Friday, May 31, 2013

Stacey Thompson had just been stationed at a Marine Corps base in Japan!!

Stacey Thompson had just been stationed at a Marine Corps base in Japan when she said her sergeant laced her drinks with drugs, raped her in his barracks and then dumped her onto a street outside a nightclub at 4 a.m.







SAN DIEGO — Stacey Thompson had just been stationed at a Marine Corps base in Japan when she said her sergeant laced her drinks with drugs, raped her in his barracks and then dumped her onto a street outside a nightclub at 4 a.m.
The 19-year-old lance corporal was not afraid to speak up.
She reported it to her superiors but little happened. She said she discovered her perpetrator was allowed to leave the Marine Corps and she found herself, instead, at the center of a separate investigation for drug use stemming from that night. Six months later, she was kicked out with an other-than-honorable discharge – one step below honorable discharge – which means she lost her benefits.
Now, 14 years later, she has decided to speak out again, emboldened by the mounting pressure on the Pentagon to resolve its sexual assault epidemic.
She went public with her story Thursday in an exclusive interview with The Associated Press and spoke Friday at a news conference with Sen. Barbara Boxer ahead of next week's Senate hearing on the problem.
"To see that what happened to me 14 years ago is still continuing to happen now, for me that was a big reason why I felt the need to come forward," she said. "I can finally say I have the strength."
Retaliation is part of a military-wide pattern that has prevented countless cases from being reported and investigated, exacerbating the epidemic, according to victims' advocates. A Pentagon report released earlier this month found 62 percent of sexual assault victims in the military who reported being attacked say they faced some kind of retaliation afterward.
Boxer is pushing for a bipartisan bill that would put the cases in the hands of military trained prosecutors and not the chain of command.
"Too many survivors of military sexual assault are afraid to report these crimes because they fear retaliation, and they don't believe they will get justice," Boxer said. "They deserve a system that encourages victims to come forward knowing that the perpetrators will be brought to justice."
Marine Corps and Navy officials declined to comment, saying they do not discuss specific cases.
All branches have been scrambling to implement sexual assault prevention programs and improve their response to cases amid growing outrage over the Pentagon's failure to stem the problem as a string of arrests and incidents of sexual misconduct continue to surface.
As many as 26,000 military members may have been sexually assaulted last year and thousands of victims are unwilling to come forward despite new oversight and assistance programs, according to the Pentagon. That figure is an increase over the 19,000 estimated assaults in 2011.
Only 3,374 of these crimes were reported, resulting in 238 convictions.
"It's an ongoing problem that is not getting better, it's getting worse, as the latest statistics out of the Pentagon show," said Brian Purchia, spokesman for Protect Our Defenders, which has been helping Thompson.
"Unfortunately commanders are conflicted: When a sexual assault occurs on their watch, it reflects poorly on them and that's why it's shoved under the rug. The perpetrators frequently out rank the victims, which is also why there is this bias. They're going to trust people they've known – not an 18 or 19-year-old just new to the service."
Former Marine Capt. Anu Bhagwati said military culture will not change until the military justice system is reformed and service members are given access to civil courts to file suits in cases of retaliation and discrimination.
"There is no outside redress," said Bhagwati, who leads the Service Women's Action Network.
Thompson said she paid heavily for reporting the assault.
The investigator called her a liar, and military authorities checked her hands for needle pricks after accusing her of using drugs. She said she never used drugs. She was reassigned to another unit, removed from her job and told to report to an office with nothing to do.
Then she was kicked out. She continues to suffer from her other-than-honorable discharge, which stripped her of her benefits and she believes has led to her missing out on Defense Department jobs.
"I felt the Marine Corps re-victimized me again after getting raped," said the 32-year-old mother of three.
Thompson said then she shut down, refusing to talk about her rape. She was afraid of men, especially Marines. To this day, she keeps her dog nearby when she showers and sleeps with lights on in her house, even when her combat Marine husband is home.
"That fear is still with me 14 years later," she said.
But the fight is there too. Thompson requested her records in December. She said they showed the drug use allegations against her came from her perpetrator's friends.
She is now appealing her case to the Department of Veterans Affairs and is seeking compensation related to military sexual trauma. After that, she plans to also appeal her discharge status to get it upgraded to honorable.

