[Abel-tasman] ***SPAM*** Free Trial to Stronger sexual life! 62883642

Vydox Vydox at mouehebbelic.us
Wed Apr 9 04:42:38 CEST 2014


Vydox can get you the erection of your life! Check!

http://www.mouehebbelic.us/l/lt31EI5019A126P/257JAC1098YY4077EGVTJ10LSMAM62883642G778483982






Unsub- http://www.mouehebbelic.us/l/lc10OX5019S126U/257HRG1098OB4077WIFHJ10VSLAS62883642M778483982











ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.  The Tampa Bay Rays apologized for what the 
team described as a lapse in judgment by a club mascot photographed 
holding an "inappropriate sign" making reference to Steve Irwin, a popular 
television personality and wildlife expert who died in 2006 after being 
attacked by a stingray.The furry mascot known as Raymond was handed a 
"Rays To Do List" by a fan during Wednesday night's game against 
Baltimore. The sign had "1. Steve Irwin" crossed off" and listed the 
World Series second.The team issued an apology after a photo of the 
mascot holding the sign wound up on the internet. A statement said 
fans are welcome to carry signs that are not offensive into the 
ballpark but that the club regretted "this particular sign" was displayed.
des acknowledged that the state has made significant improvements in its 
treatment of mentally ill inmates since the lawsuit was filed in 1991. 
That suit claimed the original care was so poor it violated the 
Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment, prompting federal supervision 
to be imposed four years later.The state has spent more than $1 
billion on new facilities and devotes $400 million a year to caring 
for the mentally ill, who account for about one in every four 
inmates in the state's 33 adult prisons. The administration argues it no 
longer is deliberately indifferent to the needs of mentally ill inmates.Yet 
court-appointed experts reported that the prison system still has major 
problems. That includes a suicide rate that worsened last year to 24 
per 100,000 inmates, far exceeding the national average of 16 suicides per 
100,000 inmates in state prisons.Despite the state's efforts to build more 
mental health facilities and hire more staff at higher salaries, attorneys 
representing inmates said much more needs to be done. In his ruling, 
Karlton indicated that he agreed."Systemic failures persist in the form 
of inadequate suicide prevention measures, excessive administrative segregation 
of the mentally ill, lack of timely access to adequate care, insufficient 
treatment space and access to beds, and unmet staffing needs," the judge 
wrote.The judge further wrote that the state could not be trusted to 
continue the improvement
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20140408/4be8be29/attachment.htm


More information about the Abel-tasman mailing list