Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Welcome Laura Brandt

Laura Brandt, ClearCause Event Planner

Laura Brandt Photo
Laura Brandt brings years of management experience to enrich ClearCause benefits and fundraising.  She worked as Director of Alumni and Donor Relations for Normandale Community College Foundation.  She enjoyed helping students afford college education by finding donors to help them pay for school.
The Foundation team raised approximately ~$400,000 a year for Normandale students.
Laura is leading ClearCause Foundation's "Around the World Safely 2013" event on July 30, 2013, while developing policy and practices to replicate and improve success.

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Students Fired Up About Campus Security

DoaneLineSimilar Study Abroad Laws Do NOT Exist!

According to an article in Doane Line, May 12, 2013 published by 'Beat Reporting Class'.  The reporting class was doing an audit of public records on Doane’s campus and within the communities of Crete and Wilber to determine compliance with state and federal law.  They reported Doane Safety Office failed, breaking both state and federal laws by failing to provide an 'incident report' without question.
The Clery Act and the Nebraska Open Records Law both require colleges and universities to provide public records concerning campus and community-based incidents upon request without question.  The article reported that safety administrator Michael Dixon, ".. demanded an email request for the documents before safety would comply. An email was sent as requested, and following another visit to the Safety Office an email reply containing the information was sent a week later."  
Swathmore Daily GazetteIn April, 2013 twelve (12) students filed a federal complaint against Swathmore College for violating Clery Act according to an article in the Daily Gazette. Specifically, the complaint addresses a lack of safety and security reporting on sexual assaults on campus.   The article reports, "In their complaint, Ferguson and Brinn bring six allegations of misconduct against the college:
1. Discouraging students from reporting crime to local law enforcement and from going through formal judiciary proceedings
2. Persistently underreporting incidents of sexual battery, sexual assault, and rape in the Annual Clery Security Report
3. Persistently underreporting incidents of sexual battery, sexual assault, and rape in the daily crime log
4. Failing to issue timely reports of incidents of sexual battery, sexual assault, and rape
5. Failing to publicly report potential sanctions for sexual battery, sexual assault, and rape
6. Intimidating, discriminating, and retaliating against sexual assault and rape survivors and their advocates
Their complaint will be reviewed by the Department of Education and may be granted an investigation in as soon as two weeks."
Failure to comply with the Clery Act means Doane & Swathmore Colleges risk losing federal financial aid and could mean a $35,000 fine.  Sadly, similar laws to mandate transparency on student travel and study abroad programs DO NOT exist.  Please use your VOICE!  Write to state and federal policy to ask for oversight, guidelines, qualifications and transparency.
Clery Security on Campus
The Clery Act for Security on Campus - was set in place after Jeanne Cleary was brutally raped, sodomized, strangled with a wire cord, bitten, and mutilated with a broken bottle in her third floor door room.  Security on Campus mandates that every campus publish their "Clery Incident Report" and make it available upon request.  Every student and parent should read this report before enrolling.  Similar reports should be mandated before going abroad.
RAINNRape, sexual assault and unwanted touching are under reported.  If you need help contact RAINN - Rape and Incent National Network - the nation's largest anti-sexual violence organization.

We rely on your generosity to advance Safe Global Youth Travel.  Please GIVE NOW.

Monday, May 6, 2013

The $41,700,000 Tick

Cara Munn China Tick Borne Encyphelitis
by Guest Blogger Nicola Losik
Fifteen year old Cara Munn had no idea that her life was about to change forever when she went to China on a school-supervised trip in the summer of 2007. While overseas, Munn was bitten by a tick and later diagnosed with tick-borne encephalitis. Her private school, Hotchkiss School of Lakeville, Connecticut, did not enforce necessary safety methods.  They let their students walk through a wooded area in China known to be infested with ticks carrying encephalitis as well as other insect-transmitted diseases. Munn now has significant brain damage and is unable to speak. Her life is forever changed.
The Bridgeport Federal Jury ruled in favor of Munn awarding $41.7 million in response to a personal injury lawsuit Munn’s family brought against Hotchkiss School. Hotchkiss School is planning to appeal, as attorneys represent tick-borne encephalitis is a rare disease and the school should not be responsible for warning students or requiring protective measures.
“We care deeply about all our students,” the school said in a statement. “We make every effort to protect them . . .  We put great care and thought into planning and administering off-campus programs and we extend the same care to students on these trips as to students on campus.”
Yet others feel differently. “Hotchkiss failed to take basic safety precautions to protect the minor children in its care,” Munn’s attorney Antonio Ponvert III said.  “I hope that this case will help alert all schools who sponsor overseas trips for minors that they need to check the CDC for disease risks in the areas where they will be traveling, and that they must advise children in their care to use repellant and wear proper clothing when necessary. Cara’s injuries were easily preventable.”
Sources:
Klimas, Liz. "Student Wins $41. 7 Million Settlement for Disease She Contracted on School Trip." The Blaze 29 Mar. 2013: n. pag. Web. 3 May 2013
Image ABC News, “Woman Who Contracted Encephalitis on School Trip Awarded $41.7M.” ABC News  pag. Web 29 March 29 2013 (Courtesy of Munn Family)

