who serves this community has been prohibited from even volunteering to celebrate Holy Mass without pay, and was told that if he violated that order, he could be subject to arrest. Protestant services continue to take place.
Only Catholic services have been shutdown. This is an astonishing attack on religious freedom by the federal government, and the latest affront towards the military since the beginning of the shutdown. As a result, the Thomas More Law Center (TMLC), a national public interest law firm based in Ann Arbor, MI, today, filed a federal lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Father Ray Leonard, a Catholic priest contracted to serve as base chaplain and Fred Naylor, one of Father Leonard's parishioners and a retired veteran with over 22 years of service.
Fr. Leonard is a civilian Catholic Pastor contracted by the Department of Defense (DoD) to serve as a military chaplain at Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base in Georgia. Fr. Leonard who served Tibetan populations in China for 10 years, informed the court in an affidavit; "In China, I was disallowed from performing public religious services due to the lack of religious freedom in China.
I never imagined that when I returned home to the United States, that I would be forbidden from practicing my religious beliefs as I am called to do, and would be forbidden from helping and serving my faith community." On October 4, 2013, Fr. Leonard was ordered to stop performing all of his duties as the base's Catholic Chaplain, even on a voluntary basis.
He was also told that he could be arrested if he violated that order. The approximately 300 Catholic families, including Fred Naylor's, served by Fr. Leonard at Kings Bay have been unable to attend Mass on base since the beginning of the shutdown. Additionally, Fr. Leonard was locked out of his on-base office and the chapel.
Fr. Leonard was also denied access to the Holy Eucharist and other articles of his Catholic faith. The order has caused the cancellation of daily and weekend mass, confession, marriage preparation classes and baptisms as well as prevented Fr. Leonard from providing the spiritual guidance he was called by his faith to provide.
The submarine base is remotely located. It consists of roughly 16,000 acres, with 4,000 acres comprised of protected wetlands. There are approximately 10,000 total people on the base. A Catholic Church is located off base in the town of St. Mary's. However, many of the parishioners both live and work on base and do not own a car and cannot otherwise access transportation.
Therefore a sixteen (16) mile journey to and from the off-base church is simply not possible. Moreover, many of the sailors have an extremely limited amount of time off. With their time highly regimented, they are not given a long enough break time for this exceptionally long walk and the Mass service. Defendants in the lawsuit are the Department of Defense (DoD), Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, the Department of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Department of the Navy, Ray Mabus.
Currently, about 25% of the US Armed Forces is Catholic and due to a shortage of active duty Catholic Priests, the DoD contracts Catholic Priests to provide religious services, sacraments and support for other religious practices for military base communities.
Catholic Priests serve the Military Archdiocese. For active duty service members, on base religious services are extremely important given issues associated with off base transportation, extremely limited time off and the highly scheduled lifestyle of active military duty. Additionally, as service members tend to have high rates of divorce, depression and suicide, the need for readily available spiritual encouragement and guidance is critical.
The Pay Our Military Act, which was enacted before the beginning of the government shutdown, provides provisions for the funding of employees whose responsibilities contribute to the morale and well-being of the military. The government has previously been criticized for interpreting the Act to not include military death benefits. Now, in yet another bizarre interpretation of the Act, some chaplains are not considered covered by these provisions, leaving Catholic members of some military facilities without spiritual guidance.
The Thomas More Law Center defends and promotes America's Judeo-Christian heritage and moral values, including the religious freedom of Christians, time-honored family values, and the sanctity of human life. It supports a strong national defense and an independent and sovereign United States of America. The Law Center accomplishes its mission through litigation, education, and related activities. It does not charge for its services.
The Law Center is supported by contributions from individuals, corporations and foundations, and is recognized by the IRS as a section 501(c)(3) organization.
You may reach the Thomas More Law Center at (734) 827-2001 or visit their website at www.thomasmore.org.
AJC urges President Obama to reconsider penalizing Egypt
(PRN/USN) NEW YORK, October 14, 2013 - The American Jewish Committee
(AJC) is urging President Obama to reconsider his decision to withhold U.S. aid to Egypt.
The Administration's action "sends the wrong signal to America's friends in Egypt and across the Middle East," AJC President Stanley M. Bergman and Executive Director David Harris wrote to President Obama.
"The broad and mutually beneficial relationship between our two countries offers a variety of other measures that can be taken to uphold American values and protect American interests in that vital region."
