Skip to main content

AI Bias Analysis

4 models · Takes ~15 seconds

Washington Examiner

DOJ accuses Jamaican woman of committing marriage fraud and lying to boost disability benefits

DOJ accuses Jamaican woman of committing marriage fraud and lying to boost disability benefits
ShareXFacebook

An illegal immigrant from Jamaica, who allegedly overstayed her tourism visa by more than a decade, is accused of committing marriage fraud to stay in the country, joining the Army to expedite becoming a naturalized U.S. citizen, and then fraudulently claiming disability benefits through veterans’ services. Britney Sherene Curry, 26, a Jamaican national living in […]

W

Source

Washington Examiner

Read full article at Washington Examiner

Opens original article in a new tab

AI-flagged phrases in this article

Use of 'illegal immigrant' terminology in opening sentenceEmphasis on immigration status and fraudulent behavior throughoutPositive framing of Trump administration's anti-fraud task force in conclusionuse of the term 'illegal immigrant'crediting of Trump-Vance administration initiativeselective focus on immigrant crime and benefit fraudloaded languagesource selectionframing of issuesloaded language ('illegal immigrant')positive attribution to Trump/Vance anti-fraud effortsone-sided focus on fraud without mitigating perspectives

These phrases were flagged by our AI models as potential bias indicators.

Advertisement

Related Politics Stories

Ohio lawmakers deliver $875 million Medicaid correction to fix formula error that shortchanged nursing homes
Washington Examiner

Ohio lawmakers deliver $875 million Medicaid correction to fix formula error that shortchanged nursing homes

The Ohio state legislature on Wednesday night approved an $875 million Medicaid payment aimed at correcting what the Ohio Supreme Court found was a yearslong formula error that left nursing homes underpaid by hundreds of millions of dollars.  The funding was included in a budget correction measure approved by the Republican-controlled legislature this week and […]

Read more →
House votes down FISA patch, risking first-ever lapse in key spy power
Washington Examiner

House votes down FISA patch, risking first-ever lapse in key spy power

The House rejected a short-term extension of a government spy program set to lapse in just one day.  The House voted 198-218, with 19 Republicans joining nearly every Democrat against the three-week patch of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The bill would have needed a two-thirds majority to pass under an expedited […]

Read more →
Advertisement