truesee's Blog

Man Lied About Wife's Illness and Death For Money

WMUR.com

Sympathy Card Foils Faked Death Plan

Police: Man Lied About Wife's Illness For Money

POSTED: 1:44 pm EDT May 14, 2011
UPDATED: 4:02 pm EDT May 14, 2011

 

HUDSON, N.H. --The Hudson Police Department arrested a 31-year-old Greenville man it said lied about his wife's illness and death to get money from his employer.
 
Officers said Scott Wellington told his bosses at C&M Machine that his wife was seriously ill with cancer. C&M Machine donated $7,000 to help Wellington cover her medical expenses. 
 
Police said Wellington later told his employers that his wife had died.
 
Officers said Wellington's wife didn't know about the plan until she received a sympathy card from the company about her death.
 
Wellington's wife called the company and let them know that she was still alive. The company then called police.
 
Wellington was being held in lieu of $2,500 bail. He is scheduled to be arraigned on Monday.


LINK TO PHOTO: http://www.wmur.com/news/27895348/detail.html#ixzz1MSsMIsa5
Entry #4,623

Big Mac fan to eat No. 25,000 next week

Big Mac fan Don Gorske of Fond du Lac to eat No. 25,000 next week

Russell Plummer
Gannett Wisconsin Media 

12:38 PM, May. 12, 2011

 

Don Gorske of Fond du Lac sits at his kitchen table in front of the bins and calendars that document his obsession with the Big Mac.

Don Gorske of Fond du Lac sits at his kitchen table in front of the bins and calendars that document his obsession with the Big Mac. / Patrick Flood/Gannett Wisconsin Media

 

FOND DU LAC — Don Gorske sometimes cannot taste the Big Macs he eats every day.

But he keeps eating and next week he expects to hit another Big Mac Milestone: On May 17, Gorske plans to consume his 25,000th Big Mac. 

Gorske, 57, says that since birth his taste buds have fluctuated in sensitivity, possibly worsening when he worked inside tanks at a factory. 

However, not knowing whether he’ll taste the Big Macs has not dampened his love for the McDonald’s staple. 

He began eating the high-calorie special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, onions on a sesame seed bun burgers on May 17, 1972. 

Gorske has structured his eating habits so he will devour his 25,000th Big Mac at about 3 p.m. May 17 inside the McDonald’s at 699 S. Military Ave. — exactly 39 years since he drove his father’s Dodge Polara to the original McDonald’s on Military Avenue and fell in love with the sandwich. 

A handful of days this year he ate one Big Mac so he would hit the milestone on his Big Mac anniversary. 

“A person like me, I just don’t change too much,” Gorske said. “It’s pretty much two Big Macs a day. When I can travel to sporting events, I like to take my Big Mac along.” 

May 17 will also be Gorske’s retirement party. He has spent 25 years as a scheduling officer inside the walls of Waupun Correctional Institution. 

Gorske hopes to be surrounded by friends and family Tuesday at McDonald’s where the first 300 people will be getting Gorske buttons and free meal coupons. 

He will also be showing three displays only viewed by his family and the Guinness Book of World Records — the receipts, 10,000 Big Mac cartons and calendars documenting his obsession. 

The need to keep track of his Big Mac consumption is part of the obsessive-compulsive disorder he has dealt with since childhood. 

He wonders what his children will do with his collection, which is neatly stored in bins in his home. 

“Are these going to be worth anything because their dad was crazy?” Gorske wondered.

In 1990 — the year Gorske ate his 10,000th Big Mac — a tornado damaged the roof of his home and made a mess of his collection.

Entry #4,620

Obama's hypocritical rhetoric on immigration reform

Obama's hypocritical rhetoric on immigration refor

Michael Barone
05/14/11 8:05 PM
Senior Political Analyst
 
President Obama gestures while speaking about immigration reform in El Paso, Texas.-LM Otero/AP
 
President Obama gestures while speaking about immigration reform in El Paso, Texas.-LM Otero/AP
 
Barack Obama's immigration speech in El Paso, Texas, on May 10 was an exercise in electioneering and hypocrisy. Hypocrisy because while Obama complained about "politicians" blocking comprehensive immigration bills, he was one of them himself.

In 2007, when such a bill was backed by a lame-duck Republican president and had bipartisan backing from Senate heavyweights Edward Kennedy and Jon Kyl, Sen. Obama voted for union-backed amendments that Kennedy and Kyl opposed as bill killers.

In 2009 and 2010, President Obama acquiesced in Speaker Nancy Pelosi's decision to pass cap and trade and bypass immigration, and in Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's decision not to bring an immigration bill to the floor.

Both times the votes were probably there to pass a bill. Obama did not lift a finger to help.

But that did not stop the president who is constantly calling for civility to heap scorn on those who seek stronger enforcement. "They'll want a higher fence. Maybe they'll need a moat," he said to laughter from the largely Latino audience. "Maybe they'll want alligators in the moat. They'll never be satisfied."

Was that on the teleprompter or was it ad-libbed? In either case Obama was showing his contempt for those who bitterly cling to the idea that the law should be enforced.

That's no way to assemble the bipartisan coalition necessary to pass an immigration bill.

