Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Topics - Harley

Pages: 1 [2] 3 4 ... 16
16
WASHINGTON  â€” At least 28 senior-level federal employees in eight agencies have bogus college degrees, including three managers at the office that oversees nuclear weapons safety, congressional investigators have found.

The problem is likely even bigger, mainly because the government has no uniform way to check whether employees' alma maters are "diploma mills" that require little, if any, academic work, the General Accounting Office reported.

The findings by the investigative arm of Congress were to be presented to a Senate committee Tuesday.

An earlier GAO report revealed how easy it is to buy a degree from a diploma mill; this one shows high-level federal workers securing such degrees at taxpayer expense. The tally was $169,471 at just two of the schools.

The colleges in question often use names similar to those of accredited schools and offer degrees largely on a person's "life experience." Some simply sell degrees for a flat fee.

Among those with bogus degrees in the GAO review were three workers with emergency operations roles and security clearances at the National Nuclear Security Administration (search), part of the Department of Energy (search).

One of those workers paid $5,000 for a master's degree from LaSalle University, an unaccredited school, the report said. He attended no classes, took no tests and told the GAO his degree was "a joke."

Under law, the federal government may only pay tuition for academic degree training at schools sanctioned by a recognized accrediting body.

In contacting representatives of three diploma mills, an undercover GAO investigator found they would not permit enrolling in individual courses. Yet they were willing to change their billing practices to receive federal money, dividing the flat fee they charged by the number of courses a student needed to appear as if a per-course fee was charged.

The number of bogus degrees and the amount of tax dollars spent on them are likely understated across the government because of incomplete records and verifications, the GAO said.

Three unaccredited schools — Pacific Western University California Coast University  and Kennedy-Western University — provided data showing that 463 of their students were federal employees. Most of those listed were in the Department of Defense. The report did not name employees.

The investigation took place from July 2003 through February.

The Senate Governmental Affairs Committee planned hearings Tuesday and Wednesday on diploma mills and the taxpayer's role in subsidizing them.

17
AEG's / Painted AEG thread
« on: May 10, 2004, 02:29:38 PM »
Post your painted AEG pics here.  Maybe we can run a poll and vote for the favorite one as well.

18
General Off-Topic Discussion / Funny news stories
« on: May 06, 2004, 12:23:55 PM »
<b>Bad Bank Robber Comes Out Losing Money</b>

An Iowa bank robber clearly couldn't count straight — he left with less money than he came in with.

Des Moines police say a man entered an Iowa Savings Bank (search) branch at the end of the day Monday and asked for change for a $20 bill, according to the Des Moines Register.

He made clear he wanted the cash as 10 $1 bills and two fives, and the clerk started counting out the notes.

She'd just finished giving him the ones when he suddenly opened a plastic bag and demanded she give him all the money she had.

But since he didn't display a weapon, or even say he had one, the teller simply refused.

The man repeated his demand.

"She said 'no' again," Senior Police Officer Jason Halifax said, "and he left."

He also left two $5 bills sitting on the counter, meaning he was out 10 bucks for his trouble.

The reverse robber was described as an average-sized male in his 20s, wearing black clothing, a blue stocking cap, a wig and a fake tattoo on his left cheek.

"He apparently didn't want his change back," Halifax said.

<b>Four-Wheel Frolicking Leads to Car-Crash Cover-Up </b>

Georgia authorities say an amorous young couple's attempted automotive copulation caused a car crash, and then a cover-up.

Newton County sheriff's deputies found a flipped-over Honda Civic on a Covington, Ga., road one Friday night last month, reports The Citizen of Covington.

Next to the car was Joshua David Correll, 22, who, despite smelling of alcohol, said he'd fallen asleep at the wheel while driving home alone.

But a witness to the crash said at least three other people had been at the scene — one of them a naked woman — and that the foursome had talked about getting their "stories straight."

While sheriff's deputies questioned the witness, a truck pulled up containing Chastity Collins, 22, and Christopher Thomas Meeks, 27, who both asked if Correll was OK.

Collins, who kept dabbing at a bloody nose as she talked with the deputies, insisted she'd been home all night.

But Meeks, who turned out to be Correll's brother, didn't keep his story straight. He told the cops he'd been following Correll and Collins home from a bar, had lost track of them and then later found their car overturned.

Correll himself finally filled in the details for authorities while recovering at the hospital. He admitted that Collins had taken off her clothes and climbed onto his lap while he was driving, blocking his view of the road and causing the crash.

