Tumgik
#Diana DiGangi
womenusingwords · 1 year
Text
Last Chance Chicago
The details… Title: Last Chance Chicago Author: Diana DiGangi Publisher: Bywater Books Distribution: Distributed to the trade by Ingram Publishing Services Release date: December 6, 2022 ISBN: 978-1-61294-251-3 Available formats: ebook, paperback Digital file size: 5245 KB Print length: 322 pages Genre: Fiction / Mystery / Thriller / Romance / LGBT+ Themes: ex-wives, second chances,…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
judeinthestars · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
New review! Last Chance Chicago by Diana DiGangi.
1 note · View note
sapphicbookclub · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Last Chance Chicago by Diana DiGangi
Attorney and recovering cocaine addict Sam DiCiccio didn’t think she was ever going to see her ex-wife Amy Igarashi again, much less wind up defending her against felony insider trading charges.
But Amy’s been falsely accused, and Sam, who’s still in love with her, can’t bear to watch her take the fall for a crime she didn’t commit. Amy is holding on to resentment from their broken relationship and is hesitant to let Sam back into her life. But that all changes when her assets are frozen by a judge, and Sam is the best and only lawyer she can afford.
As Sam and Amy pull the threads of the alleged crime, they begin to unravel a mysterious corporate conspiracy that runs deep and wide. But as the clock ticks faster each day, the chance to prove Amy’s innocence and keep her out of jail begins to slip away.
Sam and Amy keep inching closer to the truth, but each step draws them closer to shadowy enemies and amplifies the heat between them.
Genres: contemporary, mystery, romance
Get the book from Blackwell's here with free shipping!
16 notes · View notes
koreaunderground · 3 years
Link
This package was received as the result of a FOIA request made to the CDC by Twitter user @gumby4christ (https://twitter.com/gumby4christ).
The request was originally for "all documents pertaining to CDC inspections of the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick from January 1, 2018 through December 31, 2019." In order to expedite processing, this request was later narrowed to ask for exactly the same information provided to WJLA reporter Diana DiGangi, which served as the basis for her article published Jan. 22, 2020: https://wjla.com/news/local/cdc-shut-down-army-germ-lab-health-concerns.
This package contains the letter of concern sent to USAMRIID by the CDC, which resulted in a temporary shutdown of USAMRIID's Fort Detrick lab in 2019.
4 notes · View notes
Text
Family says teen charged in murder of Reston couple dated their 16-year-old daughter Crime News Today
Family says teen charged in murder of Reston couple dated their 16-year-old daughter Crime News Today
By Kelly Rule and Diana DiGangi, WDCW
FAIRFAX COUNTY, Va. — (WDCW) — A 17-year-old boy has been charged in the double homicide of a Reston married couple who were shot to death in their home on Friday.
Scott Fricker and his wife, Buckley Kuhn-Fricker, were found dead in the 2600 block of Black…
View On WordPress
0 notes
koreaunderground · 3 years
Text
(2020/01/22) Army germ lab shut down by CDC in 2019 had several 'serious' protocol violations that year
[wjla.com][1]
  [1]: <https://wjla.com/news/local/cdc-shut-down-army-germ-lab-health-concerns>
# Army germ lab shut down by CDC in 2019 had several 'serious' protocol violations that year
Diana DiGangi
5-6 minutes
* * *
![A sign on the door of a Biosafety Level 4 laboratory at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases in Fort Detrick, Md., Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011. \(AP Photo/Patrick Semansky\)][2]
  [2]: https://wjla.com/resources/media2/16x9/full/1015/center/80/2b0d96fa-a4ad-4e8b-bb4b-5ca5ffc5c0c4-large16x9_AP_110810090750.jpg
A sign on the door of a Biosafety Level 4 laboratory at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases in Fort Detrick, Md., Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2011. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
FREDERICK, Md. — In 2019, an Army laboratory at Fort Detrick that studies deadly infectious material like Ebola and smallpox was shut down for a period of time after a CDC inspection, with many projects being temporarily halted.
The lab itself reported that the shutdown order was due to ongoing infrastructure issues with wastewater decontamination, and the CDC declined to provide the reason for the shutdown due to national security concerns.
