Foreign workers for U.S. are casualties twice over

Contract employees injured in the conflict zones of Iraq and Afghanistan and families of those killed there are covered by American taxpayer-funded insurance, but it often fails to deliver.

Rey Torres dreamed of a better life for his wife and five children when he left a neighborhood of wooden shacks and burning trash piles to drive a bus on a U.S. military base near Baghdad.

He hoped to send his children to college and build a new home with the $16,000 a year he earned in Iraq -- four times what he could make in the Philippines.

Then, in April 2005, Torres, 31, was killed in an ambush by Iraqi insurgents. His widow and ... Full Story »

Posted by Leo Romero
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Posted by: Posted by Leo Romero - Jun 21, 2009 - 7:47 AM PDT
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Edited by: Dwight Rousu - Jun 22, 2009 - 5:24 AM PDT

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4.3
by Dwight Rousu - Jun. 22, 2009

This is an investigative reporting story of a major scandal of failing to pay insurance to foreign nationals injured and killed while employed in the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. Many individual cases are reported. Criminal avoidance of insurance payments by U.S. insurance companies is suggested.

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by Leo Romero - Jun. 21, 2009
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4.1
by Tanya J. Maurer - Jun. 26, 2009
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