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Judge: Hurricane Katrina Flooding Was Caused By Army Corps Of Engineers' Negligence

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CAIN BURDEAU | 11/18/09 10:49 PM | AP

What's Your Reaction?
Katrina

NEW ORLEANS — A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Army Corps of Engineers' failure to properly maintain a navigation channel led to massive flooding in Hurricane Katrina, a decision that could make the federal government vulnerable to billions of dollars in claims.

U.S. District Judge Stanwood Duval sided with six residents and one business who argued the Army Corps' shoddy oversight of the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet led to the flooding of New Orleans' Lower 9th Ward and neighboring St. Bernard Parish. He said, however, the corps couldn't be held liable for the flooding of eastern New Orleans, where two of the plaintiffs lived.

Duval awarded the plaintiffs $720,000, but the government could eventually be forced to pay much more in damages. The ruling should give more than 100,000 other individuals, businesses and government entities a better shot at claiming billions of dollars in damages.

The ruling is also emotionally resonant for south Louisiana. Many in New Orleans have argued that Katrina, which struck the region Aug. 29, 2005, was a manmade disaster caused by the Army Corps' failure to maintain the levee system protecting the city.

"Total devastation could possibly have been avoided if something had been done," said Tanya Smith, one of the plaintiffs. "A lot of this stuff was preventable and they turned a deaf ear to it."

The 36-year-old registered nurse anesthetist lived in Chalmette close to the channel when Katrina hit. She was awarded $317,000 in property damages, the most of any of the plaintiffs.

Duval referred to the corps' approach to maintaining the channel as "monumental negligence."

Joe Bruno, one of the lead lawyers for the plaintiffs, said the ruling underscored the Army Corps' long history of not properly protecting the New Orleans region.

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"It's high time we look at the way these guys do business and do a full re-evaluation of the way it does business," Bruno said.

He said he expected the government to appeal.

The corps referred calls seeking comment to the Justice Department. Spokesman Charles Miller said the government would review the judge's ruling before making any decision on how to proceed.

During trial testimony, government lawyers and experts argued the levee system was overwhelmed by the massive storm, and levee breaches couldn't solely be blamed on the shipping channel dug in the 1960s as a short-cut between the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans.

The corps had also unsuccessfully argued that it is immune from liability because the channel is part of New Orleans' flood control system.

In his 156-page ruling, Duval said he was "utterly convinced" that the corps' failure to shore up the channel "doomed the channel to grow to two to three times its design width" and that "created a more forceful frontal wave attack on the levee" that protected St. Bernard and the Lower 9th Ward.

"The Corps had an opportunity to take a myriad of actions to alleviate this deterioration or rehabilitate this deterioration and failed to do so," Duval said. "Clearly the expression 'talk is cheap' applies here."

The corps has been sued before over levee failures and flooding, but it had always walked away untouched. That included after Hurricane Betsy in 1965 over alleged flooding by the outlet. Ahead of Duval's ruling, experts had said it would likely have consequences for the way the Army Corps does business nationwide.

Pierce O'Donnell, another lead plaintiffs lawyer, said the ruling was the "first time ever the Army Corps has been held liable for damages for a major catastrophe that it caused."

The plaintiffs lawyers would like Congress to set up a compensation fund to speed up payments to the thousands of other claimants, whose claims must still be heard in court.

At a one-month trial in May, experts clashed over the causes of flooding and the channel's contribution to it.

Government experts argued the levees and floodwalls would have failed regardless of whether the MRGO had been dug.

By contrast, the plaintiffs' team of experts said the outlet became a "hurricane highway" that funneled storm surge into New Orleans. They said that without the channel, the flooding would have been minimal.

The lawsuit was the first major case against the federal government over Katrina flooding to go to trial. A decision rested with Duval because a jury cannot try a case against the federal government.

Despite its statements in court, the corps has acknowledged the area's flood risk and closed the channel with rocks. It is also building a $1.3 billion floodgate to stop surge entering the city from the direction of the channel and Lake Borgne.

