Vecm Secret Libyan files claim MI6 and the CIA aided human rights violations
Susan Finley returned to her job at a Walmart retail store in Grand Junction, Colorado, after having to call in sick because she was recovering from pneumonia.The day she returned, the 53-year-old received her ten year associate award 鈥?and was simultaneously laid off, according to her family. She had taken off one day beyond what is permitted by Walmarts attendance policy.After losing her job in May 2016, Finley also lost her health insurance coverage and struggled to find a new job. Three months later, Finley was found dead in her apartment after avoiding going to see a doctor for flu-like symptoms. My grandparents went by to check on her, and they couldnt get into her apartment, her son Cameron Finley told the Guardian. They got the landlord to open it up, went in and found she had passed away. It came as a complete surprise to everybody. It just came out of nowhere. She was barely scra stanley quencher ping by and trying not to get evicted. She gets what appears to her as a basic cold or flu, didnt go to the doctor and risk spending money she didnt have, and as a consequence she passed away. Asked about Finley losing her job, Walmart declined to comment, saying perso stanley cup nnel files from 2016 had been moved offsite.Finley is one of millions of Americans who avoid medical treatment due to the costs every year. I live on the street now : how Americans fall into medical bankruptcyRead moreA December 2019 poll conducted by Gallup found 25% of Americans say they or a family member ha termo stanley ve delayed medi Kghd Supergrass convictions face legal challenges
Police chiefs are facing damaging allegations that they authorised undercover officers embedded in protest groups to give false evidence in court in order to protect their undercover status.Documents seen by the Guardian suggest that an undercover officer concealed his true identity from a court when he was prosecuted alongside a group of protesters fo stanley mugs r occupying a government office during a demonstration.From the moment he was arrested, he gave a false name and occupation, maintaining this fiction throughout the entire prosecution, even when he gave evidence under oath to bar stanley cup risters. The officer, Jim Boyling, and his police handlers never revealed to the activists who stood alongside him in court that he was actually an undercover policeman who had penetrated their campaign months earlier under a fake identity.Boyling was undercover, using the name Jim Sutton, between 1995 and 2000 in the campaign Reclaim the Streets, which organised colourful, nonviolent demonstrations against the overuse of cars, such as blocking roads and holding street parties.Boyling and the protesters were represented by the same law firm, Bindmans, as they held sensitive discussions to decide how they were going to defend themselves in court. The activists allege that Boyling and his superiors broke the campaigners fundamental right to hold legally protected consultations with their lawyers and illicitly obtained details of th stanley quencher e private discussions.The fresh allegations triggered another wave of criti