Florida Insurance Fraud

TALLAHASSEE — For Gov. Rick Scott and state legislators, the problem is painfully obvious: Car insurance fraud costs drivers nearly $1 billion a year in increased premiums.
Now they must confront the problem and reduce fraud in a minefield of interests including insurers, doctors, chiropractors, hospitals and lawyers.
Scott says they can fix it. But many have tried before and failed and as a result, fraud in personal injury protection (PIP) is worse than ever, and insurance premiums are higher than ever.
The latest reform effort began in earnest this week as Senate and House committees tackled PIP fraud. A solution, if there is one, is months away.
“I believe we can and should save PIP,” Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater said in testimony before the Senate Banking and Insurance Committee. “It’s been hijacked.”
Among the proposals lawmakers are considering are caps on attorneys’ fees; limits on how many times patients can undergo procedures such as massage therapy or chiropractic care; stricter regulation of storefront pain clinics; the hiring more fraud investigators to crack more cases; and allowing insurers more than the 30 days under current law to determine whether claims are legitimate.
In the PIP fraud centers of Tampa and Miami, as elsewhere, minor fender-benders have become major profit centers as paid runners recruit “victims” from accident reports and lure them to clinics, often for a fee, so they can exhaust the $10,000 PIP benefit.
Lawyer referral services, advertising on TV and Facebook, appeal to victims with promises of recouping lost wages and paying all medical expenses.
At the Senate hearing, Atwater faulted the insurance industry for not disclosing data on claims that could help lawmakers find a solution, and he said the state should insist that any reduction in fraud that lowers premiums be returned to consumers.
An industry representative said antitrust laws limit how much information the companies can make public.
Some lawmakers say the system is beyond repair and should be abolished, and that a mandatory $10,000 benefit creates an irresistible money pot for scam artists.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

“You can’t fix PIP,” says Sen. David Simmons, R-Maitland. “There will always be rampant fraud.”
Rep. Mike Horner, R-Kissimmee, said he will propose repealing PIP in 2014 and replacing it with a law requiring all drivers to carry bodily injury insurance and an “inexpensive” emergency medical payment.
Hospitals and insurers not only want to retain PIP, they want to increase the $10,000 benefit. They testified in favor of raising the benefit, in effect since 1979, to justify rising health care costs. Senators quickly dismissed the idea.
Rep. Jim Boyd, R-Bradenton, the point man for PIP reform in the House, says insurance companies can cite losses to justify higher premiums that they pass on to policyholders.
“The ones hurt the most are the working families, the single mothers, who can ill afford these prices,” Boyd said. “I still believe there’s a chance to fix this problem.”
PIP fraud has been around in Florida for a long time.
In June 2000, then-Insurance Commissioner Bill Nelson’s office broke up a fraud ring and arrested 51 people in Miami and Hialeah following a year-long investigation.
Also that year, a statewide grand jury confirmed that PIP fraud was rampant throughout the state, and repeated legislative attempts to curb fraud have been dismissed as timid and ineffective.
The 2000 grand jury report noted that 20 years earlier, a Dade County grand jury “criticized this practice of ‘ambulance chasing.’”
“Here we are again,” said Sen. JD Alexander, R-Lake Wales.

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Process Server first, UGLY revenge second

Police say a disgruntled former tenant, angry he was evicted from his rented home, hatched a pricey plot to get back at his former landlord.

http://liarcatchers.com/process_service.html

The home’s owner tried to evict Frank Whittington from the house in the 7600 block of Chapel Creek Parkway South in September because he hadn’t paid rent. The landlord, according to court records, put his Whittington’s belongings on the street and a Shelby County Process Server warned him not to return to the property.

The landlord claims that later in the day Whittington sent him a text message threatening to get even with him.

Police say that Whittington decided not to serve his revenge cold though. He snuck back into the house, according to a witness, and plugged all the drains and left the water running.

Investigators say the sinks flooded and sent water pouring onto the hardwood floors, carpet and eventually poured from the second floor and damaged the first floor ceiling.

The flooding caused about $50,000 in damage, according to police records.

