Thứ Năm, 30 tháng 3, 2017

Waching daily Mar 30 2017

MICHELLE: WELL, THE SHERIFF SAYS

HE SAW THIS COMING, BUT DID NOT

MINCE WORDS.

>> LET THERE BE NO DOUBT ABOUT

IT, BRANDON BRADLEY IS AN EVIL

THUG THAT DESERVES DIE FOR

TAKING THE LIFE OF BARBARA PILL.

MICHELLE: AT A NEWS CONFERENCE

TODAY, THE STATE ATTORNEY FOR

BREVARD COUNTY, AND THE COUNTY'

SHERIFF, SAID THEY ARE NOT

SURPRISED BY THE RULING, BUT

THEY DON'T AGREE.

>> MAY GOD HAVE MERCY UPON YOUR

SOUL.

MICHELLE: IN 2014 BRANDON LEE

BRADLEY WAS CONVICTED OF KILLING

DEPUTY BARBARA PILL, SHOOTING

HER TO DEATH AFTER SHE PULLED

HIM OVER.

BRADLEY WAS ACCUSED OF STEALING

ITEMS FROM A HOTEL.

THE SHOOTING OUTRAGED PEOPLE.

THE 13-YEAR VETERAN WAS BELOVED

AND RESPECTED.

>> I WILL TELL YOU THAT IT IS

UNFORTUNATE FOR THE FAMILY, FOR

OUR COMMUNITY, FOR OUR AGENCY TO

HAVE TO GO THROUGH THAT AGAIN.

MICHELLE: THE JURY THAT

CONVICTED BRADLEY, ALSO

SENTENCED HIM TO DEATH, BUT

BECAUSE THE VOTE WAS NOT

UNANIMOUS, 10-2, THE FLORIDA

SUPREME COUNT SAID THAT'S NOT

GOOD ENOUGH.

ALL JURY MEMBERS MUST AGREE ON

DEATH, SO WHILE THE CONVICTION

STANDS, THE DEATH PENALTY DOES

NOT.

WILL THE STATE SEEK THE DEATH

PENALTY ON THIS ROUND?

THE STATE ATTORNEY SAYS AT THIS

POINT THEY DON'T KNOW.

>> CANNOT IMAGINE A SCENARIO

IN WHICH WE WOULD NOT CONTINUE

TO SEEK THE DEATH PENALTY, BUT I

WANT INPUT FROM THE PILL FAMILY.

MICHELLE: BUT IN A PHONE

INTERVIEW WITH THE SLAIN

DEPUTY'S HUSBAND, STEVE PILL

MAKES HIS POSITION CLEAR.

>> I FIGURED WHEN A PERSON GOES

OUT AND WILLFULLY KILLS SOMEONE

AND THEY HAVE NO RESPECT FOR

, THAT PERSON'S LIFE, I DO NOT

HAVE RESPECT FOR THEIRS.

For more infomation >> Death sentence of man who killed Brevard deputy overturned - Duration: 1:53.

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News Conference: Oregon Final Four Preview - Duration: 25:32.

For more infomation >> News Conference: Oregon Final Four Preview - Duration: 25:32.

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News in 90 With Jillian Olsen - March 30, 2017 - Duration: 1:36.

What's up Bulls!?

I'm Jillian Olsen and this is News in 90.

With just a little over a month left in the semester it was time to celebrate your successes

and with the help of USF's Residence Hall Association you did just that.

All week long your residential communities and their hall councils were working hard

to put on the first ever Radical RezWeek for all of you.

From barbeques to carnivals and dunk tanks to cage dodgeball you saw it all.

Let's take a closer look at how your fellow bulls celebrated and supported their respective

communities.

School spirit was in the air as events began popping up this week.

Students flooded these spaces as the draw of community, conversation and, of course,

free food and fun brought them together.

As did the unique opportunities that stood before them.

While some students sat for a caricature to commemorate the events, others lined up to

take advantage of the rare opportunity to dunk a professional staff member or pie their

RAs in the face.

All while never missing out on a chance to rep USF and throw up that Bulls sign.

It was great seeing so many of you out this week celebrating your university.

Though, if you've missed out on the fun so far, don't worry, you still have one

last chance to experience RezWeek.

Make your way to Castor Beach tomorrow between 1 and 3 p.m. to close out the celebrations

at Radical RezFest.

I'm Jillian Olsen with Housing and Residential Education.

We're the best place to live.

Best place to work.

And the best place to learn.

I'll see you next week.