AJC has been extensively engaged in Egypt for more than a quarter of a century, and has followed with concern the developments in that important Arab country and their impact on the region since the overthrow of President Mubarak.
While AJC does not sanction the removal of a democratically elected government by non-democratic means, the Morsi government turned out to be "profoundly anti-democratic in nature and in practice," and thus was broadly rejected by the Egyptian public and ousted by the Egyptian military in July.
U.S. allies across the region "recognize the danger posed by the form of political absolutism demonstrated by the Muslim Brotherhood in its year in power, stand with America against terrorism, and look to America to uphold values the Brotherhood was committed to subverting," noted the AJC leaders.
AJC remains hopeful that the Egyptian people can achieve a "transparent, responsive and inclusive government." Restoring U.S. aid would be helpful.as Egypt strives to "transition to full civilian rule and demonstrable progress toward the establishment of democratic governance."
The Administration's action "sends the wrong signal to America's friends in Egypt and across the Middle East," AJC President Stanley M. Bergman and Executive Director David Harris wrote to President Obama.
"The broad and mutually beneficial relationship between our two countries offers a variety of other measures that can be taken to uphold American values and protect American interests in that vital region."
AJC has been extensively engaged in Egypt for more than a quarter of a century, and has followed with concern the developments in that important Arab country and their impact on the region since the overthrow of President Mubarak.
While AJC does not sanction the removal of a democratically elected government by non-democratic means, the Morsi government turned out to be "profoundly anti-democratic in nature and in practice," and thus was broadly rejected by the Egyptian public and ousted by the Egyptian military in July.
U.S. allies across the region "recognize the danger posed by the form of political absolutism demonstrated by the Muslim Brotherhood in its year in power, stand with America against terrorism, and look to America to uphold values the Brotherhood was committed to subverting," noted the AJC leaders.
AJC remains hopeful that the Egyptian people can achieve a "transparent, responsive and inclusive government." Restoring U.S. aid would be helpful.as Egypt strives to "transition to full civilian rule and demonstrable progress toward the establishment of democratic governance."
Labels:
Aid
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Egypt
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Middle East
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Politics
Sunday, October 13, 2013
The Navy Celebrates its 238th Birthday
WASHINGTON. October 12, 2013 From left to right, retired Navy SEAL Lt. Jason Redman, country music singer Mark Wills, Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Adm. Jonathan Greenert, the two youngest Sailors in attendance and Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy Mike Stevens cut a birthday cake together at the U.S. Navy Birthday Ball in Washington, D.C. The ball was in celebration of Navy's 238th birthday Oct. 13, 2013. (U.S. Navy photo by Chief Mass Communication Specialist peter d. lawlor/Released)
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Jefferson County Disaster Recovery Center opens in Golden
(BMLTV) DENVER October 12, 2013 – Golden is the newest location for a Disaster Recovery Center (DRC). It will open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., MDT, Monday, Oct. 14.
Colorado residents who suffered losses and damages as a result of the severe storms, flooding, landslides and mudslides can get information about disaster assistance at this new DRC in Jefferson County.
Jefferson County Jefferson County Courthouse 100 Jefferson County Parkway Golden, CO 80401 Hours: 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., MDT, six days, Monday through Saturday.
DRCs are operated by the Colorado Office of Emergency Management and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in partnership with the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), county and local governments.
All DRCs are open Columbus Day, Monday, Oct. 14. Representatives from FEMA and the SBA are among the agencies represented at each DRC to explain assistance programs and help survivors apply for disaster aid.
For individuals who have hearing and visual disabilities or are deaf, DRCs can provide such accommodations as:
• Captioned telephones, which transcribe spoken words into text
• The booklet Help After a Disaster in large print and Braille
• American Sign Language interpreters, available upon request
• Magnifiers and assistive listening devices
• 711-Relay or Video Relay Services Survivors with losses from the storms, flooding, mudslides or landslides will save time by registering for help from FEMA before going to the DRCs.
Register with FEMA by phone: 800-621-3362.
Multilingual phone operators are available on the FEMA helpline.
Choose Option 2 for Spanish and Option 3 for other languages.
The toll-free numbers remain open from 5 a.m. to 8 p.m., MDT, seven days a week.
People who have a speech disability or are deaf or hard of hearing may call (TTY) 800-462-7585; users of 711 or Video Relay Service can call 800-621-3362. Register online:
DisasterAssistance.gov. Register by Web-enabled device, tablet or smartphone: type m.fema.gov in the browser.