Whittington has been charged with two counts of vandalis

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Did Greedy Kim Kardashian Hire Private Investigator

If you thought Kim Kardashian couldn’t look any worse after her 72-day marriage debacle, think again. The National Enquirer is reporting that the erstwhile porn star “secretly plotted to blindside” her soon-to-be-ex-hubby, Kris Humphries, in their divorce proceedings and hired a private investigator “to dig up dirt on him — but the plan backfired when the report came back without a blemish!”
“Kim expected to hear back that Kris was fooling around with other women when she was working,” a “family friend” dishes to the mag . “With the right evidence, Kim thought she could gain the upper hand in the divorce.”
http://liarcatchers.com/cheating_spouses.html

The friend tells The Enquirer that “Kim knew the marriage was over before it began” — which totally fits with earlier reports that she wanted to call off the wedding and actually met with divorce lawyers before she got married — and “she wanted to make sure he couldn’t touch any of their shared assets, including the millions they made from the wedding.”

But Kim Kardashian’s plan backfired when the private investigator’s final report “‘came back clean as a whistle,’ giving Kim nothing to use as leverage.” So … she wanted to screw him out of the little bit he earned from their wedding — compared to the lion’s share she got — so bad that she needed “leverage”? All the cash and attention she got from her obviously fake wedding weren’t enough; she wanted to stiff him out of his cut too? Who’s the “Indian giver” now, Kris Jenner? This is just beyond greedy. As if people didn’t have a reason to sign the “Kardashian boycott” petition before, they do now!

What do you think? Did Kim Kardashian hire a P.I. to follow Kris Humphries? Can you believe she’s actually this greedy? Sound off in the comments!

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How do I know what telephone number a Cell Phone is?

Simple….. Call 800-444-4444 from any phone. A female voice recording thanks you for contacting MCI. ” It will then state ” Our system indicates you are calling from …..

http://liarcatchers.com/deleted_history.html

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County in Iowa hires Private detective

OSAGE, Iowa — Mitchell County supervisors last week unanimously agreed to hire a private investigator to catch Mennonite farmers who drive steel wheel tractors on hard surface roads in violation of the county’s road protection ordinance.

The investigator will report to the county attorney. The supervisors will also place newspaper advertisements asking residents to take pictures of steel wheel tractors on hard-surface roads and call the sheriff.

A week earlier the supervisors proposed meeting with policy making leaders of the Groffdale Conference Old Order Mennonites to work out a compromise.

Groffdale Mennonite Daniel Zimmerman of Orchard conferred with a church bishop in Pennsylvania about the meeting proposal. He gave the supervisors a statement summarizing what the bishop told him.

“Requiring our members to place steel wheels on our tractors is a religious regulation, reflecting our long-standing religious belief in separation from the world,” said the statement. “We feel that this belief is supported by scripture passages such as Romans 12:2, ‘Be ye not conformed to this world.’ ”

Zimmerman said church ministry meets twice a year in a national conference to interpret and apply biblical principles to church issues.

“Over the last 40 years, the ministry has repeatedly upheld and affirmed the use of steel wheels at these national conferences,” the statement said.

http://liarcatchers.com/civil_investigations.html

Harlan Nolt, a Groffdale Conference minister from Riceville, said change must start in a member’s home church at council meetings held two times each year. From there the issue goes to the ministry council meeting where a majority have to accept it.

“As far as I can see, this was never brought up in individual church council or ministry council meetings,” Nolt said. “It was brought up if there might be an option to change, and everyone voted to uphold what we have now.”

Board of Supervisors chairman Joel Voaklander read a letter from Eloise Kuper of Osage, who sent photos of steel-wheel tractors on Primrose Avenue.

“If you hire a private investigator, plan on having him work the night shift,” Kuper wrote. “It is truly when these vehicles travel at their best. The issue isn’t better paving, but obeying the laws of the land.”

“I don’t think we have much choice,” said supervisor Bob Marreel in making the motion to hire a special investigator.

“Call your conference and see what you want to do,” Voaklander said. “You can see where we’re going, and it’s not going to pleasant for you folks. I think you’re going to have a bunch of discontented members here pretty quick.”

“You have to respect our point of view, too,” said Jim Reiff of Elma. “We try to respect yours, but it puts us in a hard spot.”

He asked why this is only a problem in Mitchell County.

