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Reporter : The Spy Whose Cover Blew Up Episode 127 Part 01

US officials have finally conceded that Raymond Davis was working as a contractor for the CIA in Pakistan. However, Pakistani authorities are yet ...

Leawood resident accused in labor fraud case

A representative of Taiwan working in Kansas City was charged Friday with violating federal law in her hiring of a Filipina housekeeper who allegedly was kept in virtual isolation inside the official&#x92;s Overland Park home.</p><p>Federal prosecutors in Kansas City say that the defendant is believed to be the first foreign representative to face this charge in the United States.</p><p>Authorities arrested Hsien-Hsien Liu, director general of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Kansas City, at her office Friday afternoon.</p><p>She made her first appearance before a magistrate judge later Friday and was ordered to remain in custody pending a federal detention hearing scheduled for Wednesday in Kansas City.</p><p>Court records do not list an attorney for Liu.</p><p>The charge alleges that Liu, 64, who is also known as Jacqueline, forced the housekeeper to work long hours and paid her far less than promised in her employment contract.</p><p>Liu also allegedly took the woman&#x92;s visa and passport, and threatened her with deportation if she did not do as she was told.</p><p>&#x93;Liu told her she was not to leave the house without permission and that she would be working six days a week at a minimum,&#x94; according to an FBI affidavit filed in support of the criminal complaint.</p><p>Lui allegedly required the woman, identified in court documents by the initials F.V., to work 16 to 18 hours a day for $400 to $450 a month.</p><p>&#x93;Liu monitored F.V. from video surveillance cameras she had installed inside her residence,&#x94; according to the court documents.</p><p>The Filipina woman was living in the Philippines last November when recruited for the housekeeping job. In order for her to obtain a visa, she and Liu signed an employment contract that was processed through the U.S. Embassy in Manila.</p><p>Under terms of the two-year contract, the woman was to be paid $1,240 each month for a 40-hour work week. She was supposed to be paid overtime for work beyond that.</p><p>The woman arrived in Kansas City in March.</p><p>In late July, she met another Filipino at a grocery store where Liu had driven her to buy groceries.</p><p>&#x93;F.V. told him that she needed his help, that she was trapped, and being underpaid and mistreated. F.V. seemed scared and stressed,&#x94; the man later reported to the FBI.</p><p>The man subsequently talked to F.V. at church, but she could no longer attend services when Liu began requiring her to work on Sundays, according to the court documents.</p><p>In August, he helped her to leave Liu&#x92;s house.</p><p>During their investigation, FBI agents spoke with other witnesses who corroborated F.V.&#x92;s story, the records said. The witnesses relayed that Liu had allegedly done the same thing with a prior housekeeper, according to the court documents.</p><p>The charge of fraud in foreign labor contracting carries a maximum sentence of up to five years in federal prison.</p><p>Prosecutors said that while there have been previous prosecutions of foreign representatives for mistreating domestic workers, Liu is accused of violating the law that covers the recruitment of foreign workers and their transport into the United States on fraudulent terms.</p><p>In their motion seeking to have Liu held without bond pending trial, federal prosecutors allege that she made arrangements to leave the United States &#x93;immediately&#x94; once she became aware of a possible federal investigation.</p><p>Prosecutors also alleged that after F.V. escaped, Liu made efforts to locate her and have her deported.</p><p>&#x93;The offense involved threats, fraud and coercion against the victim,&#x94; prosecutors stated in their detention motion.</p><p>They noted that F.V. is currently in a protected location.</p><p>The economic and cultural office where Liu served as director general is responsible for maintaining unofficial relations between the people of the United States and Taiwan, according to prosecutors. It generally would be the equivalent of foreign government consulate, but Taiwan is not recognized as a sovereign state by the United States, according to the U.S. Attorney&#x92;s Office.</p><p>The Kansas City office is overseen by the Washington-based Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States. Officials there did not respond to a telephone request for comment on the charge against Liu.

Former top jail guard charged in beating, cover-up

GB is believed to be Gary W. Barbour, 29, of Mount Pleasant in Washington County, who tried to escape from the jail on that date. Mr. Barbour filed a lawsuit a month ago alleging that he was beaten by Mr. Donis and several correctional officers.

Judge Kelly read that Mr. Donis is also accused of knowingly falsifying entries in the inmate's record when he "falsely wrote that GB was combative" in an addendum to the report on Mr. Barbour's incident on April 26, 2011. Finally, he is accused of lying to FBI agents on April 29, 2011, when he said that Mr. Barbour resisted attempts to put handcuffs on him.

"These are not charges that are typically seen in this district, and they're something that this court takes very seriously," said Judge Kelly. She sternly warned him against contacting, directly or indirectly, any witnesses or any former jail colleagues who might retaliate against witnesses.

Mr. Donis, 49, of Shaler, said nothing when he left the courtroom with his wife.

Your New Passport May Need a "Shield" - This Just In - Budget Travel

Few things feel more satisfying than a worn passport stamped-up with proof of your wide travels. But when that passport comes due for renewal, you'll have to kiss it goodbye. The government won't return it as a keepsake. It instead will issue you a new, high-tech one. The new one will have a RFID (radio-frequency identification) tag, which will store biometric and other information about you. In an absurd twist, some experts say this tag can be "scanned" by devices at a distance, making your information vulnerable. So, you may want to consider buying an RFID-blocking wallet or sleeve to protect yourself.

We encourage users to analyze, comment on, and even challenge the

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Is Jerusalem in Israel? High Court Considers | The Jewish Exponent

Richard Greenberg
Washington Jewish

Washington

The U.S. Supreme Court convened Monday to ponder the implications of a single word that is conspicuously missing from the passport of a 9-year-old boy who was born in Jerusalem. His name is Menachem Binyamin Zivotofsky, the son of Ari and Naomi Siegman Zivotofsky, Americans who made aliyah in 2000.

Menachem was born at Shaare Zedek Hospital in western Jerusalem, but due to a controversial State Department policy, his U.S. passport does not designate "Israel" as his place of birth -- despite a federal statute enacted in October 2002 that says Americans born in Jerusalem are entitled to have Israel listed on

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