Thursday, January 10, 2013

Float driver won't face charges in train crash

MIDLAND, Texas (AP) ? A grand jury on Wednesday declined to indict the driver of a float involved in a train collision that killed four U.S. military veterans in a West Texas parade.

Dale Andrew Hayden, the driver of the truck pulling the float, will not face charges stemming from the Nov. 15 accident that killed four veterans who had served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Sixteen other people were injured.

The 12-person grand jury "has not concluded its review of the incident," according to a news release issued by Midland County District Attorney Teresa Clingman. It wasn't clear what that could mean, but the grand jury did not indict Hayden and Midland police already have said they don't plant to pursue criminal charges against him. Clingman declined to comment further.

The veterans were riding on a flatbed truck that was hit by a Union Pacific train traveling at 62 mph. The truck was the second float in a parade organized to honor wounded veterans and their wives.

The accident remains under investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board.

Hayden was placed under a physician's care and got counseling in the days after the crash, his attorney, Hal Brockett has said.

Hayden, who has a military career spanning more than three decades, works as a truck driver for Smith Industries, an oilfield services company. The company placed Hayden on medical leave after the accident. Brockett said Hayden is back at work.

"I'm almost embarrassed to say I'm relieved," Brockett said Wednesday after the grand jury's decision. "I didn't think it was a grand jury matter, but I don't want to minimize the effect on Dale and the people who died and were injured out there."

According to the NTSB, the railroad crossing warning system was activated 20 seconds before the accident, and the guardrail began to come down seven seconds after that. Investigators say the float began crossing the train tracks even though warning bells were sounding and the crossing lights were flashing.

Omaha, Neb.-based Union Pacific Corp. announced in December that it was adjusting the timing of the crossing signal where the collision occurred.

Two injured vets and their wives have sued Union Pacific, alleging the train company didn't provide enough warning signals or do enough to fix what their lawsuit called hazardous conditions. Relatives of some of the victims declined to comment Wednesday or did not return messages.

The veterans had been invited to Midland, a transportation and commerce hub in the West Texas oilfields, for a three-day weekend of hunting and shopping in appreciation of their service. A local charity, Show of Support, organized the trip, parade and other festivities.

Show of Support officials did not get a parade permit from the city.

Killed were Marine Chief Warrant Officer 3 Gary Stouffer, 37; Army Sgt. Maj. Lawrence Boivin, 47; Army Sgt. Joshua Michael, 34; and Army Sgt. Maj. William Lubbers, 43.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/float-driver-wont-face-charges-train-crash-215939600.html

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Annual Holiday Story Contest Winners Announced by Consolidated ...

Wednesday, January 9th, 2013

By April Lewis-Parks

Three winners told Consolidated Credit about their personal journeys of ?Divorce with Children to Financial Independence,? ?Being Maxed Out: Learning that Credit Cards Should Not Be a Way of Life,? and ?From Scammed by Crooks to Getting on the Road to Credit Card Debt Freedom.?

Consolidated Credit, a national credit counseling agency and a financial literacy provider, asked clients to write about how the organization and its programs impacted their money management skills, helped them to live within a budget, or assisted them in achieving a specific goal.

Linda Diaz of Houston, Texas won first place for her submission where she writes, ?Desperate to hold on to my house while at the same time raising two teenage daughters alone, I maxed out my credit cards. To make matters worse, I turned to payday loans, and the nightmare grew more intense. I didn?t know where to turn. My only option was to file for bankruptcy ? or so I thought. I heard about Consolidated Credit and decided to reach out to them for help. I was able to begin the process of digging my way out. It felt like the weight of the world was lifted from my shoulders. What a welcome relief.?

