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Saturday, September 22, 2012

S.C. Lawyer Indicted for Extorting $1M From Clients in Fake Cases

ht richard breibart lawyer thg 120921 wblog  S.C. Lawyer Indicted for Extorting $1M From Clients in Fake Cases

Image credit: Lawyer.com

 

Richard J. Breibart, an attorney in Lexington, S.C., for 33 years, specialized in litigating high-profile criminal and civil cases. A once prominent member of the community,  he was known for throwing lavish Christmas parties for hundreds of people,  according to The State newspaper.

But now, Breibart faces a 10-count federal indictment for extortion and fraud, and  a maximum of 20 years in prison on each count.

The saga has been a bizarre one, especially for an attorney who once presided over a 14,000-square-foot office and employed about two dozen lawyers.

But in recent years, according to the federal indictment, Breibart started using his formidable legal talents to get  people to pay him enormous sums of money so he could make charges or investigations against them go away. But the twist? There never were any charges or investigations against these people. The cases were fake.




2 Sentenced in $680,000 Student Loan Fraud Case





CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) - A Walterboro woman has been sentenced to more than two years in prison for being the mastermind of a scheme that took $680,000 in student loans.

Federal prosecutors said 48-year-old Lena Gant got about a dozen friends, family members and co-workers to apply for online college classes and get financial aid with no intention of taking the courses. She was sentenced to 27 months in prison.


Family wants answers on missing W.Va. 3-year-old

Missing Girl

Lunsford Family via The Dominion Post / AP Photo

FILE - This undated file photo provided by the Lunsford family via The Dominion Post shows 3-year-old Aliayah Lunsford of Bendale, W.Va. Aliaya has been missing since she vanished from the family home on Sept. 24. 2011. "It just seems like everybody's forgotten her," says great-aunt Vickie Bowen, "but we're never going to forget."

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/09/22/4844393/family-wants-answers-on-missing.html#storylink=cpy

Her mother is in prison for welfare fraud. Her stepfather is lying low. Her six siblings, some just infants, are in the custody of child welfare authorities. And Aliayah Lunsford, the brown-eyed 3-year-old who vanished from her West Virginia home a year ago Monday, is still missing.

"It just seems like everybody's forgotten her," said Aliayah's great-aunt Vickie Bowen, "but we're never going to forget."

In the year since Aliayah disappeared from her family's rented house in the Bendale section of Lewis County, Bowen has concluded the girl is probably dead, though she avoids using the word.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/09/22/4844393/family-wants-answers-on-missing.html#storylink=cpy



First day of fall 2012: Autumnal equinox is here

Autumnal equinox 
New England nature photographer Kevin Talbot captures a spot of color in a sea of green. (Kevin Talbot / September 21, 2012)

The first day of fall. Autumnal equinox. Whatever you want to call it, we're starting a new season today. You might even say we're turning over a new leaf.

Get it?

The autumnal equinox ushers in the change from summer to fall. You've no doubt noticed the shift of late.

Dawn arrives later, making it harder to get out of bed in the morning. Night falls much more quickly.

"The days are getting shorter, and day and night are approximately equal in length," explains the EarthSky website.

The Earth orbits on its axis at a tilt. "We have an equinox twice a year -- spring and fall -- when the tilt of the Earth's axis and Earth's orbit around the sun combine in such a way that the axis is inclined neither away from nor toward the sun," the online science site says.

The result is that the sun shines directly on the equator, creating a nearly equal amount of day and night.
Science aside, the autumnal equinox marks a symbolic shift for many of us.



Can it! Soda studies cite stronger link to obesity

NEW YORK (Reuters) - As Americans debate what is most to blame for the nation's obesity epidemic, researchers say they have the strongest evidence yet that sugary drinks play a leading role and that eliminating them would, more than any other single step, make a huge difference.





You Are Being Poisoned

 
A woman unpacking groceries and reading a label on a box of food
Everyday we chow down on chemically produced foods that carry deadly poisons. Today when we eat meat, poultry and dairy, we eat the residue of everything the animal ate, including growth hormones, pesticides and contaminants.

Following are some of the harmful chemicals commonly found in our food and personal products, along with descriptions of what they are, where they’re found and why they’re bad.

GMO Foods
Monsanto  is an American multinational agricultural biotechnology corporation responsible for hazards such as Agent Orange.  They are currently well known for Genetically Modified agriculture, owning nearly 90% of staple GMO crops such as corn, soy, and cotton. In independent studies GMO food has been linked to organ failure, and a recent Russian study has concluded near-total sterility in GMO-soy-fed hamsters by the third generation.

The question of whether or not genetically modified foods (GMO’s) are safe for human consumption is an ongoing debate that does not seem to see any resolution except in the arena of public opinion. Due to lack of labeling, Americans are still left at a loss as to whether or not what is on the table is genetically modified. This lack of information makes the avoiding and tracking of GM foods, very difficult. The top 10 worst GMO foods for your “do not eat” GMO foods list include corn, sugar, aspartame, papayas, canola oil, cotton oil, dairy, zucchini, and yellow squash.

The best advice: steer clear of them altogether.



Astronomy Photos 2012: Royal Observatory Greenwich Announces Contest Winners (PHOTOS)

Astronomy Pictures
"Summer Nights in Michigan," by Michael A. Rosinski, was a Highly Commended entry in this year's Astronomy Photographer of the Year contest.


With so many eye-popping images coming from space-based cameras on Hubble, Cassini and Curiosity, it's easy to forget that ordinary humans can snap great astronomy photos from right here on Earth. The 2012 Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition celebrates these terrestrial shutterbugs, and we've compiled a slideshow of the winners.

Prizes were awarded to amateur and professional photographers from 12 countries, including two who were only 13 years old.



5 Signs of Gynecological Cancer Women Ignore





Ohio woman who unknowingly married her father says learning the secret was ‘devastating’ 

"It is devastating. It can destroy you," Valerie Spruill, 60, said of learning eight years ago that she had been married to her father.

Wedding rings for story about Weddings and Divorce. Pix to Orla Healy.

Pat Carroll/New York Daily News

Valerie Spruill hopes talking publicly about her ordeal will help others in similar circumstances.

An Ohio woman who unknowingly married her father says she is unsure whether he knew he was wed to his biological daughter before his death in 1998.

"It is devastating. It can destroy you," Valerie Spruill, 60, told CNN of learning eight years ago that she had been married to her father. A DNA test using hair from the late Percy Spruill's brush confirmed the shocking news.

Valerie Spruill lived silently with the secret until this month, when she gave an interview to the Akron Beacon Journal to try and help others dealing with similar circumstances.

"I want this to be more of an inspirational story," the 60-year-old told the newspaper. "If I've come through this, anyone can come through anything through the help of the Lord."
Spruill, who lives in Doylestown, Ohio, says other members of her family knew the dark secret long before the news was revealed to her.

Spruill, who is now retired with eight grandchildren, thinks all people should know the truth about their families.

“"It needs to be told, because children need to know where they come from," Valerie Spruill told th Beacon—Journal. "And I know it hurts, because I have been devastated by this.”

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