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  • 30
    Mar
    2013
    11:39am, EDT

    Mama bear? National Zoo artificially inseminates giant panda

    Smithsonian's National Zoo / Reuters

    Giant panda Mei Xiang looks over a stone wall in her enclosure at the Smithsonian's National Zoo in this handout provided by the Smithsonian National Zoo during a spring snow in Washington, D.C. March 25, 2013.

    The National Zoo announced Saturday that a team of scientists and veterinarians had artificially inseminated the Zoo's female giant panda after natural breeding failed to occur.

    The statement said that Mei Xiang was artificially inseminated with a combination of fresh and frozen semen taken from the zoo's male panda, Tian Tian. The fresh semen was taken earlier Saturday morning, while the frozen semen had been held since 2003.

    Scientists determined that Mei Xiang was ready to breed earlier this week after observing a rise in her urinary estrogen levels.

    "We are hopeful that our breeding efforts will be successful this year, and we’re encouraged by all the behaviors and hormonal data we’ve seen so far,” Dave Wildt, head of the Center for Species Survival at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute said. "We have an extremely small window of opportunity to perform the procedures, which is why we monitor behavior and hormones so closely.”

    Panda pregnancies last between 95 and 160 days. Experts say that it is impossible to determine from behaviors and hormones whether a panda is actually pregnant or not because a fetus does not begin to develop until the final weeks of gestation.

    Mei Xiang gave birth to a female cub on September 16 of last year, but the cub died one week later due to lung and liver damage. Mei Xiang and Tian Tian have produced one surviving offspring, Tai Shan, who was born in 2005 and currently lives in China.

    The panda habitat at the National Zoo has been closed since Tuesday, when Mei Xiang was deemed ready to breed. The Zoo plans to re-open the habitat to visitors Sunday.

    NBCWashington.com

    27 comments

    . The fresh semen was taken earlier Saturday morning, And you thought your job sucked.....

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  • 19
    Mar
    2013
    7:14am, EDT

    Water restrictions after DC pipe breaks, sending gusher several stories high

    View more videos at: http://nbcwashington.com.

    A massive water main break has forced the closure of Connecticut Avenue in Washington, D.C., and imposed mandatory water restrictions on Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission customers in two counties.

    The break is expected to affect the morning commute, as a hoped-for 6 a.m. reopening of Connecticut Avenue was called off around 5:20 a.m.

    Drivers are not able to get between D.C. and the Beltway using Connecticut Avenue, which is closed in both directions between Manor Road and Dunlap Street. That closure will continue indefinitely, WSSC said.

    The main broke around 8 p.m. Monday at Chevy Chase Lake Drive, where water gushed several stories high from the 54-inch water main.

    The break caused a power line to fall, but no customers have lost power. Natural gas and electric lines run along the water main, so crews from Washington Gas and PEPCO had to secure those lines before work on the water main could begin, said WSSC.

    Crews had a scare shortly before 5:20 a.m. when a tree came down at the scene due to the saturated ground.

    Read more from NBCWashington.com

    The tree brought down some additional power lines, which dashed hopes for a 6 a.m. road opening. Pepco is headed to the scene.

    Another tree is also threatening to topple, said WSSC.

    Water restrictions in Maryland
    While there are no water reported water outages, all WSSC customers in Prince George's and Montgomery counties are required to restrict usage until repairs are complete.

    WSSC says all residential and commercial customers must:

    Use water only as necessary -- i.e., take shorter showers and turn off faucets after washing hands and while brushing teeth.

    Limit flushing toilets (do not flush after every use).

    Put off washing clothes if possible.

    Limit the use of dishwashers and wash only full loads.

    The restrictions could last up to a week, WSSC said. A violation carries a fine of up to $500 fine.

    WSSC said in a release it has been working with fire departments from both counties to ensure adequate fire protection.

    "Please don't hoard water. We're not running out," said General Manager Jerry N. Johnson. "But if everyone can cut their water use by 10 percent, we should be OK. We appreciate everyone's understanding and cooperation."

    Officials said the pipes are old -- circa 1980 -- but did not give a cause for the break.

