Refunds? The Affordable Health Care Act granted many refunds and those who bought their own health insurance have already started seeing checks in the mail. What about those premiums you paid through your employer? CLICK HERE.
- Women have dominated these Olympic Games to include winning gold yesterday beating Japan in soccer. Joining Tony with more from London is Fox News' Emily Withers.

Photo credit (Lauren DeCicca for The Wall Street Journal)
Looked down by some for years, tattoos could now be the cash crop according to the Wall Street Journal. CLICK HERE.
- Should your employer be following YOU on social media (in a positive way)? Forbes' Geoff Colvin takes a look at why this might be a good idea. 
- A bizarre case where a store worker was stuffed in a trunk. Tony checks in with the LMPD's Dwight Mitchell in this week's chat.
- Most U.S. kids do not sit safely in cars, either because they are not properly restrained in car seats or booster seats, or because they sit in the front seat, according to a new study. Researchers observed nearly 22,000 children and found that just 3 percent of children between ages 1 and 3 who were restrained at all were sitting in a proper, rear-facing car seat, and only 10 percent of 8 to 10 year-old children were properly restrained in a booster seat or a car seat. The difficulty people have in adhering to car safety regulations may show how dramatically they've changed in recent years, said the study's author, Dr. Michelle Macy, of the C.S. Mott Children's Hospital at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. "For parents, it's not anything they would have done as kids," she said. In the U.S., car crashes are the leading cause of death for children over age 3, however, and more than 140,000 children go to emergency rooms each year as a result of accidents. Properly seating a child in a car seat or booster seat, and in the back seat, reduces the risk of in jury or death, but many parents don't follow the guidelines, the researchers said. The researchers looked at data from previous studies that tracked children's seating in cars at public sites such as restaurants, child care centers and gas stations between 2007 and 2009, and based their observations on American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for child passenger safety in 2011. What can be done so parents avoid the mistakes noted in this car seat study? Study's Author of C.S. Mott Children's Hospital at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Dr. Michelle Macy joins Tony today.









