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Speculators driving foreclosures in Nevada

By hdcoadmin | September 26, 2007

Southern Nevada’s foreclosure rates are the nations highest, due primarily to investors walking away from their property. “Roughly 85 percent of actual auctions or repossessions of homes from March 1 through Aug. 31 involved properties not occupied by their owners,” according to a report by Jeff German, Steve Kanigher and Alex Richards of the Las…

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Investigation leads to recall of deadly crib

By hdcoadmin | September 26, 2007

An investigation by the Chicago Tribune prompted the Consumer Product Safety Commission to recall popular cribs sold under the Simplicity and Graco brand names from 1997 to 2008. Maurice Possley of the Tribune found numerous complaints about a drop rail that “can detach from the crib’s frame, creating a dangerous gap that has led to…

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Credit card promotions profitable for two Iowa universities

By hdcoadmin | September 25, 2007

Clark Kauffman of the Des Moines Register reported in a two-part series that Iowa’s two largest public universities are aggressively marketing credit cards to their students as part of an arrangement that generates millions of dollars for the schools’ privately run alumni organizations. Records obtained by the Register showed that while the schools and their…

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Billions disappear in Baghdad

By hdcoadmin | September 25, 2007

An investigation by Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele in the October issue of Vanity Fair traces $12 billion in U.S. currency which was sent from the Federal Reserve to Baghdad between April 2003 and June 2004. While some of the money was spent on special projects and ministries, Barlett and Steele report that…

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Fugitives evade Tennessee authorities

By hdcoadmin | September 21, 2007

Tennessee has let more escaped fugitives slip through its judicial cracks than almost any other state. In fact, convicts on the run have murdered at least nine people during the past 30 years, all due to a system not equipped to handle fugitives who get out of state custody. In a series, bolstered by in-depth…

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The football injury to die for

By hdcoadmin | September 21, 2007

Most high-school football players aren’t concerned about concussions, nor would they tell their coach if they got one. However, Alan Schwarz of The New York Times, gives some compelling arguments for why they should be a lot more concerned. According Schwarz’s investigative report, teenagers who receive a second blow to the head following a first,…

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Poughkeepsie firms benefit from government grants

By hdcoadmin | September 19, 2007

The Poughkeepsie Journal used an analysis of federal data to find that “United States government agencies paid $39.4 million through federal contracts to more than 150 local businesses, nonprofits and individuals in the two most recent fiscal years.” While there has been a trend nationally of larger corporations receiving more grants at the expense of…

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CEOs of healthcare nonprofit netting top dollars

By hdcoadmin | September 19, 2007

The Honolulu Advertiser examined nonprofit salaries and reported that “the largest healthcare nonprofits in Hawai’i pay their chief executive more than $820,000 on average. Large foundations and trusts in Hawai’i pay an average of $341,000 to their top manager. Executives at a sampling of service providers were paid the least, averaging $133,100.” The healthcare companies…

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US exports unsafe products

By hdcoadmin | September 19, 2007

While much hoopla was made of the recall of certain Chinese-made products by the Consumer Product Safety Division, United States companies have been allowed to export unsafe products overseas, according to a report by Russell Carrollo of The Sacramento Bee. These items included very flammable children

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Chronic Polluters, Tainted Waters

By hdcoadmin | September 19, 2007

Josh Kovner and Regine Labossiere of The Hartford Courant conducted a two-month investigation into the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection’s lax enforcement of the federal Clean Water Act. They found that 17 of 35 companies covered by the Act are dumping toxic chemicals into the state’s waterways under permit limits that have expired, some more…

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