Tag Archives: state

He has a DNA test to prove it’s not his son, but could be locked up for unpaid 22,500 he owes in child support.

(WXYZ) – He’s on the hook for tens of thousands of dollars in back child support. But he says the boy is not his son—and has the DNA test to prove it. So why might the state send a local man to jail for failing to pay up for a child that isn’t his? Gary Harper knows all too well what it’s like to have run-ins with the law. “I mean, learned my lesson, paid to society my debt,” says Harper, who spent 18 years in prison for auto theft and armed robbery. “I want to do the right thing. I want to be a good member of society,” he says. After seven years of freedom and clean living, Harper could be locked up again—this time for not making good on the more than $22,500 the state says he owes in child support for a boy a DNA test proves isn’t his. Dorothy Hoose is Harper’s former girl friend and the biological mom to a young man, Thomas Matero, who was born in 1988. When Hoose signed up for state aid she gave Harper’s name as the father and that was it. The state considers Matero Harper’s son. “I don’t think it’s right, not at all, not one bit because he’s not the father. He’s not. I thought he was, but he’s not,” says Hoose. All this went down when Harper was behind bars. When he got out in 2003 the state said if Harper could prove he wasn’t the father, he would be free and clear. But Harper didn’t have the $500 at the time for a DNA test. He had the test done years later. “I thought it was pretty neat. I wouldn’t mind to know who my father was and everything,” says Matero, who Harper tracked down in Florida and who agreed to a DNA test. The test proved what Harper suspected. “I found out that he wasn’t my father,” Matero says. But none of this matters to the state. The law gives a limited window for a paternity test to be done. Harper was too late. “…it feels like I’m being punished again, you know what I mean, all over a technicality,” says Harper. The other twist to this story is that Matero says an aunt raised him out of state. “She raised me in Tennessee, California, Alaska and Florida,” says Matero. Why is the State of Michigan collecting child support for a child who wasn’t raised here? “He grew up the first three years with me,” says Hoose, who explains she collected state aid back then. The way it works is the state then goes after the dad to pay it back through child support. “…he’s done nothing but bump up against one brick wall after another in his attempt to try to get this taken care of,” says attorney Susan Pushman, who represents Harper. She says by law the state was required to tell Harper when in prison that he may have a son and provide him a DNA test. That never happened even though the state knew he was behind bars at the time. “…at least as far as December of ’94 goes, we know that the friend of the court was aware that he was incarcerated,” says Pushman. The Friend of the Court tracks and collects child support for the state. A 1994 letter the Friend of the Court sent to the prison system is proof that it knew Harper was behind bars. That’s the argument she plans to make to wipe away the child support. “…he hopes, and I hope for him, that we’re on the verge of having this put behind him,” says Pushman. A judge may rule in Harper’s favor and do away the child support. But by law, his attorney says he would still be Matero’s dad. Harper, who still keeps in touch with Matero, seems ok with that. “I learned I really like the kid, you know,” says Harper. “If I did have a kid, you know, of my own, I would be proud to have him for my son.” Harper initially owed more than $50,000 in child support before a judge reduced it to the $22,500. That same judge may cut it back again if Harper can prove he was in prison when the child support case began. http://www.wxyz.com/dpp/news/region/wayne_county/he-has-a-dna-test-to-prove-it 's-not-his-son,-but-still-has-to-pay-child-support added by: MotherForTruth

Time: ‘Is Bobby Jindal Making Sense?’

