Controversies
 
                                    Surprise: FBI Figures Show Border Cities Less Violent than Rest of U.S.
                                        Is the United States’ side of the border with Mexico a region of dwindling crime and violence, or an exploding threat to American national security? Statistics would say it’s the former, but political rhetoric the latter.
 
A report from the FBI...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Obama Leaves CIA Watchdog Post Vacant
                                        If there’s one agency in the federal government whose secretive nature cries out for internal oversight, it’s the CIA. And yet it is this very same spy operation that has gone without an inspector general for more than a year.
 
Former CIA watch...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    More Americans in Jail than in Alaska and More in State Prisons than in New Hampshire
                                        Incarceration levels in U.S. jails and prisons are in decline, with state penitentiaries recording their first year-to-year reduction since 1972. But even with the shrinking numbers in jail and prison populations, the country still has more Americ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Can Oil Spill Victims Get a Fair Trial if Majority of Area Federal Judges Have Oil Ties?
                                        If there’s one thing both sides of the more than 100 lawsuits filed as result of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill agree upon, it’s consolidation. Attorneys for the companies being sued—BP, Transocean Ltd. and Halliburton—and the hundreds of plaintiffs...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Health Professionals Helped CIA Use Torture Victims as Research Subjects
                                        As the CIA under President George W. Bush used torture techniques against suspected terrorists, the agency’s medical personnel assisted such “enhanced” interrogations through experimentation designed to improve the program’s effectiveness to extra...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    UN Swine Flu Drug Advisors were Linked to Drug Makers Who Profited from Vaccines
                                        One year after the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the existence of an H1N1 pandemic, governments around the world find themselves in possession of unused vaccines after paying billions of dollars collectively to pharmaceutical companies....    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Construction Company Hid Chinese Drywall Problem for Two Years
                                        American construction businesses that used Chinese-made drywall containing toxic substances have tried to either get away with their decisions without public notice or give away the material to other U.S. suppliers.
 
WCI Communities, an East Co...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    BP, with Government Support, Hid Videos Showing Size of Oil Spill
                                        Video footage showing the seriousness of the oil spill at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico was kept from the public in the early days of the crisis. But exactly who was to blame for suppressing the images is up for debate.
 
BP insists the U.S. ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Attacks on National Forest and Park Staff Hit All-Time High
                                        National Parks and public forests are increasingly becoming dangerous places to work for federal employees. Using data obtained from the federal government, the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) found that attacks and threat...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    ACLU Sues Federal Government for Access to Files Relating to Warrantless Spying
                                        Having received no response to its Freedom of Information Act request, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed suit against the federal government seeking records showing how it has been collecting Americans’ international emails and phone...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Schenectady School Suspends Seventh-Grader for Wearing Rosary to School
                                        A New York mother is suing the Schenectady City School District because officials at Oneida Middle School repeatedly suspended her seventh grade son in May for wearing a plastic rosary outside of his shirt in memory of his dead brother and uncle. ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Department of Transportation Moves to Protect Air Travelers’ Rights
                                        Unwilling to wait for Congress to address growing complaints from Americans, the Obama administration has decided to adopt federal regulations forcing commercial airlines to be more accommodating to passengers.
 
One change crafted by the U.S. D...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    African-Americans Still Excluded from Southern Juries
                                        It is 2010, and still many prosecutors in the South are excluding African-Americans from serving on juries. One study by the Equal Justice Initiative uncovered problems in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Companies Sue Online Critics Not to Win, but to Intimidate
                                        Consumers who use online social media and other websites to vent about businesses run the risk of being “slapped.” Known as in legal circles as a “strategic lawsuit against public participation” (or Slapp), this tool is being utilized by companies...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Recycled Toxic Coal Ash Found in Drywall and Construction Fill Dirt
                                        In states where coal is vital to electricity production, resulting in huge quantities of coal ash left to be disposed somewhere, businesses have looked for new ways to get rid of the toxic material. These solutions have included adding coal ash to...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Update on Mysterious Post-Katrina Death of Henry Glover
                                        The mysterious death of Henry Glover of New Orleans is gradually becoming less mysterious. Glover, who was found bleeding from a gunshot wound during the post-Katrina chaos and driven by a local resident to a temporary police compound, may have be...    read more
                                    
                                Controversies
 
                                    Surprise: FBI Figures Show Border Cities Less Violent than Rest of U.S.
                                        Is the United States’ side of the border with Mexico a region of dwindling crime and violence, or an exploding threat to American national security? Statistics would say it’s the former, but political rhetoric the latter.
 
