
JAMA Forum: How Will President Trump’s Policies Affect Domestic and Global Health and Development?
By Lawrence Gostin, JD on January 11, 2011

Donald Trump’s election to the US presidency marks a time of global transition, with singular importance to health. The world is witnessing the rise of populist movements characterized by concerns about trade, immigration, globalization, and international organizations. These seismic events could have profound effects on health and development in the United States and globally.
There is still a great deal we don’t know about the policies of a Trump administration, and how those policies will unfold in a constitutional system of checks and balances. Trump has not laid out specific details on major domestic policies, such as reforms related to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) or reproductive rights. Even less well understood are his views on global health issues, such as health assistance, the Paris Climate Change Agreement, and the World Health Organization (WHO).
Based on Trump’s earlier statements, what can we expect for 2017 and beyond?
The Affordable Care Act
A recent JAMA Viewpoint identified 4 major ACA reforms discussed by the House leadership and President-elect Trump: health savings accounts, selling health insurance across state lines, Medicaid block grants, and malpractice reform. Congress has already taken the first steps to repeal the ACA, with implementation possibly delayed before a replacement is enacted. His nominee for Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Rep Tom Price, MD, (R, Georgia), earlier introduced legislation to dismantle the ACA. There is little empirical evidence that current Republican proposals would retain health coverage gains or significantly lower health care costs.
President-elect Trump has said he plans to keep 2 popular ACA features, retaining coverage of preexisting conditions and of dependent children up to age 26 years. The ACA was able to offer these benefits by widening the pool of insured individuals, particularly younger and healthier enrollees, through individual and employer mandates, which Trump opposes. Republican proposals also would not maintain subsidies in health insurance exchanges or retain the Medicaid expansion. This leaves 2 major unanswered questions: how to widen risk pools to stabilize insurance markets and how to maintain the gains in coverage.
Reproductive Health and Rights
Trump has vacillated on his views about reproductive health, although Vice President–elect Pence and Rep Price favor restricting contraception coverage and abortions and eliminating federal funding for Planned Parenthood. Although Trump might not fight for new federal abortion restrictions, he would likely turn a blind eye to state restrictions. The Supreme Court recently struck down 2 onerous state abortion restrictions, but the majority of states still have restrictive legislation in place.
As part of the law’s commitment to covering preventive services, the ACA guarantees access to reproductive and family planning services, such as contraception. Because family planning and other preventive services are defined in an administrative regulation, the HHS Secretary could change the rule without congressional approval. Eliminating this benefit would cause real financial hardship for many of the 62% of all women of reproductive age who use contraception.
Trump promised to nominate a strong “pro-life” Supreme Court justice, putting the Court in the same closely divided position before Justice Antonin Scalia’s death. If there were additional vacancies during Trump’s presidency, the Court’s pro-life block would probably prevail. Reproductive rights are facing strong headwinds as states pass laws that make it harder for poor women to access safe, legal abortions.
Climate Change
Climate change holds short-term and long-term peril for domestic and global health. Experts say it will exacerbate severe weather events, fuel heat waves, increase pollution, alter the geographical reaches of disease vectors, and produce crop failures, thereby increasing injuries, malnutrition, infectious diseases, asthma, and cardiovascular disease.
Trump (who, along with his nominee for the Environmental Protection Agency, Scott Pruitt) is distrustful of climate science. He pledged to undo the Obama Administration’s 2016 greenhouse gas targets and revoke financial commitments to United Nations (UN) climate change programs—although he said he had an “open mind.” His commitment to fossil fuel development (coal and oil) could reduce incentives for clean alternatives. At the same time, if he rejects the Paris accord, other world leaders might similarly renege on their environmental promises.
International Health
Broad bipartisan support exists for former President George W. Bush’s President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), and successive presidents have supported the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. Trump has not signaled diminished support for these programs, but international health assistance probably will be flat-lined, possibly reduced. This will maintain the US support for antiretroviral treatment in Africa and elsewhere, but would do little to expand coverage.
President Obama’s signature global health achievement is not likely to fair as well. His $1 billion Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA) is strengthening health systems in lower-income countries. President Obama also advocated for US leadership and funding during the Ebola and Zika outbreaks during his term. Trump would be less likely to push Congress to renew GHSA funding or allocate major resources to fight the next global health emergency.