“Because you are affecting our roads,” Walk said. “We borrowed $16 million. We’re trying to protect our investments.”

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baby lisa irwin update November 17, 2011

Kansas City Private Investigator Ron Rugen has been digging for the truth on what happened to missing baby Lisa Irwin from Kansas City over the last few week.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

His fresh approach has given us an an interview with Megan Wright, the woman that owned the cell phone that received a 50-second phone call from baby Lisa Irwin’s parent’s cell phone.

Rugen also was instrumental in finding out the information from an anonymous source that a man named, Dane, had Megan Wright’s cell phone that night when the 50-second phone call came in.

Now, Wednesday night, Rugen has found out that Dane, aka Dane Greathouse, has retuned to the house in KC that he had been staying in along with Megan Wright and several other people. Since the information came out that he was using Megan Wright’s cell phone, many people have wanted to talk to him.

According to Rugen, Dane said he had been away on a hunting trip and did not even know that anyone was looking for him. The household gave him the phone number of a KCPD detective and told him they wanted to ask him questions.

Dane left the house, and at this time no one knows his exact location.

Recently, Irwin’s attorneys have said too much focus has been placed on Lisa’s parents, but Kansas City Police retired Homicide officer, David Bernard said he’s convinced the investigators are looking at everything and prioritizing leads based on the most likely scenarios, according to KMBC.

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Fund-Raiser for Liu Is Arrested on Fraud Charges

The charges against the man, Xing Wu Pan, do not mention Mr. Liu, but say that Mr. Pan served as a bundler — a person who gathers donations from a group of contributors — for a citywide candidate in New York for the 2013 election. A person briefed on the matter said the candidate was Mr. Liu.

The arrest underscores the political peril for Mr. Liu, who is considered a rising star in New York politics and a possible successor to Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. Mr. Liu has quickly amassed more than $1 million in campaign contributions, but questions have surfaced about the legitimacy of his donations.

The charges say someone approached Mr. Pan, 46, of Hudson County, N.J., in July of this year and said they wanted to donate $16,000 to the candidate, far in excess of the city-imposed limit of $4,950 for individual contributions.

Mr. Pan, according to the charges, sought to send the money to Mr. Liu’s campaign by using 20 straw donors — people who are recorded in campaign finance documents as giving to a candidate but actually serve as conduits for money from an unseen large donor.

That allowed Mr. Pan to circumvent the limits, according to the charges.

Campaign records from the 2009 election list Xing Wu Pan, the president of a company called Golden Arrow Property L.L.C., as a donor to Mr. Liu’s campaign who contributed more than $3,000. There was no immediate response Wednesday to telephone calls made to a number listed for Golden Arrow Property.

Mr. Liu has been struggling to address questions about his fund-raising after a report last month in The New York Times that found some people listed as his campaign donors said they had never given money to him. In other cases, people named as donors could not be located, or were listed as employees of companies they did not work for.

Federal authorities are investigating Mr. Liu’s campaign fund-raising operation and have in recent days subpoenaed records from his campaign and from a city contractor whose employees were listed as having contributed thousands of dollars to his campaign.

It is unclear whether the current inquiry is related to an investigation begun by Manhattan federal prosecutors and the Federal Bureau of Investigation in late 2009. That investigation, which had not previously been made public, focused on whether foreign money flowed to Mr. Liu’s 2009 campaign for comptroller, two people with knowledge of the inquiry said.

Mr. Liu, one of a handful of contenders for mayor in 2013, initially insisted that his finances were in order, and brushed aside suggestions that he ask an outsider for help, saying that such a process might be too costly.

After mounting criticism of his fund-raising, however, Mr. Liu selected Robert Abrams, who was the New York State attorney general from 1979 to 1993, to conduct a review. Mr. Liu has said that since the federal inquiry was disclosed that he might suspend that review.

Mr. Liu has climbed quickly in politics in the city in part because of the passionate support he has received from Asian voters and businesspeople here.

A fund-raiser for the New York City comptroller, John C. Liu, whose campaign finances are under federal investigation, was arrested on Wednesday on charges of attempted wire fraud and conspiracy, people briefed on the matter said.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

His campaign collected $1 million in contributions during the first six months of this year, with contributions made up mostly of $800 donations from Asian-Americans around the country. The number eight is considered lucky in Chinese culture.

