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濮阳东方看妇科病技术非常专业
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发布时间: 2025-05-31 22:12:43北京青年报社官方账号
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  濮阳东方看妇科病技术非常专业   

We’re excited that you’re excited about the #WhiteCastleArizona opening. ?? Cruise on in and join us. pic.twitter.com/Gf96Ckm4dX— White Castle (@WhiteCastle) October 23, 2019 187

  濮阳东方看妇科病技术非常专业   

Twila Szymanski lowers the scope on her rifle, takes aim and hits a target in the distance. The shooting range is where she and her husband go to relax and forget the things they've been worrying about, she said. But some experiences are hard to shake. "To trust somebody you know after a sexual assault happens … it has been so difficult to work through that," Szymanski said. Szymanski, 40, has lived on the Fort Peck Reservation in Northeast Montana since she was born and is an enrolled member of the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux tribes. She said she's been assaulted three times. "I was a victim when I was 13, a victim when I was 14, and a victim when I was 34," she said. CAPTION: Twila Szymanski is a lifelong resident of the Fort Peck Reservation. (Newsy / Carrie Cochran)"Native women have told me that what you do when you raise a daughter in this environment is you prepare her for what to do when she's raped — not if, but when,"said Sarah Deer, University of Kansas professor and author of "The Beginning and End of Rape: Confronting Sexual Violence in Native America."More than half of American Indian and Alaska Native women will experience sexual violence in their lifetimes, according to the Department of Justice."You talk to Native women who have lived their whole lives on a reservation, and they say, 'I can't think of anyone, any woman that I know who hasn't been victimized in this way,'"said Deer, a citizen of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation of Oklahoma.National data on sex crimes in tribal communities are scarce, so Newsy spent 18 months focused on two reservations: the Fort Peck Reservation in Montana and the Fort Berthold Reservation in North Dakota. After analyzing exclusively obtained documents and conducting dozens of interviews, a stark picture emerged.Sexual assault investigations can fall through the cracks when tribes and the federal government fail to work together. Even for those few cases that end in a conviction in tribal court, federal law prevents most courts from sentencing perpetrators for more than a year.Survivors who come forward to report assaults often find themselves trapped in small communities with their perpetrators, and several said the broken legal system contributed to their trauma.A complicated legal arrangementThe federal government has a unique political and legal relationship with the 573 federally recognized tribes. The tribes are sovereign, with jurisdiction over their citizens and land, but the federal government has a treaty obligation to help protect the lives of tribal members. This legal doctrine, called the "trust responsibility," goes back to the treaties that the U.S. signed with tribal nations in the 18th and 19th centuries.The array of Supreme Court decisions and federal laws that followed resulted in a complicated legal arrangement among federal, state and tribal jurisdictions, making it difficult for survivors of sexual assault to find justice. CAPTION: Sarah Deer is author of "The Beginning and End of Rape: Confronting Sexual Violence in Native America." (Newsy / Carrie Cochran)"A lot of times, when I try to explain it, people don't even believe me because it's so bizarre," Deer said. "And the reason it's bizarre is because there's been this patchwork of laws that don't talk to each other over the last century."Only one yearThe tribal courthouse on the Fort Peck reservation is a small brick building. The front desk is lined with pamphlets about dating violence and sexual assault."The trauma that has developed over the generations ... some of the assaults are generational, and they're within the same home," said Chief Judge Stacie Smith, a member of the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux tribes. "Pretend it wasn't there, and maybe it’ll go away, you know, the next generation it won't happen again. But it continues."Smith wants to break the cycle, but tribal courts face major restrictions, including a one-year limit on sentences regardless of the crime and almost no jurisdiction over non-Indians.CAPTION: Stacie Smith is chief judge of the Fort Peck Tribal Court. (Newsy / Carrie