2014 Bentley Flying Spur.

Solved? Actor Blames Dental Implants





Dick Van Dyke thinks he has found the cause of his mystery illness and dental implants might have something to do with it.
Last month, Van Dyke revealed he has been suffering from an undiagnosed neurological disorder for the past seven years. He told his Twitter followers he experiences a pulsing-sensation in his head coupled with severe fatigue. He underwent a battery of tests to try to figure out the problem, including a CAT scan, MRI and spinal tap, but to no avail.
"Tests and scans have yet to reveal a specific diagnosis. Various medications have not diminished the symptoms," his rep, Bob Palmer, told USA Today at the time. He added that the 87-year-old star was in "good physical condition" otherwise, but the fatigue had become acute. The actor was forced to cancel a public appearance in New York City that month because his doctor advised him not to fly out of Malibu.
The BBC reported last year that dental implants can cause nerve damage and may lead to problems related to pain, speech, eating and kissing. Dr. Joseph Mercola, an alternative physician and New York Times best-selling author, has claimed dental implants can exacerbate autoimmune diseases.

Yanira Maldonado, the Arizona mother freed after nine days in a Mexican jail!!!

Yanira Maldonado, the Arizona mother freed after nine days in a Mexican jail on a mistaken drug charge, said Friday that she got through the ordeal by reading scripture with other inmates and thinking of her family.
Beaming after her release, she told reporters: “I’m free. I’m free. I’m free. I was innocent.”
Maldonado, 42, was in Mexico with her husband for a funeral and was detained May 22 after soldiers found 12 pounds of marijuana taped under her seat on a bus that she was taking back to the United States.
She was released late Thursday after court officials reviewed security footage that showed the couple boarding the bus carrying only blankets, bottles of water and her purse.
Maldonado walked out of the jail and into the arms of her husband, Gary, and was driven back to the United States. She said that she would return to Mexico, but not for some time.
She described her time in jail as “very sad” but said she had been treated respectfully. Maldonado, a Mormon, said that she found a copy of the Book of Mormon in jail and read it and prayed with the other inmates.
“My faith and my family kept me going,” she said.
Maldonado, a mother of seven, was born in Mexico and is a naturalized American citizen. She stressed to reporters at a press conference in Nogales, Ariz., that the mistake was the fault of “a few people,” not the country. With a shrug, she said that she had just sat in the wrong seat.
“I love Mexico. My family is still there,” she said. “Mexico is a beautiful country. Please don’t take it wrong.”
She said that she needed to rest and was looking forward to seeing her children: “They can’t wait to see me.”
Maldonado and her family had proclaimed her innocence ahead of her release.
“I just want to be back home right now with my family, my kids and my husband,’’ Maldonado told Miguel Almaguer in an interview that aired Thursday morning on TODAY.
"I wanted to find a way out, and I’m telling them I’m innocent, I’m innocent. I keep saying what happened, and I’m still here, so I just have faith in the Lord.”
As Arizona mom of seven Yanira Maldonado's court hearing on drug smuggling charges begins in Nogales, Mexico, she is speaking out for the first time, saying her "spirit is good," but she just wants "to go home." NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.
Maldonado and her husband were married a year ago. She said before her released that she believed she may have been set up at the military checkpoint, where soldiers initially accused her husband of smuggling the marijuana before detaining her instead.
Soldiers staffing a checkpoint stopped the bus in Hermosillo, about 170 miles from the U.S. border.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Put in a safe room as armor against disaster

