Thursday, April 25, 2013

School District Missed and Ignored Long List of Serious Problems ...

FlaglerLive | April 24, 2013

The sum total of Shannon Diamond's admission of previous charges or arrests on his employee application in 2006. It was a gross understatement.

The sum total of Shannon Diamond?s admission of previous charges or arrests on his employee application in 2006. It was a gross understatement.

Sunday morning, Shannon Diamond, the assistant director at the Flagler County Youth Center, was arrested for the second time in 13 months for drunkenly behavior: he was charged with disorderly intoxication, theft and resisting arrest following an ugly incident at McCharacters, the Palm Coast bar at St. Joe?s Plaza. In March 2012, he?d been charged with DUI, found guilty, and served six months? probation.

He was given another chance last year by the school district, which runs the youth center on the campus of Flagler Palm Coast High School, under the direction of Cheryl Massaro and whoever is the principal at the high school (three have supervised Diamond: Nancy Willis, Jacob Oliva and Lynette Schott.)

Shannon Diamond

Shannon Diamond

But it wasn?t a second chance that the district was giving Diamond last year. Had the district properly conducted a criminal background check, had it verified Diamond?s own statements about his criminal background on his application, had it noticed that he had lied and left vast portions of that record unspoken, and had it taken not of its own documentation of two elementary school principals raising issues with Diamond as a substitute teacher, before his employment at the youth center?including, in one case, Diamond telling a 5th grader to ?get out of my face??Diamond?s history with the district might not have stretched as long.

That Diamond remained with the district despite a record, both internal and external, that the district could easily verify, raises questions about the thoroughness of the district?s background-check system. Diamond is currently on paid leave pending a review of his status by the district, which entails due process proceedings that apply to any employee facing disciplinary or criminal issues. A review of his employee and criminal record produced the following history.

Cursory Background Check

In late summer in 2006, Diamond, now ?32, applied to be a substitute teacher in the district.

When an employee or contractor is hired to work with the Flagler County school district, the individual must be fingerprinted and pass a criminal background check. Diamond paid the required $61 to process the documentation and was fingerprinted on Aug. 2, 2006. On Aug. 10, the district indicated that ?results have been received,? but even though the results are a public record, those results are not in Diamond?s file. Diamond was ?cleared to work,? a document states, with a mere ?x? next to the clearance.

The document is accompanied by a one-sheet check-list of ?steps completed? during the background check. Six steps are listed. There is a checkmark only next to the first one: ?Reviewed and evaluated the nature, recency and number of arrest(s)/conviction (s) in relation to the duties that are to be performed by the employee.?

The document was signed by Harriett Holiday, the district?s director of human resources.

By the absence of checkmarks next to the next five verification criteria, the document shows that there was no consideration of ?the applicant?s truthfulness in admitting previous arrests/convictions.? No references of prior employment history were obtained or reviewed. No court documents evaluating the arrest records ?and any document reflecting action of the court? were obtained or reviewed. No ?verbal explanation and/or written explanation from employee of the events of the arrest(s) [or] conviction(s)? were obtained or reviewed.

There was only one other checkmark on the sheet, next to the line: ?The aforementioned employee can begin employment with the system.?

Mischaracterizing a Criminal History

Yet in his application, Diamond had himself circled ?yes? six times to questions pertaining to his arrests and convictions on criminal offenses. But he also lied.

The application requires the applicant to explain every ?yes? answered on the sheet?not just convictions, but charges, too: where arrested, date, nature of the charges, level of the charges, and final disposition. Diamond listed only a 1999 arrest on a misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct, stating ?adjudication withheld? on final disposition.

It was a gross understatement.

In all, Diamond?s Marion County record shows seven cases with misdemeanor charges, and one with a felony, between 1999 and 2005. Diamond did not note a 1999 case reflecting his arrest on two charges of retail petit theft, with a guilty verdict on one of the charges and adjudication withheld on the other, and a sentence of 28 days in jail. It does not list DUI and reckless driving charges in 2002 that led to an acquittal on both charges. (That he was acquitted did not dispense him of noting on his employment application that he had been charged.) He does not list a battery charge in 2002 that was eventually dropped, or a failure to appear charge (even though he circled ?No? when asked if he had ever failed to appear for a court proceeding).

