Third person arrested in connection with fatal Raleigh shooting – WTVD

Police have charged a third suspect in connection with the shooting that killed a man in downtown Raleigh last month.

It happened on Sept. 29 around 6:45 p.m. at New Bern Avenue and Hill Street.

Police said the victim, 30-year-old Joshua George Ayalogu, was taken to WakeMed, where he died the following morning.

Following an investigation, RPD obtained an arrest warrant charging Khalil Shaquan Jordan, 19, with murder. Fuquay-Varina police located Jordan and took him into custody on Wednesday.

Detectives arrested Jordan’s brother, 21-year-old Mikal JaJwan Jordan, on Monday. He was arrested in the town of Ahoskie, which is about 120 miles northeast of Raleigh, without incident.

Police also arrested 21-year-old Solister Lester III in Raleigh without incident, in connection with the crime.

Mikal JaJwan Jordan and Solister Lester III

All three suspects are facing murder charges and are being held in the Wake County Detention Center.

The investigation of the case is continuing, and anyone with information that might assist detectives is asked to call Raleigh CrimeStoppers at (919) 834-HELP or visit raleighcrimestoppers.org for text and email reporting options. CrimeStoppers pays cash rewards for anonymous tips that help solve cases.

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Penny Rich: Dangerous drilling

Last month, the Orange County Board of Commissioners told Gov. Pat McCrory and President Obama that we oppose offshore oil and gas exploration, drilling activities and seismic blast activities off the coast of North Carolina. We are not alone. About 80 municipalities along the East Coast have opposed these activities, including 70 percent of the coastal communities in North Carolina. In addition, 92 members of Congress, roughly 500 local and state officials, more than 300 businesses and several fishing interest groups have weighed in with opposition.

Our state’s coastline supports a $2 billion fishing industry, world-renowned recreational opportunities and beautiful beachfronts for 11.6 million yearly travelers. Commercial and recreational fishing are critical to our economy and quality of life, and tourism is the economic backbone of our state. An oil spill like the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster would devastate our economy, our coastal environment and our social fabric, and we are not willing to make that gamble.

Even the exploration of offshore drilling is dangerous. The federal government is considering the use of seismic airguns, which shoot dynamite-like blasts of compressed air miles under the seafloor, to look for oil and gas deposits. In a letter to Obama, 75 leading marine scientists said the activity likely would significantly affect the reproduction and survival of fish and marine mammal populations in the region.

We urge McCrory to stand with North Carolinians and protect the North Carolina coast from offshore drilling.

Penny Rich

Board of County Commissioners, Orange County

Hillsborough

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Asheville eager to land Deschutes – Asheville Citizen

Deschutes Brewery continues to deliberate on where it will establish its eastern facility and with it 100 to 200 new jobs, while local officials continue to dust off the welcome mat in hopes of landing the major brewer and adding yet another big name to a booming beer tourism industry.

Deschutes, headquartered in Bend, Oregon, has narrowed to a short list its choice of locations for an eastern expansion site, and Asheville remains a top contender with another high-profile visit coming next week. Company president Michael LaLonde is expected in Asheville for an “informal” visit with local brewers.

Other possible locations include Charlottesville and Roanoke in Virginia, and Greenville and Charleston in South Carolina. Deschutes has said it will make its decision before year’s end.

Deschutes is thought to be interested in a 137-acre county-owned site in Bent Creek. Last week, the Buncombe County Commission voted to continue holding the land available for Deschutes, based on undisclosed “new information.”

For several local leaders, the Deschutes search recalls memories of Sierra Nevada’s long search for its eastern brewery.

Sierra Nevada looked at as many as 200 possible locations, including Roanoke, Black Mountain, and Blount County, Tennessee, before finally settling on its Mills River site next to the Asheville Regional Airport, officials said.

Western North Carolina has become the U.S. East Coast craft beer capital. Open now are Sierra Nevada and Oskar Blues in Brevard, and New Belgium is finishing construction and cranking up operations this fall in West Asheville along the French Broad River.

Another big player such as Deschutes could help further solidify the Asheville area as a craft brew destination alongside such western U.S. locations as San Diego and Portland, Oregon.

“I think that (collection of breweries) is unique to Asheville,” said Julia Herz of the Brewers Association trade group. “I would be hard-pressed to think of another example.”

The strong block of breweries here is an incentive to any other brewer looking to locate in the area, she said. “There is power in numbers, and we are seeing that across the country,” Herz said. The latest tally of national craft breweries stands at 4,011.

Craft brewing is “just such a perfect fit” for the area, said Buncombe County Commission Chairman David Gantt, who is among those working to lure Deschutes to the Asheville area.

Gantt will not discuss particulars about discussions with Deschutes, but he is clearly eager for the brewery to choose Asheville.

“There is no cutthroat competition” within the local brewing scene, he said. “It has added greatly to the economic engine, and we are very interested in acquiring more breweries. I don’t see an end to (more breweries opening here) anytime soon.”

Since 1994 when the city’s first craft brewery, Highland, opened here with just three employees, the beer workforce has skyrocketed not just in Asheville, but all around the mountains and North Carolina. During 2014, there were 88 beer jobs in the 10th Congressional District, which includes Asheville, and an additional 175 jobs in the 11th Congressional District, which encompasses most of Western North Carolina, according to the Beer Institute trade group and the Beer Wholesalers Association.

But those numbers increase to 2,042 in the 10th with retail and wholesaling jobs included, and 1,897 in the 11th District. Across North Carolina, there were 26,480 beer-related jobs, including wholesale and retail positions, and the numbers for 2015 are likely to be higher as all signs point to a steady industry growth.

Sierra Nevada has grown to 369 employees in Mills River, many of them working in the brewery restaurant. New Belgium already has brought more than 40 employees into its new West Asheville brewery and another 40 soon will be added. Eventually, up to 140 workers will be employed at the brewery and separate distribution in Enka.

Deschutes, the nation’s sixth-largest craft brewer, would add about 100 workers at its new brewery if it locates here, and maybe another 100 if it builds a brewpub as well, LaLonde has said. The company’s beer lineup includes Chainbreaker White IPA, Pine Mountain Pilsner and the seasonal winter brew Jubleale. Wherever Deschutes goes, it expects to be open in 2019.

Beyond the workforce, Deschutes would increase beer tourism, said Joe Rowland of Nantahala Brewing of Bryson City and president of the Asheville Brewers Association, which represents the local breweries.

“The more breweries you have, the stronger the case” for beer tourism, he said. His brewery depends greatly on tourism, and many visitors seek out regional breweries to visit. “We have 1,600 people in Bryson City, and I didn’t build here because of that population number.”

Sierra Nevada in particular has become a visitor favorite. It has a weekslong waiting list for visitors wanting guided tours and recently has hired more guides, spokesman Bill Manley said.

Deschutes would “help raise the profile of the beer-related experience in Asheville,” agreed Stephanie Brown, executive director of the Asheville Convention and Visitors Bureau.

Breweries “provide a critical mass of high-quality experiences,” she said. The bureau does not track beer tourism specifically, but Brown said the breweries are part of an overall economic magnet that includes outdoor activities and highly regarded restaurants.

Buncombe County is home to 21 breweries and more than 40 are scattered around the mountains, with more in planning or building stages. While many wonder how many more breweries the area can support, brewers and brewery owners agree that Deschutes would be good for their business by also motivating brewers to improve quality.

“It would raise the level of brewing,” said Tim Schaller, owner of Wedge Brewing.

For Mike Karnowski, owner of the soon-to-open Zebulon Artisan Ales brewery in Weaverville, Deschutes would “make us more of a destination,” he said. “I think there is room for more beer, but it has to be unique beer, creative beer. We don’t need a brewery making the same beers that everyone brews.”