Put in a safe room as armor against disaster

When dangerous weather threatens your family, there may not be much time to get to safety. But right there in your own home, you could ride out a severe tornado or hurricane in a room so sturdily built that it would be the only thing standing after the storm. Amid the trauma and tragedy of destruction, you and your loved ones would be uninjured and safe.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, claims that such a "safe room" can give you "near-absolute protection" from tornadoes and hurricanes.
Safe room ©1999 Dave Gatley/FEMA
Officials point to stories, such as how an Athens, Ala., couple and their two children emerged unharmed from their reinforced- concrete- block safe room when a deadly tornado destroyed the family's home and most others in their neighborhood in 2011.
After the recent tornado that flattened much of Moore, Okla., the mayor of that Oklahoma City suburb said a safe room should be required in every new home built in the community. Oklahoma is eager for more residents to have safe rooms in the tornado-prone state and has a program offering rebates on new safe rooms of up to 75 percent, or as much as $2,000. Residents who've lost homes to tornadoes are given priority.

What exactly is a safe room?

A safe room is a specially reinforced area in your home that can serve double-duty for another use, such as a closet or bathroom. Or it could be a stand-alone room in the garage or a shelter outside the house.
You can build a safe room as part of a new home, or you could retrofit a room in an existing home.
But don't expect a discount on your home insurance, says Loretta Worters, vice president of the Insurance Information Institute, a trade group. Safe rooms protect people, not property.

Under these guidelines, you could expect your safe room to withstand 250 mph winds and the impact of a 15- pound plank hitting a wall at 100 mph, according to the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety, or IBHS.
Just how tough is that? It would take five layers of ¾- inch plywood boards to stop that impact.
Safe rooms designed to the FEMA and ICC standards are recommended for both tornadoes and hurricanes, says Leslie Chapman-Henderson, president of the Federal Alliance for Safe Homes, or FLASH.

Paying for a safe room

Including an 8-by- 8-foot safe room in a new home under construction can cost up to $8,700, according to FEMA. A 14- by-14- foot safe room can cost as much as $14,300. FEMA says there can be big variations in the costs, depending on the size of the safe room, its location in the home, and other factors.

Retrofitting a room in an existing home will cost about 20 percent more than building a safe room into a new home, because modifying the existing walls or foundation can be complicated.
Financial assistance may be available from a variety of sources. FEMA says to begin by checking with your state's emergency management department.

Safe rooms aren't always the safest bet

If you live in a flood zone or a storm-surge area, a safe room is anything but safe during a hurricane, cautions Tim Reinhold, IBHS senior vice president of research and chief engineer. "You wouldn't want to be locked up in a safe room with water rising," he says.
Also, while some homeowners opt for a safe room or shelter outside the house, those require time to reach, Reinhold says. Wait too long and you risk going out into high winds with blowing debris.
That means you have to be alert and heed hurricane or tornado watches and warnings. Reinhold recalls a tornado that hit an area of 100 homes -- all with shelters -- near Birmingham, Ala. But only two families made it into their shelters.
"You have to be aware that there is a threat, and (of) the time it takes to prepare," he says.

Something Big is Eating Your Old Favorite Restaurant Chains



Olive Garden
AP
If we're in an economic recovery, good luck trying to convince the country's largest casual dining chains -- they're sputtering.
  • Darden Restaurants (DRI) suffered a combined same-restaurant sales decline of 4.6 percent for Olive Garden, Red Lobster, and LongHorn Steakhouse in its latest quarter, and analysts predict a sharp drop in earnings for its fiscal year that ends this week.
  • DineEquity (DIN) also posted negative comps at Applebee's and IHOP in its latest quarter. DineEquity is in the process of unloading company-owned Applebee's to franchisees, so it's not a surprise to see revenue falling sharply. But profitability is also sliding.
  • Ruby Tuesday (RT) checked in with a 2.8 percent drop in same-restaurant sales at its company-owned namesake eateries. Investors have been feeling the pain. The stock has been meandering about in the single digits for nearly two years.
And it's not as if hungry customers are flocking to cheaper fast food.

