TDA Unveils Banner Elk’s First Comprehensive Tourism Site: BannerElk.com

Banner Elk Tourism Website

Travelers now have a comprehensive website that covers lodging, restaurants, events, attractions and things-to-do in Banner Elk.

Banner Elk’s Tourism Development Authority unveiled the site – BannerElk.com – on Sept. 18. It replaces a small, outdated site which did not fully integrate all the info sought by tourists when planning a visit to this popular walkabout village in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

The new site focuses on two priorities. The first is providing complete, detailed listings of all lodging options available in Banner Elk, including: cabins, condos, hotels, bed-and-breakfast inns and vacation rentals.

The second priority is showcasing the myriad activities available to visitors. Folks can access info about the artistic, cultural, and outdoor pursuits that make Banner Elk a great place to visit in the High Country of North Carolina.

There’s also info about a thriving food scene which has earned Banner Elk the reputation as “the culinary hotspot of the High Country.” Food aficionados indulge in everything from five-star white linen dining to upscale casual to down-home cooking to tasty delis.

Big Boom Design of Asheville built the website to be both responsive and visually appealing on devices of all shapes and sizes.

BannerElk.com uses the latest technology to incorporate a bundle of plug-ins that we’ve spent the past two years designing and building,” says Boomer Sassmann of Big Boom Design. “The design is fully responsive to adjust content seamlessly between desktops, laptops, tablets and phones. And, a new directory management systems makes it easy to update content.”

For TDA chairperson Mike Dunn, creating the new site indicates that the organization is ready to play a larger role in attracting leisure travelers.

“In this day and age when everybody is connected in some way, shape or form, most travelers rely on the internet to gather information,” Dunn says. “We have to capitalize on the number of people who do their research online. We have to create that ‘top of mind’ awareness for trips and vacations to the North Carolina mountains.”

To view the website, go online to www.BannerElk.com.

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Maceo Parker among recipients to receive state Heritage Award



Posted Oct. 12, 2015 at 12:01 AM


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All aboard the Tweetsie Railroad’s Ghost Train, Halloween Festival

(Source: Facebook)
(Source: Facebook)

BLOWING ROCK, NC –  The chilling sound of a long train whistle echoing through a fall High Country night signals that it¹s time once again for Tweetsie Railroad¹s Ghost Train Halloween Festival.

Guests from far and wide plan their trips each year to enjoy Tweetsie¹s family-friendly Halloween celebration and leaf season in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

This year¹s Ghost Train will take place Friday and Saturday nights from September 25 through Halloween night. Admission is $34 for adults and children. Children 2 and under are admitted free. Ordering advance tickets online at Tweetsie.com is strongly recommended.

Daytime visitors can still enjoy all of the Wild West family fun and adventure they¹ve come to expect from Tweetsie Railroad.

But beware when the sun goes down: the park is transformed into a world filled with frights and delights around every corner.

This year, guests are invited to join monster hunters and news media as they try to uncover the truth behind rumors of bizarre and vicious creatures reported to be roaming the mountains. The mystery will unfold when the gates open at 7:30 p.m. and Ghost Train howls its way through the night.

Tweetsie Railroad is open Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays August 17 through November 1. The 2015 season ends Sunday, November 1.

Tweetsie Railroad Ghost Train - Click here to see more photos.
Tweetsie Railroad Ghost Train – Click here to see more photos.

The park¹s Wild West themed hours are 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. The Ghost Train® Halloween Festival runs from 7:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Tickets and Golden Rail Season Passes are available at Tweetsie.com. Opening day for Tweetsie¹s 2016 season is April 8, 2016.

Tweetsie Railroad is located on U.S. Highway 321 between Boone and Blowing Rock, North Carolina. For more information about the 2015 season at Tweetsie Railroad, visit Tweetsie.com or call 877.TWEETSIE (877.893.3874).

 

More Halloween-theme events and fall festivals can be found here: 2015 Halloween events and Fall festivals in the Tri-Cities.

 

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US Bike Route 10 officially opens

SANDPOINT — Riding a bicycle from Oldtown to Clark Fork is now a reality following a ribbon cutting to kick off U.S. Bike Route 10 Friday afternoon. More than 30 people attended the ceremony in Farmin Park, which was followed by a bike ride along the route.