Mike Rangel, president of Asheville Brewing, said he thinks Deschutes would be enticed by “our resources,” such as Asheville-Buncombe Technical Community College’s Craft Beverage Institute program, in which students learn the elements of brewing, distilling and wine making.

Herz from the Brewers Association said there is little concern of overbuilding craft breweries, even in a city like Asheville, which census data showed had 87,000 residents last year. “If a brewery makes world-class beer and differentiates itself from others, I believe it will be just fine.”

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Food Lion Celebrates Completion of Investments in 162 Raleigh, N.C., Area …








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    Food Lion









SALISBURY, N.C, Oct. 13, 2015 /PRNewswire/ –On Wednesday, Oct. 14, Food Lion will unveil a new, easier shopping experience for customers in 162 stores in the greater Raleigh, N.C., market. In an effort to make shopping more affordable for its customers, the company made a landmark $250 million capital investment this year, the largest in the grocer’s history. The total investment in the market includes remodeling the stores, lowering prices and investing in associates and in the community.

–>SALISBURY, N.C, Oct. 13, 2015 /PRNewswire/ –On Wednesday, Oct. 14, Food Lion will unveil a new, easier shopping experience for customers in 162 stores in the greater Raleigh, N.C., market. In an effort to make shopping more affordable for its customers, the company made a landmark $250 million capital investment this year, the largest in the grocer’s history. The total investment in the market includes remodeling the stores, lowering prices and investing in associates and in the community.

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SALISBURY, N.C, Oct. 13, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — On Wednesday, Oct. 14, Food Lion will unveil a new, easier shopping experience for customers in 162 stores in the greater Raleigh, N.C., market.  In an effort to make shopping more affordable for its customers, the company made a landmark $250 million capital investment this year, the largest in the grocer’s history. The total investment in the market includes remodeling the stores, lowering prices and investing in associates and in the community. 

Raleigh community for 40 years,” said Meg Ham, president of Food Lion. “On the anniversary of our four decades in the market, we spent the year making significant investments in our stores, our customers, our associates and our community to offer a new grocery shopping experience where customers can easily find fresh, quality products at affordable prices every day, delivered with caring, friendly service every time they shop. We invite our customers to come out and experience ‘How Life is Better with the Lion’ at Food Lion and let us know what you think of the new stores.”

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Raleigh community for 40 years,” said Meg Ham, president of Food Lion. “On the anniversary of our four decades in the market, we spent the year making significant investments in our stores, our customers, our associates and our community to offer a new grocery shopping experience where customers can easily find fresh, quality products at affordable prices every day, delivered with caring, friendly service every time they shop. We invite our customers to come out and experience ‘How Life is Better with the Lion’ at Food Lion and let us know what you think of the new stores.”

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“Food Lion has been a proud neighbor in the Raleigh community for 40 years,” said Meg Ham, president of Food Lion. “On the anniversary of our four decades in the market, we spent the year making significant investments in our stores, our customers, our associates and our community to offer a new grocery shopping experience where customers can easily find fresh, quality products at affordable prices every day, delivered with caring, friendly service every time they shop. We invite our customers to come out and experience ‘How Life is Better with the Lion’ at Food Lion and let us know what you think of the new stores.” 

Oct. 14, the company will give away free groceries to the first 100 customers at each location in the greater Raleigh market. A complete list of the remodeled stores, along with the free grocery giveaway locations, is available at www.foodlion.com/newsroom.

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Oct. 14, the company will give away free groceries to the first 100 customers at each location in the greater Raleigh market. A complete list of the remodeled stores, along with the free grocery giveaway locations, is available at www.foodlion.com/newsroom.

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As part of the celebration festivities on Oct. 14, the company will give away free groceries to the first 100 customers at each location in the greater Raleigh market. A complete list of the remodeled stores, along with the free grocery giveaway locations, is available at www.foodlion.com/newsroom.

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Key outcomes of the investments include:

  • Fully remodeled stores that provide an easier place to shop for customers,
  • Lower prices on thousands of items across all departments of the store,
  • Fresher produce, quality meats, an expanded selection of natural and organic items, as well as a dedicated gluten-free section, all at affordable prices, and
  • Enhanced customer service created by promoting or hiring hundreds of associates throughout the market and investing in additional customer-centric training for its 10,000 associates in this market.

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“With every change we made in our stores, we had our customers at the forefront with a key focus on how can we better connect with those we serve to make their life a little easier and a little better,” added Ham. “That’s why we not only invested in the stores, but invested in promoting the great associates we already had at Food Lion and in new talent by redoubling our hiring efforts this year. It’s also why, as part of the launch of our new stores, we’re partnering with the food bank in a big and lasting way to help this important organization expand its efforts to end hunger in a significant portion of the state. Giving back to our communities is something that we’re just as passionate about as serving our customers every day in our stores.”  

Donation of One-of-a-Kind Mobile Food Pantry

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Donation of One-of-a-Kind Mobile Food Pantry

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Donation of One-of-a-Kind Mobile Food Pantry

$100,000, or the equivalent of more than 1 million meals, to the Food Bank of Central Eastern North Carolina. The innovative vehicle will bring food to places where there is a need throughout the 34 counties served by the food bank, whether it’s a school, disaster location or community without access to fresh, healthy food.

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$100,000, or the equivalent of more than 1 million meals, to the Food Bank of Central Eastern North Carolina. The innovative vehicle will bring food to places where there is a need throughout the 34 counties served by the food bank, whether it’s a school, disaster location or community without access to fresh, healthy food.

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Consistent with its focus on eliminating hunger in its local communities, Food Lion Feeds has also donated a one-of-a-kind mobile food pantry, valued at over $100,000, or the equivalent of more than 1 million meals, to the Food Bank of Central Eastern North Carolina. The innovative vehicle will bring food to places where there is a need throughout the 34 counties served by the food bank, whether it’s a school, disaster location or community without access to fresh, healthy food.

Peter Werbicki, president and CEO, Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina. “We’re very excited about this innovative mobile pantry, which will enable our agency to deliver food into areas in the Raleigh market traditionally underserved by feeding agencies.We can always count on Food Lion to meet our needs to help end the fight of hunger in communities. Their associates are extremely passionate about helping to eliminate hunger and we appreciate all they do, whether its daily donations from their stores, volunteering at various events, or making a significant investment in our community that would not have been possible without this donation.”

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Peter Werbicki, president and CEO, Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina. “We’re very excited about this innovative mobile pantry, which will enable our agency to deliver food into areas in the Raleigh market traditionally underserved by feeding agencies.We can always count on Food Lion to meet our needs to help end the fight of hunger in communities. Their associates are extremely passionate about helping to eliminate hunger and we appreciate all they do, whether its daily donations from their stores, volunteering at various events, or making a significant investment in our community that would not have been possible without this donation.”

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“Food Lion has been a tremendous partner for our food bank and without their support, we would not be able to serve the thousands of clients we feed each year,” said Peter Werbicki, president and CEO, Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina.  “We’re very excited about this innovative mobile pantry, which will enable our agency to deliver food into areas in the Raleigh market traditionally underserved by feeding agencies. We can always count on Food Lion to meet our needs to help end the fight of hunger in communities. Their associates are extremely passionate about helping to eliminate hunger and we appreciate all they do, whether its daily donations from their stores, volunteering at various events, or making a significant investment in our community that would not have been possible without this donation.”

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The mobile pantry donation is part of the grocer’s commitment to provide 500 million meals to individuals and families in need by the end of 2020.

New Store Features for Customers

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New Store Features for Customers

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New Store Features for Customers

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The remodeled stores include new features that make shopping and saving easier for customers.

