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 VIENNA  A top aide to the chief of the U.N. nuclear 
agency has unexpectedly resigned, suggesting tensions among the organization's 
top leadership, diplomats said Friday.The move by IAEA Assistant Director 
General Rafael Mariano Grossi comes at a critical time for the International 
Atomic Energy Agency. It is the outside world's only window on Iran's 
nuclear program, which some nations fear is close to the ability to 
make atomic arms   a goal Iran strenuously denies.IAEA inspectors monitor 
Tehran's known nuclear facilities including its expanding uranium enrichment 
program, which Tehran says is meant only to produce nuclear power and 
for other peaceful uses.  But the United States, Israel, their allies 
and other nations fear the Islamic Republic could use the technology to 
make the core of a nuclear weapon.The agency also is trying to 
kick-start a probe of suspicions that Iran has secretly worked on developing 
nuclear weapons after more than five years of stagnation. Iran denies such 
work and says the allegations are based on falsified intelligence from Israel 
and the West. The two sides plan to resume talks on the 
issue in mid-May.Two diplomats demanded anonymity in exchange for speaking 
The Associated Press about the resignation because they were not authorized 
to discuss internal IAEA matters with reporters.One of them said Grossi 
told Amano he was quitting earlier this week after being told that 
his contract was not being extended. H
 rmation about lost and stolen guns and establishing emergency plans 
for schools. Those measures were among the 23 executive actions the president 
signed in January when he announced his broader push for tighter gun 
laws in response to a mass shooting of first-graders and staff at 
Newtown, Conn.'s Sandy Hook Elementary School.The Health and Human Services 
Department on Friday was beginning to ask for public comment on how 
the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, passed by Congress 
in 1996 and known as HIPAA, is preventing some states from reporting 
to the background check system and how to address the problem. Under 
HIPAA, health care providers such as hospitals may release limited information 
to police, but only in certain circumstances such as when a court 
is involved.Since 1968, federal law has banned the sale of guns to 
those who have been deemed a danger to themselves or others, involuntarily 
committed or judged not guilty by reason of insanity or incompetent to 
stand trial. The background check system -- which is also used to 
prevent convicted felons from buying guns -- was established under the 1993 
Brady Bill.A few state agencies shared mental health records voluntarily 
for years, but the Virginia Tech massacre in 2007 spurred passage of 
legislation that required states to submit the records or eventually risk 
losing up to 5 percent of the federal funding they receive to 
fight crime.Last year's review by the Gover
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