Georgia linebacker Adam Anderson is facing a felony rape charge in connection to an alleged early morning incident that occurred in Athens on Oct. He was booked into the Clarke County Jail at p. He was being held without bond. Anderson was suspended from the football team last week while Athens-Clarke County police investigated the allegations brought by a year-old female, who said she went to an Athens residence after having drinks. She told police she awoke with Anderson penetrating her without consent while she was lying in bed. Anderson is denying any allegation of sexual misconduct. The woman reported the incident to police the same afternoon of the incident.

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Their removal from the jail came a week before a deadline to clear the facility of immigration detainees. She said that four men were released last week. Marshals Service had for years resulted in immigration detainees being housed in the jail. That contract ended in September. Wang also said that ICE had informed the Friends committee that any remaining detainees would likely be transferred to the federal detention facility in Batavia, which is outside of Buffalo.
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Editor's Note, April 14, In the wake of the death of convicted fraudster Bernard Madoff, Smithsonian looks back at the crook who gave Ponzi schemes their name. John Kenneth Galbraith once observed that "the man who is admired for the ingenuity of his larceny is almost always rediscovering some earlier form of fraud. Even today, confidence artists continue to work their scams with great success. Time and again, people from every walk of life demonstrate their ability to abandon common sense and believe in something that is simply too good to be true by succumbing to the con man's call. Yet when all is said and done, the Internet is merely a vehicle for swindlers to reach their victims. But there is nothing new in the scams themselves: they are the same pyramid schemes, phony business opportunities and phantom storefronts that have been fooling the unwary and greedy for centuries. Ponzi's meteoric success at swindling was so remarkable that his name became attached to the method he employed, which was nothing more than the age-old game of borrowing from Peter to pay Paul. The rules are simple: money taken from today's investors is used to pay off debts to yesterday's investors. Typically, these investors are lured by promises of exorbitant profits—50, even percent. Often, they are coached to recruit more investors to enrich themselves further.