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Saturday, January 30, 2016





January 30, 2016


News Clips For The Day


1. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/donald-trump-bible-last-minute-pitch-to-evangelicals-ahead-of-iowa-caucuses-election-2016/

Donald Trump shows off Bible in pitch to evangelicals
By REENA FLORES CBS NEWS
January 30, 2016


Photograph -- In a new video released January 30, 2016, Donald Trump shows off a Bible his mother gave him. FACEBOOK / DONALD TRUMP


Just two days ahead of the first nominating contest in Iowa, Donald Trump is making a final attempt to court evangelical Christians.

In a new video posted to Facebook Saturday, the billionaire businessman thanked evangelicals and promised to "never let you down."

"I really appreciate the support given to me by the evangelicals," Trump said. "They've been incredible. Every poll says how well I'm doing with them."

Trump then held aloft a worn Bible, which he said his mother had given to him "many years ago."

"In fact, it's her writing right here," he added, flipping to the first page of the book. "She wrote the name and my address and it's just very special to me."

This is not the first time the GOP front-runner has used the Bible as a prop on the campaign trail.

In September, Trump waved the same copy of the book while giving a speech at the Values Voters Summit hosted by the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C.

Trump has also repeatedly named the Bible as his favorite book -- though he has often faced criticisms for his inability to name his favorite Bible verses.

In the past, white evangelical voters have made up nearly half of Republican primary voters and caucus-goers. And in Iowa, conservative Christians make up an outsized portion of likely caucus attendees.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, whose presidential campaign kicked off at Jerry Falwell's Liberty University, has held a large lead among evangelical voters in Iowa throughout much of the primary season -- and he runs a close second to Trump in polls of the first caucus state.

But earlier this week, according to a CBS News battleground tracker poll, Trump has recently cut into Cruz's advantage among Iowa evangelicals. Whereas Cruz had 47 percent of the evangelical vote to 28 percent for Trump last month, Cruz now only leads 38-30.



“This is not the first time the GOP front-runner has used the Bible as a prop on the campaign trail. In September, Trump waved the same copy of the book while giving a speech at the Values Voters Summit hosted by the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C. Trump has also repeatedly named the Bible as his favorite book -- though he has often faced criticisms for his inability to name his favorite Bible verses. …. But earlier this week, according to a CBS News battleground tracker poll, Trump has recently cut into Cruz's advantage among Iowa evangelicals. Whereas Cruz had 47 percent of the evangelical vote to 28 percent for Trump last month, Cruz now only leads 38-30.”


One thing I firmly believe about Trump is that he is not a religious person of any stamp whatsoever. He’s a cynic and a con artist. Still, he has apparently said the right things during the last month, as he is now the frontrunner among Evangelicals according to this article. If there’s one thing that’s true about polls in general, however, it’s that they can suddenly go up and down like the stock market. I’ll say it again. I don’t see Trump getting the Republican Party nomination. If he does decide to split the party and run as an Independent (if he can change parties in mid-race), that would be great because it would give our two pretty strong Democrats a better chance of beating all the rightists in the Presidential election.



2. http://www.npr.org/sections/ed/2016/01/29/464579497/veterans-to-higher-ed-big-room-for-improvement

For-Profit Colleges Seeking Veterans' GI Bill Dollars Aren't Always The Best Fit
Eric Westervelt
Published January 29, 2016


Photograph -- Participants in a Georgetown University program for military veterans dine together on campus in Washington, D.C. Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post/Getty Images


Recent government sanctions against predatory for-profit colleges that preyed on veterans by using inflated job promises have opened the window on the wider challenges of helping veterans transition from service to higher education.

This week, the Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit against DeVry University claiming the for-profit deceived students with claims that its graduates make more money and that 90 percent of its graduates seeking work found jobs in their field within six months of graduation. In a statement DeVry vowed to "vigorously contest" the suit it calls baseless.

More than 1 million veterans and their families are taking advantage of the Post-9/11 GI Bill to attend college. But thousands are still attracted to for-profit schools. Are they aiming high enough? Are for-profits really the best fit for those who served?

The for-profit sector has marketed aggressively to members of the military and even enrolls them online while they're stationed overseas. A 2014 Senate report shows that eight for-profit college companies got about a quarter of all the funds spent on GI Bill benefits in 2012-2013. The report also says, on average, for-profit schools cost twice as much as educating veterans at public colleges.

One reason these schools target vets is that GI Bill funds help them comply with a federal rule that states that at least 10 percent of revenue for for-profit colleges must come from outside the Department of Education's Title IV financial aid programs. Some critics says this is a loophole and are calling for lawmakers to close it.

But others say traditional colleges and universities, as well, should be doing much more to reach out to help those who served reach their education goals. And that vets themselves need to shake off some education myths.

I reached out to former Army Capt. Tim Hsia to dig deeper. Hsia co-founded the group Service to School, which assists vets transitioning to higher ed with free application and school counseling help. He is a West Point and Stanford graduate who served two infantry combat tours in Iraq, including in Mosul and volatile Diyala province during the pivotal "surge" near the end of the American occupation.

Tim, the data show that there's a dearth of U.S. veterans enrolled, not just in Ivy League schools but really the top echelon of America's undergraduate colleges and universities. Is it fair to say that myth No. 1 might be veterans' own perceptions that they won't get into these top schools, in part because of their own lowered expectations?

There is definitely an aspect of where veterans are not setting their goals high enough. But there is also a lack of awareness of what they can reach if they strive and work hard. The VA has published data on veterans transitioning out. More than half of them will be first-generation college students. Many of them see the schools available to them as for-profit schools because they are the schools that most aggressively target them. There is no training or coaching for these veterans on what's best for them and how to make that transition.

