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    Blog Posts by Liz Goodwin

    • Tim Loop at the gap in the border fence that leads to his Texas home.
      BROWNSVILLE, Texas—Pamela Taylor's living room has a Santa-hat-wearing stuffed dog atop a red doily on her coffee table, poinsettias near the couch, and, in the center of the room, an angel-topped Christmas tree with a few wrapped presents underneath.

      Outside, the Christmas spirit is less visible, amid repeated warnings to KEEP OUT—though a "Merry Christmas!" sign hangs next to a warning to would-be trespassers that they're being filmed by a surveillance system. Written outside the front gate is the message: "Don't even think about parking here."

      This will be Taylor's fourth Christmas living on what some Texans call the "Mexican side" of the U.S. border fence. Although she lives in Texas, her home is south of the 18-feet steel-and-concrete border wall erected by the American government. Taylor, who is 84, can see it from her front porch.

      The wall was built to satisfy a law, passed in 2006 and 2008, that authorized 700 miles of fence on the southern border, 315 miles of it in Texas. President Bush said the fence would make the border safer and was "an important step toward immigration reform." Many of the 2012 Republican presidential candidates, with the exception of Texas Gov. Rick Perry, say they want to build a fence that spans the entire U.S. border. The Brownsville area shows just how complicated that project would be.

      Because of a decades-old treaty with Mexico prohibiting building in the Rio Grande floodplain, the government built its border fence more than a mile north of the snaky river, trapping tens of thousands of acres of Texas--land in Cameron and Hidalgo counties--on the wrong side of the fence. The border wall is also riddled with miles-long gaps, seemingly placed at random. The U.S. Border Patrol says that illegal crossers are pushed to these gaps, where they are more easily apprehended.

      Some Texans, like Taylor, live completely on the other side of the $6.2 million-a-mile wall. Others had their property split in half by the fence, after the government seized portions of their land. At least 200 people in Cameron County had some of their land seized for the fence.

      'It's really done nothing for us'

      Ten years ago, Taylor found a stranger sitting in her living room. "He had used my bathroom, he had shaved and cleaned himself off and he was watching the border patrol go by, sitting in that rocking chair," she said in an interview with Yahoo News. A few years later, she found 40 kilos of marijuana hidden in her bougainvilleas.

      Taylor says she had to work hard to get her citizenship when she married an American soldier and moved to Texas from England after World War II. She doesn't think illegal immigrants should get a chance to become citizens. "If anything comes really easy, it's not appreciated," she said.

      But the government's solution to the problem strikes her as ridiculous. "It's really done nothing for us because they're still coming across," Taylor says. Earlier this year, teenage illegal immigrants pounded on her front door in the middle of the night. She called the Border Patrol, which arrested them and a group of Hondurans they were trafficking, according to Taylor. She keeps a gun and a taser in her house, just in case.

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    • The digital ways kids cheat

      This Idaho school banned iPods after teachers suspected students used them to cheat ( …The low-tech days of cheaters writing answers on their hands are over, according to this round up of the new and digital ways kids are finding to cheat on tests by USA Today's Greg Toppo.

      Some companies sell tiny earbuds that let test-takers communicate with a helper outside the exam room. (In China, two students taking an English exam had to be hospitalized to get those earbuds removed.) In Orange County, Calif., a student was accused of changing high school transcripts by installing spyware into school computers to steal teachers' passwords.

      One of the most popular online videos on cheating shows students how to scan a soda label, remove all the nutritional information in a photo editing tool, and replace it with formulas or other facts. Students can print out the new label and reattach it to the soda bottle--and hope teachers don't notice when they're staring at the bottle during their exam.

      In a poll done by Common Sense Media, about 35 percent of students said they'd used their cell phones to cheat on a test. The site Teachopolis tells teachers they can prevent cheating by inspecting calculators to make sure that students haven't programmed notes in them and by banning cell phones. A 2008 study also recommended that teachers run anti-plagiarism software when grading papers, to make sure their students didn't copy and paste chunks of online material into their own essays.

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    • Justice Department accuses AZ Sheriff Joe Arpaio of mistreating Latinos

      Arpaio (AP)The Justice Department released a 22-page report today accusing Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio of presiding over officers who engage in racial profiling and infringe upon people's civil rights. The federal government is giving the controversial Arizona sheriff until January 4 to agree to make changes to his program or face legal action.

      Justice department officials have been investigating Arpaio's office for more than three years for what they allege is "unconstitutional policing." Arpaio, who calls himself the toughest sheriff in America, has been unapologetic about his focus on illegal immigration, publicizing a "tent city" where he kept inmates in the desert and dressed them in pink underwear.

      The report accuses Maricopa officers of stopping and questioning people because they look Latino and retaliating against people in the community who complain about those practices. A statistical analysis commissioned by the Justice Department found that Maricopa County officers are at least four times more likely to stop Latino drivers than they would be to stop "similarly situated" non-Latino drivers.

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    • Death penalty sentences plunge to historic lows in 2011

      Troy Davis (Georgia Dept of Corrections/AP)For the first time in decades, fewer than 100 people were sentenced to death in America this year.

      Seventy-eight people were handed the death sentence in courts in 2011--the lowest number since the Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment in 1978, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Death sentences have been declining since 1998, the advocacy group says, when around 300 people per year were sentenced to death. Executions have also been declining: Forty-three people were put to death this year--a 50 percent decline from 10 years ago, when 85 were executed.

      A majority of Americans say they support the death penalty in public opinion polls, but that margin of support has eroded over the past 20 years from 80 percent to about 60 percent now.