Cynthia Gibson, executive director for the Idaho Walk Bike Alliance, said the route covers more than 66 miles in Idaho and, when complete, the cross-country system will include more than 50,000 miles. She said the route improves riding conditions and rider visibility in the state. It travels through Oldtown, Priest River, Dover, Sandpoint, Kootenai, Ponderay, East Hope, Hope, and Clark Fork.

Idaho Transportation Department designated U.S. Bike Route 10 in May in partnership with the Adventure Cycling, Idaho Walk Bike Alliance and the Pend Oreille Pedalers.

Don Davis, retired from Idaho Transportation Department, spearheaded the bicycle route for District 1 after receiving a call from Washington State Department of Transportation a couple of years ago about the trail. He had never heard of the route, but the call got his attention.

“Our region up here has just grown into bicycle stuff,” Davis said. “It was worth looking into.”

He said one of the challenges he faced while trying to make the route a reality was getting every jurisdiction the trail passes through to agree to have the trail. He coordinated with the Area Transportation Teams, which all nine cities were a part of, and eventually got endorsements from the cities and the county.

He said the project may have the first major steps completed, but local fundraising for signs and route maintenance will continue. He said the upkeep of the trail is under the local jurisdiction.

“We all have to keep working together,” Davis said.

Katie Brodie, staff for Gov. Butch Otter, was present and read a letter from the governor. The letter stated the route is a great opportunity for increased tourism. He finished saying, “happy biking.”

Diane Norton, with Idaho Department of Commerce, said there were 11.8 million domestic visitors to the state, according to a few studies done. That brought in more than $1.4 billion in revenue. She said another study showed that visitors in Montana, which she compares to Idaho, spent about $75 per day while visiting and stayed for an average of eight days.

“This region is really blessed with bicycle routes to ride,” Norton said. “Visiting small towns is what they want to do.”

Shelby Rognstad, city council president and mayoral candidate, told the crowd that bicycling promotes better health and quality of life. He said Sandpoint has grown over the past 20 years from having no amenities to being one of the leaders for bicycle recreation.

“Sandpoint is very appreciative of ITD’s contribution to the Sand Creek Byway trail system,” Rognstad said.

Currently there are 8,992 miles of U.S. bicycle routes through 18 states, including Alaska, Florida, Kentucky, Idaho, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia, Washington and the District of Columbia.

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Duke Energy hears opposition’s outcry

It may not be time yet to break out the champagne over Duke Energy’s decision to consider alternatives to its despised power line. On second thought, pop those corks to celebrate the might of the opposition in Henderson County.

The nation’s largest utility announced Thursday it would consider alternatives to building a 45-mile transmission line across the county to connect a new natural gas plant at Asheville with a substation in Campobello, S.C. The deadline for an announcement was moved to November to give Duke more time to “carefully consider more than 9,000 comments received on the proposed transmission line and create a solution to deliver cleaner, reliable power to the Western Carolinas,” officials said.

Nobody at Duke could have foreseen the magnitude of opposition back in May when it announced plans to shut down its coal-fired plant at Lake Julian, replace it with a natural gas plant and connect it to South Carolina via the line. Opposition groups formed across the region and signs sprouted from Mills River to Edneyville declaring, “No Duke Power Lines Here!”

Duke deserves credit for taking the time to thoroughly review those 9,000-plus comments, most of which oppose the line as an eyesore that will hurt our region’s economy and quality of life. Even more so, the utility won applause with this statement:

“The company is looking at all options that can meet the region’s power demand over the next 10 to 15 years — including possible alternatives to the transmission line, Campobello substation and the configuration of the proposed Asheville natural gas power plant.”

After months of failed PR work to sell the transmission line to a wary public, Duke also acknowledged the ferocity of public opposition.

“Concerns about the transmission line and substation — and the potential impact on tourism and mountain views we all enjoy — are significant,” said Robert Sipes, general manager of delivery operations for the Western Carolinas.

Environmental organizations applauded Duke’s announcement. “This would not have happened without the thousands of citizens and many organizations that made clear our states do not need a massive new 45-mile-long power line, a huge new substation and an expensive oversized gas plant,” said Frank Holleman, senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center.

Another piece of good news tucked into Thursday’s announcement: Duke still plans to scrap the coal-burning power plant that has polluted air and water and spewed mountains of coal ash waste for more than half a century.