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FBI discusses background checks

Washington, D.C.  11-15-2011

Good afternoon, Chairman Schumer, Ranking Member Kyl, and members of the committee. It is my privilege and pleasure to address you today regarding the role that record availability and completeness play in the operation of the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) and the continuing efforts of the FBI to increase the quality and quantity of information available to the NICS. I would like to also take this opportunity to share with you the number of accomplishments we have achieved with the resources we have available. We have meaningful efforts underway to ensure that the current system works as efficiently as possible to keep people as safe as possible.

http://liarcatchers.com/background_checks.html

The Firearms Background Check Process

The Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act of 1993 (Brady Act) required the attorney general to establish the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), which began operating on November 30, 1998. Through NICS background checks, federal firearms licensees (FFLs) receive information regarding whether a prospective firearm transfer may proceed or if it must be denied because the transfer would violate state or federal law. NICS checks are conducted over the telephone or via the Internet, and a response is typically available within minutes.

When a NICS check is conducted, an individual’s name and descriptive information is searched against information maintained in three national databases managed by the FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) Division: the Interstate Identification Index (III), the National Crime Information Center (NCIC), and the NICS Index. In addition, in any transaction where the potential transferee claims non-U.S. citizenship, the NICS works with its partners at the Department of Homeland Security’s U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to determine whether the transfer can proceed.

The III is the chief repository within the CJIS Division for the maintenance of criminal history records, currently housing over 60 million criminal histories. The III relies on submissions from state, local, tribal, and federal agencies across the United States.

The NCIC maintains a database of 19 different files, many of which contain information that may be relevant to the background check process. For example, the NCIC includes approximately 5 million records related to wanted persons and those against whom protection orders have been filed.

The NICS Index, on the other hand, is a database created specifically for the NICS. It contains records relating to the 10 specific federal prohibitions on firearms receipt and possession contained in the Gun Control Act that are not or cannot be housed in III or NCIC. Those categories include persons who have been dishonorably discharged, persons who have renounced their U.S. citizenship, persons who are unlawful users of or addicted to controlled substances, and persons who have been committed to a mental institution. The NICS Index currently maintains over 7 million records, and starting next year, it will be expanded to include records of persons who are prohibited from acquiring or possessing firearms by state law. In some cases, state prohibitions mirror or overlap with federal prohibitions. In other cases, however, state law may be more restrictive and may rely on records held at the state level that are not eligible to be included in III or NCIC. Having ready access to those records in the NICS Index will increase the likelihood that a NICS background check will identify those persons prohibited by state law from possessing or receiving firearms. Records contained in the NICS Index are voluntarily contributed by local, state, and federal agencies, and every record is prevalidated as demonstrating a prohibition before it is entered into the database. As a result, when a NICS background check matches with a record in the NICS Index, it allows the transaction to be immediately denied.

Since it began operating in 1998, the FBI, along with the point of contact (POC) state partners that conduct firearms background checks, have processed more than 137 million background checks. In the vast majority of cases, these checks have facilitated the timely and efficient transfer of firearms to law-abiding individuals. On more than 882,000 occasions, however, the background checks processed by the FBI have prevented a prohibited person from acquiring a gun. Some state POC partners do not report final transaction statuses to the NICS; therefore, it is undeterminable how many NICS background checks processed by state partners have resulted in denying prohibited persons the ability to obtain firearms.

As should be obvious, the NICS is critically dependent upon having access to reliable and complete records. When records are missing or incomplete, the NICS has, by law, just three business days to fill in the gaps before the FFL is allowed—but not required—to transfer the firearm. In some cases, the FBI fails to uncover an existing, applicable prohibitor during that time frame, or never uncovers it at all, because the records needed to establish the prohibitor are beyond its reach. When that happens, firearms can and do end up in the hands of persons who are not allowed to possess them. Our goal at the department is to use every tool available to us to minimize that risk.

The NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007 (NIAA)

The fact that NICS in some cases lacks ready access to relevant prohibiting records was brought home following the tragic shootings on April 16, 2007, at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, Virginia. The Virginia Tech shooter was able to acquire firearms from an FFL despite a disqualifying mental adjudication because the records of his adjudication were never transmitted to the NICS Index. In response, Congress passed the NICS Improvement Amendments Act (NIAA). The NIAA, signed by the president on January 8, 2008, reinforced and enhanced the attorney general’s ability to acquire for the NICS information from federal agencies and departments demonstrating that a person falls within one of the 10 categories of federal firearms prohibitions contained in the Gun Control Act. The NIAA also focused on non-federal records by authorizing incentives for states, tribes, and associated court systems to provide additional records to the NICS, and to ensure that state-supported records in both NCIC and III are complete, accurate, and up to date. The NIAA required that the attorney general provide annual reports to Congress concerning implementation of the NIAA.

Implementation of the NIAA

Shortly after the NIAA was enacted, both the FBI and the Department of Justice began to invest the time and resources necessary to achieve its goals. Those initial efforts included:

– Sending correspondence to the governors, attorneys general, chief justices, and state court administrators in the states and territories to announce passage of the Act and summarize the provisions affecting these entities. The same correspondence was also sent to: the National Council of State Legislatures; the Council of State Governments; the American Legislative Exchange Council; the legislative leadership of each state; the National Center for State Courts; the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors; the Justice Research and Statistics Association; the membership of SEARCH, the National Consortium for Justice Information and Statistics; NICS points of contact; and the membership of Nlets, the International Justice and Public Safety Network;

 

http://liarcatchers.com/background_checks.html 

 

– Sending correspondence to the states and federal departments and agencies regarding the minimum criteria required to establish a qualifying relief from disability program under the Act, as is required of federal agencies that make qualifying mental health adjudications or commitments, and is a prerequisite to grant eligibility for states;

– Sending correspondence from the deputy attorney general to the Administrative Office of the United States Courts, Social Security Administration, and the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, and Interior requesting that each organization identify a point of contact to work with the NICS Section to ensure that information on individuals prohibited from purchasing or possessing a firearm is available to the NICS;

– Sending correspondence from the FBI Director (or other FBI official) to all other federal agencies requesting that each organization identify a point of contact to work with the NICS Section to ensure that information on individuals prohibited from purchasing a firearm is available to the NICS;

– Conducting outreach to and dialogue with state and local law enforcement as well as the mental health community regarding regulations and protocols for protecting the privacy of information provided to the NICS Index concerning a person prohibited from shipping, transporting, receiving, or possessing a firearm pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(4);

– Publishing “questions and answers” regarding the NICS Improvement Amendments Act of 2007 on the Bureau of Justice Statistics website (http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/niaa.htm);

– Coordinating and conducting meetings with affected federal agencies and departments; and

– Making numerous presentations at association meetings and conferences involving affected parties including, among others, the FBI’s NICS User Conference, the SEARCH Membership meeting, National Crime Prevention and Privacy Compact Council meetings, American Psychological Association meeting, and FBI Criminal Justice Information Services Advisory Policy Board meetings.

We have increased efforts recently, and the FBI and the Department have achieved the following:

– Held three regional NIAA meetings in fiscal year 2011 at which more than 10 states participated in meetings designed to provide them with a better understanding of NIAA grant requirements and other resources designed to maximize their record availability;

– Attended individual state meetings (Oregon and Oklahoma) to provide information intended to assist and enhance the development of their plans regarding the NIAA;

– Surveyed more than 90 federal departments and agencies regarding potentially relevant information in their possession. The results of those survey responses are now being used to further identify the universe of information held by federal agencies and enable the FBI to assist them in complying with the information sharing mandate of the NIAA; and

– Awarded grants to three states in 2009, eight states in 2010, and 14 states in 2011 to support NIAA activities, totaling nearly $40 million.

Results

While significant implementation challenges remain, our reinvigorated efforts have achieved some notable successes in a variety of areas since enactment of the NIAA. To start, the sheer number of records available in the NICS Index is much larger than just a few years ago. Prior to the passage of the NIAA, approximately 5.1 million records (state and federal combined) were maintained in the NICS Index. Of these, approximately 500,000 were specific to the mental health category. As of October 31, 2011, the number of records maintained in the NICS Index had increased by 41 percent to over 7.2 million, and the number of mental health records had increased by 153 percent to over 1.3 million. But these macro numbers do not tell the whole story.