**READ:[Army germ research lab in Md. that was working on Ebola treatment is shut down by CDC][3]**
  [3]: <https://wjla.com/news/local/army-germ-research-lab-in-frederick-was-shut-down-by-cdc> (https://wjla.com/news/local/army-germ-research-lab-in-frederick-was-shut-down-by-cdc)
ABC7 has received documents from the CDC outlining violations they discovered during a series of inspections that year, some of which were labeled "serious."
Earlier that year, the US Army Medical Research Institute [had announced][4] an experiment at the Fort Detrick laboratory that would involve infecting rhesus macaque monkeys with active Ebola virus to test a cure they were developing.
  [4]: <https://www.usamriid.army.mil/press_releases/GLP_EBOV_Final_28_MAR.pdf> (https://www.usamriid.army.mil/press_releases/GLP_EBOV_Final_28_MAR.pdf)
Several of the laboratory violations the CDC noted in 2019 concerned "non-human primates" infected with a "select agent", the identity of which is unknown — it was redacted in all received documents, because disclosing the identity and location of the agent would endanger public health or safety, the agency says. In addition to Ebola, the lab works with other deadly agents like anthrax and smallpox.
Select agents are defined by the CDC as “biological agents and toxins that have been determined to have the potential to pose a severe threat to public health and safety, to animal and plant health, or to animal or plant products.”
Here are some of the violations the CDC observed during inspections of Fort Detrick that year:
## OBSERVATION 1
Severity level: Serious
The CDC reported that an individual partially entered a room multiple times without the required respiratory protection while other people in that room were performing procedures with a non-human primate on a necropsy table.
“This deviation from entity procedures resulted in a respiratory occupational exposure to select agent aerosols,” the CDC wrote.
## OBSERVATION 2
Severity level: Serious
The CDC reported that the lab did not ensure that employee training was properly verified when it came to toxins and select agents.
“These failures were recognized through video review of laboratorians’ working in BSL3 and ABSL3 labs,” their report said. “[These] indicate the [lab]’s means used to verify personnel understood the training had not been effective, leading to increased risk of occupational exposures.”
The CDC went on to specify that a laboratorian who was not wearing appropriate respiratory protection was seen multiple times “partially entering” a room where non-human primates that were infected with [redacted] were “housed in open caging.” They also observed a laboratorian disposing of waste in a biohazardous waste bin without gloves on.
## OBSERVATION 3
Severity level: Moderate
In this violation observation, the CDC went into more detail on the incident of the worker not wearing gloves while disposing of biohazardous waste, writing that “biosafety and containment procedures must be sufficient to contain the select agent or toxin.”
The corrective action they recommended was to confirm that relevant personnel have been trained to wear gloves to prevent exposure to hazardous materials.
## OBSERVATION 4
Severity level: Serious
In this observation, the CDC notes that the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases had “systematically failed to ensure implementation of biosafety and containment procedures commensurate with the risks associated with working with select agents and toxins.”
The violation specifically observed involved “entity personnel [...] propping open” a door while removing “large amounts of biohazardous waste” from an adjacent room, “[increasing] the risk of contaminated air from [the room] escaping and being drawn into the [redacted]” where the people working “typically do not wear respiratory protection.” {mf}
## OBSERVATION 5
Severity level: Moderate
The CDC reported that the laboratory failed to safeguard against unauthorized access to select against. They wrote that personal protective equipment worn while decontaminating something contaminated by a select agent had been stored in open biohazard bags, in an area of the facility that the CDC has redacted for security reasons.
“By storing regulated waste in this area, the entity did not limit access to those with access approval,” they wrote.
## OBSERVATION 6
Severity level: Moderate
The CDC reports that someone at the lab did not maintain an accurate or current inventory for a toxin.
## OBSERVATION 7
Severity level: Low
The CDC reports that a building at the Fort Detrick laboratory didn’t have a “sealed surface to facilitate cleaning and decontamination.” This included cracks around a conduit box, cracks in the ceiling, and a crack in the seam above a biological safety cabinet.
4 notes · View notes