After nearly a decade of positive comps, McDonald's (MCD) saw its domestic same-restaurant sales decline last October. It wasn't a fluke. Comps have gone on to slip in three different months after that.

If casual dining establishments and fast food joints are smarting for traffic, where are people getting fed?

Kicking Burritos and Taking Names

Fast casual -- a hot niche where quality food is served quickly without a dedicated wait staff -- is what's eating into both the fast food and casual dining markets.

Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG) and Panera Bread (PNRA) have become the new darlings of the dining scene. They're the poster children for fast casual, where diners can get a meal that may be slightly more expensive than fast food alternatives, but the food quality and perceived ambiance is also better.

At Chipotle, the burritos, tacos, and rice bowls are pieced together as they're ordered by a lightning-fast human assembly line. At Panera, fresh salads, soups, and sandwiches are ready within minutes of being ordered. There's no waiter to tend to your soda refill, but that also means that there's no need to tip the waitress or wait around for your check when you're done.

Industry tracker NPD Group estimates that fast casual sales rose 8 percent last year, compared to a slight decline at traditional table service restaurants.

The burrito-rolling and salad-tossing darlings will continue to gnaw away at the competition's market share. Analysts see Chipotle and Panera growing their revenue 16 percent and 14 percent, respectively, this year. Double-digit percentage growth is also projected for next year.

The Waitress Strikes Back

Casual dining isn't taking this lying down.

Earlier this year Applebee's began expanding a lunchtime platform where customers can order and pre-pay for their meals at a counter. Runners then deliver the food to their table. For now, the Express Lunch option is only available at roughly two dozen locations in the company's home turf of Kansas City. Other chains are trying to buy their way out. Ruby Tuesday acquired Lime Fresh, a small Chipotle-esque concept with a wider menu, last year.


Casual dining giants are also reaching higher up the food chain, snapping up more upscale concepts that haven't suffered from the defection to fast casual. After all, someone hankering for a foodie hotspot or a fancy chophouse isn't going to trade down to a carnitas burrito at Chipotle. Darden is one of the operators going higher end, snapping up the fast-growing Yardhouse brewpub chain and expanding its own Seasons 52 concept.

Your local casual dining operator doesn't have much of a choice. The trend isn't its friend these days, and chains that fail to adapt will have to change their approach to lunch if it doesn't want nimbler competition to eat it first.

Parents again: Grandparents taking care of grandchildren.



Parents again: Grandparents taking care of grandchildren.






Grandparents raising their grandchildren was once rare, but the U.S. Census Bureau now estimates that 2.5 million have this responsibility.

Oklahoma has the sixth highest percentage — 56.9 percent — of grandparents responsible for grandchildren who live with them, census data shows.

In Oklahoma, the American Association of Retired People says 57,601 children are living in grandparent-headed households.

Davis, 44, said that before three of his grandchildren enrolled in school, and he was trying to make it to doctors’ appointments in Tulsa, he tried to get help with daycare from the Department of Human Services.

“When I applied for childcare through DHS they actually tried to take the children away,” he said. “They said if I needed childcare I wasn’t capable of taking care of these children. So, needless to say, I pay for a baby-sitter when I need childcare out of my own pocket.”

There’s not much in that pocket, since Davis only has $1,100 in income each month. He said he has learned to make full use of coupons and sales, but barely makes ends meet. Although his life is focused on the children, he said he does not resent the extra responsibility.

“I feel like they saved my life, because when I was going though all the chemo and the radiation with the cancer, even though I didn’t feel like getting out of bed I had to; I was all they had,” he said.

Davis said his daughter is trying her best to improve her life to the point where she can take responsibility for the children.