Henderson County is a place where natives are born and retirees and industries move, loving our high quality of life and scenic mountain views. Over the years, residents have fought off perceived threats (incinerators, racetracks, a biker party and five-lane highway) and lost battles on others, such as the asphalt plant at Grimesdale. The power line marks the rare instance in which almost the entire county is united in opposition.

We will have to wait to see what Duke announces next month, but this battle shows the power of a united front.

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Man driven to death by phone scammers has 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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Restaurant workers: New face of the working class? – Asheville Citizen

ASHEVILLE – From textile and carpenter strikes of 19th-century America to the postwar nationwide labor strikes of the 1920s, labor movements are nothing new.

But in a world where food activism is on the rise, so, too, is the call for restaurant workers’ rights, a relatively new phenomenon, said Alia Todd, one of the organizers for the Asheville Sustainable Restaurant Workforce.

Like labor-movement activists of years past, Todd and other restaurant workers say it’s more important to effect change in the workplace than it is to quietly find a better fit.

“When you leave a business because you don’t like it, that doesn’t do anything to correct a wrong, and that’s what this is about,” she said. “I believe in being better than that. It’s not about me, personally, it’s about everyone.”

Kennard Ray, national policy director of Restaurant Opportunities Centers United, a group working to improve conditions for the nation’s restaurant workforce, said the incrrease in the restaurant labor movement fills a vacuum left by industries past.

With the fall of manufacturing jobs and the housing bust eliminating construction jobs, yesterday’s textile and construction worker is today’s line cook and server.

“That work has dissipated to a degree where many of the low-wage jobs that existed in that sector no longer exist,” he said. “The restaurant industry as a whole is the single-most low-paying employer of all industries.”

But Asheville may be unique in its level of food-service activism for a city its size, with restaurant jobs representing a significant share of the workforce.

In Buncombe County, one in seven jobs belongs to the tourism industry, with an estimated 25 percent of those in the food-and-beverage sector.

Tourism in Buncombe County grew by 12.6 percent from 2009-14, sustaining 24,856 jobs with a total annual income of $714 million.

That’s an average of nearly $29,000 per person working in tourism, but that multimillion dollar pie isn’t distributed equally, leaving plenty of workers struggling on the bottom rung of the workforce ladder.

“Wages are stagnant for everybody, but the people at the bottom really suffer,” Todd said.

Income inequity drives restaurant workers to speak up for better pay and perks that most other industries enjoy, including paid vacation and sick days.

At the recent White House Summit for Worker Voice Town Hall, President Barack Obama addressed a question submitted by Todd asking what more can be done at a federal level to help restaurant workers raise standards in their industry.

With the absence of unions, which he said provided enormous muscle and lift to get federal, state and local legislation for workers passed, there have been gaps.

“I think the restaurant industry is an example where a lot of federal law did not reach into restaurants the way they should,” he said, according to White House transcripts. “Which is why, for example, waiters and waitresses and how tips were treated was oftentimes substandard.”

Obama said it was unlikely Congress would pass laws to raise standards for restaurant workers during the remainder of his presidency.

“So, I think the work that Alia is doing — Asheville, by the way, is a great town (with) great restaurants,” Obama said. “But the kind of work that Alia is doing … of creating new norms and social pressures at the local level with employers and with customers is a really powerful tool.”

Using an online megaphone

The fight for restaurant worker rights is not a purely local phenomenon. That seemed particularly evident this year, with the Fight for $15 movement spurring cooks and cashiers to walk off their jobs.

The protests weren’t limited to restaurant workers, drawing also adjunct teachers and retail workers, all demanding $15 an hour.

But fast-food workers, many of whom make $7.25 an hour, were among the loudest.

Those voices were further amplified by a tool the 19th-century labor movements didn’t have: social media.

“I could walk downtown with a petition and a clipboard for five hours and not get 20 people,” Todd said. “But you bring these things to a large scale, and it’s signed and shared. I think that’s been essential.”

In 2013, campaign-generating platform Coworker.org launched as a way to organize workers behind a common cause.

For Starbucks workers, that came in the form of fighting for the right to bare tattooed arms. Starbucks did revise its dress code, allowing workers to display their ink.