    There is no timeline for repairs, WSSC said.

    NBCWashington.com

    40 comments

    I wonder if the water restrictions extend to making ice for Congressional cocktails?

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  • 2
    Mar
    2013
    8:41pm, EST

    From coast to coast, states brace for sequester shock

    In Huntsville, Alabama, Phoenix Services, an Army contractor, provides jobs to 300 physically or mentally disabled workers who produce harnesses for parachutes and burial flags for military funerals. All of them face layoffs because of the sequester. NBC Pentagon correspondent Jim Miklaszewski reports from Huntsville.

    By Berenice Garcia and Sofia Perpetua, NBC News

    Sure, it’s got a weird name. But the effects of sequestration may hit all too close to home for some Americans if lawmakers allow the cuts to take full effect later this month. One day after President Barack Obama signed an order to cut spending by $1.2 trillion over a decade, NBC News takes a look at how people may feel the pinch from New York to Chicago to Los Angeles. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    New York
    Young children in New York City’s most disadvantaged neighborhoods might be among those affected by sequestration as Head Start programs face a 5 percent cut, NBC New York reported. In the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, the SCO Morris Koppelman Center is the only Head Start program in an area where almost half of neighborhood children live below the poverty line. “It’s extremely difficult and very frightening to think what will happen to the families and the children in the community,” Shana Hewitt, program director at the Morris Koppelman Center, told NBC New York.


    Texas

    Lone Star state schools, air travel, military operations and more stand to be trimmed, NBC Dallas-Fort Worth reported. The Texas state budget may lose $334 million in cuts to public education programs, and more than 285 schools stand to lose federal funding starting July 1 if lawmakers don’t come to an agreement. Special education, English language classes, nutrition programs, early child intervention and family protective services could also be hit. The Texas Education Agency alone may lose grants totaling as much as $167.7 million, according to NBC Dallas-Fort Worth.

    Maryland
    The military may see as much $100 million for operations vanish in Maryland, NBC Washington reported. Military facilities in Maryland may lose $95 million in base operations, and furloughs of civilian employees could result in a $359 million payroll reduction, according to a letter the Pentagon sent Gov. Martin O'Malley, the station reported. Outside defense spending, the Washington, D.C. Metro transit system could see a loss of $22 million between lost grants and decreased ridership.

    California
    Parents in California also worried about the potential impact on their young children as Head Start programs were trimmed, NBC Los Angeles reported. “We can’t pay for it,” Ismael Lopez said of other preschool options for his son. “Everything is so expensive.” Cuts to funding for schools, the military and disability services could total $500 million, and primary and secondary education may see a $87.6 million cut, according to NBC Los Angeles.

    The sequester likely won't be the doomsday scenario that some had predicted, as the cuts will kick in gradually, but there is public frustration at Washington for not doing more, sooner. NBC's Kristen Welker reports.

    Connecticut
    The budget cuts include slashing funds for the Federal Aviation Administration by about $600 million nationwide, NBC Connecticut reported. How much any resulting delays may cost airline passengers in travel time at the state’s airports won’t be known until the cuts settle in, said aviation consultant Ed Garlick. "We won't really know until we get into it. It could be minutes. It could be hours," he told NBC Connecticut.

    Florida
    Florida residents spoke out about their fears that the spending cuts may cast a cloud over the Sunshine State. “I think people are going to be affected locally, and I think people need to be angrier than they are at the fact that Congress is not working together to serve us as people,” attorney Lynn Dannheisser told NBC Miami. Community hospitals and institutions of higher learning, including the University of Miami and Florida International University, may stand to see some of their funding dry up as a result of the cuts.

    Chicago
    Scott Air Force Base, a major employer in Illinois, could be hit hard by the cuts, according to NBC Chicago. Head Start programs in Illinois would likely be hit, too. "It's not just cold-hearted. It's stupid economic policy," said Diana Rauner, president of the Ounce of Prevention Fund, a nonprofit that serves 1,300 Chicago children. The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois in Chicago is considering closing its doors for one work day a week if the cuts take full effect, said court clerk Tom Bruton.

