Police investigating fetus discovered on bus in Baltimore

A fetus was discovered Saturday afternoon on a bus in Baltimore, Maryland, according to officials.

Baltimore Police and Maryland Transit Administration (MTA) police announced that a fetus had been found on an MTA Green Route bus.

Police responded around 12:40 p.m. to the 2500 block of Kirk Avenue after an MTA bus driver reported finding a fetus on a seat inside the bus.

FLORIDA BABY FOUND DEAD IN DUMPSTER WAS CHILD OF WOMAN ILLEGALLY IN US

The bus was headed south when the unusual discovery was made. The bus travels between Towson and Downtown Baltimore.

“Even though I wasn’t on the bus, just to know something happened like that on the bus, that’s what we’re going through these days,” resident Jeff McKoy told WBAL, noting that he frequents the area.

The incident remains under investigation.

This comes after other incidents in recent months of babies being discovered in abnormal locations.

‘LATE-TERM FETUS’ DISCOVERED IN VIRGINIA POND, POLICE IMMEDIATELY LAUNCH DEATH INVESTIGATION

Last month, a dead baby was found in a dumpster in Florida. Brusela D’Enstachio-Lugo, 34, admitted to giving birth to the child outside of her home on May 10. She said she did not know she was pregnant and that she did not go to the hospital because she was in the country illegally and did not have money to pay for medical expenses. She also admitted to putting the infant’s remains in the dumpster.

D’Enstachio-Lugo was charged with a misdemeanor related to the storage of human remains. Her DNA was collected and the Department of Homeland Security was contacted.

In March, police in Leesburg, Virginia, said a community member found a “late-term fetus” in a pond.

Marketer’s Mind Memo – Issue #55

Over my two decade journey in the online business world…I’ve heard every excuse imaginable from aspiring entrepreneurs. Most common is a lack of some resource. Well, based on my personal experience, here are 11 resources or skills you don’t need to have to grow a successful online business:You don’t need to have connections. When I started I […]

The post Marketer’s Mind Memo – Issue #55 appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.

GoGoGrandparent (YC S16) is hiring a senior/staff back end/full-stack engineer

About us:
We’re a digital caregiver that helps older & disabled adults avoid retirement communities and age well in their own homes. We tailor on demand APIs from companies like Uber and Instacart to the needs of people living with cognitive, visual, mobility and dexterity impairments. We’re operating profitably with millions in revenue and growing quickly. Our company is remote first. Total engineering headcount, including this position, is eight.

The position:
FULLY REMOTE | Full-time | US, UK, or able to work 4+ hours overlap with mainland US

Build high-quality, robust engineering at the rarest of things – a Silicon Valley startup that is both wholesome AND profitable. We have 8-figure revenue, are YC-backed, and growing fast.

Tech stack (required): Back-end heavy (Node, Typescript, MySQL, REST*+GraphQL), front-end (Vue), deploy (AWS, Docker/K8s)

Minimum 4 years experience (with Node). If full-stack, you must be strongest on the backend.

2-stage interview process.

If you want to help older adults and people with disabilities, send your LinkedIn/CV to william@gogograndparent.com (keep it brief) or apply at https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/gogograndparent/jobs


Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37692467

Points: 1

# Comments: 0

Minneapolis mayor's office blocks Townhall's Julio Rosas from scheduled ride-along with police

The office of Democratic Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey blocked Townhall.com senior writer Julio Rosas from partaking in a preplanned ride-along with the Minneapolis Police Department. 

Townhall managing editor Spencer Brown wrote on Tuesday that Rosas had arrived in the Twin Cities after coordinating with the MPD beginning July 12 and that a ride-along was approved by the department for the week of August 22; he had even received confirmation that the ride-along was “good to go” on Sunday.

“But when Julio arrived in Minnesota on August 22, he received word that his ride-along with MPD had not been approved by City Hall — a requirement that surprised MPD as well as Julio after the trip had received a green light from the known requisite parties in July,” Brown wrote. “One of Julio’s MPD sources familiar with the situation told him that the denial for Julio to do a ride-along with the city’s police force came from Mayor Jacob Frey’s office, despite MPD’s desire for Julio to see and report on the challenges officers deal with on a daily basis.”

Townhall published a series of questions that were sent to Frey’s office including when the policy requiring City Hall approval for MPD ride-alongs was instituted and what is considered by City Hall when allowing a reporter to join on a ride-along. Townhall did not get a response from the mayor. 

AUTHOR JULIO ROSAS SAYS MEDIA IGNORES NEWS WHEN IT DOESN’T FIT AGENDA: ‘DELIBERATE COVERING OF THEIR EYES’

Brown noted that ride-alongs were approved as recently as June for Alpha News as well as for CBS affiliate WCCO last fall. 