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Food Lion expanded its product selection in stores by adding thousands of new items and lowering prices throughout the store. The new assortment of products includes an abundant selection of fresh meat and produce backed by Food Lion’s promise of quality and freshness guaranteed always, a dedicated gluten free section, a growing selection of Nature’s Place beef, pork and poultry items free from unwanted ingredients and a new Taste of Inspirations premium line of deli meats and cheeses.

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Food Lion has also added easy and affordable meals for families, including weekend deals from Friday to Sunday and hot meals with sides available seven days a week. The grocer now has a wider variety of grab-and-go items and pre-sliced deli meats and cheeses, which are sliced fresh daily and available for customers to pick up without waiting in line.

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Food Lion also made savings easier with lower prices, new easy-to-follow signage and Three Easy Ways to Save:

  • Hot Sale: Food Lion’s top weekly MVP specials, and the best prices throughout the store, only available with an MVP card.
  • WOW: Lower prices on thousands of items that matter most to our customers, offered for longer periods of time.
  • Low Price: Essential items throughout the store, priced affordably every day.

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Knowing customers want to get in and out of the store quickly, Food Lion made checkout faster with improved technology, larger display screens so customers can see items and prices as they are scanned and additional associates available to assist and meet the needs of customers.

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The stores have received remodels as part of the grocer’s “Easy, Fresh and Affordable…You Can Count on Food Lion Every Day” strategy. Food Lion will continue to roll out storewide enhancements in markets over time.

Salisbury, N.C., its hometown.

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Salisbury, N.C., its hometown.

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Serving 10 million customers each week at more than 1,100 locations in 10 states, the company was founded as Food Town in 1957 and still calls Salisbury, N.C., its hometown. 

About Food Lion
Food Lion, based in Salisbury, N.C., since 1957, has more than 1,100 stores in 10 Southeastern and Mid-Atlantic states and employs more than 66,000 associates. By leveraging its longstanding heritage of low prices and convenient locations, Food Lion is working to own the easiest full shop grocery experience in the Southeast, anchored by a strong commitment to affordability, freshness and the communities it serves. Through Food Lion Feeds, the company has committed to provide 500 million meals to individuals and families in need by the end of 2020. Food Lion is a company of Delhaize America, the U.S. division of Brussels-based Delhaize Group (NYSE: DEG).For more information, visit www.foodlion.com.

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About Food Lion
Food Lion, based in Salisbury, N.C., since 1957, has more than 1,100 stores in 10 Southeastern and Mid-Atlantic states and employs more than 66,000 associates. By leveraging its longstanding heritage of low prices and convenient locations, Food Lion is working to own the easiest full shop grocery experience in the Southeast, anchored by a strong commitment to affordability, freshness and the communities it serves. Through Food Lion Feeds, the company has committed to provide 500 million meals to individuals and families in need by the end of 2020. Food Lion is a company of Delhaize America, the U.S. division of Brussels-based Delhaize Group (NYSE: DEG).For more information, visit www.foodlion.com.

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About Food Lion
Food Lion, based in Salisbury, N.C., since 1957, has more than 1,100 stores in 10 Southeastern and Mid-Atlantic states and employs more than 66,000 associates. By leveraging its longstanding heritage of low prices and convenient locations, Food Lion is working to own the easiest full shop grocery experience in the Southeast, anchored by a strong commitment to affordability, freshness and the communities it serves. Through Food Lion Feeds, the company has committed to provide 500 million meals to individuals and families in need by the end of 2020. Food Lion is a company of Delhaize America, the U.S. division of Brussels-based Delhaize Group (NYSE: DEG). For more information, visit www.foodlion.com

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Logo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140514/87539

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/food-lion-celebrates-completion-of-investments-in-162-raleigh-nc-area-stores-to-bring-customers-new-easy-fresh-and-affordable-shopping-experience-300158405.html

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SOURCE Food Lion

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SOUTH-TEC Bright Minds, Manufacturing Playground Designed to Inspire …








CHARLOTTE, N.C., Oct. 13, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — High school and postsecondary students and educators will have the opportunity to experience manufacturing hands-on during the upcoming SOUTH-TEC manufacturing event, taking place October 27-29 at the Charlotte Convention Center. The event hosts more than 400 industry-leading companies and addresses trends and issues important to the southeast region to improve production processes, technologies and capabilities. Day three will feature SME’s Bright Minds program that includes a “Manufacturing Playground,” industry keynote speakers, young professional Career Pathway chats and an exclusive tour of participating exhibitors on the show floor.

–>CHARLOTTE, N.C., Oct. 13, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — High school and postsecondary students and educators will have the opportunity to experience manufacturing hands-on during the upcoming SOUTH-TEC manufacturing event, taking place October 27-29 at the Charlotte Convention Center. The event hosts more than 400 industry-leading companies and addresses trends and issues important to the southeast region to improve production processes, technologies and capabilities. Day three will feature SME’s Bright Minds program that includes a “Manufacturing Playground,” industry keynote speakers, young professional Career Pathway chats and an exclusive tour of participating exhibitors on the show floor.

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CHARLOTTE, N.C., Oct. 13, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — High school and postsecondary students and educators will have the opportunity to experience manufacturing hands-on during the upcoming SOUTH-TEC manufacturing event, taking place October 27-29 at the Charlotte Convention Center. The event hosts more than 400 industry-leading companies and addresses trends and issues important to the southeast region to improve production processes, technologies and capabilities. Day three will feature SME’s Bright Minds program that includes a “Manufacturing Playground,” industry keynote speakers, young professional Career Pathway chats and an exclusive tour of participating exhibitors on the show floor.

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Bright Minds is a program developed by SME to reinforce the value of manufacturing education, providing hands-on learning experiences for high school and postsecondary students with support from educators, industry and SME members.

Cathy Kowalewicz, SOUTH-TEC event manager at SME. “We’ve incorporated some unique education and mentoring programs into SOUTH-TEC so that students gain a true sense of what a career in manufacturing requires and provides, as well as the chance to connect with industry professionals that may assist them in career choices.”

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Cathy Kowalewicz, SOUTH-TEC event manager at SME. “We’ve incorporated some unique education and mentoring programs into SOUTH-TEC so that students gain a true sense of what a career in manufacturing requires and provides, as well as the chance to connect with industry professionals that may assist them in career choices.”

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“Education is critical to the growth of U.S. manufacturing,” said Cathy Kowalewicz, SOUTH-TEC event manager at SME. “We’ve incorporated some unique education and mentoring programs into SOUTH-TEC so that students gain a true sense of what a career in manufacturing requires and provides, as well as the chance to connect with industry professionals that may assist them in career choices.”

Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, as well as professionals from companies including program partners Mastercam and Stratasys, about manufacturing career paths, and valuable curriculum and skills that would be beneficial in their career goals. Keynote speakers, presentations and panels focused on workforce development include:

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Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, as well as professionals from companies including program partners Mastercam and Stratasys, about manufacturing career paths, and valuable curriculum and skills that would be beneficial in their career goals. Keynote speakers, presentations and panels focused on workforce development include:

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Students attending SOUTH-TEC can engage with educators from technical and community colleges from Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia, as well as professionals from companies including program partners Mastercam and Stratasys, about manufacturing career paths, and valuable curriculum and skills that would be beneficial in their career goals. Keynote speakers, presentations and panels focused on workforce development include:

  • Cultivating Growth in Manufacturing; Brian Summers, vice president, Mastercam
  • Additive Manufacturing – Building Careers of the Future; Sig Behrens, general manager of education, Stratasys
  • Career Pathways; Brian Flores, senior manager for branding education, Sandvik Coromant USA

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The Manufacturing Playground at SOUTH-TEC gives students and educators the opportunity to learn and observe how diverse technologies can be used collaboratively to create a promising final product. Both a CNC Lathe and a 3D printer will be in operation producing precision parts for a motorcycle to be built live on the event floor.

