by Gene Johson Sharon Hayes said in the lawsuit that she sought fertility care from Dr. David R. Claypool, an obstetrician and gynecologist in Spokane, Washington, in 1989. SPOKANE, Wash. — An Idaho woman is suing her one-time fertility doctor, saying he secretly used his own sperm to inseminate her 34 years ago — theContinue reading “True Crime Sundays: An Idaho woman sues her fertility doctor, says he used his own sperm to impregnate her 34 years ago”
Category Archives: law
Opioid Crisis Friday: Woman sentenced for conspiracy to distribute drugs across Idaho-Canada border
by KTVB Staff The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Dalila Miller drove from the Seattle area to north Idaho with 227 pounds of meth and cocaine for it to be packed into Canada. COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho — A 39-year-old California woman was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine and cocaineContinue reading “Opioid Crisis Friday: Woman sentenced for conspiracy to distribute drugs across Idaho-Canada border”
Opioid Crisis Friday: Youngsville woman sentenced for death due to fentanyl overdose
Times Observer photo by Brian Ferry Stephanie S. Kightlinger, 27, of Youngsville, is escorted by City of Warren Police to District Judge Raymond Zydonik’s office when she was arrested back in January on charges stemming from a drug death. Kightlinger pleaded guilty Thursday to involuntary manslaughter and possession with intent to deliver.
True Crime Sundays: Man who served 25 years for murder exonerated by DNA
On October 4, 2011, Michael Morton, who spent 25 years in prison for his wife’s murder, is released after DNA evidence implicates another man in the crime. The prosecutor in the case later was accused of withholding evidence indicating that Morton was innocent. On the afternoon of August 13, 1986, a neighbor found 31-year-old ChristineContinue reading “True Crime Sundays: Man who served 25 years for murder exonerated by DNA”
True Crime Sundays: Lori Vallow Daybell sentenced to life in prison for murders of her 2 children and conspiring in the murder of her husband’s first wife.
Tony Blakeslee/Pool/East Idaho News.
Lori Vallow Daybell looks at notes during her sentencing hearing at the Fremont County Courthouse in St. Anthony, Idaho, on Monday, July 31, 2023.
This Day in History 1990 Americans with Disabilities Ave (ADA) signed into Law & 1908 FBI Founded
On July 26, 1990, President George H.W. Bush signs the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), the most sweeping affirmation of rights for the disabled in American history at the time, into law. As disability rights attorney Arlene Mayerson would later write, the story of the ADA began “when people with disabilities began to challenge societal barriers thatContinue reading “This Day in History 1990 Americans with Disabilities Ave (ADA) signed into Law & 1908 FBI Founded”
Travel Thursdays: ‘Skiplagging’ airfare hack under fire again after American Airlines nabs teen trying it.
The reason a flight with a layover is sometimes cheaper than a direct flight (even though it requires more resources and time) is based on how airlines predict (and price according to) traveler behavior.
David Gillen, director of the transportation school at the Sauder School of Business in British Columbia, explained to Vice in 2015 that airlines price routes based on how travelers are likely to connect with another flight. “The airline will charge lower fares for passengers traveling on two legs because it gets money from both legs. This is what Skiplagged is exploiting,” he said, referring to a travel booking site that had recently been sued by United Airlines, called Skiplagged.
Is skiplagging illegal?
Skiplagging is not illegal, but airlines have actively fought it and discourage customers from engaging in it. Most major airlines stipulate in their contract of carriage that they outright prohibit it.
United Airlines notes in its contract of carriage that the airline will not only invalidate a skiplagging traveler’s ticket, but also would go so far as to “permanently ban or refuse to board the Passenger and to carry the Passenger’s baggage, unless the difference between the fare paid and the fare for transportation used is collected prior to boarding.”
The Chicago-based airline is an active critic of skiplagging. In 2019, United reportedly sent a memo to its front-line airport agents urging them to be on the lookout for passengers who engage in the hack and to report suspects to the company’s security department.
Over the years, an industry promoting hidden city booking has sprouted, with the most prominent business being the aforementioned Skiplagged. The website uses a computer algorithm to offer customers airfares based on hidden city bookings and presents the fares in an interface similar to Google Flights or Expedia.
The website was founded in 2013 by a 22-year-old named Aktarer Zaman who was working as a software engineer for Amazon in New York City.
Today, the landing page for Skiplagged proudly boasts that “our flights are so cheap, United sued us… but we won,” in a callback to when the airline, along with the travel fare aggregator website Orbitz, attempted to shut down the site in 2014.
Zaman said in a 2014 forum on Reddit that the companies sued him for “making it too easy for consumers to save money.” In the lawsuit, United and Orbitz called Skiplagged “unfair competition” and alleged that it promoted “strictly prohibited” travel. The companies sought $75,000 in lost revenue from Zaman, who in turn raised over $80,000 in a GoFundMe campaign.
Ultimately, a judge in Illinois threw out the case on the technicality that the court didn’t have jurisdiction over the case since Zaman worked and lived in New York.
That decision didn’t stop Lufthansa Airlines from suing a passenger in 2019 who engaged in the money-saving practice — but the lawsuit was later dropped. In other parts of the world, the Spanish supreme court ruled that skiplagging is legal in 2018.
Inside Joe Biden’s new student loan repayment plan
by Michael Stratford Alongside his pledge to start over on a plan to cancel student debt, President Joe Biden last week unveiled the final details of his separate student loan repayment program. The program, which has been in the works for more than a year, will permanently reshape how borrowers repay their federal student loans.Continue reading “Inside Joe Biden’s new student loan repayment plan”
True Crime Sundays: Brian Kohberger broke into female student’s home and installed security cameras months before Idaho murders: report
by Evan Rosen New evidence shows that Bryan Kohberger may have infiltrated a woman’s home months before he allegedly carried out November’s slayings of four University of Idaho students, a news report says. Kohberger befriended a woman, snuck into her home and moved items around before convincing her to let him install a video security system, aContinue reading “True Crime Sundays: Brian Kohberger broke into female student’s home and installed security cameras months before Idaho murders: report”
True Crime Sundays: Police Investigating Homicide Outside Wisconsin Tavern, Suspect in Custody
by Devin Willems MADISON, Wis. (WFRV) – A suspect was taken into custody after an alleged shooting incident happened outside a tavern in Wisconsin that killed a person. According to the Madison Police Department, on May 5 around 12:15 a.m., officers were sent to the Badger Tavern for a reported shooting. The tavern is onContinue reading “True Crime Sundays: Police Investigating Homicide Outside Wisconsin Tavern, Suspect in Custody”