Colorado residents who suffered losses and damages as a result of the severe storms, flooding, landslides and mudslides can get information about disaster assistance at this new DRC in Jefferson County.
Jefferson County Jefferson County Courthouse 100 Jefferson County Parkway Golden, CO 80401 Hours: 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., MDT, six days, Monday through Saturday.
DRCs are operated by the Colorado Office of Emergency Management and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in partnership with the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), county and local governments.
All DRCs are open Columbus Day, Monday, Oct. 14. Representatives from FEMA and the SBA are among the agencies represented at each DRC to explain assistance programs and help survivors apply for disaster aid.
For individuals who have hearing and visual disabilities or are deaf, DRCs can provide such accommodations as:
• Captioned telephones, which transcribe spoken words into text
• The booklet Help After a Disaster in large print and Braille
• American Sign Language interpreters, available upon request
• Magnifiers and assistive listening devices
• 711-Relay or Video Relay Services Survivors with losses from the storms, flooding, mudslides or landslides will save time by registering for help from FEMA before going to the DRCs.
Register with FEMA by phone: 800-621-3362.
Multilingual phone operators are available on the FEMA helpline.
Choose Option 2 for Spanish and Option 3 for other languages.
The toll-free numbers remain open from 5 a.m. to 8 p.m., MDT, seven days a week.
People who have a speech disability or are deaf or hard of hearing may call (TTY) 800-462-7585; users of 711 or Video Relay Service can call 800-621-3362. Register online:
DisasterAssistance.gov. Register by Web-enabled device, tablet or smartphone: type m.fema.gov in the browser.
Friday, October 11, 2013
Alabama school board passes policy that threatens student privacy
(PRN/USN) TUSCALOOSA, Ala., October 11, 2013 - The state board of education on Thursday adopted a policy that supposedly protects student privacy while it allows the collection, data-mining and sharing of private, non-academic information on students without parental permission.
This pervasive collection, tracking and sharing of student privacy information with the federal government and private parties was made possible when President Obama changed FERPA (the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act) through regulation in December 2011.
"Even George Orwell would be shocked to the extent that the State Superintendent of Education and majority state school board will allow spying on our children at school," said Elois Zeanah, president of the Alabama Federation of Republican Women, continuing, "Concerned citizens asked legislators to restore the privacy rights stripped by President Obama during the 2013 session, but the Superintendent lobbied hard against it."
Zeanah speculated that a primary reason the Superintendent wrote a bill that vastly weakens SB190 and doesn't want the legislature to pass a bill to restore the privacy protection stripped from FERPA is that he fears he will lose federal money.
"ALDOE received one-half billion dollars from the 2009 Stimulus Bill in exchange for developing a state longitudinal data system. Also, when the Board applied for a waiver from No Child Left Behind, it agreed to implement the standards, aligned assessments, and data-mining; and it will receive additional multi-millions of dollars.
The Board no longer has the power to protect student privacy because they've 'sold' their right to the federal government. Only the State Legislature can help us now." Personal data unrelated to academics will include some students' behaviors and psychosocial attributes. Zeanah stated, "Children can be asked about their sexual preferences, drug use, political and religious beliefs, etc.
Given the recent examples of how the federal government uses data to punish its political enemies and picks winners and losers, why would the Superintendent and state board (with the exception of Stephanie Bell and Betty Peters who voted against the policy) want to subject our children to this threat? The only way to protect our children is to not collect compromising information in the first place. Let's hope the Legislature will right this wrong."
To find out more, you can visit:
www.afrw.org
This pervasive collection, tracking and sharing of student privacy information with the federal government and private parties was made possible when President Obama changed FERPA (the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act) through regulation in December 2011.
"Even George Orwell would be shocked to the extent that the State Superintendent of Education and majority state school board will allow spying on our children at school," said Elois Zeanah, president of the Alabama Federation of Republican Women, continuing, "Concerned citizens asked legislators to restore the privacy rights stripped by President Obama during the 2013 session, but the Superintendent lobbied hard against it."
Zeanah speculated that a primary reason the Superintendent wrote a bill that vastly weakens SB190 and doesn't want the legislature to pass a bill to restore the privacy protection stripped from FERPA is that he fears he will lose federal money.
"ALDOE received one-half billion dollars from the 2009 Stimulus Bill in exchange for developing a state longitudinal data system. Also, when the Board applied for a waiver from No Child Left Behind, it agreed to implement the standards, aligned assessments, and data-mining; and it will receive additional multi-millions of dollars.