      This year, Illinois abolished the death penalty entirely, and Oregon's governor John Kitzhaber announced a moratorium on executions while he's in office. The execution of Troy Davis, a Georgia inmate who maintained his innocence,

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    • After NYT report, online learning company’s stock plunges

      On Tuesday, the New York Times published a critical story on K12 Inc, the largest player in the for-profit K-12 online learning industry. Today, the publicly traded company's stock is down more than 20 percent from where they were at Monday's market close.

      But will the negative reaction last? Education expert Andrew Rotherham doubts it, pointing out that for-profit colleges' shares plunged after media reports focused on their agressive recruiting techniques and debt-ridden graduates earlier this year, but have since largely recovered. (The for-profit college industry also benefited from the news that the Education Department would be backing away from the toughest of its planned new regulations governing its business model .)

      The Times story revealed that only a third of K12 Inc.'s online students are making adequate yearly progress on state standardized tests--a measure set by the federal No Child Left Behind law. Teachers told the paper that they felt pressured to pass students who did little or no work so that the company could continue to collect public money for the students it enrolled. Some teachers also said they were forced to take on as many as 70 to 100 students in each of their classes. (We wrote about the problem of online classroom size earlier this year.)

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    • Fact check: The exploding student loan debt chart

      Student loan debt (OccupyPosters.tumblr.com)This Occupy Wall Street-affiliated chart, at right, flew around Facebook and Twitter this week as hundreds of people used it to share their frustrations about ballooning student debt in America. It's also inspired blog posts at Jezebel and Buzzfeed, among other sites.

      But as far as we can tell, the chart is just plain wrong. Mark Kantrowitz, the publisher of FinAid.org, a student loan advice site concerned with rising educational debt, tells Yahoo News that total student debt has increased five-fold between 2000 and 2011, (not counting inflation) and is nearing $1 trillion. This chart shows a much larger increase, with student debt increasing by a factor of 25 over the same period.

      A Federal Reserve Bank of New York report earlier this year showed a six-fold increase in student loans, but the group has since rescinded the paper due to errors. The Occupy chart cites the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis as its source, but a spokesman from the Bank told Yahoo News he wasn't sure what report or dataset it could be referring to. It's possible that the chart is referring to something other than the total amount of outstanding student loans during each of these years, but if it is, then it's very misleading. (Please email me if you have a theory about what data the chart is using.)

      Kantrowitz says he thinks whoever made the chart may have accidentally "set the diameters of the circles in proportion to the ratio, instead of the area of the circles in proportion. If they had done it correctly, the 2000 circle should have been about half the height of the 2011 circle." That means the creator of the chart made the diameter of the 2011 circle five times as large as the diameter of the 2000 circle, instead of making the area of the 2011 circle five times as big as the area of the 2000 circle.

      Mother Jones magazine created a correct version of the chart in September, using data that estimated student loans had quintupled between 2000 and 2011:

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    • Laid-off Illinois teachers turn to nanny jobs

      Some of the 8,800 Illinois teachers handed pink slips last year are finding work as nannies, and many are now earning more than they were inside the classroom.

      The Chicago Tribune's Vikki Ortiz Healy reports that four fresh graduates of Illinois State University's education school are applying for each teaching job opening as budget crunches have reduced the number of education jobs in the state. The shortage is forcing former and would-be teachers to explore other options in child care, to the delight of parents who want to hire a nanny with an education background. Healy interviewed several former teachers about their decision to become nannies here.

    • Kagan recused herself from Arizona immigration law case

      Elena Kagan is recusing herself from the case (AP)The Supreme Court has agreed to arbitrate the battle between the Obama administration and Arizona on the state's tough immigration law. The law, known as SB 1070, passed in 2010 but lower courts had blocked its full implementation.

      Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan will recuse herself from the court's review of Arizona's immigration law because of her former position as the Obama administration's Solicitor General.

      As Lyle Denniston at SCOTUS blog points out, that means that the court could split 4-4 on the decision. In that scenario, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision on the law--which struck down most of its provisions--would stand. But that decision would have no effect on states in other federal appellate jurisdictions that have passed similar laws over the past year, including Alabama. (Other states that passed similar legislation include South Carolina, Utah, Indiana and Georgia.)

      The Obama administration discouraged the Supreme Court from taking up the case, saying the court should wait until other appellate courts ruled on copycat laws in other states. The law requires local police to ask people about their immigration status in certain cases and allows them to arrest people without a warrant if police believe they have committed a crime that makes them deportable.

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    • Florida county will throw parents of truant kids in jail

      Lenora Hummel was fined thousands of dollars for her daughter's truancy (AP)A new truancy court in Palm Beach, Florida aims to cut down on the state's absentee rate for young children by punishing parents who don't take their kids to school.

      Florida law says parents of children under 16 who let their kids miss 15 days of school within three months can be sent to jail for up to two months as punishment. The Florida Sun-Sentinel reports that Palm Beach prosecutors say the two-month jail sentence will be a last resort, after government and nonprofit workers try to fix whatever problem is keeping parents from getting their kids to school.

      About a dozen Baltimore parents were sent to prison for their kids' truancy in 2011, the Baltimore Sun reported in April. (In 2010, no Baltimore parents were jailed.) After California adopted a strict anti-truancy bill earlier this year, at least five parents in Orange County were sent to jail for the crime, according to the local CBS affiliate. Judges in Alabama, Texas, and North Carolina and other states have also used truancy laws to send offending parents to jail.

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    • Smuggler tried to hide $140,000 drug stash in nacho cheese

      The cheese and jalapeno drug stash (DHS)

      Customs and Border officials nabbed a 21-year-old Mexican citizen this week on suspicion of smuggling $140,000 worth of methamphetamine in these three cans of liquid nacho cheese and jalapenos, the LA Times reports. Incredibly, this is not the first time nacho cheese has been used as a smuggling tool. In October, a customs officials found 7 pounds of meth hidden in nacho cheese cans, NPR reports.

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