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Your background check is available online

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (ICM)
Fri Aug 2 05:39:52 2013

Date: Fri, 2 Aug 2013 02:39:51 -0700
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "ICM" <ICM@hedanzmtc.info>

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Is your arrest record public?


http://www.hedanzmtc.info/1734/5/45/15/38.11tt71675797AAF15.php

No Thanks - http://www.hedanzmtc.info/1734/5/45/15/38.11tt71675797AAF9.html

















 uno argues 
its time the state get on board with a plan that he 
claims can help up to 100 homeless Hawaiians a year.In 2010, Mizuno 
along with state Rep. Rida Cabanilla failed to sway lawmakers. But what 
they did next shocked many. Both Mizuno and Cabanilla started soliciting 
funds to send the homeless away anyway on a case-by-case basis. Mizuno 
chipped in $100 of his own money to buy a one-way plane 
ticket to send homeless man Gregory Reese back to Seattle, Wash.That didnt 
sit well with John Fox, director of the Seattle Displacement Coalition, 
who told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, he had never heard of elected officials 
using their own money to send a homeless person back to his 
or her home state.But Hawaiis relocation plan isnt a new idea. It 
is fashioned after a New York City program implemented six years ago. 
The Mayor Michael Bloomberg-backed plan bought hundreds of homeless families 
bus tickets, train rides and airfare so they could leave the city.According 
to the latest figures available, New York City spent at least $500,000 
annually on Project Reconnect. From 2007 to 2009, the Bloomberg administration, 
which has struggled with homelessness, sent more than 550 families packing. 
They argue that sending away families is a lot less expensive than 
housing them in shelters which cost the city more than $36,000 a 
year per family.In Baton Rouge, La., the citys Metro Council approved a 
measure to send its 800 homeless residents out of
 One of the biggest impediments to establishing a market for electric cars 
is the lack of charging stations, like this one in Montpelier, Vt. 
(AP Photo/Toby Talbot)A California company was given more than $100 million 
in taxpayer funds by the federal government  with few strings attached 
 to establish a network of electric car charging stations that is 
fraught with problems, according to a government audit.All this, despite 
weak demand by the American public for electric cars.While President Obama 
has pledged to get 1 million electric cars on U.S. roads by 
2015, a new report by the Department of Energys inspector general found 
that Americans aversion to electric vehicles and loose department supervision 
led to stalling the charging network  which cost taxpayers more than 
$135 million.The report noted the project was filled with problems from 
the beginning, and said taxpayer-funded grants to San Francisco-based ECOtality 
for it were very generous and involved little risk by the company.- 
Inspector General's reportECOtality, which recently named Brandon Hurlbut, 
former chief of staff for ex-Energy Secretary Steven Chu, to its board, 
won a $99.8 million award in 2009 to install nearly 15,000 electric 
vehicle chargers throughout the country.The company and its subsidiaries 
also received about $35 million from the departments Vehicle Technologies 
Program from 2005 to 2011, for two multiyear projects to evaluate and 
test specific vehicles.Acco

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> A Zimbabwean holds up a ballot at a polling station in Domboshava, 
north of Harare, on July 31, 2013, during the general election. The 
African Union's top poll observer said Zimbabwe's crunch presidential election 
Wednesday appeared, according to initial reports, to have passed off smoothly.AFPHARARE 
(AFP)  The African Union's top poll observer said Zimbabwe's crunch presidential 
election Wednesday appeared, according to initial reports, to have passed 
off smoothly."The conduct of the election... has been peaceful, orderly, 
free and fair," said former Nigerian leader Olusegun Obasanjo, who leads 
the 69-member observation team, speaking at the closing of a polling centre 
in Harare.The AU mission had been criticised by President Robert Mugabe's 
challenger Morgan Tsvangirai for painting a rosy picture of vote preparations.Tsvangirai 
and non-governmental groups have voiced concern that the electoral roll, 
which was not released until the eve of the vote, is ripe 
for manipulation.It is alleged the list contains many duplicate and ghost 
voters.The Election Resource Centre, an NGO which is collating reports of 
problems, said it had received multiple reports of ballot papers running 
out and people finding their names were not on the register.About 600 
foreign election observers, mainly from African bodies, have been accredited 
to watch the polls in addition to 6,000 local observers.Zimbabwe has not 
invited Western observer missions because of san
 ring Season 4 last July, calling the bankruptcy 
filing process a nightmare.If you have (filed for bankruptcy), you know 
exactly whats going on and why and how terrible it is. And 
it takes a long, long time, she wrote. As you saw in 
our lawyer meeting, we withdrew our petition for bankruptcy and are paying 
our creditors back.Teresa also hinted that their money problems were far 
from behind them.Itsstillnotfinal. Im so sorry I cant talk about it in 
detail (again!), because its not done, but the day it is, I 
will write a book and tell you all about it, I promise! 
she continued.However, she now faces writing that tell-all from behind bars. 
The most serious charges Teresa and her husband face are bank fraud 
and loan application fraud, which carries a maximum potential penalty of 
30 years in prison and a $1 million fine.Still, these issues are 
nothing new for the couple. Their financial woes have been featured throughout 
the popular reality television franchise.The first season Teresa just seemed 
really rich and they spent a crazy amount; there is one scene 
where they pay to furnish their huge home all in cash, one 
entertainment industry insider connected to the popular franchise recalled. 
They filed for bankruptcy in between Season 1 and 2, they mentioned 
the bankruptcy but it seemed Teresa was in hard-core denial about everything 
and just continued to shop and live the life.With the exception of 
the reunion shows, the fifth season of the 
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