While the media have apparently given up — if they ever seriously attempted — on holding the Obama administration to account for its handling of the Gulf oil spill cleanup, Republican governors in the Gulf are a different story, particularly Louisiana’s Bobby Jindal, a potential 2012 presidential hopeful. In a short post at Time.com entitled “Battlefield General: Is Bobby Jindal Making Sense?” , writer Alex Altman cast doubt on Jindal’s handling of the oil spill cleanup while suggesting the conservative governor is hypocritical for his complaints about Obama’s handling of the disaster at the federal level: The notion that Washington should lead is not the only puzzling position taken by Jindal, a small-government conservative. An advocate of offshore oil exploration, he points to environmental devastation as a consequence of the government’s “lack of urgency” but opposes a moratorium on deepwater drilling. More important, in the throes of a crisis, a governor admired for his grasp of policy has sometimes sacrificed caution for speed. For weeks, Jindal blistered the government for dithering over his signature initiative, a plan to build sand berms to safeguard the state’s marshland. The proposal was finally okayed despite objections raised by scientists who questioned the $360 million project’s efficacy. When the Interior Department later halted the sand dredging to protect the existing barrier-island system, Jindal fumed at the “red tape and bureaucracy.” On July 6, the governor railed at the Army Corps of Engineers for denying a local parish’s request to protect coastal waters by constructing rock dikes. (A Corps commander said the measure might do more harm than good.) Of course it’s perfectly legitimate for journalists to raise questions about how Gulf state governors have handled their share of the BP oil spill cleanup, but Altman’s piece assumes the federal government’s response is virtually flawless and Jindal’s disagreements with its strategy and tactics are suspect. What’s more, Altman’s swipe at Jindal’s conservatism distorts the true conservative position that Jindal is staking out. Jindals complaints have largely been that the Obama administration’s regulatory micromanagement has gummed up cleanup efforts. It’s not so much that Jindal wants the federal government to solve the problem as he wants the feds to quit hampering private industry and local governments from solving the problem due to mindless red tape. Time is not alone in setting its sights on bashing Jindal. Last month, Newsweek’s Sharon Begley took a much more stringent tone in her criticism of Louisiana’s Republican governor: Scientists are such spoilsports, always insisting on gathering data on the likely effects of a strategy before implementing it. Politicians are more inclined to just go for it, especially when they’re desperate. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is desperate: millions of gallons of BP’s crude are launching an amphibious assault on his beaches and wetlands. So let’s do the math: desperation + a pol’s “do something” mentality = a loony decision to build 14-foot sand berms to protect the state’s coastline—a decision that bodes ill for the many others the state will face as BP’s oil gushes at least until August. Before this, Jindal was known to scientists as the governor who in 2008 signed a law allowing the state’s public schools to teach creationism (excuse me! “intelligent design”) in their classrooms. The difficulty he has distinguishing science from faith reared its ugly head again when he cast about for a way to hold back BP’s oil. Emissaries from Jindal’s office have made regular pilgrimages to the Netherlands to consult with engineers about protecting the state’s coasts from the next Katrina. Van Oord, a marine engineering and dredging company that is constructing the artificial Palm Islands for Dubai, proposed building what amounts to artificial sandbars. “If you ask a Dutch company that builds artificial islands in Dubai how to protect marshlands and barrier islands,” says coastal geologist Rob Young of Western Carolina University, “of course they’ll say, ‘Let’s make an offshore island!—and shall we put a palm tree on it for you?’ When a politician is faced with an economic or social mess, the “just try something” mentality can be justified. Policies on these fronts cannot be accurately predicted for the simple reason that human behavior is involved. No amount of science can reliably forecast the effects of, say, financial or health-care reform, so a reasonable case can be made for “do something.” Not so when we’re talking about the laws of physics and chemistry rather than human behavior. In these cases, ignoring the science makes politicians seem like petulant children.

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Time: ‘Is Bobby Jindal Making Sense?’

A Gillette child mutilation case resurfaces after 20 years – Mom charged in kids’ mutilation may get freedom