NEW ORLEANS — A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Army Corps of Engineers' failure to properly maintain a navigation channel led to massive flooding in Hurricane Katrina, a decision that co...
NEW ORLEANS — A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Army Corps of Engineers' failure to properly maintain a navigation channel led to massive flooding in Hurricane Katrina, a decision that co...
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Will this verdict even hold? The government should have paid out the big bucks immediately after the hurricane, but they didn't. What good is asking for $700,000 this long after the fact? Here is what the experts are saying: http://bit.ly/ApmtN

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 11/20/2009
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This is not news, we knew this. The Bush administration would not give money to do this work, they turned down requests by the engineers. This was a fact given by only certain media, difinitely not mainstream, nbc, cbs, abc, pbs, and of course not Fox. But it was out there. The Bush administration was told that the corps of engineers was alarmed. As all things that happened during that time, nobody at the top pointed fingers at the administration, probably under threat of Cheney shooting them.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 PM on 11/19/2009

so the answer is sue, sue, sue

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 PM on 11/19/2009
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You may want to check your facts. It wasn't Bush, it was both Bush's. AND Clinton that cut funding for New Orleans flood protection. ALL of them are to blame! I know, I live in New Orleans. Our coastal wetlands were decimated in my lifetime and now we are loosing a football field of land every five minutes from our coast because of failed ecology. And we told them and fought them. So I am glad to see this decision.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:44 PM on 11/19/2009
- GH I'm a Fan of GH 9 fans permalink

What a buch of it... That NOLA was at the risk it was at was not new news to anybody who has a brain. how come during the roaring 90's - the era of Enron, World Com - the era of the super rich get richer and the CEO's get richer and the era of the return to surpluses, the Clinton administration with all that money did nothing to start the protection of New Orleans? .. the rebuilding of Homestead, FL. turned their backs on the suffering during the great Mississippi floods of 1994? Couldn't get trailers to the homeless following Hurricane Floyd? Bush could have done better, no doubt, but the deaths in NOLA and area do not rest on his back -they rest on those prior to, and on Gov. Blanco and Mayor Nagini - and on enviromentalists who for decades have founght the Corps in their efforts to protect NOLA - including wanting to build great Holland like dikes to protect the city from exactly the sort of storm surge that buried NOLA.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:43 PM on 11/19/2009
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Why was this removed from the top stories? I had trouble finding it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 AM on 11/19/2009
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DING! DING! DING!
FANNED!
Post of the Day!
Perhaps because " Princess Letizia's Gowns: Gaudy Or Gorgeous?" is more newsworthy than an American Massacre. The Katrina Disaster was NOT a "natural disaster", rather it was man made.
This is a PERFECT example of UNDER-Reporting. The story was released Late yesterday and REMOVED early today. Its a COVER-up.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 PM on 11/19/2009

I see a lot of lawyers getting rich on this one.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 AM on 11/19/2009

of course the trial lawyers love this and guess which party they mainly support? They will rake in on this for the next year or so

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 PM on 11/19/2009
- bayside I'm a Fan of bayside 36 fans permalink
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Florida gets hit and rebuilt time and time again. I would be curious to see if this same shoddy workmanship by army corp was given to florida..

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 11/19/2009
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Floridas main problem is the DIRECT damage done by hurricanes. New Orleans damage was secondary.

See this:

""What happened in New Orleans wasn't the natural disaster; the natural disaster was the trigger. The real disaster was the man-made structure, " van Heerden said. "If the levees hadn't failed, we wouldn't be talking about Katrina."" http://www.nola.com/news/index.ssf/2009/05/ivor_van_heerden_cites_policy.html

This is a complex issue. Katrina victims LOST a lot of battles on the way to this day. The Corps of Engineers cannot be sued for levee failure itself...No matter HOW POORLY designed. There is precedence. No "Levee" cases were allowed.

The reason USACE lost this MRGO case is because it is not a flood control system failure at heart....it is a Transportation Route failure (that destroyed wetlands forestation which were a natural buffer against hurricane influenced tides)

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 11/19/2009
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Gee, i thought it was all because of Bush?

