Saturday, December 31, 2011

'Octomom' case stuns one-child public in China

(AP) ? The photo was undeniably cute: a studio portrait of eight babies in identical onesies and perky white cotton hats, sporting an array of expressions from giggly to goofy, baffled to bawling.

Intended as an advertisement for the studio, the photo grabbed a different kind of attention: In a country that limits most couples to one child, many Chinese were amazed to learn that a couple had spent nearly a million yuan ($160,000) and illegally enlisted two surrogate mothers to help have the four boys and four girls.

The incident has highlighted both the use of birth surrogates, a violation of Chinese law, and how wealthy Chinese do as they please, with scant regard for the rules that constrain others. The most common reaction, though, has been simple disbelief.

"Heavens. To have one family with eight kids ... in an era of family planning where most people have just one, the contrast is just too much," said popular Chinese Central Television news anchor Bai Yansong as he introduced a 20-minute special report on the babies last weekend. "It doesn't sound like news. It sounds more like a fairy tale."

Chinese media are calling the mother "babaotai muqin," or "octomom," a reference to the American woman who gave birth to octuplets using in vitro fertilization.

Much remains uncertain about the family from Guangzhou, the capital of south China's Guangdong province. According to the Guangzhou Daily, a government newspaper, the biological mother carried two of the babies, while two surrogates gave birth to three each. After the babies were born in September and October last year, 11 nannies were hired to help take care of the children, the report said.

While some suspect a hoax, a media officer with the Guangdong Health Department said the case was real and under investigation. He declined to identify the couple, citing privacy concerns.

The story has captivated the public because it symbolizes a bold defiance of the country's strict family planning rules, said Liang Zhongtang, a demography expert at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

"People are very interested in the policy these days and the need for changes to it," he said. "A lot of people think it should have been dropped a long time ago, or relaxed at least."

A 2001 law prohibits Chinese medical institutions and personnel from performing gestational surrogacy services, in which an embryo created from a couple is implanted into another woman who carries the baby to term.

Still, an underground market is thriving as more couples put off marriage and childbirth until later in life, only to find they are unable to conceive. The law forbids only the medical procedures, and agencies connecting couples and surrogates are easy to find online.

The Guangzhou Daily said the octomom couple resorted to in vitro fertilization and surrogates after years of failed attempts to conceive.

A manager for the Guangdong branch of the Daiyunguke surrogacy agency, Liu Jialei, said that this has been the busiest of his company's seven years in business, with more than 600 surrogates matched to families. His customers are Chinese, but the medical procedures are carried out abroad, in Southeast Asia and Japan, to circumvent the law.

Chinese media reports say many procedures are also done illegally at hospitals in China.

Many Chinese frown on surrogacy, which is often portrayed as a way for the rich to avoid going through pregnancy.

An opinion piece about the eight babies in the China Daily denounced surrogacy as something done by wealthy women unwilling to disrupt their careers or ruin their figures.

Author Cai Hong, a senior writer for the newspaper, wrote that the practice would inevitably give rise to "a breeder class" of poor women who end up "renting their wombs to wealthy people."

But Therese Hesketh, a University College London professor who has done numerous field studies in China on family planning issues, says that her impression is that Chinese who can afford surrogates tend to seek out attractive university graduates, not the underprivileged.

Chinese media say octomom and her family have gone into hiding. A Chinese Central Television investigative report could only dig up former neighbors who described seeing a pack of nannies taking the babies for strolls and to a toddler center for playtime.

A series of outtakes from the portrait session posted to a blog show the logo for the QQ Baby studio prominently displayed in the background, but staff at the shop in Guangzhou denied knowing anything about the photos.

Only the relatively well-off can afford in vitro fertilization and surrogacy or to live in a villa, as this couple reportedly did.

The rich also find it easier to flout the one-child limit, because they are better able to afford the hefty fines for doing so. Some also acquire foreign citizenship, which exempts them from the birth quotas.

On the popular Sina microblog, one user posted an article about the couple and commented: "If you have money, what does the law mean?"

All the hoopla may be boosting the surrogacy business. At Daiyun.com ? an agency whose website is splashed with photos of babies nestled in flowers ? a manager said all the attention made it inconvenient for any staff to speak with reporters.

"But one thing is for sure, our business is getting better and better," said the woman, who would only give her surname, Liu. "More and more people come to us for services."

___

Associated Press researchers Zhao Liang and Yu Bing in Beijing contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Photos on a Chinese blog: http://bit.ly/uxwW80

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-30-AS-China-Octomom/id-ddff6f23ef7b4c3a82dc484d11f25b31

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Men's college basketball: Mercer at Tulsa

MEN'S BASKETBALL

Mercer at Tulsa

8:30 p.m. Wednesday

Reynolds Center

Mercer (8-5)

Ht. Pt. Reb.

F Cecil 6-8 10.8 3.6

F Gollon 6-6 10.4 5.9

F Coursey 6-10 8.3 4.5

G Hall 6-4 13.1 3.9*

G Thomas 6-6 9.5 4.8

Tulsa (5-7)

Ht. Pt. Reb.

F Maduka 6-11 7.0 6.4

F Idlet 6-11 10.3 5.8

G Clarkson 6-4 15.3 4.8

G Haralson 6-4 12.2 2.0

G Peete 6-4 6.3 3.1

*assists per game

Source: http://www.tulsaworld.com/site/articlepath.aspx?articleid=20111228_94_B6_hMENSB352679&rss_lnk=94

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Oil inches up toward $100 as US economy improves (AP)

SINGAPORE ? Oil prices inched higher toward $100 a barrel Friday in Asia amid encouraging signs the U.S. economy is slowly improving.

Benchmark crude for February delivery rose 23 cents to $99.88 a barrel at late afternoon Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract added 29 cents to settle at $99.65 in New York on Thursday.

In London, Brent crude was up 11 cents at $108.13 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

Crude has traded near $100 since mid-November after jumping from $75 in October as investors eye growing evidence the U.S. economy could avoid a recession next year. The government reported Thursday that claims for jobless benefits fell to a four-week average of 375,000, the lowest level in three and a half years.