    Philadelphia
    The program Meals on Wheels is preparing for a worst-case scenario, according to NBC Philadelphia. Cuts to the program could mean waiting lists or stopping deliveries to home-bound clients altogether. "They wouldn't be able to stay at home and then they would probably end up in a nursing homes, which would cost the government a fortune," Bill Decamp of Lehigh Valley told NBC Philadelphia.

    In a Meet the Press exclusive interview, Speaker of the House Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, weighs in on the automatic spending cuts known as the sequester and what's next.

    Related:

    • Sequester deadline day is here, but the effects won't be instantaneous
    • As Obama signs the order, sequester is enacted
    • Sequester storm gathers over D.C. economy

    1698 comments

    It's a shame that such a small cut in government spending hurts so many government dependent people.

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  • 23
    Nov
    2012
    3:04pm, EST

    Washington, DC, set to post fewer than 100 murders this year -- a first since 1963

    By Eric Tucker, Associated Press

    The crack epidemic that began in the 1980s ushered in a wave of bloodletting in the nation's capital and a death toll that ticked upward daily. Dead bodies, sometimes several a night, had homicide detectives hustling between crime scenes and earned Washington unwelcome monikers such as the nation's "murder capital." At the time, some feared the murder rate might ascend to more frightening heights.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    But after approaching nearly 500 slayings a year in the early 1990s, the annual rate has gradually declined to the point that the city is now on the verge of a once-unthinkable milestone. The number of 2012 killings in the District of Columbia stands at 78 and is on pace to finish lower than 100 for the first time since 1963, police records show.

    "It strikes me probably daily as I ride around the city, or sometimes when I'm sitting at home at night, and it's 10 o'clock and my phone's not ringing. Or I get up in the morning, and I go, 'Oh my gosh, I've slept five hours," said Police Chief Cathy Lanier, who joined the department amid violent 1991 street riots. "It strikes me quite often how different things are now."


    The drop reflects a downward trend in violent crime nationwide and is in line with declining homicides in other big cities. Though killings have risen in Chicago, New York City officials say homicides dropped to 515 last year from 2,262 in 1990. Houston police reported 198 homicides last year, down from 457 in 1985, while Los Angeles ended last year with fewer than 300 after reporting nearly 1,100 in 1992. Across the country, violent crime reported by police to the FBI fell by 3.8 percent last year from 2010.

    Though D.C. is hardly crime-free today, and crime in some categories is even up, the homicide decline is especially notable in a place where grisly acts of violence — sometimes not far from the U.S. Capitol — embodied the worst of the crack scourge.

    The number of homicides in this city of more than 600,000 residents averaged about 457 between 1989 and 1993, a staggering rate that attracted unwanted attention. "A war zone? No, Washington, D.C.," was the sub-headline of a 1992 People magazine story branded Washington as a "city under siege." The Economist in 1995 called it "the violence capital of America." Tony Patterson, a longtime homicide detective, recalled one eight-hour shift when every detective on his squad landed a homicide investigation. Drive-by shootings with multiple victims were common, as were witnesses who'd see something — but say nothing.

    The 1990 arrest of then-Mayor Marion Barry for smoking crack cocaine fed a perception that the city where the nation's laws were made was, itself, lawless.

    "If you asked people what would happen first, there'll be a thousand murders in D.C. in a year or there'll be less than a hundred, I think virtually everybody would have said there would be 1,000," said John Roman, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Urban Institute.

    Everyone agrees there's no single cause for the trend.

    One overarching factor is the city's continued gentrification — the 2011 median household income of $63,124 is higher than all but four states, census figures show. Whole city blocks have been refashioned, drug dens razed, a Major League Baseball stadium built in place of urban blight, high-rise public housing replaced by less-dense garden style apartments. Though the poverty rate has risen, the growing wealth has pushed impoverished communities farther away from the city center. Some crime has also migrated to neighboring Prince George's County, Md., though homicides are down there too.

    "There are just more physical places in Washington, D.C., that are affluent and safe than there used to be," Roman said.