He did not list an aggravated battery felony charge, which was also eventually dropped. He did not list a resisting an officer charge in 2000, for which he was also found guilty (a first degree misdemeanor) in 2000. And he does not list a marijuana possession charge in 2000, for which adjudication was withheld, and over which he spent 26 days in jail. ?He was found guilty of disorderly conduct in 2001, and had a suspended sentence of two months in jail for disorderly conduct on an April 2001 charge.

Diamond, in his application, only explained the one disorderly conduct issue: ?I was 19 years old and it happened before I went to college in 2001. I was young and made a bad decision. I went on to play 4 years of basketball and improve myself.?

On Sept. 5, 2006, Holiday signed a recommendation for Diamond to be a substitute teacher.

Students in the Flagler County school district, of course, are routinely expelled for behavior less serious.

A Problematic Substitute Teacher

The document showed that the district had contacted only one reference on Diamond?s behalf, and none that Diamond had worked for. The reference the district contacted was Hugh Lewis, who was listed as having been a principal at the school for the blind and deaf in St. Augustine. But Lewis had never supervised him. Diamond listed three other references that had supervised him. The district did not contact them.

Holiday?s recommendation for employment includes a comment section that should reflect the substance of the discussion between district staff and the person making a recommendation on a prospective employee?s behalf. Only one word appears in the comment section after the discussion with Lewis: ?Recommend!?

Diamond listed three other references, each of whom had supervised him?at Flagler College, at a furniture store and at Sears (the latter two where he?d worked briefly, in summer jobs), with their phone numbers. None were contacted.

On Dec. 21, 2006, Cathy Shopovick, the executive secretary at Bunnell Elementary school, sent an email marked ?importance: high? to district personnel that read: ?Shannon Diamond subbed for us Mon-Wed. this week. We would like him to not be called in the future to sub here!? The email was added to Diamond?s file.

Five months later, after Diamond subbed at Rymfire Elementary, that school?s principal, Paula St. Francis, sent the following email about Diamond to Harriett Holiday, the district?s human resources director: ?We have a sub, Mr. Diamond, in our school who according to my staff has been on his cell all day long, has been watching sports?, playing computer games, sitting with his feet on the desk, wearing shorts to teach 5th grade, and told a very responsible student yesterday to ?get out of my face.? We also had 1 parent call and refuse to send their child to school today because of him. Please do not send him to RES anymore.?

State Denies Certification

In May 2008, Diamond was seeking a temporary certification from the Department of Education. The Flagler district?s human resources department forwarded the request to the state, asking if state officials needed any additional information to process the application. ?This file has been referred to Professional Practice Services (PPS) due to having a criminal background,? the state?s Bureau of Educator Certification staff replied on May 13 that year. ?We are waiting for clearance to proceed with this file.?

The state, apparently more thorough with its background checks than the district, had requested further documentation from Diamond. ?To date,? the state wrote Diamond in September, ?the Office of Professional Practices Services has not received the requested information; therefore, this office is closing your file. Your statement of eligibility and pending application for a Florida Educator Certificate are invalid.?

Youth Center Assistant Director

By then, Diamond had been hired as the assistant director at the youth center. Center director Cheryl Massaro had recommended his appointment in a July 2007 memo. For Diamond?s background, Massaro was relying on Diamond?s existing paperwork, application and background check, in his employee file: ?Shannon currently has a complete job application on file with the district, including finger prints,? Massaro wrote. Of course, the file was anything but complete, though Massaro had no way of knowing that?and when interviewed this week, was not aware of Diamond?s prior record of arrests in Marion County.

Several performance evaluations signed by Massaro and Nancy Willis, who was the principal at Flagler Palm Coast High School and also Diamond?s supervisor until, 2010, gave Diamond above-average?but not exceptional?reviews.

Under the question, ?What are your beliefs about the importance of education?? Diamond wrote: ?I want to support and challenge students to acuire (sic.) knowledge, exercise good citizenship, and adhere to high ethical standards.?