That gets to another misconception that's hopefully changing following the scandal at Corinthian Colleges, once the nation's largest chain of for-profit schools, and at other for-profit institutions. That is the idea that these are the best fit for veterans.

It's a myriad of factors which are driving veterans to non-ideal schools. One is for-profits marketing to them and [the second] is service members' own, perhaps lowered, expectations. A third factor is that the top schools could do a much better job of reaching out to veterans. In my mind it's head-scratching given how vets come with the Post-9/11 GI Bill benefits. So their education, for the most part, is heavily subsidized if not fully covered by the government. Do veterans have the academic excellence to get into those programs? Some veterans do.

And the DOD and the VA do not offer many resources for vets in transition. There was a Rand report that said there really is limited support for veterans who want to pursue higher ed, while there are a lot of resources and nonprofits trying to help veterans get jobs. The last thing I think anyone wants is a veteran who is doing a job below their real potential.

The scandal at Corinthian got a lot of coverage. The issue of some of America's top, say, 100 schools, and the Ivy League not doing enough to actively recruit veterans less so.

There's a lot more that America's top 100 schools can do for veterans, and many like our VetLink schools are taking a big step in that direction by actively working with us to recruit, source, identify and admit qualified veteran applicants. Veterans have to be academically qualified for these top 100 schools. Full stop.

We also think schools could take a more holistic approach to veterans because right now the veteran perception is that getting into these top schools is unattainable and so uncertain. Schools can do more by leaning forward and taking a little bit more risk on student veteran applicants, meaning boosting enrollment and working with organizations in this space like us and Warrior Scholar Project to further attract veterans and educate them that they are veteran-friendly.

These vets are often labeled "nontraditional" students. And many are. Soldiers, marines, sailors, airmen and Coast Guard vets often come out of their service time with powerful and unique skill sets. Technical as well as leadership and organizational. Some of those are skills top schools should want in their undergraduates, no?

Totally. It's a win for the school. They get these veterans with leadership and who have this incredible experience who want to give back to their community and to the nation writ large.

Yet many vets are still attracted to for-profit colleges. Where is that disconnect, that cognitive dissonance coming from?

If you're a veteran, you're 24 or 25 maybe and married with a kid and maybe another on the way. If you're transitioning out you don't have much time to think, "What am I going to do 12 months from now?" You get out and you have barely a month to think about what's next. The last thing you want is to go back to your hometown and be that veteran who doesn't have a game plan. So you say, "OK, I'm going to get a job or I'm going to go to school." Most schools don't have admission cycles to accept veterans. Whereas these for-profit schools, it's turnkey. It's easy. They set it up that way. It's smart of them. For some veterans it can be helpful. And many veterans don't have that wait-and-see mentality.

And some for-profit schools are preying on that time crunch?

It's not just Corinthian Colleges. I think focusing on for-profits misses the wider context. There are others who can do more for veterans and veterans to do more for themselves to prepare themselves not to go to for-profits. Other schools in their marketing need to make it clear veterans are welcomed and accepted. It's also the VA and [Department of Defense] doing more. It's the nonprofits doing more. That's why Service to School and programs such as Warrior Scholar exist.

You raise a good point. Many from the Pentagon to higher ed need to do more to come up with plans and programs to advocate and attract veterans.

Totally. They need and can do more. As with every major social problem it's not just one, simple solution: "OK, we knock out the for-profit schools; what's next?" For some veterans, for-profits might be a good alternative. For some. I think it's a very, very small minority.

As you say, a for-profit school might be the right fit for some veterans. Do you and would you at Service to School recommend that route?

We have never endorsed or recommended an applicant to proceed with that route because we believe there are better alternatives. For example, if a veteran needs to beef up their academic credentials, then attending a community college is a great steppingstone that expands their academic horizons. Many of the veterans that we have placed into top undergrad schools have gone through a community college program. ... For people staying in the military, though, for-profits can be the easiest and most efficient way for people to get promoted in the military. The DOD, like other government agencies, doesn't distinguish between Yale and University of Phoenix when checking off the degree box. But it is a rude awakening for some veterans when they later transition out and realize that they often don't get academic credit for those for-profit classes when they're applying to nonprofit colleges, and that those for-profit degrees often don't count when applying to selective graduate schools.

You've mentioned a lack of higher-education role models for some service men and women. Aren't officer leaders in the field across the services role models?

I'm an officer. But I'll be candid. It's just a different mindset. For a junior officer who's gone to West Point or an ROTC program, that transition to higher education is very easy. They've got their service academy network, role models, they've got a well-worn path. But if you're an E5 sergeant from the Marine Corps or Army transitioning out, there's no model of, "How do I make a successful switch?" There's not a community, a program, a network to assist you with that transition. Compounding that is you're probably the first person in your family applying to schools.

What more, concretely, can the DOD, the VA and colleges do institutionally to help those enlisted men and women transition?

For the longest time the transition program for the military was centered on just getting them jobs. It really ignored the vast majority of veterans who were thinking of utilizing their GI Bill benefits. So providing more guidance and knowledge on how to make that transition is crucial: When you need to apply. What kind of credentials schools are looking for. How to package yourself as an applicant. Just a little bit of investment there, in the long run, will save taxpayer money.

In terms of the schools, it's outreach and getting them to be as aggressive as for-profit schools are in telling them how good of a program they have. That's part of what we do at Service to School. We partner with eight schools, some of the top schools in the nation, to help increase the number of veterans admitted. To society it looks very homogeneous: a veteran's a veteran. But it's very hard for admissions officers to pierce through that military veil. How do they efficiently, and at scale, reach out to veterans who are in Germany, Japan, the National Guard, Army Reserve, deployed veterans, Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Navy, etc.? It's a very fractured and heterogeneous demographic. And there's also a different vocabulary and culture we come from.