The National Association of Realtors also reported that contracts to buy U.S. homes rose last month to the highest level in a year and a half.

Some analysts worry Europe's debt crisis will drag the continent into recession next year and undermine global crude demand.

"From a longer term perspective, we continue to zero in on the euro zone as the primary driver of oil pricing during the first quarter of 2012," energy consultant Ritterbusch and Associates said in a report. "We still view the euro zone debt issues as intractable."

Traders are also closely watching tensions between Iran and Western powers over Tehran's nuclear power program. Iran threatened this week to close the key oil export passage of the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf if the U.S. and other nations tighten sanctions. The U.S. Navy said it would not tolerate any move to limit the strait's traffic.

Energy trader Blue Ocean Brokerage said oil prices would likely eventually jump by about $50 if Iran, OPEC's second-biggest crude exporter, tried to close the strait.

"Let's start with an easy $20 spike, then add in a risk premium for insurance costs, delays, costs to push oil through alternative routes and the obvious loss of 3.5 million barrels a day from Iran," energy trader Blue Ocean Brokerage said in a report.

Trading volume was low this week as many investors take vacations around the Christmas and New Year's Day holidays.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil rose 0.7 cents to $2.93 per gallon and gasoline futures gained 0.7 cents at $2.68 per gallon. Natural gas futures were down 1.2 cents to $3.02 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_bi_ge/oil_prices

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Alexei Navalny, key engine behind Russian protests (AP)

MOSCOW ? Alexei Navalny has done more than any other opposition leader to lay the groundwork for the protest movement now challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's 12-year grip on power. His reward came last weekend when he took the stage before tens of thousands of cheering demonstrators.

Working the crowd like a firebrand preacher, Navalny had people responding to his calls with cries of "Yes" and "We are the Power!" His role now looks set only to grow.

The 35-year-old corruption-fighting lawyer and popular blogger has inspired and mobilized many in Russia's young Internet generation, who until recently had seemed reluctant to get up from their laptops.

He reaches tens of thousands through his blog, consistently among the top three on Live Journal, and has more than 167,000 followers on Twitter.

He has tapped into deep anger throughout society, particularly over the corruption that pervades public life and the generous subsidies sent to the restive mostly Muslim regions in southern Russia. Navalny's description of Putin's political party as the "party of crooks and thieves" and his call to "Stop feeding the Caucasus" have become catchphrases of the opposition.

The Kremlin has woken up to the threat posed by the charismatic and ambitious Navalny, but efforts to silence him have only added to his stature.

Navalny was arrested after leading a protest march in defiance of police the day after Dec. 4 parliamentary elections. The shameless falsifications that had helped Putin's United Russia party retain its majority outraged many Russians, and more than 5,000 joined what turned into the largest anti-Putin demonstration in years. Navalny was jailed for 15 days, but the protests only grew.

When he was released last week, Navalny said he felt that he had been "jailed in one country and freed in another." Dozens of camera crews had waited into the early hours of the morning for his release, in a sign of his growing fame.

He was one of the most anticipated speakers at Saturday's rally, which drew an estimated 70,000 to 100,000 people in the largest protest in the country since the demonstrations that swept away the Soviet Union two decades ago.

The outpouring of public anger has shaken Putin as he prepares to return to the presidency in a March election. He needs more than 50 percent of the vote to avoid a second round, and polls show he will have trouble pulling this off if he meets protesters' demands for a free and fair election.

Still, Putin's eventual victory does seem assured. He faces a handful of challengers in what appears to be a Kremlin strategy to split the protest vote. His most serious rival is the veteran Communist leader, an unpalatable choice for most of the demonstrators. The opposition has no consensus candidate it could rally behind.

Navalny says he won't stand in this election because of the barriers that block any candidates that do not have Kremlin approval.

Speaking Monday night on Ekho Moskvy radio, he called for continued pressure on the Kremlin to follow through on its promises to make it easier for opposition candidates to compete in elections. If this happens, he said he might form his own political party and run for president in the future.

In the meantime, he intends to drive the protest movement on the street, giving voice to Russians who are tired of having their votes stolen.

"We will take to the streets as long as they don't give us back what belongs to us!" Navalny shouted at the weekend rally. "We are peaceful people, but there is an end to our patience!"

Stanislav Belkovsky, a well-connected political analyst, said that while Putin's team hopes to retain power by splitting the opposition and incorporating some of its leaders into the government, it doesn't know what to do with Navalny.

"Navalny's name is taboo for them, they are really afraid of him," Belkovsky said.

Navalny first made his name a few years ago by fighting corruption. Using his rights as a minority shareholder, he gathered evidence of corruption at state-controlled oil and gas companies and banks. Cases he filed against some of the biggest names in Russian business have made little progress in court, but he exposed some seemingly outrageous practices.

He also has used his skills to attack corruption inside government at all levels. About a year ago he set up a website where he posts government documents announcing tenders for various goods and services. His team of lawyers studies them and he also invites anyone who is interested to review the documents online. Navalny claims the government has withdrawn scandalous tenders worth millions of dollars after they were exposed by his site. In one telling example, the Interior Ministry canceled an order for a hand-carved gilded bed intended for one of its residences.

Yulia Latynina, a columnist who supports Navalny, said he has proved his political skills.

"He made half of the Russian Internet work for him and he built a strategy for the parliamentary campaign without taking part in it," she wrote in an online commentary.

Navalny, however, has plenty of detractors even among the opposition. Some are turned off by his shrill populism and his flirting with ethnic Russian nationalists.

"Society, unlike a crowd, demands respect," Alexander Podrabinek, a former Soviet dissident and political prisoner, wrote in a commentary on Grani.ru. "If you openly manipulate it as Navalny does, the best part of it will be reluctant to show up at the next rally. Rallies of the liberal opposition will then turn into something similar to the Russian Marches."