Terry Hoppe, director of Applications Engineering, Stratasys. “We see a tremendous opportunity to bridge the gap between education and industry though the various additive manufacturing applications these students will learn.”

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Terry Hoppe, director of Applications Engineering, Stratasys. “We see a tremendous opportunity to bridge the gap between education and industry though the various additive manufacturing applications these students will learn.”

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“Stratasys is proud to be a sponsor of Bright Minds for the fifth year now. This program provides young students the opportunity to learn about 3D printing and its many capabilities,” said Terry Hoppe, director of Applications Engineering, Stratasys. “We see a tremendous opportunity to bridge the gap between education and industry though the various additive manufacturing applications these students will learn.”

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Through the Bright Minds Passport Tour, students and educators will have the opportunity to experience new, innovative technology like advanced robotics and animation.

Dick Motley, Southeastern U.S. regional director, FANUC.

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Dick Motley, Southeastern U.S. regional director, FANUC.

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“Workforce development is such a huge part of ensuring our industry will continue to grow and evolve, especially in this region. Programs like this help shape and mold the skills and knowledge of tomorrow’s workforce,” said Dick Motley, Southeastern U.S. regional director, FANUC.

http://www.southteconline.com/.

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http://www.southteconline.com/.

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SOUTH-TEC is free for students, educators and SME members. To register and find more information about SOUTH-TEC 2015, please visit http://www.southteconline.com/.

About SOUTH-TEC
SOUTH-TEC, produced by SME, is a Southeast manufacturing trade event, held every other year, that provides regional manufacturers and suppliers the means to discover and acquire the tools and processes necessary to drive the next evolution of their industry. SOUTH-TEC is designed to advance manufacturing knowledge by keeping industry executives up to date on leading technologies and trends, while highlighting the strength of manufacturing throughout the region.

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About SOUTH-TEC
SOUTH-TEC, produced by SME, is a Southeast manufacturing trade event, held every other year, that provides regional manufacturers and suppliers the means to discover and acquire the tools and processes necessary to drive the next evolution of their industry. SOUTH-TEC is designed to advance manufacturing knowledge by keeping industry executives up to date on leading technologies and trends, while highlighting the strength of manufacturing throughout the region.

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About SOUTH-TEC
SOUTH-TEC, produced by SME, is a Southeast manufacturing trade event, held every other year, that provides regional manufacturers and suppliers the means to discover and acquire the tools and processes necessary to drive the next evolution of their industry. SOUTH-TEC is designed to advance manufacturing knowledge by keeping industry executives up to date on leading technologies and trends, while highlighting the strength of manufacturing throughout the region.

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/south-tec-bright-minds-manufacturing-playground-designed-to-inspire-challenge-future-talent-300158889.html

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/south-tec-bright-minds-manufacturing-playground-designed-to-inspire-challenge-future-talent-300158889.html

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SOURCE SME

RELATED LINKS
http://www.sme.org

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Johnson City brewer on Brewly Noted Beer Trail: "We’re all in this together"

The Brewly Noted Beer Trail crosses into Tennessee and Virgnia and gives craft beer lovers, and what brewers hope will be future craft beer lovers, reason to make the rounds to all the area’s breweries.

Unlike those large international beer makers, the local brewers spoke Tuesday about how they are in this regional movement together, bringing business to each other.

“We’re all in this together,” said John Henritze, co-owner of Johnson City’s JRH Brewing, which is expected to open up around the beginning of 2016.

He talked about collaborating and teaming up with his peers to benefit all of them. With the Brewly Noted Beer Trail, JRH is one of nine Tri-Cities breweries to be include on the Trail Log. Participants are encouraged to go to the trail’s website and register. T-shirt and beer glass swag can be purchased along with an empty passport Trail Log booklet, which can be filled out with stops to each location. Once all nine breweries are marked off in the log, the thirsty traveler earns herself or himself a “Brewly Noted Beer Trail” T-shirt.

Henritze assured this is a great way to get new people into craft beer, which boosts the local economy. He specifically plugged his Boone Time Belgian Blonde ale as a perfect transition beer for those trying to get out from the shackles of macro breweries like Budweiser, Coors and Miller and try something produced locally.

Aaron Carson, with Superfly Fabulous Events that helped put the trail together, said the craft beer movement in this region is bigger than any other time in the area’s history.

“That is a testament to the major growth we have in the industry,” Carson said. “I wouldn’t say that it’s a rebirth of craft beer, because that implies it’s never happened before. For the Tri-Cities, this is certainly the golden age.”

Along with JRH, Johnson City breweries include Yee-Haw Brewing Company and Johnson City Brewing Company. In Bristol, Bristol Brewery, Holston River Brewing Company and Studio Brew are the three stops on both sides of the state line. In Kingsport, trail stops include Triple B Brewery and Sleepy Owl Brewery. Depot Street Brewing, the oldest remaining of the lot, is the only stop in Jonesborough.

Michael Foster, Depot Street’s founder, remembered back to 2004 when he first opened and was somewhat shocked that there weren’t any others in the area.

Now finding himself in a coalition of eight area breweries, Foster isn’t surprised that it’s really taken off.

“It was only a matter of time,” Foster said.

Depot Street’s Loose Caboose lager is the beer Foster recommends as the brew that most new craft beer drinkers will drink to get introduced to the world of craft beer.

Brenda Whitson, with the Johnson City Convention Visitors Bureau, announced to the crowd of media members and local civic leaders that seeing the success of craft beer tourism in Western North Carolina gave good reason to put together the Brewly Noted Beer Trail.

“We’ve seen our neighbors across the mountain make significant strides in this market and they have created tremendous economic impact in the community and we feel confident that we will as well,” she said. “By supporting local brewers, we are promoting job creation, the entrepeneur spirit and the quality of our life for the region.”

The name of the trail comes from the area’s rich musical history, and Whitson asked rhetorically what compliments some tunes better than a cold craft beer.

Andrew Felty is the director of the trail. He points to the tools craft breweries have compared with their their much larger counterparts in continuing to win over large numbers of beer drinkers. Specifically, Felty said, it’s their individuality, creativity and ability to cooperate with each other that sets them apart. Merger aside, he said you’d never see big beer brands working together the way craft brewers do on collaborative beers, or even on something like the Brewly Noted Beer Trail.

“That’s the cool thing,” he said. “Everyone here is going to make the rounds to the other brewers. They’re not all making the same beers and they all want to try something new.”

Email Tony Casey at tcasey@johnsoncitypress.com. Follow Tony Casey on Twitter @TonyCaseyJCP. Like him on Facebook at www.facebook.com/tonycaseyjournalist.

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Man driven to death by phone scammers with North Carolina ties

HARRIMAN, Tenn. — The phone calls wouldn’t stop.

The man on the other end of the line made promises of a big payoff: millions of dollars in prize money. But first the IRS needed $1,500 in taxes, he insisted, then the jackpot would arrive at the family home, a camera crew ready to capture the excitement.

The calls came a couple of times a day; other times, nearly 50.

Mr. Albert, we need the money to be sent today …

Don’t hang up the phone, Mr. Albert …

Mr. Albert, don’t tell your wife about this …

Albert Poland Jr. had worked 45 years for the Burlington hosiery factory in Harriman, Tennessee, starting off as a mechanic before rising to become a quality control manager.

He and his wife, Virginia, were living a humble life in the Appalachian foothills near Knoxville, having raised a son and daughter in their 62 years of marriage. The family patriarch was known simply as Daddy.