If schools did a better job of getting more vets into college, might it help lessen the post-Sept. 11 civilian military divide in America today?

That civilian-military divide is very real. It's especially real in an academic setting. Some of it goes back to the Vietnam era when a lot of the top schools decided not to have ROTC programs there. There's been a whole generation of veterans not at these campuses. Some colleges want to address that. And I think that would be great for the schools and for society.



“It's a myriad of factors which are driving veterans to non-ideal schools. One is for-profits marketing to them and [the second] is service members' own, perhaps lowered, expectations. A third factor is that the top schools could do a much better job of reaching out to veterans. . . . So their education, for the most part, is heavily subsidized if not fully covered by the government. Do veterans have the academic excellence to get into those programs? Some veterans do. And the DOD and the VA do not offer many resources for vets in transition. . . . . The last thing I think anyone wants is a veteran who is doing a job below their real potential. …. Recent government sanctions against predatory for-profit colleges that preyed on veterans by using inflated job promises have opened the window on the wider challenges of helping veterans transition from service to higher education. This week, the Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit against DeVry University claiming the for-profit deceived students with claims that its graduates make more money and that 90 percent of its graduates seeking work found jobs in their field within six months of graduation. In a statement DeVry vowed to "vigorously contest" the suit it calls baseless. …. Veterans have to be academically qualified for these top 100 schools. Full stop. We also think schools could take a more holistic approach to veterans because right now the veteran perception is that getting into these top schools is unattainable and so uncertain. …. Some of those are skills top schools should want in their undergraduates, no? Totally. It's a win for the school. They get these veterans with leadership and who have this incredible experience who want to give back to their community and to the nation writ large. Yet many vets are still attracted to for-profit colleges. Where is that disconnect, that cognitive dissonance coming from? …. Most schools don't have admission cycles to accept veterans. Whereas these for-profit schools, it's turnkey. It's easy. They set it up that way. It's smart of them. For some veterans it can be helpful. And many veterans don't have that wait-and-see mentality. And some for-profit schools are preying on that time crunch?”


“The DOD, like other government agencies, doesn't distinguish between Yale and University of Phoenix when checking off the degree box. But it is a rude awakening for some veterans when they later transition out and realize that they often don't get academic credit for those for-profit classes when they're applying to nonprofit colleges, and that those for-profit degrees often don't count when applying to selective graduate schools.” In other words, entering the average For-Profit college is not a win-win at all. It’s a scam. They simply aren’t academically oriented, but a quick and dirty program instead aimed at a specific job or non-academic skill set. In my view, the student should go to a community college, where health care or IT training are available at much cheaper cost, and it involves a real live teacher, a classroom and textbooks. I’m really not impressed by those computer-based courses, because the input from other students and professors is more valuable to me than memorizing some overly simplified information. There is an improvement of life scheduling for a student has a kid or is working at a job, however, but you can still get computerized courses through real colleges and probably for less money.

For-Profits of all kinds have taken over the country – colleges, hospitals, prisons, all have ostensibly a human-centered function. The higher goal of a prison is to reform the inmate and make him more ready to enter society. Throwing him into solitary confinement and making him subsist on “the loaf” don’t serve that purpose. Teaching him to improve his academic skills, work at a job, and get insight into himself by providing group therapy and AA/Na for those with addiction problems do. As for those For-Profit hospitals, medical care costs are as high as the sky already. Some of those for-profit hospitals have been charging the poor at the same high level as the wealthy, which is (usually anyway) against the law. They don’t tend to stop doing that, however, until complaints are raised, the hospital finds itself at the heart of scandal and as a result begins to lose “patients” (customers).

Being involved in a profitable business will pay the rent and membership at exclusive clubs, but it isn’t a reason for the adoration of the public, as the GOP leaning groups tend to claim, and it is certainly not the only real form of success. A businessman is very likely to be as dishonest as they come, and totally lacking in empathy with human beings or other life forms. If a woodland or meadow is destroyed and the animals that lived there have left the area, or worse have died, that just isn’t one of their concerns. I will hasten to say, of course, that many US citizens have the same callous viewpoint. Likewise, they don’t usually give a happy darn about paying their female employees at the same level as the men or giving them promotions as often as those of the male persuasion, which is generally based on sheer bias rather than real differences in expertise. Men are not really smarter than women. Intelligence ranges across all groups, from gender and race to poverty or even mental illness. Many mentally ill people have higher than average IQs, though they have mood disorders or other symptoms that require good, effective, non-addictive medication and talk therapy of some kind.

So what’s so wrong with a For-Profit business? Well, if it isn’t supposed to be a humanitarian enterprise, maybe nothing. If it’s goal is to make and sell widgets, however, it should make the best designed, useful and durable widgets so that the public is not, again, essentially cheated. See the definition below:


http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/for-profit-organization.html
Definition -- for profit organization

“A business or other organization whose primary goal is making money (a profit), as opposed to a non profit organization which focuses a goal such as helping the community and is concerned with money only as much as necessary to keep the organization operating. Most companies considered to be businesses are for profit organizations; this includes anything from retail stores to restaurants to insurance companies to real estate companies.”




3. http://www.npr.org/sections/ed/2016/01/27/464418078/lowering-the-bar-for-the-new-ged-test

Lowering The Bar For The New GED Test
ANYA KAMENETZ
Published January 27, 2016


Tens of thousands of GED test takers who barely missed the cut may soon receive a diploma, after the company that oversees the test said this week it's lowering the minimum passing score.