?I am so thankful to all the Consolidated Credit customer representatives for being so kind to us,? writes the second place winner, Marla and Rob Tebbenkamp of Alma, MO. ?They were able to negotiate with our creditors and get us lower interest rates. They were able to get us a budget for groceries and gas. No longer, do we feel that our life is spinning out of our control? I have used many of the financial tools available online. I have used www.powerwallet.com. We are beginning to start thinking about saving for our retirement and our children?s college education. Now we have a better handle on our financial future. I hope that I can teach my children how to have financial freedom.?

Stories from real people about their situations are great to share with others who may be facing a similar situation who are unaware that there is help available.

?In light of the continuing economic down turn many people need help and we want to be there for them. Consolidated Credit?s budgeting application and online financial literature, which anyone can use for free, we provide in the hopes that it will be easier for people to deal with money matters and stay out of debt in the future,? said Howard Dvorkin, CPA and founder of Consolidated Credit.

Alan Hogan of Rowlett, TX told us his story of surviving a layoff and being scammed by an unscrupulous debt relief company to finding Consolidated Credit and finally having a solid plan and organization to help him pay off his debts. He writes ?Fast forwarding a few years now, the crooks are in court, trial set for next spring, but who knows what the outcome will be. I decided to do my homework and check out Consolidated Credit. You can only imagine how distrusting I would be after being scammed before. I took the plunge and had Consolidated Credit to take over my accounts? From the beginning, they made me feel at ease, explained the program and offered solutions. I cut up all my credit cards, only pay cash and I?m about to finish school. It?s hard, but I feel more at ease. My life is getting back to normal. Thanks Consolidated Credit, I?m a believer.?

The first prize winner receives $300, the second prize is $200 and the third place wins $100. The stories will be spotlighted on Consolidated Credit?s web site and personal finance blog, MissMoneyBee.com. For more information about Consolidated Credit and to find debt help, fill out an online debt analysis form or call 1.800.728.3632 to receive a free debt analysis from a certified credit counselor today!

Source: http://missmoneybee.com/2013/01/16th-annual-holiday-story-contest-winners-announced-by-consolidated-credit-2/

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How flight attendants deal with unruly passengers

16 hrs.

It?s a picture that launched thousands of Facebook shares, tweets and online comments: An air traveler who was allegedly so out of control that he had to be taped to his seat is also sparking curiosity about how flight crews deal with unruly passengers.

Icelandair will file charges with Icelandic police against a man who was hitting, screaming and spitting at other fliers while yelling profanities on a flight from Reykjavik to New York on Thursday, airline spokesman Michael Raucheisen told NBC News.

The man was restrained and after the plane landed at JFK International, a photo of a male passenger with tape around his chest and mouth quickly went viral when it appeared on a blog run by New Yorker Andy Ellwood, who said he received the picture from an acquaintance who witnessed the incident.

The startling image prompted many questions from air travelers who wondered whether such creative use of tape would ever be sanctioned on a U.S. airline.

First, you should know flight attendants on U.S. carriers do have the ability and the tools to tie up an unruly passenger when necessary, but they would not attach the troublemaker to the seat, said Veda Shook, international president of the Association of Flight Attendants.

?If we have to physically restrain someone, sure, we?re trained to do that, but not in this manner,? Shook told NBC News, adding that she?s seen prisoners being transported in handcuffs but never cuffed to any part of the plane for their safety.

?If there were an emergency, how would he get out of there??

It is standard to find to find flex cuffs -- or plastic ties ? on board flights in case a passenger needs to be retrained, Shook said.

It?s also not uncommon to find tape on a plane, although it?s meant for more routine uses, like hanging up passengers? drink orders or fixing a broken suitcase handle, said veteran flight attendant Heather Poole, author of ?Cruising Attitude: Tales of Crashpads, Crew Drama, and Crazy Passengers at 35,000 Feet.?

No tape? No problem. There are many other alternatives on board if an impromptu restraint were to be needed.

?Flight attendants are pretty clever. ?If we don't have tape, we'll find something else to use: men's ties, shoe laces, seat belts,? Poole said.