Cochran)"When you think about rape and you think about somebody who is a perpetrator of that kind of crime, and you think, 'What do they deserve?' One year doesn't usually sound like the right answer," Sarah Deer said.In 2010, the sentencing cap was expanded to three years per offense through the Tribal Law and Order Act as long as the tribes were able to meet certain requirements. Only 16 tribes have implemented the three-year sentencing enhancement.Fort Peck is one of them.When the law took effect, there were no attorneys, no one with a law degree in the court system.Smith decided to leave her young daughters in order to attend law school hundreds of miles away. This would help the tribal court meet the federal requirements and give it more authority.The tribal court was able to hand out three-year sentences starting in late 2012. From 2013-2018, there were three sexual assault convictions, but none of them had enhanced sentences. The longest sentence was still one year."We use the enhanced sentencing sparingly because we want it to have meaning," said Scott Seifert, a member of the Comanche Nation of Oklahoma and Fort Peck's lead tribal prosecutor.Going federalTribal court is not the only option for those seeking justice for sexual assault. In most cases, the FBI, Bureau of Indian Affairs, or BIA, and U.S. attorneys' offices are federally mandated to work with the tribes to investigate and prosecute "major crimes," which include sexual assault."So, if you have a rape case or a child sex abuse case and you do want to see that perpetrator put away, the best possibility for you is that it will go federal," said Deer.That responsibility falls to the U.S. attorneys' offices, which have seen their funding and staffing in Indian County cut by more than 40% in the past seven years, according to the Department of Justice.Data Newsy obtained from the DOJ shows that the Montana U.S. Attorney's Office declined 64% of cases of sexual assault in the past four fiscal years.CAPTION: Kurt Alme is the U.S. Attorney for Montana. (Newsy / Carrie Cochran)The U.S. attorney for Montana, Kurt Alme, said that a lot of these cases are declined because of weak or insufficient evidence, "and it is something that has to be worked on," he said.According to the BIA, tribal courts received less than 5% of the funding that was needed in 2016. Law enforcement received 22% of what was needed, and jails received less than 50%.Less than half of the law enforcement agencies that the bureau funds and oversees are properly staffed, said Charles Addington, director of the BIA Office of Justice Service and a member of the Cherokee Nation.In August 2018, Fort Peck Tribal Police had funding for 21 positions, but nine of them were vacant, said Ken Trottier Jr., criminal investigations supervisor for the Fort Peck Tribes and a member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa."We have a hiring pool that is literally nothing here on the reservation, even though we open it up to off-reservation people," he said. "There's no houses for sale. No houses for rent. Where's that person going to live?"Constant turnover and understaffing can lead to an undertrained police department, Deer said."[The survivor is] waiting for help. They don't know if help is coming. They don't know if the help is going to be compassionate and trained," Deer said. "The system is not feeling like a safe, productive system to them anymore."Big money but little justiceThree hours east of Fort Peck, the Fort Berthold Reservation in North Dakota sits on the Bakken oil basin and has an annual budget of 0 million. The reservation is home to the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, or the Three Affiliated Tribes.Driving around the remote reservation, council member Dr. Monica Mayer points to a multimillion-dollar housing project that she says will soon have an aquatic center, baseball diamonds and mini golf.They've also built a million public safety and judicial center and increased staffing in the court system. In the past three years, the reservation has hired more than a dozen additional officers to help with what was an understaffed police department.CAPTION: Kurt Alme is the U.S. Attorney for Montana. (Newsy / Carrie Cochran)Despite this financial independence, the justice system still appears to be failing sexual assault survivors who decide to report."At every level, we are not adequately functioning to provide the services that are needed in a critical situation," Mayer said.The Fort Berthold tribal court does not have enhanced sentencing. The court sentenced three