Since the new GED was unveiled two years ago this month, complaints have been rising. Students and teachers don't like that the high school equivalency test is now a for-profit venture, that it is more expensive than before and that it is solely computer-administered.

Most of all, they said, it's harder. So much harder, in fact, that pass rates reportedly plummeted in many states.

The GED Testing Service seems to have heard that last complaint. The testing service is a partnership between the American Council on Education, or ACE, and Pearson, the world's largest education company.

This week they announced that they are lowering the minimum passing score by 5 points, from 150 to 145. States are currently reviewing the change.

"Our recommendation is for each state to strongly consider making these changes retroactive," says CT Turner, a spokesman for the GED Testing Service. He adds that the changes aren't an admission that the test is too difficult, but a response to new information.

"We've gotten hard data back from a number of states showing that GED grads are not just performing on par, but better than high school graduates when it comes to college," Turner says. A passing score of 145, he says, puts GED holders more in line with a typical high school graduate.

In addition to the new lower cutoff score, the GED will have tiered pass rates for the first time. A score of 165-174 certifies readiness for college-level work without remediation. And a score above 175, earned by about 1 in 10 test takers, could make students eligible for up to 10 hours of college credit through ACE's Credit Recommendation Service.

"This is just one of many enhancements that helps adult learners," says Turner. It may also help the GED Testing Service reclaim lost market share. From what was once essentially a monopoly, 21 states so far have now adopted cheaper alternative tests — the TASC and HiSET.

About 20 million people have earned a GED since 1942, when the test was originally created as an educational passport for GIs returning from WWII. Today, more than ever before, a high school diploma is widely viewed as an economic necessity.

But the number of GED test takers dropped from 800,000 in 2013 to 248,000 who took the new test in 2014, the latest complete numbers. And the other two alternative tests are still much smaller: 42,000 took the TASC in 2014 and 38,000 completed the HiSEt.

Correction
Jan. 28, 2016
A previous version of this piece incorrectly stated that TASC and HiSET, alternative GED tests, were both not-for-profit. HiSET is administered by the nonprofit Educational Testing Service, or ETS, but TASC is run by the for-profit CTB, a division of McGraw Hill.



“Tens of thousands of GED test takers who barely missed the cut may soon receive a diploma, after the company that oversees the test said this week it's lowering the minimum passing score. Since the new GED was unveiled two years ago this month, complaints have been rising. Students and teachers don't like that the high school equivalency test is now a for-profit venture, that it is more expensive than before and that it is solely computer-administered. Most of all, they said, it's harder. So much harder, in fact, that pass rates reportedly plummeted in many states. …. In addition to the new lower cutoff score, the GED will have tiered pass rates for the first time. A score of 165-174 certifies readiness for college-level work without remediation. And a score above 175, earned by about 1 in 10 test takers, could make students eligible for up to 10 hours of college credit through ACE's Credit Recommendation Service.”


“This week they announced that they are lowering the minimum passing score by 5 points, from 150 to 145. States are currently reviewing the change. "Our recommendation is for each state to strongly consider making these changes retroactive," says CT Turner, a spokesman for the GED Testing Service. He adds that the changes aren't an admission that the test is too difficult, but a response to new information.” Yeah, right. I think it’s probably hard to really pin down what would be a reasonable passing score, as schools vary so much in what and how they pitch their courses at the students. One thing that may be the main problem is that too many high school graduates can’t read at grade level, or anywhere near it. That does mean that they can’t read the questions on the test or the multiple choice answers, not to mention the GED study materials. (See the article a week or two ago on the discouraging math and reading scores among modern American kids.)

I would like to know why the new GED is harder than before. What makes it harder? One complaint along the same lines as these concerning the Common Core tests is that they use a different form of math presentation and the kids not only didn’t understand it all too often, but their parents don’t either. Testing kids on something they haven’t been taught and which isn’t common knowledge is simply ridiculous. This emphasis on raising the academic level of high school would be approached better by more thorough teaching every day, that builds the less skilled student’s abilities gradually as the new material is being introduced, so that fewer kids fall behind on a day by day basis. Test those kids daily. There’s nothing like a pop quiz to make students perk up and pay attention. I took a music appreciation course that, we were warned, would involve a test on the new chapter every day and the prof did follow through on that. They weren’t hard tests, but I did have to read the chapter to pass them. That means you don’t slough off until the last week before exams without even reading the text. Young people do have a tendency to goof off as much as the teacher allows them to do.



4. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/escaped-inmates-hossein-nayeri-jonathan-tieu-caught-in-california-sheriff-says/

Sheriff: Remaining 2 escaped inmates caught
CBS/AP
January 30, 2016

Photograph -- When criminals are convicted and sentenced to time behind bars; most of the time, that's the end of it. Every once in a while, though, inmates pull off elaborate escapes that shock the world.On January 22, 2016, 43-year-old Tien Duong, 37-year-old Hossein Nayeri and 20-year-old Jonathan Tieu broke out of a Southern California jail by cutting their way through a steel screen and entering the prison's plumbing tunnels. Law enforcement says the group then rappelled off the roof, down nearly five floors, using a make-shift rope made of linens. ORANGE COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT/REUTERS
Play VIDEO -- Escaped California inmate turns himself in, two others at large
Photograph -- duong3.jpg, Bac Duong, one of three inmates who escaped from the Orange County Men's Central Jail earlier in the month, turned himself into Santa Ana police, Jan. 29, 2016. KCAL


SANTA ANA, Calif. - Two inmates who had escaped from a Santa Ana jail more than a week ago were in custody, authorities announced Saturday.