Wyoming State Hospital officials have asked a judge to transfer a Gillette woman who beheaded and mutilated her young children to a supervised residential program. Laura Lee Rice has spent the past 20 years at a mental institution in Evanston after being found criminally insane. Prosecutors say Rice, a 58-year-old schizophrenic, killed her daughters because she believed they were clones of her real children. In 1989, the decapitated bodies of 15-month-old Danielle and 4-month-old JoAnn were found in Rice’s home at the Hitching Post Trailer Court south of Gillette. She had stuffed the children’s bodies in plastic bags. Later that year, Rice was found not guilty by reason of mental illness of two counts of first-degree murder. She was sent to the state hospital and has remained there ever since. Last month, the Wyoming Attorney General’s Office filed a motion on the state hospital’s behalf for Rice’s conditional discharge. In a letter filed in District Court, hospital officials urged Judge John R. Perry to place Rice in a less restrictive setting like a group home or an apartment on the hospital’s campus. Hospital superintendant Robert Stahl and psychiatric nurse practitioner Jamie Bennett wrote that Rice would have to check in with staff throughout the day to make sure she is taking her medications. She would be allowed to attend therapy groups and work in the hospital’s library, but “there is no intention for Ms. Rice to have unsupervised access into the community,” Stahl and Bennett wrote. They note that Rice has not shown any sign of violent behavior since being institutionalized and say she has a low risk of re-offending. “Ms. Rice has been engaged in her recovery process and deemed ready to progress to the next level of privileges,” Stahl and Bennett wrote. They point out that Rice at one time lived in an on-campus apartment but was moved to an in-patient facility because of a policy change requiring patients to get court approval before moving into supervised housing. A motion hearing is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. July 21 in District Court. It is not the first time that Rice has petitioned the court for her release. Court records show she filed a motion for discharge in 1998. District Judge Dan R. Price II denied her request after ruling that she “has not recovered from her mental illness and that she continues to be a substantial risk to others and cannot be adequately controlled if released on supervision.” Rice suffers from Capgras syndrome, a schizophrenic condition where one believes close relatives have been replaced by evil clones. Doctors who examined Rice said she complained of chronic pain in her neck, chest and stomach, which she said was caused by the clones “taking bites out of her body with their eyes.” Rice asked for the results of a CAT scan and chest X-rays taken after she was arrested to see if parts of her were missing. She also wanted to know if pieces of her were found in her daughters’ stomachs. Rice’s older daughter had small cuts around her legs, hands and eyes — all made after she had been beheaded. The other daughter was scalped and her ears were cut off. Her right little toe had been severed a few days before she was murdered. At trial, a psychiatrist testified that the post-death cutting was an attempt by Rice to see if the children were clones. When she took the stand, Rice said a dark-haired woman wearing glasses knocked on her door the morning of the murders. The woman was with two children who looked like Rice’s daughters. She claims the woman told her she had to get rid of them. After the woman left, Rice and the girls laid down for a nap. When she got up to check on her daughters, Rice said “it had already been done. Their throat(s) had already been cut.” Prosecutors have said she had a history of drug abuse and occasionally drifted into different personalities such as “Cindy,” “Sherry” and “Patty.” A few days before the murders, she told the girls’ father that she felt like her head was splitting — that she had no brain. She asked him to take her to the hospital but he didn’t. http://www.gillettenewsrecord.com/articles/2010/07/05/news/yesterday/news03.txt added by: MotherForTruth

The Death of Internet Anonymity

After a year-long analysis of the state of Internet security led by the National Security council, President Obama's cybersecurity coordinator Howard Schmidt has released details of the administration's plan to protect the masses from cyberscumbags by creating a federal system for online identity authentication… https://www.infosecisland.com/blogview/4501-The-Death-of-Internet-Anonymity.html added by: Paisano1

Maine “Michael Nifong on steroids”

Maine: Supreme Court Hears Case on Out-of-Control DV Prosecutor Tuesday, June 15, 2010 By Abusegate Bob This is an update on a case currently being argued in front of the Maine Supreme Court about an out-of-control prosecutor named Mary Kellet, who has wrongfully charged and prosecuted many innocent men in Maine… The Maine Supreme Court recently heard oral arguments in the State of Maine vs. Vladek Filler. National Director of the Domestic Abuse Helpline Jan Brown attended the hearing as did some others. The “Michael Nifong on steroids” Mary Kellett has prosecuted countless innocent men on trumped up charges and false evidence. When it becomes easy for a prosecutor to lie to judges and juries with impunity, it is also easy for them to lie to the Supreme Court. Mary Kellett mislead the Supreme Court about her misconduct and the trial record. When the trial court found Mary Kellett guilty of prosecutorial misconduct against Vladek Filler she continued to abuse her power as the representative of the State of Maine. She filed an appeal of her prosecutorial misconduct, then wrote the appeal herself, and then argued it herself before Maine Supreme Court. It is equivalent to a corrupt police officer investigating himself then writing a report finding the victims at fault. The prosecutor brazenly lied to the Supreme Court about her misconduct and explicit court order violations at trial, pointed the finger at the defense attorney, and argued for Vladek Filler to be denied acquittal or even a new trial. One Justice asked Mary Kellett whether she considered a custody battle for the children important in a case where the wife is alleging spousal rape against the husband. Mary Kellett responded that it is the defense who should be concerned with the importance of child custody battle evidence. The admission of the State’s unconstitutional “burden shifting” is stunning. The State of Maine has admitted that it is less concerned with evidence ulterior motives and false allegations, and relies on defense to seek the truth and be concerned with such evidence. Vladek Filler’s attorney argued the systematic and flagrant prosecutorial misconduct committed by Mary Kellett and the insufficiency of evidence to support Vladek Filler’s conviction or even for bringing charges against him. That in fact, the evidence showed this prosecutor brought numerous charges of rape against a man where the accuser herself made admissions that it was consensual. This highly politicized appeal is pending in the Maine Supreme Court. Not a single media outlet in Maine has covered the State’s appeal or the systematic prosecutorial abuse of innocent men in the Bar Harbor region. The prosecutorial and civil rights crimes against Vladek Filler and men like him must be exposed. For more information, see: www.fillerfund.com added by: choice

