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Commander in Nazi SS-led unit lied to enter U.S.
Associated PressA top commander of a Nazi SS-led unit accused of burning villages filled with women and children lied to American immigration officials to get into the United States and has been living in Minnesota since shortly after World War II, according to...Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Unrest, Conflicts and War, Prosecution, Warsaw (Poland), Nazi Party
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Commander in Nazi SS-led unit living in Minnesota for decades
BERLIN (AP) - An Associated Press investigation has found that a commander of a Nazi SS-led unit accused of atrocities has been living in Minnesota since shortly after World War II. Records obtained by the AP through a Freedom of Information Act request...
Tags: Civil Rights, Crime, Law and Justice, U.S. Department of Justice, Justice and Rights
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Former Nazi commander lives in Minneapolis
BERLIN (AP) — A top commander of a Nazi SS-led unit accused of burning villages filled with women and children lied to American immigration officials to get into the United States and has been living in Minnesota since shortly after World War II,...Tags: Freedom of Information Laws, Prisons, Crime, Law and Justice, Russia, Unrest, Conflicts and War
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Fired teacher gets settlement from District 109
Deerfield School District 109 has agreed to pay a $65,000 settlement to a tenured teacher fired last year after she missed nearly two school years. Stephanie Horwitz was hired in 2001 as a special education teacher at Caruso Middle School. In...Tags: Labor Legislation, Teaching and Learning, Crime, Law and Justice, Employment Opportunities, Justice System
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$1 Million In Lawyers' Bills To Taxpayers For State's Defeat In Court
The Hartford CourantThe U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals on May 31 reversed a lower court ruling, and gave unionized state employees a major victory in a 2003 class action lawsuit against ex-Gov. John G. Rowland and his budget chief, Marc Ryan. The appeals panel of...Tags: Layoffs and Downsizing, Crime, Law and Justice, John Rowland, Regional Authority, Waterbury
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House Passes Bill Whose Goal Is Improving Children's Mental Health
The Hartford CourantMore than five months after the Newtown massacre, the state House gave final legislative approval Friday to a bipartisan bill designed to improve the emotional and mental health of children. In an attempt to head off another similar tragedy, lawmakers...Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Elections, Republican Party, Regional Authority, Waterbury
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Comptroller Bemoans Senate Leaders' Failure To Act On Economic 'Transparency' Bill
The Hartford CourantState Comptroller Kevin Lembo on Thursday bemoaned the failure of state Senate leaders to vote on a bill he was pushing that would have required the state to establish a searchable online database for citizens to learn about tax breaks and other...Tags: Politics, Elections, U.S. Senate, New Haven (New Haven, Connecticut), Dannel P. Malloy
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Trying To Make Sense Of The Holowaty Mess At Eastern
The Hartford CourantOn the night of April 25, Bill Holowaty sounded deeply wounded and foreboding. Amid allegations of abuse and a failure to comply with administration directives — suspended by his school — Holowaty had decided to retire after 45 years as...Tags: Work Relations, Rutgers University, Budgets and Budgeting, Baseball, College Baseball
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Minors detained at adult immigration facilities, report says
WASHINGTON — More than 1,300 minors — including several dozen 14 or younger — were held for days in immigration detention facilities for adults over a four-year period when the Obama administration ramped up deportations, according to...
Tags: Politics, Civil Rights, Crime, Law and Justice, Prisons, U.S. Department of Homeland Security
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FBI struggled to find relatives in Moore civil rights cold case
As The Baltimore Sun set out to look back on the murder of civil rights activist William Lewis Moore 50 years later, the first step was to find his relatives. It wasn't easy. Records showed none located in Baltimore, where the postal worker had lived...Tags: Civil Rights, Murder, Crime, Law and Justice, Justice System, Justice and Rights
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Slaying of Baltimore civil rights protester still unsolved
Everyone begged William Lewis Moore not to go to Mississippi. His pastor told him he would get killed walking around in a sandwich board sign protesting segregation. His family worried about where he would sleep and eat. Even fellow civil rights...
Tags: Civil Rights, Crime, Law and Justice, DeKalb, Foods and Beverages, Executive Branch
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Fracking could lead to state oil boom
Even before the Illinois House passed legislation Thursday to regulate high volume hydraulic fracturing, paperwork filed for one such well in White County indicates Illinois could be a big oil producer. Carmi, Ill.-based Campbell Energy's filing puts the...Tags: Politics, Crime, Law and Justice, Illinois Governor, Energy Resources, Laws
Jun 14, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Jun 14, 2013
|Story| KY3-TV
Jun 14, 2013
|Story| Aberdeen News
Jun 13, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jun 8, 2013
|Column| Hartford Courant
May 31, 2013
|Story| Hartford Courant
Jun 6, 2013
|Story| Hartford Courant
Jun 6, 2013
|Column| Hartford Courant
Jun 3, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Jun 3, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 1, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Jun 2, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
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