The WHO has introduced major reforms, including a new health emergencies program and joint external evaluation of national health systems. Yet its new program is significantly underfunded. Absent GHSA funding to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and WHO, we are unlikely to see significant improvements in epidemic preparedness. That would leave the world highly vulnerable to novel circulating viruses and influenza strains.
Refugee Health
The millions of refugees fleeing conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa often lack basic health needs such as potable water, nutritious food, and housing. Overcrowded conditions fuel infectious disease outbreaks, while vulnerable women face sexual assaults. Turning the tide on these health threats requires humanitarian assistance and a willingness to shoulder a fair share of the burden in welcoming refugees. A new US administration is unlikely to increase (and may reduce) humanitarian assistance, while turning away vulnerable immigrants. Two hallmarks of Trump’s campaign were an antiimmigrant sentiment and an insistence on increased border security, both of which would harm refugees and other vulnerable immigrants.
Health, Development, and the Environment in the Balance
Fresh leadership at the UN and WHO, together with the Sustainable Development Goals, offers great promise. António Guterres, the former UN High Commissioner for Refugees, began serving as the ninth UN Secretary-General on January 1, and in May, the World Health Assembly will elect a new WHO Director-General. Both are charged with the task of working toward the ambitious UN Sustainable Development Goals, including bold health targets such as universal health coverage and fighting noncommunicable diseases.
The United States has historically exercised global health leadership, while sharply increasing health insurance coverage domestically under the Obama administration. As Trump takes office with the promise to “put America first,” what will that mean for our commitments to global health and progress toward universal health coverage? The future of health, development, and the environment hangs in the balance.
***
About the author: Lawrence O. Gostin, JD, is University Professor and Faculty Director, O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, Georgetown University Law Center, and Director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Center on Public Health Law and Human Rights. His most recent book is Global Health Law (Harvard University Press).
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New York City taxpayers will pay $75 million to settle a class action lawsuit against the New York Police Department over its issuing of nearly 1 million legally baseless criminal summonses over several years because they were under pressure to meet quotas. The summonses were later dismissed for lack of evidence. The settlement must be approved by U.S. District Judge Robert W. Sweet.
The suit was filed in a federal court in 2010 on behalf of people who were hit with 900,000 court summonses that were later dismissed because of legal deficiencies. The settlement would allow people issued court summonses for offenses such as trespassing, disorderly conduct and urinating in public to receive a maximum of $150 per person per incident for their trouble.
The lawsuit argued police were routinely ordered to issue summonses “regardless of whether any crime or violation” had occurred to meet quotas. It cited claims by two whistleblower officers who said they were forced into quotas by precinct superiors. The quota allegations were denied in the settlement agreement.
Under the agreement, the city said the NYPD must update and expand training and guidance reiterating to officers and their superiors that quotas are not allowed, and officers must not be mandated to make a particular number of summonses, street stops or arrests.
A total of $56.6 million would be set aside, and individual payments could end up lower if more claims are made. Any funds not paid go back to the city, which is also paying $18.5 million in legal fees. Possible class members would be notified through social media and other advertisements.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs called it the largest false-arrest class-action lawsuit in city history. The 2010 lawsuit includes summonses filed from 2007 through at least 2015. About one-quarter of the summonses issued during that time frame were dismissed for legal insufficiency, according to data in the lawsuit. Legal insufficiency is not necessarily a lack of evidence but may be that an officer wasn’t clear enough in explaining why someone was ticketed.
The class action suit came amid a growing outcry over the NYPD’s encounters with minorities. The lead plaintiff in the case, Sharif Stinson, said he was stopped twice outside his aunt’s Bronx building in 2010 when he was 19 and was given disorderly conduct summonses by officers who said he used obscene language. The officers didn’t specify what the language or behavior was, and the tickets were dismissed.
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Lawmakers quietly closed the investigation into the lead poisoning of the water system in Flint, Michigan in December 2016. The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee’s findings blamed state officials, the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) and the EPA.
The Flint water crisis began when the city’s unelected emergency manager, appointed by Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, switched the source of Flint’s drinking water from the Detroit system to the corrosive Flint River to save money. The water corroded Flint’s aging pipes, causing poisonous levels of lead to leach into the drinking water. The impoverished city was under state control at the time.
Between 6,000 and 12,000 children were been exposed to drinking water with high levels of lead and they may experience a range of serious health problems.
The chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Jason Chaffetz, issued two separate letters announcing that the investigation was finished and that Snyder was without guilt because it was the Environmental Protection Agency’s fault Flint’s water source was shifted to a contaminated source. After the April 25, 2014 switch to Flint River water from back-up to temporary primary source, city residents began complaining about their water’s color, taste, and odor.
Thirteen people have been charged in the Flint Water Crisis and its cover-up. Former MDEQ employees Michael Prysby and Stephen Busch were charged with misconduct in office, conspiracy to tamper with evidence, tampering with evidence, a treatment violation of the Michigan Safe Drinking Water Act, and a monitoring violation of the Safe Drinking Water Act. Former city water plant operator Michael Glasgow was charged with willful neglect of office, a misdemeanor, and felony tampering with evidence. Glasgow accepted a plea deal with prosecutors, admitting to filing false information about lead in Flint water and agreeing to cooperate in other prosecutions.
Liane Shekter-Smith was charged with misconduct in office and willful neglect of duty; Adam Rosenthal was charged with misconduct in office, conspiracy to tamper with evidence, tampering with evidence, and neglect; Adam Cook was charged with misconduct in office, conspiracy to engage in misconduct in office, and neglect of duty. From the MDHHS, Nancy Peeler, Corinne Miller, and Robert Scott were charged with misconduct in office, conspiracy to commit misconduct in office, and willful neglect of duty.
On December 20, 2016, false pretenses, conspiracy to commit false pretenses, willful neglect of duty and misconduct in office charges against former Emergency Managers Darnell Earley and Jerry Ambrose; and false pretenses and conspiracy to commit false pretenses charges were filed against former Flint Utilities Administrator Daugherty Johnson and former Flint Department of Public Works director Howard Croft. Many residents are outraged that Governor Rick Snyder has survived the investigation unscathed since some of the officials charged reported directly to him.
The closing of the investigation came as Flint Mayor Karen Weaver told residents they should still not drink the water. The city’s lead pipes have not yet been replaced.
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In an effort to broaden the company’s “social interaction” with our clients and FaceBook fans, Daily Trivia Questions are posted on both of our business pages. Here are the weekly standings for this past week, and the winner of the Sunday night Weekly Drawing for an AmEx gift card!
Congratulations – To this past week’s Trivia Contest Winner!! Our latest contest winner for the weekly FaceBook HealthInsurance4Everyone/Health & Life Solutions, LLC Trivia Contest, drawn randomly by computer late Sunday evening, January 29th, 2017 was:
BROOKE SCOTT
Jonesboro, GA
Winner Of A $25.00 AmEx Gift Card
Each day, fans of either of our company FaceBook pages (HealthInsurance4Everyone or Health & Life Solutions LLC) are able to test their skills with our Daily TRIVIA QUESTION. The first 20 winners who post the correct answer to the TRIVIA QUESTION, will then get entered into the weekly drawing held late on Sunday evenings for a $25.00 Am Ex Gift. Card
Weekly Gift Card winners will be posted in our blog at this site. Remember to become a FaceBook “fan” on either of our company pages to enter and post your answers.
Here are the daily contestants from last week’s Trivia Contest that were entered into the Sunday drawing:

1/23/17
Ralph Gonzales
Leslie Wagner Hobson
Katrina Worford
Dean Bruss
Holly Cajigas
Anna Ashley Pinder
Nelle Bailey
Desiree Ann
Jamie Shapiro
Jennifer Saavedra
Anna Nichols
Amy Hopper
Morgan Alexandra
Jennifer Sparks
Kim Floyd
Cheryl Hall
Phyllis Hines
Ashley Nicole
Tiffany Greene Elliott
Priscilla Shimp
Christina Radcliff
1/24/17
Anna Nichols
Phyllis Hines
Heather Jacques
Jade Good
Ashley Oshier
Misty Shallcross
Mya Murphy
Kiki Roberson
Kendra George
Lori Capobianco
Jakara Jackson
Jennifer Saavedra
Paula Rousseau
Candy Dyer
Amy Chavis
Cheryl Hall
Stacy Mydlarz
Amber McGrath
Amy Hopper
Stephanie Beckwith
Traci Anderson
Lesa Moats
Kizzy Alvarez DeSantis
Althea Thomas
1/25/17
Cheryl Hall
Heather Jacques
Jakara Jackson
Beata Tybor
Kassi Krick-King
Christine McKinnon