Hossein Nayeri and Jonathan Tieu were taken into custody in San Francisco, the Orange County Sheriff's Office announced on its Twitter feed.

#OCSDPIO: Both outstanding jail escapees (Nayeri & Tieu) IN-CUSTODY by @SFPD. Details to follow at press conference - Sheriff's HQ 12pm
— OC Sheriff, CA (@OCSD) January 30, 2016

The news comes a day after Bac Duong, the third prisoner in the group, turned himself in. Duong walked up to a Southern California auto shop where a friend works, had her call police and stood and smoked a cigarette until he was arrested.

Duong, 43, then told investigators that a day earlier he had been in Northern California with the other two inmates before breaking off to turn himself in, authorities said. Nayeri and Tieu were believed to have been in San Jose and driving a van that the men stole a day after their escape.

The three men had all been jailed and awaiting trial for separate violent crimes. They were held in a dormitory with about 65 other men in the jail about 30 miles southeast of Los Angeles.

The men escaped in the early morning hours after cutting a hole in a metal grate then crawling through plumbing tunnels and onto the roof of a four-story jail building.

They pushed aside barbed wire and rappelled down using a rope made of bed linen.

It took jail staff 16 hours to realize the three men were missing.

On Thursday, authorities arrested a woman who taught English inside the jail. Nooshafarin Ravaghi, 44, gave Nayeri a paper copy of a Google Earth map that showed an aerial view of the entire jail compound, Hallock said.

She was booked on suspicion of being an accessory to a felony and was being held pending a court appearance set for Monday. It wasn't clear if she had a lawyer.

Ravaghi and Nayeri also exchanged "personal and close" handwritten letters, but Hallock could not say if the two were romantically involved.

"It wasn't the relationship that you would expect between a teacher and an inmate in a custody setting," he said.

Duong, a native of Vietnam, has been held since last month on charges of attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon.

It was the first escape in nearly three decades from the Central Men's Jail, built in 1968, that holds 900 men.

Tieu, 20, is charged with murder and attempted murder in a 2011 gang shooting. Nayeri,37, had been held without bond since September 2014 on charges of kidnapping, torture, aggravated mayhem and burglary.



“The news comes a day after Bac Duong, the third prisoner in the group, turned himself in. Duong walked up to a Southern California auto shop where a friend works, had her call police and stood and smoked a cigarette until he was arrested. …. The three men had all been jailed and awaiting trial for separate violent crimes. They were held in a dormitory with about 65 other men in the jail about 30 miles southeast of Los Angeles. The men escaped in the early morning hours after cutting a hole in a metal grate then crawling through plumbing tunnels and onto the roof of a four-story jail building. They pushed aside barbed wire and rappelled down using a rope made of bed linen. It took jail staff 16 hours to realize the three men were missing. On Thursday, authorities arrested a woman who taught English inside the jail. Nooshafarin Ravaghi, 44, gave Nayeri a paper copy of a Google Earth map that showed an aerial view of the entire jail compound, Hallock said. …. Ravaghi and Nayeri also exchanged "personal and close" handwritten letters, but Hallock could not say if the two were romantically involved. "It wasn't the relationship that you would expect between a teacher and an inmate in a custody setting," he said.’


Well, this wasn’t a violent escape, but they were all pretty dangerous men, having committed murder and attempted murder, with the Middle Eastern doing the worst things – kidnapping and torture. This was certainly an exciting story. Bruce Willis should make a movie about it. It was a big waste of time, however, as they were caught and will now undoubtedly serve even more time.




5. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/analysis-finds-deliberate-disabling-of-some-chicago-police-dashcams/

Analysis finds "deliberate" disabling of some Chicago PD dashcams
By DEAN REYNOLDS CBS NEWS
January 29, 2016


Photograph -- Laquan McDonald, right, walks on a road before he was shot 16 times by police officer Jason Van Dyke in Chicago in this still image taken from a police vehicle dash camera video shot on Oct. 20, 2014, and released by Chicago police on Nov. 24, 2015. CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS
Play VIDEO -- Chicago cop Jason Van Dyke pleads not guilty in death of Laquan McDonald


CHICAGO -- On Friday, the lawyer for a white Chicago cop charged with murdering a black teenager said officer Jason Van Dyke has received death threats and he may seek to move the trial out of the city.

It was also revealed that Van Dyke's dashcam was not working the night the teen was killed, which has reportedly been happening a lot in Chicago.

There's something missing from a number of dashboard videos of fatal police shootings in Chicago: the sound.

And though almost all Chicago squad cars have video and audio recorders in the dashboards, an analysis of police maintenance logs by the website DNA Info Chicago indicates silent tape is not unusual.

The analysis -- which was not disputed by police officials -- found microphones stashed in glove boxes, batteries removed and antennas damaged. On purpose.

John Escalante, the interim superintendent of police, said technical problems or human error can happen at any time.

"But there are other times it's deliberate -- people deliberately trying to circumvent the system," Escalante said.

In the October 2014 shooting of Laquan McDonald, none of the five cruisers on the scene recorded audio when officer Van Dyke shot McDonald 16 times.

Escalante concedes that on any given day about 12 percent of the recorders need to be fixed but intentional destruction will be met with reprimands or suspensions.

Dean Angelo of the police union blames aging equipment -- not the cops.

"Some of those things have been in disrepair for a long time, and to now come down on the individual operators of the vehicle and say that they've done something to it, I think is a bit arbitrary," said Angelo.

When asked if Chicago officers feel as though the public is breathing down their necks, Escalante said "there is some concern that officers don't want to be the next viral video."