Correll, Meeks, Collins and the fourth person, Jeremy Scott Day, 28, were charged with obstruction of justice. Correll got a DUI charge as well, while Collins was charged with obstructing a driver's view.


<b>Fast-Moving Fondler Meets Felon-Busting Fondlee </b>

A bike-riding fondler picked the wrong bottom to grab, reports WRTV-TV of Indianapolis.

Indianapolis police say Aloysius Roselle, 29, was cycling on a downtown sidewalk last month when he reached out and touched someone — a woman who happened to be a deputy county probation officer.

Even worse for him, a cop happened to be watching, gave chase and caught the touchy-feely two-wheeler.

"He picked the wrong victim and the wrong time today," said Officer Mike Wilson.

Roselle faces a felony charge of sexual battery and a charge of resisting arrest.

<b>Here's Some Music for You, Honey </b>

HENDERSON, Texas (AP) — A man set up a bubble bath for his wife, complete with candles and music, then tried to electrocute her by pushing a radio into the tub, authorities say.

William Joseph Wolfe, a 34-year-old emergency room nurse, was arrested Thursday on charges of attempted murder and freed on $40,000 bail.

"This is a strange case," said Henderson Chief of Police Randy Freeman. "It's the kind of case you would expect to see on a 'Columbo' episode."

Teresa Wolfe told police her husband had moved the radio from its usual place in the bathroom to a bench near the bathtub, with an extension cord running into another room.

She said she caught the radio before it hit the water and threw it out of the way. She told police that her husband's reaction was "not normal," became suspicious and later discovered that he had visited Web sites on their home computer dealing with bathtub electrocution.

According to authorities, Wolfe bought a life insurance policy on his wife five months ago.

"Mr. Wolfe has been a very good employee," said Henderson Memorial Hospital (search) Director of Human Resources Maria Stephens, "and we are shocked at what has happened."

Wolfe could get up to 20 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

<b>Never Enough Uses for a Ham Sandwich </b>

BEAUMONT, Texas (AP) — A courthouse security officer testified Wednesday that a defendant was able to attack a witness in court by disabling his shock belt with a ham sandwich.

Officer Kent May's testimony came in the punishment phase of Kiheem Grant's aggravated robbery trial in a Beaumont state district court.

Grant's trial was disrupted Tuesday when he attacked the woman as she left the witness stand. The woman suffered minor injuries in the attack before Grant was subdued. Jurors later returned a guilty verdict against him.

May said today that his investigation found that Grant inserted the sandwich between a battery and a belt electrode during a lunch break. That left the belt ineffective when the judge tried to trigger it during the attack.

Jefferson County Sheriff's Captain Leo Goldberg says Grant was wearing the belt because of concerns he might turn violent.

Grant faces charges in two other robberies and is accused of murder in a separate case. Prosecutors say he could face a retaliation charge for the courtroom assault.

<b>Mealtime Emergency </b>

BINGHAMTON, N.Y. (AP) — Police in the Binghamton, N.Y., area were looking for an ambulance thief who may have been in a hurry to grab a bite to eat.

A 1999 Ford ambulance vanished from outside a Johnson City hospital emergency room early Sunday morning. It had been left running for about seven minutes when the crew discovered someone had driven it away.

It took local police almost four hours to find the hard-to-conceal vehicle. It turned up in the parking lot of an all-night diner in Binghamton — about four miles away from the ER.

Police said nothing was taken and the thief had left the key in the ignition.

They suggested that ambulance companies review their procedures and not leave keys in unattended vehicles.

<b>Free-Gas Guzzlers Win 'Duh' Award of Week </b>

PITTSFIELD TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) — You can pump, but you can't hide. Some motorists in Michigan have found out the hard way that you can't just gas and go.

They discovered that because of a computer glitch they could swipe their drivers' licenses instead of credit cards to gas up for free at the pumps outside the (search) chain.

A total of 107 people figured it out, many of them students from nearby colleges in Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor.

In some cases people got as many as 15 fill-ups over a three-week period. Meijer got hosed for thousands.

But it turns out the information from each transaction with a drivers' license was stored on a central computer and police are tracking down the culprits.