At age 81, his mind was faltering. He suffered from Alzheimer’s and dementia. And the caller — a man in Jamaica — preyed on that vulnerability.

Poland’s lucidity fluctuated. In February, he went to the local police station and asked if they could make the phone calls from the 876 area code stop. Another time, he went to the post office to send money to his caller. The teller stopped him, talked with him and handed him a brochure on Jamaican lottery scams. He thanked her.

His family tried to intervene numerous times. On one of his good days, he told his wife simply, “I’m in too deep.”

On March 21, the caller asked for $1,500. Poland withdrew the maximum $400 from his ATM and sent it via Western Union. He was sure he was going to win more than $2 million. He hoped to pay off his son’s mortgage and help his family for years to come.

His son, Chris Poland, was livid when his mother told him his father was talking with the caller again. Chris, 53, had had the same conversation for months with his dad; his father had sent more than $5,000 to the caller. Chris spoke with his father like most any son would. “Daddy, you taught me the value of the dollar. Why are you giving money away?”

As father and son talked by cell phone, the Jamaican called back on Poland’s land line.

Mr. Albert …

The next morning, a Sunday, was like a repeat record. More calls and another tense phone conversation between father and son.

Virginia got dressed for church. Her husband decided to stay home.

It was a beautiful spring morning, with temperatures hovering around 60 degrees and the trees a lush green. Poland strolled around his yard. A neighbor waved: “Looks like we’re gonna have to start mowing soon.”

“Yeah, looks like it,” Poland said.

He walked to the basement of the family home. He carried with him a snub-nose .38 revolver.

In his suicide note, Poland told his family not to spend much on his funeral and said he hoped when more than $2 million arrived tomorrow, it would vindicate him.

‘Truly heartbreaking’

Albert Poland was in the grips of a Jamaican lottery scammer — part of a cottage industry that targets nearly 300,000 Americans a year, most of them elderly, and has enticed them to send an estimated $300 million annually to the Caribbean island nation.

AARP has run campaigns warning about the scams originating from the Jamaican 876 area code. The U.S. Postal Service has published pamphlets and distributed them around the country. The Senate Special Committee on Aging held hearings two years ago about the magnitude of the problem and urged U.S. and Jamaican authorities to do more.

“The Jamaican lottery scam is a cruel, persistent and sophisticated scam that has victimized seniors throughout the nation,” says Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, the committee’s chairwoman. “It is truly heartbreaking that this scam has robbed seniors of hundreds of millions of dollars.”

It’s such a huge problem in Jamaica that the scams have been dubbed the highest level Tier 1 threat — a “clear and present danger” to national security, says Peter Bunting, Jamaica’s national security minister.

From children to the nation’s most tech savvy 20-somethings, from a former deputy mayor of Montego Bay to the most vicious gang members, lottery scams have left few segments of the island nation untouched.

“It is extremely corrosive to the fabric of society,” Bunting says. “We have seen where it has corrupted police officers. It has corrupted legitimate business persons who end up playing some role in laundering money.”

The Poland family first spoke to CNN in April. Investigators are looking into Albert Poland’s case and hope to provide some solace to the family soon; for now, his scammer remains at large.

From there, CNN followed the money, traveling to ground zero of the scams, Montego Bay, where we witnessed a police raid of a suspect’s house.

In Jamaica, more than 200 deaths a year have been tied to the scams. And in the United States, the scams have cost people their lives — and their life savings.

Trial marks U.S. first

Edna Schmeets looks like she’s straight out of “The Golden Girls” central casting: a grandma with curly gray hair and a 5-foot-2 frame. At 86, she’s soft-spoken yet opinionated.

Just a month after Albert Poland took his life in Tennessee, Schmeets faced down her scammer in federal court in Bismarck, North Dakota.

Sanjay Ashani Williams started off as a scammer around 2008, making calls to elderly Americans. He eventually graduated to buying and selling caller lists — reams of information containing the names and numbers of tens of thousands of potential victims.

Williams made more than $5 million on his operation, the government said. His case marked the first U.S. trial of what officials call a “lead list scammer.”

In addition to dealing in lists, Williams continued making calls himself, including to Schmeets.

“He said I had won this $19 million from American Cash Awards and that I would have to, you know, pay taxes on this money before they would release it,” Schmeets testified, according to trial transcripts. “And they kept calling about sending another check and another check and another check. I mean, it just kept on and on until I had both my life insurances gone, all my savings. Everything.

“I just had lost everything.”

She sent checks for $65,000, $57,000 and $20,000 over the course of the next nine months.

How much did she lose total?

“Oh my goodness,” she testified. “When I figured it out, it was about $297,000.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Clare Hochhalter probed, “Did you become suspicious after you kept sending money and you didn’t get your prize?”

“Yes, I did,” Schmeets replied.

But she said she was told not to tell anyone “about this until you get your winnings, your $19 million. Then, you can tell everybody.”

Why keep sending money?

Because, Schmeets testified, she was told she would get “all your money back, plus the $19 million.”

Schmeets and her husband, Lawrence, had been married 62 years. They lived on a small cattle farm. Her husband worked in the railroad industry; she clerked at a grocery store to bring in extra cash. They raised five children: four boys and one girl. The family had endured tragedy years ago when one of their sons died at age 31.

Her husband died in 2010. Phone calls congratulating her on winning a lottery began in fall 2011 and continued through June 2012.

Her motivations for wanting the money were simple: “I was going to just give it to my children.”

Instead, all that she and her husband had worked for was gone.

She glanced occasionally across the room at Williams. He never returned her gaze. Instead, she said, he rifled through a garbage bag containing hundreds of pages of court documents. He was dressed in an orange prison jumpsuit, with a bushy beard and braids piled on top of his head.

She thought about how different he was than the person she had envisioned. “He seemed like such a nice guy on the phone,” Schmeets would say later.

Williams operated out of Montego Bay and established an intricate network of runners based in Charlotte, North Carolina, to pick up money and send it to him.

His website, gamblerslead.com, was a goldmine for scammers seeking phone numbers for elderly Americans. Authorities studied more than 500,000 emails connected to the site, an FBI agent testified.

Authorities discovered Williams was buying lists at wholesale on the black market, where they can go for up to $5,000 and contain tens of thousands of names. He then carved up the lists and sold names and numbers to callers for $5.50 apiece.

Thirty-two people in the United States and Jamaica were indicted in the scheme. Eleven pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, seven are awaiting trial and 14 are awaiting extradition. According to authorities, many pretended to be FBI agents, bank personnel and IRS workers to convince people their lottery winnings were real.

Seventy-two Americans, all older than 55, were identified as losing money in Williams’ operation.

William Porter, 94, was a fighter pilot in World War II in the Pacific theater. He lost $250,000. Charlotte Davis, 64, was also targeted. She testified she was told by her scammer that if she didn’t send the money he’d rape her daughters and kill her son.

A 72-year-old victim from Odessa, Texas, committed suicide. Prosecutor Hochhalter told CNN it was too difficult legally to bring homicide charges in the case. “But we believe we have the factual evidence to suggest that this offense involved conduct that created a risk of serious bodily injury or death,” Hochhalter said. “And that’s evidenced by the fact that at least one person did commit suicide.”

Williams was combative at the defense table through much of the trial. He said his rights were violated when he was arrested on a trip in North Carolina, and he threw fits that annoyed even his own lawyer. He refused the judge’s recommendation to wear nice clothes in court, instead opting for his prison outfit. He had the same reaction when the judge suggested he might want to consider a plea deal that would result in three to five years in prison.

Instead, Williams placed his fate in the hands of a jury.