Their exposure is about to increase. This spring, police in several districts will be wearing new body cameras as part of a pilot program that, if successful, could spread to the whole force.



“There's something missing from a number of dashboard videos of fatal police shootings in Chicago: the sound. And though almost all Chicago squad cars have video and audio recorders in the dashboards, an analysis of police maintenance logs by the website DNA Info Chicago indicates silent tape is not unusual. The analysis -- which was not disputed by police officials -- found microphones stashed in glove boxes, batteries removed and antennas damaged. On purpose. …. "But there are other times it's deliberate -- people deliberately trying to circumvent the system," Escalante said. In the October 2014 shooting of Laquan McDonald, none of the five cruisers on the scene recorded audio when officer Van Dyke shot McDonald 16 times. …. "Some of those things have been in disrepair for a long time, and to now come down on the individual operators of the vehicle and say that they've done something to it, I think is a bit arbitrary," said Angelo. When asked if Chicago officers feel as though the public is breathing down their necks, Escalante said "there is some concern that officers don't want to be the next viral video."


This does look like “the blue wall of silence” to me – purposeful silence. Dash cams wouldn’t have their sound turned off to avoid recording gun shots, but to prevent cries of pain or illegal and unethical conversations instead. As for the police department failing to keep those cameras in good working condition, that is shameful, and is at least partly the fault of “the brass.” When officers are inspected, their car should be also. The statement that body cams are to be tried out in some sections of the city is encouraging, but they can be disabled as easily as the others. The apparent lack of honesty among officers disturbs me no end. If they “don’t want to be the next viral video,” they should stop being abusive. I hasten to say that not all officers are abusive; but the fact that all six cars which recorded the McDonald shooting had no sound, that sounds a little like a majority are involved rather than a minority, as the police unions always say. We shouldn’t forget that police unions are made up of officers and not of supervisors.



6. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/election-2016-new-york-times-endorses-hillary-clinton-john-kasich/

These candidates just got endorsed by the New York Times
By REENA FLORES CBS NEWS
January 30, 2016

Photograph -- The New York Times logo is seen on the headquarters building on April 21, 2011 in New York City. RAMIN TALAIE/GETTY IMAGES
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In a Saturday editorial, the New York Times threw their weight behind Republican presidential candidate and Ohio Gov. John Kasich -- but you might never know it if you had only skimmed its first paragraphs.

That's because the newspaper of record devoted its opening lines to lambasting the rest of the Republican field, with front-runners Donald Trump and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz featuring prominently in the attacks. Kasich's name, in contrast, first appears in the sixth paragraph of the editorial.

"The battle to be the Republican choice for president has been nasty, brutish and anything but short," the Times began, before going on to blast Trump and Cruz as "equally objectionable for different reasons."

"Mr. Trump has neither experience in nor interest in learning about national security, defense or global trade," the editorial board penned. "From deporting Mexican immigrants and barring Muslims to slapping a 45 percent tariff on Chinese imports, Mr. Trump invents his positions as he goes along."

Of Cruz, the Times labeled his campaign one of "ambition," rather than "constitutional principles."

"Whether he's threatening to 'carpet bomb' Syrian villages or pitching a phony 'flat tax' that would batter middle-class consumers, Mr. Cruz will say anything to win," the editorial said. "The greater worry is that he'd follow words with action."

The Kasich endorsement went on to slap at the wrists of other GOP candidates trailing behind in the polls: Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has "failed to ignite much support"; Florida Sen. Marco Rubio has "forgotten his more positive 'New American Century' campaign" in favor of "embracing the alarmist views" of his opponents; and Ben Carson has shown a remarkable "inability to grasp the world."

The Times didn't even name Kasich in the editorial's headline, instead titling it an anodyne "Chance to Reset the Republican Race."

The Times spent just a scant few paragraphs enumerating the White House qualifications of the Ohio governor, who the paper acknowledged was a "distinct underdog."

The Times named Kasich a chief executive with conservative bona fides -- a man who has "gone after public-sector unions" and limited abortion and same-sex marriage rights, but is also given to compromise in the face of partisan fights.

The paper praised Kasich's position on a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigration, as well as his $13 billion expansion of Medicaid in Ohio.

"For Republicans tired of the extremism and inexperience on display in this race," the editorial board wrote, Kasich was "the only plausible choice."

During a Fox News interview Saturday, Kasich called the Times nod "fantastic."

"It's just really awesome," he said. "You want to have everybody for you. I think that what works for me is I've proven that I can attract voters across the board."

In the GOP primary season, however, the Times endorsement may be a mixed blessing for Kasich, entrenching him further as an "establishment" candidate when Republican voters are trending towards contenders that are anything but.

In the latest CBS News Battleground Tracker poll released earlier this week, Trump leads among voters in Iowa -- where the nation's first nominating contest will be held in just two days -- because of his ability to "shake up the system."

In a separate editorial, the Times also gave their endorsement to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton: the "right choice for the Democrats to present a vision for America that is radically different from the one that leading Republican candidates offer."

The paper focused largely on Clinton's foreign policy experience and specifically applauded her economic platform.

"Her lifelong fight for women bolsters her credibility in this area, since so many of the problems with labor law hit women the hardest, including those involving child care, paid sick leave, unstable schedules and low wages for tipped workers," the Times wrote.

The editorial board questioned her "hawkish" stance on the use of military might in conflicts abroad, but still put their faith in Clinton to "use American military power effectively."

The endorsement also drew differences between Clinton and her rival Bernie Sanders on gun control, naming the former secretary a "strong advocate of sensible and effective measures to combat the plague of firearms." Sanders' record, meanwhile, was "relatively weak," according to the Times.