Publix workers are also asking for dress-code tweaks, namely to a facial-hair policy which forbids any growth beyond a mustache. The campaign, Free the Beard, has more than 12,000 signatures.

Locally, Tupelo Honey is the subject of another Coworker.org campaign.

The petition, started by Tupelo Honey employees with support from ASRW, states that in the past year, the restaurant has reduced wages for support staff by more than $3 per hour to the federal minimum meant for servers, $2.13 per hour.

“This base wage for support staff is below local and national industry standards,” the petition, which has more than 1,150 signatures, asserts.

The restaurant recently released a response to local media denying that wages had been cut, stating that wages in Asheville stores have, in fact, risen 6 percent since last year.

Tupelo also took a hit for dropping its Living Wage certification. But owner Steve Frabitore said that certification shouldn’t matter, adding that his company pays well above the 95th percentile of the industry.

“We’re not looking for validation of who we are and how we run our company from any third party,” he said.

But Frabitore said employees have the right to petition. “(We’re) doing the best we can for our employees, and I think the facts will bear that out,” he said.

Frabitore thinks well-known businesses in general invite scrutiny. “I just think that we’ve got so many fans and had a modicum of success through our hard work and efforts, and I feel as though we’re becoming a target,” he said.

But in an information age, every restaurant is subject to scrutiny, Ray said.

“Social media gives you a broader lens into some of the labor practices we weren’t able to see in the past,” he said. “It’s been incredible for organizing, and we’re just at the tip of the iceberg.”

Cool to be kind

To recognize worker-friendly restaurants, the ASRW introduced the Better Business Practice Bandwagon, bestowing the first business award to the owners of Blue Dream Curry House in downtown Asheville.

Chris Cunningham, one of the owners of the restaurant, said Blue Dream prioritizes workplace rights in part because of the owners’ extensive restaurant background.

“We are the restaurant workers who spent our lives in the front of the house making $2.13 an hour and depending on the kindness of strangers to pay our bills,” he said.

He said, $8 an hour isn’t enough compensation for kitchen work. “As we have grown into business owners, we share that same sensibility.”

To that end, kitchen employees at his restaurant make $12.50, while servers’ tips are supplemented to reach the same amount as needed.

As inflation grows, the minimum wage hasn’t kept pace with what it takes to survive in modern society, he said. “Who feels that more so than someone who makes $2.13 an hour and walks with $20 at the end of their shift?”

Asking for improvements in the worker-pay system is a common cause many industry activists fight for. And, according to Ray, it’s a fight worth having.

“The workers are the power,” he said. “For far too long, low-wage workers have been made to feel like they’re expendable.”

In his labor summit, Obama said that, too often, the worker debate gets framed as “a business-versus-labor thing,” rather than a debate between businesses doing the right thing and businesses “trapped in a bad relationship with their workers (and) relying on outdated models of rapid turnover and low wages and no benefits.”

Good employer standards begin with shining a spotlight on good practices and those effective companies and to help those companies share their own best practices, Obama said.

“That can make a really powerful difference over the long term,” he said. “And it sounds like Alia is doing that in her local level, and that’s something that I think we all have to learn from.”

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Brady, perfect Patriots visit Cowboys sans Romo, Bryant

ARLINGTON, Texas – Tom Brady called it a “bummer” that New England was catching the Dallas Cowboys when they were missing Tony Romo and Dez Bryant.

The star quarterback for the Patriots didn’t say it was a letdown, though. Big difference.

“This team could easily be 4-0,” Brady said of the Cowboys (2-2), who instead have lost both full games without Romo and Bryant heading into New England’s first visit to their $1.2 billion stadium Sunday. “They’re playing at home. They’ve got a lot of good players. Last year they were one of the best teams in football.”

The 38-year-old Brady is off to one of his best starts in his 16th season, the only quarterback besides Peyton Manning to have at least 1,110 yards passing and nine touchdowns without an interception in his first three games.

Coming off a bye, he’s trying to join Manning and Fran Tarkenton as the only quarterbacks to get off to a 4-0 start at least four times in a career.

The Cowboys are just trying to find a way to win without Romo, who will miss at least four more games after this one with a broken left collarbone. Brandon Weeden is making his third start in Romo’s place, and has a personal 10-game losing streak that goes back to his time in Cleveland.