I guess it's the Army Corps of Engineers who don't like Black people, Kanye...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 AM on 11/19/2009
- VPN I'm a Fan of VPN 105 fans permalink
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Lack of maintenance and poor building quality is one thing but dithering and enjoying Birthday cake while ignoring people drowning is quite another, look into the difference it might help you better understand kanye's comment.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 AM on 11/19/2009
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If you remember, the Hurricane missed New Orleans.

However the rain cause flooding, and the levees were breached the FOLLOWING AFTERNOON.

The morning after the hurricane, all the news stations were reporting that New Orleans was fine.

NOBODY realized that there would be a disaster, until well after the storm had passed.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 AM on 11/19/2009
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We can assign PLENTY of blame on bush.

Check the Katrina Mistake List
http://www.katrinamistakelist.com/

It sure looks intentional to me.

Check my Blog for more:
http://themurderofneworleans.blogspot.com/

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 11/19/2009
- kk78 I'm a Fan of kk78 4 fans permalink

Does the ARMY CORP get enough funding to beable to support these engineering problems around the country? just asking im not sure how that all works.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 AM on 11/19/2009
- Cryostatic I'm a Fan of Cryostatic 22 fans permalink

Of course not. It's a bureaucracy. Every request for funding probably goes through several dozen steps before it even reaches approval, much less finds it's way to the place that it's needed.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 AM on 11/19/2009

"In the aftermath of hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005, Congress passed the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) of 2007. The Act required the establishment and maintenance of an inventory of all federal levees, as well as those non-federal levees for which information is voluntarily provided by state and local government agencies. The inventory is intended to be a comprehensive, geospatial database that is shared between the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), FEMA, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and the states."

"While the USACE has begun the inventory of all federal levees, to date few states or local agencies have provided any formal information, leaving the inventory far from complete. In addition, there is still much to be determined about the condition and performance of the nation’s levees, both federal and nonfederal. As of February 2009, initial results from USACE’s inventory show that while more than half of all federally inspected levees do not have any deficiencies, 177, or about 9%, are expected to fail in a flood event. The inventory data collection process is ongoing and these preliminary findings are expected to change as the process continues."

http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/fact-sheet/levees

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 AM on 11/19/2009
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Monies were diverted..... Iraq was holding our oil hostage.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 11/19/2009
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The Engineers tried, wanted to, begged for years for action funds and plans from the administrations.
They got no approvals, no funding, no orders...
They are being used as scapegoats...it's truly sad...

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 AM on 11/19/2009

GX, there is NO scapegoating going on here. The USACE has acknowledged its role in failing to maintain the floodwalls and levees. And, yes, it is truly sad given the loss of life which occurred as a result.

"Some 10 months after Hurricane Katrina's devastation, the corps issued its June 1, 2006, follow-up study of the hurricane protection system for New Orleans and Southeast Louisiana. Among its findings, it said: "The System did not perform as a system: the hurricane protection in New Orleans and Southeast Louisiana was a system in name only ... The system's performance was compromised by the incompleteness of the system, the inconsistency in levels of protection, and the lack of redundancy. Incomplete sections of the system resulted in sections with lower protective elevations or transitions between types and levels of protection that were weak spots."

"The report went on to criticize the inconsistent levels in the quality of materials used in levees, differences in the conservativeness of floodwall designs, and variations in structure protective elevations due to subsidence and construction below the design intent due to error in interpretation of information."

http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/547432/

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 AM on 11/19/2009
- sueno I'm a Fan of sueno 12 fans permalink

Finally the 'truth' is told!
The 'myth' of the Army Engineers
not closing or miss-closing the levies
is true! Now the question is how many
politicians were involved with this decision???

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 11/19/2009
- Cryostatic I'm a Fan of Cryostatic 22 fans permalink

The truth isn't "finally" being told, a judge just simply ruled in favor of a lawsuit against them.