All of the flight attendants who spoke with NBC News noted that unruly passengers are rare and that they?ve never come close to having to restrain a flier. Still, the government deals with dozens of out-of-control air travelers each year.

There were 131 cases of unruly passengers on U.S. airlines in 2011, the last full year for which statistics are available, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. That?s down from a peak of 330 cases in 2004.

FAA regulations do not require that airlines carry items such as plastic ties. "Flight attendant security? training is conducted according to FAA and TSA standards, which we do not discuss," the agency said in a statement.?

While federal air marshals fly under cover on some routes to protect passengers from terrorists, airlines have their own protocols on how to deal with travelers who may have had too much to drink or are behaving badly. Dealing with unruly passengers is not a function of the Transportation Security Administration, said agency spokesman David Castelveter.

For all of their training, flight crews can?t always anticipate how passengers will act, so they often have to rely on their best judgment, said veteran flight attendant Rene Foss, author of ?Around the World in a Bad Mood!?

?When you?re flying at 39,000 feet, you can?t just call 911, so you have to figure it out,? Foss said.

Part of the strategy is knowing who you can enlist to help. Foss and Shook said they routinely size up passengers during boarding to mentally note who might be able to assist in an emergency.

?If you know that the Green Bay Packers are traveling in the main cabin and there?s some trouble up in front, you might want to get one of those big boys to come up and help you,? Foss said. ?It?s just situational awareness.?

Flight attendants also try to de-escalate and diffuse tense situations to avoid getting anywhere near the point where someone has to be restrained, Shook noted.

When passengers do act out, alcohol is often the culprit, she added. The unruly Icelandair passenger ?drank all of his duty free liquor on the flight,? Ellwood wrote in the blog post accompanying the infamous photo.

Poole recalled a traveler who was on his fourth beer less than an hour into a flight and who told her he could drink many more. The flier backed off when she balked at his request for more booze, but others aren?t so calm when they don't get what they want, Poole noted.

?That's when we might accidentally on purpose forget to serve them a drink, or tell them we've run out, or we might even start mixing way more Coke and a lot less (alcohol) until we're only serving a tiny drop of liquor in the glass,? she said.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/travel/how-flight-attendants-deal-unruly-passengers-1B7885636

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Iraqis held at Abu Ghraib, other sites receive $5M

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A defense contractor whose subsidiary was accused in a lawsuit of conspiring to torture detainees at the infamous Abu Ghraib prison has paid $5.28 million to former prisoners held there and at other U.S.-run detention sites in Iraq during the war.

The settlement on behalf of 71 former inmates marks the first successful effort by lawyers for former inmates at Abu Ghraib and other detention centers to collect money from a U.S. defense contractor in lawsuits alleging torture. Another contractor, CACI, is expected to go to trial over similar allegations this summer.

Defense contractor Engility Holdings Inc. of Chantilly, Va., disclosed the payment in a document it filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission two months ago.

The defendant in the lawsuit, L-3 Services Inc., now an Engility subsidiary, provided translators to the U.S. military in Iraq. In 2006, L-3 Services had more than 6,000 translators in Iraq under a $450 million-a-year contract, an L-3 executive told an investors conference at the time.

On Tuesday, Baher Azmy, a lawyer for the ex-detainees, said that each of the Iraqis received a portion of the settlement. Azmy declined to say how the money was distributed among them. He said there was an agreement to keep details of the settlement confidential.

"Private military contractors played a serious but often underreported role in the worst abuses at Abu Ghraib," said Azmy, legal director at the Center for Constitutional Rights. "We are pleased that this settlement provides some accountability for one of those contractors and offers some measure of justice for the victims."

Jennifer Barton, a spokeswoman for L-3 Communications, the former parent company of L-3 Services, said the company does not comment on legal matters.

Eric Ruff, Engility's director of corporate communications, said the company does not comment on matters involving litigation.

