Dodane przez Morrissges dnia 14-12-2024 19:53
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Xumr Rudy Giuliani won t testify Tuesday in Georgia election probe
WASHINGTON In a forthcoming report triggered by an Associated Press investigation, the top watchdog at the Social Security Administration found the agency paid $20.2 million in benefits to more than 130 suspected Nazi war criminals, SS guards, and others who may have participated in the Third Reich atrocities during World War II.The report, scheduled for public release this week and obtained by the AP, used computer-processed data and other internal agency records to develop a comprehensive picture of the total number of Nazi suspects who received benefits and the dollar amounts paid out. The Social Security Administration last year refused AP request for those figures.The payments are far greater than previously estimated and occurred between February 1962 and January 2015, when a new law called the No Social Security for Nazis Act kicked in and ended retirement payments for four beneficiaries. The report do
stanley cup es not include the names of any Nazi suspects who received benefits.The large amount of the benefits and their duration illustrate how unaware the American public was of the influx of Nazi persecutors into the
stanley cup U.S., with estimates ranging as high as 10,000. Many lied about their Nazi past
stanley cup s to get into the U.S. and even became American citizens. They got jobs and said little about what they did during the war.Yet the U.S. was slow to react. It wasn ;t until 1979 that a special Nazi-hunting unit, the Office of Special Investigations, was created Oblw Iran asks West to leave Persian Gulf as tensions heightened
Air Force Major Gregory Stone, 40, of Boise, Idaho, died early Tuesday at an Army Hospital in Kuwait, a spokesman for the Idaho Air National Guard said Wednesday.Stone is the second U.S. serviceman to die from the attack on a brigade command tent of the 101st Airborne Division based at Camp Pennsylvania in Kuwait, near the border with Iraq. Captain Christopher Scott Seifert, 27, of Easton, Penn., was also killed in the March 23 attack, while 14 other soldiers were injured.Stone injuries
stanley cup were so severe that he could not be transported safely to a U.S. military medical center in Landstuhl, Germany, Lt. Col. Tim Marsano, spokesman for the Idaho Air National Guard, told the Associated Press.Sergeant Asan Akbar of Los Angeles, Calif. was taken into custody shortly after the attack, although he has not been formally charged.On March 25, Akbar was transferred to the Mannheim Confinement Facility in Germany after a judge found probable cause to try him for the grenade assault. The probable cause ruling means that Akbar will remain in jail awaiting a pretrial investigation. It was not clear where or when that would take place, an Army official told the AP.Army investigators will complete a report and send it to Akbar superiors, according to Marc Raimo
stanley cup ndi, a spokesman for the Army Criminal Investigation Div
stanley cup ision in Virginia. He could not say when the report would be finished.Before Stone death, military experts said Akbar could have faced one charge of i