It's obvious that nothing like the legalization (opponents say "amnesty") provisions considered in 2007 can pass in this Congress. They can never pass the Republican House, where Judiciary Chairman Lamar Smith is a long-standing opponent and Speaker John Boehner will not schedule a bill not approved in committee.

Nor will this Congress pass the most attractive proposal Obama mentioned, the DREAM Act, providing a path to legalization for those brought in illegally as children who enroll in college or serve in the military. That failed last December in a more Democratic Senate and won't pass now.

Some new approach is needed, and Obama did little to point the way. One idea, advanced by a bipartisan Brookings Institution panel, is a bill that would strengthen enforcement and would shift the U.S. away from low-skill and toward high-skill immigration.

Canada and Australia have done this to their great benefit. And with a sluggish economy it makes little sense, as current law does, to give preference to low-skill siblings of minimum-wage workers rather than to engineering and science Ph.D.s. We need more job creators, not more job seekers.

The problem here is that the lobbying forces backing comprehensive legislation don't favor such an approach. Latino groups and lobbies representing employers of low-skill workers are interested in legalizing the low-skill Latinos who make up the majority of the 11 million illegal immigrants.

High-tech firms seek more H-1B visas for high-skill graduates, but these tie immigrants to particular employers. They don't have an interest in provisions allowing these people to work for anyone they don't like or to start their own businesses, as they can in Canada and Australia.

In the absence of significant lobbying support, the only way to provide support for Brookings-style legislation is a bold presidential initiative advertising it as a clean break from past proposals.

Obama didn't come close to doing that in El Paso. He included a few words about letting in more high-skill folks, but didn't suggest any reduction in low-skill immigration.

And he said only a few words about workplace enforcement on which his administration has developed a valuable new tool.

That's a refinement of the E-Verify electronic system now available in which employers can verify the Social Security numbers of new employees.

The Department of Homeland Security has been ironing out glitches in E-Verify and, as former National Security Agency General Counsel Stewart Baker reports, DHS now allows job seekers in some states to use E-Verify before applying for a job not only to check their status but also to protect against identity theft.

The administration has been attacking state laws requiring employers to use E-Verify. If Obama were serious about enforcement he would be calling for mandatory E-Verify. That would be a more effective tool against illegal immigration than even the strongest border enforcement.

But as Obama's record makes clear, he's not really interested in passing a law. He knows his support has been slipping among Latino voters and he wants to goose it back up. El Paso was all about election 2012, not serious immigration reform.



Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/politics/2011/05/obamas-hypocritical-rhetoric-immigration-reform#ixzz1MPsNPiuO
Entry #4,619

8th-Grader Punished After Reporting Students Had Sex On Bus

WHIOTV News 

 

8th-Grader Punished After Reporting Students Had Sex On Bus

Posted: 2:26 pm EDT May 13, 2011

Updated: 5:17 pm EDT May 13, 2011

 
DAYTON, Ohio -- An eighth-grade charter school student who said she saw two classmates having sex on a bus during a group spring break trip is being punished for reporting the incident, her mother said.

The girl, who goes to Dayton View Academy, waited until she got home to tell her mom what she saw. The school is punishing her for not telling chaperons who were on the bus at the time it happened.

"If you tell something on a kid, you have to look for the response from that child and at the time," said Saundra Roundtree, the girl's mother. "She was afraid. I told her 'don't say anything when you are at school. I will handle it.' "

Roundtree said her daughter won't be able to go to her eighth-grade prom or the class picnic. The students who reportedly had sex are being punished as well, but Roundtree feels as though disciplining her daughter sends the wrong message. She added that all eight chaperons were sitting in the front of the bus watching a movie when the incident occurred.

"That says that 'yea you go ahead and tell but you are going to get in trouble for it,' " Roundtree said. "Even if she knew about the act, I feel like the chaperons should have known about it before her."

Roundtree said her daughter, a straight-A student, has been trying on dresses and looking forward to the prom for months.

"I have to tell her today when she comes home and I already know she is going to be very upset," she said talking about telling her daughter of the punishment.

Roundtree said the dress that her daughter was going to wear will go to a kid in her church.

The school released the following statement on the matter:
"The authorities have completed their investigation, and the school has taken appropriate actions inline with our school policies concerning such matters."

 
News Center 7 has learned that the school suspended the two involved in the act.
Entry #4,615

Hotel launches $1,000 tequila popsicle

Hotel launches lavish $1,000 tequila popsicle

May 13, 2011 1:00 PM
Newslite
 
    275x250.jpg Popsicles are normally a effective and cheap way to cool off -- but not at a hotel resort in Mexico, they've launched a lavish $1,000 tequila ice lolly.

The expensive icy treat may come served on a classic plastic stick, but it's made from premium tequila which sells for £1,000 per bottle rather than fruit squash.

But should the Tequilas Premium Clase Azul Ultra not be enough of a draw, there is also the little matter of the 24 ct. gold flakes the Tequila Pop contains.

Bosses at the Marquis Los Cabos resort in Baja California Sur say they expect the premium popsicle to prove popular, but that those on a budget may prefer a straight shot of the Clase Azul Ultra… a snip at $500 a shot.
 
275x250.jpg

 

LINK:

http://www.marquisloscabos.com/

Entry #4,613