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Loving county tickets and criminal cases changed to lesser charges in turn for bigger fines

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

A CBS 7 investigation into how speeding tickets for CDL drivers are handled in Loving County has uncovered even bigger problems. CBS 7 was first to report Thursday that the county judge and county legal advisor have been writing off speeding tickets as parking violations. However, we found more than just speeding tickets are being…

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Memphis Police Department inconsistent with rape kit testing

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

Newly released Memphis police records show detectives secured DNA testing within weeks of the 2003 home-invasion rape of a girl, then 12, now suing the city over its massive backlog of untested rape kits. In a story last month exploring early missed opportunities to stop serial rapist Anthony Alliano, The Commercial Appeal reported 12-year-old Madison…

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FBI still investigating Jimmy Haslam, Pilot Flying J

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

A year after the raids, the investigation at Pilot Flying J is far from over, as federal authorities continue to examine the company in the methodical, painstaking approach that is typical of how the U.S. Justice Department handles complex, white-collar crime cases.

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Broome County employees told campaign support for County Executive Debbie Preston was mandatory

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

When Broome County Executive Debbie Preston ran for re-election in 2012, about a dozen of her appointed county employees got a mandatory email assignment. Employees were told in the note from Deputy Broome County Executive Bijoy Datta that they were required to participate in political activities to help get Preston elected, according to email messages…

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Utah Transit Authority doubled managers’ bonuses while seeking tax increase

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

The Utah Transit Authority doubled spending on controversial bonuses for managers last year, while it sought a sales-tax hike it says is needed to restore bus service cut during the recession. The agency spent $1.74 million on such bonuses last year, twice the $870,368 doled out in 2012, according to UTA salary data analyzed by…

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Victims, injuries from West Fertilizer Company explosion overlooked

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

One year later, the number of people hurt by the West explosion remains a mystery because a government survey of the injured has failed to account for scores of casualties. Government health officials were initially slow to study the extent of the West injuries. When they did, they limited their survey to those treated at…

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Overdose deaths increase with sales of painkillers

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

Several hundred Iowans have died in recent years from overdoses involving prescription painkillers. The U.S. has seen a surge of such deaths in the past decade as sales of prescription painkillers have exploded. The issue of painkiller abuse has come into sharp focus in Iowa recently with the filing of criminal charges against several medical…

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Colorado foster children regularly prescribed psychotropic drugs

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

About 4,300 of Colorado’s 16,800 foster children — more than a quarter — were prescribed psychotropics in 2012, according to a University of Colorado analysis released to The Denver Post under open-records laws. Among teens in foster care, 37 percent were prescribed psychotropic drugs.

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San Diego Opera officials sought government grants amid financial troubles

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

San Diego Opera officials seeking millions in government grants painted a picture of financial health over the past few years — a time during which financial troubles were well known inside the organization. In a 2012 application to the city of San Diego the opera noted — as it did in each year the company…

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California’s $840-million medical prison beset by waste and mismanagement

By Alena Rehberger | April 14, 2014

California’s $840-million medical prison — the largest in the nation — was built to provide care to more than 1,800 inmates. When fully operational, it was supposed to help the state’s prison system emerge from a decade of federal oversight brought on by the persistent neglect and poor medical treatment of inmates. But since opening…

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