Society's Child
"She was paralyzed from the neck down and very uncomfortable without much of a future, so I just helped her along," the 88-year-old William Dresser told the Reno Gazette-Journal.
Dresser was released on $225,000 bond Friday, was charged with open murder in the Jan 19 fatal shooting of his wife, 86-year-old Frances Dresser, who suffered from a fall earlier this month and struck her chin.
She says just a few hours after her doctors told her employer she would need some time off for cancer treatments and surgery, they fired her.
CBS 2′s Dana Kozlov tells us why she's fighting back.
"I've been fighting for my life," said Madonia.
One thing Elisa Madonia didn't think she'd have to fight for after her cancer diagnosis was her four year job at property management company S37. She was wrong.
"Not only I'm being hit with a disease, that I have cancer, now you take my job too away from me?" said Madonia.
Madonia's ordeal began last October, right after doctors told her she had stage three esophageal cancer.
Doctors sent her employers letters about her illness and her possible need for some significant time off for chemo, radiation and surgery. Less than two hours after getting that letter, Madonia says her boss called her in to the office, suggested she resign and offered to pay six months of COBRA if she signed a separation letter. Then they terminated her. Video here.
The Better Business Bureau issued an alert Thursday to users of any kind of cell phone under any carrier.
The scam starts when users receive a call from a number they don't recognize.
"There was no static, no fuzz, no anything, so I just hung up," said Carla Aldridge of the call from Antigua / Barbuda that she answered Thursday morning.
Aldridge owns CPR Cell Phone Repair in Jacksonville, and is always cautious of scams in the industry, but even this one got by her. Now, she owes her cell phone company $9.
"Nine dollars just for answering my phone?"
Aldridge is one of dozens of cell phone users Action News easily located, who were also targets over the past two days. Each received calls from somewhere in the Caribbean like Antigua, Grenada, Jamaica or the British Virgin Islands, where a computer calls random numbers and quickly hangs up if you don't answer.
"A certain percentage of people are going to automatically call back that number," says Tom Stephens, President of the Better Business Bureau of Northeast Florida and the Southeast Atlantic.
In Atlanta, a relatively minor snowfall has resulted in the deaths of 5 people, more than 100 injuries, and some commuters reported being stuck in traffic for up to 18 hours. According to USA Today, highways around Atlanta resembled "a post-apocalyptic world" at the height of the storm...
The nation's wealthiest, denizens of the loftiest slice of the 1 percent, appear to be having a collective meltdown.
Economists, advisers to the wealthy and the wealthy themselves describe a deep-seated anxiety that the national - and even global - mood is turning against the super-rich in ways that ultimately could prove dangerous and hard to control.
President Barack Obama and the Democrats have pivoted to income inequality ahead of the midterm elections. Pope Francis has strongly warned against the dangers of wealth concentration. And all of this follows the rise of the Occupy movement in 2011 and a bout of bank-bashing populism in the tea party.
The collective result, according to one member of the 1 percent, is a fear that the rich are in deep, deep trouble. Maybe not today but soon.
The court called the case "disturbing" and asked the district judge at Birbhum, 240km west of the state capital Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) where the sexual assault took place on Monday night, to investigate and file his report within a week.
The tribal woman, who is admitted to a local hospital, told the police that she was raped the entire night on the directions of her village council for falling in love with a man from a different community and religion.
She said her lover visited her on Monday to propose marriage, but was caught by the villagers who were enraged by his motives.
The two of them were then tied to a tree while the village council conferred to decide their fate.
It ordered each of them to pay a fine of Rs25,000 (€296) and when the woman's family, too poor to pay, demurred the council ordered her gang rape, police said.

Missing the similarities between Corey Haim and Justin Bieber? Just watch Me, Myself, and I.
