Insurance Companies Are Paying Cops To Investigate Their Own Customers

From BuzzFeed News authored by Kendall Taggart:

“When police showed up at Harry Schmidt’s home on the outskirts of Pittsburgh, he thought they were there to help. He was still mourning the disappearance of the beloved forest green Ford F-150 pickup that he’d customized with a gun storage cabinet, and he hoped the cops had solved the crime.

Instead, the officers accused him of faking the theft. The Vietnam veteran was now facing up to seven years in prison.

Schmidt was stunned, but he was even more upset when he found out who had turned him in.

Erie Insurance, one of the nation’s largest auto insurers, had not only provided the cops with evidence against its own loyal customer — it had actively worked with them to try to convict him of insurance fraud.”

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Meet the first female Marine F-35B pilot

From Marine Times authored by Shawn Snow:

“Marine Capt. Anneliese Satz just made a name for herself June 27 at the Marine air station at Beaufort, South Carolina, for being the first female Marine to complete the F-35B syllabus.

It’s a historic feat for the Corps, as she joins a relatively small field of Marine F-35 pilots.

The Corps’ high-tech stealth fighter pilots were only manned with 86 pilots as of February, according to data obtained through a government records request. The field is authorized to have 263 pilots.

Satz arrived at Beaufort, South Carolina, with Marine Fighter Attack Training Squadron 501 in July 2018 and took her first flight in the F-35 in October, according to a Marine Corps release.”

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‘It’s Like an Automatic Deportation if You Don’t Have a Lawyer’

From The New York Times authored by Mazin Sidhamed:

“In February 2017, Carlos was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement shortly after he dropped one of his daughters at her school bus stop; the agents had been waiting there for him. He was locked in immigration detention in the Bergen County Jail in New Jersey for six weeks before he had his first hearing in immigration court.

Carlos, who wishes to be identified only by his first name, worked as a mechanic and held a green card, making him a legal permanent resident. In jail, he was confused, he missed his three daughters, and he had no idea what was going to happen to him next. He had been arrested so that he could be deported to his native Dominican Republic, having been convicted several years before for two offenses. One was a misdemeanor assault in 2013, for which he served five months in jail, and the other was attempted burglary in 2011, for which he served six months.

“In that month when I was waiting to see a judge, there was no information,” Carlos said. “It was just chaos.”

Then one day, jail guards shackled his legs and hands and transported him and other detainees in the back of a van to the Varick Street Immigration Court in Lower Manhattan. His family had been struggling to find a lawyer, and he wasn’t sure what awaited him. To his surprise, he was taken to a fourth-floor room where he met Molly Lauterback, an attorney from Brooklyn Defender Services, a city-supported pro bono agency; she told him she could represent him free of charge.”

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Juvenile Defender Wants Teachers To Disrupt The School-To-Prison Pipeline

From Wyoming Public Media authored by Savannah Mayer

“Over 600 Native students and their educators gathered at Central Wyoming College this week for the annual Native American Conference. Juvenile Defender Nubia Pena gave the keynote address. She talked with Wyoming Public Radio’s Savannah Maher about what teachers on the Wind River Reservation can do to disrupt the school-to-prison pipeline.”

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Fiona Kolbinger, 24-Year-Old Medical Student, Becomes First Woman to Win the Transcontinental Race

From Bicycling authored by Jason Sumner:

  • Fiona Kolbinger, 24, won the Transcontinental Race on Tuesday.
  • The medical student and cancer researcher is the first woman to win the ultracycling race across Europe.
  • Finishing in 10 days, two hours, and 48 minutes, she beat the U.K.’s Ben Davies by nearly 11 hours.

“Following a ride that covered nearly 2,500 miles, passed through seven countries, and included a trip over the mighty Col du Galibier in the French Alps, German medical student and cancer researcher Fiona Kolbinger rolled into Brest, France, on Tuesday to become the first woman to win the Transcontinental Race.

Along the way, she bested 225 men and 39 women to win the seventh edition of the ultracycling contest across Europe. Ben Davies of the U.K. slotted second, nearly 11 hours behind Kolbinger. The third-place rider had yet to finish at the time of this report.”

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Cambridge sexual misconduct rule change branded ‘unlawful’

From The Guardian authored by David Batty:

“Lawyers and women’s groups have condemned a decision by Cambridge University to not investigate some students’ complaints of sexual misconduct, including rape, warning it was potentially unlawful.

Their comments came after a ruling this summer that sexual misconduct should no longer be covered by the university’s general disciplinary regulations for students.