    Law enforcement techniques and medical care have advanced at the same time. Improved technology helps officers pinpoint gunfire, even before a 911 call, and share information faster. A police unit dedicated to seizing illegal firearms was re-established and prosecutors, benefiting from the city's strict gun laws, routinely ask that defendants arrested on weapons charges be held without bond — in part, to head off possible retaliation. Stronger community relationships mean detectives have developed better sources on the street and witness cooperation, police say.

    And better medical care, honed through lessons learned in Iraq and Afghanistan, means patients who were once stabilized at the scene are more likely to be taken directly to the hospital, where they have access to improved blood transfusion processes.

    "The advances in the way we practice nowadays, I think, probably helps today's trauma patient more so than 20 years ago," said Anthony Shiflett, an acute care trauma surgeon at MedStar Washington Hospital Center.

    Still, homicides are but one gauge of a city's safety and an imperfect one too.

    Crime in certain other categories has risen this year from the previous year, including robberies and, as of mid-September, assaults with a dangerous weapon. There have been headline-making violent crimes in 2012, including the beating and robbery of a man returning home from a Washington Nationals game, the slaying of a taxi driver whose body was found inside his burning cab and, most recently, the fatal stabbing of an 18-year-old inside a subway station after a robbery.

    U.S. Attorney Ron Machen, whose office prosecutes homicides, said that while witness cooperation has improved, retaliatory violence remains enough of a concern that he preaches against it during regular school visits.

    "We always say, 'You're not going to remember what the argument was about five days from now, let alone five years from now. But you pick up that gun and shoot somebody, if you don't kill them, now they're going to be coming after you,'" he said.

    The department doesn't track non-fatal shootings, but the number of aggravated assaults reported to the FBI — which would encompass such crimes — dropped from 8,568 in 1992 to 2,949 last year. The toll taken by violence is apparent each Tuesday at the MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital, where wheelchair-bound survivors gather for support sessions.

    "I'm still frightened to a degree to come outside — day, night, it really don't matter," said Jordon Cook, 31, who was hit by stray gunfire at age 15. "I'm probably going to have to deal with this until the day I die."

    The homicide drop is good news for violence-weary residents such as John Harper, who said his street in the historically violent Anacostia neighborhood feels far safer than it did 10 years ago. Still, a fatal shooting last July on his block returned his thoughts to the night in 1999 when his own son was killed in an alley.

    "I didn't even want to look over there because it just takes me right back to that day," he said, adding, "A lot of it is starting to come to an end, that behavior is starting to just leave this city — hopefully for good. I know not all of it, but a lot of it."

    Lanier, the police chief, said that in a city visited by millions of tourists annually, a continued downward trend might help alter a lingering perception of the city as a haven for violence.

    "It really is about a vibrant, safe city. I want people to not only be safe but to feel safe," she said. 

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Love among the ruins: Sandy decimates community, but wedding goes on
    • Lawyer: Suspect in Brooklyn shopkeeper slayings may have 'mental health issues'
    • Destroyed roller coaster could be Jersey Shore tourist attraction, mayor says
    • 140 car-pileup in Texas kills 2, hurts at least 80
    • Early wake-up call as NJ earthquake rattles homes

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    10 comments

    DON'T MAKE any mention of the SUPREME COURT overturning the unconstitutional gun ban that had plagued the city since 1976. So when citizens are allowed to carry guns to protect themselves and not have to rely on the gov't, crime goes down? Imagine that.

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  • 1
    Nov
    2012
    1:15pm, EDT

    War veterans hit Sandy's front lines for rescues, cleanup

    Courtesy Mike Lee

    Team Rubicon's "DC Response Team" clears a tree in the Capitol Hill nieghborhood. Left to right: Lourdes Tiglao, Neil Landsberg, Kiara Baginski, Dan Pick.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    Up to his armpits in flood water, flanked by darkened buildings and submerged vehicles, Iraq veteran Peter Meijer felt oddly at home Monday night as he trudged through the streets of Brooklyn at the height of Sandy's fury: "The right place at the right time with the right mission."