The Devil is in the Details: More on the Health Care Reform Bill

I'm starting to wonder just how stupid we actually were to believe that a Federal government that had just paid off the bankers for bankrupting the Nation was actually going to deliver on viable health care reform, and the gross mismanagement of the Gulf oil spill doesn't really shore up my confidence on what's in the mystery meat they are calling health care reform. Health law to bring longer ER waits, crowding? by CARLA K. JOHNSON, AP Emergency rooms, the only choice for patients who can't find care elsewhere, may grow even more crowded with longer wait times under the nation's new health law. That might come as a surprise to those who thought getting 32 million more people covered by health insurance would ease ER crowding. It would seem these patients would be able to get routine health care by visiting a doctor's office, as most of the insured do. But it's not that simple. Consider: * There's already a shortage of front-line family physicians in some places and experts think that will get worse. * People without insurance aren't the ones filling up the nation's emergency rooms. Far from it. The uninsured are no more likely to use ERs than people with private insurance, perhaps because they're wary of huge bills. * The biggest users of emergency rooms by far are Medicaid recipients. And the new health insurance law will increase their ranks by about 16 million. Medicaid is the state and federal program for low-income families and the disabled. And many family doctors limit the number of Medicaid patients they take because of low government reimbursements. * ERs are already crowded and hospitals are just now finding solutions. Rand Corp. researcher Dr. Arthur L. Kellermann predicts this from the new law: “More people will have coverage and will be less afraid to go to the emergency department if they're sick or hurt and have nowhere else to go…. We just don't have other places in the system for these folks to go.” Kellermann and other experts point to Massachusetts, the model for federal health overhaul where a 2006 law requires insurance for almost everyone. Reports from the state find ER visits continuing to rise since the law passed — contrary to hopes of its backers who reasoned that expanding coverage would give many people access to doctors offices. Premiums for pre-existing conditions could be costly. Massachusetts reported a 7 percent increase in ER visits between 2005 and 2007. A more recent estimate drawn from Boston area hospitals showed an ER visit increase of 4 percent from 2006 to 2008 — not dramatic, but still a bit ahead of national trends. “Just because we've insured people doesn't mean they now have access,” said Dr. Elijah Berg, a Boston area ER doctor. “They're coming to the emergency department because they don't have access to alternatives.” Crowding and long waits have plagued U.S. emergency departments for years. A 2009 report by the Government Accountability Office, Congress' investigative arm, found ER patients who should have been seen immediately waited nearly a half-hour. “We're starting out with crowded conditions and anticipating things will only get worse,” said American College of Emergency Physicians president Dr. Angela Gardner. Federal stimulus money and the new health law address the primary care shortage with training for 16,000 more providers, said Health and Human Services Department spokeswoman Jessica Santillo. But many experts say solving ER crowding is more complicated. Crowding at both ends. What's causing crowding? Imagine an emergency department with a front door and a back door. More at the link: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38054844/ added by: Incredulous

