Society's ChildS


Beer

TSA Fires 14 After Drinking Incident

tsa
After having to fire workers for sleeping on the job and firing more employees for being implicated in a bribery scandal, the Associated Press is reporting that the Transportation Security Administration is now firing eight federal air marshals in the New York office, including a supervisor, for allegedly drinking alcohol during a training day. In addition, the TSA is suspending six more individuals for not reporting the misconduct, the agency said on Friday.

While one of the employees accused had probationary status and was therefore immediately fired, all of the other workers can appeal the decision. At the time the AP article was written, the TSA wasn't sure if any workers had retained attorneys.

The TSA said that the workers were drinking at a restaurant in February. The article said that "the incident was reported to a website that allows employees to alert leadership of inappropriate behavior."

Heart - Black

US airport security guard opens jar of man's ashes, spills them on the floor, then 'stands and laughs' as grandson scrambles to gather them up

Image
© theindychannel.comJohn Gross, of Indianapolis, was trying to bring Mario Mark Marcaletti's ashes home from Florida and had them in his bag in a tightly sealed jar clearly marked 'human remains'.

A man suffered humiliation and distress at the hands of an airport security agent when she insisted on opening a jar containing his grandfather's remains and then dropped them on the floor.

John Gross, of Indianapolis, was trying to bring Mario Mark Marcaletti's ashes home from Florida and had them in his bag in a tightly sealed jar clearly marked 'Human Remains'.

The 91-year-old's remains had been divided up among family members after he died in 2002 and Gross had been given a share by his uncle during his trip.

He was confronted by the TSA officer and explained what was in the container.

'They opened up my bag, and I told them, "Please, be careful. These are my grandpa's ashes,"' he told theindychannel.com.


Black Cat

Cop with Violent History Keeps Job After Beating a Man into Critical Condition

Image
© Mike ArchambaultBrian Vander Lee, 43, of Ramsey, lies in a hospital bed after he was allegedly punched by an off-duty Minneapolis police sergeant and SWAT officer on Saturday night.
A Minneapolis, Minnesota police officer with a history of violence is out of jail and on paid home assignment after allegedly beating a man into critical condition while off the clock.

Sgt. David Clifford is still on the force even after the man he pummeled nearly two weeks earlier remains hospitalized. Brian Vander Lee, 43, has received two separate brain surgeries after an altercation with the 47-year-old Minneapolis Police SWAT Unit officer earlier this month almost ended in tragedy.

Bad Guys

Head of Institute of Directors Calls for UK Banks Purge

Image
© Dylan Martinez/ReutersCalls for Bob Diamond to resign as CEO of Barclays are growing becoming more vociferous.
The head of the Institute of Directors (IoD) led the mounting clamour on Friday from the City, business leaders and politicians for a cull at the top of Britain's banks. In an unusually strong condemnation of the culture of banking, Simon Walker, director general of the IoD, said it was "high time" for a clearout of top bankers after a wave of mis-selling scandals and market manipulation.

His remarks came on a day when pressure was mounting on Bob Diamond to step down as chief executive of Barclays in the wake of the record-breaking £290m fine for the bank's attempt to fix a crucial interest rate and as the Financial Services Authority ordered Barclays and three other high street banks to compensate up to 28,000 small businesses that were mis-sold products designed to minimise their risk against interest rates going up.

Sherlock

Montreal Police Find Human Remains Linked to Luka Rocco Magnotta

Image
© The Canadian Press/Graham HughesA police forensic vehicle leaves a Montreal park where they carried out a search on Sunday, July 1, 2012.
Montreal - A published report says Montreal police have found human remains linked to alleged killer Luka Rocco Magnotta.

Radio-Canada is reporting that body parts were found in a Montreal park on Sunday.

Montreal police spokeswoman Anie Lemieux says the remains were found after a link with Magnotta.

Police are not saying who told them about the possible links with Magnotta.

Magnotta is accused of the murder and dismemberment of Concordia University student Jun Lin.

Lin's torso was discovered stuffed in a suitcase behind Magnotta's apartment building. His hands and feet were mailed to political parties in Ottawa and two B.C. schools.

Source: The Canadian Press

Bad Guys

US Attorney General Holder Will Not Be Prosecuted Over Gun-Tracking Scandal

Image
© US Attorney General (AG) Eric Holder
The US Justice Department has said that it would not prosecute Attorney General (AG) Eric Holder for contempt, after he refused to turn over to Congress documents about a gun-tracking scandal to Mexico.

