Thursday, July 10, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 356 • 17 of 31

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X-Ray Center worker pleads guilty on embezzlement

• SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) -- A former employee at Medical X-Ray Center in Sioux Falls has been pleaded guilty to embezzlement charges.
• KELO-TV reports (http://bit.ly/1mgE93C) that Gerald Larson worked as business manager for the closed health care company. Larson appeared in federal court Wednesday.
• He was federally indicted last year on charges of bank fraud, embezzlement and money laundering.
• Court documents show that Larson deposited business checks into his personal bank account. They don't say how much money was embezzled.
• Larson could serve 10 years in prison in addition paying fines and restitution.


Ranchers taking advantage of USDA disaster program
HENRY C. JACKSON, Associated Press

• WASHINGTON (AP) -- Farmers and ranchers who suffered heavy livestock and grazing losses over the last three years due to extreme weather have been quick to take advantage of newly available disaster relief funds, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said Wednesday.
• As of July 2, the agency has distributed more than 106,000 payments totaling $1.2 billion in relief funds in three months, the progress report said. That's a little less than half the $2.5 billion the USDA estimated would be spent on cases from 2011 to 2014. The funds encompass several programs for disaster relief included in the farm bill, which was approved in February.
• Among the communities anxious for the funds to become available were South Dakota ranchers who suffered historic losses during an unusual early-season blizzard last October. An estimated 43,000 cattle and other livestock died, with individual ranchers suffering, in some cases, more than $1 million in losses. The storm also affected farms and ranches in North Dakota.
• USDA did not provide data for individual states, so it wasn't clear which were quickest to take advantage of the new program.
• Forty states, including the Dakotas, have begun to receive disaster payments that expired in 2011 but were retroactively renewed when Congress passed the new farm bill this year. The funds are available to help ranchers and farmers who have suffered through blizzards, persistent droughts and other unexpected weather conditions. That includes many states in southern Plains, like Texas, which dealt with

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