An April 13 article provided incorrect information on homeland security spending in various states. Overall, Wyoming received $42 per person in fiscal 2004 and New York received $11 per capita, according to the Department of Homeland Security. For fiscal 2005, the figures are $28 and $15 per capita, respectively.
Metro articles on April 12 and 13 incorrectly said that a plot to kill a government witness in a federal gang case was allegedly orchestrated from the Alexandria jail. The plotting was allegedly done from jail cells in Arlington and Fairfax counties.
An April 13 Business article about the entertainment industry's decision to sue people who share music over a version of the Web called Internet2 incorrectly said that the lawsuits were filed the previous day. They were filed April 13.
An April 11 Metro article incorrectly said that physician Asif Qadri is a Muslim from Pakistan. He is from the Indian-controlled side of the disputed region of Kashmir.
An April 4 Sports article incorrectly said that University of South Carolina basketball coach Dave Odom is a native of Columbus, Ga. Odom is from Goldsboro, N.C.
An April 3 article on the U.S. government's plan to embed radio-frequency technology in passports incorrectly implied that Donald Davis, editor of Card Technology magazine, was a critic of the plan. Davis said he supports the effort to include the technology in U.S. passports.
A headline on a March 6 Metro article incorrectly implied that the Bush administration has a plan to cut housing subsidies. The cuts were predicted in a study by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, but Bush administration officials say no such cuts are currently planned.