Navalny took part in last month's Russian March in which thousands of nationalists marched through Moscow to call on ethnic Russians to "take back" their country, some raising their hands in a Nazi salute.

Many Russians resent the influx of dark-skinned Muslims into Moscow and other cities. Many also resent the disproportionate amount of budget money sent to Chechnya and other Caucasus republics, seen as a Kremlin effort to buy loyalty after two separatist wars.

Navalny defends his association with nationalists by saying their concerns are widespread and need to be addressed as part of any broad movement pushing for democratic change, but many in the liberal opposition fear that he is playing with fire.

Some opposition leaders also seem alarmed by Navalny's soaring popularity.

"We are already seeing signs of a Navalny cult," Vladimir Milov wrote in a column in the online Gazeta.ru. "I wouldn't be surprised if grandmothers from the provinces start showing up here asking where they can find him so he can cure their illnesses."

Milov, who is 39, said some of the older liberal opposition leaders who have been involved in politics since the 1990s would try to prevent Navalny from taking over the protest movement.

"Old political foxes who hate a young and promising competitor will try to drown him," he wrote.

Navalny has avoided public spats with other opposition leaders, focusing on the need to consolidate the protest movement and bring a growing number of people onto the streets to push for a fair presidential election.

"We will get 1 million people and they won't be able to do anything but fulfill our demands," he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_protest_hero

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Jimmie Dee Hooten, 80, Georgetown, Texas

Jimmie Dee Hooten, age 80, of Georgetown, Texas passed away on December 25, 2011. Jimmie was born October 9, 1931 in Iowa Park, Texas to Avery Charles and Ada (Patterson) Hooten. On August 26, 1952 he married the love of his life Peggy Ann Ratcliff in Dallas, Texas. Their marriage was a romance for 59 years. Jimmie received his Bachelor of Arts in Education and his Master of Divinity. He served as a Missionary for the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention before his retirement in 1997. Jimmie served as Pastor of various churches and was a Missionary for more than 28 years in Kenya and Uganda. He will be remembered by all as a great story teller, as well as a wonderful husband, father, and grandfather. Through his selfless devotion to others, wise counsel and deep Christian faith he helped shape the lives of his children and later generations of his family.

Preceding him in death are his parents and one brother.

Survivors include his wife Peggy Hooten of Georgetown; son, David Hooten and wife Janet of Lilongue, Malawi; daughter, Kathy Cummins and husband Jim of Georgetown; daughter, Dee Ann Snyder and husband Dan of Stevensville, Michigan; brother, Cecil Hooten of Wichita Falls, Texas; eight grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.

In lieu of flowers memorials may be made to the Lottie Moon Mission Offering c/o Main Street Baptist Church, 1001 Main St., Georgetown, Texas 78626.

A Memorial Service will be held at Main Street Baptist Church with date and time to be announced.

You are invited to leave a message or memory in our memorial guestbook at www.RamseyFuneral.com.

Source: http://weareaustin.tributes.com/show/Jimmie-Dee-Hooten-93014939

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Amazon plans to set up local logistics backend in India

LBR Staff Writer Published 26 December 2011

Seattle (Washington)-headquartered Online retailer Amazon has prepared the process for creating a local logistics backend in India, marking its precursor to launch full-fledged operations to trade products in the country.

Amazon Asia-Pacific Resources, a Singapore-based arm of Amazon, is planning to setup a wholly owned subsidiary in Delhi-NCR to enable courier services for delivery of goods within the India.

The company is planning an initial investment of about $3m for hiring around 300 people for the independent Indian venture following the proposal filed with the Indian authorities for approval.

techcircle.in has reported that the plan to set up a courier firm follows the company's plan to launch its marketplace under the domain name amazon.in via a separate, wholly owned arm for its e-commerce activities.

The company also operates various country specific e-commerce sites in Canada, China, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain and the UK.

The company already operates a development centre for refining and redefining how Amazon creates and manages product information for all its retail sites in India.

Source: http://www.logistics-business-review.com/news/amazon-plans-to-set-up-local-logistics-backend-in-india-261211

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Sunday Photoblogging: Happy Chanukah


ShareShare ?ShareEmail



Whatever holiday you might be celebrating (if you?re celebrating at all), I hope it was enjoyable.

Photo: Canon EOS Rebel XTi, 44mm, ISO 1600, f/5.0, 1/125 sec.

Jason G. GoldmanAbout the Author: Jason G. Goldman is a graduate student in developmental psychology at the University of Southern California, where he studies the evolutionary and developmental origins of the mind in humans and non-human animals. Jason is also Psychology and Neuroscience Editor for ResearchBlogging.org and Editor of Open Lab 2010. He lives in Los Angeles, CA. Follow on Google+. Follow on Twitter @jgold85.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=d5ec23284569faf196c6995aed175011

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Oil & Gas - Uruguay - YPF, Schuepbach eyeing new onshore E&P prospects - reports

Argentine oil company YPF and US firm Schuepbach Energy have made separate proposals to Uruguay's state oil company Ancap for E&P in central and north...

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Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5665202362

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Finest News Source just rubbing it in (Unqualified Offerings)

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

CDCR Today: Inmate Death at California State Prison-Sacramento is Being Investigated as a Homicide

17,881,489 members doing good!

CDCR Today: Inmate Death at California State Prison-Sacramento Is Being Investigated as a Homicide


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- 8 hours ago - cdcrtoday.blogspot.com

The inmate, who has been identified as Anthony Steadham, 38, was transported to an outside hospital where he was pronounced dead at 5:04 a.m

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Stuffed animals bring Christmas joy to cancer patients | mu?oz - Life ...

Alexandra "Alex" Munoz knows where she will be today.

After attending mass in the morning, it's tradition for her family to head over to her grandmother's house, just two blocks away from their home in Cypress.

ADVERTISEMENT

How to reach them

To attract future donors for the Teddy Bear Donation Drive, the Munoz family is working with Brenda Trujillo, senior account executive with Dawson & Dawson, an executive search firm in mission Viejo.

