RSS Feed

Posts Tagged ‘Identity’

Man drowns trying to catch runaway bull

April 4, 2011 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
David Goodhue – AHN News Reporter

Houston, Texas, United States (AHN) – A man trying to corral a loose bull on a ranch near Houston, Texas fell into a bayou and drowned.

According to local media reports, two men were chasing the bull along the Berry Creek near the town of Ahrens at about 11 p.m. Friday night. Both men fell into the water.

Several people from a nearby farm ran to the men’s aid and were able to pull one of them out, but the second man slipped back into the water and drowned.

His body was recovered by the Houston Police Department’s dive team several hours later, according to local media reports.

His identity has not been released.

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

View full post on Human Interest Stories

 

Feds Charge 53 In Crackdown Of Identity Theft Ring

September 17, 2010 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off
Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Bergen, NJ, United States (AHN) – Federal agents swooped down on a suspected identity theft ring in New Jersey on Thursday and arrested dozens of suspects.

Forty-seven people were arrested in the massive crackdown. They face allegations including conspiracy to commit wire fraud, conspiracy to commit credit card fraud, and unlawfully using identification documents to defraud the United States.

Prosecutors say the suspects were part of a group of mostly Korean immigrants in Bergen County who sold identification documents that were used to commit fraud. Allegedly led by Sang-Hyun Park, the group obtained Social Security numbers beginning with the prefix 586, which are issued to Chinese working in U.S. territories such as Guam and Saipan. The Social Security numbers were used to secure genuine drivers licenses and other state identification cards.

The group would then “build up” the credit scores of the Chinese identities on the IDs by attaching these identities to existing credit card accounts as authorized users. The suspects allegedly would then guide customers using identities with good credit ratings to open bank accounts, obtain credit cards and apply for loans, including those guaranteed by the federal Small Business Administration.

The fraudulently obtained credit cards were used by the group to buy expensive goods that were later sold. The cards were also used for fake transactions with conspiring business owners to obtain cash. The suspects are believed to have paid for the fake charges by drawing on other fraudulently opened bank accounts.

Among those charged were Chun-O Kim, owner and operator of what prosecutors said was a nonexistent general contracting company, and Nathan Buschman, a manager at a JPMorgan Chase branch in Edgewater.

Also part of the criminal complaint are Zakchary Benji, a loan officer in a Clifton bank, and Kang-Hyok Choi, who has been in custody since his arrest in 2008, when he is believed to have murdered three people who may have been involved in the identity theft operation.

Apart from JPMorgan, other institutions that were defrauded were Citibank and PNC Financial Services.

“The activity in this instance was a virtual crime superstore,” Special Agent in Charge Michael Ward said in a statement. “The criminal activity was sophisticated, and the extent of the fraud committed by this group is believed to be substantial, if not staggering.”

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

View full post on All Stories

 

Austin’s Identity Crisis for Downtown Austin Real Estate

July 13, 2010 by Real Estate Investor Comments Off

I don’t know if you’ve noticed— it’s certainly hard to miss— but the landscape around Austin is changing. As is the skyline. As is the… well, the feel of the city. The flavor.

Some Austinites are not excited about the changes going on. The corporations moving in, the family-owned and operated businesses go down while the thirty-six story condos go up. People who have lived here all their lives (or even just more than ten years) say that this is a different city than the one they remember. Back when they might not even have called Austin a “city.”

There was a time when Motorola was just a type of phone people had, not a place where they worked. When video games were a thing people played, not designed. Where Dell was a thing from a song about a farmer, not a computer company. In short, there was a time when Austin was a big, friendly village where everyone seemed to know everyone.

Now, it’s hard to see the sky without noticing the foreboding skeleton of an incoming condominium projects or a crane in your periphery. Developers are buying up land and displacing local businesses in order to get the best spot downtown for a high rise that will dwarf all the others, that will sell for more money, that will be nicer and closer to all the downtown Austin attractions.

But what are those attractions?

There will always be a Congress Bridge, and so there will always be bats. But will people want to walk from the Sheraton to see them, then get a drink at the Coyote Ugly Saloon franchise? Will they want to eat at the Baby Acapulco’s? What will make the town special when Las Manitas is gone, when all the little businesses that got us to this point are gone, and the only choices for restaurants are in the lobbies of the newest hotels?

What will make Austin Austin? It’s a good question.

It’s easy to see that the city has lost some its appeal. Its uniqueness, its originality. Big business has a way of doing that. But is it so bad? Is it really true that there will be nothing left?

Those small, local places brought people here, it’s true. And they certainly gave Austin its flavor. But millions more people are here now. The city has grown by leaps and bounds. People still need places to live. And the more people there are, the more money is being spent. There is much to be thankful for when we think about this new “bigger” Austin. The Austin real estate market values go up. Many businesses prosper. The city has more money to improve infrastructure and city services like parks. Its hard to allow it to change some of what we love, and some of the changes I’m not happy with. But overall I think it will be okay.

The key is that the people are still here. The same people that made Austin the coolest city in the… well, in my opinion in the entire country —are still here. They’re still waving at you from their yard, still smiling at you on the street. The buildings aren’t the personality in the city —the people in them are. So let’s make sure those people don’t go anywhere, and we’re all gonna be just fine. Yes, we may have to part with a couple businesses and landmarks dear to our hearts, but as long as Austinites keep true to what we love about this city, we will retain the part of our identity that is the most important.

Ki Gray works for Austin Real Estate a small company in Austin Texas. Their website provides a search of the Austin MLS along with information on Austin Condominium

 

Powered by Yahoo! Answers