people for sexual assault from 2013 to mid-2018, according to court records. Sentences ranged from eight days to six months.The tribes' relationship with its federal partners — the BIA, the FBI and the U.S. attorneys — is crucial to helping survivors get justice. But based on interviews and records obtained from federal and tribal agencies, it's unclear if all sexual assaults on Fort Berthold were fully investigated by any agency in the past six years.The tribes are supposed to refer every major crime to either the BIA or the FBI for investigations. Both are charged with overseeing all major criminal investigations on Fort Berthold and will determine which agency takes the lead.The tribal criminal investigators had record of 66 sexual assault cases from January 2016 to September 2018. The BIA only had record of 10 investigations during that same time period. The FBI declined to provide any records.After Newsy asked about the status of these cases, Three Affiliated Tribes Police Captain Grace Her Many Horses, a member of the Oglala Sioux tribe from the Pine Ridge Reservation, said she would do a case file review."The priority for me, right now, is to go through those case files to find out what's been declined, why, and is there anything we can do to make it happen," she said. "I guess part of that is on me, too. I should know this by now."Grace Her Many Horses said she finished the case file review nearly a year later, but she did not provide the details of what she found, nor did she disclose whether the police referred all 66 cases up to their federal partners.Exactly one week after Newsy's last trip to Fort Berthold, during which reporters asked how sexual assaults and rapes are handled on the reservation, the Department of Justice and the BIA released a joint statement saying, "A number of concerns have been raised about public safety and criminal investigations on the Fort Berthold Reservation."Citing "the high rate of violence against women and children," it stated that the BIA was increasing the number of special agents from "one to two." As of the start of October, no second agent had started working on Fort Berthold.The United States Commission on Civil Rights has issued two reports on funding in Indian County, one in 2003 and an update in December 2018, called Broken Promises. The report said "the federal government continues to fail to support adequately the social and economic well-being of Native Americans," and that this "contributes to the inequities observed in Native American communities."Trying to make a differenceToday, Twila Szymanski works as the deputy court administrator for the Fort Peck Tribal Court, maintaining records and stats.Szymanski only reported one of her three assaults — the one when she was 14. Her case made it into federal court.The defendant pleaded guilty in 1995. He was sentenced to three years' probation and no prison time.CAPTION: Twila Szymanski is the deputy court administrator for the Fort Peck Tribal Court. (Newsy / Carrie Cochran)"Justice wasn't served, in my opinion," she said. "He was back in the community quickly, and I had to see him when this was all fresh."Szymanski is confronted with the memory of what happened to her each time a case comes up and each time she sees her perpetrator in the community.She said she uses her position in the court to go through cases and stop them from dropping through the cracks, and she is running for Fort Peck associate judge in the election this month."When the system has failed you time and time and time again, you don't feel empowered," Deer said. "It feels like a disconnect between this moment of 'Me Too' and the reality of Indian Country and sexual assault."Suzette Brewer is a writer specializing in federal Indian law, having written extensively on the Indian Child Welfare Act, environmental issues on reservations, the opioid crisis in Indian Country and violence against Native women and children. Her published books include “Real Indians: Portraits of Contemporary Native Americans and America’s Tribal Colleges” and “Sovereign: An Oral History of Indian Gaming in America.” She is the 2015 recipient of the Richard LaCourse-Gannett Foundation Al Neuharth Investigative Journalism Award for her work on the Indian Child Welfare Act. She is also a 2018 John Jay/Tow Juvenile Justice Reporting Fellow. She is a member of the Cherokee Nation and is from Stilwell, Oklahoma.You can watch"A Broken Trust" on Newsy's over-the-top streaming platforms, including Roku and FireTV, as well as online at newsy.com. For more details on where to watch, 13295