The family can be contacted at 714-373-4542 for more information. Trujillo can be reached at 949-421-3966 or 714-600-1660.

But Alex knows that a lot of kids can't celebrate Christmas at home with family. They're in the hospital being treated for cancer.

To bring some Christmas cheer, she started the Teddy Bear Donation Drive.

A few days before Christmas, Alex, her mom and younger brother Anthony visited local hospitals to drop off armfuls of joy ? stuffed animals donated by friends, family, neighbors, students and teachers at Cypress High, and people at workplaces.

Why stuffed animals?

"It's like giving a hug to someone all the time," said Alex, a freshman and pre-med student at UCLA who wants to be a pediatrician.

She knows just how much hugs can mean to a child who is scared and missing home.

Last year, at 17, Alex was diagnosed with ovarian cancer, a rare disease for someone so young.

She had surgery in May 2010 to remove a tumor the size of a cantaloupe and then subsequent rounds of chemotherapy that left her exhausted, nauseous and bald. Alex found comfort in a chocolate-colored stuffed animal puppy that was a gift from her TeamOC gymnastics club coaches.

She'd fall asleep holding it, a reminder of all the people who loved her.

So last Christmas she distributed more than 100 stuffed animals to childhood cancer patients at Kaiser medical centers and at Miller Children's Hospital in Long Beach, where the mother of one of Alex's best friends is a doctor ? and a cancer survivor.

Alex and her mom recall one older teen, a big guy sporting tattoos and earlobe plugs. They weren't sure he'd want a stuffed animal, but when Sylvia asked him, he gave a quick nod. Later, they saw him walking the hall in his gown, clutching his white teddy bear.

"That made me think stuffed animals really are for everyone," Alex said.

Alex and her two elves were back at Miller on Thursday with two wagons filled with stuffed animals. They stopped in playrooms, met children in the hallways and paid bedside visits to kids too sick to leave their rooms.

Ashley Perez, 12, of Garden Grove looked up from a paper snowman she was making to choose a fluffy brown bear. Ashley, who has leukemia, was hospitalized a week ago because she felt too sick to eat. Seeing Ashley's wisps of hair, Alex shared hopeful words.

"It'll come back," she told the girl. "I promise you."

A CHILD SHOWS THE WAY

Early last year, before her diagnosis, Alex had gone a few weeks feeling a "bump" in her abdomen. A competitive gymnast since the age of 9, Alex hid the growth from her parents.

"I thought I was just getting chunky," she said.

Then it got to where she couldn't stretch in gymnastics. Finally, she called her parents from practice to say she wasn't feeling well. On the ride to urgent care, her worry surged. "I just started rambling and crying."

The entire summer before her senior year of high school was spent undergoing four rounds of chemotherapy ? one every three weeks, and a hospital stay of four days each time. She lost about 15 pounds, most of it muscle. She would beg her mom to make the constant "beep, beep" of the chemo pump go away. That stuffed puppy dog stayed by her side.

"My daughter's experience with ovarian cancer taught me just how far a little bit of comfort goes for a child who must endure the indignities of chemotherapy," Sylvia Munoz said.

Alex was older than the other pediatric cancer patients at Kaiser Permanente Hospital in Anaheim Hills, but she took her cue on being brave from a 2-year-old named Omar. Alex saw him that first day she went for chemotherapy.

Sylvia Munoz says her nervous daughter had the same look on her face that she gets right before competing in gymnastics, "that blank look, like, 'Ooh, here we go.'"

Omar was all business.

"He wasn't even nervous when the doctors pulled out his shunt to take his blood count," Alex said. "It let me know that if a little kid could do it, I could do it too."

A NEW TRADITION

Her recovery has gone well. She returned to school for the start of her senior year and got back to gymnastics that October. Her dark, wavy hair ? once halfway down her back ? slowly grew in.

But as good as things were going for Alex, she kept thinking about young cancer patients. She wanted to do something to help make them feel better, something to make it easier to be hospitalized at Christmas.

"I thought how much the dog helped me," she said of that puppy, the only stuffed animal she took along to her dorm at UCLA.

With her mother's organizing skills ? Sylvia Munoz works in human resources ? they launched the Teddy Bear Drive.

This year they collected about 160 stuffed animals and added Children's Hospital of Orange County to their stops. Next year, they hope to attract corporate donors to help expand the drive.

Their visit on Thursday to the Hematology and Oncology Unit at Miller Children's Hospital touched the heart of Juliet Pulido of Downey, whose daughter Marie, 6, has been hospitalized since June. Marie has aplastic anemia, a condition that prevents her bone marrow from producing enough new blood cells.

Marie picked out a big brown plush teddy bear, while her brother, Aaden, 3, chose a creature that could play a part in "Monsters Inc."

"It's kind of sad for her to be here for Christmas," Juliet Pulido said of her daughter. "So this is awesome."

Contact the writer: twalker@ocregister.com or 714-796-7793


Source: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/alex-332882-stuffed-year.html

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Saturday, December 24, 2011

US man gets 14 years prison for burning black church

Man jailed for arson after Obama?s win /FILE

WASHINGTON, December 23 ? A white man was sentenced on Thursday to nearly 14 years prison for setting a predominantly black church on fire to protest the election of Barack Obama as the first African-American US president, the Justice Department said.

Early November 5, 2008, within hours of Obama being elected president, Michael Jacques and his co-conspirators burned down ?the Macedonia Church of God in Christ?s newly constructed building where religious services were to be held for its predominantly African-American congregation,? the Justice Department said.

The building, located in Springfield, in the northeastern state of Massachusetts, was almost complete at the time of the fire, but the blaze ?destroyed nearly the entire structure, leaving only the metal superstructure and a small portion of the front corner intact.?

Jacques, now 27, was sentenced Thursday in Boston to 166 months in prison followed by four years of supervised release and ordered to pay more than $1.5 million in restitution for civil rights charges stemming from the arson, the Justice Department said.

Jacques was found guilty in mid-April of conspiracy against civil rights, damage or destruction of religious property, and use of fire to commit a felony for his involvement in the arson, the Justice Department said.