    With a fellow veteran at his side, Meijer had driven a van from a Brooklyn high school-turned-evacuation shelter to the Gerritsen Beach neighborhood, stopping only when the van's tires met the storm surge. From there, the pair went on foot. With 911 phone lines down, the Army reservist was trying to reach and rescue a man who had climbed into his attic with his dog to escape the rising tide. Back at the shelter, the man's wife — who had been on the phone with him — pleaded Meijer to try to save him.

    A team of volunteers who were also hit hard by the storm, put their needs aside to help neighbors with first aid and food. NBC's Stephanie Gosk reports.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "She said the water was up to his knees, then it was up to his waist. Nobody could reach the police. We were 15 minutes away. I peer-pressured my partner, Marvin Avilez, into going out there," said Meijer, 24, who served in Iraq during 2010 and 2011. "When the road ended, we hopped out. On the way, we found a dude wading in the water, pulling a row boat. He was a former Marine recon guy, going house to house to rescue folks.

    "It was during the brunt of the storm. There were eerie moments when the wind was blowing 70 miles per hour, then where it went down to nothing, then back to 70. Water up to my chest. Cars under water. It was like 'End of Days' stuff out there." 


    Meijer is one of 50 veterans dispatched this week into storm-battered areas from Team Rubicon — a nonprofit, 4,000-member, all-volunteer army composed almost entirely of former military members who served after 9/11, many of them in combat. They typically join forces with federal and local authorities to help during natural catastrophes such as the April 2011 outbreak of tornadoes in Tuscaloosa, Ala., that killed more than 340 people. 

    The multiple ways in which the military is helping New Jersey and New York recover from Hurricane Sandy. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    Loosely formed in 2010 to aid earthquake victims in Haiti, Team Rubicon quickly melded into a tightly run disaster-relief machine with a military style and sharp focus, said Matt Pelak, the organization's director of strategic partnerships. He was deployed to Iraq in 2004 with the U.S. Army. 

    "In Haiti, they realized they were onto something," said Pelak, now a full-time firefighter and paramedic in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. "They were realizing: We’re home from war and we have these skills and we’re good in that environment.  

    Slideshow: Sandy slams into East Coast

    David Friedman / NBC News

    Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

    Launch slideshow

    "In Tuscaloosa, a ton more veterans showed up than we expected. At end of day, we got around the campfire and talked about our deployment experiences. We realized we're not just helping other Americans, we're also helping each other, giving each other self confidence, giving direction."

    In the wake of the superstorm, people are banding together across New York City and New Jersey, offering power, food and even Halloween fun to their neighbors who have been devastated by wind and floods. NBC's Jenna Bush Hager reports.

    Team Rubicon has engaged in roughly 50 more missions since the tornadoes. The group says it has "a good relationship" with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and with local authorities, emphasizing that it "doesn't freelance." 

    "We have our little niche and that's what we stick to," Pelak said. "We utilize military-style plans and military-style leaderships to be more effective with less overhead and less bureaucracy, to be fast. Our teams are good at improvising and adapting. That’s what veterans do best."

    Team Rubicon had a pre-existing relationship with the New York City Office of Emergency Management, which asked the veterans to help staff the city's command center and to problem-solve issues at some rescue shelters: lack of food, no power, people not getting along, Pelak said. Team Rubicon members arrived from Pennsylvania, Delaware, Virginia and Connecticut to help storm victims access their homes, help towns do damage assessment, and help clear debris from roadways and yards — in New York, Washington, D.C., and other eastern towns. 

    NBC's Katy Tur reports from Hoboken, N.J., where water is covering much of the city.

    Meijer, who lives in Manhattan, joined his Team Rubicon colleagues on Saturday in New York. By Wednesday, he estimates that he'd since had about eight total hours of sleep. 

    While helping smooth out operations at a Brooklyn shelter, Meijer met the frantic woman who told him about her trapped husband — a man in his 60s who has hip trouble. 

    "The whole reason you get involved in an organization like this is to not sit on the sidelines," Meijer said. 

    Drenched and peering through the darkness, they eventually found the couple's house in Brooklyn.