Kizzy Alvarez DeSantis
Mary Alice Ford
Cassandra Berholtz
Kimberly Snyder
AmValerie Kuehn
Ralph Gonzales
Jonnalyn Gates
Stephanie Griffith
Jamie Nash Lewter
Alisa Jones
Susan Killion
Sheila Carvell
Poonam Gosain
Kathleen Hickman
Rushell Tuggle
1/26/17
Brittany Deaver
Phyllis Hines
Nitasha Shank
Kathi Taylor
Susanne Killion
Jennifer Ramlet
Melissa Turner Baker
Carla S-Paige Williams
Cheryl Hall
Jennifer Vega
Fanny Wat
Crystal Young
Leslie Wagner Hobson
Mary Perez Ramz
Tracy Shafer
Carol Scheive
Misty Shallcross
Ralph Gonzales
Mike Adamski
Kristi Cervantes
Valerie Kuehn
Shannon Douglas Deadmon
1/27/17
Sheila Carvell
Jonnalyn Gates
Juanita Williams-Jones
Katrina Worford
Suzie Mize Lockhart
Adaria Johnson
Jessica Miller
Ashley Stamey Phillips
Jennifer Kinner
Chrissy Kim
Kristin Yergey
Ashley Nicole Airey
Crystal Dougherty Merrill
Hollie Jahnke
Nitasha Shank
Paula Rousseau
Valerie Kuehn
Priscilla Shimp
Thomas Ryan
Amy Hopper
Cheryl Hall
1/28/17
Althea Thomas
Dawn Raasch
Jakara Jackson
Susanne Killion
Brian K Henson
Kathleen Hickman
Sheila Carvell
Alexandra Vindiola
Joanie Waterman
Crystal Dotson
Heather Jacques
Alisa Jones
Juanita Williams-Jones
Brandi Chaney
Christina Withrow
Kendra George
Tessa Davis
Wayne Gallas
Dean Bruss
Ashley Stamey Phillips
1/29/17
Jennifer Ramlet
Anna Nichols
Kendra George
Daniela Tapia
Kathi Taylor
Leah Denton
Rhonda Nicholson
Jennie Gallagher
Christine McKinnon
Beth Cleveland
Anna Ashley Pinder
Alicia Dansby
Alexandra Vindiola
Neil Anderson
Debbie Smith
Amanda Kyrie’ Ayala
Kathleen Hickman
Mya Murphy
Brooke Scott
Carla S-Paige Williams
Paula Rousseau
Shannon Douglas Deadmon
Daniela Hernandez
Carol Scheive

Be sure to watch both of our FaceBook pages for your chance to win and enter again next week, with questions posted daily on HealthInsurance4Everyone or at Health & Life Solutions, LLC!!
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Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has decided to drop a series of lawsuits to buy plots of lands in Hawaii after public backlash. Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan purchased the 700-acre waterfront estate on Kauai for $100 million in 2014. They filed a series of eight lawsuits to buy out several hundred people’s stake of 13 plots on eight acres partitioned during the 1850s.
Many of the plots of land involved in the suits are “kuleana lands” which were granted to native Hawaiian tenant farmers between 1850 and 1855 and hold special rights including access, agricultural uses, gathering, water and fishing rights.
The suit was met with heavy criticism by some Hawaiians including hundreds who planned to protest outside Zuckerberg’s estate. The suits would have forced hundreds of residents, including Native families, off their land in order to make his Hawaiian beachfront property as private as possible.
He initially defended the move, saying the purpose of the quiet title action was to identify property owners who were unaware of their stake in the land. “Quiet title actions are the standard and prescribed process to identify all potential co-owners, determine ownership, and ensure that, if there are other co-owners, each receives appropriate value for their ownership share,” Zuckerberg’s lawyer, Keoni Schultz, said earlier in January.
Zuckerberg published a letter in the local Hawaiian newspaper The Garden Island saying it was clear the decision to file the suits over his ownership of the beachfront property on the island of Kauai was a mistake. Zuckerberg said he initially misunderstood the quiet title process and hoped to work with the community to find a better solution.
“To find a better path forward, we are dropping our quiet title actions and will work together with the community on a new approach,” he said. “We understand that for native Hawaiians, kuleana are sacred and the quiet title process can be difficult. We want to make this right, talk with the community, and find a better approach.”
“Upon reflection, I regret that I did not take the time to fully understand the quiet title process and its history before we moved ahead. Now that I understand the issues better, it’s clear we made a mistake,” he said. “The right path is to sit down and discuss how to best move forward. We will continue to speak with community leaders that represent different groups, including native Hawaiians and environmentalists, to find the best path.”
