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Back Taxes weighing you down?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tax Settle)
Tue Sep 17 17:08:43 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Tue, 17 Sep 2013 14:08:26 -0700
From: "Tax Settle" <TaxSettle@iapiecend.us>

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Owe Back Taxes to the State or IRS? 

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  with the National 
Weather Service in St. Louis, Mo., said severe weather struck the suburb 
of Hazelwood.  "We won't be able to confirm whether it was 
a tornado until teams get out there tomorrow," Dye said. (AP Photo/David 
Carson, Post-Dispatch)The Associated PressThe street light at Howdershell 
Road and Lynn Haven Lane lies damaged following high winds from a 
strong spring storm in Hazelwood late Wednesday evening, April 10, 2013. 
Butch Dye, a hydrometeorological technician with the National Weather Service 
in St. Louis, Mo., said severe weather struck the suburb of Hazelwood. 
 "We won't be able to confirm whether it was a tornado 
until teams get out there tomorrow," Dye said.  (AP Photo/Erik M. 
Lunsford, Post-Dispatch)The Associated PressST. LOUIS  At least one death 
has been blamed on a strong spring storm system that's brought everything 
from tornadoes to ice and snow to much of the Midwest and 
parts of the southeast U.S.Mississippi Emergency Management Agency spokesman 
Greg Flynn says one person has died and several are injured after 
a reported tornado in Kemper County in the far eastern part of 
the state.And in Missouri, the National Weather Service says that the St. 
Louis suburb of Hazelwood was hit by an EF-2 tornado on Wednesday 
night.A National Weather Service meteorologist said crews were still assessing 
whether tornadoes were to blame for other damage in Missouri and neighboring 
Illinois.
 m police and store employees, Hurtado collected 
rope and rags from store shelves and put makeshift tourniquets on both 
arms, most likely saving the man's life, police said."Were we in a 
good place for it? No, but you improvise," Hurtado said. "If I 
didn't have rope I'd have used my shoelaces. We would have made 
it work."The man was in surgery hours after the incident, said Spl. 
Rudy Lopez, from the West Covina police. He knew nothing more of 
the mans condition.The man, who looked to be in his 40s, was 
carrying no identification, has been unable to answer questions, and was 
not heard saying anything in the store, so police do not know 
his name or why he cut himself, Lopez said.Police interviewed about five 
people who said they saw what happened, and Lopez said there were 
likely many more who quickly left the disturbing scene."It was pretty graphic," 
he said. The store was shut down the rest of the day.Click 
for more from KNBC-TVThe Associated Press contributed to this report

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> t the only ones cashing in on Bitcoin. The hackers behind 
Lulz Security, whose campaign of online havoc drew worldwide attention back 
in 2011, received thousands of dollars' worth of bitcoins after promising 
followers that the money would go toward launching attacks against the FBI.A 
report apparently drawn up by the bureau and leaked to the Internet 
last year said that "since Bitcoin does not have a centralized authority, 
detecting suspicious activity, identifying users and obtaining transaction 
records is problematic for law enforcement."It went on to warn that bitcoins 
might become "an increasingly useful tool for various illegal activities 
beyond the cyber realm" -- including child pornography, trafficking and 
terrorism.The FBI did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.Late 
last month, the U.S. Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or 
FinCen, announced it was extending its money-laundering rules to U.S. bitcoin 
dealers and transfer services, meaning that companies that trade in the 
cybercurrency would have to keep more detailed records and report high-value 
transactions.Many in the Bitcoin community are frustrated at the attention 
paid to the shadier side of the virtual economy.Atlanta-based entrepreneur 
Anthony Gallippi said the focus on drugs and hacking misses the "much 
bigger e-commerce use for this that's growing and that's growing rapidly."Very 
few businesses set their prices in bitcoins -- the currency 
 April 10, 2013: First lady Michelle Obama speaks about 15 year-old Hadiya 
Pendleton who was shot and killed on the south side of Chicago 
earlier this year, during a luncheon at the Chicago Hilton in Chicago.APCHICAGO 
 First lady Michelle Obama made a deeply personal entrance into the 
gun debate Wednesday, the eve of a showdown in Congress, by comparing 
herself to the honor student from her hometown killed by gun violence 
a week after performing in the presidential inaugural events.Mrs. Obama 
told a conference on youth violence that the new gun regulations her 
husband proposed in response to Connecticut's Sandy Hook Elementary School 
shooting deserve a vote in Congress. But she says reducing daily gun 
deaths in places like Chicago also will require an intensive effort by 
community leaders.As part of a rare foray into a policy debate, Mrs. 
Obama highlighted the case of 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton, shot to death 
in January while hanging out with friends at a park on the 
city's South Side, not far from the Obamas' home. Mrs. Obama attended 
Pendleton's funeral and said she was struck by how familiar the Pendleton 
family seemed to her own."Hadiya Pendleton was me and I was her," 
Mrs. Obama said. "But I got to grow up and go to 
Princeton and Harvard Law School and have a career and a family 
and the most blessed life I could ever imagine."She said the only 
difference between her and the young people killed on the Chicago streets 
is that she 
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