Word: jailing
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...black self-responsibility and to the future of the black community. This march represents a resounding retort to the chilling statistic recently released that one third of all black males between the ages of 20 and 29 are somehow involved in the penal system, either on trial, in jail, or on parole...
...never been an outspoken proponent of black rights, and the fact that he has become a symbol of racial oppression seems paradoxical. When the race card become his ticket out of jail, he played it. It was not out of a quest for racial equality that the defense team crucified Mark Fuhrman or that Johnnie Cochran spent more time talking about blacks in America than he did about the evidence. It was simply a tactic...
...Bank when they came to light last February. Like Leeson, Iguchi was simultaneously in charge of making trades and recording them in his firm's back office--a combination that enabled him to conceal the true nature of the transactions. But unlike Leeson, who has remained in a German jail while Singapore continues its effort to extradite him, Iguchi traded nothing more exotic than U.S. Treasury securities. They are "as plain-vanilla a financial instrument as you can find," notes Marc Cohen, managing director at the Hermes Capital hedge-fund firm. That very simplicity should have made the fraud relatively...
Iguchi, who could face up to 30 years in prison and a $1 million fine if convicted of bank fraud and forgery, remained a mystery to his neighbors and colleagues as he languished in a Manhattan jail cell. He is divorced but has custody of his two teenage sons. The threesome moved from one neighborhood to another in 1991, finally settling into a house currently worth about $300,000. "I've never seen him, and we live right across the street," says Karen Donow of Kinnelon. "I've seen the kids playing basketball, but that's it. No one knew...
...that point, the Smiths retreated to the nearby home of a relative and the Tulls went to get their son out of jail. But Cathy Tull didn't stop there. That evening she solicited from a local physician's assistant, James Jordan, a letter stating that "any elective abortion could potentially cause medical and emotional damage to the mother at any stage of pregnancy." Though Jordan and the doctor who co-signed the letter, K.C. Bagby, had never examined Mary, they claimed that at 23 weeks an abortion "could not only be harmful...but even in the most extreme case...