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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Monday, August 20, 2018

Garrison Keillor | My Weekend in Manhattan: A Memoir




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19 August 18 PM
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Garrison Keillor | My Weekend in Manhattan: A Memoir 
Author Garrison Keillor. (photo: NPR)
Garrison Keillor, Garrison Keillor's Website
Keillor writes: "A string of blazing summer days in New York City and after the sun went down, perfect summer nights, diners in sidewalk cafes along Columbus Avenue, dogs walking their owners, and my wife walking me. 'You need to get out and move around,' she says. 'It's not healthy to sit at a desk all day.' And she is right."
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Guantanamo trials court. (photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Guantanamo trials court. (photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

September 11 Trial Judge Forbids Use of FBI Interrogations at Guantánamo
Carol Rosenberg, McClatchy D.C.
Rosenberg writes: "The judge in the death-penalty trial of those accused of carrying out the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks in the U.S. has ruled that prosecutors may not use key FBI interrogations conducted at the Guantánamo detention center soon after years of CIA black site abuse ended."
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George Papadopoulos. (photo: NYT)
George Papadopoulos. (photo: NYT)

Mueller Seeks Six-Month Sentence for Papadopoulos, Says He Lied and Hurt Russia Probe
Daniel Politi, Slate
Politi writes: "If it had not been for George Papadopoulos' lies, federal authorities may have been able to detain a man they suspected was part of Russia's efforts to meddle in the 2016 presidential election, the special counsel said Friday night."
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US Customs officer at US/Mexican border. (photo: AP)
US Customs officer at US/Mexican border. (photo: AP)


MUST READ!
EXCERPT:
If they can justify suspicions, federal officers at U.S. ports of entry are authorized, without the need for warrants, to require some disrobing for genital and rectal inspections, and monitored bowel movements to check for drugs, according to a CBP handbook. At the same time, the detention-and-search handbook instructs officers to record a solid justification for every step beyond a frisk, and to respect detainees’ dignity and “freedom from unreasonable searches.” The handbook also warns against what could be considered a “visual or physical intrusion” into body cavities.
The women who’ve brought these lawsuits, including two minor girls, say CBP officers subjected them to indignities — such as strip searches while menstruating and prohibited genital probing — despite finding no contraband. Four women further allege they were handcuffed and transported to hospitals where, against their will, one underwent a pelvic exam and X-rays. In one of the cases, the woman’s lawsuit asserts she was intravenously drugged at the hospital, according to lawsuits.


Ferriss writes: "Lovell has accused CBP officers of violating her constitutional rights and sidestepping the agency's rules prohibiting officers from conducting invasive body searches. Her case is one of at least 11 since 2011 examined by the Center for Public Integrity."
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Pope Francis. (photo: Reuters)
Pope Francis. (photo: Reuters)

The Clergy Abuse Crisis Has Cost the Catholic Church $3 Billion
Tom Gjelten, NPR
Gjelten writes: "Sixteen years after an investigation in Boston highlighted the dimensions of the sex abuse crisis in the Catholic priesthood, the financial and reputational cost to the Catholic church continues to grow."
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Imran Khan. (photo: AP)
Imran Khan. (photo: AP)

As Imran Khan Takes Office, Military Looms Over Plan for 'New Pakistan'
Howard LaFranchi, The Christian Science Monitor
LaFranchi writes: "Hemmed in as he will be by a deepening economic crisis on the one hand and a military that continues to hold the levers of power on the other, Khan is likely to find the road to his 'New Pakistan' a steep and encumbered one, regional experts say."
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Houses are partly submerged in the flooded River Ganges in Uttarakashi district, in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand, India. (photo: AP)
Houses are partly submerged in the flooded River Ganges in Uttarakashi district, in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand, India. (photo: AP)

The Climate Change Widows of Indian Villages
Arpita Chakrabarty, Al Jazeera
Chakrabarty writes: "The struggling women, who say the state government had promised them jobs, are left to deal with the prospect of more unpredictable weather and an uncertain future."
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