In June 2016, Zuckerberg faced criticism for building a 6 foot stone wall enclosing his 700 acre property. Many residents said it blocked breezes and obstructed ocean views. Others argued that while it is his right to build on his property-it did not feel very neighborly.
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Mexican drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán pled not guilty in a U.S. federal court in New York City. His attorneys had fought his extradition in part by citing discrimination against Mexicans. His court appearance came just one day after his extradition from Mexico and he is being held without bail. Guzman, 59, arrived at Long Island’s MacArthur Airport Thursday night after being taken from prison in the city of Juarez, in the northern state of Chihuahua, where his Sinaloa cartel rules.
He is accused of running the world’s largest drug-trafficking organization. There are 17 criminal charges against him, carrying a minimum sentence of life behind bars. Guzman is accused of money laundering, drug trafficking, kidnapping and murder in several US cities, including Chicago, Miami and New York. Charged in a total of six U.S. jurisdictions, Guzman will faced his first set of charges in Brooklyn on a combined indictment from New York and Florida.
While leading the Sinaloa cartel, Guzman is believed to have been running the world’s largest transnational cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine smuggling operation. More than 100,000 people have been killed during a decade-long drug war in Mexico. A U.S. attorney says the government is seeking a $14 billion forfeiture order as part of its prosecution of the notorious Mexican drug kingpin.
According to his indictment and court filings, Guzman grew and sold poppies for heroin as a young boy. His drug trafficking career that began in the 1980s and he came to dominate Mexican smugglers by the speed with which he was able to move drugs into the United States.
After partnering with Colombian producers, they shared in profits of U.S. distribution markets, moving cocaine and other drugs through tunnels under the U.S. border as well as planes, yachts and even a submarine, employing a crew of violent hit men known as“sicarios” and corrupting Mexican officials.
The indictment charges Guzman with running the massive drug trafficking operation that laundered billions of dollars and oversaw murders and kidnappings. Prosecutors agreed to not seek the death penalty as a condition of the extradition of Guzman, who’s the convicted leader of the Sinaloa cartel.
Guzman had maintained control and expanded his drug trafficking empire through two prison terms in Mexico. He has escaped twice from a maximum security prison in Mexico, once in a laundry cart and a second time in 2015, through a mile-long tunnel dug into the shower in his cell. He was captured a year ago, just six months after his last escape. Mexican officials say a secret interview with US actor Sean Penn helped locate the world’s most wanted drug baron. US officials have refused to say where El Chapo will be held while awaiting trial, but they vowed to prevent any further escapes.
US attorney for New York’s Eastern District, Robert Capers, told reporters the trial will likely be long and that more than 40 witnesses were ready to testify. US prosecutors assured Mexican officials that El Chapo would not be executed in order to secure his extradition, Capers said. Mexico opposes capital punishment. “Guzman and the Sinaloa cartel had a veritable army, ready to war with competitors and anyone Guzman deemed to be a traitor,” US prosecutors said. He was known to carry a gold-plated AK-47 rifle.
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The Justice Department have announced that Chicago police officers routinely violate civil rights, target communities of color with excessive force and maintain a “code of silence” to hinder investigations into abuses. After a 13 month investigation, the Department of Justice has concluded that there is reasonable cause to believe that the Chicago Police Department engages in a pattern or practice of use of excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.
The investigation began in December 2015 after the release of a video showing the death of 17-year-old African American Laquan McDonald, who was shot 16 times by white police officer Jason Van Dyke. Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel agreed in principle to negotiate a consent decree for a federal monitor to oversee the Chicago Police Department.
The Chicago Police Department has a legacy of corruption and abuse. The over 161 page report came to light as the department grapples with skyrocketing violence in Chicago, where murders are at a 20-year high, and a deep lack of trust among the city’s residents.
The report cited unchecked aggressions such as an officer pointing a gun at teenagers on bicycles suspected of trespassing; officers using a Taser on an unarmed, naked 65-year-old woman with mental illness; officers purposely dropping off young gang members in rival territory. The report stated that after officers used excessive force, their actions were practically condoned by supervisors, who rarely questioned their behavior. One commander interviewed by the Justice Department said that he could not recall ever suggesting that officers’ use of force be investigated further.