Sanders was also slammed for lacking the "breadth of experience or policy ideas" compared to Clinton. Of the Vermont senator's boldest proposals to tackle the financial sector and to reinvent the health care system with a single-payer alternative, the editorial board said "his plans for achieving them aren't realistic."

The newspaper backed Clinton in the 2008 presidential election and endorsed her twice during her two New York races for the U.S. Senate.



"Mr. Trump has neither experience in nor interest in learning about national security, defense or global trade," the editorial board penned. "From deporting Mexican immigrants and barring Muslims to slapping a 45 percent tariff on Chinese imports, Mr. Trump invents his positions as he goes along." . . . . and Ben Carson has shown a remarkable "inability to grasp the world." …. The Times named Kasich a chief executive with conservative bona fides -- a man who has "gone after public-sector unions" and limited abortion and same-sex marriage rights, but is also given to compromise in the face of partisan fights. The paper praised Kasich's position on a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigration, as well as his $13 billion expansion of Medicaid in Ohio. "For Republicans tired of the extremism and inexperience on display in this race," the editorial board wrote, Kasich was "the only plausible choice." …. The endorsement also drew differences between Clinton and her rival Bernie Sanders on gun control, naming the former secretary a "strong advocate of sensible and effective measures to combat the plague of firearms." Sanders' record, meanwhile, was "relatively weak," according to the Times. Sanders was also slammed for lacking the "breadth of experience or policy ideas" compared to Clinton.”


I’m not going to vote for a Republican, but if I did I would definitely prefer Kasich, not merely because his views are more centrist than any of the others, but because compared to the others he seems to be a pleasant, rational thinking individual. As for Clinton having a broader range of experience than Sanders, I agree, but she is not as strong on the economic front as he is, and I think that is the greatest and most commonly unmet need that we have in today’s America. As for being weaker on gun control and slow to react to the BLM movement, I think his main personal focus has been on the inequality between the wealthy and all of us who are (much) less well to do. He has quickly stepped up to the plate on both of those social issues. Our main problem is the wealth gap. The wealthiest in this country are in a position to buy the government seat by seat, and that is exactly what they are doing, not to mention the socially unfair laws being enacting around the states under the ALEX plan of action. Those things are a real threat to our national heritage and a prosperous, happy future for our citizens.



7. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/audio-cpr-started-11-minutes-after-staff-found-gynnya-mcmillen/

Audio: CPR started 11 minutes after staff found Gynnya McMillen
By GRAHAM KATES CBS NEWS
January 30, 2016


Photograph -- Gynnya McMillen LACHE SIMMS VIA FACEBOOK


A sheriff's deputy planning to transport 16-year-old Gynnya McMillen to court arrived at the Lincoln Village Juvenile Detention Center to pick her up at 9:55 a.m on Jan. 11.

When he arrived, staff at the small facility entered the cell where McMillen spent her one night at Lincoln Village alone. They realized she was "cold" and not breathing, according to emergency dispatch recordings obtained by 48 Hours' Crimesider.

Nine minutes passed between the deputy's arrival and the first call to 911, at 10:04 a.m.

About 1 ½ minutes later, the emergency dispatcher asked a Lincoln Village nurse if CPR was being performed.

"No it's not," the nurse said.

"They want us to start CPR," she can then be heard saying to someone at the facility.

"Do y'all have a CPR protocol or do y'all need it?" the dispatcher asked about 10 seconds later.

"I'm new, I can find out, I don't know," the nurse replied.

By 10:07, dispatch confirmed that CPR was beginning, and that McMillen was "cold to the touch." Eight minutes later, an EMS supervisor radioed dispatch and declared McMillen dead. It is not clear if a defibrillator was used at any time. McMillen's body was on the way to the county coroner by 11:33.

Since McMillen's death, officials have indicated she likely died in her sleep, though no cause has yet been determined. Members of McMillen's family have criticized the treatment she received from staff, both before and after her death.

"They have a duty to serve and perform. You start CPR. It doesn't take 11 minutes to assess whether one is breathing or not," said Dana McDuffie, whose fiance, Greg Mitchell, is McMillen's brother.

Officials initially released few details about the circumstances of McMillen's death, leading her sister to launch a social media campaign seeking answers.

gynnya_mcmillen2.jpg
Gynnya McMillen LACHE SIMMS VIA FACEBOOK

A state official said Friday that on Jan. 10, the day before McMillen's death, a Lincoln Village employee used an "Aikido restraint" on her. The martial arts technique was used because McMillen refused to remove her sweatshirt in order to be searched and photographed for booking.

"The staff performed an Aikido restraint hold to safely conduct a pat-down search and remove the youth's hoodie," Floden wrote. "The purpose of having multiple staff involved in a controlled restraint is to ensure the safety of the youth and staff."

The teen's "repeated refusal to cooperate with staff and remove her outer garment prompted the restraint," Floden wrote. A female staff member conducted the pat-down and removed the hoodie, she said.

It's not clear if the "Aikido restraint" factored into McMillen's death on Jan. 11. Her death is currently under investigation by the Kentucky State Troopers and the Justice Cabinet's Internal Investigation's Branch. McDuffie expressed frustration at the slow trickle of information released by officials since McMillen's death.

"As you try and grieve in a proper effective manner, you keep thinking, 'What's going to come out next? They said one thing before and now it's something else,'" McDuffie said Saturday.

Her sentiment was echoed by McMillen's sister, LaChe Simms.

"It's a lot to take in, it really is. It's a lot process," Simms said. "It still doesn't make sense."