For more infomation >> News in 90 With Jillian Olsen - March 30, 2017 - Duration: 1:36.

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How the VA's Mistakes Are Sending Thousands of Veterans - politics - Duration: 5:56.

How the VA�s Mistakes Are Sending Thousands of Veterans into Debt

Nebraska � �You get all of these promises that, �Hey, you do 20 years and you�ll

get this.� And when it comes down to the end, it�s like, damn.

You really can�t support your family when they are taking your whole check away.�

That comment came from Army veteran Tad Steckler, 40, a retired master sergeant and winner of

a medal for heroism, in an interview with VICE News that ran Monday.

Steckler was discussing the traumatic ordeal he just experienced with Veterans Affairs

(VA).

In June of last year, Steckler�s wife opened a letter from the agency thinking it was her

husband�s monthly disability check.

Enclosed, however, was a bill from the VA to the tune of over $10,000.

The agency claimed Steckler had been overcompensated in error and that the debt must be paid.

The VA said the master sergeant�s monthly check would be withheld until it was.

�If Blue Cross Blue Shield gave you too much of a benefit, they would have to sue

you first; they couldn�t go straight into collections,� attorney Daniel Willman told

VICE News regarding the abrupt manner in which the government demands reimbursement.

�But because it�s the federal government, it can go straight into collections.�

For the Stecklers, the issue came down to marital status.

Steckler had taken his ex-wife and her two children off his military healthcare policy

when his divorce was finalized and had informed the Department of Defense of the split.

Thinking this was enough, he never informed the VA directly.

The master sergeant says if it was a mistake, it was an honest one.

But even still, he says the government has yet to show exactly how � and by how much

� he was overpaid.

�If we owe, then we own.

We get it,� he told VICE News.

�But can you show me what I owe and how?

I don�t know any businesses that would get away with something like this.�

After months of letters, filings, and phone calls � during which, the Stecklers were

informed the initial debt quote itself was a miscalculation, and that the family actually

owed nearly $22,000 � Tad and his wife Robyn were left with very few answers and even fewer

options.

In September of last year, they set up a payment plan with the VA to repay the supposed debt.

They opted to pay $360 a month over five years, to be drawn from Steckler�s disability check.

�They basically blackmail you with the option of losing your house and filing bankruptcy

or (to) go on a payment plan for some enigmatic, elusive, ever-changing debt,� said Robyn.

And the process took its toll on the veteran.

Robyn recounted to VICE News that throughout their dealings with the VA, she watched her

husband grow more and more depressed � to the point where she was worried he would harm

himself.

�In a few days I will have to start driving the girls to and from school again, and I

dread it,� Robyn wrote in one letter to the VA.

�I know we will worry that he is home alone during those times.

We cannot take him with us because with the added stress of this huge debt, his PTS symptoms

have increased and he is back to being unable to handle traffic, noise and becomes disoriented.�

Unfortunately, Tad Steckler is far from alone with these woes.

VICE News� investigation revealed that the VA sent out nearly 190,000 such overpayment

notices in 2016.

One combat medic from Idaho was told he owed the government nearly $10,000.

An Army sniper from Colorado is purported to owe over $11,000.

An NPR report from January of 2016 shed light on the case of Clay Hull, an army vet whose

military career ended when he was wounded by an improvised explosive device.

The government said Hull owed it $38,000 in reimbursement for payments received while

Hull was in prison for eighteen months on a weapons charge.

Hull fought the VA and eventually got the debt erased.

His attitude about the whole ordeal mirrors Steckler�s.

�If I�m in the wrong, I�ll admit it,� he told NPR.

�But I�m not going to let somebody just push me around, especially the VA.�

NPR�s investigation found that in 2015 alone, the VA overpaid vets by $24 million � money

it then tried to get back

As to the manner of that debt collection, VICE News wrote Monday that the VA says �there

is no limit on how much it can ask a vet to repay, and no limit on how far back the agency

is willing to go to collect overpayment debts.�

It�s not a system that works in a soldier�s favor, says Douglas Rosinski, an attorney

who represents veterans.

�VA is so fragmented that it is almost impossible to correct an error in the underlying facts

before VA turns the case over for collection,� he said.

�If the underlying facts are incorrect, which they are in many instances, it is nearly

impossible to jump through all the legal hoops to appeal the determination before VA executes

its recovery action.�

In all such cases, the burden is on the soldier to disprove the VA�s claims.

In all cases, as well, payments to veterans are withheld until

the agency is fully reimbursed.

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