The Republican-led House of Representatives approved a resolution on Thursday to hold the attorney General in criminal contempt of Congress. The Republicans accused Holder of refusing to provide certain documents related to the Justice Department's failed Fast and Furious operation, intended to track weapons sold along the Mexican border.

Black Cat

Sexual Predators in the Police Targeting Victims They are Supposed to be Helping

Image
© North News & PicturesNorthumbria police constable Stephen Mitchell, who was jailed for life after admitting charges of rape, indecent assault and misconduct in public office.
Guardian investigation finds sexual predators in police are abusing their power to target victims of crime

Sexual predators in the police are abusing their power to target victims of crime they are supposed to be helping, as well as fellow officers and female staff, the Guardian can reveal.

An investigation into the scale and extent of the problem suggests sexual misconduct could be more widespread than previously believed.

The situation raises questions about the efficacy of the police complaints system, the police's internal whistleblowing procedures, the vetting of officers and a failure to monitor disciplinary offences.

Police officers have been convicted or disciplined for a range of offences from rape and sexual assault to misconduct in public office relating to inappropriate sexual behaviour with vulnerable women they have met on duty. Others are awaiting trial for alleged offences, though many are never charged with a criminal offence and are dealt with via internal disciplinary procedures.

Dollar

Banking Scandal: 'the Rot Was Widespread, the Corruption Endemic'

Image
© Dylan Martinez/ReutersBob Diamond of Barclays. Vince Cable argues that shareholders must play a more aggressive role in controlling the direction of banks.
Urgent action is being taken by the coalition to tackle the incompetence and greed exposed by interest-rate rigging affair

Last week's banking scandals demolished a convenient myth: that the banking crash was all the fault of a few colourful rogues like Fred the Shred of RBS and Adam Applegarth of Northern Rock. We have been reminded, instead, that the rot was far more widespread. Incompetence, corruption and greed have been endemic in British banking. The RBS/NatWest computer failure illustrated the incompetence. Millions of households and firms now have to clean up the mess caused by accidental missed payments, bounced cheques and cash shortages.

Wall Street

Vince Cable advises shareholders: throw out bank cheats!

Vince Cable banking system
© Ray Tang/Rex FeaturesVince Cable wants to purge corrupt executives, who he says have allowed 'systemic abuse' to take root in the banking system.
Bosses preside over 'moral quagmire', says business secretary, as Barclays chief Bob Diamond is summoned to face MPs

Vince Cable has urged shareholders in UK banks to rise up and purge their companies of corrupt executives, who he says have allowed "systemic abuse" to take root in the banking system.

The business secretary, writing in the Observer says it is now clear that no one at Barclays Capital, the investment bank that triggered the market-rigging scandal, is prepared to take responsibility for endemic corruption, so the ultimate owners of banks must take matters into their own hands.

Describing the problems in UK banking as "a moral quagmire of almost biblical proportions", Cable says the government is taking urgent action, including creating a clearer separation between "casino-style investment banking" and retail banking on the high street. Ministers will this week begin a review into the Libor system under which banks lend to each other and Cable hints that US-style criminal sanctions, such as the threat of prison terms, could be considered against those who abuse it.

But he says shareholder power will be crucial. "Regulators are a backstop: they don't own banks," he writes. "The governance at the top of our leading banks has been shown to be lamentably weak. No one at the top of Barclays will take responsibility for systemic abuse.

"Shareholders, the owners, have a major responsibility here. I am bringing in legislation to strengthen their control over pay and bonuses, through binding votes, but shareholders have to get a stronger grip on weak boards and out-of-control executives."

Dollar

Barclays Bank Chairman Marcus Agius to Resign over Libor Lending Rate Scandal

Image
© 2012indyinfo.com
Marcus Agius is to resign as the chairman of Barclays in the wake of the Libor lending rate scandal.

BBC business editor Robert Peston says Mr Agius will admit to an "unacceptable standard of behaviour" at Barclays when he makes the announcement on Monday.

It comes after Barclays was fined £290m ($450m) for attempting to manipulate the Libor inter-bank lending rate.

Earlier, it emerged RBS had sacked four traders over their alleged involvement in the Libor-fixing scandal.