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Medal of Honor recipient’s deeds were embellished

By hdcoadmin | December 16, 2011

“After an exhaustive assessment by a McClatchy correspondent who was embedded with the unit and survived the ambush found that the Marines’ official accounts of Dakota Meyer’s, the latest Medal of Honor recipient, deeds were embellished. They’re marred by errors and inconsistencies, ascribe actions to Meyer that are unverified or didn’t happen and create precise,…

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LA Deputies working off-duty pay into “detail fund”

By hdcoadmin | December 15, 2011

“The Lens reports that the Orleans Parish Sheriff’s Office runs a lucrative program hiring out deputies for private security work frequently at far higher pay than their commissioned duties – but it’s not just the deputies who are bringing in a tidy sum. The program provides Sheriff Marlin Gusman with a regular supply of discretionary…

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Former criminals caring for elderly and others, despite state law

By hdcoadmin | December 12, 2011

“During the past six years, Minnesota has granted more than 15,000 waivers to people with criminal records seeking employment in nursing homes and other state-regulated care programs, state records show.“ However, the Minnesota Star Tribune reports that “under state law, people are automatically rejected for those jobs if background checks reveal they have committed any…

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Suspicious suicide raises questions about what the deceased knew

By hdcoadmin | December 12, 2011

After spending some time in the Delaware County jail, Edwina King was approached by other female inmates, they needed her help. “According to a federal civil rights suit, employees of the Delaware Country Sheriff’s Office were abusing the inmates, including rape, sodomy, sexual battery and blackmail. County officials recently settled the lawsuit for $13.5 million.”…

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Pipeline stretching 100’s of miles has little oversight

By hdcoadmin | December 12, 2011

“In Pennsylvania’s shale fields, where the giant Marcellus strike has unleashed a furious surge of development, many natural gas pipelines today get less safety regulation than in any other state in America, a Philidelphia Inquirer review shows. Hundreds of miles of high-pressure pipelines already have been installed in the shale fields with no government safety…

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CA vocational schools lack oversight

By hdcoadmin | December 9, 2011

“An examination by Jennifer Gollan of The Bay Citizen found that over the last two years, the California Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education had not met many of its core responsibilities, like swiftly investigating complaints, monitoring the quality of educational programs and rooting out unlicensed schools. It found that the bureau has provided little enforcement…

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Exam boards, teachers help students pass

By hdcoadmin | December 8, 2011

Reporters for The Telegraph went undercover to reveal that exam boards are advising teachers on how to word questions and arrange exams so that students are more likely to obtain higher marks.  “The advice appears to go far beyond the standard “guidance” and opens exam boards to accusations that they are undermining the purpose of…

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Using documents to cover religious organizations

By hdcoadmin | December 8, 2011

Covering religious organizations can be difficult, because it can be tough to get public documents. Kansas City Star reporter Judy Thomas, spoke at an IRE training session for McClatchy journalists and offers the following tips: Get to know your subjects inside out. Subscribe to newsletters, magazines and other publications of the organizations you cover. Get…

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Double-Dipping in New Jersey

By hdcoadmin | December 6, 2011

A New Jersey Watchdog investigation by Mark Lagerkvist reveals that more than 20 “investigators and supervisors who work for Attorney General Paula T. Dow and her Division of Criminal Justice” are receiving both a salary and a pension. For example, the New Jersey State Police captain retired at age 50. However, he “began work at…

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“Racial gap” shows up in Milwaukee traffic stops

By hdcoadmin | December 6, 2011

In a recent analysis of 46,000 traffic stops, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter Ben Poston found that black resident drivers are “seven times as likely to be stopped by city police as a white resident driver.” Additionally, the study found that “Milwaukee police pulled over Hispanic city motorists nearly five times as often as white drivers.”…

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