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15500 SW Jay St<br />
Beaverton, OR 97006-6018</p>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> Anthony Weiner announces his resignation from Congress during a news conference
in Brooklyn, New York, Thursday, June 16, 2011. (AP)AP2011Former Rep. Anthony
Weiner is laying the groundwork for a political comeback, possibly as a
startling addition to this years mayoral race, sources said yesterday.Political
insiders were abuzz at news that Weiner and his wife, Huma Abedin,
had granted a lengthy magazine interview for the first time since his
resignation in an embarrassing sexting scandal in 2011.The magazine piece
is step one of a two-step process for him to run citywide
this year, said one Democratic Party source.Hes looking at public advocate
and comptroller, but he really thinks he can use this to get
back in and run for mayor.Weiner issued a terse no comment when
asked about his plans.Weiner has $4.3 million left in his campaign account,
including $248,710 that would be matched 6-to-1 under the public-financing
system.A second source said Weiner has been contacting former staffers to
prepare for his re-entry into politics.Weiners entry into the Democratic
primary for mayor would make it more difficult for any of the
five candidates now in the race to get at least 40 percent
of the vote and avoid a runoff.Click for more from NYPost.com.
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
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