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Source: http://flaglerlive.com/53457/shannon-diamond-history/

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Google pays CEO a buck, 4 other execs get $124M

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Google CEO Larry Page and his longtime partner Sergey Brin limited their salaries to $1 apiece last year, while four other top executives received combined compensation packages totaling more than $124 million.

The breakdown disclosed in a regulatory filing Wednesday consisted mostly of stock awards that could ultimately be worth more or less money, depending on how Google's stock price fares in the future. Google Inc. also paid all four of the executives besides Page and Brin their maximum bonuses to reward them for their accomplishments during a year that saw the Internet search leader's stock price and earnings rise by 10 percent from 2011.

Page and Brin, who co-founded Google in 1998, have capped their salaries to $1 since the company went public in 2004. It's a symbolic gesture that other top Silicon Valley executives such as Apple Inc.'s late CEO Steve Jobs, and Yahoo Inc. co-founder Jerry Yang have made after amassing fortunes through the stock that they held in their respective companies.

Page, 40, and Brin, 39, are Google's two biggest stockholders, with stakes that are each currently worth about $20 billion.

Meanwhile, other Google executives are still looking to build their fortunes.

Last year's biggest windfall went to Nikesh Arora, who oversees the advertising sales that generated most of Google's $50 billion in revenue last year.

Arora's compensation package was valued at $46.7 million, including $10.8 million cash bonus to supplement his $650,000 salary. The bonus included an $8 million discretionary payment that was boosted by a decision to cancel some of Arora's stock awards in exchange for $4.7 million in cash, according to the Google proxy statement inviting shareholders to the company's June 6 annual meeting at its Mountain View, Calif., headquarters.

Arora's pay last year more than doubled from $23.2 million in 2011.

Patrick Pichette, Google's chief financial officer, and David Drummond, the company's top lawyer, both received hefty raises, too. Pichette's compensation package was valued at $38.7 million, more than doubling from $18.3 million in the previous year. Drummond's pay climbed 71 percent to $31.3 million last year.

Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt's compensation plunged last year after the company gave him stock valued at nearly $94 million in 2011 in appreciation of his decade-long stint as CEO.

When Page took over as CEO two years ago, Schmidt accepted the company's offer to raise his salary from $1 to $1.25 million. Including a $6 million bonus and other perquisites, Schmidt's compensation last year was valued at $7.6 million. That was a 92 percent decline from his $101 million package in 2011.

Schmidt is in the process of selling up to 3.2 million shares of Google stock this year. As of April 8, he owned about 6.9 million shares of Google stock, down from 7.6 million shares at the end of last year. His remaining stake in Google is worth about $5.6 billion, based on Wednesday's closing price of $813.45 for the company's stock.

The Associated Press formula calculates an executive's total compensation by adding salary, bonuses, perks, above-market interest that the company pays on deferred compensation and the estimated value of stock and stock options awarded during the year.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-04-24-US-Google-Executive-Compensation/id-c6567edd875349e38b14dafff2506ced

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Italy president calls centre-left official Letta

By Paolo Biondi

ROME (Reuters) - Italian President Giorgio Napolitano called Enrico Letta, deputy head of the center-left Democratic Party, to the Quirinale Palace, indicating he was likely to be asked to form a new coalition government.

The new government, which could take office in a matter of days, would be backed primarily by the rival center-left and center-right groupings, which had hitherto refused to cut a deal following inconclusive elections in late February.

Formation of a government would end two months of damaging political impasse in Italy and send a signal to markets that the country might at last be ready to make a start on much-needed reforms.

Letta, the nephew of former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi's long-time chief of staff Gianni Letta, is considered a moderate. He is close to former party leader Pier Luigi Bersani, who resigned at the weekend after rebels sabotaged him in the voting for a new president, which ended with Napolitano being re-elected.

Berlusconi's People of Freedom (PDL) party, Letta's PD and the centrist Civic Choice movement of outgoing premier Mario Monti have all said they will cooperate with whomever Napolitano chooses.

"Given the crisis the country finds itself in, the country needs a strong, a durable government that can make important decisions," Berlusconi said after meeting Napolitano.