?Racial violence and intimidation have no place in our society,? said Thomas Perez, a senior official at the Justice Department?s Civil Rights Division.

Jacques?s co-conspirators, Benjamin Haskell and Thomas Gleason, pleaded guilty to civil rights charges in June. Haskell was sentenced to nine years prison in November, while Gleason is scheduled to be sentenced in January.


Author: AFP
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Source: http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/2011/12/us-man-gets-14-years-prison-for-burning-black-church/

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2012 CN Employees' and Pensioners' Community Fund campaign raises more than C$1.2 million for Quebec charities

MONTREAL, Dec. 21, 2011 /CNW Telbec/ - CN (TSX: CNR)(NYSE: CNI) announced today that the recently concluded 2012 CN Employees' and Pensioners' Community Fund (Fund) campaign raised more than C$1.2 million for Quebec charities - the fourth successive year that the Fund has generated more than C$1 million in charitable contributions.

Over the past ten years, the Fund has raised close to C$10 million in donations to assist a range of Quebec agencies, including Centraide, to help those in need.

Luc Jobin, co-president of Campaign 2012 and CN executive vice-president and chief financial officer, said: "The great success of the fund-raising campaign this year is attributable to the continuing generosity of CN employees and retirees, along with the outstanding dedication of the canvassers, volunteers and committee members. It underscores the commitment of the company, its union partners, employees and pensioners to come together to help the less fortunate tackle the challenges of daily life."

Jean-Michel Hall?, co-president of Campaign 2012 and vice-general chairman of the Teamsters Canada Rail Conference, said: "Significantly, 100 per cent of each donation dollar raised by the Fund goes directly to organizations that employees and pensioners wish to support because the Fund relies exclusively on volunteers and the services and facilities of the company."

CN -- Canadian National Railway Company and its operating railway subsidiaries - spans Canada and mid-America, from the Atlantic and Pacific oceans to the Gulf of Mexico, serving the ports of Vancouver, Prince Rupert, B.C., Montreal, Halifax, New Orleans, and Mobile, Ala., and the key metropolitan areas of Toronto, Buffalo, Chicago, Detroit, Duluth, Minn./Superior, Wis., Green Bay, Wis., Minneapolis/St. Paul, Memphis, and Jackson, Miss., with connections to all points in North America. For more information on CN, visit the company's website at www.cn.ca.

For further information:
Media? ? Investors
Louis-Antoine Paquin?
Manager?
Corporate Communications?
(514) 399-6450?
? Robert Noorigian
Vice-President
Investor Relations
(514) 399-0052

?

Source: http://www.newswire.ca/en/story/899017/2012-cn-employees-and-pensioners-community-fund-campaign-raises-more-than-c-1-2-million-for-quebec-charities

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Codecademy Builds ?Labs,? A Web-Based Code Editor

150133v1-max-250x250Smoking hot startup?Codecademy, a service which teaches you how to program online has launched its?Labs feature today, as a sign of things to come. Codecademy founder Zach Sims tells me that?Codecademy, and specifically new hire Amjad Masad, built the feature because it wanted people to be able to play with what they've learned on Codecademy?without having to download a desktop-based code editor or integrated development environment (IDE). ?He says that most other online code-learning environments (like Treehouse) don't yet offer a way for students freeform write and run the code they teach in-browser.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/xjpNWhn-_zA/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

COL BKB: Florida 82, Florida State 64

Published: Dec. 22, 2011 at 9:19 PM

GAINESVILLE, Fla., Dec. 22 (UPI) -- Bradley Beal started and finished a 15-2 run in the second half Thursday that allowed No. 12 Florida to pull away for an 82-64 win over Florida State.

Florida State scored only two points during the game's first 8:45, but the Seminoles trailed by just two early in the second half. Beal began the big run with a layup and finished it with a dunk followed by a 3-pointer with 7:32 to play.

That gave the Gators (10-2) a 53-38 lead on their way to their fifth straight victory.

Beal scored 21 points to lead Florida. Patric Young had 15 points and Kenny Boynton added 14.

The teams combined to attempt 52 3-point shots and they made 18.

Florida State (8-4) got 15 points from Luke Loucks. The Seminoles turned the ball over 17 times to just 10 for Florida.

Source: http://pheed.upi.com/click.phdo?i=37a97fd456cc7c0ed7d886cff5cd777f

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Surprising Results in Study of Cancer Survivor Twins | ScienceBlog ...

Female cancer survivorsOlder female cancer survivors are significantly more likely to suffer from long-term cognitive impairment after diagnosis and treatment compared to their twin sibling with no history of cancer, a USC study found.

The risk was higher among survivors of gynecologic cancers and those who had treatments directly or potentially affecting ovarian functioning, according to the study published in the The Journals of Gerontology.

Findings suggested localized treatments that affect estrogen-producing areas may be associated with serious impairment of memory and thinking in older women, according to co-author Margaret Gatz.

?This is not the result we expected,? said Gatz, professor of psychology, gerontology and preventive medicine at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, and co-author of the study. ?We expected chemotherapy would have a larger effect. This surprised us deeply. The results showed that either surgery, radiation or pelvic cancer itself accounts for the increased risk of cognitive impairment.?

The study defined cognitive impairment as having significant problems in memory (such as not being able to remember three words over a short delay) and thinking (such as not being able to explain similarities and differences between pairs of common items), to the extent that the problems affected the management of daily life.

The association was strongest in women whose cancer treatment affected the pelvic area, resulted in ovary removal and/or when radiation was used in the pelvic area. Since most of the women in the study were past menopause, the effect on estrogen production was not as dramatic, but cognition impairment nonetheless was significant.

The study seems to confirm that estrogen, even in older women, is important, Gatz said.

The next hypothesis to be studied by lead author and USC graduate student Keiko Kurita for her dissertation is the role of ovaries, which produce estrogen, in cognitive performance.