Sunday, May 5, 2013

National Geographic - Locked Up Abroad

A View From Behind Bars  with Dick Atkins

Dick Atkins Locked Up Abroad National GeographicAttorney Dick Atkins, the so-called “Houdini of Fast Escapes from Foreign Prisons,” has spent more than 28 years helping Americans get out of legal trouble abroad — helping to win freedom for over a thousand Americans held in foreign custody.
His services are sought by congressmen seeking help for detained constituents, travel insurance companies looking into high-stakes claims, people who call his hotline, which offers around-the-clock legal advice, and human rights organizations like Amnesty International who refer those seeking help for friends or loved ones in trouble abroad. Some of his clients are travelers to developing countries who have found themselves in jail after breaking laws they didn't know existed.
Through his experience, Mr. Atkins has become proficient in describing the world's most notorious and unexpected tourist traps, the worst prisons on Earth and how to avoid getting sent to them. Below is his advice should one become Locked up Abroad.  

SAUDI ARABIA
The view from behind bars:
  • Bail is almost always denied.
  • Use of torture is allegedly widespread.
  • Access to legal counsel during interrogation and trial is not guaranteed.
  • Penal code includes beheading and public flogging.
What will get you locked down:
  • Using or possessing alcohol (zero tolerance).
  • Breaking morality laws — including dress and head-covering codes for women — which are enforced by religious police.
  • Possessing pornography.
  • Engaging in homosexual acts.
Atkins’ advice:
  • Remember that a confession may be the most practical way to prevent interrogation from escalating to actual torture — and give you time to seek legal representation.

INDIA
The view from behind bars:
  • Inadequate food and medical care.
  • Lengthy detention times before trial (without bail) are common.
  • No prisoner transfer agreement exists between India and the United States.
  • Americans can be targeted for extortion by the corrupt, underpaid police.
What will get you locked down:
  • Disputes over business contracts can be settled by the criminal justice system.
Atkins’ advice:
  • Discreet payments, or baksheesh, could get you out of trouble or get you better treatment.

MEXICO
The view from behind bars:
  • The police have been accused of torturing U.S. citizens to extract confessions.
  • Meals and medical care are often inadequate; in some cases, you may have to pay out of pocket for all your prison expenses.
  • Conditions can be violent; an American was allegedly beaten to death in jail by inmates and a prison guard in 2000.
  • Detention while waiting for a trial can last for weeks or longer.
  • Inmates are sometimes targeted for extortion by underpaid prison guards and officials.
What will get you locked down:
  • Possession of firearms and/or ammunition almost always results in jail time.
  • Drivers involved in accidents in which someone is seriously hurt are automatically jailed — sometimes for months — pending determination of fault and payment of restitution.
Atkins’ advice:
  • If you are jailed, make sure that your lawyer knows about the Prisoner Transfer Treaty and that everything possible is being done to get you transferred to an American prison.
PERU
The view from behind bars:
  • Harsh prison conditions made worse by inmate violence or extreme altitude.
  • Slow judicial processes mean long pretrial detention times.
What will get you locked down:
  • Extremely harsh drug laws.
Atkins’ advice:
  • Coca leaf preparations are traditionally used to counter the effects of altitude sickness by locals and tourists alike; avoid all other forms of coca.

THAILAND
The view from behind bars:
  • Despite generally good treatment by prison officials, prisons are overcrowded, extremely humid and uncomfortable.
  • Slow judicial processes can result in long pretrial detention times.
What will get you locked down:
  • Drug-related offenses can be punished with a lifetime prison sentence or the death penalty.
  • Many (mostly women) are duped into becoming drug mules when they agree to transport a package or suitcase out of the country in exchange for money or a free vacation.
Atkins’ advice:
  • Despite the availability of cheap drugs, remember the consequences.

CHINA
The view from behind bars:
  • Isolation:  It is extremely difficult to contact people who are in Chinese jails.  No prisoner transfer treaty exists between the United States and China.
  • There is no independent monitoring of Chinese prison conditions.
What will get you locked down:
  • The criminal justice system is used to enforce business contracts in a dispute.
  • There are currently around 30 Americans jailed for business-related offenses in China.  (Many claim that they are in jail for refusing to pay bribes).
 Atkins’ advice:
  • If you’re arrested in China?  Pray.
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03/09 Reprinted from National Geographic Adventure Magazine / Source: www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/0312/exclusive.html
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