    Once inside, they saw that the flowing water already had topped the kitchen chairs. The man was indeed tucked into a crawlspace but debris from the storm surge was blocking the attic door. The veterans yanked the door open and freed the man and his dog. They eventually put him into the Marine's row boat and pulled him back to drier streets where he stepped into the van. 

    "We were able to bring him to the hurricane shelter to be with his wife and puppy," Meijer said. "It was cute." 

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • 'Pure mayhem' as New York City tries to get back to work
    • Wind, flames, Our Fathers: The inside story of Breezy Point's terrible night
    • NYC-area airports up and running, albeit slowly
    • New York trick-or-treaters defy Sandy to celebrate Halloween
    • As National Guard comes to rescue, so do NJ residents — with power outlets
    • How to avoid post-storm insurance and repair scams
    • For some New Yorkers, it's back to business as usual
    • New Jersey investigating reports of price gouging
    • Your Sandy photos: Show us the heroes in your life
    • Sandy's aftermath: How you can help

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    57 comments

    Military Veterans all over are usually the vanguard when disasters hit the community. After numerous typhoons on Guam in the mid to late 1980s, we helped clear debris, fallen palm trees etc from local areas in Tamuning and other towns in the Andersen AFB area. Welcome home Veterans and "hand salute" …

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  • 12
    Jul
    2012
    8:19pm, EDT

    D.C. officer reprimanded for alleged threat against Michelle Obama

    By Pete Williams, NBC News

    The Secret Service is downplaying reports that a Washington, D.C., police officer made a threat against first lady Michelle Obama during Wednesday morning roll call, NBC News reported. The police officer was removed from his unit and placed on administrative duties.

    But the agency is not concerned that the remark made by the officer constitutes any kind of actual threat. “Pump the brakes on this one,” a Secret Service official told NBC.

    Read more on the story at NBC Washington


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The police officer is a member of the official motorcade unit, according to the Washington, D.C. police and the Secret Service. A police lieutenant heard the officer making what he described as a threatening comment.


    According to the Washington Post, the officer allegedly said he would shoot the first lady and then pulled up a photo of a gun on his cell phone.

    Officials familiar with what happen say that it was a bad joke made by someone who should have known better. The officer, who is represented by the police union, has retained a lawyer. 

    "We're aware of it and taking the appropriate steps," said an official for the Secret Service.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Poll: Confidence in organized religion at all-time low
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    • Caught on camera: Shark steals fish off pole
    • Police: Wire mesh used to trap girl, 4, in bed

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    1304 comments

    The Secret Service is downplaying reports that a Washington, D.C. police officer made a threat against first lady Michelle Obama during Wednesday morning roll call, NBC News reported. The police officer was removed from his unit and placed on administrative duties.

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  • 18
    Apr
    2012
    4:51pm, EDT

    61 DC employees terminated -- for collecting jobless benefits

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    The proof was in the paychecks: After a review of city records, the mayor of Washington, D.C., has fired 61 people for collecting jobless benefits while also working for the city.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The 61 were among 92 employees suspended last February, when the investigation was first announced.

    "We’re not going to tolerate this kind of activity in the government," the Washington Post quoted Pedro Ribeiro, spokesman for Mayor Vincent Gray, as saying Tuesday.


    The checks were up to $20,000 per worker since 2009 and totaled about $800,000, the Post reported, citing city officials.

    The city expects to fire more employees, the Post added, while three were found to have been unaware that they were getting the jobless benefits. Another returned to work after repaying the money.

    The city has said it would refer the names of employees found to have defrauded the city to the U.S. attorney for prosecution.

    It also hired an outside auditor to review its jobless program.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    106 comments

    "Another returned to work after repaying the money." Really!? If you steal just save it and see if you get caught? If you do- JUST REPAY IT? and we hire you back?!! This kind of thinking is what entices criminals to take advantage of you in the first place. wow- we are really in so much trouble. (on …

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NBC News contributor covering health, business, military and travel. @writerdude Author of "The Third Miracle: An Ordinary Man, A Medical Mystery and a Trial of Faith" (Random House, 2011).

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