?When we found that female, but not male, cancer survivors were at an increased risk for cognitive impairment compared to their co-twins, we were eager to uncover the reasons that might explain this,? said Kurita, who is advised by Gatz and Beth Meyerowitz, a USC psychology professor who is corresponding author of the study. ?On my dissertation project, we will be examining the possible relation between cognitive functioning and ovarian removal, a research question that grew directly from the findings that we have just published.?

The study reviewed more than 400 pairs of twins who participated in cognitive screening at least three years after one had ended cancer treatment.

Gatz, who is chair of USC Dornsife?s psychology department and a foreign adjunct professor with the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, is one of the few researchers with access to the Swedish Twin Registry, the largest comprehensive twin registry in the world. The registry is a set of records on same-sex twins born between 1886 and 1925.

Studying twins from a statistical standpoint mitigates genetic or early childhood causes of both cancer and cognitive deficits because twins usually possess similar genetic and early environmental influences. The comparison with cancer-free twins means the increased dysfunction cannot solely be attributed to the normal aging process.

Cognitive effects on the twins were evaluated using a standardized interview that evaluated mental status. The study was designed to rule out the short-term side effects of cancer treatment by separating the cognitive tests and the end of treatment by at least three years.

Per Hall of the Karolinska Institutet also was a co-author.

In a 2005 study, Gatz, Meyerowitz, Hall, and USC doctoral student Lara Heflin found long-term cancer survivors over age 65 were twice as likely to develop cognitive problems as individuals who never had been diagnosed with cancer. The study did not suggest a cause for the cognitive problems in cancer survivors.

Funding for the research came from the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute on Aging, both based at the National Institutes of Health.

Source: http://scienceblog.com/51165/surprising-results-in-study-of-twins/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Brad Harrington: Christmas Presence Trumps Christmas Presents Every Time

This week Jennifer Fraone, Marketing and Communications Director for the Boston College Center for Work & Family, appeared on one of Boston's local television stations to do our monthly "Work-Life Wednesday" segment. We've been doing these regular pieces for nearly a year and it has been a great outlet for us to talk about our research, provide updates on new developments in the field and offer some evidence-based advice on how individuals can flourish in the work-family aspects of their lives. Staff members of our center take turns appearing in these pieces and we have all enjoyed the opportunity to experience what Andy Warhol memorably called our "15 minutes of fame" -- although in this case, it's closer to five minutes.

In her work and her writing, Jennifer frequently offers her thoughts, suggestions and advice on what one can do to create greater "work-life harmony," to borrow a term from my friends in Singapore. In this week's segment, she provided a number of excellent tips on maintaining balance during the stressful holiday season. One of her pearls of wisdom was "It's more about presence than presents." Jennifer discussed the fact that we often feel compelled to get everyone on our list a gift at Christmas time. As a result, we spend much or most of our precious holiday time in frenzied malls hunting down the perfect gift, which often doesn't prove to be all that perfect. Instead, we might opt to slow down long enough to realize that spending time with our loved ones would likely prove far more valuable than something that comes in a box with a bow.

My own family is certainly not exempt from the syndrome of rushing around to buy presents this time of year. But there are three things we do annually that are far more meaningful and memorable to all of us than a material gift could ever be. First, we do an annual pilgrimage to Providence, RI to see a wonderful and always unique rendering of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol. We make an overnight of it and after the show enjoy a meal in one of Providence's many wonderful Italian restaurants. Dickens' timeless work never fails to remind us of the true meaning of the season. Second, on a mid -December afternoon we go as a family to pick out our tree and then spend the early evening decorating it together (with the late, great Vince Guaraldi's classic A Charlie Brown Christmas soundtrack playing in the background.)

Finally, as many of my friends and colleagues know, I am quite proud of my Irish-American heritage. So the third "much beloved" tradition is that I drag the entire family to see A Christmas Celtic Sojourn. I'm the only one in the family who really loves traditional Irish music so part of the beauty of this tradition is seeing the disappointed look on my angelic children's faces as I hold up the tickets and bring the good tidings that we will once again be attending this wonderful show. And every year, however reluctantly, the kids get dressed up and despite their protestations truly seem to enjoy an evening of Irish music, storytelling and dance. So while the kids are more excited to witness Scrooge's transformation or decorate the family tree than they are about their Gaelic evening, they are present in each of these three small but important traditions. And each year, their presence is the greatest gift I receive.

I wish you happy holidays, a merry Christmas, and a prosperous new year!


Dr. Brad Harington is the Executive Director of the Boston College Center for Work & Family and a research professor in the Carroll School of Management.

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Follow Brad Harrington on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@BCCWF

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brad-harrington/christmas-tradition_b_1153704.html

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Former Chief Legal Officer of UPMC Talks Justice System ? CBS ...

PITTSBURGH (NEWSRADIO 1020 KDKA) ? KDKA Radio?s Rob Pratte and Joe Dentici talked with Bob Cindrich about his life and the justice system.

He has served in government as the assistant public defender, assistant district attorney and as the U.S. Attorney for Western Pennsylvania.

His most recent post is as senior adviser for the president of UPMC.

They talked about the justice system and how it work in different ways such as how it works with the war on drugs.

Bob Cindrich & the Justice System

Source: http://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2011/12/17/former-chief-legal-officer-of-upmc-talks-justice-system/

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

AP IMPACT: When your criminal past isn't yours (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO ? A clerical error landed Kathleen Casey on the streets.

Out of work two years, her unemployment benefits exhausted, in danger of losing her apartment, Casey applied for a job in the pharmacy of a Boston drugstore. She was offered $11 an hour. All she had to do was pass a background check.

It turned up a 14-count criminal indictment. Kathleen Casey had been charged with larceny in a scam against an elderly man and woman that involved forged checks and fake credit cards.

There was one technicality: The company that ran the background check, First Advantage, had the wrong woman. The rap sheet belonged to Kathleen A. Casey, who lived in another town nearby and was 18 years younger.

Kathleen Ann Casey, would-be pharmacy technician, was clean.

"It knocked my legs out from under me," she says.