Criminal History Dispositions

Largely as a result of aggressive outreach, over 766,000 criminal dispositions have been obtained by the FBI for use in updating to national criminal history records. In addition, over 142,000 dispositions were forwarded to state repositories to update corresponding state records. Having ready access to these dispositions will not only make the background check process more effective and efficient, it will also ensure that other users of III and the state databases have access to more complete and accurate records.

Enhanced Electronic Submissions

Through the combined efforts of the FBI and NIAA partnering agencies, certain federal agencies have begun submitting records electronically to the NICS. Electronic submissions are more efficient and accurate than submissions on paper or disk, as was the prior practice. For example, the FBI is currently working with the Department of State to accomplish the submission of their information on an electronic basis. In addition, within the Department of Justice, the Office of the Deputy Attorney General is spearheading an effort to develop a streamlined, department-wide approach to ensuring that all federal indictment, conviction, and arrest warrant information is promptly transmitted to NICS. By January 2012, all U.S. Attorney’s Offices and the litigating components of Main Justice will be required to complete and submit electronically to NICS a one-page summary of relevant information pertaining to all federal charges and convictions. A similar procedure is being developed for federal law enforcement to submit information regarding federal arrest warrants.

The FBI has also made the states aware of alternative means of accomplishing electronic submissions, including electronic mail, compact disk, and/or through the use of a NICS-only originating agency identifier (ORI). These interim options are available to the states (and federal agencies) as they continue to work toward an optimal electronic submission process.

Additional developments in enhancing the submission of electronic records include:

– In March 2011, the Federal Court Services and Offenders Supervision Agency began electronically submitting federal drug-related prohibiting information to the NICS Index;

– In February 2011, the U.S. Coast Guard identified an additional category of federal prohibition held by their agency and, since the passage of the NIAA, has begun electronic submission of these records to the NICS Index;

– On January 20, 2011, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) became the first federal agency to submit real-time online dispositions via the III. In addition, the DEA has submitted approximately 500,000 legacy dispositions to the FBI for update to III records;

– In July 2011, the Department of Agriculture began electronically submitting information pertaining to the federal prohibiting category of ‘persons under indictments for a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year’ to the NICS Index;

– In 2010, the FBI created and implemented a process to provide certain non-criminal justice agencies, such as mental health agencies, not eligible for NCIC ORI assignment with a NICS-only ORI. A NICS-only ORI provides such agencies with the ability to submit federal prohibiting information electronically to the NICS Index. The FBI provided this as an alternate means for agencies to electronically submit records to the NICS Index other than through the NCIC front-end.

Controlled Substances

In July 2010, in response to the NIAA, the U.S. Army enacted a policy change that provides for the submission of fingerprints to the III on persons subject to the federal firearms prohibitor for illegal use of controlled substances.

Domestic Violence

On December 14, 2009, the FBI implemented a process to post victim relationship information to III records. The relationship information is essential for the effective processing of records regarding the prohibiting misdemeanor crime of domestic violence.

State Prohibitors

Effective April 2012, the NICS Index will be expanded to collect and maintain records of persons who are prohibited from the possession of firearms based on state law. The expanded NICS Index capability will enhance the level of firearm-prohibiting information made available to NICS users during the NICS background check process. Participation by the states will be voluntary, as is state submission of information to any of the databases accessed by NICS.

Mental Health Records

In the wake of the tragic shootings at Virginia Tech, the attorney general issued correspondence to federal agencies requesting they identify and contribute any information that would immediately identify individuals prohibited by federal law, particularly those persons with a prohibiting mental health history, from possessing or receiving firearms or explosives. The attorney general also referred agency inquiries or concerns pertaining to relevant firearm-prohibiting information to the FBI. Corresponding guidance was provided to numerous federal agencies about the NICS program, determining if agency-held information is relevant to NICS’ purposes, and accurately interpreting federal firearm-prohibiting criteria. Both the FBI and the ATF wrote letters to the state attorneys general on these issues as well.