The ex-detainees filed the lawsuit in federal court in Greenbelt, Md., in 2008. It covers torture allegations from 2003 to 2007.

L-3 Services "permitted scores of its employees to participate in torturing and abusing prisoners over an extended period of time throughout Iraq," the lawsuit stated. The company "willfully failed to report L-3 employees' repeated assaults and other criminal conduct by its employees to the United States or Iraq authorities."

One inmate alleged he was subjected to mock executions by having a gun aimed at his head and the trigger pulled. Another inmate said he was slammed into a wall until he became unconscious. A third was allegedly stripped naked and threatened with rape while his hands and legs were chained and a hood placed on his head. Another said he was forced to consume so much water that he began to vomit blood. Several of the inmates said they were raped and many of the inmates said they were beaten and kept naked for extended periods of time.

Four years ago in its defense against the lawsuit, L-3 Services said lawyers for the Iraqis alleged no facts to support the conspiracy accusation. Sixty-eight of the Iraqis "do not even attempt to allege the identity of their alleged abuser," and two others provide only "vague assertions," the company said at the time.

A military investigation in 2004 identified 44 alleged incidents of detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib. No employee from L-3 Services was charged with a crime in investigations by the U.S. Justice Department. Nor did the U.S. military stop the company from working for the government.

Fifty-two of the 71 Iraqis alleged that they were imprisoned at Abu Ghraib and at other detention facilities. The other 19 Iraqis allege they were detained at detention facilities other than Abu Ghraib.

The Abu Ghraib prison scandal erupted during President George W. Bush's 2004 re-election campaign when graphic photographs taken by soldiers at the scene were leaked to the news media. They showed naked inmates piled on top of each other in a prison cell block, inmates handcuffed to their cell bars and hooded and wired for electric shock, among other disturbing scenes.

In the ensuing international uproar, Bush said the practices that had taken place at Abu Ghraib in late 2003 were "abhorrent." Some Democrats demanded that Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld resign. Eventually, 11 U.S. soldiers were convicted of crimes including aggravated assault and taking pictures of naked Iraqi prisoners being humiliated.

Rumsfeld told Congress in 2004 that he had found a way to compensate Iraqi detainees who suffered "grievous and brutal abuse and cruelty at the hands of a few members of the United States armed forces." But the U.S. Army subsequently has been unable to document a single U.S. government payment for prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib.

This week, the U.S. Army Claims Service said it has 36 claims from former detainees in Iraq, none of them related to alleged physical abuse. From the budget years 2003 to 2006, the Defense Department paid $30.9 million to Iraqi and Afghan civilians who were killed, injured or incurred property damage due to U.S. or coalition forces' actions during combat.

In the aftermath of Abu Ghraib, lawyers for the Iraqis filed a number of lawsuits against L-3 Services and another company, CACI International Inc. of Arlington, Va., but the cases were quickly hung up on an underlying question: whether defense contractors working side by side with the U.S. military can be sued for claims arising in a war zone. The U.S. government is immune from suits stemming from combatant activities of the military in time of war.

Courts are still sorting out whether contractors in a war zone should be accorded legal immunity from being sued, just as the government is immune.

But a turning point in the cases involving L-3 and CACI came last May. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va., ruled 11-3 that more facts must be developed before the appeals court could consider the defense contractor's request to dismiss the lawsuit.

In the case against CACI, four Iraqis who say they were tortured are seeking compensation from the company, which provided interrogators to the U.S. military during the war. CACI has chosen to continue its fight against the lawsuit. Azmy said a trial is expected this summer.

In its defense four years ago against the lawsuit, L-3 said the fact that the claims in the case "cannot be brought against the government means that they also cannot be brought against L-3."

"No court in the United States has allowed aliens ? detained on the battlefield or in the course of postwar occupation and military operations by the U.S. military ? to seek damages for their detention," the company told the federal court. "Yet these plaintiffs bring claims seeking money damages for their detention and treatment while in the custody of the U.S. military in the midst of a belligerent occupation in Iraq."

