Sunday, April 1, 2012

Motor home crash kills 5 in northeast Kansas

LYNDON, Kan. -- A motor home headed to Minnesota has crashed in northeast Kansas, killing five people.

The Kansas Highway Patrol said the northbound Freightliner motor home was carrying 18 people and pulling a trailer when the driver lost control at 9 a.m. Sunday on Interstate 35.

The Kansas City Star (http://bit.ly/Hduru7) reported that the motor home crashed into a ravine. Trooper Don Hughes said the victims included adults and children. He said he didn't know how many people were
injured.

The crash is under investigation and the names of the victims weren't immediately released. - http://goo.gl/YadCN

Symposium to explore Illinois' civil unions law

CARBONDALE - A symposium next week at Southern Illinois University Carbondale will examine the benefits and limitations of Illinois' civil union law.

Lt. Gov. Sheila Simon, a former assistant clinical professor at the SIU School of Law, will be among the speakers at the event. "Civil Unions: What You Get and What You Don't," is set for 5:30 p.m., Tuesday, April 3, in the Hiram H. Lesar Law Building Auditorium.

Simon at one time taught family law at the law school and also practiced family law in Southern Illinois. Other speakers will include Ray Prather, an attorney and certified public accountant with the Chicago-based Prather Ebner LLP, and Bernard Cherkasov, executive director of Equality Illinois. The moderator is Kateah McMasters, a third-year law student and president of the Women's Law Forum, a registered student organization at the law school.

Admission is free and open to the public. Attorneys may still register to earn continuing legal education credit. For more information, contact Alicia Ruiz, the law school's director of communication and outreach, at 618/453-8700.

Symposium sponsors include the SIU School of Law, and two registered student organizations in the law school -- Women's Law Forum and The Lesbian and Gay Law Students and Supporters (LEGALSS); the Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program at SIU Carbondale; Paul Simon Public Policy Institute, GLBT Resource Center, the Graduate and Professional Student Council, and the Illinois State Bar Association.

A pre-reception is set for 5 p.m. in the law school's formal lounge. A post-reception will follow the symposium.

Top Obama campaign donor accused of fraud

WASHINGTON -- A major donor to President Barack Obama has been accused of defrauding a businessman and impersonating a bank official, creating new headaches for Obama's re-election campaign as it deals with the questionable history of another top supporter.The New York donor, Abake Assongba, has contributed more than $50,000 to Obama's re-election effort this year, federal records show. But Assongba is also fending off a civil court case in Florida, where she's accused of thieving more than $650,000 to help build a multimillion-dollar home in the state - a charge her husband denies.Obama is the only presidential contender this year who released his list of "bundlers," the financiers who raise campaign money by soliciting high-dollar contributions from friends and associates. But that disclosure has not come without snags; his campaign returned $200,000 last month to Carlos and Alberto Cardona, the brothers of a Mexican fugitive wanted on federal drug charges.

Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt declined comment to The Associated Press. He instead referred the AP to previous statements he made to The Washington Post, which first reported the allegations against Assongba in its Sunday editions. LaBolt told the paper 1.3 million Americans have donated to the campaign, and that it addresses issues with contributions promptly.Assongba was listed on Obama's campaign website as one of its volunteer fundraisers - a much smaller group of about 440 people.Assongba and her husband, Anthony J.W. DeRosa, run a charity called Abake's Foundation that distributes school supplies and food in Benin, Africa.In one Florida case, which is still ongoing, Swiss businessman Klaus-Werner Pusch accused Assongba in 2009 of engaging him in an email scam - then using the money to buy a multimillion-dollar home, the Post reported. The suit alleges Assongba impersonated a bank official to do it. Pusch referred the AP's questions to his attorney, who did not immediately return requests seeking comment Sunday.Meanwhile, Assongba has left a trail of debts, with a former landlord demanding in court more than $10,000 in back rent and damages for a previous apartment. She was also evicted in 2004 after owing $5,000 in rent, records show.In an interview with the AP on Sunday, DeRosa said the allegations against his wife were untrue, although he couldn't discuss specifics because of pending litigation. He said he and Assongba were "very perturbed" by the charges, and said the couple's charity does important work in Africa.Assongba has given more than $70,000 to Democratic candidates in recent years, an AP review of Federal Election Commission data shows. Her larger contributions include $35,000 to the Obama Victory Fund, a joint fundraising committee between Obama and the Democratic Party, and at least $15,000 to the Democratic National Committee. She also contributed to Hillary Rodham Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign.Abake's Foundation is listed by the IRS as a registered nonprofit organization; its financial reports were unavailable. A representative who picked up the phone at the foundation's Benin office declined to answer questions, and instead referred the AP to Assongba.Obama's campaign declined to comment on whether its vetting procedures were thorough enough, or whether Assongba's contribution would be refunded. All told, Obama has raised more than $120 million this election, not counting millions more from the Democratic Party - giving him a financial advantage thus far over any of his Republican challengers.

Fans burn couches, flip cars after Kentucky's win

LOUISVILLE, Ky. —Riot police used pepper spray in small amounts for crowd control as thousands of rowdy fans swarmed into the streets near the University of Kentucky campus, overturning cars and lighting couches ablaze after a victory over cross-state rival Louisville in a Final Four matchup.

Police had been bracing for the possibility of post-game violence and resorted to pepper spray though large amounts weren't needed before they ultimately began dispersing the throngs, Lexington police spokeswoman Sherelle Roberts said.

She said 150 officers deployed on the streets at one point to quell what she called "a very dangerous situation with the fires and the violence" that dragged on for hours. - http://goo.gl/kJSii