Michele Deitch, an attorney and juvenile justice expert who lectures at the University of Texas at Austin, said Friday that youths in detention should only be restrained when there's a risk of physical danger to themselves or others. Deitch criticized the use of martial arts in particular.

"I've never heard that phrase used in the context of a corrections setting," Deitch said.

A chapter Deitch wrote in the National Institute of Corrections' guide to working with youth in confinement covers "crisis management" for juveniles in detention.

"Situations in which there is not active violence, but a youth simply refuses to comply with an order or is passively resisting do not constitute an immediate necessity of force; policy should clarify this," Deitch wrote in the the federal agency's guide. "The continuum of force must offer options for staff--including separation of the youth from peers, verbal de-escalation, or the involvement of mental health staff--that do not involve hands-on measures."

State police are not currently considering criminal charges in the case.

However, Reginald Windham, a Lincoln Village employee, was placed on paid administrative leave as a result of the internal investigation. Officials say Windham, who has been with the state's juvenile justice department for 10 years, failed to check on McMillen every 15 minutes, a requirement for those in isolation at the detention center in Elizabethtown.

McMillen was placed in a cell by herself on Jan. 10, at some point after the Aikido incident. Officials previously confirmed to 48 Hours' Crimesider that McMillen did not respond the next morning when food was offered at 6:30 a.m. and 8:30 a.m., or later when her mother called.

In the nearly 3 ½ hours between when McMillen was first offered food and when the deputy arrived for her at 9:55, she was not checked on.

It is not clear when exactly she died.

Staff said McMillen's failure to respond the morning of her death didn't raise red flags, because "her silence was consistent with her behavior" after arriving at the facility, according to Kentucky Justice and Public Safety Cabinet spokesperson Lisa Lamb.

Liz Ryan, a juvenile justice consultant, and founder of the advocacy group Campaign for Youth Justice, said in an interview Wednesday that when McMillen missed breakfast, it should have immediately been a cause for concern.

"It's common sense. It's a reasonable expectation. Somebody should have gone in to check to make sure that she's okay," Ryan said.

She and Deitch noted that juvenile detention centers are not supposed to be punitive in nature, in part because they're typically for youth who are pre-trial, and therefore not convicted of any crimes. Both said staff should seek to "engage" teenagers who are not communicative with staff.

McMillen was brought to Lincoln Village on Jan. 10 after she was charged with misdemeanor assault, following what police called a "domestic incident" at her mother's home in Shelbyville, Ky. Officials say a court-designated worker -- a Kentucky official who handles pre-court processing related to juveniles -- made the recommendation that McMillen be brought to a detention center.

It is not clear why McMillen was alone in a cell or how often she was checked on throughout the night. In Kentucky, youths in isolation must have video surveillance at all times. That footage has been turned over to investigators.

Last week, Kentucky Justice Cabinet Secretary John Tilley requested the investigations be expedited along with McMillen's autopsy.



The following is from the Wikipedia article below. “Ueshiba's [who devised this form of martial art] goal was to create an art that practitioners could use to defend themselves while also protecting their attacker from injury.[3][4] Aikido techniques consist of entering and turning movements that redirect the momentum of an opponent's attack, and a throw or joint lock that terminates the technique.[5].” A YouTube demonstration described as “aggressive” Aikido combat shows the potential for dangerous or even lethal injury. It looks like Bruce Lee stuff. Another shows a simple hold, however, that is probably harmless and effective in which the “attacker” hand is grasped tightly by the fingers and twisted. If the attacker strongly resisted that one he might be unable to use that hand for quite a while. A Daily Mail article stated that the restraint was used “because she refused to take off her hoodie”. See “http://www.stenudd.com/aikido/aikidobasics.htm.”

In other words, this Martial Arts hold, meant to merely immobilize an attacker, shouldn’t have caused death, although a sprain might be likely. See the photograph at the site above. I will be looking for more information on this story. A thorough autopsy, not merely a cursory examination for bruises, should be and probably will be conducted. If the press hadn’t become aware of the situation and published this story, perhaps that wouldn’t be true.

Police “holds” have caused injuries before. The infamous “rough ride” case began with a police hold which may have been the real cause for the prisoner’s back injury, and the case of a neck restraint on a large man who was not resisting arrest, but was in effect probably considered too large to tackle without the choke hold. He unfortunately suffocated, and again, was not given any kind of medical aid until he was unconscious, even though he kept saying “I can’t breathe.” That man’s crime was selling individual cigarettes on the street, probably for a dollar or so apiece. Big crime!



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aikido

Aikido
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


“Aikido (Japanese: 合気道 Hepburn: Aikidō?) [a.i.ki.doː] is a modern Japanese martial art developed by Morihei Ueshiba as a synthesis of his martial studies, philosophy, and religious beliefs. Aikido is often translated as "the way of unifying (with) life energy"[1] or as "the way of harmonious spirit."[2] Ueshiba's goal was to create an art that practitioners could use to defend themselves while also protecting their attacker from injury.[3][4]

Aikido techniques consist of entering and turning movements that redirect the momentum of an opponent's attack, and a throw or joint lock that terminates the technique.[5]

Aikido derives mainly from the martial art of Daitō-ryū Aiki-jūjutsu, but began to diverge from it in the late 1920s, partly due to Ueshiba's involvement with the Ōmoto-kyō religion. Ueshiba's early students' documents bear the term aiki-jūjutsu.[6]

Ueshiba's senior students have different approaches to aikido, depending partly on when they studied with him. Today aikido is found all over the world in a number of styles, with broad ranges of interpretation and emphasis. However, they all share techniques formulated by Ueshiba and most have concern for the well-being of the attacker.”




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