His attorney, Charles Stock, tried to make the case that hotels, credit card companies, casinos and other companies buy and sell Americans’ personal information all the time — and that it’s perfectly legal. This is true, the prosecution countered, but it becomes illegal when you knowingly use the information for a crime.

Williams was convicted on an array of conspiracy, wire fraud and money laundering charges. He faces up to 40 years in prison.

“That was a big relief to know that he’s going to prison,” Schmeets said.

During the trial, an expert from Jamaica’s equivalent of the FBI gave an assessment of just how endemic the scamming has become.

Kevin Watson, a corporal with Jamaica’s Major Organized Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency, or MOCA, told the court many Jamaicans see scamming as “the only source of income for them.”

“In small pockets of communities,” Watson said, “you will find many persons involved in this activity. You will also find children who grew up … to believe that this is OK — it’s OK to get involved in lottery scamming.”

Deadly competition

The turquoise water off the coast of Montego Bay serves as a majestic paradise for millions of tourists.

But outside the walls of the resorts, the victims of lottery scams are counted not by sums of money lost, but by an ever growing tally of bodies.

The expansive four-lane highway along Montego Bay’s Resort Row gives way to winding, pothole-filled roads where corrugated tin homes press up against the cracked pavement. Goats straddle the sides of roads barely wide enough for two cars.

It is here in the ghettos that competition for calling lists has turned deadly.

More than 200 Jamaicans a year are killed in connection with lottery scams — a fifth of the killings in the island nation, which has the dubious distinction of being among the most violent countries per capita in the world.

Scammers who sell names and numbers to callers expect a cut of their profits; if they find out they’re being cheated, they’ll hunt down and kill the caller or a member of his family. Other killings occur when rival gang members steal caller lists.

“It’s a cancer in the society,” says Luis Moreno, the U.S ambassador to Jamaica. “Gangs escalate armed competition with each other over who is going to control these lists and who is going to get the best scammers, the best phone numbers, the best phone guys. Even children as young as 10, 12 years old are tied in as couriers.”

In June, a 14-year-old was dragged out of his home and machine-gunned by gang members connected to the scams. The same fate befell a 62-year-old grandmother in July. Two American women were wounded in August at a nightclub when a gang member opened fire on a rival who owed him money. The rival was killed.

“These gangs are often indiscriminate,” says Bunting, the national security minister. “When they come looking for their target, if they don’t find him, they will shoot members of his family to essentially send a message.”

The average Jamaican makes about $300 a month. The top lottery scammers boast of bringing in $100,000 a week. They share videos of washing cars with champagne and show off by setting fire to thousands of dollars in cash.

Scammers justify their actions by calling it reparations for slavery, authorities say.

We’re robbing the rich to pay the poor, scammers think. If someone is stupid enough to send us money, that’s their fault.

“You’re not stealing from the rich to give to the poor,” says Ambassador Moreno. “In fact, you’re victimizing the most vulnerable people of a society — Jamaican as well as the U.S.”

Lottery scamming sprang up between 1998 and 1999 when legitimate American and Canadian call centers set up operations in Montego Bay. Young Jamaicans were trained on how to empathize with customers.

No one could have known those skills would result in today’s flourishing scam business. Kenrick Stephenson, known simply as Bebe, is credited with being the country’s first lottery scammer. His hub sprang out of Granville, one of Montego Bay’s poorest and most dangerous neighborhoods. Bebe trained, recruited and cultivated young scammers.

Mansions popped up, taking over land where squatters dwelled. Expensive cars cruised the streets. Scammers flashed their bling. At the gates of call centers, scammers lurked, offering money to anyone who would provide lead lists.

But even the godfather of lottery scams wasn’t immune to the spiraling violence. Bebe’s life was snubbed out gangland style at the gates of his mansion in the plush Ironshore neighborhood of Montego Bay in May 2014.

Showing how intricately tied scammers are within Jamaican society, Bebe was a prominent gay activist and powerful figure within the ruling People’s National Party. When he was killed, a PNP member said he would be “sadly missed.” His casket was said to be made of gold.

Top officials know the stakes are great. If the violence moves closer to the resorts and scares off visitors, the nation’s economy would crumble. Its multi-billion-dollar tourism industry counts for about 90% of the economy.

“We have to have a zero-tolerance approach,” Bunting says. “We need to establish that this is as much a crime as drug trafficking, as much a crime as if you held up somebody with a gun. It is in some ways even more cruel because of the age and the vulnerability of the victims.”

A Jamaican raid

The sign at the entrance to Rosemount Gardens, a middle- to upper-class neighborhood in Montego Bay, reads: “The law is active here. Take no chances.”

Today, the law is active.

Wham. Wham. Wham. Two agents pound on the front door of a house. The sound echoes around the neighborhood. A dog barks from a nearby house.

One of the agents has a 9 mm machine gun. The other is armed with a Glock handgun. More are standing back. They’ve gotten intelligence that a man inside has earned maybe hundreds of thousands of dollars from scamming.

The house, once a one-room concrete shack, is undergoing extensive renovations, including a new wing and a front porch with intricate floor-to-ceiling grill work — fancy burglar bars to keep intruders out. A mound of sand sits next to the porch. A stucco front wall remains unfinished.

Inside, the suspect grabs a hammer and drives a nail into his laptop, piercing the hard drive. He runs to his bathroom and throws the laptop in a bucket of water in his shower. He begins eating pieces of notebook paper.

The agent with the machine gun kicks open the door and rushes inside. Other agents follow, their Glocks drawn, and go through the house room-to-room.

In seconds, they spot the suspect in a back bedroom. Wearing only gray briefs, he holds his hands in the air and falls down on his bed.

“You get out of bed!” an agent screams.

The suspect moans, a mortified look across his face.

“Right now! Right now! Downnnnnnnn!”

He lies on his stomach on the bedroom floor. An agent handcuffs him. That’s when authorities realize he’s chewing on something.

“Spit it out! Spit out everything!”

An agent pulls out a machete and stands over the suspect, the blade looming over his head. He coughs up pieces of paper with names and numbers.

Authorities allowed CNN to film the raid.

Kevin Watson, the MOCA official who testified at the North Dakota trial, oversees the raid on this August day. Watson is a made-for-Hollywood cop, with slick-backed hair, a million-dollar smile and effusive pride in law enforcement.

Watson stands in the bedroom, the handcuffed suspect next to him. Authorities have found a treasure trove: the laptop, the chewed-up paper, cell phones and a notebook with dozens of names and numbers.

Watson holds up a flip phone and scrolls through the call log. Scammers prefer to use flip phones instead of smartphones to limit their digital footprint. Calls to America were made at 10:42 a.m.; 10:43; 10:46; 10:47. Each call went to a different area code.

“It’s quite unlikely that you know someone from all these states,” Watson says.

He turns to the suspect. “How long have you been involved in lottery scamming?” Watson asks. “I don’t want you to tell me that you’re not involved, because we didn’t come here by chance. If you understand how MOCA works, you understand that we came here because we know what you’re up to. Alright. So how long have you been involved in lottery scamming?”

The suspect says he wishes not to speak. Under further questioning, he acknowledges that he defrauded people a “few years ago.”

“Like how many years?” Watson asks.

“I don’t want to respond,” the suspect says.

“You do understand that we can get all of that information, right? So it would be prudent for you to be honest with us,” Watson replies.

Silence.

In the suspect’s wallet is the name, address and Social Security number of a 69-year-old man in Wisconsin. The suspect admits he’s never been to Wisconsin.

Investigators log all items seized and bag them. They take away the suspect to be booked and jailed. He has been charged with “knowingly possessing identity information of other persons with intention to commit an offense,” Watson says.

