The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, March 12, 2010 - 3 NEWS BRIEFS DETROIT * Detroit woman involved in federal food-aid fraud Authorities say a Detroit city employee sold food-assistance cou- pons for years to people who didn't qualify, costing the U.S. govern- ment as much as $648,000. A judge unsealed a criminal complaint yesterday against Jac- queline Taylor. A federal agent says Taylor sold WIC coupons and deb- it-style cards for about eight years while working at a health clinic on Detroit's east side. The federal WIG program pays " for certain grocery items for moth- ers and children. Taylor appeared to turn remorse- ful. A year ago, agents searching her workplace found a handwritten note in her Bible that said, "Dear Lord, I have done somethingwrong as you know. ... So please I hope they look over this." A phone message seeking com- ment was left for Taylor. WASHINGTON Obama to donate Nobel Prize money to Haiti survivors President Barack Obama plans to donate the $1.4 million from his Nobel Peace Prize to helping stu- dents, veterans' families and survi- vors of Haiti's earthquake, among others, drawing attention to orga- nizations he said "do extraordinary work." Obama is giving a total of $750,000 to six groups that help kids go to college. Fisher's House, which provides housing for families with loved ones at Veterans Admin- istration hospitals, will receive $250,000, the White House said Thursday. And the Clinton-Bush Haiti Fund, for which two former presidents are raising money to rebuild earthquake-ravaged Haiti, will receive $200,000. "These organizations do extraor- dinary work in the United States and abroad helping students, veter- ans and countless others in need," Obama said in a statement. "I'm proud to support their work." Obama was chosen for the Nobel award more for his aspirations and approach than his accomplish- ments thus far. BAGHDAD, Iraq Iraqi journalist dies in military gunfire U.S. troops opened fire on a car in western Baghdad, killing an Iraqi journalist and her husband, a police official said yesterday. Morgue officials confirmed the deaths and said the bodies of Aseel al-Obeidi and her husband were riddled with bullets in Wednes- day's shooting in the Tobchi neigh- borhood. AI-Obeidi worked for Dijla tele- vision, an independent Baghdad station that recently closed because of financial problems. The U.S. military said it was investigating the killing of two Iraqis during a joint patrol by American and Iraqi troops in west- ern Baghdad on Wednesday, but it did not give any details or confirm if that was the same shooting that involved the journalist and her hus- band. PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti Kidnapped aid workers released Kidnappers have freed two Swiss women snatched off the streets of Haiti's capital and held for five days, officials said yester- day. It is the first reported kid- napping since Haiti suffered a magnitude-7 earthquake with catastrophic damage on Jan. 12. More than 5,000 prisoners fled jails that collapsed or were dam- aged in the temblor. Only about 200 have been captured. Doctors Without Borders con- firmed the kidnapping. Agency spokesman Michel Peremans said the victims were released Wednesday night. He would not say if a ransom was paid. Doctors Without Borders is one of hundreds of international aid agencies that have flooded into Haiti to help. A security alert sent to non- governmental agencies, obtained by The Associated Press, said the 0 two were Swiss women working for the France-based agency. -Compiled from Daily wire reports NYC to pay up to $675M to settle 9/11 health cases CARLOS OSORIO/AP Ex-Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick addresses the media outside the Frank Murphy Hall of Justice in Detroit on Tuesday. Former Detroit mayor Kilpatrick owes $ 870K Judge calls for short restitution hearing DETROIT (AP) - An ongoing restitution battle between ex- Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and prosecutors may come down to a final one- or two-day hearing in Wayne County Circuit Court. Kilpatrick, his attorneys or prosecutors have either appeared or filed motions on the issue, or judges have made rulings in the matter, on at least nine occasions since Feb. 10. But on Thursday, Circuit Court Presiding Judge Timothy Kenny made it clear that the proceed- ings should be nearing an end with a March 24 probation viola- tion hearing. "I do think ... both sides need to have the opportunity to fairly and completely litigate the issues," Kenny said. "It really should be done swiftly and conclusively." Defense attorney Michael Allan Schwartz said he would need about a day to present his case, while prosecutors expect to use transcripts from earlier hear- ings before Judge David Groner. Kenny also on yesterday denied Schwartz' appeal to disqualify Groner over claims the judge was biased against Kilpatrick and had improper communications with prosecutors on a bench warrant charging the former mayor with violating his probation. Kenny's ruling was a "partial victory," Kilpatrick spokesman Mike Paul told reporters outside the court building. "What we were seeking all the time was fairness, accountabil- ity," Paul said. "And the judge added something that