He is so popular with teenyboppers that his name has become synonymous with a subset of perpetually screaming teen, tween, or preteen girls. This is a gift and a curse: It gives him a massive, loyal, and devoted fan base but it also makes it difficult, if not prohibitively impossible, for him to be taken seriously. He is a popular subject of worship and derision, lusty adulation and glib mockery. Child stardom of this nature and ferocity and intensity is not something to be experienced or enjoyed: It is something to be survived and endured, and sometimes even that is asking too much.
The young man in question is not Justin Bieber. It's the late Corey Haim. The video is Me, Myself, and I, a notorious, 40-minute long 1989 "video diary" the iconic former child star made following one of many stints in rehab to prove to the world that he was clean, sober, and ready for work. Instead the video helped finish the job Haim had already started of destroying a once promising career.
Age: 39.
Appearance: Pasty expat Brit.
That's not very nice. I don't think you'll find many people who have a good word to say about Mr Casey.
What does he do? He's a fund manager.
In that case, fire away. Amazingly, Casey's job is the least unattractive thing about him.
What's his problem? Casey - who lives in Singapore - had to leave his Porsche at the garage, obliging him to take the train.
Good for him to see how the other half lives. He then posted a picture of his son sitting on said train on Facebook, along with the caption: "Daddy, where is your car & who are all these poor people?"
Nice. Casey later posted another picture of his son sitting in the newly repaired Porsche, with the words: "Ahhhhhhhhh, reunited with my baby. Normal service can resume, once I have washed the stench of public transport off me ...!"
Comment: It looks like Mr. Casey was fired from his job and run out of town for his comments. Jolly good!
The American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of Louisiana on Wednesday filed a federal lawsuit against Negreet High School in Sabine Parish on behalf of two parents, Scott and Sharon Lane, and their son, "C.C." The lawsuit claims the school has "a longstanding custom, policy, and practice of promoting and inculcating Christian beliefs," including the teaching of creationism.
Sixth-grade teacher Rita Roark has told her students that the universe was created by God about 6,000 years ago, and taught that both the Big Bang theory and evolution are false, according to the lawsuit. She told her students that "if evolution was real, it would still be happening: Apes would be turning into humans today."
One test she gave to students asked: "ISN'T IT AMAZING WHAT THE _____________ HAS MADE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" The correct answer was "Lord," but C.C. wrote in something else. Roark responded by scolding the boy in front of the entire class.
When informed that C.C. was a Buddhist and therefore didn't believe in God, Roark allegedly responded, "you're stupid if you don't believe in God."
On another accusation, she allegedly described both Buddhism and Hinduism as "stupid."
It was a commenter on my Facebook page who put the 'skipping' charges against three men who were taking discarded food from a bin at an Iceland store in North London in the best perspective I've seen - they said: if there's a crime here, it's only the (non-legal) one of wastefulness, in which case it's the supermarket that should be in the dock, not the dumpster divers.
Three men are being charged - the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has said it sees "significant public interest" in proceeding - accused of taking stealing tomatoes, mushrooms, cheese and Mr Kipling cakes from a supermarket's bins. Police say they retrieved and "returned" the items to the store. That is to say they ensured what was undoubtedly perfectly good food went into (at best) composting or anaerobic digestion, but quite likely into landfill.
You do have to wonder if there's a campaigner in the CPS who thinks it is time to put the entire supermarket model of food distribution on trial.
Recently, Tesco admitted that more than 30 per cent of bagged salad is wasted in store, and 40 per cent of apples. In total in the first six months of last year, 28,500 tonnes of food waste were generated in its stores and distribution centres. No doubt the other giant oligopolists that dominate our food chains are similar.
The fact that 'dumpster diving'/'skipping'/'bin raiding' is a new phenomenon is clear from the absence of a settled name - but it's clear that it the practice is spreading fast. That's a product of the rising desperation in our society that has seen foodbanks become one of our fastest growing industries, as I saw for myself last week on a visit to one in prosperous Winchester.













Comment: The elite should feel nervous. In times of catastrophe and societal collapse the population turns against its leaders.