The Board no longer has the power to protect student privacy because they've 'sold' their right to the federal government. Only the State Legislature can help us now." Personal data unrelated to academics will include some students' behaviors and psychosocial attributes. Zeanah stated, "Children can be asked about their sexual preferences, drug use, political and religious beliefs, etc.
Given the recent examples of how the federal government uses data to punish its political enemies and picks winners and losers, why would the Superintendent and state board (with the exception of Stephanie Bell and Betty Peters who voted against the policy) want to subject our children to this threat? The only way to protect our children is to not collect compromising information in the first place. Let's hope the Legislature will right this wrong."
To find out more, you can visit:
www.afrw.org
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Fed up with the Feds: South Rim Community businesses led protest at the Grand Canyon
(PRNewswire) TUSAYAN, Ariz., October. 7, 2013 - There was a protest at the gates of the Grand Canyon due to businesses in Northern Arizona and the people who work there suffer because the federal government has turned down offers of financial assistance from South Rim business owners, the State of Arizona, and the adjacent town of Tusayan to partially open the Grand Canyon during the government shutdown .
The protesters gathered at 1pm Arizona time, October 8th in the ADOT right-of-way just south of the Grand Canyon National Park South Rim entrance gates. The Town of Tusayan had previously voted to appropriate more than $200,000 and businesses in the town have pledged another $150,000 to fund a partial opening of the Grand Canyon National Park during the government shutdown.
The economic loss caused by closing the Canyon has created huge losses for businesses in northern Arizona. On October 4th, Arizona Senators John McCain and Jeff Flake wrote a letter to the Secretary of the Interior requesting that the department reconsider its refusal to use non-federal funds to operate the Canyon as was done during a government shutdown in 1995.
The letter states in part: "We fail to understand why the Department and the NPS would dismiss the efforts of Arizonans trying to proactively address this situation." Governor Brewer, House Speaker Andy Tobin, and Senate President Andy Biggs also wrote President Obama asking the administration to allow the use of non-federal funds to operate the Canyon. Red Feather Properties, which has been serving tourists in northern Arizona for nearly a century, initiated the idea and pledged the first $25,000.
The protesters gathered at 1pm Arizona time, October 8th in the ADOT right-of-way just south of the Grand Canyon National Park South Rim entrance gates. The Town of Tusayan had previously voted to appropriate more than $200,000 and businesses in the town have pledged another $150,000 to fund a partial opening of the Grand Canyon National Park during the government shutdown.
The economic loss caused by closing the Canyon has created huge losses for businesses in northern Arizona. On October 4th, Arizona Senators John McCain and Jeff Flake wrote a letter to the Secretary of the Interior requesting that the department reconsider its refusal to use non-federal funds to operate the Canyon as was done during a government shutdown in 1995.
The letter states in part: "We fail to understand why the Department and the NPS would dismiss the efforts of Arizonans trying to proactively address this situation." Governor Brewer, House Speaker Andy Tobin, and Senate President Andy Biggs also wrote President Obama asking the administration to allow the use of non-federal funds to operate the Canyon. Red Feather Properties, which has been serving tourists in northern Arizona for nearly a century, initiated the idea and pledged the first $25,000.
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Syrian refugees fearful as food aid reduced in Lebanon

A young Syrian refugee child in al Marj village in Lebanon's Beka'a Valley peers out of his makeshift window, where cardboard protects from the sun's heat.
photo: christina malkoun/IRIN©
(IRIN) TYRE, October 9, 2013 - On a scruffy basketball court in south Lebanon, a few dozen people shuffle their way to the front of an orderly queue where most collect a piece of paper and leave. A few, perhaps a quarter, are told to join the second line.
They are Syrian refugees expecting to pick up their monthly food vouchers at one of the dozens of makeshift distribution centres across the country. In the second line, two NGO workers explain in detail why the select group of refugees will be cut off from food aid, and give them an appeal form if they want to challenge the decision.
Lebanon, now home to nearly 700,000 Syrian registered refugees and many more unregistered, is stretched to breaking point. At least one in five people in the country of little over four million is now a Syrian, as tens of thousands of families flee the increasingly bloody civil war next door.
Across the region, countries neighbouring Syria are struggling to cope with the staggering number of refugees, who have strained health, education and other infrastructure. As more refugees stream over the border every day, the UN is being forced to prioritize the most vulnerable due to lack of funds.