Chicago is among nearly two dozen cities — including Cleveland; Ferguson, Mo.; and Seattle — where the Justice Department has pushed for wholesale changes to police practices.
Attorney General Loretta Lynch and Mayor Emanuel presented the report at the federal courthouse in downtown Chicago. They laid out the steps the city had committed to take to remedy the problems. Lynch said the Justice Department had reviewed thousands of documents, conducted extensive interviews, and discovered widespread evidence that the Police Department was sorely in need of reform. It does not train officers properly, fails to properly collect and analyze data, and has little support from the community, the report said.
The report described a broad lack of oversight within the department. “We found that officers engage in tactically unsound and unnecessary foot pursuits, and that these foot pursuits too often end with officers unreasonably shooting someone — including unarmed individuals,” the report said. “We found that officers shoot at vehicles without justification and in contradiction to C.P.D. policy. We found further that officers exhibit poor discipline when discharging their weapons and engage in tactics that endanger themselves and public safety, including failing to await backup when they safely could and should; using unsound tactics in approaching vehicles; and using their own vehicles in a manner that is dangerous.”
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President Obama has commuted more sentences than any other president in U.S. History. He recently commuted the sentence of some high profile prisoners. Army whistleblower Chelsea Manning, Puerto Rican independence activist Oscar López Rivera and retired U.S. Marine Corps General James Cartwright had their sentences commuted as part of more than 200 commutations issued on January 17th.
Chelsea Manning is now set to be freed on May 17, after Obama shortened her sentence from 35 years to seven. Manning is already the longest-held whistleblower in U.S. history. Manning leaked more than 700,000 classified files and videos to WikiLeaks about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and U.S. foreign policy. While serving her sentence she has seen long stretches of solitary confinement and has been denied medical treatment related to her gender identity. She attempted to commit suicide twice last year.
Puerto Rican independence activist Oscar López Rivera has been imprisoned for almost 35 years with a lot of that time served in solitary confinement. In 1981, López Rivera was convicted on federal charges including seditious conspiracy—conspiring to oppose U.S. authority over Puerto Rico by force. In 1999, President Bill Clinton commuted the sentences of 16 members of the FALN, but López Rivera refused to accept the deal because it did not include two fellow activists, who have since been released. Under Obama’s commutation order, López Rivera will be released on May 17th as well.
U.S. Marine Corps General James Cartwright also received a pardon. Last year, Cartwright, a retired U.S. Marine Corps general with 40 years of service behind him, admitted that he lied to the FBI during an investigation into who leaked classified information to a New York Times reporter. The top secret information leaked, was about Stuxnet, a secret U.S. cyberwarfare operation against Iran. He was due to be sentenced this month. Cartwright’s defense team had asked for a year of probation and 600 hours of community service, but prosecutors had asked the judge overseeing his case to send him to prison for two years.
President Obama granted another 330 commutations on the last day of his presidency, January 19th. The majority of the sentences commuted Thursday were for nonviolent drug offenses. Throughout his presidency, Obama has granted 1,715 commutations—more than any other president in U.S. history. Of those, 568 inmates had been sentenced to life in prison.
In Obama’s second-term, he had made great effort to try to remedy the consequences of decades of excessive sentencing requirements that he said had imprisoned thousands of non-violent drug offenders for too long. To be eligible for a commutation under Obama’s initiative, non-violent offenders had to have been well behaved while in prison and already served 10 years, although some exceptions to the 10-year rule were granted.
Obama personally reviewed the case of every inmate who received a commutation. Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates said the administration reviewed all applications that came in by an end-of-August deadline which was more than 16,000 in total.
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In an effort to broaden the company’s “social interaction” with our clients and FaceBook fans, Daily Trivia Questions are posted on both of our business pages. Here are the weekly standings for this past week, and the winner of the Sunday night Weekly Drawing for an AmEx gift card!
Congratulations – To this past week’s Trivia Contest Winner!! Our latest contest winner for the weekly FaceBook HealthInsurance4Everyone/Health & Life Solutions, LLC Trivia Contest, drawn randomly by computer late Sunday evening, January 22nd, 2017 was:
KRISTINA ROSSON
Winner Of A $25.00 AmEx Gift Card
Each day, fans of either of our company FaceBook pages (HealthInsurance4Everyone or Health & Life Solutions LLC) are able to test their skills with our Daily TRIVIA QUESTION. The first 20 winners who post the correct answer to the TRIVIA QUESTION, will then get entered into the weekly drawing held late on Sunday evenings for a $25.00 Am Ex Gift. Card
Weekly Gift Card winners will be posted in our blog at this site. Remember to become a FaceBook “fan” on either of our company pages to enter and post your answers.
