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Ballot design may have caused undervote in Florida election

By hdcoadmin | December 6, 2006

Matthew Doig and Maurice Tamman of the Herald-Tribune analyzed every ballot cast in Sarasota County in an effort to understand the substantial undervote for the disputed District 13 congressional race. Their analysis points to ballot design as the culprit, although they discuss other theories offered to explain the dramatic 13 percent undervote, or “nearly twice…

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Sexual misconduct problem for Oregon officers

By hdcoadmin | December 6, 2006

Ian Demsky of Willamette Week in Portland, Ore., investigated the records of law enforcement and corrections officers in Oregon who had their licenses revoked. Since 2002, about one third of the revocations stemmed from sexual misconduct.

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Subprime loans cripple minority homeowners

By hdcoadmin | December 6, 2006

Vikas Bajaj and Ron Nixon of The New York Times looked at the impact of subprime loans on minority homeownership over the past six years. The very loans that allowed for the purchase of a home are now crippling buyers’ finances as interest rates inflate, leading to an increase in delinquencies and foreclosures. “Industry officials…

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Conflict of interest in sealed guardianship cases

By hdcoadmin | December 5, 2006

In the on-going series “Your Court, Their Secrets” investigating closed court records, Cheryl Phillips, Maureen O’Hagan and Justin Mayo of The Seattle Times uncovered conflicts of interest in sealed guardianship cases. “Only a small circle of lawyers practice in the guardianship field. Some say that to make a good living they cannot limit their practice…

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Texas law hog-ties defense attorneys

By hdcoadmin | December 5, 2006

Jeremy Rogalski and 11 News Investigates of KHOU-Houston exposed an open secret of the Texas justice system: Texas prosecutors are not letting defense attorneys see basic documents, such as police reports, witness statements, and even DNA lab results, before trial. A Texas state law practically eliminates pretrial discovery often leaving defense attorneys unable to prepare…

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Surface mines pose unique dangers

By hdcoadmin | December 5, 2006

The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette’s Ken Ward Jr. continues his series on coal mine safety with a Sunday article about the dangers of working at mountaintop removal mines in Appalachia. Ward reports, among other things, that Appalachian strip mines account for 20 percent of the nation’s strip-mined coal, but over the last decade accounted for 75…

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Too little choice, too much ideology

By hdcoadmin | December 4, 2006

The Center for Public Integrity’s International Consortium of Investigative Journalists conducted a yearlong investigation into how rigid rules and restrictions of President Bush’s initiative to fight HIV/AIDS have affected countries struggling with the pandemic. The investigation found that restrictive funding and emphasis on abstinence have hindered the $15 billion effort. “Information accumulated by reporters in…

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Methadone series leads to FDA warning

By hdcoadmin | November 29, 2006

Six months after the Charleston Gazette ran a series about methadone overdose deaths nationwide, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a public health advisory and strenghtened the warnings on the package insert for methadone this week. The Gazette series revealed that the FDA-approved recommended dosage on methadone’s old package insert was wrong and potentially…

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Fort Worth Diocese concealed abuse

By hdcoadmin | November 29, 2006

After a 19-month legal battle by The Dallas Morning News and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the newspapers obtained more than 700 pages from the personnel files of seven priests that the diocese had fought to keep secret. The records show that Fort Worth Catholic Diocese leaders systematically helped predator priests stay in ministry for two…

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Military introduces new mental-health guidelines for troops

By hdcoadmin | November 29, 2006

Lisa Chedekel and Matthew Kauffman of The Hartford Courant reported that the U.S. military has issued sweeping new mental-health guidelines that expand screening for troops being sent to war and set limits on when service members with psychiatric problems can be kept in combat. The changes are aimed at meeting a congressional mandate prompted by…

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