Cornea Transplants

Cornea Transplants

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 957 , Segment 6

Brexit, Canadian Tweets, Cornea Transplants, Civil Forfeiture

Episode: Brexit, Canadian Tweets, Cornea Transplants, Civil Forfeiture

  • Dec 4, 2018 10:00 pm
  • 14:44 mins

Guest: Wade McEntire, Director of Operations and Business Development, Utah Lions Eye Bank The cornea is just a small, clear covering on the eye, but it accounts for about two-thirds of the eye’s optical power. And when it’s damaged, the world goes dark. We often hear about the importance of organ donations such as the heart, liver or kidney, but millions of people are also waiting to have their sight restored through a cornea transplant.

Other Segments

Law Enforcement Tool or Legal Theft?

Dec 4, 2018
21 m

Guest: Beth Colgan, Professor of Law, UCLA It’s a little known fact that police in most states have the ability to seize property – we’re talking homes, cash, cars – if they suspect the stuff helped in committing a crime. Say, if someone were caught selling drugs, police might seize the car the suspect was driving. In many states, police can even do this before someone is even charged or convicted of a crime. The seized property often gets sold and the law enforcement keeps the cash. “Civil forfeiture” brings in millions of dollars for police every year. And for the last year, the US Justice Department has been encouraging local police departments to seize stuff as a way of funding their crime-fighting efforts.

Guest: Beth Colgan, Professor of Law, UCLA It’s a little known fact that police in most states have the ability to seize property – we’re talking homes, cash, cars – if they suspect the stuff helped in committing a crime. Say, if someone were caught selling drugs, police might seize the car the suspect was driving. In many states, police can even do this before someone is even charged or convicted of a crime. The seized property often gets sold and the law enforcement keeps the cash. “Civil forfeiture” brings in millions of dollars for police every year. And for the last year, the US Justice Department has been encouraging local police departments to seize stuff as a way of funding their crime-fighting efforts.