All McNuggets not created equal…

U.S. McNuggets not only contain more calories and fat than their British counterparts, but also chemicals not found across the Atlantic. CNN investigated the differences after receiving a blog comment asking about them. American McNuggets (190 calories, 12 grams of fat, 2 grams of saturated fat for 4 pieces) contain the chemical preservative tBHQ, tertiary butylhydroquinone, a petroleum-based product. They also contain dimethylpolysiloxane, “an anti-foaming agent” also used in Silly Putty. By contrast, British McNuggets (170 calories, 9 grams of fat, 1 gram of saturated fat for 4 pieces) lists neither chemical among its ingredients. “I would certainly choose the British nuggets over the American” says Ruth Winter, author of “A Consumer’s Dictionary of Food Additives.” McDonald’s says the differences are based on the local tastes: In the United States, McNuggets are coated and then cooked, in the United Kingdom, they are cooked and then coated. As a result, the British McNuggets absorb less oil and have less fat. “You would find that if you looked at any of our core food items. You'd see little, regional differences,” says Lisa McComb, who handles global media relations for McDonald's, which has more than 32,000 restaurants in 117 countries. “We do taste testing of all our food items on an ongoing basis.” One apparent difference is only a matter of labeling, according to McComb. U.K. McNuggets list ground celery and pepper, which are labeled simply as “spices” in the United States, she says. Marion Nestle, a New York University professor and author of “What to Eat,” says the tertiary butylhydroquinone and dimethylpolysiloxane in the McNuggets probably pose no health risks. As a general rule, though, she advocates not eating any food with an ingredient you can’t pronounce. Dimethylpolysiloxane is used as a matter of safety to keep the oil from foaming, McComb says. The chemical is a form of silicone also used in cosmetics and Silly Putty. A review of animal studies by The World Health Organization found no adverse health effects associated with dimethylpolysiloxane. TBHQ is a preservative for vegetable oils and animal fats, limited to .02 percent of the oil in the nugget. One gram (one-thirtieth of an ounce) can cause “nausea, vomiting, ringing in the ears, delirium, a sense of suffocation, and collapse,” according to “A Consumer’s Dictionary of Food Additives.” In 2003, McDonald’s launched smaller, all-white-meat McNuggets after a federal judge dubbed the food “a McFrankenstein creation of various elements not utilized by the home cook.” Among the ingredients that remained in the new McNuggets: tBHQ and dimethylpolysiloxane. Christopher Kimball, the founder and publisher of Cook’s Illustrated magazine and host of the syndicated cooking show America’s Test Kitchen, says he suspects these chemicals are required for the nuggets to hold their shape and texture after being extruded into nugget-shaped molds “The regulations in Europe, in general, around food are much stricter than the U.S.,” …Kimball says… added by: eden49

Pope Calls for “World Political Authority”

[Note: this is a story from last year, im just posting it for personal reference] Pope Benedict XVI called for a “true world political authority” to manage the economy in his new encyclical on social justice. The encyclical, entitled “Charity in Truth,” was released by the Vatican on Tuesday and signed by the pope a day earlier. Benedict’s encyclical specifically called for “regulation of the financial sector,” and a “worldwide redistribution of energy resources.” Benedict added that “the State’s role seems destined to grow” if his political prescription is followed. “There is urgent need of a true world political authority,” Benedict wrote in the 30,000-word encyclical, calling for “reform of the United Nations Organization, and likewise of economic institutions and international finance, so that the concept of the family of nations can acquire real teeth.” Benedict described what a powerful world government with teeth would look like: “Such an authority would need to be universally recognized and to be vested with the effective power to ensure security for all.” He added: “Obviously it would have to have the authority to ensure compliance with its decisions from all parties” — that is, nations. At best, Benedict is proposing a global federation that would improve upon the U.S. Constitution’s checks and balances. “Such an authority would need to be regulated by law, to observe consistently the principles of subsidiarity,” Benedict says. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pope,_13_march_2007.jpg http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/culture/education/1375 added by: ibrake4rappers13

High Court: Petitions Aren’t Private

A state law that would make public the names of people signing a petition for a voter referendum against greater rights for same-sex partners has been upheld by the Supreme Court. At issue in this free speech and privacy dispute was whether officials in Washington state properly decided there was a “compelling public interest” when opting to release the names of gay rights opponents who voluntarily signed a statewide petition. The court by an 8-1 vote on Thursday decided in favor of the state. “Public disclosure promotes transparency and accountability in the electoral process to an extent other measures cannot,” wrote Chief Justice John Roberts. “Public disclosure of referendum petitions in general is substantially related to the important interest of preserving the integrity of the electoral process.” Gov. Christine Gregoire last year signed a bill approved by the legislature affording same-sex couples, as well as domestic partners over the age of 62, the same “rights, responsibilities, and obligations” given married spouses. It is commonly called the “Everything But Marriage” bill. State law allows such measures to be put to a voter referendum. A group called Protect Marriage Washington, which opposed expanded rights for same-sex couples, was able to gather more than 138,000 supporting signatures, qualifying the question for last November's ballot. Voters, asked in Referendum 71 to approve or reject the law, narrowly approved it, marking the first time a state's voters backed a gay equality measure at the ballot box. The two sides of the debate now are at odds over whether the identities of the referendum's signers are considered public records. The high court had debated whether signing a referendum is considered public political speech — permitting release of the names — or anonymous speech, allowing greater First Amendment protection to privacy. This ruling could affect about two dozen states that allow citizens to place an initiative or referendum on the ballot. Protect Marriage Washington says its backers could be harassed if officials release the names. James Bopp, the attorney representing gay rights opponents, told the court, “With modern technology, it only takes a few dedicated supporters and a computer who are willing to put this information on the Internet, MapQuest it,” which he claimed happened to California residents opposing a gay marriage law. The controversial law's open disclosure provision “encouraged people to harass” those against expanded rights for gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgenders. But Roberts said most such referendums involve more mundane matters like state revenue, property taxes, and public education. “Voters care about such issues, some quite deeply — but there is no reason to assume that any burdens imposed by disclosure of typical referendum petitions would be remotely like the burdens plaintiffs fear in this case,” he wrote. Justice Samuel Alito agreed the state law in general does not violate the Constitution, but said voters in this specific case and others may still be able to justify non-disclosure if they can rationally prove possible harassment. added by: Stoneyroad