It's common knowledge that the Corp had reports dating years back describing the possible failure of the levies, and that they needed work to avoid potential disaster. As far as people involved, you'll never finger them all.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 AM on 11/19/2009

It could be the hurricane? Or maybe New Orleans is below sea level? Or both? Mother Nature is stronger than anything Man can build.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:02 AM on 11/19/2009
- Cryostatic I'm a Fan of Cryostatic 22 fans permalink

New Orleans is indeed below sea level. Certainly not the best place for building a coastal community.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 AM on 11/19/2009
- superbjorn I'm a Fan of superbjorn 4 fans permalink
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people have been living on the coasts for centuries and more. no one dithers about the netherlands.

What about Florida? their fault for hurricanes? California's fault for earthquakes?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 AM on 11/19/2009

What's at issue is the state of our nation's infrastruc­ture---whe­ther it is being properly built and maintained. There are simply too many regions of the country that rely upon some form of levee, flood wall or dam protection to make your assertion valid.

Just a few of these examples include:

"There are 96 high hazard dams in Arizona - 43 of Arizona’s 248 dams are in need of rehabilitation.
There are 352 high hazard dams in Colorado. - 9 of Colorado’s 1,935 dams are in need of rehabilitation.
There are 457 high hazard dams in Georgia. - 147 of Georgia’s 3,881 dams are in need of rehabilitation.
There are 240 high hazard dams in Indiana. - 538 of Indiana’s 1,088 dams are in need of rehabilitation.
There are 102 high hazard dams in Montana. - 25 of Montana’s 2,884 dams are in need of rehabilitation.
There are 25 high hazard dams in Maine. - 13 of Maine’s 831 dams are in need of rehabilitation."

http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/states

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 AM on 11/19/2009
- Bienville I'm a Fan of Bienville 13 fans permalink
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New Orleans is less than half below sea level.

It is not on the coast. It is 100 miles upriver from the Gulf.

Where would you site a port city if not near water?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 11/19/2009
- Bienville I'm a Fan of Bienville 13 fans permalink
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Check what the judge said. He said it was sloppy work by the Corps.

Check the ILIT report from UC Berkeley. They say some floodwalls failed several feet below their design elevations - that means they were not overtopped.

What causes a floodwall to fail below its design elevation before it is overtopped? Is it the storm or is it the wall?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 PM on 11/19/2009

As a civil engineer who is experienced in these types of things, to place the blame virtually soley on the Corps is ridiculous. The entire region is, and has been, a flooding diaster waiting to happen that no levee system could ever fully protect.

If people want to start throwing blame around, how about blaming the developers, businesses, politicians and others would allowed and encouraged development in floodplain areas despiute constant and numerous warnings from the enginnering community that it was a very bad idea.

Folks, everytime you build in a floodplain, you're asking to get flooded. Doing it anyway and then expecting agencies like the Corps to fully protect you anyway is a big part of what's wrong with America these days.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 AM on 11/19/2009
- Dynamohum I'm a Fan of Dynamohum 59 fans permalink

Answer me one question then please. Why is it that Netherlands, a country COMPLETELY below sea level, the ENTIRE country has been and is able to build/maintain a system that keeps the OCEAN out, not just gulf waters, but a wave producing, violent, churning ocean. So, according to you, this whole culture of people should just be wiped out?

There are a myriad of reasons New Orleans and the Mississippi delta were developed the way they were. It was needed to INDUSTRY and COMMERCE. It was needed by the OIL industry. A majority of goods and services Americans use everyday come from New Orleans.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 11/19/2009

In theory, I agree with some of your comments. But the fact remains that negligence contributed to the loss of lives. I'm not interested in "throwing blame around" but facts are the facts. The question is what can be done to improve this nation's infrastructure so that our bridges aren't collapsing and our levees, flood walls, and dams are designed and maintained to do a better job protecting the families who live in the vicinity?

In my opinion, partisan bickering over whose fault it is or was is counterproductive and solves nothing. Public awareness of the fact that many of these structures are in disrepair and action needs to be taken to correct this situation would be a good start.

Peace.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 11/19/2009
- Bienville I'm a Fan of Bienville 13 fans permalink
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I encourage you and all other civil engineers to read the ILIT report. You can find it by Googling "ILIT Berkeley." I wonder if you'll be as shocked and ashamed as I was.

