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  • Robert talks with forensic accountant Kalman Barson, who works for Rosenberg, Rich, Baker, Berman and Company. Barson explains some techniques which might be used to trace and recover O.J. Simpson's money. Forensic accountants...who are also known as investigative accountants...trace where money has gone and how it was used.
  • The United Nations has long been in the spotlight over allegations of child rape and other sexual abuses by its peacekeepers, especially by those based in Congo and the Central African Republic.
  • A new bill from a top Democrat seeks to close a loophole that federal judges have used to collect pension benefits despite facing credible accusations of wrongdoing by employees.
  • NPR's Libby Lewis reports on police accountability and whether efforts to protect police officers from investigations immediately after an incident are necessary or not.
  • We hear a montage of reports from eyewitnesses to the shuttle Columbia disaster.
  • We hear a montage of reports from eyewitnesses to the Columbia disaster. (This is a repeat from earlier in the show.)
  • One of the first acts of the 104th Congress was to require members to comply with the federal workplace laws from which Congress has traditionally exempted itself. NPR's Chitra Ragavan reports that a new report says that means more than 40 percent of Congressional staffers should be getting overtime.
  • A Swiss banker has pleaded not guilty to charges he helped thousands of Americans evade paying their taxes. Raoul Weil was one of the top managers at UBS, a Swiss bank that helped nearly 20,000 Americans hide their assets in secret accounts.
  • If President Trump wins reelection and a lawsuit against the Affordable Care Act, millions of Americans with preexisting health conditions could lose access to health insurance or pay much more.
  • Thomas Wheeler led the Justice Department's civil rights unit through a period of transition. He told lawyers he never intended to stay in the job permanently.
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