Since 2002, each successive year of operations has reported an increase in the number of prohibiting mental health submissions to the NICS Index, with the most notable increase, approximately 74 percent, occurring after the Virginia Tech tragedy in 2007. As of October 30, 2011, the number of records maintained in the NICS Index Mental Defective File totaled 1.3 million. A significant percentage of these records, however, are from a small number of states.

Continuing Challenges

The department continues to educate our federal, state, and tribal partners about the NICS and the records relevant to the federal laws prohibiting the receipt or possession of a firearm. During the course of this outreach, several continuing challenges and obstacles have been reported. Among these challenges are limitations including the manpower to accomplish the added duties and responsibilities associated with the management and maintenance of information submitted to the NICS. Other issues identified include outdated information technology and the inability to submit records electronically. In certain instances, the requirement to implement a relief from mental health disabilities program that is a prerequisite to grant funding also presents obstacles, thereby hindering progress.

At the state level, a variety of legal and policy barriers appear to hinder the submission of robust mental health information to the NICS. For example, some states report that state privacy laws bar them from providing information to the NICS that would demonstrate a mental health prohibitor for one of its citizens. The FBI has compiled and disseminated a catalogue of state legislation that has been enacted by certain states to allow for the sharing of mental health information with the NICS. Whether such legislation is pursued, however, is up to the state.

Moreover, submission by the states to any of the databases accessed by NICS is voluntary. While the availability of grant funds under the umbrella of the NIAA is helping some states develop capabilities that will permit them to effectively and efficiently submit much-needed information to the NICS, the requirement that states create and operate a qualified relief from disabilities program in order to compete for a grant may act as a disincentive for some states from seeking those funds. Finally, the manpower to assume the duties and responsibilities associated with the management and maintenance of information and to assist with the auditing of such records has also been identified as a significant issue faced by states.

Conclusion

During the last three years, a great deal of progress has been made toward fully implementing the NIAA. Much work through intense outreach, training, and information sharing has enhanced state and federal awareness of the importance of making relevant information available to the NICS. The overall number of records submitted to the NICS Index since the passage of the NIAA has improved; however, the improvements are not spread equally across the board. Although deficits in funding may continue to be an issue across many state, local, tribal, and federal agencies, it is anticipated that through our department’s continued outreach, and with the support from the federal government and the NIAA partnering agencies, local, state, tribal, and federal agencies will move closer to the NIAA’s goal of closing the gaps in the information available to the NICS.

I appreciate the opportunity to review some of the department’s recent work to improve the completeness and accuracy of the information made available to the NICS by local, state, tribal, and federal agencies. Through these efforts, we continue to ensure that persons prohibited from possessing firearms pursuant to state or federal law do not acquire them from an FFL, and that law abiding citizens are able to acquire them without undue delay. I would be happy to answer any questions that you may have.

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psychics agree to help in missing boy case

Tips are pouring into Bellevue Police regarding the last known whereabouts of missing 2-year-old baby Sky. Tips are also coming in on his current whereabouts, from those that “see.” Yes, tips from psychics.
This undated photo provided by the Bellevue, Wash., Police Department, shows Sky Metalwala, who is currently 2-years old, with his mother. The toddler was reported missing Sunday Nov. 6, 2011, after his mother told police she left him sleeping alone in her unlocked car for an hour after it ran out of gas. She said she and her 4-year-old daughter walked to a gas station. (AP Photo/Bellevue Police Dept.)

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

On high profile missing people cases, it’s common that at least a  thousand psychics will call in with tips, according to Bellevue psychic Shellee Hale.

In fact, Bellevue Police spokeswoman Carla Iafrate said on Monday that many of their recent tips had come from psychics.

“There’s no real scientific explanation for it,” said Hale, who cannot comment directly on the Sky Metawala case since she is a volunteer with the King County Search and Rescue on the case.

Listen to Shellee Hale, psychic

Pattern recognition, remote viewing, guessing right, creative thinking – Hale said there are many names for what she does. “I have an ability to actually choose spots where bodies are.”

Hale said that she has had some success too, pointing police in the direction of at least two missing persons. But she said, in her opinion, psychics are at their best when they use groupthink.

“It’s my opinion that those psychics are never as strong individually as they are as a group.”