There is much truth in what you say. Often, "requirements" have to be downgraded to "desirements" when there is no money.

Read the report and explain why the Corps tried to protect all those people and all those interests with dogshit.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 PM on 11/19/2009
- factotem I'm a Fan of factotem 127 fans permalink
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In my industry, it's well-known; If you want something severely messed up (for decades), hire the Army Corps of Civil Engineers!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 AM on 11/19/2009
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Problem goes back a long time and began when the government at the behest of shipping companies, oil companies, agribusiness, etc. began making engineering decisions based on what was best for these industries instead of what is best for the people of southern Louisiana. As a result we now have straightened canals, crumbling and insufficient levees, and a very unsafe environment for residents.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:21 AM on 11/19/2009

You're right on point don-

"During the past 50 years there has been tremendous development on lands protected by levees. Coupled with the fact that many levees have not been well maintained, this burgeoning growth has put people and infrastructure at risk—the perceived safety provided by levees has inadvertently increased flood risks by attracting development to the floodplain. Continued population growth and economic development behind levees is considered by many to be the dominant factor in the national flood risk equation, outpacing the effects of increased chance of flood occurrence and the degradation of levee condition. Unfortunately, lands protected by levees have not always been developed in a manner that recognizes the benefits of the rivers and manages the risk of flooding."

"Additionally, in the absence of a comprehensive levee inventory, there are many uncertainties regarding location, performance, and condition of levees. There has been a lack of formal government oversight, sufficient technical standards, and effective communication of the risks of living behind a levee, further placing people and property in danger of floods."

http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/fact-sheet/levees

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 AM on 11/19/2009
- Bienville I'm a Fan of Bienville 13 fans permalink
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You are terrific.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 11/19/2009
- iblogleft I'm a Fan of iblogleft 86 fans permalink
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This judge needs to be investigated.

This is nothing more then putting the cost burden onto the taxpayers instead of insurance companies.

Like they could ever prove fault. They knew this levy system was not good enough 2 years before the disaster, and it was the city that turned down the 2.4 billion dollar plans to revamp the system.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 AM on 11/19/2009
- doctorj2u I'm a Fan of doctorj2u 16 fans permalink

That is some fantasy world you have created for yourself! You posted a lot of inaccurate information in that post. Inaccurate by a mile.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 AM on 11/19/2009
- nirek I'm a Fan of nirek 87 fans permalink
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So what is the accurate info?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 11/19/2009
- Bienville I'm a Fan of Bienville 13 fans permalink
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The City certainly cannot "turn down" money that is appropriated by Congress for use by the Corps of Engineers. Please cite your source for that whopper.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 PM on 11/19/2009

This can't be! I thought government was the solution, not the cause of problems!!!!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 AM on 11/19/2009
- MadHeart I'm a Fan of MadHeart 124 fans permalink

It depends on WHO is running the govt. Obviously, Rethuglicons care more about the money they bring in to themselves and dispense to their cronies in the form of no-bid contracts than what the people get for their tax dollars. Don't forget, Katrina happened during Bush's watch, when his appointees were running the different depts, the majority of whom paid no attention to the laws in place and how they affected the people of the US. Even to the end of his last term, Bush helped engineer the biggest meltdown of the economy, in dollar terms, than the Great Depression and wound up helping even more cronies related to his Treasury Secy, Henry Paulson.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:37 AM on 11/19/2009

Two genocides happened on billy clinton's watch. complete failure on his part and in Rwanda alone over 800,000 were butchered in 100 days, despite billy KNOWING that it was going to happen. Sorry, this is YOUR logic. But I bet the genocideS that happened during billy's time, well, that is different, or, will you attempt to blame Bush for those as well?

Why do dims always react with the assumption that I have a great love of Bush? Logic is not very big on them, you see, I commented on GOVERNMENT, not a particular person. Bush spent money like a demonrat.

Scariest words ever heard: "We are from the government and we are here to help"

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:49 AM on 11/19/2009
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