“Now, their mother has come back into the picture, but she had some problems with personal issues and just was not able to take care of them,” he said. “And she has worked very, very hard to get her life back together. But I still have the children, and hopefully one day she will be able to take care of the children.

Muskogee County Department of Human Services Assistant Director Faye Waits said having to raise children a second time around can be difficult.

“There are the basic challenges like putting a roof over their head, being a parent again when just been taking care of yourself, getting the kids enrolled in school, making sure the kids get up and get to school every day, and being responsible for their medical care,” she said.

Waits said some grandparents may be so aged that they cannot accompany their grandchildren to many events.

“There may also be problems for the grandparent if they are older and have disabilities and can’t be as active as when they were younger,” she said.

Waits said many grandparents raising grandchildren may be eligible for Temporary Assistance to Needy Families.

Humidity and COPD

How to protect your lungs on hot, humid days.
Heat and humidity can affect your breathing, especially if you have asthma or COPD.
On very hot, humid days, especially days that have high levels of air pollution or smog, stay indoors. Find an indoor place that’s cool. Make sure the place you choose has clean air – this means no tobacco smoke or harsh scents. If your home is not air conditioned, go to an air-conditioned public space, like a recreation centre, public library, or shopping mall.
Some things to remember when it is hot and humid:
  • Stay indoors in an air-conditioned place with good indoor air quality.
  • Keep your windows and doors closed to keep your house cool and keep pollutants out. Keep your curtains and blinds drawn to keep out the heat. Turn on fans. At night, if you don’t have air conditioning and there are low levels of air pollution outdoors open your window to let the cooler air in.
  • Keep your rescue medicine (usually a blue puffer) with you, take your medication regularly.
  • Avoid strenuous activities hard work and reduce the amount (or length of time) of exercises during these times.
  • Look up your air quality readings, either through an air quality index or air quality health index and learn how air quality can affect you.
  • Listen to air quality and humidity (humidex) advisories.
  • Know your warning signs of a flare-up.
  • Know the signs of heat stroke and when to see your doctor.
  • Drink plenty of water.
  • Wear loose, cool, and light-coloured clothing and a hat if you go outdoors.
  • Avoid exercise, especially during the hottest time of the day (generally between 11:00 AM and 3:00 PM)
  • Make sure someone checks up on you if you are living alone.
Heat and COPD
How heat can affect your COPD
Your body is always working to maintain a normal body temperature. When you are exposed to extreme weather conditions, such as extreme heat and humidity, your body must use extra energy to try and cool down. This extra energy causes your body to work harder.
If you have COPD, you are already using much of your energy just to breathe. When you are in extreme heat your body uses more energy while working hard to keep your normal body temperature. If it gets too hot, this can affect a person’s breathing.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Taco Bell Receives Amazing Application

Taco Bell Receives Amazing Application


Taco Bell job application on RedditA sense of humor can serve you well in many situations. A job application, however, may not be one of them. That apparently did not deter one prospectiveTaco Bell employee when filling out his application -- and his application immediately prompted a debate online as to what his true motive was.

According to an application that was posted Friday to Reddit, the anonymous online forum,the candidate -- described as the brother of a girlfriend of a Reddit editor -- wrote a humorous little story in response to the standard question, "How did you find out about TACO BELL?" In response to the standard question of "desired salary," he wrote: "Minimum wage."

The applicant's name was not shown on Reddit, nor was the position for which he was applying. But while no one in his or her right mind "desires" a federal minimum wage -- $7.25 an hour, it's probably the most realistic expectation for fast food workers. Most workers in the industry make exactly that hourly wage, which has been a sore point and has resulted in fast-food workers' strikes in five cities. Was this application a sly way of making a political point?

