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A federal jury on Thursday awarded more than $650,000 to two Ohio tourists who were arrested in New Orleans on public drunkenness charges two days before Hurricane Katrina and jailed for more than a month in the storm s chaotic aftermath.The jury unanimously concluded that Orleans Parish Sheriff Marlin Gusman falsely imprisoned Robie Waganfeald and Paul Kunkel Jr., both of Toledo, Ohio, and awarded them a total of $459,300 for those claims.The seven jurors also found that one of Gusman s chief deputies, William Hunter, was deliberately indifferent to the men s constitutional rights to call an attorney or relative after their arrest. For that violation, jurors awarded them $200,000.The men had asked the jury to award them more than $1.3 million in damages, claiming they were held illegally in inhumane c
stanley quencher onditions after the jail flooded.The two friends hugged each other after the verdict was read. There is a God, Kunkel whispered after the jury left the courtroom.Other inmates who rode out the hurri
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stanley tumblers lawsuits, but a lawyer for Kunkel and Waganfeald said he believed they were the first to win an award against Gusman s office. We hope it gets his attention, said the lawyer, John Murray.Gusman, who testified during the trial but wasn t in the courtroom Thursday, said in a statement that his office will appeal the judgment. Gusman said transferring more than 6,000 inmates out of the jail after Katrina was an unpreceden Clkq Are We There, Yet The Challenges Of Landing On A Comet
It estimated that over a million students in the U.S. misuse prescription
stanley cup drugs and stimulants to boost their attention span, memory, and alertness. But a new study suggests some of these drugs are detrimental to developing brains, causing long-term impairments to cognitive function. As noted in the new study by Kimberly Urban and Wen-Jun Gao, Cognitive enhancement is perhaps one of the most intriguing and controversial topics in neuroscience today. Indeed, a growing proportion of the population 鈥?especially students 鈥?are feeling increased pressure to take cognitive enhancing drugs. These individuals are facing more stringent college and graduate school acceptance criteria, limited job pools and an ever-increasing pressure to perform better and better
botella stanley if they hope to succeed, write Urban and Gao in their study, which now appears Frontiers In Systems Neuroscience. Sadly, this group is most likely at risk for potential neurological consequences due to their still-developing brains. Reduced Brain Plasticity Many of these stimulants 鈥?which are part of a broader groups of enhancement drugs known as nootropics 鈥?are used illicitly and off label, and are often acquired via the black market. It now appears, however, that the short-term boost in mental performance comes at a cost to juveniles and adolescents, namely a long-term decrease in the brain plasticity required for task switching, future planning, and adaptive flexible behavior.
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