“So why did City Hall change the policy between what was known to MPD at least as recently as August 5 and Julio’s visit on August 21? Why was Julio blocked by the Minneapolis mayor’s office from going on a ride-along with MPD this week? And what are Democrat leaders in Minneapolis trying to keep hidden from outside eyes?” Brown asked.

He added, “Is it because the reality on the ground doesn’t match the rosy picture painted by Democrat leaders who’ve overseen the city’s decline into chaos?”

JULIO ROSAS ON HIS NEW BOOK ‘FIERY BUT MOSTLY PEACEFUL: THE 2020 RIOTS AND THE GASLIGHTING OF AMERICA’

Rosas told Fox News Digital, “It’s a shame, but not surprising, that the Mayor’s office doesn’t want the public to know what MPD officers are having to deal with on a daily basis. While Townhall got a story out of the trip, it wasn’t the story I wanted as it should’ve been about the brave men and women of MPD.”

Frey’s office did not immediately respond to Fox News’ request for comment. 

Frey was widely criticized over his handling of the civil unrest that broke out following the death of George Floyd. Minneapolis has not fully recovered from the 2020 riots as crime continues to plague the city. 

Critics point to a demoralized police force that does not have strong support from the mayor. 

CNN PANNED FOR ON-AIR GRAPHIC READING ‘FIERY BUT MOSTLY PEACEFUL PROTEST’ IN FRONT OF KENOSHA FIRE

Rosas, author of the book “Fiery But Mostly Peaceful: The 2020 Riots and the Gaslighting of America,” was on the ground covering the George Floyd riots in Minneapolis and is one of few journalists covering crime in cities across the country as well as the migrant crisis at the southern border. 

In a recent interview with Fox News Digital, Rosas said the riots have had long-lasting effects. 

“The effects of the riots are still very much with us today. We see that with high crime, we see that with progressive DAs not actually doing law and order in these big cities, and that all stems back to, unfortunately, what happened with George Floyd and I think we kind of lost the plot on that,” Rosas said. “Obviously what happened to him was not good, but then it shifted to the extreme on the other side, and we’re just like, ‘Well, we’re going to let a lot of people go because equity, or because racial justice.’”

He noted that crimes such as smash-and-grabs are on the rise, particularly in cities run by progressives.

“I think the lack of law and order is definitely one of those issues that people have at the top of their minds in addition to the economy, in addition to inflation and the border crisis. It’s being compounded from everything and a lot of it stems back to the lawlessness that I saw and reported on in 2020,” Rosas said. 

Rosas’ book title was inspired by the infamous CNN on-screen graphic that declared protests that had taken place in Kenosha, Wis., following the police-involved shooting of Jacob Blake were “fiery but mostly peaceful.” 

Fox News’ Brian Flood contributed to this report. 

New comment by milky2028 in "Ask HN: Who is hiring? (April 2022)"

AWS | NYC | Engineering | Hybrid | https://www.linkedin.com/posts/mattpope1_aws-reinvent-2020-k…

Good people solving some interesting problems. Lots of secret, unannounced, greenfield stuff to work on. Hit me up and I will personally refer you.

Here’s the original post from LinkedIn:

“I’m looking for amazing people to join an exciting new AWS cloud product that is part of the Amazon Connect family in New York City (domestic relocation available). If you are interested in building a high-quality and scalable SaaS offering using the latest AWS infrastructure from inside AWS, and having a blast with a fun and talented team, I would love to hear from you. Some of the open positions are linked below. Watch this Andy Jassy video if you want to learn about Amazon Connect and its impact for customers: https://lnkd.in/eq6sXe8M.

– Frontend or Full-stack Engineer (FEE II): https://lnkd.in/eNhBDwZ8

– Backend Engineer (SDE II): https://lnkd.in/eAXV7NdT

– Sr Backend Engineer (SDE III): https://lnkd.in/ed5WUZVY

– Product Manager Lead (Sr PMT): https://lnkd.in/ev9kaSQz

– Engineering Manager (SDM): https://lnkd.in/e8QF6PiB

The FTC to Dun & Bradstreet—Stop Deceiving Businesses About CreditBuilder Services and Pricing

CreditBuilder Issues Finally Resolved

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) recently settled a case against Dun & Bradstreet, the business credit bureau. The case was about its CreditBuilder product.

To settle Federal Trade Commission charges that it engaged in deceptive and unfair practices, D&B agreed to an order. This order required major changes in its operations. The idea is to benefit small- and mid-sized businesses. Under the proposed order, D&B (the Respondent) will also refund some businesses that bought the company’s products. Businesses bought these products, believing they would improve business credit scores and ratings.

The initial complaint goes back to at least 2019 and refers to D&B business practices from 2015 and later. In this case, the FTC is the complainant and D&B is the respondent.