Commenters On Reddit Divided: Reddit user emkay99 wrote that the applicant was being realistic, saying fast-food workers are going to be paid what "the corporation says he should be paid, and 99 times out of a hundred, that will mean minimum wage." Others suggested the application was in sync with famous anti-corporate slogans. "He's a straight shooter with upper management written all over him," Reddit user Robotizer wrote, repeating a quote from the 1999 cult film, "Office Space," which explored the soul-sucking life of the contemporary American worker. The applicant's response to "How did you find out about Taco Bell?" was clearly tongue-in-cheek. He wrote:
I was lost one night, and in the distance I spotted a purple bell, and I thought to myself, think outside the bun. So I ran to your doors and asked for the cheesiest gordita crunch you could make. I was not disappointed.

Happyplace.com, a viral news website which also posted the application, said the response sounded as if the author was "really, really stoned."

How did Taco Bell view the application? The chain, which is owned by Yum Brands Inc., would not comment on whether the applicant landed the job. But in an e-mail statement to AOL Jobs, Taco Bell spokesman Rob Poetsch chose to overlook any intended humor in the application. "We're flattered that this customer's passion for the Cheesy Gordita Crunch led him to apply for a job," he wrote.

Sometimes it takes an over-the-top approach to get the job, including taking out a billboard saying, "Hire Me." In May, 23-year-old Bennett Olson landed a position with a 3-D scanning company after he splashed his smile on a billboard in Minneapolis with that entreaty.

Just recently, on a thread on Quora, Yahoo executive Gil Yehuda claimed that he was hired after turning down the Web giant in a job interview, telling the recruiter, "I can't take a job if the company doesn't know what they are looking for. You need to figure out what you want before you make an offer."

According to LinkedIn, he's still employed at Yahoo.




Don't Miss: Companies Hiring Now


Freedom Tower .

Freedom Tower Update: As the tenth anniversary of 9/11 approaches, construction of the Freedom Tower continues to move forward. Parts of the National September 11 Memorial, which will be located elsewhere on a 16-acre site, should be finished by 2013. 

Both structures have been the subject of some debate, but public perception of them is improving, and developers remain confident that their work will act as a fitting tribute to the victims of 9/11. 

The Freedom Tower is due to be completed in 2013.

The New York City Freedom Tower, which will stand 1,776 feet tall on the site of the former World Trade Center, is the work of the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation. It will serve as a beacon of freedom, and demonstrate the resolve of the United States, and the people of New York City. 

Construction on the tower, which will have a cubic base, began in early 2006. Steel became visible aboveground in 2007, and by 2013 the building will be ready for occupancy - twelve years after the World Trade Center was destroyed by terrorist attacks. 

The site will also feature the Reflecting Absence memorial, which will honor the 2,986 men and women who died as a result of the terrorist attacks which thrust America, and the world, into war. Over 2,500 people died after the World Trade Center came crashing down to earth, and leaders vow they will never be forgotten

Smoke clogged the air for many weeks after September 11th, and the rubble burned for months. New Yorkers, and America, will never be the same.

Met-Ed what a rip off Company!!




I called Met-Ed a month ago to set up electric (transfer out of landlord's name and into mine).  They wanted a security deposit of $264.00 OR a cosigner who had lived in my area with an account in good standing for at least 3-5 years.  Really?  It gets better...They mailed me out a cosigner (they call it a 'guarantor') statement to sign and send back.The security deposit has nothing to do with credit.  The security deposit is based on past electricity usage at your address, it is 2 1/2 times the normal bill.  It must be paid in full, but we will refund it if you re-send the guarantor statement" So I hung up, mulled it over, and called back and talked to another person because I really didn't believe you could hit someone with a security deposit based on the address you're moving to.  WRONG.  She verified the security deposit is based upon the address I have moved to, but assured me it had nothing to do with whether or not the previous tenant was delinquent on their bills or not.  I asked her HOW they could come up with a security deposit based upon previous electricity usage if I had JUST MOVED IN.  She said it was based on the history of usage at that address, not my personal usage.  WHAT???????  I asked her so if the people who lived here before used $500 worth of electricity per month, I would have to pay them $1250 just to have electric in my name??  (Yup).  Just because I moved there?
My credit's a 670, not bad, but certainly not 'excellent excellent'.  But apparently the credit is BESIDES the point and now you just have to pay the electric company a security deposit just because of the address you choose to move to.  By the way, I moved to a normal house on a normal street in an incredibly small town.  Is this housing profiling lol?  REALLY????  Is this legal????