A report from the FBI...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Obama Leaves CIA Watchdog Post Vacant
                                        If there’s one agency in the federal government whose secretive nature cries out for internal oversight, it’s the CIA. And yet it is this very same spy operation that has gone without an inspector general for more than a year.
 
Former CIA watch...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    More Americans in Jail than in Alaska and More in State Prisons than in New Hampshire
                                        Incarceration levels in U.S. jails and prisons are in decline, with state penitentiaries recording their first year-to-year reduction since 1972. But even with the shrinking numbers in jail and prison populations, the country still has more Americ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Can Oil Spill Victims Get a Fair Trial if Majority of Area Federal Judges Have Oil Ties?
                                        If there’s one thing both sides of the more than 100 lawsuits filed as result of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill agree upon, it’s consolidation. Attorneys for the companies being sued—BP, Transocean Ltd. and Halliburton—and the hundreds of plaintiffs...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Health Professionals Helped CIA Use Torture Victims as Research Subjects
                                        As the CIA under President George W. Bush used torture techniques against suspected terrorists, the agency’s medical personnel assisted such “enhanced” interrogations through experimentation designed to improve the program’s effectiveness to extra...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    UN Swine Flu Drug Advisors were Linked to Drug Makers Who Profited from Vaccines
                                        One year after the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the existence of an H1N1 pandemic, governments around the world find themselves in possession of unused vaccines after paying billions of dollars collectively to pharmaceutical companies....    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Construction Company Hid Chinese Drywall Problem for Two Years
                                        American construction businesses that used Chinese-made drywall containing toxic substances have tried to either get away with their decisions without public notice or give away the material to other U.S. suppliers.
 
WCI Communities, an East Co...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    BP, with Government Support, Hid Videos Showing Size of Oil Spill
                                        Video footage showing the seriousness of the oil spill at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico was kept from the public in the early days of the crisis. But exactly who was to blame for suppressing the images is up for debate.
 
BP insists the U.S. ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Attacks on National Forest and Park Staff Hit All-Time High
                                        National Parks and public forests are increasingly becoming dangerous places to work for federal employees. Using data obtained from the federal government, the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) found that attacks and threat...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    ACLU Sues Federal Government for Access to Files Relating to Warrantless Spying
                                        Having received no response to its Freedom of Information Act request, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed suit against the federal government seeking records showing how it has been collecting Americans’ international emails and phone...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Schenectady School Suspends Seventh-Grader for Wearing Rosary to School
                                        A New York mother is suing the Schenectady City School District because officials at Oneida Middle School repeatedly suspended her seventh grade son in May for wearing a plastic rosary outside of his shirt in memory of his dead brother and uncle. ...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Department of Transportation Moves to Protect Air Travelers’ Rights
                                        Unwilling to wait for Congress to address growing complaints from Americans, the Obama administration has decided to adopt federal regulations forcing commercial airlines to be more accommodating to passengers.
 
One change crafted by the U.S. D...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    African-Americans Still Excluded from Southern Juries
                                        It is 2010, and still many prosecutors in the South are excluding African-Americans from serving on juries. One study by the Equal Justice Initiative uncovered problems in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Companies Sue Online Critics Not to Win, but to Intimidate
                                        Consumers who use online social media and other websites to vent about businesses run the risk of being “slapped.” Known as in legal circles as a “strategic lawsuit against public participation” (or Slapp), this tool is being utilized by companies...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Recycled Toxic Coal Ash Found in Drywall and Construction Fill Dirt
                                        In states where coal is vital to electricity production, resulting in huge quantities of coal ash left to be disposed somewhere, businesses have looked for new ways to get rid of the toxic material. These solutions have included adding coal ash to...    read more
                                    
                                 
                                    Update on Mysterious Post-Katrina Death of Henry Glover
                                        The mysterious death of Henry Glover of New Orleans is gradually becoming less mysterious. Glover, who was found bleeding from a gunshot wound during the post-Katrina chaos and driven by a local resident to a temporary police compound, may have be...    read more
                                    
                                 
        


