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Patients in Peril series

By hdcoadmin | August 23, 2010

From a violent patient allowed to roam free to a pregnancy case that violated policy at every turn and nurses who falsified documents to cover their mistakes, a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel investigation exposed a raft of problems at the Milwaukee County Mental Health Complex, home to the county’s most vulnerable residents. Reporters Meg Kissinger and…

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Brevard (FL) Students Frequently Held Back

By hdcoadmin | August 18, 2010

Mackenzie Ryan reports that struggling students in Brevard’s public schools have a greater chance of repeating a grade than their peers in other parts of the state. In 2009, 7.1 percent of Brevard students were held back, compared with 4.6 percent statewide, a FLORIDA TODAY analysis of education data shows.

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Mortgage Fraud Spawning New Scams

By hdcoadmin | August 18, 2010

Mortgage fraud is a crime that cost an estimated $14 billion in 2009, prompting the FBI to assemble its largest ever team to fight it. But the tsunami of foreclosures is making classic scams easier and spawning new ones to boot. Reuters correspondent Nick Carey reports from Chicago.

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InvestigateWest:Cruise Ships Dump Waste To Dodge Laws

By hdcoadmin | August 18, 2010

An InvestigateWest report on the billion dollar cruise ship industry in the Washington-Alaska cruise market found that most ships avoid tougher state regulations and dump their waste in Canadian waters between the two states, despite state efforts to adopt stricter standards for sewage and wastewater discharge.

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Thai Workers Victims of Human Trafficking In Utah

By hdcoadmin | August 18, 2010

Lee Davidson reported how Thai workers recruited to work on Utah pig and chicken farms were victims of human trafficking. Read “A Story of Modern Slavery in Utah.”

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OneUnited bank was weakest to receive TARP support

By hdcoadmin | August 10, 2010

A report on  Bank Tracker, a project of the Investigative Reporting Workshop at American University, shows that OneUnited Bank, the bank at the center of the allegations against Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., was the weakest TARP bank at the time of its rescue.  “When then Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced creation of the so-called “Capital…

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Trouble plagues N.C. State Bureau of Investigation

By hdcoadmin | August 10, 2010

A 4-part series by The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)  reveals deep trouble at the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation. The series finds an agency in line with prosecutors wishes, agents and analysts who ignore or twist the truth, and reliance on junk science. The director of the SBI was removed from her post…

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Sharpen your interviewing skills

By hdcoadmin | August 10, 2010

By Doug Haddix, IRE training director Studies have shown that the actual words account for only about 7 percent of communication between two people, according to Amy Herdy of the University of Colorado. Body language makes up 55 percent of communication, with tone accounting for the other 38 percent, she told journalists during a recent…

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No recalls on van despite cracking axles

By hdcoadmin | August 6, 2010

Tim Darragh of The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.) reports that Ford Windstars from 1999-2003 are under investigation due to rear axles breaking while the car is being driven at high speeds – but no recall has been ordered. Hundreds of drivers have already complained to the federal government, but recalls on older vehicles are hard…

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Sewage has polluted fishery for over a decade

By hdcoadmin | August 5, 2010

A review of state and federal environmental records by reporters Christopher Baxter, Patrick Lester and Jarrett Renshaw, of The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.), uncovered that for more than a decade, Allentown and other communities have allowed more than 33 million gallons of raw sewage into a prized local trout fishery. The pollution equates to someone…

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