The business of background checks is booming. Employers spend at least $2 billion a year to look into the pasts of their prospective employees. They want to make sure they're not hiring a thief, or worse.

But it is a system weakened by the conversion to digital files and compromised by the welter of private companies that profit by amassing public records and selling them to employers. These flaws have devastating consequences.

It is a system in which the most sensitive information from people's pasts is bought and sold as a commodity.

A system in which computers scrape the public files of court systems around the country to retrieve personal data. But a system in which what they retrieve isn't checked for errors that would be obvious to human eyes.

A system that can damage reputations and, in a time of precious few job opportunities, rob honest workers of a chance at a new start. And a system that can leave the Kathleen Caseys of the world ? the innocent ones ? living in a car.

Those are the results of an investigation by The Associated Press that included a review of thousands of pages of court filings and interviews with dozens of court officials, data providers, lawyers, victims and regulators.

"It's an entirely new frontier," says Leonard Bennett, a Virginia lawyer who has represented hundreds of plaintiffs alleging they were the victims of inaccurate background checks. "They're making it up as they go along."

Two decades ago, if a county wanted to update someone's criminal record, a clerk had to put a piece of paper in a file. And if you wanted to read about someone's criminal past, you had to walk into a courthouse and thumb through it. Today, half the courts in the United States put criminal records on their public websites.

Digitization was supposed to make criminal records easier to access and easier to update. To protect privacy, laws were passed requiring courts to redact some information, such as birth dates and Social Security numbers, before they put records online. But digitization perpetuates errors.

"There's very little human judgment," says Sharon Dietrich, an attorney with Community Legal Services in Philadelphia, a law firm focused on poorer clients. Dietrich represents victims of inaccurate background checks. "They don't seem to have much incentive to get it right."

Dietrich says her firm fields about twice as many complaints about inaccurate background checks as it did five years ago.

The mix-ups can start with a mistake entered into the logs of a law enforcement agency or a court file. The biggest culprits, though, are companies that compile databases using public information.

In some instances, their automated formulas misinterpret the information provided them. Other times, as Casey discovered, records wind up assigned to the wrong people with a common name.

Another common problem: When a government agency erases a criminal conviction after a designated period of good behavior, many of the commercial databases don't perform the updates required to purge offenses that have been wiped out from public record.

It hasn't helped that dozens of databases are now run by mom-and-pop businesses with limited resources to monitor the accuracy of the records.

The industry of providing background checks has been growing to meet the rising demand for the service. In the 1990s, about half of employers said they checked backgrounds. In the decade since Sept. 11, that figure has grown to more than 90 percent, according to the Society for Human Resource Management.

To take advantage of the growing number of businesses willing to pay for background checks, hundreds of companies have dispatched computer programs to scour the Internet for free court data.

But those data do not always tell the full story.

Gina Marie Haynes had just moved from Philadelphia to Texas with her boyfriend in August 2010 and lined up a job managing apartments. A background check found fraud charges, and Haynes lost the offer.

A year earlier, she had bought a Saab, and the day she drove it off the lot, smoke started pouring from the hood. The dealer charged $291.48 for repairs. When Haynes refused to pay, the dealer filed fraud charges.

Haynes relented and paid after six months. Anyone looking at Haynes' physical file at the courthouse in Montgomery County, Pa., would have seen that the fraud charge had been removed. But it was still listed in the limited information on the court's website.

The website has since been updated, but Haynes, 40, has no idea how many companies downloaded the outdated data. She has spent hours calling background check companies to see whether she is in their databases. Getting the information removed and corrected from so many different databases can be a daunting mission. Even if it's right in one place, it can be wrong in another database unknown to an individual until a prospective employer requests information from it. By then, the damage is done.

"I want my life back," Haynes says.

Haynes has since found work, but she says that is only because her latest employer didn't run a background check.

Hard data on errors in background checks are not public. Most leading background check companies contacted by the AP would not disclose how many of their records need to be corrected each year.

A recent class-action settlement with one major database company, HireRight Solutions Inc., provides a glimpse at the magnitude of the problems.

The settlement, which received tentative approval from a federal judge in Virginia last month, requires HireRight to pay $28.4 million to settle allegations that it didn't properly notify people about background checks and didn't properly respond to complaints about inaccurate files. After covering attorney fees of up to $9.4 million, the fund will be dispersed among nearly 700,000 people for alleged violations that occurred from 2004 to 2010. Individual payments will range from $15 to $20,000.

In an effort to prevent bad information from being spread, some courts are trying to block the computer programs that background check companies deploy to scrape data off court websites. The programs not only can misrepresent the official court record but can also hog network resources, bringing websites to a halt.

Virginia, Arizona and New Mexico have installed security software to block automated programs from getting to their courts' sites. New Mexico's site was once slowed so much by automated data-mining programs that it took minutes for anyone else to complete a basic search. Since New Mexico blocked the data miners, it now takes seconds.

In the digital age, some states have seen an opportunity to cash in by selling their data to companies. Arizona charges $3,000 per year for a bundle of discs containing all its criminal files. The data includes personal identifiers that aren't on the website, including driver's license numbers and partial Social Security numbers.

Other states, exasperated by mounting errors in the data, have stopped offering wholesale subscriptions to their records.

North Carolina, a pioneer in marketing electronic criminal records, made $4 million selling the data last year. But officials discovered that some background check companies were refusing to fix errors pointed out by the state or to update stale information.

State officials say some companies paid $5,105 for the database but refused to pay a mandatory $370 monthly fee for daily updates to the files ? or they would pay the fee but fail to run the update. The updates provided critical fixes, such as correcting misspelled names or deleting expunged cases.

North Carolina, which has been among the most aggressive in ferreting out errors in its customers' files, stopped selling its criminal records in bulk. It has moved to a system of selling records one at a time. By switching to a more methodical approach, North Carolina hopes to eliminate the sloppy record-keeping practices that has emerged as more companies have been allowed to vacuum up massive amounts of data in a single sweep.