Allowing the case to proceed "would require a wholly unprecedented injection of the judiciary into wartime military operations and occupation conduct against the local population, in particular the conditions of confinement and interrogation for intelligence gathering," L-3 added.

___

Associated Press investigative researcher Randy Herschaft contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraqis-held-abu-ghraib-other-sites-receive-5m-080247943.html

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Clipboard, The Evernote-Meets-Pinterest Clipping Service With 1.7 Clips To Date, Targets Education Sector With Strategic Investment From Scientia

clipboardClipboard?--?the web clipping service that is a little like a cross between Evernote and Pinterest, racking up?1.7 million clips since opening for private beta in October 2011 --?has taken a strategic investment from ed-tech company Scientia -- backing that will result in joint product development between the two to target the education market with online collaboration tools.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QWv6DRfe63Y/

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Tuesday, January 8, 2013

New Dish box sends TV shows 'hopping' to iPad

(AP) ? Dish Network Corp. revealed a set-top box called "Hopper" last year, named for its ability to send the TV signal "hopping" from room to room, covering all the TVs in the house. This year, it's upgrading the Hopper so that it follows you wherever you go ? even outside the house.

The new all-in-one digital video recorder and set-top box, revealed Monday at a press conference ahead of the International CES trade show in Las Vegas, is adorned with the same kangaroo logo and can transfer recorded TV shows or movies to an iPad for viewing any time.

Dish is the first cable or satellite company to offer such a feature. It may raise eyebrows in Hollywood and among the TV networks that supply the satellite broadcaster with programming because it could dig into the extra revenue they get from sales of content for offline viewing through iTunes. Dish is already fighting suits from Fox and NBC over the automatic ad-skipping feature it introduced with the first Hopper.

Legally speaking, "to say you're in novel territory is probably an understatement," said Scott Flick, an intellectual-property lawyer at Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman in Washington.

However, legal challenges to the transfer feature could be stymied by the fact that the stored movies and shows are under the control of the viewer the whole time, Flick said. In other words, the system is not much different from a VCR that lets a consumer tape a show and then bring the tape along for viewing elsewhere.

"We always stand with the consumer. That means sometimes we'll have lawsuits," Dish CEO Joe Clayton said in an interview ahead of the show.

The transfer of stored content only works in the home, with an iPad connected via Wi-Fi to the same Internet router as the Hopper. Dish is planning to bring the feature to other devices as well.

The new Hopper can also transmit live TV programming to iPads, iPhones, Android phones and computers, even outside the home. That's because the new box integrates, for the first time, technology from Sling Media, a company Dish's sister company Echostar Corp. bought in 2007. The Slingbox, a separate device, hooks up to a satellite or cable set-top box and "slings" the live signal out over the Internet, to the owner's PCs and mobile devices.

Competing cable companies are also rushing to extend their services to smartphones and tablets, to stay relevant as consumers spend more time on small screens. In parallel, networks like HBO are creating their own apps for online viewing.

Dish, which is based in Englewood, Colo., said the new Hopper will be available later this year. As usual, the box will be free to Dish subscribers who sign a two-year contract.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-07-Gadget%20Show-Dish-TV%20Anywhere/id-865ce540105648ae8970af51a3623939

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Will Any Photo-Sharing Startup Stick Around? Just A Few Months In, Social Photo Scrapbook Irrive Hits The Deadpool

trip-2Sometimes startups shut down fast, and in the case of new online scrapbooking maker Irrive, which only launched this past September, the company had barely even gotten started before closing up shop. According to CEO Steven Cohn, who sold his last startup to LivingSocial, he made the decision to quickly pivot (his word, not mine, by the way), because even though Irrive's metrics were good, the viral event of sharing a scrapbook was too infrequent an action.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/PRcUufrfLik/

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