  濮阳东方看妇科病技术非常专业   

Twin 3-year-old girls in foster care were found dead Sunday in a hot vehicle in Georgia, according to a statement by the City of Hinesville.The statement said someone called 911 at 1:42 p.m. to report that two children who'd been missing had been found unresponsive in a vehicle in the backyard of a home.First responders arrived and found the two deceased toddlers inside. The temperature was around 92 degrees Fahrenheit at the time, according to CNN Weather.The girls, Raelynn and Payton Keyes, were in foster care, according to Whitney Morris-Reed, public relations manager for the City of Hinesville. Police said the girls didn't reside at the house where they were found but often spent time there."A search warrant for the home was obtained and GBI was contacted to assist with the investigation," according to the city's statement. "A crime scene unit processed the scene with the assistance from GBI and the bodies of the children were removed from the scene and taken to the crime lab. Autopsies will be performed on Monday, September 30."Captain Tracey Howard with Hinesville police 1106

  

Waiting in line is a necessary fate of travel, especially when dealing with security at the airport. It's the reason Trusted Traveler Programs like TSA Precheck and Clear are gaining more traction. "Cut lines. You know, time. Time is money, time is precious, and we need that," Clear customer Shavit Rootman says.The benefit is a faster security process, which also leads to a larger number of what the airline industry calls "trusted travelers".“What we're doing is providing a high level of security and certainty that the person that we're presenting is actually the person that they say they are," Clear Executive Vice President Howard Kass says.But the convenience only comes if you're willing to give up some private information. A form of identification, a photo and a fingerprint are necessary to become a part of the system. No need to be worried, though. Programs say your information isn't sold or shared, and it's well protected. When it comes down to it, the power is in your hands, whether you opt in or not."I don't really worry about the information side of it," says Craig Weller, a customer of both TSA Prechec and Clear. "I think most of that stuff is going to be tracked no matter what you do, so it's not that big of a deal to me, and I have nothing to hide." So, what are these programs? International travelers are often familiar with Global Entry, Nexus and Sentri. Those fall under the control of Customs and Border Protection. But the most popular programs here in the U.S. are TSA Precheck and Clear. TSA Precheck is run by the federal government, and Clear is a private company that coordinates with airports across the country.When taking a closer look at the details, TSA Precheck will cost you for five years. That breaks down to per year. Clear is 9 per year. But before considering cost, it is important to know what each program offers. With TSA Precheck, you won't have to go through the traditional security process."They are allowed to leave their shoes on at the checkpoint, and their belts. They're allowed to leave their lightweight jackets on, they can leave their electronics in their carry-on bag. They don't have to take out their laptops," Lisa Farbstein says. Farbstein is a spokesperson for the Transportation Security Administration.Clear, on the other hand, is a way to skip all lines, including the one at TSA Precheck."I got Clear because at this point there are so many people using TSA Precheck that sometimes the wait is just as long there," Weller said.When it comes to availability, TSA Precheck is in more than 200 airports nationwide, and Clear is in 30. That may not sound like a lot, but travelers say it really depends where you're going."Clear… it's growing so it's in a lot of places, but it's still not in a lot of the places i travel to, so it would only help me here," TSA Precheck customer Mike Lutz says."Most of the major airports now have it. They've been growing I think quickly enough that most of the time it's available," Weller says.How you join each program is also something to consider. For TSA Precheck, you need to make an appointment for an interview, but with Clear, you can do everything online."For Clear it's really easy. It's basically just online," Weller says. "You enter maybe a passport number or a social or something like that and it's almost instantaneous. With TSA Precheck there's an interview, you have to go to a border patrol place, and it's more of a process."Aside from their differences, both TSA Precheck and Clear say the programs are designed to complement each other."I don't want to get to the airport two hours in advance just in case the line's terrible, and if I have Clear and TSA Precheck, I can always cut that window down to about half an hour in advance and still make my flight," Weller says.Each of these programs has its perks. Clear will get you to the front of the security checkpoint faster, and TSA Precheck will get you through that checkpoint without the hassle of taking off your shoes. However, as more people sign up for precheck, those lines get longer as well, so if you're a frequent flyer and you believe "time is money," it may be worth it to sign up for both. 4215

  

WASHINGTON — Federal prosecutors have declined to charge former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, closing an investigation into whether he lied to federal officials about his involvement in a news media disclosure. That's according to a statement from McCabe's legal team on Friday. The decision resolves a criminal investigation that spanned more than a year and began with a referral from the Justice Department’s inspector general, which said McCabe repeatedly lied about having authorized a subordinate to share information with a newspaper reporter for a 2016 article about an FBI investigation into the Clinton Foundation. Prosecutors told McCabe’s lawyers they decided “not to pursue criminal charges" against him after careful consideration. 762

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