Hillary Clinton: Gay Rights Are Human Rights

Obama, Clinton vow to defend gay rights, adding 'it's not who we are as Americans' By Elise Labott, CNN Senior State Department Producer June 23, 2010 1:48 a.m. EDT Washington (CNN) — President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pledged to end violence and discrimination against gays and lesbians at home and abroad Tuesday, as the Obama administration moves to extend further benefits to gays working in the federal government. “It's not right, it's not who we are as Americans, and we're going to put a stop to it,” Obama told a raucous White House reception honoring Gay and Lesbian Pride Month. Earlier, Clinton received several standing ovations from a standing-room only crowd of several hundred during her address at an event co-hosted by the State Department's Office of Civil Rights and GLIFAA, the organization for Gays and Lesbians in Foreign Affairs Agencies. “We are moving together in the right direction,” said Clinton. “We reaffirm our commitment to protect the rights of all human beings.” The White House event invited politicians and government officials as well as lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender American from across the country, including young people “who have stood up for equality,” said White House spokesman Shin Inouye. At a similar event last year, six months after Obama took office, participants expressed frustration over what they called a lack of progress in confronting discrimination issues that the president had promised to resolve. This time, Obama received loud applause, cheers and whistles as he cited steps his administration has taken, including a new hate crimes law, extending federal benefits to gay employees and a push for an employee discrimination bill. The Obama administration is expected to announce Wednesday that gay workers will be able to take medical leave to care for the sick or newborn children of their same-sex partners as part of the Family and Medical Leave Act, which generally allows those working for companies with 50 or more employees to take 12 unpaid weeks off to care for newborns or children with serious health issues. “And finally, we're going to end “don't ask, don't tell,” Obama said Tuesday of the policy that prohibits openly gay and lesbian soldiers from military service. A bill that would repeal the policy after a Pentagon review is completed in December is before Congress, the president noted. “We have never been closer to ending this discriminatory policy, and I'm going to keep on fighting until that bill is on my desk,” he said to cheers. Attending the event was Janice Langbehn of Lacey, Washington, who was denied hospital visitation rights when her partner of 18 years, Lisa Pond, was stricken with a fatal brain aneurysm while on vacation in Florida. Obama mentioned her story on Tuesday, calling the way she was treated “wrong” and “cruel.” Earlier, Clinton said she is asking embassies in Africa and elsewhere to report on rights of the local lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities. The State Department also is placing more attention on ensuring gays around the world have access to HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment, and providing grants to human rights activists who are persecuted either because they are gay or defend gay rights, she said. “These dangers are not gay issues. This is a human rights issue,” Clinton said. She drew more rousing applause when she declared “human rights are gay rights and gay rights are human rights,” a variation on the phrase she famously delivered in Beijing 10 years ago declaring “women's rights are human rights.” Clinton said she is equally concerned about creating an environment at the State Department in which gay employees feel valued and “can give 100 percent.” That is why, she said, she supported offering equal benefits to same-sex partners of State Department employees, a move that encouraged Obama to authorize such benefits for gays throughout the federal government. She noted the State Department also has made it easier for transgender people to change their passports and, for the first time, the agency's “equal opportunity statement” will include gender identity. It already includes sexual orientation. CNN's Suzanne Malveaux contributed to this report added by: EthicalVegan