Starting this month, the World Food Programme (WFP) and the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) have stopped distributing food vouchers to 30-40 percent of Syrian refugees in Lebanon, or more than 200,000 people, according to UNHCR. Fatima, a mother of two small children, is among the unlucky ones.
Her husband works in a bakery in the capital Beirut making US$300 a month, sleeping in a room next door. They cannot afford to rent a place there, so she and the children live 90km further south in Tyre, an impoverished city that still bears the scars of the 2006 Israeli assault. He sends her what he can, but after living costs he does not have much to spare, so her family survives on support from the UN, mostly food vouchers.
Already the $27 per person monthly food allowance does not go far in a country where prices of basic staples are considerably higher than in Syria. A kilogram of rice, sugar, tomatoes, cucumbers and other basics costs $1-2 each. Meat and fish are often too expensive for the budget.
“This country is so expensive,” Fatima said. “They were already giving us almost nothing and now they are going to stop this [aid].” Further down the line Mohammed, a frustrated 32-year-old from Idlib in northern Syria, is also facing a cut. The charity workers seek to calm him down by explaining that he can appeal against the decision, but he has little time for their arguments.
“Why me? I don’t have anything,” he protested, explaining that he left his family behind to seek work in southern Lebanon but has been unemployed for six months. He now shares a room with five other men. “I was going to bring my two children here to get away [from the war]. I don’t think I will any more,” he said, crumpling the appeal form in his hands.
“Tragic choices”
The cutbacks are one of the consequences of insufficient support for Syrian refugees by the international community. The UN and the Lebanese government have appealed for $1.2 billion and $450 million respectively to care for the refugees throughout 2013. To date, the UN has received 44 percent of its appeal for Lebanon, while the government has received none of its desired funding, according to UNHCR.
The result is that the UN can no longer afford to provide full support for all refugees. Ninette Kelley, UNHCR’s representative in Lebanon, said the lack of funding presents them with “tragic choices” every day. Other forms of aid are also being cut for many refugees, particularly hygiene kits and baby kits. UNHCR had already reduced the percentage of hospitalization covered from 85 to 75 percent in April.
But the food vouchers are the most potentially dangerous, with charities already warning that malnutrition is on the rise. In theory those facing the cuts should already be able to support themselves - either because they have jobs or have families or friends that can provide for them. Roberta Russo, communications officer at UNHCR, stresses that “all the people who cannot rely on themselves to survive will continue to get assistance.”
But there are major concerns among charities that by cutting food vouchers to over 200,000 people, thousands who desperately need that support could be mistakenly taken off the list, with potentially disastrous consequences. Asked whether she can survive without the aid, Fatima merely pointed at her dirtied outfit: “Do I look rich to you?” “We are very concerned that refugees with legitimate needs will fall through the gaps,” said Rachel Routley, grants and communications manager with the Danish Refugee Council (DRC), one of the largest international charities working in Lebanon.
“We are concerned that gaps in our information could lead to mistakes [in who gets excluded].” Part of the concern is over a lack of quality information to determine who to cut. Normally, in order to make an assessment, aid agencies would visit refugees regularly to analyze their needs. But the scale of the crisis has made this impossible, so many of the decisions are based on bio-data - basic information on the makeup or the size of families and their work status.
“The criteria we have are very complex but to simplify them, they depend on the family composition [and] on the income of the family,” Russo said. She declined to give a more detailed explanation of the way in which the decisions are made, but stressed UNHCR is trying to make the appeals process adjustable to avoid mistakes. While she emphasized that they are doing their best to ensure no one falls through the cracks, both UNHCR and charities stress the importance of the appeals process in limiting the number of people wrongly cut off.
Every person facing the cut is given an appeal form, with over 100 drop-off boxes across the country. Charities are helping illiterate refugees fill in the forms. But some Syrians, many of whom already feel deserted, say they will not fill in the forms due to frustration with the already slow UN bureaucracy. Mohammed summed up much of this feeling of inertia: “What’s the point?” Indeed Russo was unable to guarantee that appeals would be responded to within a specific time frame. “The aim is to get it through as soon as possible but I am not sure [how quickly they will all be done].
We are starting now. It depends - there are too many variables; it depends on how many appeals we have.” For these reasons, the DRC’s Routley stressed: “The vast majority of excluded beneficiaries will be visited by a verification team to ensure we have the best possible information and that the right decisions are being made. This secondary verification will make doubly sure that the most vulnerable are not excluded.”
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