Dallas led Atlanta by two touchdowns three times before fading in the second half of Weeden’s first start after Romo’s injury. Then Drew Brees beat the Cowboys with an 80-yard touchdown on the second play of overtime for New Orleans.

Now Dallas gets the defending Super Bowl champs and their six-game winning streak including the playoffs last season.

“We’ve got a resilient group of guys in this room, that last week’s last week,” said Weeden, who turns 32 next week but is making just his 24th career start; the four-time champ Brady completes his second streak of 100 straight regular-season starts for the Patriots. “We’re on to the next one. This is another big challenge for us. We know that.”

While Romo lost Bryant to a broken right foot in the opener before sustaining his injury a week later, Brady and high-scoring favorite target Rob Gronkowski are at it again. They’ve connected on four touchdowns through three games for the league’s top offense in yardage and points. New England’s 88 first downs through three games are the most in NFL history.

“They’ve had a lot of success for a long time. And there is a reason for that,” Dallas tight end Jason Witten said. “I don’t think you focus on last year. We respect them because of what we see the last three Sundays they played. And they’re a really good football team.”

Things to consider as the Patriots go for a fifth straight win over the Cowboys after losing the first seven in the series:

Hardy McClain

Defensive end Greg Hardy makes his Dallas debut and linebacker Rolando McClain returns as well after both served four-game suspensions to start the season. Hardy made headlines in his first public comments since signing with Dallas by making a reference to guns and commenting on Brady’s wife after the NFL suspended him because they believed he roughed up an ex-girlfriend with semi-automatic rifles in plain view in his apartment.

“We addressed it immediately,” Coach Jason Garrett said. “That’s not how we want to operate as an organization. We want to distinguish ourselves with our play, not with what we say.”

First visit

Brady makes his first visit to Dallas’s retractable roof stadium with the giant video board over the center of the field. “You try to study what you can on tape and see how the other quarterbacks kind of adjust some of their rhythms and mannerisms,” Brady said. “But I’m excited. I’ve heard a lot of great things about this stadium, so it will be fun to play in it.”

No Dunbar

The Dallas offense was already struggling without Romo and Bryant, who could return after next week’s bye. But the loss of Lance Dunbar to a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee presents another challenge. He was Weeden’s favorite for underneath throws and led the NFL in yards receiving for a running back through three weeks.

Tight end showdown

Witten (59 touchdowns receiving) and Gronkowski (58) are both on the verge of joining Tony Gonzalez (111), Antonio Gates (99), Shannon Sharpe (62) and Jerry Smith (60) as the only tight ends with at least 60 for their career. At 68 straight games with at least one catch, Gronkowski is 39 games behind Witten, the active leader among tight ends at 107. “I’ve been watching him ever since I’ve been in high school, college,” Gronkowski said.

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New way to greet tourists: Signs offer info, photos of local history



Posted Oct. 9, 2015 at 2:44 PM
Updated Oct 9, 2015 at 2:47 PM


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MOTOsafety Challenges Parents During National Teen Driver Safety Week








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MOTOsafety, your teen driving coach, strives to promote National Teen Driving Safety Week, to bring awareness to parents and teens about impaired driving.
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    MOTOsafety, your teen driving coach, strives to promote National Teen Driving Safety Week, to bring awareness to parents and teens about impaired driving.
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    MOTOsafety, your teen driving coach, strives to promote National Teen Driving Safety Week, to bring awareness to parents and teens about impaired driving.









ST. LOUIS, Oct. 9, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — MOTOsafety, the #1 solution on the market that prevents teen accidents on the road, is promoting National Teen Driver Safety Week (October 18-24, 2015) with resources to support parents in the “5 to Drive Campaign.”According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the goal of this campaign is to encourage parents to talk to their teen drivers about important driving safety rules.MOTOsafety is challenging parents to have their child sign the “MOTOsafety Pledge” and to discuss the pledge in detail with their teen.

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ST. LOUIS, Oct. 9, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — MOTOsafety, the #1 solution on the market that prevents teen accidents on the road, is promoting National Teen Driver Safety Week (October 18-24, 2015) with resources to support parents in the “5 to Drive Campaign.”According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the goal of this campaign is to encourage parents to talk to their teen drivers about important driving safety rules.MOTOsafety is challenging parents to have their child sign the “MOTOsafety Pledge” and to discuss the pledge in detail with their teen.