was just as important: 'swiftly.' And that's what we feel we're going to have now. Judge Groner, we feel that he will deal with us in a more just and accountable way." Kilpatrick also was allowed to return to his home outside Dallas after spending the past two days in Detroit. The latest flurry of court action followed a six-day resti- tution hearing that started in October and ended in January when Groner ordered Kilpatrick to make two lump sum payments of $79,011 and $240,000 toward restitution. On Feb. 10, Kilpatrick's law- yers said he was having trouble coming up with the first payment that was due Feb. 19 and filed an emergency motion with Groner asking the judge to reconsider. Six days later, Groner ruled he would not consider the order. A bench warrant was issued for Kilpatrick's arrest when he failed to pay the full amount. Defense attorneys went to the state Appeals Court which post- poned a brobation violation arraignment, but later denied a request to stay Groner's restitu- tion payment order. Kilpatrick was arraigned Tues- day and kept free on a $10,000 personal bond. Kilpatrick agreed to pay the city $1 million in restitution fol- lowing pleas in 2008 to two criminal cases tied to a text-mes- saging sex scandal involving a former aide. He resigned as mayor, spent 99 days in jail and took a job as a computer software salesman for Texas-based Covisint after his release in February 2009. Prosecutors accused Kilpat- rick last year of not being hon- est about his finances and those of his wife, Carlita. They proved during earlier restitution hear- ings that tens of thousands of dollars were moved from bank Settlement offer awaits approval of judge, workers NEW YORK (AP) - After years of fighting in court, lawyers rep- resenting the city, construction companies and more than 10,000 ground zero rescue and recovery workers have agreed to a settle- ment that could pay up to $657.5 million to responders sickened hy dust from cle destroyed World Trade Center. Thesettlementwas announced yesterday evening by the WTC Captive Insurance Co., a spe- cial entity established to indem- nify the city and its contractors against potential legal action as they moved to clean up the site after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. The deal, which still must be approved by a judge and the workers themselves, would make the city and other companies represented by the insurer liable for a minimum of $575 million, with more money available to the sick if certain conditions are met. Most if not all of the money would come out of a $1 billion grant from the Federal Emergen- cy Management Agency. Mayor Michael Bloomberg called the settlement "a fair and reasonable resolution to a com- plex set of circumstances." "The resolution of the World Trade Center litigation will allow the first responders and workers to be compensated for injuries suffered following their work at Ground Zero," Bloomberg said in a statement. Marc Bern, a senior partner with the law firm Worby, Groner, Edelman & Napoli, Bern LLP, which negotiated the deal, said it was "a good settlement." "We are gratified that these heroic men and women who performed their duties with- out consideration of the health implications will finally receive just compensation for their pain and suffering, lost wages, medi- cal and other expenses, as the U.S. Congress intended when it appropriated this money," he said in a statement. Workers who wish to par- ticipate in the settlement would need to prove they had been at the World Trade Center site or other facilities that handled debris. They also would have to turn over medical records and provide other information aimed at weeding out fraudulent or dubious claims. For the settlement to be enforced, 95 percent of the work- ers would need to agree to be bound by its terms. The agreement comes with just two months to go until the first trials are to begin in the case. Thousands of police offi- cers, firefighters and construc- tion workers who put in time at the 16-acre site in lower Man- hattan had filed lawsuits against the city, claiming it sent them to ground zero without proper pro- tective equipment. Many of those workers now claim to have fallen ill. A major- ity complained of a respiratory problem similar to asthma, but the suits also sought damages for hundreds of other types of ail- ments, including cancer. accounts in ms name to his wite' 7C accounts and argued some of that should go toward restitution. Groner agreed and ordered the two large lump sum payments, in addition to the $3,000 monthly payments Kilpatrick already is making. On Tuesday, Kilpatrick told reporters that he owed about $870,000 in restitution. l SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY A N PRIORITIESAN D OPPORTUNITI ES INTrHE OBAMAADMINISTRATION J Staying in Ann Arbor this summer? Looking for a job? TheMichigan Daily Busess Departnt is currently hiring dedicated and energetic individuals to be Advertising Account Executives for this summer. iease send resumes or questionC the position to dailydisplay'&gmailC.om to the attention of Ju ianna Cr SPEAKER: JOHN P. H OLDREN President Obama's Science and Technology Advisor and the Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Monday, March 22, 201:0 i