Two female students have been informed that their complaints of sexual assault and rape will not be taken forward because of the decision, according to the Cambridge student newspaper Varsity.

It reported that one of the chairs of Cambridge’s disciplinary committee, which is independent of the university’s central administration, ruled in June that sexual misconduct should not fall under the definition of harassment set out in the general regulations for discipline.”

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How to Handle Triangulation, the Worst Form of Workplace Bullying

From Forge.Medium authored by Leah Fessler:

“Few moments define workplace friendship quite like the first flirtation with gossip. Your colleague rolls her eyes at you when someone cracks a particularly stupid joke in a meeting, or sends a Slack DM reacting to an awkward discussion in the group chat. You’ve taken a new, delicious step in your relationship: Now, you’re people who can talk about other people together.

Often, this gossip-infused camaraderie is long-awaited and exhilarating. Research has shown that workplace friendship is key to employee satisfaction, and that complaining to colleagues can bolster friendship, satisfaction, and productivity.

“In our studies, we find that when individuals are able to gossip about one another, it can lead to two useful outcomes,” says Matthew Feinberg, a professor of organizational psychology at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Business. First, gossip helps you know what to make of the person being gossiped about, even if you’ve never interacted with them before. “In this way, gossip is how a person’s reputation precedes them, for better or worse,” says Feinberg.

And secondly, gossip can help convey more nuanced workplace norms. “You learn a lot about what others might expect of you when they complain about a third person behaving in certain ways,” says Feinberg.

Lighthearted gossip is one thing. But the truth is that gossip is not always accurate or fair. Routine snarking about your colleague can have nasty ripple effects, and even shape someone’s workplace reputation for months and years to come. And when talking about your coworkers tips from “good fun” to toxic, it usually looks like an under-discussed form of workplace bullying called triangulation.”

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Emma Watson launches hotline that provides women legal advice on workplace sexual harassment

From Upworthy  authored by Heidi Lux:

“A staggering one in two women have been sexually harassed at work, but four out of five of them aren’t comfortable reporting the issues to H.R., which is why actress Emma Watson launched a new hotline that offers free legal advice regarding sexual harassment in England and Wales.

The hotline is designed to help women hold their employers and harassers accountable and is the first of its kind, something Watson finds “completely staggering,” she told Fast Company. Anyone who needs legal advice for dealing with these types of situations can call the hotline and speak with someone from the nonprofit, Rights of Women, without paying the lofty fees traditional lawyers often charge.”

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College Financial-Aid Loophole: Wealthy Parents Transfer Guardianship of Their Teens to Get Aid

From The Wall Street Journal authored by Douglas Belkin:

“Amid an intense national furor over the fairness of college admissions, the Education Department is looking into a tactic that has been used in some suburbs here, in which wealthy parents transfer legal guardianship of their college-bound children to relatives or friends so the teens can claim financial aid, say people familiar with the matter.

The strategy caught the department’s attention amid a spate of guardianship transfers here. It means that only the children’s earnings were considered in their financial-aid applications, not the family income or savings. That has led to awards of scholarships and access to federal financial aid designed for the poor, these people said.

Several universities in Illinois say they are looking into the practice, which is legal. “Our financial-aid resources are limited and the practice of wealthy parents transferring the guardianship of their children to qualify for need-based financial aid—or so-called opportunity hoarding—takes away resources from middle- and low-income students,” said Andrew Borst, director of undergraduate enrollment at the University of Illinois. ‘This is legal, but we question the ethics.’”

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Why Women and People of Color in Law Still Hear “You Don’t Look Like a Lawyer”

From Harvard Business Review authored by Tsedale M. Melaku:

“There are certain unspoken rules of success in corporate America, not least of which is “looking the part.” That often means tailored suits, a certain range of coiffed hair styles, and other accoutrements or signals of success. In the legal field, a popular refrain directed at women and people of color is “You don’t look like a lawyer.” It’s the idea that the norms of success, ability, and competence are tied to looking a certain way — usually white and male.

As confirmed by a recent report from the National Association for Law Placement and a recent survey of diversity at 232 law firms by Vault and the Minority Corporate Counsel Association, women of color and black women specifically continue to be significantly underrepresented, making up 8.57% and 1.73% of all attorneys, respectively. Law firms are overwhelming white and male despite efforts to recruit people of color from prestigious academic institutions. These candidates often go on to find their ambitions stunted by the unwelcoming landscape of corporate America.”

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