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Death rates rise at Kabul maternity hospital supported by U.S. training

By hdcoadmin | November 20, 2007

Maternal and infant death rates spiked at a major Kabul maternity hospital that was promoted as a model of U.S. medical training in Afghanistan. Alison Young of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reveals that “the rate of normal-sized babies dying in labor and delivery at Rabia Balkhi jumped 67 percent last year.” The statistics, including death rates…

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Young hunters twice as likely to cause accidents in Wisconsin

By hdcoadmin | November 19, 2007

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter Ben Poston analyzed hunting accident records kept by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and found that in the past five years, hunters 21 and younger were more than twice as likely to cause accidents than all other hunters. The analysis also found that deer drives — “a method in which…

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D.C. property tax refund fraud

By hdcoadmin | November 19, 2007

In a Washington Post analysis of Washington D.C. city records, Dan Keating and Carol D. Loennig report that seven years’ worth of fraudulent property tax funds have cost the District $31.7 million. On Nov. 7, the former manager of property tax refunds was arrested and charged for the refund fraud, along with five others. Federal…

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Some Boy Scouts leaders earn six-figure salaries

By hdcoadmin | November 15, 2007

Lee Davidson of the (Salt Lake City) Deseret Morning News analyzed nearly 300 tax returns, known as IRS Form 990, filed by tax-exempt organization and found that Boy Scouts both in Utah and across the U.S. tend to pay their top executives significantly more than do other nonprofit groups that serve youths. It’s a topic…

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Convicted killers in Texas receive probation

By hdcoadmin | November 14, 2007

After a Texas man convicted of shooting an unarmed prostitute received probation, Brooks Egerton and Reese Dunklin of The Dallas Morning News decided to see whether his sentence was a fluke or representative of a larger trend. They analyzed thousands of government records, some of which came from confidential criminal files and interviewed more than…

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Scam hits struggling homeowners

By hdcoadmin | November 14, 2007

A mortgage scam has deceived homeowners in 27 states, including at least 17 in New Jersey. Jason Method of the (Neptune, N.J.) Asbury Park Press investigated the fraud, in which a company contacted homeowners who had been struggling to make their payments. The company promised them a deal: An investor would temporarily buy they property…

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More mayhem in the Meadowlands

By hdcoadmin | November 13, 2007

In an ongoing investigation, Jeff Pillets of The Record in Bergen County, N.J., uncovered how a taxpayer-supported plan to reclaim the North Jersey Meadowlands instead reopened the infamous garbage dumps to millions of cubic yards of contaminated waste. A review of some 10,000 pages of state documents revealed that the site’s developers won a string…

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Investigative journalism challenged in China

By hdcoadmin | November 13, 2007

The Washington Post‘s Edward Cody reports on the case of Pang Jiaoming, a reporter in China who lost his job in the wake of publishing investigative stories “reporting that substandard coal ash was being used in construction of a showcase railroad, the $12 billion high-speed line running 500 miles.” The Post says that due to…

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Chicago transit pension fund in trouble

By hdcoadmin | November 8, 2007

Stacy Warden of the Chi-town Daily News investigated questionable policies in the Chicago Transportation Authority’s pension fund, raising questions about CTA’s claim that state funding policies had caused its current financial crisis. “Taking the first steps toward repairing the agency’s pension fund, along with paying rapidly increasing employee wages and health care costs, will cost…

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The Mercury Connection

By hdcoadmin | November 2, 2007

Hundreds of miles of South Carolina rivers are tainted with mercury, and the state warns people not to eat fish caught in some of these waterways. But no one had checked to see if the mercury was harming humans until The Post and Courier in Charleston had tests conducted on people who eat the fish…

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