Hale told 97.3 KIRO FM’s Dori Monson Show that while she believes she has psychic abilities that perform best when she is with a group of psychics, she wouldn’t try and explain the science behind it.

“It’s like, how do you know what somebody is thinking or feeling? You can’t scientifically explain it.”

Hale thinks she has a good idea on the location of Sky, even though she couldn’t share it with Dori. But she did say that there are “absolute probabilities” that help direct psychics.

“I think I have a very good idea. I think there are a lot of people saying the exact same thing on the [investigation] forum,” Hale said. “What I can tell you is that an unreported death is almost always linked to the custodial parent.”

She said that while fathers trying to conceal a child’s body may take it farther away from the home, mother’s feel a greater attachment and often try to conceal the body close to the home.

Detectives still haven’t spoken with the mother since early in the investigation. While Bellevue Police Major Mike Johnson said it’s frustrating, it’s not fair to characterize this as an “uncooperative person” because they recently haven’t asked that many questions of Biryukova.

Police say Biryukova told them she was taking Sky to a hospital when the car stopped, so she left him alone in the unlocked vehicle and took his 4-year-old sister to go for gas. When she returned an hour later, she says, the boy was gone.

Police are also investigating whether Biryukova, or someone using her name and photos, created a profile on a dating website listing herself as a “sugar baby” seeking a “real man.”

Police said hundreds of investigators are working on the missing person case that could turn into a criminal case.

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herman Cain bidy guard interviewed

URBANDALE, Iowa — A bodyguard for presidential candidate Herman Cain got a little physical with a Post reporter at an event in Iowa on Tuesday in the midst of the campaign’s battle to regain its footing in the wake of damaging sexual harassment allegations against the candidate When the bodyguard asked the reporter (okay, me) to move to a different location while waiting for Cain to exit the Machine Shed restaurant here, I politely declined.

http://liarcatchers.com/executive_protection.html

After a little back-and-forth, the bodyguard made it known that he would physically prevent me from asking a question of the GOP presidential candidate, and then started backing into me with his back and shoulder. The incident wasn’t what I would call violent.

In any case, it offers a window into the Cain campaign’s dealings with the press at this pivotal point in the race. Here’s the blow-by-blow (so to speak) from the recording:

At the Tuesday event, Cain’s bodyguard summoned me from my spot near the side door of the restaurant from which Cain, it was clear, would be exiting. The bodyguard said he wanted me to move further away so the campaign could shoot a video in the area. When I asked whether I would get to ask Cain a question, the bodyguard said no. He and another aide explained that Cain had already answered media questions.

True, Cain had, but I arrived at the time the event was slated to start at 3:30 p.m., and the media availability had already concluded.

Me: I’d prefer to be over there. If he’s going to come out the side door, then I’m going to be over there.

Bodyguard: But I’m asking you to stand over this way while we film this thing we’re about to do. We’re trying to do something, OK?

Me: But what shot is he taking right now?

Bodyguard: Sir, do you want to play this game?

Me: Well, if he’s not going to come out the front door…

(Talking over each other)

Me: … I’m going to be at the side door.

Bodyguard: You want to play this game?

Me: Yeah, I do.

Bodyguard: OK… (again asks me to move to the parking lot)

Me: I’m sorry, I don’t have to do that, and I’m not going to. If he’s not going to come out the front door, then I’m going to stand by the side door.

Bodyguard: I’m gonna tell you, I’m not gonna let you get it. I’m gonna tell you, you won’t ask a question.

Me: That’s fine.

Bodyguard: I will stand in front of you, I will block you.

(He begins to back into me with his back and shoulder.)

Me: You can touch me as much as you want to, but I wouldn’t recommend it. I wouldn’t recommend touching me like that.

Bodyguard: (indistinguishable) … (If) you put your hands on me when I step in front of you, we’re going to play the game.

Me: I’m not going to touch you. You’re the one that touched me. What’s your name, sir?

(No response)

Bodyguard: … stand over there. You don’t want to do that? You want to be a hard hitter? Fine, we’ll play.

Me: OK. That’s fine. If you want to bump me over, that’s fine.

Bodyguard: We’ll play.

UPDATE: For what it’s worth, a tipster points out that a Cain bodyguard did something similar last week. It’s not clear that it’s the same bodyguard.

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