I have been a customer of Liberty Mutual 1996 and being Rape.




I have been a customer of Liberty Mutual since  1996's. I have a perfect driving record and carried home, auto policy with Liberty for all these years.. When I got my renewal for auto insurance (insuring 1 vehicle w/ full coverage), my rate was listed as $1317.81 a year. When I called and told them I thought that was too high and I was checking other Insurance companies, they told me that they would look at it again and now they could do it for same coverage for about $1317.81 a year.

I asked why I have to call to get a lower rate and that I have been with them all these years . They said they have a new rating software and they can't call every customer and re-rate their policy. I know with the computer technology now, they can sort the good policy holders from the higher risk ones and this is just a way of ripping off unsuspecting customers. I cancelled all my policies with them and told them exactly how I felt about this kind of business practice. The customer service people that I talked to seemed as if they didn't care. I hope other people that are insured with Liberty Mutual will check out their rates and compare them. Cheapest is not always the best and I did' go with the cheapest at 73.87, I was raped by Liberty Mutual at 131.78 per month and then renter 25.58 each month . That’s 167.36 per month how I pay 70.16 full coveage for everything the insurance company is bigger and has been around for over 80 years..Here are my saving after all that.



State Farm
Auto per Month 70.16
Auto per Year 841.92 Pre year
Renter   per Month 12.45
Total for the year 993.84

Liberty
Auto1317.81 per  year
Auto  per month 131.78
Renter per month 25.58
Rent total 255.80
Total 1730.97

Saving with State Farm 737.13 Total

Liberty
POLICYPOLICY
BALANCE
LAST
PAYMENT
CURRENT
AMOUNT DUE
SELECT
My Auto
AO5
Customer Billed
Billed Monthly Paper Bills
Annual Premium: $1,508.00
$1,317.81
as of
05/29/2013
$131.78
paid on
05/07/2013
$0.00
My Renter
H45-281-
Customer Billed
Billed Monthly Paper Bills
Annual Premium: $286.00
$255.80
as of
05/29/2013
$25.58
paid on
05/07/2013
$0.00


Yanira Maldonado, Arizona Mom, Arrested Over Pounds Of Marijuana In Mexico; Family Cries 'Framed'

Yanira Maldonado, Arizona Mom, Arrested Over Pounds Of Marijuana In Mexico; Family Cries 'Framed'



Yanira Maldonado was arrested on a bus last Wednesday while traveling home with her husband from a funeral, CNN reports. At a military checkpoint in the northwestern Mexican state of Sonora, authorities told Maldonado that they found 12 pounds of marijuana under her seat.
Her daughter, Anna Soto, told CNN that her mother is innocent.
"She's an honest good woman. A Christian woman that would never do anything to jeopardize her freedom," Soto said. A Mexican state official agreed, telling reporters that it's impossible for one woman to be lugging around that much marijuana.
Maldonado's lawyers told her husband Gary that he could bribe a judge to get her out of jail, but the $5,000 he cobbled together was either too late or not enough. Maldonado was transfered to a women's jail in Nogales, according to ABC News.
Gary Maldonado told Fox 10 that witnesses who saw them board didn't see them with any packages, and that security footage of them proves it.
"The most frightening feeling you could ever imagine and scary, what's going to happen next?" he said. "I've seen two other buses roll in with the exact same thing and they took the bus driver in and arrested him."
A judge will decide Tuesday whether Maldonado should be released. If she's not, she could wait in jail another four to six months for another hearing.