Four years ago, Watson scrapped his IT job for the opportunity to conduct raids like these. At 37, the father of two young children has made targeting lottery scams one of his primary aims.

When he spoke at an elementary school earlier this year, a teacher pulled him aside and told him that 17 of the 35 students in her class wanted to be lottery scammers. He spoke with two boys, ages 7 and 9, who told him they hoped to become scammers so they could drive fancy cars and live in big houses.

Watson’s heart sank. “I was very broken by what I heard,” he recalls. “What lottery scamming is doing is making it look like only thieves live in Jamaica.”

As he leaves the scene of the raid this day, he walks out the broken front door and gives a thumbs up.

“We’re successful with this one,” he says.

Plugging the leaks

Watson and his Jamaican colleagues have begun making headway in the fight, although they admit it will be a long battle.

Law enforcement personnel have met with priests and preachers, business leaders and teachers to talk about the need to stop the scams. Just this year, police have spoken to more than 10,000 children and teens at schools around Montego Bay. Their message: There’s nothing glamorous about stealing from old people or getting executed.

Jamaican authorities and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement launched a joint task force in 2009, called JOLT, to focus on the scams. But there was little the Jamaican Operations Linked to Telemarketing task force could do because the scammers were essentially untouchable. There was little political will to prosecute the scammers and few laws to hold them accountable.

And so, they flourished. One prominent rapper glorified scamming in a song. People could walk down the streets of Montego Bay and hear scammers operating in the open, Watson says.

That changed in 2013 when Jamaican lawmakers passed what has become known as the Lottery Scam Law, giving authorities the tools they need to conduct sweeping raids and keep suspects locked up.

More than 500 arrests have been made since then.

Western Union and Moneygram now closely monitor transactions, especially around Montego Bay. Scammers have begun shifting tactics, using money mules to carry cash directly to them. Sometimes, they talk their victims into sending appliances with cash hidden inside.

Call centers have tightened their operations. Employees get searched before and after their shifts. Cell phones, pens, notepads, CDs, flash drives — everything — gets stored in lockers while they work. Their Internet access at work is strictly controlled.

Workers also undergo lie detector tests once a quarter, get fingerprinted and are warned of the likelihood of jail time if caught working with lottery scams.

Those measures have “completely locked down the leakage of information,” says Yoni Epstein, who heads a trade group representing more than two dozen call centers in Jamaica.

The centers provide tech support, customer relations and other services for companies like Xerox and Amazon. They employ 17,000 Jamaicans.

Scammers no longer wait outside their gates.

Still, caller lists are available online through black markets, authorities say. Leaks can come from disgruntled workers — if not in Jamaica, then in other countries — or from hackers or other criminal enterprises.

History was made earlier this year when a Jamaican was extradited to the United States for the first time on lottery scam charges. Damion Bryan Barrett, 29, pleaded guilty to wire fraud and was sentenced in June to 46 months in prison.

“Before all this, I was just going through a very difficult time. Smoking, drinking, just living,” Barrett told the judge in federal court in Fort Lauderdale. “I just want to go home to my son — be a better person for him, so this won’t happen to him.”

Moreno, the U.S. ambassador, says Barrett’s extradition “sends the message that there’s no way that you can really get away with this.”

Jamaica’s minister of national security agrees. Bunting says Jamaican officials want more suspects extradited because no Jamaican wants to end up in a U.S. prison. When top drug traffickers from Jamaica were extradited to the United States, Bunting says, it cut down tremendously on his nation’s drug trade.

“If we could get maybe a few dozen scammers extradited,” he says, “then it could have a similar chilling effect.”

Authorities pledge more extraditions are on their way.

The calls keep coming

The day after Albert Poland killed himself in Tennessee, neighbors brought casserole dishes and reflected on the man who taught Sunday school for more than 45 years.

The phone rang. Caller ID showed it was from the 876 area code. Then it rang again. And again. And again. More than 40 calls from Jamaica. Poland wasn’t even in the ground yet.

Chris Poland could hardly contain his rage. The son decided to do something. He picked up his father’s phone, placed it on speaker and hit the record button on his cell phone. He pretended to be his father.

The man on the other end said he hoped to deliver millions today. He said he’d received the $400 from Saturday but needed another $1,500.

“Where is your wife right now?”

“She’s at the store,” Chris responded.

“Ah, OK, OK, OK. What I need you to do now, Mr. Albert, is I need you to get your bank card and your identification card and go in the car right now. I’m not going to hang up. OK?”

“But I don’t have a car. She’s in the car,” Chris said.

“Ah, and that’s the car you’d have to use to go to the Western Union and your bank. Right?”

Yes, Chris told him, adding that maybe he could catch a cab.

“That would be more better, because we don’t want your bank to close today and we need to deliver this money,” the man said. “We want to deliver your $2.5 million to you before your bank closes, so you can put it in a safe place. OK?”

“OK,” Chris responded.

“So go outside right now and get a cab. I’m not going to hang up …”

“OK,” Chris said. “Where will I get the money, the $2.5 million?”

“Remember that we took your address from you on Saturday. It’s going to be delivered directly to your doorstep. OK?”

Chris said he needs to hail a cab; the caller promised to call back in 10 minutes. The two hang up.

More than three months after Poland’s death, the calls have not ceased.

Sometimes, Virginia Poland picks up the phone. She found her husband’s suicide note next to his computer. “He was my best friend. He was my buddy. He was just good to me,” she says softly, dabbing tears with a tissue. “When they took him, they took my life, too.”

Once, she told her husband’s scammer that her husband killed himself. The man laughed. She told him to call the funeral home.

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UNCW Office of the Arts, Thalian Hall Partner to Present Special Performance …

Monday, October 12, 2015

The UNCW Office of the Arts, in partnership with the Thalian Hall Center for the Performing Arts, announces a special performance by Dušan Týnek Dance Theatre. The internationally acclaimed ensemble of dancers will take the stage at Thalian Hall at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 23.

This is the third show of the Office of the Arts’ 2015-16 “UNCW Presents” season, which kicked off on Sept. 11 with a concert by country music legend Ricky Skaggs. An additional seven performances remain before the season concludes on June 9, 2016 with percussionists Savion Glover and Jack DeJohnette. 

“Collaboration is at the core of our work in the arts and I’m so happy to continue our collaborative presentations with Thalian Hall,” said Kristen D. Brogdon, director of the UNCW Office of the Arts. “I love watching contemporary dance in historic venues and look forward to bringing Dušan Týnek Dance Theatre’s energy and vision to Wilmington.”

Born in Czechoslovakia, Dušan Týnek served as an understudy for the Merce Cunningham Dance Company and toured with a host of NYC-based modern dance companies before founding his own eight-member company in 2003. The NYC-based troupe was touted as one of the top five dance highlights in the city by The New York Times.

In 2012-13, Dušan Týnek Dance Theatre was one of six dance companies chosen to be part of the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Professional Development Program (BAM PDP) inaugural year. The company’s tenth anniversary year was marked by several world premieres that provocatively explored the confluence of science and mythology.

Under the direction of Týnek, the company has built a reputation for their high level of innovation, sophistication and an exceptional level of artistry that people of all ages can appreciate.

Ticket prices for the Oct. 23 performance range from $18 to $32 and may be purchased online.

The public is invited to an open masterclass at The Dance Cooperative from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Oct. 24.  Members of the Dušan Týnek Dance Theatre will also make a special appearance at Snipes Academy of Arts and Design and conduct an open rehearsal for local university and community college dance students as part of their residency.