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ST. LOUIS, Oct. 9, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — MOTOsafety, the #1 solution on the market that prevents teen accidents on the road, is promoting National Teen Driver Safety Week (October 18-24, 2015) with resources to support parents in the “5 to Drive Campaign.” According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the goal of this campaign is to encourage parents to talk to their teen drivers about important driving safety rules. MOTOsafety is challenging parents to have their child sign the “MOTOsafety Pledge” and to discuss the pledge in detail with their teen.

CLICK HERE to download driving pledge

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CLICK HERE to download driving pledge

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The pledge is a tool to guide parents through the conversation about the major impairments to safe driving. The pledge covers positive and negative behavior commitments in three key areas: rules of the road, distracted driving, and responsible behavior. It is a thorough set of talking points that covers the “5 to Drive” rules of the road and much more, including issues such as texting/drinking and driving. Parents can CLICK HERE to download driving pledge

Jessica Stoddard, Director of Consumer Products for Agilis Systems.

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Jessica Stoddard, Director of Consumer Products for Agilis Systems.

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“We have always been a major advocate for National Teen Driver Safety Week because a lot of parents are unaware that solutions like MOTOsafety are available to provide valuable information to keep their teen safer on the road,” said Jessica Stoddard, Director of Consumer Products for Agilis Systems.

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MOTOsafety empowers parents to coach their children to be safer drivers. MOTOsafety is a GPS device for your vehicle that monitors your child’s driving behaviors such as speeding, tailgating, rolling stop signs, and curfews. The device gives parents peace of mind of knowing where their child is and how well they are driving without their supervision. MOTOsafety provides valuable resources to help parents through all the challenging conversations with their teen with their partnerships with National Highway Safety Administration (NHTSA), Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) and National Safety Council (NSC).

the United States. Parents are encouraged to learn more about what they can do to prevent future accidents by preparing their child to drive through MOTOsafety’s comprehensive driving education course available here http://www.motosafety.com/blog/driving-resources/.

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the United States. Parents are encouraged to learn more about what they can do to prevent future accidents by preparing their child to drive through MOTOsafety’s comprehensive driving education course available here http://www.motosafety.com/blog/driving-resources/.

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According to the NHTSA, motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for teenagers 14-18 years old in the United States. Parents are encouraged to learn more about what they can do to prevent future accidents by preparing their child to drive through MOTOsafety’s comprehensive driving education course available here http://www.motosafety.com/blog/driving-resources/.

About Agilis Systems, LLC:

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About Agilis Systems, LLC:

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About Agilis Systems, LLC:

St. Louis, MO with additional offices in Chicago, IL and Charlotte, NC. For more information, visit www.agilissystems.com.

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St. Louis, MO with additional offices in Chicago, IL and Charlotte, NC. For more information, visit www.agilissystems.com.

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Agilis Systems, LLC is Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) company specializing in providing vehicle telematics including MOTOsafety, your teen driving coach. Since 2002, Agilis has been a recognized industry leader in delivering GPS solutions that give businesses and consumers the tools they need to oversee and improve driver safety and efficiency, track mobile equipment and other assets, and reduce overall operating costs. Agilis Systems is a recipient of Frost and Sullivan’s Award for Product Innovation in the U.S. Mobile Resource Management (MRM) market. Agilis Systems is headquartered in St. Louis, MO with additional offices in Chicago, IL and Charlotte, NC. For more information, visit www.agilissystems.com.

NTDSW MOTOsafety Media kit HERE

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NTDSW MOTOsafety Media kit HERE

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For more information please check out our: NTDSW MOTOsafety Media kit HERE

Organizational Contact:
Jessica Stoddard, Director of Consumer Products
314.732.4925 x134
jstoddard@motosafety.com

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Organizational Contact:
Jessica Stoddard, Director of Consumer Products
314.732.4925 x134
jstoddard@motosafety.com

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Organizational Contact:
Jessica Stoddard, Director of Consumer Products
314.732.4925 x134
jstoddard@motosafety.com

http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20151008/275463

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Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20151008/275463 

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/motosafety-challenges-parents-during-national-teen-driver-safety-week-300156995.html

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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/motosafety-challenges-parents-during-national-teen-driver-safety-week-300156995.html

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SOURCE Agilis Systems, LLC

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