The Facts of the Case

Per the complaint (paragraph 2):

From at least May 2015, D&B sold and distributed products to small and mid-sized business consumers. These included products D&B claims will help a business monitor, manage, and build its business credit report. D&B claims the products offer an easy way to provide positive payment history. This is history otherwise unreported by D&B. The aim is to improve the business’s credit report.

But in fact, D&B rejects most of the submissions. Thousands of businesses that have paid for these products cannot get even a single payment experience added to their reports.

D&B’s Claims About its CreditBuilder Line of Products

The complaint (paragraph 16) also said:

Respondent has routinely deceptively claimed that if an affected business would simply purchase a CreditBuilder Line product and provide information to Respondent, Respondent would verify that information and add it to the credit report. For example, in pitching … (these) … products, Respondent’s telemarketers have made specific deceptive claims including, “we will contact those companies that you add … [and] verify that payment history going back a full 12 months,” and “[i]t’s a really easy process[,] I just need a little bit of information from you and we basically take over the rest from there.”

Pricing

CreditBuilder and related products were already expensive to begin with. They cost almost $900/year. And in 2018, after selling ever more expensive products, D&B came out with Credit Essentials Plus (after releasing CreditBuilder Plus and other products). It had a price tag of almost $2,500. But in 2013, CreditBuilder cost $948.

Hence, in five years, the price of the information and features in this product rose by over 163%. In contrast, the actual inflation rate for this five-year span was less than 3%.

Selling a CreditBuilder Account as a Way to Add Trade References

Many times, telemarketers for D&B told business owners that using CreditBuilder would be a fast and easy way to add trade references. But such was not the case.

In paragraph 51, the complaint says that often and for various reasons, D&B rejected trade references added by CreditBuilder Line customers. And they didn’t include this information on their credit report.

Issues

D&B employees convinced business owners to sign up for expensive services. And then they never bothered to do what they promised to do, anyway.

Hence, beyond the issue of hard selling services which entrepreneurs didn’t need, there’s also an issue of breaking their promises. D&B was paid for services it didn’t render. And this doesn’t even get into what looks an awful lot like price gouging.

Furthermore, entrepreneurs had to spend considerable time and money correcting several errors on D&B’s part.

And finally, these issues may even date back at least to 2013.
Text of image: D&B was paid for services it didn't render (re its product, CreditBuilder)

Arguments

There don’t appear to have been too many arguments by Dun & Bradstreet in favor of its practices. The Federal Trade Commission makes arguments like the issues listed above.

Holding and Rationale

The matter was settled, and Dun & Bradstreet agreed to:

  • Change operational practices to help businesses correct their reports. This includes deleting or reinvestigating disputed data within certain time periods. Plus, a way to receive free results of revised data.
  • Clearly disclose its limited involvement in adding to a customer’s history of payment information. And disclose its rates of accepting customers’ requests to add payment information.
  • Provide disclosures for automatic renewals. And do so without placing a customer’s subscription level to a more expensive one not ordered; and
  • Give customers refunds or allow them to cancel a current subscription.

By the looks of the above proposed order, D&B conceded on pretty much everything.

What This CreditBuilder Case Means for You, the Small Business Owner

Per the FTC, business owners should review credit card statements often and with care. And consider any and all subscriptions on a regular basis. If the subscription isn’t needed, then get rid of it. The same goes for subscriptions you were signed up for without your knowledge and consent. If you have no idea what a subscription is for, or how it got on your bill, don’t hesitate to ditch it.

At Credit Suite, we help you monitor your business credit reports. This could help you spot charges you don’t recognize. But any way you monitor, we encourage you to review all statements, bills, and reports. Do so before anything like this has the potential to happen again.

And finally, we still believe trade references are an excellent addition to any business credit report. We hope Dun & Bradstreet will improve its means of adding trade references. Small business owners should be able to reap the benefits of such added data on their business credit reports.

The post The FTC to Dun & Bradstreet—Stop Deceiving Businesses About CreditBuilder Services and Pricing appeared first on Credit Suite.

Super Bowl Lessons and Super-duper-star Steph 2.0 With Kevin Clark and Logan Murdock

The Ringer’s Bill Simmons is joined by Kevin Clark to discuss the Buccaneers’ Super Bowl victory, Tampa Bay’s coaching, upcoming free agents, the NFL salary cap, the QB carousel, and more (3:00). Then Bill talks with The Ringer’s Logan Murdock about Steph Curry, Logan’s time covering the Kevin Durant Warriors, the Warriors’ playoff chances this year, and more (45:30). Finally, Kevin Clark rejoins the podcast to discuss Boxing and MMA (1:25:30).

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The post Super Bowl Lessons and Super-duper-star Steph 2.0 With Kevin Clark and Logan Murdock appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.