Letta said on Tuesday his party would back any government committed to tackling the "social-economic emergency," and enacting serious political reform, including changes to a dysfunctional electoral law considered largely responsible for the two-month long political stalemate.

In February's general election, the center-left narrowly won a majority in the lower house but failed to win control of the Senate and was not able to form a government.

Hopes that the deadlock would soon be over have given a further boost to financial markets, with the yield on 10-year Italian government bonds dropping below 4 percent and the spread, or risk premium over German bonds, narrowing.

Italy's economy has been the most sluggish in Europe for more than a decade and mired in a deep recession since the middle of 2011, with no recovery in sight.

POLITICAL "IRRESPONSIBILITY"

Napolitano angrily scolded the parties on Monday when he was inaugurated for an unprecedented second term, berating them for their "irresponsibility" in prolonging the political stalemate for nearly two months.

He threatened to resign unless the parties agreed to cooperate and find some middle ground on reforms.

The PD has emerged the most scarred from the crisis and its fractures could threaten the stability of the next government given the hostility among many in the party to any deal with Berlusconi, their enemy for almost two decades.

Deep internal divisions worsened when Bersani was unable to make a government deal with either Berlusconi's center-right or the shock new third political force, Beppe Grillo's 5-Star Movement.

Berlusconi has capitalized on the center-left's woes. One poll gave the center-right a clear lead of around 8 points.

The anti-establishment 5-Star Movement, which won a quarter of the vote and speaks for millions of Italians disillusioned with an entire political class, told Napolitano it would sit in opposition and may support specific reforms.

The Left Ecology Freedom party (SEL), a partner of the PD in the February election, and Berlusconi's allies in the Northern League also said they would not join a coalition led by Amato.

(Additional reporting by James Mackenzie; Editing by Robin Pomeroy, Barry Moody and Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italy-president-set-announce-choice-prime-minister-054722232.html

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Cancer cells' Achilles' heel revealed

Apr. 24, 2013 ? Scientists from the Manchester Collaborative Centre for Inflammation Research (MCCIR) have discovered why a particular cancer drug is so effective at killing cells. Their findings could be used to aid the design of future cancer treatments.

Professor Daniel Davis and his team used high quality video imaging to investigate why the drug rituximab is so effective at killing cancerous B cells. It is widely used in the treatment of B cell malignancies, such as lymphoma and leukemia -- as well as in autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis.

Using high-powered laser-based microscopes, researchers made videos of the process by which rituximab binds to a diseased cell and then attracts white blood cells known as natural killer (NK) cells to attack. They discovered that rituximab tended to stick to one side of the cancer cell, forming a cap and drawing a number of proteins over to that side. It effectively created a front and back to the cell -- with a cluster of protein molecules massed on one side.

But what surprised the scientists most was how this changed the effectiveness of natural killer cells in destroying these diseased cells. When the NK cell latched onto the rituximab cap on the B cell, it had an 80% success rate at killing the cell. In contrast, when the B cell lacked this cluster of proteins on one side, it was killed only 40% of the time.

Professor Davis says: "These results were really unexpected. It was only possible for us to unravel the mystery of why this drug was so effective, through the use of video microscopy. By watching what happened within the cells we could clearly identify just why rituximab is such an effective drug -- because it tended to reorganise the cancerous cell and make it especially prone to being killed."

He continues: "What our findings demonstrate is that this ability to polarise a cell by moving proteins within it should be taken into consideration when new antibodies are being tested as potential treatments for cancer cells. It appears that they can be up to twice as effective if they bind to a cell and reorganise it."

The findings from this study have been published online today on the website of the journal Blood. The research was carried out in collaboration with MedImmune, the global biologics research and development arm of AstraZeneca.

Commenting on the research Dr Matt Sleeman, Senior Director of Biology at MedImmune said: "Not only is this a great observation that can influence how we as a biotech company identify and design future therapies, it also shows the innovative 'out of the box' thinking that can be achieved by working in close partnership with academics at the top of their field. This unique partnership, bringing together industry and academia, demonstrates a real catalyst of scientific change within the UK, and I am excited by the potential of the MCCIR to bring further innovation that could ultimately bring benefit to patients."