The Office of the Arts’ “UNCW Presents” series serves the UNCW campus and the Wilmington community by shining a spotlight on the intellectual life of the campus through diverse and unique cultural programming. Curated by UNCW’s Office of the Arts, the series also includes free outreach opportunities available to the public, including master classes, lectures, demonstrations and more within the Wilmington community and our partner community groups. “UNCW Presents” participates in the cultural life of the region as a member of the NC Presenters Consortium and Arts North Carolina. Visit www.uncw.edu/presents for additional information on each event.

Photos and additional media tools are available at www.dusantynek.org.

To arrange advanced media interviews, please contact:
Kristen D. Brogdon
Director, UNCW Office of the Arts
910.962.3442 (o)
312.399.0428 (m)
brogdonk@uncw.edu

— Caroline Cropp

#Arts

#UNCWPresents

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Technology Solution For Growing Senior Market Earns Attention From Strategic …








RALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 12, 2015 /PRNewswire/ —
K4Connect, a user-centric technology integration company, announced today that it has raised $1.9 million in a seed round to support the launch of its debut product for senior living communities. The product, K4Community, transforms community apartments and residences into smart homes that are responsive to individual residents’ needs and preferences via a single easy-to-use application. With new home automation products appearing on the market daily, K4Connect is the first company to bring them together in an integrated solution specifically designed and developed to meet the evolving needs of the rapidly growing, though underserved, senior living market.

–>RALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 12, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — K4Connect, a user-centric technology integration company, announced today that it has raised $1.9 million in a seed round to support the launch of its debut product for senior living communities. The product, K4Community, transforms community apartments and residences into smart homes that are responsive to individual residents’ needs and preferences via a single easy-to-use application. With new home automation products appearing on the market daily, K4Connect is the first company to bring them together in an integrated solution specifically designed and developed to meet the evolving needs of the rapidly growing, though underserved, senior living market.

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RALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 12, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — K4Connect, a user-centric technology integration company, announced today that it has raised $1.9 million in a seed round to support the launch of its debut product for senior living communities. The product, K4Community, transforms community apartments and residences into smart homes that are responsive to individual residents’ needs and preferences via a single easy-to-use application. With new home automation products appearing on the market daily, K4Connect is the first company to bring them together in an integrated solution specifically designed and developed to meet the evolving needs of the rapidly growing, though underserved, senior living market.

Sierra Ventures and Better Ventures; North Carolina-based Lowe’s Companies, Inc.; and Florida’s Stonehenge Growth Equity Partners. Individuals including Stephen Morton, President and COO of Signature Senior Living, and Chris Regan, a patent attorney with Allen, Dyer, Doppelt, Milbrath Gilchrist, P.A., as well as two other unnamed investors have committed funds for K4Connect’s growth.

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Sierra Ventures and Better Ventures; North Carolina-based Lowe’s Companies, Inc.; and Florida’s Stonehenge Growth Equity Partners. Individuals including Stephen Morton, President and COO of Signature Senior Living, and Chris Regan, a patent attorney with Allen, Dyer, Doppelt, Milbrath Gilchrist, P.A., as well as two other unnamed investors have committed funds for K4Connect’s growth.

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The senior market, which is expected to double in size over the next 15 years, is prime for an influx of new technologies and investments. The momentum in the market is evidenced by strong support for K4Connect from several leading investors, including: Silicon Valley-based Sierra Ventures and Better Ventures; North Carolina-based Lowe’s Companies, Inc.; and Florida’s Stonehenge Growth Equity Partners. Individuals including Stephen Morton, President and COO of Signature Senior Living, and Chris Regan, a patent attorney with Allen, Dyer, Doppelt, Milbrath Gilchrist, P.A., as well as two other unnamed investors have committed funds for K4Connect’s growth.

F. Scott Moody. AuthenTec’s technology is now the foundation for Apple’s Touch ID. Similarly, Regan previously served as outside patent counsel for AuthenTec, which had more than 200 patents when acquired by Apple in 2012.

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F. Scott Moody. AuthenTec’s technology is now the foundation for Apple’s Touch ID. Similarly, Regan previously served as outside patent counsel for AuthenTec, which had more than 200 patents when acquired by Apple in 2012.

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Sierra Ventures and Stonehenge were previous investors in AuthenTec, the fingerprint sensor technology company co-founded by K4Connect CEO F. Scott Moody. AuthenTec’s technology is now the foundation for Apple’s Touch ID. Similarly, Regan previously served as outside patent counsel for AuthenTec, which had more than 200 patents when acquired by Apple in 2012.

the United States. The company’s focus on improving quality of life for seniors will be essential as our population ages,” said Ben Yu, Managing Director of Sierra Ventures. “We could not be more excited to reinvest in anentrepreneur like Scott. Much like our priorinvestment in him and the team atAuthenTec, we see K4Connect solving a global problem by making extremely complex technology accessible to everyday consumers.”

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the United States. The company’s focus on improving quality of life for seniors will be essential as our population ages,” said Ben Yu, Managing Director of Sierra Ventures. “We could not be more excited to reinvest in anentrepreneur like Scott. Much like our priorinvestment in him and the team atAuthenTec, we see K4Connect solving a global problem by making extremely complex technology accessible to everyday consumers.”

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“K4Connect’s first product is bridging the gap between smart technologies and the 43 million seniors living in the United States. The company’s focus on improving quality of life for seniors will be essential as our population ages,” said Ben Yu, Managing Director of Sierra Ventures. “We could not be more excited to reinvest in an entrepreneur like Scott. Much like our prior investment in him and the team at AuthenTec, we see K4Connect solving a global problem by making extremely complex technology accessible to everyday consumers.”                                                                                                                                                                         

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“By putting the residents’ needs first, there is no doubt that K4Community is making a material difference in peoples’ lives,” said Morton, co-founder of Southern Assisted Living, whose 40 senior living communities were acquired by Brookdale in 2006. “My experience in this industry has taught me that the products that empower seniors themselves are the ones that succeed, and that is what I see here.”

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The company’s patent-pending software platform seamlessly integrates disparate smart devices, systems and technologies into a single responsive system. This makes life simpler and healthier for seniors, while arming community staff and operators with actionable resident data and analytics to help improve quality of care and customer satisfaction. 

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“The overwhelmingly positive support we have received from investors confirms that K4Connect will be important to the future of senior care,” said Moody. “As more of America’s 75 million baby boomers transition to retirement, senior living communities need new ways to distinguish themselves from competitors. Our product improves quality of care, streamlines community operations, and most importantly, helps make residents’ lives simpler, healthier and happier.”

About K4Connect
K4Connect is a technology integration company based in Raleigh, North Carolina. Its differentiated software platform can integrate any number of disparate smart devices, systems and applications into a single responsive system. The company’s initial K4-branded products, including the previously announced K4Community, are specifically tailored for seniors and individuals living with disabilities. For more information, please visit www.k4connect.com.

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About K4Connect
K4Connect is a technology integration company based in Raleigh, North Carolina. Its differentiated software platform can integrate any number of disparate smart devices, systems and applications into a single responsive system. The company’s initial K4-branded products, including the previously announced K4Community, are specifically tailored for seniors and individuals living with disabilities. For more information, please visit www.k4connect.com.

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About K4Connect
K4Connect is a technology integration company based in Raleigh, North Carolina. Its differentiated software platform can integrate any number of disparate smart devices, systems and applications into a single responsive system. The company’s initial K4-branded products, including the previously announced K4Community, are specifically tailored for seniors and individuals living with disabilities. For more information, please visit www.k4connect.com.

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/technology-solution-for-growing-senior-market-earns-attention-from-strategic-investors-300157591.html

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/technology-solution-for-growing-senior-market-earns-attention-from-strategic-investors-300157591.html

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SOURCE K4Connect

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