Saturday, 28 April 2012

Council Handed Names of Residents Who Complained About Anti-Social Behaviour to Trouble-Makers


'Police are now patrolling a housing estate around the clock to protect the residents involved. Officials at Islington Council in north London have described the blunder as "unforgivable" and are now trying to limit the potential damage caused by the "serious data leak" which has already led to harassment.
The bundle of evidence gathered in order to serve injunctions on 13 suspected miscreats - which would ban them from the Andover estate in Holloway - was delivered to 10 of the troublemakers along with the injunctions.
It is understood the details - including names, street names and phone numbers of 51 people in the area who had made complaints - had been photocopied in the council's legal department and stapled to the injunctions.'

Seven Lies about Homeschoolers

 

Tony Robbins Puts National Debt in Perspective

 

Home Owners Across the Nation Sue All Bank Servicers and Their Offshore Havens; Spire Law Officially Announces Filing of Landmark Lawsuit

'In a lawsuit alleged to involve the largest money laundering network in United States history, Spire Law Group, LLP -- on behalf of home owners across the Country -- has filed a mass tort action in the Supreme Court of New York, County of Kings. Home owners across the country have sued every major bank servicer and their subsidiaries -- formed in countries known as havens for money laundering such as the Cayman Islands, the Isle of Man, Luxembourg and Malaysia -- alleging that while the Obama Administration was publicly encouraging loan modifications for home owners, it was privately ratifying the formation of these shell companies in violation of the United States Patriot Act, and State and Federal law.
The case further alleges that through these obscure foreign companies, Bank of America, J.P. Morgan, Wells Fargo Bank, Citibank, Citigroup, One West Bank, and numerous other federally chartered banks stole hundreds of millions of dollars of home owners' money during the last decade and then laundered it through offshore companies.'

Turfed Out of Her Hospital Bed at 2am and Sent Home: Is This Really the Way to Treat a Dementia Patient of 89

'An elderly dementia patient was discharged from hospital at 2am after hospital bosses declared it was ‘in her best interests’.
Eileen Hansbury, 89, had been admitted nine hours earlier after suffering a suspected broken nose in a fall. But despite being made comfortable in bed, she was woken up in the middle of the night, put in an ambulance and sent home.
Her appalled family say hospital bosses simply threw the confused old lady out in the early hours so they could free a bed.'