Much of the research for this study was carried out during Professor Davis' time at Imperial College London. He will be continuing to use high quality video imaging at a microscopic level to investigate immunology at the MCCIR.

Professor Davis and MedImmune would like to acknowledge the funding they received from the Medical Research Council which helped make this study possible.

Videos: http://bloodjournal.hematologylibrary.org/content/early/2013/04/23/blood-2013-02-482570/suppl/DC1

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Manchester University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. D. Rudnicka, A. Oszmiana, D. K. Finch, I. Strickland, D. J. Schofield, D. C. Lowe, M. A. Sleeman, D. M. Davis. Rituximab causes a polarisation of B cells which augments its therapeutic function in NK cell-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity. Blood, 2013; DOI: 10.1182/blood-2013-02-482570

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/uNtotQMZrJk/130424102940.htm

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

PFT: Milliner revealed to have had five surgeries

PeadGetty Images

As this year?s crop of incoming players, especially those taken in the first two rounds, celebrate their new circumstances, they need to keep one thing in mind.

Several months from now, there?s a chance they will think those circumstances stink.

Rams running back Isaiah Pead fell right into that category last season, despite being the 50th overall pick in the 2012 draft.? Presumed to be the heir apparent to Steven Jackson, Pead became largely forgotten last year, sliding behind seventh-rounder Daryl Richardson.

?Honestly, I would call it miserable,? Pead said of his rookie season, via the University of Cincinnati official website. ?Miserable life.? Miserable four-five months.?

When the season finally ended, Pead packed up and left.

?I took off and I didn?t come back until it was time to,? Pead said.? ?I just wanted to stay out of this area, I came back for a couple days to pack up then all the memories and walking back into my house by myself, had a couple days by myself, I just needed to get out of that area.?

Pead is partially responsible for his misery.? He didn?t deal well with being demoted behind a guy taken 202 spots later, showing up late for a pair of meetings.

?I was literally fed up with football,? Pead said.? ?Not a quitter, not quitting, I was just tired of football.? Tired of practice for the day and I would just lay there play video games and whatnot because it was so miserable, so stressful.?

With a fresh opportunity coming from the departure of Jackson, Pead is ready to turn the page.

?Whole new era, whole new attitude, whole new team, whole new Pead,? Pead said. ??I?m not going to sit and linger on something, but I am one to not forget about a situation.? I am moving on from last year, last year is last year, but I have not forgot about last year.? I wouldn?t call it revenge, but the chip that I put on my shoulder is just a little bigger.?

He needs to perform more than a little better to erase the head start that Richardson earned in 2012.? While Pead finished with 10 carries for 54 yards, Richardson had 98 carries for 475 yards.

Pead also needs to hope the Rams don?t use one of their high draft picks on a rookie who?ll get a chance to in 2013 that which Pead couldn?t in 2012.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/23/dee-milliner-has-had-five-surgeries/related/

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The Reluctant Fundamentalist Video Movie Review

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A young Pakistani man living in New York City finds his world turned upside down after 9/11 in The Reluctant Fundamentalist, one of the many films premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival this week. Watch our review to find out why we think this movie, costarring Kate Hudson and Liev Schreiber, is one to seek out once it comes out in wide release.

View Transcript?? Transcript

Source: http://www.buzzsugar.com/Reluctant-Fundamentalist-Video-Movie-Review-29768824

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Jon Stewart Drubs CNN Again For Boston Bombing Reporting (VIDEO)

You might think Jon Stewart is being overly harsh in taking CNN to task yet again for its Boston bombing coverage... until you see this set of clips from the dramatic conclusion to last week's nightmare manhunt.

To sum it up here would be a disservice to the segment. Suffice to say, CNN went from a "say it first and have Anderson Cooper correct it later" style to a "sandlot football, 'EVERYONE GO LONG'" model. Much, much better.

Or not better at all.

Watch "The Daily Show" clip above and let us know what you think. And savor that closing thought... it's a doozy.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/23/jon-stewart-drubs-cnn-aga_n_3138172.html

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