Here are the daily contestants from last week’s Trivia Contest that were entered into the Sunday drawing:

1/16/17
Lotorya Patrick
Sandy Nevels
Sheila Carvell
Nitasha Shank
Alicia Dansby
Adaria Johnson
Holly Cajigas
Marcy Coull
Brandy Marie Willaims
Christine McKinnon
Brittany Deaver
Jade Good
Dean Bruss
Katrina Worford
Jennifer Sparks
Cheryl Hall
Stacy Draeger-Brogan
Michelle Rayeske-Jeske
Fanny Wat
Paula Rousseau
Kendra George
1/17/17
Jessica Miller
Misty Shallcross
Alicia Dansby
Kimberly Snyder
Lisa Jimenez
Lesa Moats
Lori Capobianco
Megan Akins
Derek Jennings
Mary Ann Cody
Wendi Black
Phyllis Hines
Megan Akins
Amy Marie Wilkinson
Holly Cajigas
Michelle Hughes
Alexandria Tinnon
Sheila Carvell
Jennifer Fremont
Jennifer Ramlet
Andrea Workman
Kathleen Hickman
Anna Nichols
1/18/17
Shelby Howke
Pamela White Brearley
Amy Marie Wilkinson
Dale Fish
Steve Hardy
Cassandra L Penley
Raquel Munoz Navarro
Judy Custer
Lesa Moats
Mya Murphy
Jennifer Downing
Brandi Chaney
Amy Hopper
Mya Murphy
Marie Beauregard
Melissa Ann Stura-Bassett
Chrissy Kim
Jade Good
Kristina Harris
Abby Cox
1/19/17
Christine Acoba
Katrina Worford
Beata Tybor
Brett J. Griffith
Laurie Griffith
AmValerie Kuehn
Crystal Hazelwood
Sheila Carvell
Kimberly Snyder
Brittany Deaver
Susanne Killion
Juanita Williams-Jones
Joanie Waterman
Kizzy Alvarez DeSantis
Heather Jacques
Steve Hardy
Phyllis Hines
Brandi Chaney
Priscilla Shimp
Megan Rhyne
1/20/17
Anna Nichols
Jennifer Alice Duran
Christy Hawkes
Megan Rhyne
Kristin Yergey
Gino Nino
Jade Good
Chaunda Zeller
Amy Chavis
Juanita Williams-Jones
Sarah Bellestri Shih
Kathleen Hickman
Amy Marie Wilkinson
Tessa Davis
Lesa Moats
Jennifer Saavedra
Kayla Clemons
Leigh Nichols
Derek Jennings
Brandy Marie Williams
Kendra George
Amy Hopper
1/21/17
Kizzy Alvarez DeSantis
Kendra George
Ralph Gonzales
Lori Capobianco
Nikki Bankert
Dawn Raasch
Luis Vazquez
Paula Rousseau
Amy Hopper
Nitasha Shank
Brandy Marie Williams
Fanny Wat
Jane Peterson
Emily Rice Bowersock
Wayne Gallas
Samantha Brwn
Derek Jennings
Nai Merri
Mikayla Oakes
Anna Nichols
1/22/17
Andrea Timms
Althea Thomas
Kim Floyd
Kristina Rosson
Nicole Matusevich
Beth Cleveland
Carole Jacobs
Priscilla Shimp
Hollie Jahnke
Kiki Roberson
Cheryl Reagin Burns
Joanie Waterman
Lisa David Carr
Crystal Young
Sarah Bellestri Shih
Kristina Harris
Alexandra Vindiola
Jennifer Downing
Beeg Reeb
Brian K Henson

Be sure to watch both of our FaceBook pages for your chance to win and enter again next week, with questions posted daily on HealthInsurance4Everyone or at Health & Life Solutions, LLC!!
Remember that if you try your hand at answering the Trivia Question several days each week, your odds of winning the Sunday weekly drawing are much better. You may also find that if you “Like” both of the business pages, you will receive faster notifications of the other players as they post their answers to compete with you!
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At Health Insurance 4 Everyone, we not only want to improve our customer service but also interact with our customers on a social media level that wasn’t available before. Interested in connecting with us? Look us up on….
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