Virginia ended its subscription program. To get full court files now, you have to go to the courthouse in person. You can get abstracts online, but they lack Social Security numbers and birth dates, and are basically useless for a serious search.

North Carolina told the AP that taxpayers have been "absorbing the expense and ill will generated by the members of the commercial data industry who continue to provide bad information while falsely attributing it to our courts' records."

North Carolina identified some companies misusing the records, but other culprits have gone undetected because the data was resold multiple times.

Some of the biggest data providers were accused of perpetuating errors. North Carolina revoke the licenses of CoreLogic SafeRent, Thomson West, CourtTrax and five others for repeatedly disseminating bad information or failing to download updates.

Thomson West says it was punished for two instances of failing to delete outdated criminal records in a timely manner. Such instances are "extremely rare" and led to improvements in Thomson West's computer systems, the company said.

CoreLogic says its accuracy standards meet the law, and it seemed to blame North Carolina, saying that the state's actions "directly contributed to the conditions which resulted in the alleged contract violations," but it would not elaborate. CourtTrax did not respond to requests for comment.

Other background check companies say the errors aren't always their fault.

LexisNexis, a major provider of background checks and criminal data, said in a statement that any errors in its records "stem from inaccuracies in original source material ? typically public records such as courthouse documents."

But other problems have arisen with the shift to digital criminal records. Even technical glitches can cause mistakes.

Companies that run background checks sometimes blame weather. Ann Lane says her investigations firm, Carolina Investigative Research, in North Carolina, has endured hurricanes and ice storms that knocked out power to her computers and took them out of sync with court computers.

While computers are offline, critical updates to files can be missed. That can cause one person's records to fall into another person's file, Lane says. She says glitches show up in her database at least once a year.

Lane says she double-checks the physical court filings, a step she says many other companies do not take. She calls her competitors' actions shortsighted.

"A lot of these database companies think it's `ka-ching ka-ching ka-ching,'" she says.

Data providers defend their accuracy. LexisNexis does more than 12 million background checks a year. It is one of the world's biggest data providers, with more than 22 billion public records on its own computers.

It says fewer than 1 percent of its background checks are disputed. That still amounts to 120,000 people ? more than the population of Topeka, Kan.

But there are problems with those assertions. People rarely know when they are victims of data errors. Employers are required by law to tell job applicants when they've been rejected because of negative information in a background check. But many do not.

Even the vaunted FBI criminal records database has problems. The FBI database has information on sentencings and other case results for only half its arrest records. Many people in the database have been cleared of charges. The Justice Department says the records are incomplete because states are inconsistent in reporting the conclusions of their cases. The FBI restricts access to its records, locking out the commercial database providers that regularly buy information from state and county government agencies.

Data providers are regulated by the Federal Trade Commission and required by federal law to have "reasonable procedures" to keep accurate records. Few cases are filed against them, though, mostly because building a case is difficult.

A series of breaches in the mid-2000s put the spotlight on data providers' accuracy and security. The fallout was supposed to put the industry on a path to reform, and many companies tightened security. But the latest problems show that some accuracy practices are broken.

The industry says it polices itself and believes the approach is working. Mike Cool, a vice president with Acxiom Corp., a data wholesaler, praised an accreditation system developed by an industry group, the National Association of Professional Background Screeners. Fear of litigation keeps the number of errors in check, he says.

"The system works well if everyone stays compliant," Cool says.

But when the system breaks down, it does so spectacularly.

Dennis Teague was disappointed when he was rejected for a job at the Wisconsin state fair. He was horrified to learn why: A background check showed a 13-page rap sheet loaded with gun and drug crimes and lengthy prison lockups. But it wasn't his record. A cousin had apparently given Teague's name as his own during an arrest.

What galled Teague was that the police knew the cousin's true identity. It was even written on the background check. Yet below Teague's name, there was an unmistakable message, in bold letters: "Convicted Felon."

Teague sued Wisconsin's Department of Justice, which furnished the data and prepared the report. He blamed a faulty algorithm that the state uses to match people to crimes in its electronic database of criminal records. The state says it was appropriate to include the cousin's record, because that kind of information is useful to employers the same way it is useful to law enforcement.

Teague argued that the computers should have been programmed to keep the records separate.

"I feel powerless," he says. "I feel like I have the worst luck ever. It's basically like I'm being punished for living right."

One of Teague's lawyers, Jeff Myer of Legal Action of Wisconsin, an advocacy law firm for poorer clients, says the state is protecting the sale of its lucrative databases.

"It's a big moneymaker, and that's what it's all about," Myer says. "The convenience of online information is so seductive that the record-keepers have stopped thinking about its inaccuracy. As valuable as I find public information that's available over the Internet, I don't think people have a full appreciation of the dark side."

In court papers, Wisconsin defended its inclusion of Teague's name in its database because his cousin has used it as an alias.

"We've already refuted Mr. Teague's claims in our court documents," said Dana Brueck, a spokeswoman for Wisconsin's Department of Justice. "We're not going to quibble with him in the press."

A Wisconsin state judge plans to issue his decision in Teague's case by March 11.

The number of people pulling physical court files for background checks is shrinking as more courts put information online. With fewer people to control quality, accuracy suffers.

Some states are pushing ahead with electronic records programs anyway. Arizona says it hasn't had problems with companies failing to implement updates.

Others are more cautious. New Mexico had considered selling its data in bulk but decided against it because officials felt they didn't have an effective way to enforce updates.

Meanwhile, the victims of data inaccuracies try to build careers with flawed reputations.

Kathleen Casey scraped by on temporary work until she settled her lawsuit against First Advantage, the background check company. It corrected her record. But the bad data has come up in background checks conducted by other companies.

She has found work, but she says the experience has left her scarred.

"It's like Jurassic Park. They come at you from all angles, and God knows what's going to jump out of a tree at you or attack you from the front or from the side," she says. "This could rear its ugly head again ? and what am I going to do then?"

___

AP Technology Writer Michael Liedtke in San Francisco contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_broken_records

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