20
General Off-Topic Discussion / FOAMY Cartoons
« on: April 27, 2004, 09:52:13 AM »
If you're offended by swearing then you might not want to listen to these.  Otherwise they are extrememly funny and very insightful.

http://www.illwillpress.com/vault.html

22
AEG's / Something for Mr. Joseph
« on: April 22, 2004, 02:48:47 PM »
Get this to add to your WWII gear Joey.

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 27045&rd=1

Hey Paco, bet you don't have one of these!!! [;)]

23
AEG's / Charging/Discharging Instructions for Ni-MH's
« on: April 16, 2004, 08:56:20 AM »
I got these instructions with my new battery from "www.onlybatterypacks.com".  This if for Ni-MH's only, I would not recommend fast charging NiCad's with such high amps.

http://www.public.asu.edu/~jbovenzi/ima ... t/NiMH.doc

24
General Off-Topic Discussion / Italian hostage executed
« on: April 15, 2004, 07:00:47 AM »
Iraqi militants executed an Italian hostage, the first captive known to have been killed among at least 22 foreigners kidnapped during Iraq's spasm of violence this month.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,117149,00.html

25
NEW YORK  â€” A Secret Service office worker stole five agency cars believed irreparably damaged at ground zero and gave them to his mother and daughter, prosecutors charged.

William Bennette (search) pleaded not guilty Tuesday to a charge of theft of government property, which carries a maximum 10-year sentence.

In comments to reporters, his attorney suggested that Bennette's actions could be explained by psychological trauma related to the attack on the World Trade Center (search), where Bennette was working on Sept. 11, 2001.

Suspicion began to focus on Bennette last month when the Secret Service, which was conducting a vehicle inventory, called shops that had been repairing cars damaged in the collapse of the trade center, where the agency had its New York office, prosecutors said.

A body shop worker in Queens told a Secret Service (search) agent that he had two cars but they had been given to him by Bennette. That prompted the agency to search Bennette's desk, where it found fake bills of sale for three other Secret Service cars.

The cars were found at the homes of Bennette and of his mother in North Carolina.

The cars were parked in the vicinity of the World Trade Center and contaminated by dust from the collapse, much of which contained asbestos and other potentially dangerous substances. Secret Service records listed the cars as disposed of by the agency.

Bennette admitted to investigators that he had falsified records and given the cars to his family, according to a complaint against him. He had been a Secret Service office support technician since 1999, the agency said.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Sean Casey said the investigation was continuing but had no further comment.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,117084,00.html

26
Philadelphia police, who lost an undercover car to a quick-thinking prostitute a few months ago, have another vehicular-loss problem on their hands.

Someone's been taking an unmarked squad car from its parking space — and bringing it back, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

"Over the course of the last few weekends, an unknown person or persons has been taking an unmarked pool car from Police Headquarters," police spokesman Inspector William Colarulo said last Wednesday. "During the course of one of the unauthorized usages, the car did sustain damage to the driver's side."

The car is an undercover special of the sort immediately recognizable as a police car — a dark-colored Ford Crown Victoria with red strobe lights and a siren.

"The person or persons responsible will be held accountable for the unauthorized use of this auto, along with the damages incurred," Colarulo told the newspaper.

Cops were going over security-camera footage from the past few weeks to see if they could spot the temporary thief.

One suspect being looked at: a 14-year-old boy, mentored by Police Commissioner Sylvester M. Johnson (search), who stole Johnson's $2,000 walkie-talkie and disrupted police and 911 communications this winter before apologetically giving the unit back.

Johnson has banned the boy from police headquarters, but still mentors him, the Inquirer reported.

27
General Off-Topic Discussion / Another helo goes down
« on: April 13, 2004, 07:22:05 AM »
NAJAF, Iraq  â€” A U.S. Apache helicopter was seen by an Associated Press reporter burning on the ground outside Fallujah on Tuesday, and witnesses said it was hit by a rocket from the ground. There was no immediate word on casualties.

The helicopter was in flames on the ground 12 miles east of Fallujah near the village of Zawbaa.

U.S. troops who converged on the site were attacked by gunmen, the reporter said.

Later Tuesday, a Marine commander confirmed that a military H-53 Sikorsky helicopter crashed outside Fallujah.

The site was between Fallujah and the western Baghdad suburb of Abu Ghraib, where an Apache was shot down by gunmen Sunday, killing its two crewmembers.

28
Airsoft Equipment Specials / Real AN/PAQ4 on eBay
« on: April 12, 2004, 01:13:35 PM »
Not really something usable in Airsoft, but somebody might want it.

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 10789&rd=1

29
Airsoft Equipment Specials / Classic Army Armalite metal body on eBay
« on: April 12, 2004, 12:43:59 PM »
For someone who wants to upgrade their Marui M4, here's good deal.

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... 48449&rd=1

Pages: 1 [2] 3 4 ... 16